Global Forecast and Prospects for Uzbekistan
Analytical Review of “Global Economic Prospects, January 2026”
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The World Bank has published its latest Global Economic Prospects report (January 2026), presenting a comprehensive analysis of global economic trends and regional forecasts. Key findings indicate that the global economy is maintaining resilience amid unprecedented uncertainty in trade and economic policy, though growth rates remain moderate, potentially making the 2020s the weakest decade for the global economy since the 1960s.
For Uzbekistan, the outlook remains positive: the country continues to demonstrate some of the highest growth rates in the Europe and Central Asia (ECA) region, though a gradual slowdown is expected from 6.2% in 2025 to 6.0% in 2026 and 5.9% in 2027.
I. GLOBAL ECONOMIC CONTEXT
1.1. General Global Economic Trends
The global economy is proving more resilient than previously expected, despite persistent trade tensions and economic policy uncertainty. According to World Bank projections:
- 2026: global economic growth will reach 2.6% (an upward revision from the June forecast)
- 2027: expected to accelerate to 2.7%
This resilience is largely driven by stronger-than-expected growth, especially in the United States, which accounts for about two-thirds of the upward revision to the 2026 forecast.
1.2. Critical Assessment of the Decade
Key finding of the report: if these forecasts hold, the 2020s are on track to be the weakest decade for global growth since the 1960s. This has serious implications:
- Sluggish growth is widening the gap in living standards worldwide
- By the end of 2025, per capita incomes in nearly all advanced economies exceeded their 2019 levels
- However, about one in four developing economies had lower per capita incomes compared to 2019
1.3. Growth Drivers in 2025
In 2025, global economic growth was supported by:
- Surge in trade ahead of policy changes
- Swift readjustments in global supply chains
- Easing global financial conditions
- Narrowing sovereign spreads and rising equity prices
1.4. Outlook for 2026-2027
These temporary boosts are expected to fade in 2026:
- Softening trade and domestic demand
- Easing financial conditions and fiscal expansion in several large economies should help cushion the slowdown
- Global inflation is projected at 2.6% in 2026 (reflecting softer labor markets and lower energy prices)
- Growth is expected to pick up in 2027 as trade flows adjust and policy uncertainty diminishes
1.5. Developing Economy Forecast
The report pays special attention to developing economies:
- 2025: growth of 4.2%
- 2026: slowdown to 4.0%
- 2027: modest acceleration to 4.1%
Low-income countries will show higher growth rates:
- 2026-2027: averaging 5.6% (buoyed by firming domestic demand, recovering exports, and moderating inflation)
However, a critical challenge remains:
- Per capita income growth in developing economies is projected at 3% in 2026
- This is about one percentage point below the 2000-2019 average
- At this pace, per capita income in developing economies is expected to be only 12% of the level in advanced economies
1.6. The Employment Challenge
Over the next decade, 1.2 billion young people will reach working age in developing economies. The World Bank identifies three key pillars to address the jobs challenge:
- Strengthening capital: physical, digital, and human to raise productivity and employability
- Improving the business environment: enhancing policy credibility and regulatory certainty
- Mobilizing private capital at scale to support investment
1.7. Position of the World Bank Chief Economist
Indermit Gill, Chief Economist of the World Bank Group, emphasizes:
“With each passing year, the global economy has become less capable of generating growth and seemingly more resilient to policy uncertainty. But economic dynamism and resilience cannot diverge for long without fracturing public finance and credit markets.”
Recommendations for governments:
- Aggressively liberalize private investment and trade
- Rein in public consumption
- Invest in new technologies and education
II. REGIONAL OUTLOOK: EUROPE AND CENTRAL ASIA
2.1. Regional Overview
The Europe and Central Asia (ECA) region shows moderate growth amid a complex geopolitical situation:
- 2025 (estimate): 2.4% (slowdown)
- 2026 (forecast): 2.4% (steady)
- 2027 (forecast): 2.7% (strengthening)
Excluding Russia, Türkiye, and Ukraine:
- Average regional growth in 2026-2027 is projected at 3.1%
2.2. Factors Behind the 2025 Slowdown
The regional slowdown in 2025 primarily reflects:
- Decline in private consumption, especially in the Russian Federation, due to lagged effects of tight monetary policy
- External headwinds amid heightened trade policy uncertainty
- Weak eurozone growth, constraining exports, especially in Central Europe’s and Western Balkans’ automotive industries
Important note: although the region’s direct dependence on the U.S. market is limited, it remains vulnerable due to value chain integration and spillovers from further eurozone slowdown.
2.3. Positive Factors in 2025
Despite the slowdown, positive trends were observed:
- Moderate trade growth in the first half of 2025 (partly due to frontloading ahead of tariff increases)
- Easing global financial conditions, narrowing sovereign spreads, and rising equity prices
- Tourism and remittances remained important drivers of economic activity (though their contribution to regional growth declined)
2.4. Inflationary Pressures
The inflation situation in the ECA region requires special attention:
- Inflation slowed in the first half of 2025 but reaccelerated in the second half
- Median headline and core inflation remain elevated, above pre-pandemic levels
- In most countries, inflation exceeds central bank targets
Sources of price pressures:
- Rising prices for food and utilities (especially in Central Asia and Romania)
- Ongoing robust wage growth
Central bank response: most central banks maintained their monetary policy stance unchanged.
2.5. 2026 Outlook
Regional growth in 2026 is expected to remain steady at 2.4%. Supporting factors include:
Positive factors:
- Resilient domestic demand supported by declining inflation
- Improved financial conditions
- Accelerated EU funds absorption
- Rising defense spending
Negative factors:
- Trade slowdown due to weak eurozone growth
- Escalating trade tensions
2.6. Inflation Forecast
Headline inflation in the ECA region is expected to gradually decline in 2026 due to stabilizing commodity prices.
However:
- In most countries, inflation will remain above central bank targets
- This implies a cautious approach to monetary policy easing
2.7. Fiscal Consolidation
While many countries plan fiscal consolidation in 2026-2027:
- Deficit reduction is expected to be moderate
- Will have only a limited restraining impact on economic growth
2.8. Regional Demographic Challenges
The ECA region faces unique labor and demographic challenges:
Aging population:
- Slowing labor force growth (except in Central Asia)
- By 2050, the region’s dependency ratio will increase to 63%
Youth employment:
- Over the next decade, about 63 million young people will enter working age
- Limited job creation and skills mismatches may hinder their employment prospects
2.9. Risks for the ECA Region
The forecast is characterized by downside risks related to potential growth slowdown:
Downside risks:
- Geopolitical risks: prolonged or escalating conflict → persistent high uncertainty and further weakening of economic activity
- Trade tensions: further escalation in global trade → declining trade and investment (especially in open economies of Central Europe and Western Balkans)
- Persistent inflation: tight labor markets, accelerating wage growth, rising tariffs, and supply chain disruptions
- Tightening financial conditions: capital outflows, exchange rate pressures, higher borrowing costs (especially in countries with large external financing needs)
- Climate risks: more frequent and severe extreme weather events
Upside potential:
- Conflict resolution: earlier-than-expected end to active hostilities → accelerated investment in Ukraine’s reconstruction and improved investor confidence
- Regional integration: deepening integration supported by new agreements
- Artificial intelligence: faster productivity gains (especially in Central Europe with retraining and innovation policies)
III. CENTRAL ASIA: COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
3.1. Subregional Overview
Central Asia demonstrates some of the highest economic growth rates in the ECA region, significantly outpacing European countries as well as the South Caucasus and Western Balkans.
3.2. Central Asian Countries: Comparative Forecast Table
| Country | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 (estimate) | 2026 (forecast) | 2027 (forecast) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kazakhstan | 5.1% | 5.0% | 6.0% | 4.5% | 3.9% |
| Kyrgyz Republic | 9.0% | 9.0% | 9.2% | 6.5% | 6.8% |
| Tajikistan | 8.3% | 8.4% | 8.0% | 6.2% | 4.7% |
| Uzbekistan | 6.3% | 6.6% | 6.2% | 6.0% | 5.9% |
Note: The World Bank does not publish data for Turkmenistan due to a lack of reliable, adequate-quality data.
3.3. Key Subregional Observations
-
2025 Growth Leaders:
- Kyrgyz Republic – record 9.2% (highest in the ECA region)
- Tajikistan – 8.0%
- Uzbekistan – 6.2%
- Kazakhstan – 6.0%
-
Deceleration Trend:
- All Central Asian countries show gradual growth deceleration in 2026-2027
- This reflects global trends and normalization after the recovery period
-
Growth Resilience:
- Even with deceleration, Central Asian growth rates remain significantly above global averages (2.6-2.7%) and regional averages (2.4-2.7%)
- Uzbekistan demonstrates the most stable forecast among Central Asian countries
IV. UZBEKISTAN: DETAILED ANALYSIS AND PROSPECTS
4.1. Uzbekistan’s GDP Growth Dynamics
Uzbekistan continues to demonstrate sustained and high economic growth rates:
| Year | GDP Growth Rate | Characteristics |
|---|---|---|
| 2023 | 6.3% | Base year of strong growth |
| 2024 | 6.6% | Growth acceleration |
| 2025 | 6.2% (estimate) | Slight deceleration |
| 2026 | 6.0% (forecast) | Continued deceleration |
| 2027 | 5.9% (forecast) | Stabilization |
4.2. Uzbekistan’s Positioning
In the global context:
- Uzbekistan’s growth rates are more than double the global average (2.6-2.7%)
- Significantly outpacing average developing economy growth (4.0-4.1%)
In the regional context (ECA):
- Uzbekistan shows growth rates 2.5 times higher than the regional average (2.4-2.7%)
- In 2025, ranks third among Central Asian countries after Kyrgyzstan (9.2%) and Tajikistan (8.0%)
In the subregional context (Central Asia):
- Uzbekistan shows the most stable growth trajectory without sharp fluctuations
- Projected deceleration is minimal: only 0.3 percentage points over two years (from 6.2% to 5.9%)
4.3. Uzbekistan’s Economic Strengths
Uzbekistan’s high and stable growth rates are driven by:
- Structural reforms: continuation of economic liberalization initiated in 2017
- Domestic demand: sustained consumption amid rising household incomes
- Investment activity: large-scale infrastructure projects and FDI attraction
- Demographic dividend: young and growing population (unlike most ECA countries)
- Economic diversification: development of non-commodity sectors
4.4. Factors Behind Projected Deceleration
The slight slowdown in 2026-2027 is attributable to:
External factors:
- Global trade slowdown and trade policy uncertainty
- Weak growth in key trading partners (eurozone, Russian Federation, China)
- Normalizing commodity prices (including natural gas, gold, cotton)
Internal factors:
- Base effect: after several years of high growth
- Capacity constraints: time needed for investment project implementation
- Inflationary pressures: especially in food and utilities (noted by the World Bank for Central Asia)
4.5. Inflation and Monetary Policy
The World Bank specifically notes for Central Asia:
- Price pressures primarily driven by rising food and utility prices
- Ongoing robust wage growth
This requires the Central Bank of Uzbekistan to:
- Maintain a cautious approach to monetary policy easing
- Balance growth support and inflation containment
4.6. Uzbekistan’s Demographic Advantage
Unlike most ECA countries facing aging population challenges, Uzbekistan has a demographic advantage:
Positive aspects:
- Young population: significant youth share in population structure
- Growing labor force (unlike other regional countries facing labor force growth slowdown)
Challenges:
- Need to create sufficient jobs for the growing labor force
- Addressing skills mismatches with labor market needs
- Investing in education and vocational training
4.7. Strategic Recommendations for Uzbekistan
Based on World Bank analysis, to maintain high growth rates, Uzbekistan needs to:
1. Productivity enhancement:
- Invest in digital technologies and artificial intelligence
- Modernize physical infrastructure
- Develop human capital through education and healthcare
2. Business environment improvement:
- Enhance transparency and regulatory predictability
- Strengthen rule of law and property rights protection
- Reduce administrative barriers for businesses
3. Private capital mobilization:
- Develop the financial sector and financing instruments
- Create conditions for public-private partnerships
- Attract foreign direct investment to priority sectors
4. Economic diversification:
- Develop export-oriented non-commodity sectors
- Support innovation and technology startups
- Develop the services sector and digital economy
5. Regional integration:
- Deepen trade and economic cooperation in Central Asia
- Participate in regional infrastructure projects
- Develop transport and logistics capacity
6. Fiscal sustainability:
- Prudent public debt management
- Build fiscal buffers to counter external shocks
- Enhance public spending efficiency
4.8. Risks and Opportunities for Uzbekistan
Key risks:
- External trade risks: escalating trade tensions and protectionism globally
- Geopolitical risks: escalating regional conflicts affecting trade routes
- Commodity risks: volatility in key export commodity prices
- Climate risks: droughts and extreme weather events affecting agriculture
- Financial risks: tightening global financial conditions, higher borrowing costs
Key opportunities:
- Demographic dividend: leveraging growing labor force for economic growth
- Digitalization: accelerated adoption of digital technologies and AI
- Regional integration: benefits from deepening economic ties in Central Asia
- Transit potential: development as a transport and logistics hub
- Green energy: investments in renewable energy sources
V. COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS: UZBEKISTAN AND OTHER REGIONAL COUNTRIES
5.1. Uzbekistan vs Central European Countries
Central Europe (Poland, Romania):
- Poland: 3.3% (2025) → 3.2% (2026) → 2.9% (2027)
- Romania: 0.8% (2025) → 1.3% (2026) → 1.9% (2027)
Uzbekistan outpaces Central European countries by almost twofold in growth rates.
5.2. Uzbekistan vs South Caucasus Countries
South Caucasus:
- Georgia: 7.0% (2025) → 5.5% (2026) → 5.0% (2027)
- Armenia: 5.2% (2025) → 4.9% (2026) → 4.7% (2027)
- Azerbaijan: 1.9% (2025) → 1.8% (2026) → 1.7% (2027)
Uzbekistan shows more stable dynamics than Georgia (sharp slowdown from 7.0% to 5.0%) and significantly outpaces Armenia and Azerbaijan.
5.3. Uzbekistan vs Türkiye
Türkiye (largest economy in the ECA region):
- 3.5% (2025) → 3.7% (2026) → 4.4% (2027)
Uzbekistan significantly outpaces Türkiye in growth rates, though the economic scales are incomparable.
5.4. Uzbekistan vs Russian Federation
Russian Federation:
- 0.9% (2025) → 0.8% (2026) → 1.0% (2027)
Uzbekistan demonstrates growth rates 6-7 times higher than Russian indicators.
5.5. Uzbekistan’s Competitive Advantages
- Forecast stability: minimal deviation between years (5.9-6.2%)
- Demographic potential: growing young population
- Geographic location: potential as a transit hub between Europe and Asia
- Natural resources: significant reserves of natural gas, gold, uranium
- Reform momentum: continuation of structural reforms
VI. GLOBAL TRENDS AND THEIR IMPACT ON UZBEKISTAN
6.1. Fiscal Rules and Fiscal Sustainability
The World Bank pays special attention to fiscal rules in developing countries. Key findings:
- More than half of developing economies have at least one fiscal rule in place
- Countries with fiscal rules typically see budget balance improvement of 1.4 percentage points of GDP after five years
- Fiscal rules increase the likelihood of multi-year budget balance improvements by 9 percentage points
For Uzbekistan, this means the need to:
- Develop clear fiscal rules
- Establish limits on deficits and public debt
- Strengthen the institutional framework for rule compliance
6.2. Debt Sustainability
M. Ayhan Kose, Deputy Chief Economist of the World Bank, emphasizes:
“With public debt in emerging and developing economies at its highest level in more than half a century, restoring fiscal credibility has become an urgent priority.”
Uzbekistan is in a relatively favorable position in terms of debt burden but should:
- Maintain a cautious approach to debt accumulation
- Direct borrowing toward productive investments
- Develop the domestic capital market
6.3. Trade Policy and Global Chains
The World Bank forecasts increased uncertainty in trade policy. For Uzbekistan, this means:
Challenges:
- Potential decline in global trade
- Value chain restructuring
- Protectionist measures in advanced economies
Opportunities:
- Export market diversification
- Participation in regional trade agreements
- Development of intraregional trade in Central Asia
6.4. Technology and Productivity
Artificial intelligence and digitalization can accelerate productivity growth. For Uzbekistan, it is critical to:
- Invest in digital infrastructure
- Develop the IT sector and digital services
- Digitalize government services
- Train workforce in digital technologies
- Create a favorable environment for technology startups
VII. CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
7.1. Key Conclusions
-
Unfavorable global context: the global economy is experiencing one of its weakest growth periods since the 1960s (2.6-2.7%)
-
Uzbekistan among leaders: the country demonstrates some of the highest growth rates in the ECA region (6.0-6.2%)
-
Trajectory stability: Uzbekistan shows the most resilient dynamics among Central Asian countries
-
Natural gradual slowdown: slight deceleration (from 6.2% to 5.9%) reflects global trends and high base effects
-
Demographic advantage: unlike most ECA countries, Uzbekistan has a young and growing population
-
Regional leadership: Central Asia overall outpaces other ECA subregions in growth rates
-
Risks persist: trade tensions, inflation, geopolitical uncertainty
7.2. Strategic Priorities for Uzbekistan
To maintain high growth rates and enhance competitiveness:
Short-term priorities (2026-2027):
- Inflation management: balanced monetary policy
- Fiscal discipline: prudent public finance management
- Business support: reducing administrative barriers
- Infrastructure projects: completing initiated investments
Medium-term priorities (through 2030):
- Economic diversification: developing non-commodity sectors
- Digital transformation: implementing modern technologies
- Human capital development: education and healthcare reforms
- Regional integration: deepening Central Asian ties
- Investment attraction: improving the investment climate
Long-term priorities (through 2040):
- Knowledge economy: transition to innovation-based economy
- Green economy: investments in renewable energy
- Regional leadership: positioning as Central Asia’s economic center
- Social development: achieving high living standards
7.3. Risk-Oriented Approach
Risk management:
- Building fiscal buffers to counter external shocks
- Export diversification by products and destinations
- Domestic market development to reduce external demand dependence
- Financial system strengthening to ensure stability
- Climate adaptation: measures against droughts and climate risks
Leveraging opportunities:
- Demographic dividend: converting young population into competitive advantage
- Digital leap: accelerated modernization through digital technologies
- Regional cooperation: joint projects with neighbors
- Transit potential: developing transport corridors
- Green investments: attracting international financing for renewable energy
7.4. Concluding Remarks
The World Bank’s Global Economic Prospects report (January 2026) confirms that Uzbekistan is on the right development trajectory. Despite the complex global context and projected global economic slowdown, the country continues to demonstrate high and stable growth rates, significantly exceeding both global and regional averages.
The key to success lies in continuing structural reforms, investing in human capital and infrastructure, diversifying the economy, and effectively leveraging the demographic advantage. With sound economic policies, Uzbekistan has every opportunity not only to maintain current growth rates but also to create a foundation for sustainable long-term development.
The World Bank’s forecast – 6.0% in 2026 and 5.9% in 2027 – is not a ceiling but a baseline scenario that can be exceeded with effective economic policy implementation and favorable external conditions.
APPENDIX: SOURCES AND METHODOLOGY
Data sources:
- World Bank. “Global Economic Prospects, January 2026” (full report)
- World Bank. “Regional Highlights: Europe and Central Asia, January 2026” (regional overview)
- World Bank Press Release, January 13, 2026 (PRESS RELEASE NO: 2026/028/DEC)
Methodological notes:
- All forecasts are based on year-on-year percentage changes
- GDP at market prices (2010-2019 average U.S. dollar prices)
- “e” = estimate; “f” = forecast
- World Bank forecasts are frequently updated with new information
World Bank report publication date: January 13, 2026