Djasur Djumaev is the CEO and founder of Uzum.
For decades, discussions about economic development in emerging markets have revolved around governments, large-scale infrastructure projects and foreign investment. While all three remain critical, another force is increasingly determining whether a country succeeds in the digital era: its entrepreneurs.
Today, Uzbekistan stands at a unique historical crossroads. With a population approaching 40 million—more than half of whom are under the age of 30—the country combines one of the youngest demographics in Eurasia with a rapidly modernizing economy. Driven by ongoing reforms, robust investment and deeper integration into global markets, Uzbekistan’s economic growth is projected to remain among the strongest in the region.
Yet macroeconomic indicators alone won’t determine long-term prosperity. It’ll ultimately depend on whether local businesses can build products, services and technologies capable of solving everyday problems at scale.
The Shift From State-Led To Entrepreneur-Led Growth
Like many emerging economies, Uzbekistan historically relied on state-led initiatives to drive development. While that approach successfully built the country’s essential foundations, the next stage of growth requires a different catalyst. True innovation comes from entrepreneurs who are willing to challenge assumptions, take risks and build solutions tailored to real customer needs.
Across the country, digital businesses are transforming industries that only a few years ago remained largely offline. Commerce, payments, logistics, lending and business services are becoming highly accessible through technology. Just five years ago, many everyday services in Uzbekistan were fragmented, e-commerce penetration was low, and logistics infrastructure outside major cities was vastly underdeveloped.
According to the National Agency of Perspective Projects, however, Uzbekistan’s e-commerce market reached $1.8 billion in 2025, growing by nearly 50% year on year. The share of online commerce in total retail sales rose to 4.6%, with government targets aiming to exceed 9% in the coming years. At the same time, the Central Bank of Uzbekistan reported that the volume of cashless transactions has multiplied several times over the past five years. Financial services that once required an in-person bank visit are now fully accessible from a smartphone.
Why Digital Infrastructure Is The New Highway
Technology neutralizes geographical barriers and levels the playing field for open competition. A merchant in Namangan or Termez can seamlessly reach customers nationwide.
This is why digital infrastructure deserves to be discussed with the same weight as roads, railways and power plants. These systems create an environment where entrepreneurship can flourish. Moreover, they bring economic activity into the light. As businesses move online, market transparency increases. As digital payments become standard, economic velocity accelerates. As access to capital expands, entrepreneurs can reinvest and scale faster.
Where The Value Lies Today
The next and most lucrative wave of innovation belongs to builders who move beyond generic, Western-style copies to develop deeply localized AI and advanced fintech 2.0 solutions. The future will be won by technology that possesses a profound understanding of local context—mastering the Uzbek language, its cultural nuances and regional habits to power hyper-localized customer service, smart lending algorithms and voice assistants.
By embedding this contextual intelligence directly into financial services, entrepreneurs can move past simple digital wallets and unlock sophisticated micro-lending and specialized financial tools tailored precisely to the everyday needs of individuals and underserved micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs).
The Founder’s Challenge
While the foundation is there, scaling a business in Uzbekistan still comes with specific challenges that founders must anticipate:
• The demand for high-tier senior developers, AI practitioners and product managers currently outpaces local supply. Companies that succeed will be those that invest heavily in internal training and upskilling.
• Scaling outside of Tashkent requires a different strategy. Consumer habits in regions such as the Fergana Valley or Khorezm heavily rely on trust, localization and offline touchpoints combined with digital backends.
Nations don’t become innovation hubs simply by declaring themselves to be one. They achieve this status because three critical components align:
1. Entrepreneurs create practical products.
2. Investors provide the patient capital to support long-term growth.
3. Institutions foster the right regulatory conditions.
Uzbekistan already has many of these ingredients in place. The government can set the stage, global VCs can provide the capital, and technology can lower the barriers to entry. However, the outcome rests entirely on whether local entrepreneurs can capitalize on this foundation.
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