Uzbekistan is preparing to significantly expand its support for entrepreneurs and small businesses in 2026 through an aggressive push to increase commercial bank lending. The country aims to channel a combined 450 trillion soum (approximately $37.6 billion) across the banking system next year — a substantial commitment designed to fuel domestic economic activity and create employment opportunities across sectors.
Lending targets take shape: focus on micro and small enterprises
Within this broader lending framework, financial institutions will dedicate 140 trillion soum specifically to microfinance, small business, and medium-sized enterprises — earmarked to support entrepreneurial projects from approximately 100,000 individuals. This targeted approach reflects a deliberate strategy to democratize access to capital among emerging business owners and existing enterprises seeking to scale operations.
The momentum is already evident. Throughout 2025, Uzbek banks have distributed 116 trillion soum to entrepreneurs — a figure that represents a remarkable 1.4-fold increase compared to the same period in the previous year. On the ground, community-based lending initiatives have already supported business ventures from roughly 89,000 people with credit facilities totaling 1.1 trillion soum, demonstrating both appetite and capability within the financial system to serve dispersed populations beyond traditional urban centers.
Banking expansion as an inflation-control tool
This lending expansion serves a dual purpose: stimulating business activity while simultaneously anchoring price stability. Uzbekistan’s monetary authorities have been working to saturate the domestic market with goods and services to moderate inflationary pressures. The approach recognizes that expanding productive capacity — through funded enterprises — creates supply to match demand, thereby tempering price increases.
Recent performance supports this strategy’s effectiveness. As of early November 2025, annual inflation had declined to 7.8 percent, down from 10.2 percent recorded a year earlier. The government targets further reduction to 7 percent in 2026, followed by 5 percent by 2027. Ensuring stable pricing for essential consumer goods remains a core policy objective underpinning these lending initiatives.
What this means for international investors and traders
For international companies in manufacturing, construction, interior design, trade, and related sectors, Uzbekistan’s commitment to expanding credit availability signals a maturing market with growing purchasing power and business dynamism. As local entrepreneurs gain greater access to financing, demand for imported materials, design services, construction solutions, and quality furnishings and interior products will likely intensify. The policy environment increasingly favors business expansion, franchise or partnership opportunities, and supply chain development. Additionally, a stabilizing inflation trajectory and strengthening financial infrastructure create more predictable conditions for long-term investments and trade relationships.



