Uzbekistan's Cash Ban Is a Reckoning With the Shadow Economy — and Everyone Is Watching
Tashkent's move to ban cash for key transactions is more than a financial modernisation play — it is the most direct test yet of whether the Global South can force its informal economy into the light without surrendering it to Western surveillance architecture.

Something unusual happened in Uzbekistan this month: the state moved to ban cash for a set of key transactions, forcing the informal economy into a digital register. The official framing — that digital penetration raises transparency and traces businesses — is the one most wire reports will lead with. That framing is not wrong. But it is incomplete, and treating it as the whole story lets a more interesting dynamic slip out of frame.
What is actually being tested here is not whether Uzbekistan can modernise its payment infrastructure. It is whether a country in the Global South can force its shadow economy into the open on its own terms — or whether that formalisation inevitably hands data, leverage, and financial architecture leverage to the dollar-denominated system it is trying to sidestep.
What the ban actually does
Uzbekistan's prohibition on cash transactions for key items — effective this month — is an aggressive signal. The countries most discussed in dedollarisation debates tend to reach for crypto, bilateral settlement agreements, or yuan-denominated trade. Uzbekistan is doing something more domestic: it is demanding that its own citizens transact digitally within its own borders, on its own financial rails. The effect is to make the informal economy — estimated in many developing economies to represent between 30 and 60 percent of GDP — legible to the state in real time. Tax bases expand. Corruption patterns become traceable. But so does state surveillance capacity.
The policy is aimed squarely at a shadow economy that cash has shielded for decades. In economies where trust in domestic banking is low, regulatory capacity thin, and informal employment dominant, cash is not just a medium of exchange — it is a form of sovereignty. People use cash because it leaves no record, incurs no fees, and cannot be frozen by a government or a correspondent bank acting on a third-party sanction. Removing it is not a technical upgrade. It is a political act.
The autonomy argument — and its limits
The case for the policy, made in passing by its architects, is coherent: formalisation expands the tax base, reduces corruption, attracts investment, and gives the state the data it needs to plan economically. These are real benefits. Countries with large shadow economies consistently underperform on public investment, infrastructure delivery, and institutional quality. Bringing that economic activity into the formal register is a legitimate development goal.
But the autonomy argument has a shadow side. Digital transactions do not just make the shadow economy visible to the state — they make it visible to every correspondent bank, payment processor, and compliance system the country routes transactions through. For a country that is not fully dollarised but is deeply integrated into the global financial messaging infrastructure — SWIFT, Visa, Mastercard, correspondent banking rails — going digital inside the country does not mean going free of external dependencies. It means converting informal, cash-based autonomy into formal, traceable, potentially sanctionable digital activity. The informal economy was inefficient. It was also, in a specific structural sense, outside the reach of the architecture that the dollar system deploys against its targets.
The geopolitical context nobody is writing about
Uzbekistan's move arrives in a moment of heightened sensitivity around financial architecture. Several major developing economies are simultaneously exploring alternatives to dollar-denominated trade, domestic payment systems that route around SWIFT, and CBDC frameworks that would give central banks direct control over digital transaction data. The framing in Western financial media has been largely technical — efficiency, inclusion, anti-money laundering compliance. The geopolitical dimension has been treated as secondary.
It is not secondary. When a country chooses to digitalise its economy, it is making a bet on which financial infrastructure to align with. The United States and its partners have been explicit that compliance with the dollar system — and with the sanctions and anti-money laundering frameworks built around it — is the price of access to dollar-denominated markets. Countries formalising their economies through digital rails that route through that architecture are paying that price, in data and in leverage, even if no one says so plainly. Uzbekistan is not being naive — it may be calculating that the benefits of formalisation outweigh the costs of that dependency. But that calculation deserves to be named, not buried under the word "modernisation."
Why this matters beyond Uzbekistan
The Uzbekistan case matters because it is a template, even if an imperfect one. Formalising the shadow economy is a goal that development institutions — the World Bank, the IMF, bilateral aid agencies — have actively promoted for decades. The tools they have offered have consistently been anchored in Western financial architecture: digital payment adoption, formal banking inclusion, compliance with international standards. That promotion has been framed as technical assistance. It has also been a mechanism of influence.
Countries that succeed in formalising through those tools gain legitimacy, investment, and macroeconomic stability — real benefits. They also, almost inevitably, build financial infrastructure that is legible to, and in some cases dependent upon, the system those institutions represent. The question Uzbekistan is forcing — implicitly, probably without framing it in these terms — is whether formalisation on Global South terms is possible, or whether the only available formalisation is formalisation-on-Western-terms. The answer will not come from Tashkent alone. But this month, Uzbekistan made the question unavoidable.
Uzbekistan's move to ban cash for key transactions, reported by Nikkei Asia on 25 April 2026, reflects a broader Global South push to formalise shadow economies through digital payment infrastructure. The policy's promise — expanded tax bases, reduced corruption, better economic data — is real. Its structural cost — converting cash-based autonomy into traceable, potentially sanctionable digital activity on Western-aligned rails — is less discussed but equally material. Whether developing economies can formalise on their own terms, or only on the terms the dollar system makes available, is the unresolved question this policy exposes.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/nikkeiasia/11682
- https://t.me/TSN_ua/29847
- https://t.me/TSN_ua/29845
- https://t.me/TSN_ua/29846