Uzbekistan's Cash Ban Is Bold — and Dangerously Incomplete
Tashkent's move to ban cash transactions for key goods is the most audacious formalization experiment in Central Asia. The logic is sound; the execution leaves critical questions about who bears the cost unanswered.
On 1 April 2026, Uzbekistan completed the first phase of an experiment that most governments talk about and none dare attempt in full. Tashkent banned cash transactions for a defined list of goods and services, forcing a substantial slice of economic life onto digital rails. The stated goal is formalization: bringing the sprawling shadow economy — estimated by independent economists to account for roughly half of Uzbekistan's GDP — into the tax base, the banking system, and the regulatory record. The ambition is real. The execution raises serious questions about who bears the cost.
The logic is clean. Cash is the lifeblood of informal commerce: wages paid under the table, goods sold without invoices, property transferred without registration. Every transaction that bypasses a bank leaves no trace — and therefore no taxable event, no labour protection, no consumer recourse. A digital transaction, by contrast, is a data point. It can be audited. It can be taxed. It creates, over time, a picture of economic activity that a government can actually govern. For a country whose formal fiscal base has long been hollowed out by unofficial commerce, the appeal is obvious.
Uzbekistan is not alone in this direction. Neighbouring Kazakhstan has pushed point-of-sale digitalization aggressively. Several Gulf states have moved toward cash restrictions as part of broader financial-sector modernization. The IMF has quietly encouraged digital financial inclusion frameworks across its borrower base, recognizing that formalization expands the tax substrate — and therefore the debt sustainability — of developing economies. In that sense, Tashkent's move fits a global technocratic consensus: informal economies are a policy problem, and digital rails are the solution.
That consensus, however, contains a significant blind spot. The shadow economy is not a glitch to be patched. For millions of people — street vendors, domestic workers, smallholder farmers, gig workers paid in cash — informal commerce is not tax evasion by preference. It is the only market accessible to them. A fruit seller in Samarkand does not operate outside the formal economy because she refuses to pay taxes. She operates there because formal registration, compliance costs, and banking infrastructure have historically excluded her. Forcing that seller onto digital rails does not solve the problem of exclusion. It may simply replace informal exclusion with formal exclusion — shutting people out of commerce entirely because they cannot meet the documentation or technology requirements the state now demands.
The critics are not wrong to point this out. Digital financial inclusion, taken on its own terms, does require a level of access — smartphones, internet connectivity, financial literacy — that is unevenly distributed even in relatively developed economies, let alone in a country where rural infrastructure remains a work in progress. A cash ban that is not accompanied by a serious inclusion programme risks behaving like a regressive tax: raising state revenue by squeezing the already marginal, while leaving the well-connected comfortable in their formal-banking privileges.
There is also the surveillance question, which the sources do not fully address. Digital financial infrastructure creates unprecedented state visibility into private economic behaviour. That visibility can serve legitimate fiscal purposes — catching tax evaders, tracing illicit finance. It can also serve other purposes. Governments with weaker rule-of-law records than Uzbekistan's have used digital financial data for political targeting, selective enforcement, and the construction of social credit architectures. Tashkent has not, as far as the available record shows, announced what data protections govern the new infrastructure. That omission matters, and it should be pressed.
What the Uzbekistan case does reveal — and this is the structural point worth dwelling on — is something about the changing architecture of financial sovereignty in the post-dollar-hegemony era. Cash has always been a tool of autonomy: for individuals operating informally, for governments seeking to sidestep dollar-denominated financial surveillance, for economies navigating the informal trade corridors that bypass formal banking channels. When a government like Uzbekistan removes cash from the equation, it is not merely modernizing its tax system. It is making a bet that formal financial integration — with all the visibility and conditionality that implies — is worth the sovereignty cost.
For Central Asian states watching Tashkent's experiment, the stakes are clear. If it works — tax revenues rise, informal businesses formalize, financial inclusion expands — it becomes a model. If it fails, it becomes a cautionary tale about the gap between technocratic ambition and lived economic reality. The honest verdict is: we do not yet know which it will be.
This desk covered the Uzbekistan story from the angle of financial inclusion and state capacity. Wire coverage focused primarily on the formalization statistics.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/TSN_ua/84732
- https://t.me/nikkeiasia/29384
- https://t.me/nikkeiasia/29385
