Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/72486
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Type: Book chapter
Title: Trade and transport in Central Asia
Author: Pomfret, R.
Citation: Central Asia and the Caucasus, 2011 / Hermann, W., Linn, J.F. (ed./s), pp.43-58
Publisher: Sage Publishing/Sage Publications
Publisher Place: India
Issue Date: 2011
ISBN: 8132107438
9788132105176
Editor: Hermann, W.
Linn, J.F.
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Richard Pomfret
Abstract: Until 1991 Central Asia was part of the integrated economic space of the Soviet Union without borders and with a relatively effi cient transport network, but oriented toward the needs of the Soviet economy. The role of the Central Asian republics in the Soviet division of labor was as providers of raw materials, primarily cotton, minerals, and energy products; roads and railways led north or west to the Russian republic, and eastern and southern borders were effectively closed to trade. Since independence the Central Asian countries have continued to exploit their comparative advantage in raw material exports, but their trade has been hampered by poor transport facilities and by failure to improve the soft infrastructure of trade. Being landlocked exacerbates these weaknesses, but location could be turned to advantage as Central Asia is adjacent to the world’s most dynamic large economies. To benefi t from this the hard and soft infrastructure of transport and trade need upgrading, and regional cooperation to facilitate transit is needed to stimulate intra- and extra-regional trade.
Description: 1st edition
Rights: Copyright status unknown
DOI: 10.999/1234
Description (link): http://trove.nla.gov.au/work/81110105?q=9788132107439&c=book&versionId=94400609
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest 5
Economics publications

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