Astana International Financial Centre
51°05′28.5″N 71°24′46.1″E / 51.091250°N 71.412806°E
Industry | Financial services |
---|---|
Founded | 2018 |
Headquarters | Astana, Kazakhstan |
Key people | Renat Bekturov (Governor)[1] |
Website | http://www.aifc.kz/ |
The Astana International Financial Centre (AIFC) is a financial hub in Astana, Kazakhstan that officially launched on July 5, 2018.[2]
The Constitutional Statute "On the Astana International Financial Centre" approved on 7 December 2015 provides a legal framework for the functioning of the AIFC as well as a favourable environment for its participants.[3]
The Astana International Financial Centre plays one of the main roles in attracting financial resources. It is positioned as a financial hub for the countries of Central Asia, the Caucasus, Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU), Middle East, Western China, Mongolia and Europe.[4]
History
[edit]The Astana International Financial Center is a major part of the Belt and Road Initiative's financial infrastructure.[5]: 154 It increases financial connectivity among Central Asia, China, Russia, and the Arab world. The AIFC is partly owned by the Shanghai Stock Exchange and the Silk Road Fund.[5]: 154
On 20 May 2015, the President of Republic of Kazakhstan Nursultan Nazarbayev announced the “100 Concrete Steps” Plan of the Nation to implement the five institutional reforms, designed to provide a strong national platform needed to achieve country's ambition of joining the top 30 developed countries by 2050.[6] As part of the Plan of the Nation, the AIFC was established with a special legal status to be based on the EXPO-2017 International Specialized Exhibition infrastructure.[7]
The number of companies working with the AIFC reached 2700 in 2024. The companies are from 78 countries.[8] In the first half of 2020, the AIFC registered 122 new companies, 70 of which were registered during the lockdown caused by COVID-19 pandemic.[9] As of 2022, the number of enterprises working with the AIFC increased to 1046 companies from more than 35 countries. These companies include financial institutions such as the China Construction Bank, China Development Bank, and CICC (Hong Kong) and Wood & Co (Czech Republic), the largest investment banks.[10]
AIFC bodies
[edit]AIFC Management Council
[edit]It is a supreme authority that includes high-profile leaders of global financial corporations and is chaired by the President of Kazakhstan. The main objectives of the Management Council include the determination of the strategic directions for the AIFC development and the assistance in the development of the favourable conditions for the formation of a leading financial centre. AIFC Development strategy was determined by the Management Council during its first meeting on 26 May 2016.[11]
AIFC Authority
[edit]The AIFC Authority was established on 28 December 2015 and is responsible for the development of the overall strategic plan, promotion of the AIFC in the global markets, attraction of the potential participants to the AIFC.
Astana International Exchange (AIX)
[edit]The Astana International Exchange (AIX) was established in 2017 as part of the AIFC. develop the public equity and debt capital markets in Kazakhstan and Central Asian region. AIX was created to develop the public equity and debt capital markets in Kazakhstan and Central Asian region.[12] AIX is regulated by the Astana Financial Services Authority, an independent regulator established within the AIFC.[12] AIX shareholders include the AIFC, Goldman Sachs GS, the Shanghai stock exchange, and China's Silk Road Fund. Nasdaq NDAQ is behind the AIX trading platform.[13]
Astana Financial Services Authority (AFSA)
[edit]FinTech Lab
[edit]As part of developing its FinTech pillar, AIFC supports innovative companies through acceleration, incubation, mentoring programs and flexible regulation suitable for both start-up and incumbent FinTech firms. For these purposes in May 2017, AFSA has introduced the first regulatory sandbox regime in the region called the “FinTech Lab”, which enables firms to test new products and services in a safe environment without being immediately subject to standard regulatory requirements and allows AFSA to adopt regulatory approaches to keep up with innovation and build legislative frameworks tailored to the market needs. As of August 2020, the FinTech Lab has received more than 120 inquiries for testing and has supported 23 FinTech firms offering services in the field of digital banking, payments, operations with digital assets, crowdfunding, robo-advisory and other.
26 firms from 11 states were accepted to the Fintech Lab, focused on different types of financial services such as payments, mobile banking, digital assets, crowdfunding and other solutions.[14] In two years, AIFC Fintech Hub's accelerator programs supported more than 120 startups.[14]
AIFC Court and International Arbitration Centre
[edit]Similar to International Commercial Courts in Dubai, Qatar and Singapore, the AIFC Court provides a common law court system for the resolution of civil and commercial disputes within the AIFC. It exclusively oversees all legal matters stemming from the AIFC and its activities, as well as other disputes where all involved parties expressly consent in writing to the jurisdiction of the AIFC Court. Inside Kazakhstan, the establishment of a common law court in a civil law system has provoked fierce criticism.[15] The International Arbitration Centre, on the other hand, offers an alternative to court litigation and offers arbitration, mediation, and other dispute resolution methods. It shall review disputes which the parties have agreed shall be settled by arbitration. The opening ceremony of the AIFC International Arbitration Centre (IAC) was held in July 2019 during the Astana Finance Days conference in Astana (then known as Nur-Sultan).[16]
AIFC Bureau for Continuing Professionals Development
[edit]AIFC Bureau for Continuing Professional Development is responsible for human capital development and plans to retrain over 2000+ specialists in the financial industry of Kazakhstan and, ultimately, creating critical mass of professionals for AIFC eco-system and beyond. In addition, the Bureau is responsible for investment and financial literacy programs related to AIFC's core pillars including Islamic Finance, Fintech, Capital Markets, Green Finance, as well as Asset and Wealth Management.
Language
[edit]English is the official language on the AIFC territory.
Priority Sectors
[edit]Finance
[edit]It is the goal that the AIFC become a regional financial centre and be a top 20 leading Asian financial centres within 10 years.[17]
Equities Trading
[edit]The AIFC has partnered with NASDAQ and the Shanghai Stock Exchange.[17] The AIFC is the shareholder of the Astana International Exchange (AIX) that was established in 2017. AIX's first trading session was held on November 14, 2018, coinciding with the 25th anniversary of tenge, the national currency of Kazakhstan. The session was opened by Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev.[18]
Green Technology
[edit]The center uses renewable energy. The AIFC provides structural framework for the advancement of green finance. To that end, the centre launched the AIFC Green Finance Centre to develop and promote green finance in Kazakhstan and neighboring countries.[19]
Information Technology
[edit]The AIFC supports the development of information technologies in Kazakhstan. An important organization that helps achieve this is Astana Hub. Even though it is independent from the AIFC, it has shared functions in the tech field.
Astana Hub - International IT and startup hub is a business incubator in Kazakhstan that provides support for new and start-up IT projects. The Astana Hub was launched on November 6, 2018, in the Kazakh capital by President of Kazakhstan Nursultan Nazarabyev.[20]
On May 12, 2020, the AIFC established the Advisory Council on the Development of Legal Technology, which comprises experts from the UK, US, Netherlands, Kazakhstan, Russia, China, Singapore, and Switzerland.[21] The main goal of the council is to create a vibrant and sustainable legal technology ecosystem that can improve the efficiency and quality of legal services and make them more accessible.[21]
Partnerships
[edit]The AIFC signed an agreement with London-based global communications company OneWeb in January 2020 to accelerate broadband connectivity in Kazakhstan.[22] The partnership was established as part of the Digital Kazakhstan program to promote digitization in the country. The agreement stipulated that OneWeb would engage local telecom operators among its distribution partners to provide universal, high-speed, fibre-like broadband connectivity across the private and public sector, including businesses, schools, hospitals and civil services.
Other initiatives
[edit]The AIFC creates competence centres at Kazakhstan's major universities to improve investment literacy and help students develop skills in finance, investment and other industries. Eight platforms have already been established at Almaty universities.[23]
Other Information
[edit]Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev and Kyrgyz President Sadyr Japarov visited the Astana International Financial Centre (AIFC) in March 2021. During the visit, Tokayev and Japrov were briefed on activities of different agencies in the AIFC and also attended a presentation of the e-Justice electronic filing system.[24]
References
[edit]- ^ "New Governor of AIFC named". inform.kz. 2023-01-06. Retrieved 2023-02-21.
- ^ "Central Asian global financial hub AIFC opens in Astana". Business Standard.
- ^ "Constitutional Law "On the AIFC" dated 7 Dec 2015" (PDF).[dead link]
- ^ "Number of foreign companies in Kazakhstan increases 25 percent in the past year". astanatimes.com.
- ^ a b Curtis, Simon; Klaus, Ian (2024). The Belt and Road City: Geopolitics, Urbanization, and China's Search for a New International Order. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. doi:10.2307/jj.11589102. ISBN 9780300266900. JSTOR jj.11589102.
- ^ "Embassy of Kazakhstan in the UK / 100 Concrete Steps". www.kazembassy.org.uk. Retrieved 2017-05-02.
- ^ "Astana International Financial Centre to Cement Capital's Place in Global Finance". Astana Times. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
- ^ "Nur-Sultan's financial hub to be at heart of Kazakhstan's recovery and greening". Euractiv.
- ^ "AIFC Continues Work Through Lockdown, Simplifies Access to Financing For Companies". The Astana Times.
- ^ "AIFC yearly report indicates key achievements, projects". astanatimes.com.
- ^ "The first meeting of the Management Council of Astana International Financial Centre was held in Astana | Invest In Kazakhstan". invest.gov.kz. Archived from the original on 2016-07-13. Retrieved 2017-05-02.
- ^ a b "AIX Overview". AIX.
- ^ "Kazakhstan's Futuristic Finance Center Becomes Breeding Ground For New Fintech". Forbes.
- ^ a b "Kazakhstan's Futuristic Finance Center Becomes Breeding Ground For New Fintech". Forbes.
- ^ Kenzhaliyev, Madi (2024-01-11). "Perspectives of the Court of the Astana International Financial Centre: Potential to Transform the Central Asian Legal Landscape". Asian Journal of Comparative Law: 1–20. doi:10.1017/asjcl.2023.37. ISSN 2194-6078.
- ^ "AIFC International Arbitration Centre opening ceremony, EdTech and FinTech summits mark second day of Astana Finance Days".
- ^ a b "AIFC, green tech centre and IT start-up hub to begin operating in 2018".
- ^ "Kazakh President opens AIX's first trading session". astanatimes.com.
- ^ "Kazakhstan Leads Central Asia in Green Finance". Bloomberg.
- ^ "Kazakhstan will support and incentivize IT innovation, says President". astanatimes.com.
- ^ a b "Legal Technology Boosts Business in Kazakhstan". The Astana Times.
- ^ "AIFC, OneWeb to bring next generation satellite technology to Kazakhstan". The Astana Times.
- ^ "AIFC opens competence centres at major Kazakh universities".
- ^ March 2021, Assel Satubaldina in Central Asia on 4 (2021-03-04). "Presidents Tokayev and Japarov Visit AIFC Together". The Astana Times. Retrieved 2021-12-14.
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