Central Asia’s decade-long growth story has a clear center of gravity, and it sits in Kazakhstan. Rising domestic demand, expanding trade routes, a steady climb in foreign investment and a wave of economic reform have turned the region into one of the fastest-growing corners of the global economy — but no single country has captured more of that momentum than Kazakhstan itself.
That dynamic was on full display on July 16, when President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev met Chinese President Xi Jinping in Shanghai. The meeting was less a standalone diplomatic event than a checkpoint on a relationship that has been building for years — one where Kazakhstan’s economic scale increasingly shapes how Beijing thinks about the region as a whole.
The numbers explain why. Kazakhstan is not simply the largest economy among its neighbors; it is the most diversified and the most internationally plugged-in, and it holds that lead across nearly every structural, financial and investment metric worth tracking.