Dr Elmira Satybaldieva

Small Group Project 2022-23

Income inequalities in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Russia: finance, rent and wealth in the age of neoliberal capitalism

With Balihar Sanghera & Ilya Matveev & Kuat Akizhanov

The project’s main purpose is to develop an understanding of the impact of financialisation and rent extraction (rent-seeking activities or rentierism) on economic inequality. The distributional patterns and their relations to neoliberalisation in three former Soviet countries of Eurasia (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Russia) between 2000 and 2020 will be analysed and compared. This research addresses the question whether financialisation and rentierism facilitate uneven capital accumulation, and generate conditions that increase income and wealth disparities.

More information

Cohort

FG8

Biography

Dr Elmira Satybaldieva is one of the leading scholars in Central Asian politics. Her main area of research interest is politics and development in the post-Soviet space, with a particular focus on grassroots activism and international capital in Central Asia.

As of May 2024, she was researching Chinese, Russian and American investment strategies in Central Asia and their geo-economic implications for the region. She is a co-investigator on a 2-year research project that examines Chinese industrial investments in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan (Enacting the Belt and Road Initiative: the implementation of Chinese projects in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan, Faculty of Social Science Research Grant, University of Kent, 2020-22).

She has been researching the region for over 15 years, collaborating with principal international aid agencies (DFID, Open Society Foundations, USAID and European Commission’s Department for International Cooperation and Development) and research/policy institutions (Woodrow Wilson Center, Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, Swiss National Science Foundation, EU-Central Asia Monitoring and Shaanxi Normal University, Xi’an).

Previously, she worked at the American University-Central Asia and the Karelian Institute, University of Eastern Finland, and had fellowship at the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies, Harvard University. She has published widely on social movements, development and political economy in the region.

Biographical details correct as of 19.04.26

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