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The Evolution of the Kazakhstani Silk Road Section from a Transport into a Logistics Corridor and the Economic Sustainability of Regional Development in Central Asia

doi: 10.3390/su12156291
handle: 11573/1449871
Central Asian countries attract investment in transport infrastructure to rebuild the Silk Road paths and enjoy economic benefits from the participation in international trade. The Kazakhstani government approached the Russian and Chinese governments intending to join the Western Europe–Western China (WE–WC) initiative to boost the country’s regional development. The paper aims to assess how the WE–WC transport corridor affected the economic potential of linking cities and regions starting from the quality of transport infrastructure and leading to their export potential. The study’s findings showed that the Kazakhstan section of the WE–WC corridor was at an early stage of transformation from a transport into an economic corridor. While the Russia-Uzbekistan section continues to serve mainly a transit function and operate at the level of transport infrastructure, the China-Kyrgyzstan section has started evolving from the level of multimode transport corridor to the level of logistics corridor. The economic sustainability of the WE–WC linking mining and agricultural regions of Kazakhstan still comes into question and depends on the government’s further region-specific policy actions.
- Roma Tre University Italy
- University of Central Asia Kyrgyzstan
- Sapientia University Romania
- Kazakh German University Kazakhstan
- Sapienza University of Rome Italy
The Silk Road in Central Asia, TJ807-830, TD194-195, Western Europe-Western China (WE–WC), Renewable energy sources, economic complexity, GE1-350, transport corridor, sustainable regional development, Environmental effects of industries and plants, economic corridor, international trade, Environmental sciences, economic complexity; economic corridor; international trade; regional capability; sustainable regional development; The Silk Road in Central Asia; transport corridor; Western Europe-Western China (WE-WC), regional capability
The Silk Road in Central Asia, TJ807-830, TD194-195, Western Europe-Western China (WE–WC), Renewable energy sources, economic complexity, GE1-350, transport corridor, sustainable regional development, Environmental effects of industries and plants, economic corridor, international trade, Environmental sciences, economic complexity; economic corridor; international trade; regional capability; sustainable regional development; The Silk Road in Central Asia; transport corridor; Western Europe-Western China (WE-WC), regional capability
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