uzbekistan

Sri Lanka Rupee(LKR)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Sri Lanka Rupee = 54.1985 Uzbekistan Som



  • Sri Lanka Rupee

uzbekistan

Algerian Dinar(DZD)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Algerian Dinar = 78.7698 Uzbekistan Som




uzbekistan

Indonesian Rupiah(IDR)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Indonesian Rupiah = 0.6775 Uzbekistan Som




uzbekistan

Lithuanian Lita(LTL)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Lithuanian Lita = 3423.5998 Uzbekistan Som




uzbekistan

Nigerian Naira(NGN)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Nigerian Naira = 25.9205 Uzbekistan Som




uzbekistan

Czech Republic Koruna(CZK)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Czech Republic Koruna = 402.2266 Uzbekistan Som



  • Czech Republic Koruna

uzbekistan

Bolivian Boliviano(BOB)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Bolivian Boliviano = 1465.9903 Uzbekistan Som




uzbekistan

Japanese Yen(JPY)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Japanese Yen = 94.7636 Uzbekistan Som




uzbekistan

Uzbekistan must enforce anti-corruption laws and strengthen public sector integrity

Uzbekistan has adopted its first anti-corruption action plan and established an anti-corruption coordination commission. Nevertheless corruption is widespread in Uzbekistan and remains a key obstacle for business.




uzbekistan

OECD launches project to support Uzbekistan’s anti-corruption reforms

The OECD and the Uzbekistan Government, with the support of the U.S. Department of State Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL), has launched a project to strengthen Uzbekistan’s capacity to fight corruption and boost its implementation of OECD Istanbul Anti-Corruption Action Plan (IAP) recommendations.




uzbekistan

India-Uzbekistan strategic partnership continues to flourish: EAM after conversation with Uzbek counterpart




uzbekistan

Uzbekistan moves to lower cotton cost for manufacturers




uzbekistan

Uzbekistan moves to lower cotton cost for manufacturers




uzbekistan

Timeline: Uzbekistan

A chronology of key events




uzbekistan

Country profile: Uzbekistan

Key facts, figures and dates




uzbekistan

AT#172 - Bike Travel in Central Asia (Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan)

The Amateur Traveler talks to Friedel from TravellingTwo.com about their continuing bike tour around the world. Friedel was on previously talking about travel to Iran and has come back to talk about the Central Asian countries of Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan. This region of the world offers adventure travelers deserts, tea houses, camels, wild horses, yurts, tea houses, spectacular mountains, friendly locals and fermented mares milk.




uzbekistan

AT#571 - Travel to Uzbekistan

Hear about travel to Uzbekistan as the Amateur Traveler talks to Latish Sharma about his travels on the Silk Road to ancient cities including Samarkand.




uzbekistan

Uzbekistan acceded to the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety on 25 October 2019.




uzbekistan

Can Uzbekistan’s President Meet Raised Expectations?

11 December 2019

Kate Mallinson

Associate Fellow, Russia and Eurasia Programme
Shavkat Mirziyoyev has implemented a number of important reforms, but is now entering a more hazardous period.

2019-12-11-Uz.jpg

Shavkat Mirziyoyev in June. Photo: Getty Images.

In the three years since Shavkat Mirziyoyev was elected president of Uzbekistan, he has embarked on a wide-ranging reform process including currency liberalization, eliminating forced labour and abolishing exit visas. This has encouraged foreign investors and the population, but a rare protest last week over natural gas and electricity shortages shows that the Uzbek population’s faith in change under the new leadership could be wearing thin, while foreign direct investment that adds real value to the economy is in short supply.

When Mirziyoyev came to power, Uzbekistan was on the verge of bankruptcy. A former prime minister of 13 years, and a pragmatic economist, the new president set on a rapid course to open Uzbekistan up to its neighbours and remove barriers to trade and foreign investment. The alacrity and ambition of the reform process and the monetary and economic liberalization has at times been overwhelming for lawyers and businesses. 

However, allowing the free movement of capital, people and goods are natural moves to boost an economy after 20 years of stasis. The country is now immersed in the more challenging and substantive phase of development, including privatization, the breakup of monopolies and capital markets reform. 

Despite a marked increase in foreign direct investment, the country is not receiving the investment it needs. Much of it comes from Russia or China through bilateral arrangements, with debt from China washing through state-owned banks and state-owned enterprises. Uzbekistan’s debt to China has increased three times since the end of 2016.

Meanwhile, European and US companies still appear unsure about the business environment and the staying power of reforms. A lack of consistent policy, alongside hastily drafted decrees and legislation that often require presidential decrees to clarify their meaning as well, as opaque carve outs, are further deterring Western investors. A workforce that is still in transition from a Soviet to a free market approach exacerbates the situation.

Opposition within the government to implementation of some of the reforms, as well as competing government interests, have led to backtracking on some reforms (such as free and unrestricted currency convertibility) and creeping protectionism in some sectors. Some reforms simply get lost in the long chain from presidential decree to implementation. After 2018, import tariffs were abolished but recently, a list of protected domestically produced products has been drawn up raising concerns that vested interests are replacing state monopolies with private ones.

Despite progress on the economic front, political and social reform has lagged. Uzbekistan is still largely run by senior cadres from the previous administration of Islam Karimov. While the government has attracted younger reformers, often returning from abroad, it has also been rehabilitating key figures from the Karimov years that were implicated in corruption scandals. Progressive senior officials, such as the former general prosecutor Otabek Murodov, have been removed with little explanation as to why; trials take place behind closed doors.

The new leadership has transformed the media environment, but the country still lacks objective analytical reporting. Direct criticism of the president or the ruling family remains taboo. Economic and monetary liberalization has come at a cost to the population in the form of double-digit inflation, while utility prices are moving to the level of the free market. Popular discontent is growing at the grass roots level and some hark back to the stability of the former government, in spite of its reputation for appalling human rights treatment.

Small and innovative steps have been taken to improve the rule of law, but more can be done, including introducing transparency over judicial processes and ensuring regional authorities have less impunity before the law. An initiative to address the issue of conflict of interest – whereby mayors, senators and other senior civil servants have been able to benefit commercially from their positions during an era of government economic stimulus – would signal a commitment to fundamental reform.

With great promises of political and economic reform, the government has set a high bar for itself. A continuing paternalistic form of governance, with its restricted civil society freedoms, human rights, stifling bureaucracy and corruption, against continuing lack of opportunities, will clash with the expectations of a growing young population.

Mirziyoyev is trying to make the parliamentary elections on 22 December, the first during his presidency, more dynamic. Yet no opposition parties have been able to emerge to serve as a check on the executive branch. A product of the system he ostensibly wishes to reform, Mirziyoyev will need to prioritize the strengthening of independent institutions to deliver results to his expectant people.




uzbekistan

Seychellois Rupee(SCR)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Seychellois Rupee = 588.8246 Uzbekistan Som




uzbekistan

Trinidad and Tobago Dollar(TTD)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Trinidad and Tobago Dollar = 1495.9519 Uzbekistan Som



  • Trinidad and Tobago Dollar

uzbekistan

Swedish Krona(SEK)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Swedish Krona = 1034.4969 Uzbekistan Som




uzbekistan

Slovak Koruna(SKK)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Slovak Koruna = 455.2373 Uzbekistan Som




uzbekistan

Serbian Dinar(RSD)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Serbian Dinar = 93.2092 Uzbekistan Som




uzbekistan

Polish Zloty(PLN)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Polish Zloty = 2404.1857 Uzbekistan Som




uzbekistan

Qatari Rial(QAR)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Qatari Rial = 2776.4045 Uzbekistan Som




uzbekistan

Indian Rupee(INR)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Indian Rupee = 133.8869 Uzbekistan Som




uzbekistan

Pakistani Rupee(PKR)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Pakistani Rupee = 63.3198 Uzbekistan Som




uzbekistan

Sierra Leonean Leone(SLL)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Sierra Leonean Leone = 1.0253 Uzbekistan Som



  • Sierra Leonean Leone

uzbekistan

New Taiwan Dollar(TWD)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 New Taiwan Dollar = 338.5806 Uzbekistan Som



  • New Taiwan Dollar

uzbekistan

Thai Baht(THB)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Thai Baht = 315.705 Uzbekistan Som




uzbekistan

Turkish Lira(TRY)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Turkish Lira = 1425.992 Uzbekistan Som




uzbekistan

Singapore Dollar(SGD)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Singapore Dollar = 7155.8009 Uzbekistan Som




uzbekistan

Mauritian Rupee(MUR)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Mauritian Rupee = 254.5681 Uzbekistan Som




uzbekistan

Nepalese Rupee(NPR)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Nepalese Rupee = 83.5897 Uzbekistan Som




uzbekistan

Bangladeshi Taka(BDT)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Bangladeshi Taka = 118.9371 Uzbekistan Som




uzbekistan

Moldovan Leu(MDL)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Moldovan Leu = 566.9276 Uzbekistan Som




uzbekistan

Colombian Peso(COP)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Colombian Peso = 2.5944 Uzbekistan Som




uzbekistan

Uruguayan Peso(UYU)/Uzbekistan Som(UZS)

1 Uruguayan Peso = 234.3323 Uzbekistan Som




uzbekistan

Uzbekistan Som(UZS)/Iraqi Dinar(IQD)

1 Uzbekistan Som = 0.1177 Iraqi Dinar




uzbekistan

Uzbekistan Som(UZS)/Zambian Kwacha(ZMK)

1 Uzbekistan Som = 0.5134 Zambian Kwacha




uzbekistan

Uzbekistan Som(UZS)/South African Rand(ZAR)

1 Uzbekistan Som = 0.0018 South African Rand




uzbekistan

Uzbekistan Som(UZS)/Yemeni Rial(YER)

1 Uzbekistan Som = 0.0248 Yemeni Rial




uzbekistan

Uzbekistan Som(UZS)/CFA Franc BCEAO(XOF)

1 Uzbekistan Som = 0.0598 CFA Franc BCEAO




uzbekistan

Uzbekistan Som(UZS)/Vietnamese Dong(VND)

1 Uzbekistan Som = 2.3148 Vietnamese Dong




uzbekistan

Uzbekistan Som(UZS)/Venezuelan Bolivar Fuerte(VEF)

1 Uzbekistan Som = 0.001 Venezuelan Bolivar Fuerte




uzbekistan

Uzbekistan Som(UZS)/Uruguayan Peso(UYU)

1 Uzbekistan Som = 0.0043 Uruguayan Peso




uzbekistan

Uzbekistan Som(UZS)/US Dollar(USD)

1 Uzbekistan Som = 0.0001 US Dollar




uzbekistan

Uzbekistan Som(UZS)/Ugandan Shilling(UGX)

1 Uzbekistan Som = 0.3759 Ugandan Shilling




uzbekistan

Uzbekistan Som(UZS)/Ukrainian Hryvnia(UAH)

1 Uzbekistan Som = 0.0027 Ukrainian Hryvnia