Shifting Comparative Advantages : Implications for Growth Strategy

The future development of the Tajik economy will be shaped by its comparative advantage on world markets. Exploiting comparative advantage enables an economy to reap gains from trade. Tajikistan's most important comparative advantage is its hydropower potential, which is far larger than the economy's domestic requirements. Yet, high capital costs of building hydropower plants and the unstable geopolitical situation in the transit region to reach South Asian export markets are constraining the realization of this potential. In the short term, the sector, which provides the greatest opportunity for Tajikistan to diversify its exports, appears to be agro-industry and, to a lesser extent, clothing. For both sectors, the main export market is likely to be the regional market. Tajikistan also has a comparative advantage in labor exports, which it has successfully exploited since the mid-2000s. To harness the full potential for labor exports will require improving the skills base of migrant workers and, in particular, their command of the Russian language. In the medium term, the paper argues that an export diversification strategy should tap the agglomeration economies generated by cities. More specifically, establishing Tajikistan's two leading cities, Dushanbe and Khujand, and their surroundings as enclave economies, linked to each other and to major regional markets through improved transport infrastructure so as to minimize production and transportation costs. The two enclave economies should provide the supporting services (finance, logistics, transport and storage) for private sector businesses. In the long term, regional cooperation on trade and transport facilitation could be pursued to reduce transport costs to attractive regional markets such as China, India, Russia and Turkey.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Coulibaly, Souleymane
Format: Policy Research Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2012-07
Subjects:ACCESS TO MARKET, ACCESS TO MARKETS, ACCESSIBILITY, ADVERSE IMPACT, AFFILIATE, AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES, AGRICULTURAL OUTPUT, AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION, AGRICULTURE, AIR, AIR TRANSPORT, AIR TRANSPORT SECTOR, ARABLE LAND, BORDER CROSSING, BORDER MANAGEMENT, BOTTLENECKS, CARRIERS, COAL, COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE, COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGES, COMPETITIVENESS, CONSOLIDATION, CONSUMERS, DEBT, DECREASING PRODUCTIVITY, DEMAND FOR TRANSPORT, DEMAND FOR TRANSPORT SERVICES, DEMAND GROWTH, DEVELOPMENT AGENCY, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, DIVISION OF LABOR, DOMESTIC FLIGHTS, DOMESTIC MARKET, DOMESTIC TRAFFIC, DRIVERS, DRIVING, ECONOMIC CONCENTRATION, ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMIC STRUCTURE, ECONOMIES OF SCALE, EMPLOYMENT, ENVIRONMENTS, EXPENDITURE, EXPORT GROWTH, EXPORT MARKET, EXPORT MARKETS, EXPORTS, EXTERNAL TRANSPORT, EXTERNALITIES, FINANCIAL SECTOR, FREIGHT, GDP, GOVERNMENT REGULATION, GOVERNMENT REGULATIONS, GROWTH RATE, HIGHWAY, HIGHWAYS, INCOME LEVELS, INCREASING RETURNS, INCREASING RETURNS TO SCALE, INDUSTRIAL EXPANSION, INDUSTRIALIZATION, INEFFICIENCY, INFRASTRUCTURES, INSPECTION, INTERMEDIATE GOODS, INTERNATIONAL AIRPORTS, INTERNATIONAL FLIGHTS, INTERNATIONAL TRANSIT, ITC, JOURNEY, LABOR FORCE, LABOR MARKET, LABOR PRODUCTIVITY, LEVEL PLAYING FIELD, LOCAL GOVERNMENT, MARKET FORCES, MARKET INFORMATION, METALS, MIGRATION, MINISTRY OF TRANSPORT, MODAL SPLIT, MODE OF TRANSPORT, MOTOR VEHICLES, PASTURES, PATENTS, POLICE, POTENTIAL INVESTORS, PRODUCERS, PRODUCTION FUNCTION, PRODUCTIVE RESOURCES, PROPERTY RIGHTS, PUBLIC FINANCE, RAIL, RAIL CONNECTIONS, RAIL LINES, RAIL NETWORK, RAIL NETWORKS, REAL PRICES, RESOURCE ALLOCATION, RETAIL, RETAIL TRADE, RETURNS TO SCALE, RISK MANAGEMENT, ROAD, ROAD CROSSING, ROAD PROJECTS, ROADS, SAFETY, SPREAD, SUPPLY CHAINS, SURPLUSES, SUSTAINABLE GROWTH, TAX, TAX ADMINISTRATION, TAX RATES, TAXATION, TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE, TRADE LIBERALIZATION, TRADE POLICY, TRAFFIC, TRAFFIC FLOW, TRANSIT, TRANSIT OPERATORS, TRANSIT SERVICE, TRANSIT SERVICES, TRANSIT SYSTEM, TRANSIT SYSTEMS, TRANSIT VEHICLES, TRANSPORT, TRANSPORT COSTS, TRANSPORT FACILITATION, TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE, TRANSPORT MODES, TRANSPORT OPERATIONS, TRANSPORT SYSTEM, TRANSPORTATION, TRANSPORTATION COSTS, TRANSPORTATION SERVICES, TRAVEL TIME, TRIP, TRUCKS, TUNNELS, URBAN ROADS, URBAN SERVICES, URBAN TRANSPORT, VALUATION, WHOLESALE TRADE, WORLD MARKETS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/07/16490839/shifting-comparative-advantages-tajikistan-implications-growth-strategy
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/11941
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