In its regional economic outlook report updated in June 2026, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) revised Kyrgyzstan’s forecast downward due to the crisis. recent European sanctions against the republic.
According to the EBRD, real GDP has grown rapidly in Kyrgyzstan this year, with growth of 10.1% year-on-year in the first quarter. In the short term, growth is expected to slow slightly but remain robust at 8.7% in 2026 and 7.0% in 2027.
Risks loom, but their severity remains subject to debate.
“The dominant short-term risk is the 20th EU sanctions package, adopted at the end of April 2026, which restricts exports of dual-use goods to the Kyrgyz Republic and tightens controls on the financial and logistics sectors, thereby weighing on economic activity,” the EBRD noted, adding that additional risks include rising energy prices – due to the Strait of Hormuz crisis – and the potential for a further economic downturn in Russia.
Kyrgyzstan’s past GDP statistics are a roller coaster that goes up and down dramatically. Although many factors contribute to GDP growth, Kyrgyzstan’s political instability has historically been a telling indicator. Note in the graph below the declines in 2005, 2010 and 2020, which correspond to the three revolutionary government changes in Kyrgyzstan. Of course, most countries had a bad 2020, but Kyrgyzstan’s pandemic experience was arguably made worse by that year’s political upheaval, leading to the region’s largest contraction.
External factors are equally important, particularly because of the way they can fuel domestic instability or the perception of these risks. Here, the EBRD’s warning, however slight its actual revision may be – a 0.3 point downward revision of the 2026 forecast compared to its February 2026 figures – should ring alarm bells in Bishkek.
On the sidelines of the International Economic Forum in St. Petersburg this week, the First Deputy Prime Minister of Kyrgyzstan, Daniyar Amangeldiev REMARK that, according to Kyrgyzstan, “Western sanctions are illegal”.
“But they have their own justification. They have their own protective measures,” he added.
This corresponds to the position of President Sadyr Japarov, as expressed during his speech to the United Nations in 2025.
In May, Kyrgyz Prime Minister Adylbek Kasymaliev said negotiations were underway with a range of Western powers that have particularly targeted Kyrgyz banks with sanctions, including the United States, the United Kingdom and the EU, but provided few details.
As reported 24.kg“Kasymaliev generally called sanctions against Kyrgyz banks unfair and said that Kyrgyzstan does not help Russia evade sanctions and that there are no specific cases of such violations.”
Nevertheless, a few days later, the Kyrgyz Ministry of Justice announced that it had ordered the closure of 50 locally registered businesses in the country. In a statementthe ministry said it had “issued an order to simultaneously suspend the activities of 50 legal entities involved in operations with a high risk of sanctions.” The companies involved have not been named publicly. It remains to be seen whether this gesture will be sufficient.
While the US, UK and EU have increasingly targeted specific Kyrgyz banks for Russia-related sanctions over the past year, the EU took its most significant step in late April by designating Kyrgyzstan the first target of its “anti-circumvention tool.”
In the eleventh EU sanctions package, adopted in June 2023, the European Commission introduced what it called an “anti-circumvention tool” designed to allow the EU to “restrict the sale, supply, transfer or export of sanctioned goods and technologies to certain third countries” considered to pose a high risk of providing avenues to circumvent sanctions.
“This new “anti-circumvention” tool will be an exceptional and last resort measure when other individual measures and EU awareness-raising actions with relevant third countries have proven insufficient to prevent circumvention,” the European Commission said.
In the 20th sanctions packageannounced in late April, the European Commission said it would activate the tool for the first time, citing the Kyrgyz government’s “systematic and persistent failure” “to prevent the sale, supply, transfer or export to Russia of certain machine tools and telecommunications equipment imported from the EU and used for the manufacture of drones and missiles in Russia.”
In late May, Kyrgyz Economy and Trade Minister Bakyt Sydykov suggested that there “may be no direct impact on the country” because 24.kg summary. He highlighted the indirect impacts of Kyrgyzstan’s membership, alongside Russia, in the Eurasian Economic Union and sanctions against the banking sector.
“We have been living in this reality for four years now. There have not been any particularly strong or immediate effects. We hope that the positive economic momentum will continue,” he said.
