"PROSPERITY, SECURITY
AND EVER GROWING WELFARE
OF ALL CITIZENS OF KAZAKHSTAN"
WE ARE IN
FOR A NEW CENTURY,
NEW TIMES ARE COMING...
Virgil
EACH EPOCH SETS ITS OWN GOALS
Heine
NOTHING IS MORE
REMOTE AS YESTERDAY,
NOTHING IS MORE CLOSE THAN TOMORROW
Kazakh folk proverb
INTRODUCTION
Dear fellow-citizens,
I appeal to
you, the people of Kazakhstan, to share my vision of the future of our society
and the mission of our state. I want to present to you a strategy which I am
sure will help us in gaining this future and accomplishing our mission. I wish
to share my considerations as to the future which looms far ahead in the next
century, in the new millennium, in the pretty remote perspective.
Time has come to say once and for all what future we want to build for us and
for our children. What do we need it for? I believe, with each of us there has
ripened a profound awareness of the fact that one can no longer live for the day
only, merely in an incessant turmoil of settling present day tasks.
We must have a clear-cut knowledge and understanding of what we mean to
construct, what should be the trajectory, the highway of our development which
is to ensure our gaming the objetives we've set. Through correct identification
of our priorities, in choosing relevant strategies, by manifesting our firm will
and persistence in following this path, we shall dispense with unnecessary
off-tracking, with waste of energy, time and resources. When provided with
well-considered strategy and firmness of purpose in accomplishing our goals, we
shall be able to overcome any serious obstacles blocking our way.
Hard conditions we have to tackle with today must not deprive us of hope and
enthusiasm. Clear awareness of our prospects, honest presentation of eventual
difficulties and privations empeding our way will help in mobilizing the efforts
of all the citizens of our society for settling this task common to all. We must
well remember that apart from the goals set for the period of today, our
generation bears tremendous responsibility to future generations, it is in fact
responsibility of parents and grandparents to their children and grandchildren.
What will our children and grandchildren be - the way we want to see them in
that remote future - when they are our age? Will they be well-off, well-fed,
healthy and well-educated? Will they live in a prosperous and democratic
society? Will they live in peace? Will they feel safe, safe as to themselves and
to their children? Will they be able to feel safe walking along the streets,
feel safe for their property? Indeed, will they succeed to a strong state and to
friendly relations with their neighbours, whether remote or close? It is today
that we must answer these seemingly simple but pretty important questions. Once
some man of wisdom remarked that if one doesn't know his way, he may reach the
goal following any path. Having this in mind we must always have a clear-cut
vision of the model of the future presented both generally and as specific
short-term objectives. What's the wherefore of it? Taking some actions we shall
permanently stick to a certain standard to verify the way we follow, whether we
make progress or move off track, whether we outstrip the developments or lag
behind them.
When mentally contrasting every passing day with the day to come, with the
process being repeated time and again, one comes to somewhat different
perception of the scope and import of problems set ahead. When we feel ourselves
a part of the world and of the planet at large, we can't help feeling the
nagging breath of the new epoch and new times drawing ever near. Kazakhstan, as
a new state, emerged in the world in the epoch which saw the end of many a
powerful empire: Ottoman one. Austrian-and-Hungarian one and, only recently, the
Soviet Union. Today we are building a new state, a new market economy and a new
democracy, and this - at the very time when many other independent states have
already trodden that path similar enough. Today we live in an epoch of ever
growing globalization and ever close interrelationships when powerful outer
forces would inevitably play a pretty substantial role in determining our
future. If we are serious and clever enough in our intentions, if we are capable
of honest analysis of both external and internal factors of our development,
then we do have a chance of choosing the right way: to identify priorities and
elaborate the relevant strategy on the basis of our general consolidation, on
the basis of our history and unique circumstances.
Sure enough, we may and ought to study the experience of other countries and
take advantage of auspicious tendencies in the world community. Yet only we,
none other than we, are capable of coping with this enormous work which is
indispensable for the implementation of our dream of and hope for building the
Kazakhstan, which our children and grandchildren will be proud of when they are
our age. Why is it particularly today that we set this task? It is because we
were not ready for this yesterday, we were short of both experience and
knowledge, we could hardly afford it because of unfavourable circumstances and
all sorts of instabilities. And the task itself was quite different. The essence
of the preceding period consisted in eventual survival of an independent state
in stormy conditions of the budding transition period. Many prognosticated that
we shall be a sheer failure, that we shall not cope with unprecedented
tremendous tasks of building a state, that our social and economic
transformations will collapse altogether. Yet, even today, it is quite clear
that we have withstood the first trial with flying colours. Here we are - alive
and kicking. Notwithstanding all the obstacles we safely emerged from the abyss
of chaos and disorder. At present we pass over to the stage of stabilization.
The fact that we have successfully settled our most urgent and paramount
problems gives us a chance of retrospective analysis, of trustworthy evaluation
of the way we've passed. From now on we can afford facing the future,
contemplating perspective development, making elaborate plans. An experience in
achieving our statehood, in implementing political and economic reforms,
knowledge about the world and the laws that govern it, tolerance and
understanding of the Kazakhstanis - all these gains won in the most arduous
conditions make us ever stronger and more confident. Frankly speaking, we cannot
afford putting off solution of this task for tomorrow, we can't afford waiting
for the completion of our reforms. In other words it was too early yesterday but
it might be too late tomorrow. A well-considered strategic plan summons one's
efforts, it makes one more disciplined, enhances one's activity.
Such plan concentrates the attention of the state on a pretty narrow range of
priorities, thus urging the Government to daily settle these tasks and
strategies. Finally, it enhances daily and annual activities which -in the long
run--would bring us to scoring our goals. Yet it is far from enough. Just as
essential is to put these guidelines into practice, to realize the plans we
contemplate. That's why it is utterly indispensable to set up a system in which
each and every ministry and department would organize its work in such a way
that each day, month and year could bring us ever nearer to the objectives we've
set. Every day public servants must have the awareness of the strategic goals
and priorities, and settle them without wasting their time in meddling with
minor, daily chores. The laws and decisions we adopt must be correlated with our
strategy whereas the work proper-be concentrated and purposeful. From the next
year onwards our annual plans must meet our long-term priorities. More than
that: a system of monitoring must answer the question - how far we have advanced
in gaining the objectives we've set. Which is why we need a system of strategic
planning, strategic control, accountability and responsibility. The main
prerequisite for our sustainable, steady progress is consolidation of our
society in achieving the goals we've set, unity of all the walks and groups of
population as to the strategy aimed at settling common problems. It will become
well feasible if we duly take into consideration needs of the society in general
and various groups of the population in particular, if we identify relevant
priorities and ensure realization thereof.
This should be done in an atmosphere of cooperation between the state,
particular groups of the population and the private sector. This Message has
been elaborated within the framework of my Constitutional duty to address
annually to the people of Kazakhstan concerning basic trends in domestic and
foreign policy. Yet, as I've mentioned above, our state and the society at large
need a more global vision and a strategy to be guided by as a coordinate system
which would enable us to draw up our annual plans of actions. That is why these
issues are given particular consideration in the Message. Subsequent annual
Messages of the President to the people of Kazakhstan devoted to major trends in
the domestic and foreign policy will contain evaluation of implementation of the
long-term strategy. Along with this they will identify specific objectives for
the year to come.
1. WHAT ARE OUR WHEREABOUTS FOR TODAY?
THERE OCCURS A
MOMENT OF HIGH TIDE IN A MAN'S LIFE
WHICH BRINGS LUCK IF ONE AVAILS OF IT.
BUT IF ONE MISSES IT, HE WILL HAPPEN TO FOLLOW
A WAY OF SHALLOW WATERS AND DISASTER.
Shakespeare
BRIGHT OPPORTUNITIES COME TO ALL BUT
ALL TOO MANY DON'T EVEN SUSPECT THAT HAVE ENCOUNTERED THEM.
Dunning
All along the latest six years we were involved in pursuing two major strategic
goals.
First, Kazakhstan became a sovereign independent state. Today many take the fact
for granted but the Kazakhstanis must have remembered that it was a fairly rare
occurrence in our history.
Second, we have embarked on the way of implementing broad-scale social,
political and economic transformations. The said goals are not yet scored though
some areas clearly manifest tangible results.
Now, it is important to give this situation a profound consideration, to analyze
our development from the point of view of world expertise and - consequently -
to compare the progress of our transformations and that of forming our new
institutions with the best world experience. Just as essential for us is to
analyze our advantages and flaws.
Such work would serve an indispensable prelude to elaborating our own strategy.
I'd like to start from analyzing our domestic advantages and external
opportunities which Kazakhstan enjoys as well as our weakest points and troubles
we anticipate from without. As a matter of fact, our country may be proud of
eight advantages.
First, we've laid the foundation of our independent sovereign state. We have
already set up all the requisite state institutions and each passing month
brings ever greater experience and knowledge. Yet development of our state is
far from completion.
Second, we have parted with our former political and economic system for good
and all. I mean the system that for seventy years dominated our lives. Today we
have an altogether new state, and an utterly different political and economic
system is at work now.
Third, under the influence of transformations unfolding in our society we all,
though wholly unawares, have changed dramatically, while getting used to a
qualitatively different system of values and to an altogether new standard of
human relations. In short, we have become free. State-and-collective world
outlook was replaced by a private-and-individual one and the event reversed each
and every aspect of our life.
Sure enough, the discarded system offered more secure minimum social benefits
and was a success in a number of fields. However, we must remember that this
system fell apart because it proved to be noncompetitive from the economic point
of view. It obviously failed on the social level too because living standards of
the most people lagged behind those abroad. Likewise it meant frustration with
reference to a man as a personality who was denied basic freedoms. With time our
own experience is sure to prove that free market economy and democratically
elected government are capable of bringing prosperity and freedom to Kazakhstan.
During the transition period our citizens have suffered much and sacrificed just
as much. Yet, we do all this not only for our own benefit but for the benefit of
our children and grandchildren, first and foremost.
Fourth, one of our basic assets is undoubtedly quality of our population, that
is of our human resources. By right, we may be proud of a highly educated
population with a pretty high standard of scientific and creative potential. Few
countries can boast of it and many strive to achieve such standard as one of
their strategic goals. This indeed is a tremendous achievement of our people...
and of the former system for that matter. We must do our utmost to further
develop this invaluable asset of ours and grant it ever new, ever civilized
opportunities of development.
Fifth, our natural resources are an enormous wealth. Yet, paradoxical as it is,
the world experience testifies to the fact that many a country possessing
substantial natural resources failed to dispose of them in the best possible way
and - consequently - to this day they rate as poor. East-Asian countries marked
with most effective and dynamic development happened to be the countries which
could hardly boast of natural resources. All this is but to emphasize the fact
that actually paramount factors are people themselves, their willpower, energy,
persistence and knowledge. In fact, it is the very "key of gold" that would
enable us open the door to welfare and independence.
However, a negative world experience is also a good teacher. It shows quite
unequivocally that absence of strategies or that of the ability of realization
thereof outweighs the notorious potential of natural resources. Hence-the major
conclusion we have to make-we have to work out a well-considered strategy and to
persistently put it into practice in defiance of all the difficulties. The
wealth of the entrails of the earth is the property of all subsequent
generations. However the circumstance must not lull us to relaxation. On the
contrary, all of us, the Government included, must live and work as though we
never possessed it.
Sixth, a truly omnipotent factor represented by our vast land areas, our arable
lands. We have many parameters in common with Canada and Australia save for one
though capital index-the level of their effectiveness, productivity and
exporting potential. Here again, the main, the essential is a realistic and
effective strategy, people and financial assets.
The seventh advantage consists in our political stability and in unity of our
society. We are by right proud of the fact that we managed to escape direct
confrontation within the society and stabilize the situation. Unfortunately many
a developed and post-Communist country failed to gain the same.
However, so far there is a long way to go to gain the overall stability, the
more so-consolidation and unity, and we have to do much for us to feel a single
family, to know our objectives and to gain coordination in advancing thereto.
Yet, the aim is not equality in poverty and misery, in constructing a new system
of egalitarianism.
Naturally, it is out of the question that some ethnic or religious groups be
granted any priorities against the other ones. Our strategic objective is a
unity of multiform groups of the population, reasonable combination of personal
and social fundamentals which add substantially to consensus and hierarchic
traditions of our society. A society in which a dramatically huge gap separates
a small group of the rich from masses of poor people will never survive and is
doomed to misery. Just as equally there is no future for the country in which
various ethnic and religious groups exercise different rights, in which some
groups are granted all sorts of benefits and opportunities whereas the others
are denied same, where political parties and movements tear the society apart,
where there exists enormous unbalance between freedom and responsibilities of
mass media, between liberalism and democracy and the might of the state. We have
already suffered from one extreme, God beware us of running to another. I think
that awareness of these sensible things has already fixed up in social
consciousness.
Eight, I'd like to put particular emphasis on tolerance and patience of the
Kazakhstanis, on their cordiality and affability. It is witnessed by all
foreigners. I am only too grateful to my country-men for their enduring all the
hardships and privations of the transition period with such understanding and
patience and I deem these qualities to be a serious pledge of our success, of
the consolidation of the society, of attracting foreign investments and
involvement of the world community in settling our problems.
Along with all these advantages, we can enjoy quite a number of opportunities of
purely external nature. The opportunities of that sort are determined, first and
foremost, by the geographical, geopolitical and economic position of the
country. It is worth while to distinguish three basic opportunities for
Kazakhstan. The first opportunity stems from our geographical position on the
very crossroads in the Eurasian region.
The process of globalization of international economic and political processes
makes this factor a paramount one. Being a member of the single family of Turkic
peoples, our forefathers used this important strategic factor to advantage: all
along the legendary Silk Route they set up a broad channel of trade between
European and Asian countries.
Today we initiate its restoration in cooperation with other countries pertaining
to our region and substantiated by support extended by the world community. It
goes without saying, that in future the system of trade, financial flows and
migration of people between Europe and Asia would be on the rise. Actually it is
the very reason, apart from politically stabilizing factors, which prompted me
to advance and to further develop the idea of Eurasianism, which has, I am sure,
a bright strategic future. Single-handed, Kazakhstan, as any other contiguous
country, is unable to realize its profitable transit potential. It must be done
jointly, in close and mutually advantageous cooperation.
Situated on such cross-roads we do afford a tremendous potential of major
marketing areas for our produce all along the perimeter of our borders.
Neighbouring markets embracing about 2,000,000,000 people are capable of
absorbing- with a rare exception-any Kazakhstani product, provided, naturally,
that it is competible and there is a network of related transport routes. These
neighbours, more particularly Russia, China, a group of Islamic and Central
Asian states, countries of the Near and Middle East, historically represent
important world centres.
Establishing peace and good-neighbourly relations of confidence on the whole of
the Eurasian continent is an indispensable prerequisite for successful
development. Countries involved in wars, rivalry, competition and confrontation
would impermissibly waste their resources, time and energy thus being doomed to
stagnation and lagging behind.
Second, support lent on the part of foreign states and donor agencies to
substantiate laborious processes of state construction and implementation of
reforms offers us additional opportunities. When compared, quite a number of
countries are less fortunate than ours. This factor, more particularly, at the
initial stage of the transition period is very important for us because we do
need financial assets and knowledge from without.
Third, the process of globalization and scientific and technical progress,
especially in the development of new informational and telecommunication
technologies, offers unique opportunities for such vast and thinly populated
country as ours. Yet nothing guarantees that we shall keep abreast with these
processes rather than lag behind them.
Consequently, it is utterly indispensable to understand these technologies, to
succeed in complete integration thereof in our society and to support scientific
and technological personnel. When speaking about negative features of our
present-day reality, one should make note of the fact that many of our weak
points are of temporary and transitory nature, rather they result from Soviet
legacy and hardships of the arduous transition period.
First, our mentality is shaped up by several generations of people who were
brought up in the spirit of Communist principles. Some people enthusiastically
took advantage of recent changes, but quite many didn't. People are influenced
by subjective and objective factors, they are slow to adapting themselves to
eventual changes. As of old, they are waiting for assistance to be rendered on
the part of the state in solving their problems.
Such philosophy and outlook prevent them from coping with the new difficulties,
they deprive them of energy and wish to undertake actions on their own. It is
but an open secret that many officials do not understand as yet that today the
role of the state doesn't consist in taking decisions which should be taken by
people themselves. On the contrary, it must consist primarily in shaping up
conditions in which free citizens and the private sector will be able to take
effective measures in support of their families and themselves.
We must be patient in our transforming mass consciousness. In this we must seek
support in the younger generation which is more flexible in adapting to the new
system of values and has a fresh vision of the future. In fact the state is
unable to reverse established human mentality overnight. However, the state is
capable of accelerating the process of changes through elucidation of objective
trends, through bringing home essential information and-most importantly-by way
of implementing social and economic policie aimed at self-sufficiency. It would
take decades until a new world outlook comes into existence with us.
Second. Objectively, realization of economic reforms, disintegration of the USSR
and integration of Kazakhstani economy in the system of world economic relations
couldn't help resulting in substantial downfall in volumes of production and-
consequently-in deterioration of overall social situation. A good portion of
technologically outdated and power-consuming industries, poorly trained, hardly
coping with new conditions economic management-such are basic factors that
brought about non-competitiveness, shut-down of numerous enterprises, losses in
traditional marketing areas, nonpayments and production downfalls. As
consequence within the last eight years our country suffered from a more than
two-fold decline in the level of production while budget receipts suffered ever
greater reduction. If we remember that the said downfall coincided in time with
high rates of economic growth in many developing countries, then the implication
is that in relative terms our economy suffers from a more than three-fold
lagging behind. It is only natural that such figures make us act as effectively
and energetically as ever.
Third. As a result of the economic downfall we witness obvious deterioration in
incomes and in living standards of most our citizens. Elimination of
egalitarianism and creation of an actively functioning labour market resulted in
an ever growing gap between the rich and the poor. Unfortunately, the section of
the middle class-major support of the state and basic stabilization factor of
the society-is quite insignificant.
Fourth. National savings and accumulation of capital which must act as a motive
force in the economy proceed rather slowly. Consequently, short of internal
capital and savings, Kazakhstan became ever more dependent on the foreign
capital, both on the private one and on the international financial agencies.
Further rehabilitation of the economy depends on a massive influx of investments
which is possible only on condition of eventual improvement in the investment
climate.
Fifth, painful transition from the command-and-administrative economy to the
market one has given birth to most acute problems of poverty and unemployment
hitherto unknown to us on such a wide range. They pave the way for crime and
narcomania, they give rise to social depression and build up a potential for
social instability. Quite tangible unemployment combined with delayed payments
of pensions and wages is generated mostly by economic problems, shortage of
financial capital and strategies inefficient in their solutions. Lack of
effective programmes for reforming agrarian and social sectors (health care,
education, science, etc.) and reduction of budget allocations in crucial
conditions of the transition period has brought about deterioration and
stagnation in these vital areas of our society. All these processes naturally
generate the sixth weak point of ours-demographic depopulation which is fairly
dangerous in any of its manifestations.
For the first ever time, over the last 50 post-war years, starting from 1992, we
witness a decrease in our population. Just as negative is the seventh aspect-a
poorly prepared and inefficiently organized state. Yet, we can't regard it as a
purely Kazakhstani feature. In fact, all post-colonial, developing and
post-Communist countries had to counter that phenomenon. Today solution of many
a problem depends on this factor and it would take quite a time to cope with it.
So far, we are miserably short of people capable of settling strategic problems,
of doing it honestly, with a sense of patriotism and on a high professional
level.
Long-standing habits of petty interference with all the affairs, altogether
unnecessary and harmful halo of secrecy prompting concealment of information
from the society and even from each other, bureaucracy and localistic
tendencies, nepotism and clannishness, collective irresponsibility, dullness and
inertia, inadequate multi-stage hierarchies, corruption - this is but a far from
complete "bunch of virtues" of our bureaucracy brought up by the former regime
and coming to the fore in the last years to acquire overt, undisguised forms.
Another aspect of the problem is surely a painfully low quality of our corps of
enterprise managers. Much has been done though to address the situation, and
every now and then we had to resort to a sort of an administrative surgery.
But one thing is obvious - this problem is one of the first priorities. As the
Head of State I must say the following: we thought it reasonable to spare a
certain time for our officials to adapt to the situation and we did it. By now
this term has already expired and we cannot afford being kind-hearted at the
expense of other people, endangering the destiny of the country. Besides it does
affect development of the country. We have to most seriously undermine this
potential for reproduction of pernicious habits and step up capital reforms
among the government staff and that of civil servants.
Finally, we must pay most serious attention to the incompleteness and
instability of our legislation. It is not enough to build a foundation-it must
be substantiated with floors, walls, roof and all. This is a fairly important
issue whose solution determines improvement of the investment climate, reduction
of poverty, elimination of crime and development of our social sphere. I
enumerated these negative factors along with the positive ones in order to
outline the tasks we'll have to tackle when implementing our national strategy.
In identifying advantages and opportunities as well as weak points and potential
troubles threatening our country, one has to bear in mind that they are dynamic
in time and dialectically interrelated. An opportunity may turn into a trouble
and vice versa. What is an advantage today might transform itself into a flaw
and vice versa. Just how effectively we succeed in availing of the opportunities
and in neutralizing troubles, in raising our assets and lowering our
liabilities-all these depend on ourselves, on this specific way in which we set
our goals and priorities, on timeliness and flexibility in implementation
thereof.
2. KAZAKHSTAN'S MISSION
GIVE SOME
THOUGHT TO WHAT LIES AHEAD
AND CHOOSING A GOOD AIM PURSUE IT TO THE END
Firdusi
WHEN A SHIP HAS NO KNOWLEDGE
WHAT PORT IT IS BOUND FOR, NO WIND WILL BE FAIR
Seneca
Today we are on
the threshold of great opportunities. Many of you know that some of the poorest
countries in Asia extricated themselves of poverty within some thirty years to
turn into prosperous industrial states. Korea, Taiwan and Singapore were
pioneers, so say, followed by Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand. Our great
neighbour, China, demonstrates amazing rates of growth. Likewise manifesting
their power and abilities are India and Brazil. We are full of hope and
confidence that friendly Russia too would soon acquire a new image of a great
country.
Forty years ago when Singapore gained its independence, it was one of the
poorest countries in the world with an annual per capita income less than $200.
Today the per capita income of Singaporeans exceeds $20,000. Malaysia, a country
similar to ours with respect to the population, ethnic composition and many
other parameters, gained a 10-fold rise in living standards of its citizens
within less than twenty years. Such staggering achievements made these countries
world famous assigning them the name of Asian Tigers. Are there any obstacles
which might prevent Kazakhstan availing of fine opportunities from scoring the
same success? None whatsoever.
'I, for my part, am sure that by the year of 2030 Kazakhstan would have become a
Central-Asian Snow Leopard and would serve a fine example to be followed by
other developing countries. Tigers are not found in Kazakhstan while the Show
Leopard inhabiting our mountains is but a stranger in the world community.
Though a relation to the Tiger in the animal kingdom, Snow Leopard bears some
substantial distinctions there from. It will be virtually a Kazakhstani Snow
Leopard with inherent elitarianism, sense of independence, intelligence, courage
and nobleness, bravery and cunning. It will never be the first to attack anyone,
ever prone to avoiding direct clashes.
However, any time when his freedom, habitation or descendants come to be
threatened, the animal would defend them with all its might. The animal must be
wiry and springy, it must not suffer from obesity and laziness for otherwise it
would hardly survive in severe environment. He will be persistent and stubborn
in mastering ever new peaks, in its indefatigable search for secret but sure
paths that lead to the goal. He will neither be frightened by severe cold of
threats nor made soft in intolerable heat of opportunities. He will exercise
fine wisdom in bringing up its descendants: he would protect them against
unwelcome visitor, he would share most tasty morsels with them attending to
their health, education and world outlook thus preparing them for an early life
of their own in conditions of ruthless competition in any environment. He would
keep vigilant watch so that the water he drinks be pure and the environment he
inhabits and the air he breathes be clear and healthy.
Kazakhstani Snow Leopard would also possess western elegance multiplied by the
advanced level of development, oriental wisdom and endurance. He will be all at
one in his strivings, victories and failures with his brothers brought up by a
single mother, i. e. by Uzbek, Kyrgyz and other Central Asian Snow Leopards. He
will be ever proud of their progress and achievements. But such Kazakhstan of
2030 will not shape up all by itself. We shall build it proceeding from our
intentions and our will to succeed. If we don't avail of this opportunity, if we
waste days and weeks without making plans for the future, without thinking of
the future nor taking specific actions today, then we shall blame none but
ourselves if we are a failure.
Nothing comes easily and at once. Objectively inherent to a successful and
stable development are certain stages which defy over skipping at one stroke. We
shall be unable to build a powerful state and its armed forces, to solve
demographic, ecological and social problems, to raise the living standards of
each and every person if Kazakhstan fails in shaping up a healthy, prosperous
economy. In its turn, achieving high rates of economic growth demands political
stability, energetic and purposeful reforms. This would require a highly
professional, intelligent, courageous and patriotically minded Government
capable of pursuing the right policy, of overcoming resistance offered by the
old and the discarded, of inspiring the doubtful.
Success of these enormous efforts depends on the support extended by the
Kazakhstani citizens. Yet it would be extended when people witness real
improvement and justice. That's why ever growing well-being of people must be
the basis of our everyday activities whereas our combating corruption must be
resolute and uncompromising. To build such future and not to go astray, we must
have a clear vision of what we actually want. That's why when speaking about a
long-term period, I, as the Head of State suggest the following as the mission
of our country: to build an independent, prosperous and politically stable
Kazakhstan with its inherent national unity, social justice and economic
well-being of the entire population.
Prosperity, security and raising the living standards of all the Kazakhstanis-such
are key words to characterize Kazakhstan we all want to build. In process of our
advancement into the XXI century they must remain our guides. What is Kazakhstan
of 2030 the way I visualize it? Our young state would grow up and reach its
manhood and with it our children and grandchildren would also become grown up
people.
They would be responsible and enthusiastic representatives of their generation,
would be in the prime of their life. They would be well-educated and healthy.
They would be prepared to work in conditions of modern market economy sticking
though to the traditions of their forefathers. They would have an equally good
command of the Kazakh, Russian and English languages. They would be patriots of
their peaceful, prosperous, rapidly growing country well-known and respected all
over world. Our children would become highly skilled workers and farmers,
engineers, bankers, men-of-arts, owners of shops, teachers and doctors, owners
of plants and factories, stock brokers and sportsmen. They would produce oil,
gas, electric power, manufacture various food items and supply all these to the
world economy. Some of the Kazakhstanis would become producers of high-tech
commodities and such other items of produce, all - in demand on the world market
owing to low price and excellent quality.
Certain representatives of our younger generation would become civil servants.
Working in conditions of a new epoch they would be well-paid, professionally
trained experts who would rate interests of Kazakhstan and the Kazakhstanis
superior to their own ones. Citizens living in the year of 2030 would be sure
that the state would protect their rights and uphold their interests. More than
that: they would know that the state would take care of the few who - by virtue
of some unfavourable circumstances-failed to win a proper place in the sun and
had to appeal to the state for social aid. Kazakhstan of 2030 must be a clean
and green country with clear air and pure waters. Industrial waste and radiation
would no longer enter its homes and gardens. Our children and children of our
children would live a full value life in healthy conditions. In the year of 2030
our descendants would live in a country which would no longer stay in the
background of world developments. The Kazakhstan of theirs, being the centre of
Eurasia, would play the part of a connecting link between the three rapidly
growing regions - China, Russia and the Moslem world.
It would be inhabited by representatives of numerous nationalities sure of equal
opportunities enjoyed by all the nations but deeming themselves to be citizens
of Kazakhstan, first and foremost. I am afraid though that Kazakhstan of 2030
would not as yet be an epitome of perfection. It would not be the richest, the
most educated, the most advanced country in the world but, nevertheless, it
would be a country that has covered a long way with flying colours and is now
entering the future with firm confident steps.
Sure enough all this is but a vision of the future, a model thereof, an ideal
objective and a dream. Obviously many of you would just give a bitter chuckle,
they would think it a sheer Utopia comparing this ideal picture with the present
day reality when people are short of basic things. No, it is not so. My vision
is quite attainable and the world experience supports feasibility of such plans.
Yes, today many of us have it very hard. But when was it easy? Was it easy with
our fathers and grandfathers all along this century, say, in the years of the
Civil war, at times of famine and starvation, at those of mass repressions, in
the years of the Great Patriotic war and in conditions of the post-war
devastation? I don't think people had it easy in either the last or prelast
century.
Naturally now it is but a mere history. Yet even today each year our planet as a
witness to 800,000,000 of those who starve or can't get enough to eat, many
hundreds of millions of people have no roof over their heads. Millions perish in
murderous wars. Why then some of us sigh and moan wasting their precious energy
to empty battles and grumbling? I don't believe that we have such a short memory
not to remember that whatever the trials we always came out victorious owing to
our consolidation, enthusiasm and faith in the future. We worked several days on
end, starved ourselves giving all to children and were dead sure that they will
have a better lot. What prevents us from doing it today and tomorrow? Why are we
so despondent and losing heart?! And this - at the time when such bright vistas
open to the country and to each of us.
Bright vistas and vast opportunities whose main medium is freedom- the very
thing we couldn't afford before. All depends on ourselves only, on our faith.
And enthusiasm. Cohesion and labour. "Don't ask what country can do for you,
you'd better ask what you can do for the country". These words uttered by John
Kennedy in his appeal to the American people sound today as topical as ever.
3. LONG-TERM PRIORITIES AND STRATEGIES OF THEIR IMPLEMENTATION
THE MAIN THING
IN THE WORLD OF OURS IS NOT
WHERE WE STAND BUT RATHER
IN WHAT DIRECTION WE ADVANCE
Holmes
For our country
to achieve the prospects I mentioned above we have to implement the following
long-term priorities:
1. NATIONAL SECURITY: Ensure development of Kazakhstan as an independent
sovereign state preserving its complete territorial integrity.
2. DOMESTIC POLITICAL STABILITY AND CONSOLIDATION OF THE SOCIETY: Safeguard and
strengthen domestic political stability and national unity. It would enable
Kazakhstan put the national strategy into practice in the course of the current
and the upcoming decade.
3. ECONOMIC GROWTH BASED ON AN OPEN MARKET ECONOMY WITH HIGH LEVEL OF FOREIGN
INVESTMENTS AND INTERNAL SAVINGS. Gain realistic, stable and steadily growing
rates of economic growth.
4. HEALTH, EDUCATION AND WELL-BEING OF KA2AKHSTANI CITIZENS: Consistently
improve standards of life, health, education and opportunities of the
Kazakhstanis. Improve natural environment in the country.
5. POWER RESOURCES: Effectively utilize power resources of Kazakhstan through
rapid increase in extracting and exporting oil and gas with the aim of gaining
revenues which would enhance stable economic growth and improvement of living
standards of the people.
6. INFRASTRUCTURE, MORE PARTICULARLY TRANSPORT AND COMMUNICATION: Develop these
key sectors in such a way that they add to strengthening of national security,
political stability and economic growth.
7. PROFESSIONAL STATE: Establish an effective and up-to-date corps of civil
servants and state-owned formations of Kazakhstan loyal to the cause they serve
to and capable of acting as representatives of the people in achieving our
priorities. For each of' these long-term priorities we must elaborate and
consistently implement a special strategy concentrating our efforts on specific
actions outlined in one-year, three-year and, finally, five-year plans. These
long-term priorities must serve the purpose of focusing the efforts exerted by
both the state and our citizens, they must make the basis of criteria in forming
the budget of the country and personnel policy.
LONG-TERM
PRIORITY 1:
NATIONAL SECURITY
EXTRA CAUTION
PREVENTS EXTRA DISASTER
Popular wisdom
The entire historic experience in developing human civilization testifies to the
fact that the first and foremost of all the prerequisite conditions which
determines consistent and sustainable growth of the state is security of its
nation and preservation of statehood.
It is not enough to gain freedom and independence, one should uphold and
strengthen them and pass over to our descendants. Future generations would
forgive us all those hardships, privations and problems that fell to our lot and
the fact that we failed in overcoming them.
But we shall vainly await forgiveness if we lose our statehood, if we waive
strategic fundamentals of sovereignty, our lands and resources. It is only
natural that this logic in the vision of the perspective must be permanent in
time whatever the internal and external circumstances as for the strategic
course of Kazakhstan policy for a long-term period. In fact it is the topmost
strategic priority in Kazakhstan's development up to 2030.
Priority status of security is obvious: if the country fails to survive, to
preserve its security, we shall hardly be able to speak of the plans of
sustained development. A retrospective look at the conception and subsequent
development of the state of our forefathers graphically substantiates the fact
that they waged a historically difficult and tough struggle for the benefit of
their descendants and for the preservation of their statehood. And the necessity
of incessant search for the solution of this strategic goal urges us to
undertake a well-considered and adequate evaluation of the present day situation
in the parity of geostrategic forces and trends in the changes thereof.
We understand only too well that all possible potential troubles threatening
national security of Kazakhstan at present and in the nearest future do not
imply and will never imply a direct military invasion or a threat to the
territorial integrity of the state. It is perfectly clear that neither Russia,
nor China, nor the West, nor any Moslem country has any impelling motive to
attack us. And this relatively predictable state of calm and stability must be
made use of to effectively strengthen economic potential of Kazakhstan which
would serve the basis for our building a reliable system of national security.
To ensure our independence and territorial integrity, we .must be a strong state
and maintain friendly relations with our neighbors, which is why we shall
develop and consolidate relations of confidence and equality with our closest
and historically equal neighbor - Russia. Likewise we shall develop just as
confident and good-neighborly relations with the PRC on a mutually advantageous
basis. Kazakhstan welcomes the policy pursued by China for it is aimed against
hegemonism and favors friendship with neighboring countries.
Just as actively we shall consolidate our links and integration processes with
Central-Asian states. No less active should be the level of strengthening
relations with the countries of the Near and Middle East.
The second component of our strategy consists in strengthening relations with
major industrial democratic states including the United States of America. By
and by these countries come to the awareness of the fact that emergence of an
independent prosperous Kazakhstan meets their national interests.
Third, in every possible way we shall use the assistance and promotion granted
by such international institutions and forums as the UN, IMF, World Bank, the
Asian, European and Islamic banks of development as it will secure support
extended to Kazakhstan on the part of the world community.
The fourth element of our strategy consists in developing rich natural resources
which may serve a reliable basis for the protection of national sovereignty and
territorial integrity.
Fifth-with all Kazakhstani citizens we must develop a strong sense of patriotism
and love to their country. Long-standing firm links between the people and the
state have become rather lax while the new ones i.e. those between personal and
national interests have not yet established.
Fortunately, there appeared an understanding of commonness of interests of the
people and the state. I have no doubt that such awareness would strengthen as
living standards of people would experience improvement. In its turn it would
enhance perception of such seemingly simple wisdom as, say, this: welfare of
every citizen depends on sovereignty and security of the state he lives in.
Once our collective security is ensured, each and every would gain far more than
when only one's personal interests are met, with the security of the society
balancing on the brink of its being lost altogether. However lucky is a man, all
the same he is defenseless if his country is in danger. It is the
representatives of the domestic capital that must be particularly conscious of
it thus demonstrating superiority of public interests as against private ones.
Yes, we must display to the world at large our unity, will to independence,
civic motivation and patriotism so that any powerful country harbouring evil
intents against us be already in the know that any attempts of using force or
threats to use force would face tough resistance. Without clear-cut citizenship
stand it would be too hard to implement other elements of the strategy whose aim
is securing independence. As regards our defence policy, it must be clear to all
that we are a peace-loving nation and lay no claims to anyone's lands, resources
or wealth. As to lands and resources, we have all these in abundance, and as to
the wealth we shall make it with our own hands.
We, for our part, shall expect adequate attitude to Kazakhstan, the one we
exercise to other countries and shall be ready to react adequately. In our
epoch, as the world abandons military confrontations, rivalry is being
transferred from the military area to those of politics and economy.
We do hope that this trend would become predominant and shall do our utmost to
enhance establishment of peace and good-neighborliness. Yet we must be well
aware that Kazakhstan's consistent integration - in the course of its economic
growth - in the world economy may willy-nilly involve the country in an
unpredictable vortex of various regional conflicts of military, political,
economic and confessional nature. That's why absolute priority in security
belongs to our foreign political activity and to the formation of a close
network of Kazakhstan's mutually-advantageous relations with its neighbors and
leading countries of the world.
Even today, in the end of the XX century, after our learning the lessons of the
World War II and the cold war, we have not yet parted with the threat of the
world being split up into blocks and alliances. However such way is unacceptable
to Kazakhstan which ensues from our five-element strategy.
Ethnic composition of our country is too motley, our interests are too important
and the prospects-too bright for us to afford dependence on the relations with
some certain country or reliance thereon. Kazakhstani people and Kazakhstani
government must exert every effort to shaping up an economic field tolerable and
liberal for major transnational capital, they must encourage creation of "warm
climate" for long-term investments in the country.
We must become extremely tough opponents of any military settlement in
conflicts, we must advocate the principle of ..better a bad peace than a good
quarrel". The best weapon of ours to ensure protection of national interests and
parity of forces - for the nearest and remote perspective - must be conducting a
policy of integration, primarily-consolidation of the Central-Asian Union among
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan, non-interference in affairs of other
states, predominance of acts of consensus rather than confrontation.
Though we sincerely hope that the world has become conscious of utter
uselessness of armed conflicts, let's not forget that any reasonable state
relies not only on promises of other governments but also on the might of its
own country. That's why there must be no doubt that we shall attach high
priority to the construction and modernization of our Armed Forces, to improving
the level of their occupational training, their combat readiness and equipping
thereof with modern armaments. In order to build an up-to-date effective army,
air force and naval forces of the Republic of Kazakhstan we have to strengthen
their equipment and personnel and intensify the latter's training. It would
continuously claim economical and effective spending of budgetary funds which we
allocate and shall go on allocating for our Armed Forces.
Besides, our country would make use of the military assistance and would
co-operate with its neighbors in sharing the burden of regional defence. As
regards issues of security and integrity we must always be on the alert. Our
affability and hospitality which we display and shall display should not be
taken for open-heartedness and obedience. Rated among leading priorities of
national security must be a forceful demographic and migration policy. If our
government bodies treat this issue indifferently, then on the threshold of the
XXI century we shall follow Russia into the situation of a "demographic cross"
when the size of the population would go down but this time - not only because
of external migration processes but also in a natural way. This trend has to be
stopped immediately.
LONG-TERM
PRIORITY 2:
DOMESTIC POLITICAL STABILITY
AND CONSOLIDATION OF SOCIETY
NOTHING WOULD
COME OF THE AFFAIR WITHOUT UNITY
Tole-bi
Peace
maintained with neghbours represents an issue of paramount importance but it
would not be settled if the country is torn apart by internal discord. If
various groups, irrespective of the thing which unites them, be it political
ideology or religious, ethnic or class interests, are in a state of
confrontation, it would result in a dangerous situation when people would be
distracted from the goal of achieving general welfare, from realization of the
national interests. Here it doesn't go about a state of direct confrontation or
war.
Northern Ireland, former Yugoslavia, Peru, Afghanistan, Cambodia and Rwanda -
these and other countries came to be a proof of the fact that not a single
civilization, not a single culture is insured against fatal consequences of
dissociation.
Our mission consists in destroying the old and preventing the appearance of the
new barriers which create obstacles on the way to unity regardless of what these
barriers are based on-be it habits, affections or particular interests,
prejudiced attitude, religion, age community or such other factors.
Through inhancing all possible forms of a dialogue as well as by consolidating
mutual links and relations among people, gradually, step by step, we shall
deepen our national solidarity and build our national potential. Our strategy
for gaining this priority constituting the society includes the following
components:
- guarantee developing our own uniform civic motivation based on equality of
opportunities for all the citizens of our country;
- ensure eventual elimination of causes for ethnic differences and mind that all
ethnic groups have equal rights;
- narrow the gap between the wealthy and the poor in our society and pay
particular attention to the problems of the country-side;
- steadfastly settle social problems which arise in the course of the transition
and subsequent, periods;
- be more vigorous in building a reach Kazakhstan which would ensure both
political stability and consolidation of the society in a long-term perspective;
- develop all forms of communication among people; - strengthen mutual respect,
tolerance and relations of confidence between various confessions.
Today it is not everybody that can answer a seemingly simple question: "Who are
we - the Kazakhstanis?". Settlement of the problem of self-identification would
take certain time and require a certain level of historic development.
For over 70 years Communist regime failed to form a united Soviet people. Many a
post-colonial multinational country, even after the expiration of several
decades, failed in completing this process.
Several decades would elapse before this feeling takes shape and gets firmly
established with us. Yet even today we can name a number of factors which unite
us. It is our land in its borders, our parents who cultivated it, it is our
common history in which we jointly suffered from bitter failures and shared the
delight of achievements. It is our children who are destined to jointly live and
work on this land. And each of us is at one in the awareness of his duty to his
parents, in his striving to make life of our children ever better tomorrow.
Today it is a real platform for unity and consolidation in the name of these
specific objectives. During the first years of independence and reforms we did
our best to rapidly depart from Communist-collective elements toward private and
individual ones.
Rapid development of individualism based on private ownership not only promoted
replacement of value reference points but also undermined in-depth roots of
inter-ethnic contradictions, it rapidly brought their potential down. Chauvinism
and nationalism however are not yet forgotten for good and all.
Efforts to stir up these sentiments do not arouse the least interest with the
population, rather the reverse: they only irritate people. Suffering rapid
decline is russo-phobia, and regeneration of the Kazakh traditions and the
language is perceived as quite natural. Unlike that of previous years, the
society became more calm and constructive, it came to discuss ethnic problems
with greater mutual understanding and openness.
Our movement to the market which is both cosmopolitan and international brings
jts beneficial fruit - it relaxes inter-ethnic contradictions. However, even a
free market without an adequate role played by the state is not free from flaws.
Like a pendulum, after gathering speed in transition from one system of values
to another, it seems to have missed the point of equilibrium which we need so
badly. Today we witness new poles of confrontation: between the poor and the
wealthy, the rulers and the ruled, the country-side and the city. The society is
fully aware that the above gap exceeds the admissible limits. If Kazakhstan is a
state of a thin layer of the well-off, then, by virtue of too low vitality,
instability both within and without, it will be doomed to vegetative existence
at best. We have already been a state of the poor though not in its pure form.
First and foremost, the state must represent the interests of the middle
class-farmers, "white" and "blue" collars, intelligentsia, petty bourgeoisie.
Incidentally, these were the very groups that were so fiercely attacked by the
Bolsheviks. They knew only too well where to deal the main blow to make a
transition from capitalism to Communism.
They delivered mortal blows against the bulwark of the capitalist state. Just
remember how persistently we were instilled hostile attitude to kulaks, to
"rotten intelligentsia", labor aristocracy and petty shopkeepers. Doesn't this
enmity persist to this day? Domestic political stability and development would
rest on all the three classes: the rich, the middle and the poor. The society
needs all of them, though naturally -'in a normal civilized proportion.
Polarization acquired a graphic manifestation in the relations established
between the city and the countryside. In both cases we witness a global process
of social differentiation with the gap there between growing steadily. Within
the nearest decade the country-side must become a priority area from the point
of view of giving an additional impetus to market transformations, to emphatic
settlement of social problems and development of infrastructure. We are to
expect considerable rejection of a free labor force in the country-side,
significant migration to the city from the country-side and ever developing
processes of urbanization.
The country-side of today has become an epitome of major social problems:
nonpayment of wages and pensions, backwardness, poverty and unemployment, poor
ecology, poor infrastructure, education and health care. Meanwhile the
country-side manifests the highest demographic potential. Badly needed resources
laboriously "collected" at the central level don't reach the country-side
accumulating in the city. We must do away with such practices. In the shortest
possible time we must complete all transformations in the country-side
substantiating them with a vigorous emphatic social policy. Our objectives are
quite clear here. We' must grant peasants and countrymen an opportunity of more
effective control over their lives and besides supply them with means to realize
this opportunity.
Strategically these problems may mostly be settled with the help of economic
growth. A well-off Kazakhstan would offer more opportunities for each and every.
As the great world leader put it "high tide sets all ships afloat". Our strategy
must be elaborated in such a way so that everybody has a chance of obtaining a
portion of the ever growing national wealth.
Meanwhile many people will have it hard in the transition period and the
Government has not enough means to help all of them. In this field our strategy
would consist in directing state-rendered assistance to the most vulnerable
groups of the population and to them only. However today we are more interested
in raising the number of those who are able to cope with the difficulties on
their own.
Speaking of the future for our children and relations among the people the way
we see them, we must have a vision of the model of our future society, of the
civilization which we intend to construct. Today when history discarded the
dispute between a totalitarian and a liberal society, it became obvious that the
models of the liberal society themselves vary greatly and differ from one
country to another.
Basic difference is witnessed between the two types of models, Anglo-Saxon and
Asian ones, which was demonstrated so graphically by Asian Tigers. Having common
features, in certain aspects they manifested a striking dissimilarity. While
individualism was specific of the first model, the second one was characterized
by communitarism. In the first case they actively advocate a limited role of the
state while in the second case this role is overemphasized: the state must be
actively involved in planning and lead the private sector in the society an
large. In the first model emphasis is made on the macroeconomy, in the second
one - on the microeconomy, etc.
As I have already noted, in previous years we actively followed the Anglo-Saxon
variant and the goal we set was rapid changes. Yet, today we face a strategic
alternative - which way to choose.
There is no consensus on this score in the society. We are a small, but
nevertheless, part of Europe and historically we gravitate to the Western
civilization - that's what some say. Others argue that we are predominantly an
Asian country and consequently have to stick to the experience gained by the
"Tigers", Japan and Korea.
The third would say, however, that we are deeply imbued with Russian mentality
and principles of collectivism and our choice must largely coincide with the
perspective model of Russia.
The fourth would object to it maintaining that Moslem population is predominant
with us and we must make our choice in favour of the New-Turkic model.
However paradoxical but all of them are right and wrong at the same time. We are
a Eurasian country having its own specific history and specific future. That's
why our model would bear likeness to neither model. It world imbibe the
achievements of various civilizations. We shell face no alternative on this
score.
We shall act dialectically using both, taking advantage of the best achievements
of all civilizations which proved themselves effective. Our model would govern
our own path of development combining elements of other models, but resting
mostly on our specific conditions, history, new civic motivation and strivings,
taking into consideration specifics of each stage of development.
LONG-TERM PRIORITY 3:
ECONOMIC
GROWTH BASED ON THE DEVELOPED MARKET ECONOMY
WITH A HIGH LEVEL OF FOREIGN INVESTMENTS
THE GREATER
FREEDOM ENJOYS THE ECONOMY,
THE MORE SOCIAL IT IS
Erhard
Our strategy of healthy economic growth rests on a strong market economy, an
active part played by the state and attraction of significant foreign
investments thereto. It includes ten basic principles: Limited interference of
the state with the economy combined with an active role thereof.
Success of economic reforms and braking thereof on certain legs of the route
requires reappraisal of the role of the state. Authorities, both in the centre
and in the periphery, must stop any interference with the economy, cease
launching sowing campaigns, harvesting, etc.
In the economy the state must play a substantial though limited part in creating
legitimate limits of the market in which the private sector is offered a leading
part. We mean finalizing formation of the legal basis that would provide for
registering ownership rights, on shaping up competitive markets and reliable
means of antimonopoly regulation, on maintaining fiscal and monetary policy, on
developing a network of social protection, on providing for the development of
requisite infrastructure, education, health care, and on pursuing effective
environmental policy. If, for the time being, the markets are weak and
underdeveloped, if the market space is encumbered with fragments of the
administrative system, the state ust interfere having in view development of the
market and clearing of the space.
So far as the economy itself is lingering in a transitory stage of unstable
development, regulating role of the state and its interference must be duly
adequate. We must raise effectiveness and quality of state administration to at
least an order, must help to enhance and supplement activities of the private
sector and the national capital to correlate with the new world economic
paradigm.
At the same time the state itself must be a guarantor of free economy. Its
mission is to establish market rules and then safeguard their observance acting
both just and impartial. We are a sensible and vigorous nation. If rules of the
game are clear-cut and their observance is easily provided for on a just and
impartial basis, then I have no doubt that citizens of Kazakhstan will be quick
enough to adapt to the market economy.
However the fact that the state will play a limited role on developed markets in
no way implies that it will be deprived of will and power, thus turning into a
passive observer. Quite the contrary: it must be very strong for the laws to be
honoured, it must be competent and knowledgeable as to the world and domestic
markets for it to be on the alert for permanently changing conditions. It must
minutely plan its activities so as not to be lax and disorganized, it must
identify interests of various groups of the population and development
priorities, it must closely co-operate with the private sector thus
consolidating and cementing the society.
Today however the state exercises too great administrative zeal where it
shouldn't and, on the contrary, it is fairly passive and inert where its role
must be great indeed. However it becomes ever more obvious that such state of
affairs turns into an obstacle in our development. On the other hand, can we
deem ourselves a strong state if we fail to decently (and completely!) collect
taxes and duties, if we fail in paying wages and pensions on time, if laws and
decrees are ignored time and again? That is why law-abiding taxpayers and honest
owners of enterprises as well as the most vulnerable strata of the population
suffer permanent losses. Meanwhile unscrupulous heads of enterprises and persons
who defy paying taxes prosper and enrich themselves. Everybody knows the
strategy of solving these problems.
Accordingly, our duties are as follows:
- eliminate persisting administrative interference of the government with trade
and production;
- complete the process of privatization including real estate, the remaining
small- and middle-range enterprises and the agro-industrial complex;
- sensibly organize and simplify the central Government and local authorities; -
seriously reappraise the role, powers and responsibilities;
- establish absolute supremacy of law and protect law-abiding citizens from
crime. At the same time apply all power of laws and authorities to those who
live a fairly-well-to-do life by using illegal means.
During the last three years our economic strategy consisted in achieving
macroeconomic stabilization that implies reduction of the deficit of state
budget and consistent pursuing of a tough monetary and credit policy. Today we
are as close to the solution of this problem as never before. However, successes
of today give us no grounds for being calm. We are sure to fail implementation
of goals we set if inflation in the country exceeds the critical level, if the
rate of national currency is far from adequate to the general condition of the
economy and to our strategic objectives while interest rates remain high and
inaccessible for the real sector or - on the contrary - are negative in real
terms.
Lessons drawn from international experience are unequivocal. Any of the
countries which scored outstanding economic successes had to obligatorily take
all possible measures of tough suppression of high inflation rates in the period
preceding rapid economic growth and subsequently it had to exercise close
control over the macroeconomic indices to be kept in prescribed limits. Those
who went astray were doomed to failure.
To become the first ever Asian Snow Leopard, we must deem, as a priority,
utilization of the best international experience in the field of macroeconomic
indices-low inflation, low budget deficit, steady national currency, high rate
of savings. Such formula proved effective for Japan, Korea, Indonesia, Taiwan
and Chile. Hopefully, it would prove as effective for Kazakhstan. So far we have
never faced the alternative: inflation or economic growth. We must never forget
that our finite goal is economic growth, and macro stabilization is but a means
of gaining this objective. Of course, financial stabilization, as no other
process, has seriously complicated the situation with many a social group. It
couldn't be otherwise in conditions of systemic structural transformations. In
fact, a market is a democracy, which rests upon a most severe financial
liability. The majority of the population has already understood this wisdom.
Naturally, macro-stabilization was accompanied by tough depression and painful
shortage of cash. But structural transformation of the real sector is underway,
and presently both monetary and commodity masses would get reconciled. Time will
come and people tempered by the hard period in their life and work would
overcome this crisis.
As a Kazakh folk saying goes: "he who knows not what tightness is will never
rejoice space". Through reducing inflation to an acceptable level, we transfer
strategic emphasis onto the economic growth.
But the economic, the more so government strategy in no way coincides with the
monetary policy, and today we are capable of taking a far greater and more
adequate range of measures. In this respect our attention in the nearest years
would concentrate on the real sector of the economy meaning rehabilitation and
growth thereof, an effective social policy, though in conditions of tough fiscal
and monetary limitations.
When speaking about macro-stabilization in a long-term perspective, we must be
ready to countering troubles arising in this field. Significant influx of
currency cash which might invade the country as a result of the development of
our natural resources and of, hopefully, ever growing exports in certain sectors
of the economy, might push the rate of our currency ever up thus seriously
endangering it. This would imply "loss" of other industries, exporting and
processing ones, first and foremost. That is why we must be capable of absorbing
a portion of the influx of currency cash without extensive use of import.
By virtue of scarcity of the population and low purchasing capacity thereof,
Kazakhstan's domestic market is negligible indeed. That's why we must prepare
strategies of financial investments abroad well in advance having carefully
studied the world experience and mechanisms currently effective on investment
markets. From now on liberalization of prices which we have accomplished will
never be subject to whatever doubts and changes. Institutions of private
ownership too would undergo consolidation at the expense of land property as
well as by establishing of such a judicial system which would protect ownership
rights and performance of contracts. Privatization of enterprises.
This process is mostly completed. It needs but finishing touches, primarily in
the agrarian complex and social sphere. Besides we need efficient regulation of
the process of share circulation. As to state-owned blocks of shares at the
enterprises of strategic import, they would be used with sense and measure.
We scored fine successes on our way to liberalization, yet in agriculture, in a
number of industries and in the social sector the standard of market relations
persists to be too low. Actually, the whole of the production sector suffers
from the crisis of payment system which is the result of the actions of
incompetent or corrupt chiefs of enterprises, who are not accountable or poorly
accountable to related owners.
Building of an open economy and free trade is prompted by our situation as a
connecting link between numerous major markets. Such policy would be far more
effective in linking countries and continents rather than any efforts to isolate
one's own markets. From the start our national capital must get hardened and be
ready to combats on its own markets. It is a very tough mission but otherwise it
would never win the day on external markets in future.
However, while it is too young and too weak, is actually making its first steps
and, wittingly, is in an unequal position, the state would protect it and help
it to stand on its own feet as soon as possible. When we compare countries which
gained topmost economic results, even with insignificant domestic markets, with
those which preferred the way of self-isolation, we come to see for ourselves
that closed markets, excessive government regulation as well as attempts to
achieve self-sufficiency, though capable of producing transitory improvements,
are in the long run doomed to failure. Besides we shall proceed with the
develoment of power and such other natural resources with the aim of gaining
revenues from exports which would promote not only economic growth but political
stability and provision of national security. As before proper protection of
foreign investments and opportunities of profit repatriation would remain in the
focus .of our most particular attention.
There exist several sectors of economy (development of natural resources,
infrastructure, communications and information) which are of paramount
importance for our country. Development of these industries would enhance not
only the economic growth but also the social sphere and Kazakhstan's integration
into the world community. These are capital-consuming industries whose
development requires both foreign capital and tough strategic control on the
part of the state. However, as was recognized by Adam Smith, there exist certain
public needs which are far less attractive for the private sector. In these
cases and as a last ditch measure the state would assume implementation of these
tasks.
Our situation as a major inter-regional transport centre demands establishment
of a more liberal regime for foreign investments than in some states bordering
our country. Only in such situation we shall be able to attract the badly needed
influx of finance and knowledge, only then we shall be able to substantiate our
opportunities and regular trade exchanges. An open and liberal investment policy
with clear-cut effective and strictly observed laws executed by an impartial
administration would give a most powerful impetus to attracting foreign
investments.
Elaboration of such policy must become one of our basic objectives because it is
hard to imagine in what other way Kazakhstan can achieve rapid economic growth
and modernization without foreign capital, technologies and expertise. We need a
strong political will and effective actions for our investment climate to become
more favourable and Kazakhstan itself - to rate as one of the first with regard
to volume and quality of attracted foreign investments throughout the world.
Besides we have to display supreme skill in utilizing relevant instruments
needed in attracting as many world-famous investors as possible.
This was actually the very reason for my setting up - by virtue of a special
Decree - of the State Committee for Investments and granted it a status of the
only government body in Kazakhstan enjoying the right of conducting our policy
in support of direct investments. One must remember that chasing foreign
investments would be a long process which, incidentally, would never end. In
this race we can't afford lagging behind. The need to formulate industrial
technological strategy for Kazakhstan ensues from world experience. With a rare
exception all developing countries passed the way from labor-consuming to
capital- technology- and science-consuming industries. One cannot improve inert
and cumbersome structure of production overnight. World experience testifies to
the expediency of a certain continuity consisting in a steadfast reduction in
the gross national product of the share pertaining to agriculture and extractive
industry while the share of processing industries, primarily science-consuming
ones with high extra cost and that of the services industry, must go up.
We have every ground to believe that, given favorable conditions in the future
of oil-and-gas extractive industry which is the vital basis of the country as
well as of the entire extractive sector, they would experience a considerable
rise. It offers us a starting point from which to proceed in building our
structural policy. Besides, our industrial strategy, as a rule, would not affect
separate enterprises. We shall use instruments of state policy in such a way so
as to enhance development of industries most appropriate for Kazakhstan. Not to
become a country whose economy is oriented to raw materials only, we must
develop light and food industries, infrastructure, oil-and-gas procession,
chemistry and petro-chemistry, certain sub industries of machine-building,
finite science-consuming industries, services industry, tourism, all these - by
priority rates.
Diversification of production would help us in ensuring sustainable growth.
While the process of adaptation of entire branches and productions to the market
in conditions of tough competition with liberal imports is underway, while our
produce, save for raw materials, is hardly competitive on the world market, we
are increasingly sliding to cumbersome raws-oriented structure of production
whereas the whole of the civilized world advances in quite opposite direction.
Downfall of production and its regressive structure is indeed a particularly
dangerous factor which may no longer be ignored. If a free market is really
free, it will invariably create new industries in our country.
Our mission is to present Kazakhstan in the eyes of world community as an
attractive site for investments, and to actively attract investors to most
critical industries. However, so far, one cannot rely on the market only. The
government must set about launching an active industrial policy of
diversification thus transferring the emphasis from macro- to the microeconomic
level. At first, up to 2010, we shall have to focus on labour-consuming
industries fairly perspective from the point of view of opportunities and
competibility. They are - in order of priority - agriculture, timber-and
timber-processing industries, light and food industries, tourism, housing
construction and creation of infrastructure. By developing these industries we
setlle not only structural issues of the economy, but also problems of
employment and poverty which is particularly important at the moment. We all
understand only too well why economic growth is so vital for the future of our
country. Without developing our economy we shall be unable to fund schools and
hospitals, to protect our society against corruption and crime.
LONG-TERM
PRIORITY 4:
HEALTH, EDUCATION AND WELFARE
OF THE CITIZENS OF KAZAKHSTAN
CLEANLINESS IS
A PLEDGE OF HEALTH
WHILE HEALTH IS A PLEDGE OF WEALTH
Kazakh folk proverb
In and of itself, economic growth cannot safeguard welfare of our citizens. One
can easily imagine a prosperous economy, in which people year in year out become
ever more sick as a result of wrong approach to their health and because of
polluted environment. In the course of our building the society we have to exert
ever vigorous efforts for our citizens to be healthy all throughout their lives,
for them to contact a healthy environment.
Accordingly, our strategy in accomplishing this goal includes the following
components:
Prophylactics of diseases and enhancing a healthy mode of life. As the world
experience shows the most important factor determining the health of the
population of the country is actual measures taken by the state in prophylactics
of diseases on the one hand and in enhancing a healthy mode of life on the other
hand.
Prophylactics of diseases implies utilization of pure water and healthy foods,
availability of purification systems, reducing the number of facilities
polluting the environment and inflicting ecological damage, along with
additional similar measures reducing other risk factors.
As to enhancing a healthy mode of life it implies our doing physical exercises,
feeding properly, observing standards of hygiene and sanitation, avoiding use of
drugs, cigarettes, spirits, etc. Our strategy for combating diseases and
improving our health when we suffer from shortage of sufficient means, should
start with preparing our citizens to leading a healthy mode of life. We must
launch an aggressive informational campaign in favor of a healthy mode of life
and correct feeding, rules of hygiene and sanitation.
It must include the following:
Combating drug addiction and drug trafficking.
We have to toughen penalties for import and spread of drugs, we should launch a
discussion in the society - whether it is expedient to introduce capital
punishment for that offence as is common in a number of countries including
Malaysia and Singapore. Drugs are an altogether particular and destructive
threat and it is quite a problem to what extent principles of humanism may be
applicable here. In fact, on one scale we have the life of the man who imports
and spreads drugs while on the other we see several lives ruined through the
fault of that man.
Reduced consumption of spirits and tobacco. Negative impact of spirits and
smoking on man's health is scientifically substantiated. World experience offers
several formulas of conducting government policy in this field: from imposing
taxes on spirits and tobacco items to taxation of dipsomania treatment. However
we'd rather take time in pursuing this policy. We must give careful
consideration to this problem and repeatedly check our calculations if we do not
expect reverse results in the form of the flow of contraband and rising crime.
At first we must impose a final and universal ban on advertising the items in
question.
By and by smoking must be ousted from public places but it all must be
well-considered to avoid exaggerations. We must start with government buildings
and establishments thus setting an example for others. Well, indeed, why should
people endanger their health and put up with those who poison their
environment?! I appeal to all to display intolerance to those who smoke. As to
public consciousness and morals, they too must be less tolerable to spirits.
Over the years of Soviet power vodka has deeply imbued our everyday life, our
customs and traditions. It became part and parcel of life in the country-side.
Today, when many of us have it hard, when we are obsessed with stresses, craving
for spirits has grown considerably. Many countries tried to impose bans on this
evil but so far it was to no avail. This notwithstanding, certain countries
succeded in achieving substantial positive results thanks to conducting rational
information and elucidation policies, through culture and education. In
industrially advanced countries they witness ever reducing consumption of
spirits and a cut-down in the number of smokers.
One of the effective ways is also a diversification of mode of life - from
pernicious habits to sports. Improvement of health of women and children.
Protection of health of a mother and her child must always be in the focus of
our state, our health protection authorities and the public. In due course, when
we accumulate substantial revenues in our treasury, we shall obtain funds to
officially support mothers and children in the form acceptable both for the
state and for the effective demographic policy meant to aid families. For quite
a time we have been rendering such assistance, in fact, to this day, despite
pretty hard times.
As a matter of fact, I submit to public judgment a proposal of imposing a tax on
those unwilling to have children, having in view subsequent allocation of these
assets in support of families having many children. On a local level too it is
necessary to look for new ways and means of supporting families, pregnant women
and children. Indeed, we have to thoroughly consider the issue of eventual
improvement of the institution of marriage and family, that of unmarried
mothers. If we claim to be a society of high morals, we have to toughen mutual
matrimonial responsibilities, primarily those to children. When parents care for
their children and children, when grown up,- for their aged parents, when women
command respect in the family and the society, then we may be sure of our
country. After all, these principles were-from time immemorial-inherent with the
Kazakhstanis, they must be restored and cherished.
Public should have its say as to adequate solution of the issue to be
subsequently reflected in the law on family. Along with this we must specially
distinguish parents who lead a healthy mode of life thus setting a glaring
example for their children. I'd like to recommend companies and employers find
relevant forms of commendation.
Annually they perform some 200,000 abortions. We think it expedient to hold a
discussion whether it is sensible to impose bans on abortions. It is a pretty
delicate issue and I'll have to follow the opinion of the majority. In any case
we must choose a civilized way of family planning without endangering health and
lives of women. In our age-related policies we'd rather focus our attention on
our youth and the rising generation as well as on young families. Improvement of
nutrition, raising purity standards of natural environment. Today poor
ecological situation turns into a cause of nearly 20% mortality while in certain
regions it is even more aggravated. One third of our compatriots drink
substandard water. Inferior and irregular meals too bring about ruinous
demographic consequences. Accordingly, each of us must be quite particular as to
what one eats or drinks.
Our experts should- through mass media - tirelessly explain and show the way one
should feed and arrange his meals in keeping with one's income, the way one
should follow prescriptions of up-to-date personal hygiene, of avoiding drinking
low-grade water. Ecological, sanitation-and-epidemiology departments and
standardization agencies must work in keeping with the priority of related
objectives. As a matter of fact we must bar the way to whatever suppliers and
producers of low-grade food items, to all who pollute the environment. Heads of
government departments must set personal example thereof. Besides I appeal to
our leaders of religious confessions, to other respectable members of our
society to actively participate in the process. For these are issues of
paramount importance. Relevant measures would mean too much for people's health,
for many thousands of human lives.
LONG-TERM
PRIORITY 5:
POWER ENGINEERING RESOURCES
WEALTH LIES NOT
ONLY IN POSSESSION OF RICHES,
BUT IN ABILITY TO THOUGHTFULLY UTILIZE THEM
Cervantes
Kazakhstan possesses vast deposits of natural and energy resources. Its
territory bears oil and gas fields, which rank us to the top ten of oil
extracting nations. Kazakhstan has large deposits of coal, uranium, gold and
other valuable minerals. We have a significant potential in utilizing solar and
wind energy.
Despite it, we cannot satisfy our internal demands for a number of years. It is
the result of the system of distribution, which goes back to Soviet epoch and
also the lack of the required infrastructure. Similarly, the shortage of the
required communications for exporting oil and gas to the world markets sharply
reduces our opportunity to recover sufficient sources for the realization of our
development programs.
Strategy of energy resources utilization will include the following components:
Firstly, we shall sign the long-term partnership with main overseas oil
companies to attract the best state-of-the-art technology, know-how, large
capital for quick and effective utilization of our resources. We have already
signed some large-scale contracts, the rest are under preparation. We are in
search of partners for long-term outlook, whose challenges coincide with our
challenges. In contracts we shall strictly and reasonably stand up for interests
of Kazakhstan, ecology, employment and labor training, the necessity of settling
a number of social tasks.
Within utilization of our natural resources we are interested in concluding
transparent agreements which will correspond to the best world practice and meet
Kazakhstani interests. Here lies the guarantee of our incomes stability and
contracts' fairness alongside with the world community back up. Strategy
Second part is the creation of the system of pipelines for oil and gas
exporting. Only a large quantity of sovereign export routes can prevent our
dependence on a single neighbor as well as monopoly pricing dependence on a
single consumer.
Thirdly. Our strategy on utilization of fuel resources is directed to the
attraction of interests of large countries to Kazakhstan and its role as a world
fuel supplier. In this case companies and countries which will be involved in
investing the development of our oil and gas business include the USA, Russia,
China, Japan, and West European countries. Economic interests of these companies
and countries to our resources exporting on the regular and stable basis will
stimulate the development of independent and prosperous Kazakhstan.
Fourthly, with the attraction of overseas investments, we shall accelerate the
creation and development of the domestic energy infrastructure, and settle the
problem of self-sufficiency and competitive independence.
Finally the strategy stipulates efficient and expedient utilization of future
profits drawn out of these resources. We should strictly control our strategic
resources, cut down expenses and economically utilize means, saving part of them
to our future generations.
LONG-TERM
PRIORITY 6:
INFRASTRUCTURE, MORE PARTICULARLY
TRANSPORT AND COMMUNICATIONS
THREE DEEDS
CREDIT A MAN: A WELL,
DUG OUT IN THE DESERT:
A BRIDGE, LAID OUT THROUGH RIVER,
AND A TREE, PLANTED AT A ROAD.
Oriental Saying
Historically transportational flows east to west and vice versa have been laid
through our territory and their intensity hasn't been decreased for now
Kazakhstan is to provide for competitiveness of the domestic
transportation-communication complex on the world level and to increase trade
flows via its territory.
To a certain degree the sector is sufficiently developed and in a long-term
period it should follow the concentrated growth strategy, which means
diversification of the national market and search of new markets, that would use
our transportation and communication services.
This strategy will promote further development of automobile construction,
tourism, system of rendering services; road and overhaul construction, reduction
of a transport component within domestic production net cost.
RAILROAD TRANSPORT
Given the
vastness of the territory and economy oriented on raw materials the bulk of
freight traffic in Kazakhstan is made by railroad. To realize strategic tasks,
we have the following to define as priorities:
- to modernize the main railroad routes, providing international transportation
and trade ties, and also transit flows of goods via Trans-Asian main road;
- to finalize the development of Druzhba station and to intensify
Druzhba-Aktogai leg of the route with the traffic capacity of up to 10 min. tons
of goods per year;
- to launch the construction of multimodular terminals in heavy loading areas;
thus starting the utilization of container and package deliveries, providing
technological unity of different transportation types.
- to decisively restructure all transportation-communication monopolies
separating them from non-specialized enterprises.
AUTOMOBILE ROADS AND MOTOR TRANSPORT
- to develop automobile roads in the directions providing international
transportation alongside with the creation of high-speed legs of routes. To
launch the construction of private main highways, privatisation and concession
of the present. To provide their servicing on the level of modern international
requirements;
- as a priority, to develop the network of roads in rural part of the country
and in a long-term period to transfer them to solid pavement. To improve the
traffic capacity of main highways and bridge constructions.
AIR TRANSPORT
to set aviation in order and to enlarge the air fleet through leasing and
acquisition of a definite amount of high-class aircrafts;
- to start the reconstruction of airports; level of servicing is to reach
international standards;
- to reorganize the system of air traffic management in order to develop transit
air lines via Kazakhstan.
WATER TRANSPORT
- to reconstruct Aktau sea port, and to attract foreign investments for
enlarging flotilla with "river-sea" vehicles.
- to enliven and involve into the activities river steamships, namely the
vehicles with low net cost of loading and passenger transportation.
COMMUNICATIONS AND TELECOMMUNICATION NETWORKS
Telecommunications maintain functioning of market mechanisms through the access
enlargement and information transmission. Telephones, faxes, e-mail are
considered to be vitally important and necessary prerequisites for modern
business development.
Being more international and flexible by their nature, informational
technologies in comparison with other types, in a greater extent contribute to
the business development of exporting and economy decentralization.
They integrate national economies and enlarge the informational range of the
region, incorporate the countries into the world economic ties.
Telecommunications may potentially smooth some distortions and negative
phenomena taking place in social sphere, granting new jobs, decreasing economic
migration between rural and urban regions.
Of great significance are informational technologies for health care and
education, and also for environmental protection and improvement. One of the
positive assets of easily accessible and comprehensively utilized
telecommunication system is the guarantee that the people, despite the poor
condition of roads, vastness of some regions and high tariffs, for passenger
traffic will get an access to information.
The Government will render the minimum level of communication services to remote
and underdeveloped districts. For example to retransmit regional training
programmes for children and youth. It will be of minimum net cost; and in future
it will be profitable.
Currently the Republic of Kazakhstan faces the necessity of establishing
priority of an independent and effective system of telecommunications services
of its own, competitive in future with similar infrastructures of the world
developed economies.
Present-day status of Kazakhstani telecommunications, despite the sufficient
density of lines in comparison with other countries turn to be a serious
economic problem.
LONG-TERM
PRIORITY 7:
PROFESSIONAL STATE
A COUNTRY
DEVIATES FROM THE LAW
GOVERNANCE WHEN IT HAS A LOT OF CHIEFS
Solomon
Reorganization and improvement of state bodies has just started, but this
process has to be given more active impulse. That is why early this year I have
launched the realization of the strategy in reforming of our government and its
staff.
On federal and local levels the Government will be cut down and it will be an
on-going process. Our task is to create in Kazakhstan an efficient modern state
service and management structure best suited for market economy; form the
Government capable of realizing priorities; build a state protecting national
interests.
Within the Soviet command economy the state managed to control everything and
everybody. As a result it has become an awkward structure with numerous
intersecting chains. In developed countries more than 80% of similar activities
which were under the Soviet control, are not included into the list of state
functions.
After collapse of the Soviet Union we had to solve anew issues of state
construction and management.
Firstly it applied to provision of legislative basis for functioning of a new
independent state, consequent maintenance of social-political stability. For now
of topical significance is the issue that state management through complex
systematic transformations of a society and economy is to become systematic.
Naturally, it can be reached on a step-by- step basis, but only in case of
preliminary working-out of the coordinated logical programme of long-term
reforming of state functions.
Strategy seven main principles, on the basis of which the Government and local
bodies will be finally created have resulted in the following:
1) Comprehensive and professionally trained government concentrated on
fulfillment of some most important functions;
2) Work on Action Programmes on the basis of the proposed strategies;
3) Efficient inter-institutional coordination;
4) Increase of authorities and responsibilities of ministers, their
accountability and strategic control over their activity;
5) Decentralization within ministries: from the federal centre - to region and
from the state to the private sector;
6) Decisive and merciless combating corruption;
7) Improvement of the system of personnel hiring, their training and
advancement. Governments, which have achieved success are comprehensive and
concentrated on execution of some main functions, which can be fulfilled only by
a state.
Moreover efficient governments focus on a limited number of priorities and on
strategy realization to achieve these goals. Government effectiveness is based
on three interrelated factors: structural composition, strategic coordination
and the level of personnel training.
Our nearest task is to create a small and flexible staff, comprised of capable
and dedicated personnel perfectly commanding methods of strategic planning.
There is no need to dwell on the fact that the lack of coordination between
ministries and institutions, and between regions is one of the main hotbeds of
crisis in social activities.
Terms of reference for the solution of specific tasks which don't correlate with
each other, duplication of functions and collective guarantee, formal replies
lead to delays and red-tape intestine, lack of responsibility. It is the gist of
the present state management. This problem is rooted in the lack of strategic
programmes. Work of each ministry, institution, akimat as well as regional
development itself, should be in conformity with the state strategy stipulating
clearly defined goals and tasks. Undoubtedly, it will require new approaches.
Strategic planning, financial programming and project management should become
the essence of improvement within state management in the nearest future.
Inter-institutional and interregional coordination is wanted as air, as the
manifestation of political will towards effective achievement of priorities. We
have to establish a single coordinating body to control the activities and
efforts of institutions involved in realization of strategic tasks. State system
of coordination is to be efficient and transparent.
Results of its activities should be available to all subordinating bodies.
Current situation in ministries and institutions is such that the level of
responsibility exceeds the terms of reference. Distortion of balance of
responsibilities and authorities into one or another extreme tangibly decreases
the management efficiency.
As the world practice shows, granting of broad-scale authorities on internal
management gives more advantages for a head of an institution than losses
stipulated by the possibility of this power abuse. Ministers and akims must and
shall possess broad powers, but their activities are to be accountable to high
ranking bodies and be subjected to regular strategic control. Wider power
concentrated in our hands implies larger personal responsibility for
non-execution of obligations.
As I have said, each ministry and institution should be released from functions
not characteristic of them, trying to maximally transfer them from the federal
centre to regions and from the state to private sector. The less numerous
hierarchy and intermediaries are, the stricter is separation of powers. Power
decentralization and alignment of authorities to lower layers, directly involved
in execution of the activities is so obvious that central and any other state
bodies will be demonstrating their necessity and usefulness.
Within the market conditions we are to establish and strengthen competitiveness
between regions on the principle: the best region is the region with better
living standards. accordingly, productive forces should be concentrated in
places with better conditions. Regional competitiveness is to be based on a
larger independence of regions, especially in the bud-get sphere where excessive
centralization is evident. We should relentlessly combat corruption
notwithstanding persons and their positions.
The executive staff is to be decisively cleared and refreshed. New generation of
public servants should serve their nation; be patriotic and just, dedicated to
the work and highly competent. Creation and support of comprised of capable and
dedicated personnel perfectly commanding methods of strategic planning. There is
no need to dwell on the fact that the lack of coordination between ministries
and institutions, and between regions is one of the main hotbeds of crisis in
social activities.
Terms of reference for the solution of specific tasks which don't correlate with
each other, duplication of functions and collective guarantee, formal replies
lead to delays and red-tape intestine, lack of responsibility. It is the gist of
the present state management. This problem is rooted in the lack of strategic
programmes.
Work of each ministry, institution, akimat as well as regional development
itself, should be in conformity with the state strategy stipulating clearly
defined goals and tasks. Undoubtedly, it will require new approaches. Strategic
planning, financial programming and project management should become the essence
of improvement within state management in the nearest future.
Inter-institutional and interregional coordination is wanted as air, as the
manifestation of political will towards effective achievement of priorities.
We have to establish a single coordinating body to control the activities and
efforts of institutions involved in realization of strategic tasks. State system
of coordination is to be efficient and transparent. Results of its activities
should be available to all subordinating bodies. Current situation in ministries
and institutions is such that the level of responsibility exceeds the terms of
reference. Distortion of balance of responsibilities and authorities into one or
another extreme tangibly decreases the management efficiency.
As the world practice shows, granting of broad-scale authorities on internal
management gives more advantages for a head of an institution than losses
stipulated by the possibility of this power abuse. Ministers and akims must and
shall possess broad powers, but their activities are to be accountable to high
ranking bodies and be subjected to regular strategic control. Wider power
concentrated in our hands implies larger personal responsibility for
non-execution of obligations.
As I have said, each ministry and institution should be released from functions
not characteristic of them, trying to maximally transfer them from the federal
centre to regions and from the state to private sector.
The less numerous hierarchy and intermediaries are, the stricter is separation
of powers. Power decentralization and alignment of authorities to lower layers,
directly involved in execution of the activities is so obvious that central and
any other state bodies will be demonstrating their necessity and usefulness.
Within the market conditions we are to establish and strengthen competitiveness
between regions on the principle: the best region is the region with better
living standards. accordingly, productive forces should be concentrated in
places with better conditions. Regional competitiveness is to be based on a
larger independence of regions, especially in the bud-get sphere where excessive
centralization is evident. We should relentlessly combat corruption
notwithstanding persons and their positions.
The executive staff is to be decisively cleared and refreshed. New generation of
public servants should serve their nation; be patriotic and just, dedicated to
the work and highly competent. Creation and support ofcivil service high
reputation is our strategic objective, which is to be solved within the years to
come.
Old mentality, ideological blinkers, legacy of the past; inability and lack of
competence to work within new market conditions - are obstructions on the way of
social economic debelopment. There are some gleams of hope though. But
generally, training of a new managerial staff generation is an imperative task
for the nearest future. Technocrats capable and ready to roll up for achievement
of priorities and challenges should enter management. Professionalism,
patriotism, ability to set long-term tasks, skills and will to solve them within
new conditions are the main criteria for selection and advancement of personnel.
The Republic has laid the basics of professional civil service. However we are
in for a lot of work. We have to create a state system of cadres' management
with efficient and effective training in the country and abroad, with just and
fair procedures of career advancement, single informational system, guaranteed
social protection system, rational attitude towards the basic management
resource-human capital. Alongside with it, this state system should be selective
for incompetent and unqualified workers. Regularly each employee has to prove
his actual capabilities and usefulness.
THE AGENDA: 1998-2000
ONE TODAY IS
WORTH TWO TOMORROWS
Franklin
There is a danger that the above will be castles in the air if we do not specify
short-term objectives for the next three years until the early XXI century and
do not fulfill them.
For the bulk of our people long-term prospects are of no importance today: it is
too difficult to overcome present day privations. While the majority of people
won't enjoy concrete results, even small improvements within the nearest future,
they will be cynical towards long-term goals and high-flown promises.
First steps and results on our strategic path are more tangible and verifiable.
On their basis realization of the correctness of the chosen trend will take
place, people's trust to the state will be built; sense of patriotism and
community will be developed. However, our compatriots are wise.
They understand that we shan't be able to cope with all the bulk of acute social
problems until our economy is revived within a few years. They do understand
that the state during the coming years will be restricted in resources for
realization of our long-term priorities and for execution of short-term specific
action programmes within a long-term strategy.
Nevertheless, our people await and deserve even insignificant improvements until
the end of the century. That's why I submit for 1998-2030 the most important
tasks within the context of the Republic of Kazakhstan strategic programme
development until 2030.
Priority goals are as follows:
- national security strengthening through more active relationships with leading
countries, capital attraction into Kazakhstan power engineering sector and
working-out of the military doctrine of our country;
- settlement of the most pressing rural problems; - combating poverty and
unemployment;
- economic growth through strengthening internal political stability and unity
of the society;
- finalization of all social and economic reforms primarily in the budgetary
sphere thus resulting in timely and complete payment of pensions, wages,
salaries and social benefits;
- creation of a favorable investment environment; - acceleration of government
and civil service reform and strengthening of activities in combating corruption
and abuse.
NATIONAL SECURITY
By 2000:
Initiation via foreign political state institutions of stability of the forming
strategic parity around Kazakhstan, which geopolitically will meet long-term
interests of our country.
We shall advance to strengthening of our relationships with Russia, China,
Central Asian neighbors, Islamic states and Western countries. Big business and
companies from the USA, Russia, China, Great Britain will be involved in the
development of Caspian Shelf and Karachaganak field, that will strengthen world
powers interest the country independence and continuous fuel supplies to the
world markets.
Efforts made by foreign political and intelligence authorities will be
concentrated on securing state independence and territorial integrity. There
will be worked out a military doctrine of Kazakhstan which be subject to regular
rearrangement depending on circumstances. Due to the lack of resources,
demography strategy realization will be started mainly with utilization of its
items which don't involve expenditures mentioned above. However, the Government
will pursue payment of allowances to children and support mothers having many
children.
RURAL PROBLEMS
As the settlement of most serious rural problems is concerned, by 2030 we shall:
- dismiss local administrations from their interference into market relations;
- privatize pseudo private entities with clear in-kind personification of
private property and plots;
- improve the rural economy through bankruptcy mechanisms;
- reduce the price of credits for farmers and real private entities, first and
foremost;
- develop small-scale and middle-scale businesses in the country-side through
loans granted by Asian and European Banks for Reconstruction and Development,
and through the assistance rendered by other agencies and donor countries;
- lend micro credits worth 25-30 thousand KZT.
Within three years the Government is responsible to provide such assets not less
than to 150 thou. peasants, who found themselves in the most desperate plight,
and who cannot afford buying livestock and tools to start legally permitted
businesses, which will keep them afloat and develop their business skills;
- go on attracting direct domestic and foreign investments;
- render assistance to farmers in produce marketing; - solve water-supply and
irrigation problems;
- provide priority rural financing through all ministries and foundations.
COMBATING POVERTY AND UNEMPLOYMENT
Strategy of combating poverty and unemployment during these years will be based
on the following:
- introduction of a system of micro credits;
- small-scale and middle-scale business development;
- priority development of labor-intensive sectors and active attraction of
foreign investments and domestic capital into them;
- tough approach to problems of unemployment under contracts, agreements, budget
purchases;
- development of public works, primarily road construction and tree planting;
- removal of all unnecessary administrative barriers on the way of developing
private entrepreneurship;
- efficient development of the sphere of services, tourism in particular.
ECONOMIC GROWTH
With the aim to realize our long-term priorities on this trend during the next
three years we contemplate the following:
- tough monetary policy will be carried out;
- privatization will be finalized;
- legislation to improve country investment environment will be perfected and
and made more comprehensive;
- foreign investments will be more actively attracted; the volume and the
results of which being notified in detail to the people;
As power