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An Industry of Individuals: What the ICT Enterprise Registry Reveals About Kyrgyzstan’s Digital Economy

An Industry of Individuals: What the ICT Enterprise Registry Reveals About Kyrgyzstan’s Digital Economy

As of January 2018, the Kyrgyzstan National Statistics Committee registry counted 7,522 entities engaged in ICT-related activity across the country. That number — extracted from ten consecutive annual snapshots and shared with KG Labs as part of a 2018 ecosystem mapping exercise — sounds like a substantial figure. In 2008 the same registry had counted 2,372. A decade of more than three-to-one growth in registered ICT businesses looks, at first, like a sector that has arrived.

The structure beneath that number tells a more specific story. Over three-quarters of those 7,522 entities are individual entrepreneurs — sole operators registered as businesses rather than companies with employees, payroll, or formal hiring capacity. The category that most directly corresponds to what an IT graduate might work in — software development firms — numbered 143 entities nationally. Of those, 96% of the small formal businesses were in Bishkek. The sector grew threefold in a decade, and the growth was almost entirely in informal and retail-facing activity rather than in the kind of structured software and services companies that can absorb a fresh graduate and offer career development.

Ten Years of Growth: The Registry Trend

The Natsstatkom data covers every year from 2008 through 2017. The growth trajectory is consistent: a sector that added roughly 500 entities per year in the early period and somewhat fewer as the base grew, moving from just over 2,300 in 2008 to just over 7,500 by the close of 2017.

Year Total ICT Entities Individual Entrepreneurs IE as % of Total Small Businesses Medium Large
2008 2,372 1,522 64% 513 156 181
2010 4,211 539
2012 5,156 3,661 71% 956 294 244
2014 6,380 1,015
2016 7,157 1,125
2017 7,522 5,801 77% 1,213 261 247
Source: National Statistics Committee of Kyrgyzstan, ICT enterprise registry (ГКЭД-2 and ГКЭД-3), annual snapshots as of January 1 of the following year. Full size-category breakdown available for 2008, 2012, and 2017 only from extracted data. 2010, 2014, 2016 totals confirmed from full registry snapshots; IE and medium/large breakdowns not extracted for those years.

ICT Entity Growth — Kyrgyzstan 2008–2017

.kg-axis{font-size:10px;fill:#888;font-family:-apple-system,sans-serif}.kg-point-label{font-size:10px;fill:#1D1D1F;font-family:-apple-system,sans-serif;font-weight:600} 0 2,000 4,000 6,000 8,000 2,372 4,211 5,156 6,380 7,157 7,522 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2017

Source: National Statistics Committee of Kyrgyzstan (Нацстатком), ICT enterprise registry ГКЭД-2/ГКЭД-3, annual snapshots as of January 1 of the following year. +217% growth over the decade.

The share of individual entrepreneurs in the total rises consistently: 64% in 2008, 71% in 2012, 77% in 2017. This is not a sign of sector weakness in itself — in many economies, freelance and sole-operator activity is a legitimate and productive part of the technology services landscape. But the direction of the trend matters: the formal business layer — small, medium, and large companies — is growing more slowly than the individual-operator layer, and is staying relatively constant as a share of the total rather than expanding to create more structured employment.

What the Sector Actually Does

The registry breaks down entities by OECD economic classification codes. In 2017, the largest single category by entity count was not software, not telecom, and not IT services: it was retail sale of computers and software in specialised stores (code 47.41), with 1,208 entities. That category — electronics and technology retail — represents 16% of all ICT-registered entities in the country. The overwhelming majority of those 1,208 are individual entrepreneurs: 1,142 of 1,208, or 94.5%.

Activity (НГКЭД-3 Code) Total Entities (2017) Bishkek Count Bishkek % Individual Entrepreneurs %
Computer & software retail (47.41) 1,208 391 32% 94.5%
Other IT activities (62.09) 966 56 6% 97.2%
Wireless telecommunications (61.20) 445 126 28% 82.2%
Data processing & hosting (63.11) 352 109 31% 87.2%
Audio-visual & electronics retail (47.43) 362 25 7% 99.4%
Web portals / internet activity (63.12) 184 41 22% 100%
Other information services (63.99) 77 32 42% 77.9%
News and information agencies (63.91) 46 12 26% 63%
IT consulting (62.02) 63 20 32% 77.8%
IT systems management (62.03) 58 7 12% 91.4%
Software development (62.01) 143 101 70.6% 63.6%
Wired telecommunications (61.10) 36 8 22% 88.9%
Source: Нацстатком ГКЭД-3 registry, data as of January 1, 2018 (2017 activity year). Software development (62.01) highlighted because it is the category most directly linked to formal graduate employment. «Other IT activities» (62.09) is a broad residual category. Individual entrepreneur percentages calculated from registry size breakdown.

Top ICT Sectors by Entity Count — Kyrgyzstan 2017

.ks-lbl{font-size:10.5px;fill:#1D1D1F;font-family:-apple-system,sans-serif}.ks-val{font-size:10px;fill:#555;font-family:-apple-system,sans-serif}.ks-note{font-size:9px;fill:#aaa;font-family:-apple-system,sans-serif} Computer & SW retail (47.41) 1,208 · 94.5% IE Other IT activities (62.09) 966 · 97.2% IE Wireless telecom (61.20) 445 · 82.2% IE Audio-visual retail (47.43) 362 · 99.4% IE Data processing & hosting (63.11) 352 · 87.2% IE Web portals (63.12) 184 · 100% IE Software development (62.01) ★ 143 · 63.6% IE · 70.6% in Bishkek ICT services Retail categories Software dev (highlighted)

Source: Нацстатком ГКЭД-3 registry, January 2018. IE = Individual Entrepreneurs. ★ Software development shown separately as the sector most directly linked to graduate employment.

The software development row is worth looking at separately. With 143 entities, it is the category most directly associated with the kind of IT employment that university graduates might expect to enter — writing code, building systems, working on products. Its Bishkek concentration is by far the highest of any category: 101 of 143 entities, and 48 of the 50 registered small businesses, are in Bishkek. Of the remaining 42 entities, 20 are in Chuy oblast (the region surrounding Bishkek), one is in Osh city, and 21 are distributed across the rest of the country. That distribution means that for a software engineering graduate from Talas, Naryn, or Jalal-Abad, the local formal employment market in their field has a near-zero presence.

The Geography of Where Entities Are

The regional spread of all ICT entities in 2017 reveals a picture that is more distributed than the software sector alone — but still heavily tilted toward the southern and northern extremes of the country, with the middle regions largely absent from formal ICT activity.

Region ICT Entities (2017) % of National Total Character of Activity
Bishkek city 1,862 24.8% Software, services, formal businesses; 71.3% of all small businesses nationally
Osh oblast (excl. Osh city) 1,231 16.4% Predominantly individual entrepreneurs; retail and informal services
Chuy oblast (excl. Bishkek) 1,120 14.9% Mixed; includes spillover of Bishkek IT companies and logistics/distribution
Osh city 845 11.2% Individual entrepreneurs dominant; 1 software dev firm; active wireless telecom presence (75 entities)
Batken oblast 787 10.5% Overwhelmingly individual entrepreneurs; border trade context
Issyk-Kul oblast 524 7.0% Tourism-adjacent IT retail; individual entrepreneurs
Jalal-Abad oblast 490 6.5% Retail-dominant; limited formal sector
Naryn oblast 471 6.3% Lowest formal presence; mostly individual entrepreneurs
Talas oblast 192 2.6% Smallest regional presence; 9 entities in Talas city software/services
Source: Нацстатком ГКЭД-3 registry, data as of January 1, 2018. «Osh oblast» and «Osh city» are administered separately in the registry. Activity character descriptions derived from sector-level breakdown in the full registry data. Bishkek’s share of small businesses (71.3%) calculated from small-business counts by region across all ICT categories.

Osh oblast’s position is instructive. With 1,231 entities (plus 845 more in Osh city itself), the south of the country is not absent from the registry. But the 2019 ICT roadmap for Osh — researched in parallel with this data — found that the Osh technopark area had only two specialists in 1C accounting software serving the entire oblast, while Bishkek had over a hundred. The registry entity count and the functional depth of the sector are different things. A high entity count built on individual entrepreneurs registering retail or general «IT activities» does not translate into structured employment capacity for graduates with software engineering degrees.

The Size Structure: What Formalization Looks Like

Entity Category Count (2017) % of Total Bishkek share
Individual entrepreneurs 5,801 77.1% 13.8% (802 of 5,801)
Small businesses 1,213 16.1% 71.3% (865 of 1,213)
Medium businesses 261 3.5% 29.9% (78 of 261)
Large businesses 247 3.3% 47.4% (117 of 247)
Total 7,522 100% 24.8% (1,862 of 7,522)
Source: Нацстатком ГКЭД-3 registry, data as of January 1, 2018. Bishkek share calculated from regional breakdown in registry data. Note: Bishkek’s share of individual entrepreneurs (13.8%) is much lower than its share of small businesses (71.3%) — suggesting that informal individual-entrepreneur activity is more evenly distributed nationally while formal business infrastructure is highly concentrated in the capital.

ICT Sector by Entity Size (2017)

7,522 total entities
Individual entrepreneurs5,801 (77.1%)
Small businesses1,213 (16.1%)
Medium businesses261 (3.5%)
Large businesses247 (3.3%)
Bishkek holds 71.3% of small businesses but only 13.8% of individual entrepreneurs

The size-geography interaction in the last column above is one of the sharpest findings in the data. Individual entrepreneurs are distributed across the country — Bishkek holds only 13.8% of them, while Osh oblast and Osh city together hold more than 20%. But small businesses — the tier most likely to hire graduates, offer professional development, and eventually scale — are concentrated in Bishkek at a rate of 71.3%. This is not because Bishkek has more population; it is because the formal business infrastructure for technology firms — access to banking, legal services, accelerator programs, investor networks, co-working spaces — is overwhelmingly centred in the capital. A student who wants to join a small software company almost certainly needs to be in Bishkek to find one.

Software Development vs. Education Output: The Specific Gap

The KG Labs university survey — the companion to this enterprise analysis — found that Kyrgyzstan’s fifteen IT-active universities produced roughly 2,974 undergraduate graduates cumulatively through 2018, with an annual output of over 500 graduates across all programs. Annualised against the enterprise registry data, that pipeline is producing more IT-educated graduates per year than there are software development companies in the entire country.

That comparison is deliberately simplified — not every IT graduate needs to join a software company, and not every software development entity in the registry needs to hire from a university. But it does point to a real structural question: where do Kyrgyzstan’s IT graduates go? The enterprise registry suggests the formal absorption capacity is shallow and geographically narrow. The options this leaves are migration to Bishkek for those who want to stay in the sector, emigration for those who want international career exposure, transition into the informal individual-entrepreneur layer of the economy, or re-entry into sectors — teaching, government service, NGO work — where IT skills are relevant but not the primary role.

None of these outcomes is necessarily problematic on its own. Migration to Bishkek transfers talent to where the formal sector is. Emigration — to Russia, Kazakhstan, or further — generates remittances and, in some cases, return expertise. The individual-entrepreneur category represents real economic activity even if it is informal. The question the data cannot answer is whether these pathways are what the education system intended to prepare graduates for, or whether a different configuration of formal employer capacity in regional cities would change what is possible.

Part of KG Labs’ 2018 ICT talent mapping research. Companion piece: Fifteen Universities, Four Thousand Students — The IT Education Landscape →

Source: National Statistics Committee of Kyrgyzstan (Нацстатком), ICT enterprise registry (ГКЭД-2 and ГКЭД-3), annual snapshots 2008–2017. Data compiled and analysed by KG Labs Public Foundation, October 2018.

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