Masimov back in as prime minister as Akhmetov resigns

03.04.2014
    President Nursultan Nazarbayev has brought back business-friendly Karim Masimov back as prime minister as the Central Asian country's economy comes under pressure.
    Serik Akhmetov, in office since September 2012, stepped down just weeks after the energy-rich nation was forced to devalue its currency, the tenge, by 19 percent against the dollar, prompting rare street protests.
    Nazarbayev told lawmakers in a speech the returning prime minister, seen as promoting business-friendly policies during his previous term in office from 2007 to 2012, must work on attracting investment into the country's economy, which he acknowledged is under threat.
    "Instability is growing in the global economy, the international situation is worsening sharply," Nazarbayev said as quoted by the Interfax Kazakhstan news agency.
    "This demands a search for new measures to carry out our economic policies at a national level, and with our international investors. What is needed is a new vision, a new team that will act effectively."
    High oil prices kept the Kazakh economy growing by 6 per cent last year, according to World Bank estimates, with growth expected to come in at 5.8 per cent this year.
    But like other emerging economies, Kazakhstan has been buffeted by shifting investment flows in response to the reduction of US monetary stimulus.
    It has also been affected by a slowdown in neighboring Russia, its biggest trading partner.
    Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan are members of a Kremlin-led Customs Union.
    "We need to use our domestic resources more to stop the threat to the economy," the president added, according to the Business Standard.