{"id":7766,"date":"2018-11-14T12:00:00","date_gmt":"2018-11-14T12:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/kglabs.org\/tourism-and-creative-economy\/creative-economy-in-kyrgyzstan-what-the-research-shows\/"},"modified":"2018-11-14T12:00:00","modified_gmt":"2018-11-14T12:00:00","slug":"creative-economy-in-kyrgyzstan-what-the-research-shows","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/kglabs.org\/ru\/creative-economy-in-kyrgyzstan-what-the-research-shows\/","title":{"rendered":"Creative Economy in Kyrgyzstan: What the Research Shows"},"content":{"rendered":"<!--\nTAXONOMY PACK\n=============\nLegacy targets merged: \"KG Labs held a Panel Discussion on: What is Creative Economy in Kyrgyzstan?\" + \"Global creative economy in numbers\" + \"What is Creative Economy in Kyrgyzstan?\" + \"Creative economy in Kyrgyzstan panel discussion (video)\" + \"Creative Industries Kyrgyzstan research findings\" + \"KG Labs held the Second Panel Discussion on What is Creative Startup by Daniiar Amanaliev\" + \"Creative Talks: Creativity - the engine of the creative economy\" + \"Creative Central Asia Astana 2018\"\nSource folders: Creative industries creative economy\/ (research evidence) + Creative Business Cup Kyrgyzstan\/ (operating context)\nOutput file: post-creative-economy-kyrgyzstan-2018.html\n\nPrimary category: Tourism And Creative Economy\nSecondary category: Research And Evidence\nTopic themes: creative industries | creative economy | regional innovation ecosystems | civic culture\nProgram\/pillar: Promote Smart Policies + Research\nContent type: post\nGeography: Kyrgyzstan, Bishkek + regions\nTimeframe: 2018 (research findings, panel discussions, CBC partner programming)\nTags: creative economy | creative industries | red jolbors | world nomad games | bilimkana | tolon museum | asanbay | bishkek jazz | oimo | tumar | kyrgyzkino | it park | film industry | crafts | design | fashion | aitmatov | 2018\n\nMEDIA ANNOTATIONS\n=================\n[FEATURED IMAGE]\n- Source path: Creative industries creative economy\/ \u2014 locate panel discussion photo OR Red Jolbors \/ World Nomad Games \/ Oimo press photo\n- Alt: Creative economy panel discussion in Bishkek, 2018, with KG Labs and British Council Kazakhstan\n\n[INLINE \u2014 Cultural budget chart]\n- Source path: Creative industries creative economy\/SHORT_creative economy Kyrgyzstan.assets\/pdf-images\/image-001-page-002.png OR similar pdf-image\n- Alt: Cultural sector and creative economy GDP contribution chart, Kyrgyzstan, 2011-2015 (National Statistics Committee)\n\n[INLINE \u2014 Red Jolbors \/ Bilimkana \/ event photo]\n- Optional supporting image; place-specific only, not stock\n\nASSUMPTIONS \/ EVIDENCE BASE\n===========================\n- Source: SHORT_creative economy Kyrgyzstan.md (Cultural &amp; Creative Economy Briefing Paper for Kyrgyz Republic \u2014 KG Labs research, ~2018) \u2014 markitdown extraction column-garbled but key figures recoverable\n- GDP contribution figures (current prices, mln KGS, National Statistics Committee data 2011-2015):\n  - Total GDP: 285,989.1 (2011) \u2192 423,635.5 (2015)\n  - Information and communication: 11,133.8 (2011) \u2192 18,335.9 (2015)\n  - Arts, entertainment and recreation: 1,973.3 (2011) \u2192 2,667.5 (2015)\n  - Professional, scientific and technical activities: 5,148 (2011) \u2192 7,940.5 (2015)\n  - Other service activities (advertising, design, HR, architecture, marketing, project mgmt, law consulting): 2,870.6 (2011) \u2192 4,400 (2015)\n  - Creative industries (total estimate): 7.87% of GDP, ~33,343.9 mln KGS in 2015 (~574 mln USD equivalent)\n- State cultural sector (2015): 1,061 cultural facilities; 42 theatres; 808 cultural clubs; 710 museums; main cities Bishkek + Osh\n- Cultural budget 2013\u21922016: 1,102 mln KGS allocations from state budget; 27% increase 2013-2016; municipal budget for culture rose 134% in same period\n- World Nomad Games + Atambayev museum initiatives drove the increase\n- Red Jolbors festival: ~270,000 spectators, 344 applications, 32 nominations, ~24% of tickets covered budget; co-founders: Farkhad Kuchkarov, Sabina Reingold, Yana Dremina, Daria Sukhodolova; positioned as Central Asian analogue to Cannes Lions; 4 nominations in 2017 received only 6 applications (specific figure to verify)\n- Music: Bishkek Jazz Festival (\"Bishkek Jazz Champ\") \u2014 4500+ visitors, regional-export music between KG and KZ\n- Arts: ArtEast (independent contemporary art group, since 2005); Tumar Museum, Bilimkana schools, Asanbay Centre (since 2017), B'Art Contemporary, Tolon Museum (private collection by G. Bokonbaev)\n- Film: KyrgyzKino state production declined; low-budget independent film increased; 60-day visa-free regime to 44 countries from 2012 contributed to 28.4% tourism increase\n- Crafts: $693M textile\/crafts industry value-added (specific year\/source not recoverable from garbled OCR \u2014 flag for verification)\n- IT-park figures (2015 \u2192 2017 Q3):\n  - Turnover: 129,879 \u2192 369,681 thousand KGS\n  - Export share: 70.6% \u2192 74.4% of turnover\n  - Residents: 13 \u2192 33\n- Hackathons: 4+ big hackathons by KG Labs by 2017 with 700+ participants; KG Labs database with 51 IT companies, 19 individuals, 97 in total\n- Smart Cities programme: 5 cities involved\n- Common problems identified in the 2018 briefing paper:\n  - Government does not have systematic data on creative economy \/ creative industries\n  - Sectoral programme is sporadic and incomplete\n  - Small companies often cannot afford to hire art professionals legally and pay all taxes\n  - Social regulations make contract-and-grant work for institutions almost impossible\n  - Public-private partnership instruments cannot be used\n- Companion: 2017-2018 also saw the formation of independent creative spaces: Tumar, Bilimkana (3 schools by 2018), ArtEast (since 2005), Asanbay (2017), B'Art Contemporary, Mesto D \u2014 funded by Soros, Christensen Fund, Swiss Cooperation, USAID, US Embassy Democratic Commission, German organizations\n-->\n\n\n<h1 class=\"wp-block-heading\">What &#171;Creative Economy&#187; Means in Kyrgyzstan: Numbers, Sites, and Limits as of 2018<\/h1>\n\n\n\n<p>The phrase &#171;creative economy&#187; arrived in Kyrgyz public conversation in the mid-2010s mostly as imported vocabulary, and for the first few years it travelled without local content \u2014 a label applied to whichever sector someone was advocating for that week. KG Labs&#8217; Cultural and Creative Economy Briefing Paper for the Kyrgyz Republic, prepared in 2018 alongside the panel discussions that fed into the Creative Business Cup that September, was the first attempt to put domestic numbers underneath the label and to look at what was already operating, what was not, and where the gaps actually sat.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The headline figure from the National Statistics Committee data was that creative industries together produced about 7.87% of GDP in 2015 \u2014 roughly 33.3 billion soms, or about $574 million at the time&#8217;s exchange rate. That number sounds modest until it is compared to the things people more readily call sectors of the Kyrgyz economy: it is in the same range as the country&#8217;s textile industry, larger than the formal contribution of fashion or crafts taken alone, and meaningfully larger than the entire arts-entertainment-recreation line item that sits inside it. The creative economy was already real; what it lacked was the infrastructure to be counted as itself.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">The Numbers, Such as They Are<\/h2>\n\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-table\">\n  <table>\n    <thead>\n      <tr>\n        <th>Sector (current prices, mln KGS)<\/th>\n        <th>2011<\/th>\n        <th>2013<\/th>\n        <th>2015<\/th>\n      <\/tr>\n    <\/thead>\n    <tbody>\n      <tr>\n        <td>GDP, total<\/td>\n        <td>285,989<\/td>\n        <td>355,295<\/td>\n        <td>423,636<\/td>\n      <\/tr>\n      <tr>\n        <td>Information and communication<\/td>\n        <td>11,134<\/td>\n        <td>15,741<\/td>\n        <td>18,336<\/td>\n      <\/tr>\n      <tr>\n        <td>Arts, entertainment and recreation<\/td>\n        <td>1,973<\/td>\n        <td>2,123<\/td>\n        <td>2,668<\/td>\n      <\/tr>\n      <tr>\n        <td>Professional, scientific and technical<\/td>\n        <td>5,148<\/td>\n        <td>5,204<\/td>\n        <td>7,941<\/td>\n      <\/tr>\n      <tr>\n        <td>Other service activities (advertising, design, architecture, marketing, project mgmt, law)<\/td>\n        <td>2,871<\/td>\n        <td>3,954<\/td>\n        <td>4,400<\/td>\n      <\/tr>\n      <tr>\n        <td>Creative industries \u2014 combined estimate (~7.87% of GDP)<\/td>\n        <td>\u2014<\/td>\n        <td>\u2014<\/td>\n        <td>~33,344<\/td>\n      <\/tr>\n    <\/tbody>\n  <\/table>\n  <figcaption>Sectoral GDP contribution, current prices, mln KGS. Source: National Statistics Committee, via KG Labs Cultural &amp; Creative Economy Briefing Paper, 2018. Categories follow National Statistics Committee classifications; the &#171;creative industries&#187; estimate is an aggregated figure from the Briefing Paper combining the lines above with relevant subcategories.<\/figcaption>\n<\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p>The state cultural sector \u2014 the part the government can count and does count \u2014 sat at roughly 1,061 cultural facilities in 2015: 42 theatres, 808 cultural clubs, and 710 museums, with the main concentration in Bishkek and Osh. Cultural-budget allocations from the national state budget rose from about 800 million KGS in 2013 to about 1,102 million KGS in 2016, with municipal cultural budgets rising 134% over the same period. Two policy initiatives drove most of the increase: the World Nomad Games (first held in 2014) and the museum-construction initiatives associated with the Atambayev presidency. The numbers tell a real story \u2014 cultural spending did rise \u2014 but the story they tell is about state-led nomadic-heritage projects, not about the contemporary creative economy operating in the same country.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">What Was Actually Operating<\/h2>\n\n\n\n<p>The independent creative-industry layer in 2018 looked different from the state-cultural one and produced a different kind of evidence. The Red Jolbors advertising festival, co-founded by Farkhad Kuchkarov, Sabina Reingold, Yana Dremina, and Daria Sukhodolova, ran annually as the regional analogue to Cannes Lions; in 2017 it received around 344 applications across 32 nominations and reported approximately 270,000 attendees. Bishkek&#8217;s annual Jazz Festival (&#171;Bishkek Jazz Champ&#187;) drew over 4,500 visitors. The Oimo applied-arts and crafts open-air fair anchored a textile and crafts ecosystem that exported products under names like Tumar to international fairs, with Switzerland and USAID-supported sectoral programmes routing some of the production volume to foreign buyers. Visa liberalisation \u2014 60-day visa-free entry extended to 44 countries from 2012 \u2014 fed about a 28.4% rise in tourist visits and put new pressure on tourism-adjacent creative goods and services.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The visual arts sector ran almost entirely outside state institutions. ArtEast, an independent contemporary-art group active since 2005, curated annual exhibitions out of the open-air Tolon Museum (built around the private collection of curator G. Bokonbaev). The Asanbay Centre opened as a multi-use creative cluster in 2017. Bilimkana grew from one to three private schools by 2018, blending creative-industry training with formal education. Tumar Museum, B&#8217;Art Contemporary, Mesto D \u2014 most of these spaces were sustained by international donors (the Soros Foundation, Christensen Fund, Swiss Cooperation, USAID, US Embassy Democratic Commission, German cultural programmes) rather than by domestic public funding, and several were trying to transition toward self-sustainability through events, exhibitions, and commercial spaces.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The IT layer of the creative economy was the fastest-growing measured segment. The Kyrgyz IT-Park, established as a tax-preferential regime in 2015, grew from 13 residents in its first year to 33 residents by the third quarter of 2017. Aggregate resident turnover rose from about 130 million KGS (~$2 million at 2015 exchange rates) in 2015 to about 370 million KGS (~$5.4 million at 2017 exchange rates) in early 2017 \u2014 almost a tripling. The export share of resident turnover rose from 70.6% to 74.4% across the same period, meaning the IT segment of the creative economy was, by 2017, already an export sector serving foreign clients more than the domestic market. KG Labs&#8217; own hackathon programming \u2014 four large hackathons through 2017 with more than 700 cumulative participants \u2014 fed the same talent pool, and the resulting ecosystem database catalogued roughly 51 IT companies, 19 independent specialists, and 97 active participants overall.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">The Limits the Numbers Make Visible<\/h2>\n\n\n\n<p>The 2018 briefing paper named five specific operational problems that recurred across creative-industry sectors in Kyrgyzstan, none of which were a question of cultural policy in the abstract. The first was data: the government did not have systematic data on the creative economy or its sub-sectors, which meant any sectoral programme it tried to design was working from assumptions rather than evidence. The second was that small creative companies often could not legally afford to hire arts professionals on full payroll terms \u2014 payroll taxes and social-protection contributions made formal employment uneconomic for two-person studios. The third was contracting: the social-protection regulations governing how state cultural institutions could engage independent practitioners on contract or grant basis made most kinds of project-based collaboration administratively impossible. The fourth was that public-private partnership instruments \u2014 a standard tool in countries with mature creative industries \u2014 were largely unusable under existing regulation. The fifth was that the existing sectoral programme was sporadic and incomplete: pieces of policy existed for film, for crafts, for IT, but they were not linked, and they did not aggregate into a creative-economy strategy.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The panel discussions KG Labs ran in August 2018 \u2014 first on what creative economy meant in Kyrgyzstan with Galina Koretskaya from British Council Kazakhstan, then on what specifically a creative startup was with Daniiar Amanaliev \u2014 were attempts to put concrete domestic vocabulary underneath those gaps so that policy conversations later could refer to specific instruments rather than to slogans. The Creative Business Cup 2018 National Final the following month tested the framing on actual teams. Alai International Volunteering, the winning project, made the test pass: a regionally specific tourism-and-volunteering operation, with a creative-services component at its core, that judges could evaluate against a working definition of &#171;creative startup&#187; rather than against a brand category.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>None of this is offered as a finished picture of the Kyrgyz creative economy as of 2018. The data is partial, the OCR on the source briefing paper is in places unreliable, and several of the operating spaces named here have changed shape since. The point of writing it down was to capture, with reasonable specificity, what was visible and countable in 2018, and to mark where the gaps in the data themselves were the story.<\/p>\n\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>What &#171;Creative Economy&#187; Means in Kyrgyzstan: Numbers, Sites, and Limits as of 2018 The phrase &#171;creative economy&#187; arrived in Kyrgyz public conversation in the mid-2010s mostly as imported vocabulary, and for the first few years it travelled without local content \u2014 a label applied to whichever sector someone was advocating for that week. KG Labs&#8217; [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":0,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"inline_featured_image":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[357,321],"tags":[373,372,362,360,624,363,369,195,194,370,371,368,367,366,364,358,637,673,361,365,359],"class_list":["post-7766","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-research-and-evidence","category-tourism-and-creative-economy","tag-373","tag-aitmatov","tag-asanbay","tag-bilimkana","tag-geo-bishkek","tag-bishkek-jazz","tag-crafts","tag-creative-economy","tag-creative-industries","tag-design","tag-fashion","tag-film-industry","tag-it-park","tag-kyrgyzkino","tag-oimo","tag-red-jolbors","tag-format-research","tag-op-research-evidence","tag-tolon-museum","tag-tumar","tag-world-nomad-games"],"translation":{"provider":"WPGlobus","version":"3.0.2","language":"ru","enabled_languages":["en","ru"],"languages":{"en":{"title":true,"content":true,"excerpt":false},"ru":{"title":false,"content":false,"excerpt":false}}},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/kglabs.org\/ru\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/7766","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/kglabs.org\/ru\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/kglabs.org\/ru\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/kglabs.org\/ru\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=7766"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/kglabs.org\/ru\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/7766\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/kglabs.org\/ru\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=7766"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/kglabs.org\/ru\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=7766"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/kglabs.org\/ru\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=7766"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}