Azamat Kerimbayev
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The impact of tourism services development on income inequality in Kazakhstan’s regions
Lazat Spankulova
,
Bulat Mukhamediyev
,
Azamat Kerimbayev
,
Laura Kuanova
,
Csaba Kőmives
doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.21511/ppm.24(1).2026.22
Problems and Perspectives in Management Volume 24, 2026 Issue #1 pp. 318-331
Views: 381 Downloads: 77 TO CITE АНОТАЦІЯType of the article: Research Article
Abstract
This study investigates the relationship between tourism development and income inequality across regions of the Republic of Kazakhstan, using regional panel data for 2003–2024. The empirical analysis is based on an unbalanced panel of 16 regions, comprising 367 region–year observations. Fixed-effects regression models are employed to examine how two distinct dimensions of tourism development (tourism services per capita and tourist accommodation places per capita) affect income inequality measured by the regional Gini coefficient.
The results indicate that the intensity of tourism service provision does not have a statistically significant effect on income inequality, even after controlling for cross-sectional dependence. In contrast, tourism accommodation infrastructure capacity is positively and statistically significantly associated with regional income inequality across all model specifications. Additional results show that income inequality is significantly influenced by poverty incidence, income polarization, healthcare expenditures, and the share of the rural population.
The coefficients on the per-capita tourist accommodation variable are positive across all specifications. This indicates that the growth of this indicator contributes to increased income inequality. Moreover, the coefficients for the indicators ShServPop and ShServPop(–1) are significant. However, they cannot be relied upon, as Pesaran’s test rejects the hypothesis of cross-sectional independence for these specifications. This suggests that the growth of tourism infrastructure may exacerbate, rather than reduce, regional income differences due to capital concentration, skill-labor-oriented employment, and price effects.
The results highlight the need for complementary policies that promote inclusive tourism development and mitigate inequality-enhancing effects of tourism-related infrastructure investment.Acknowledgment
This study was funded by the Science Committee of the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Republic of Kazakhstan within the framework of the IRN grant project AP26198345 “Reducing socio-economic inequality in the regions of Kazakhstan through investments in health and improving the organization of the healthcare system.” -
Cluster-driven innovation and management in healthcare under regional and socio-economic disparities
Lazat Spankulova
,
Alexis Belianin
,
Azamat Kerimbayev
,
Zhuldyz Asanova
,
Akan Nurbatsin
doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.21511/ppm.24(2).2026.29
Problems and Perspectives in Management Volume 24, 2026 Issue #2 pp. 425-437
Views: 72 Downloads: 21 TO CITE АНОТАЦІЯType of the article: Research Article
Abstract
The purpose of this study is to determine the socio-economic and demographic factors of intra-regional inequality in Kazakhstan and their implications for cluster-based innovation in healthcare. A hybrid approach has been used, consisting of a systematic review of 181 publications using the PRISMA 2020 protocol and econometric analysis of the 2001–2024 panel data for the districts of Kazakhstan, consisting of 3,842 observations. Fixed-effects, cluster-robust, and hierarchical mixed-effects models were employed using standardized variables of population size, fertility, mortality, migration, criminality, and investments. The results reveal that the strongest and most robust predictor of intra-regional inequality in Kazakhstan is investment in fixed capital (β = 0.466, p < 0.01; β = 0.399, p < 0.01). Population size has consistently negative effects on intra-regional inequality in Kazakhstan (β = –0.240 to –0.256, p < 0.05 and p < 0.01). In the multilevel model, fertility increases intra-regional inequality in Kazakhstan (β = 0.114, p < 0.01), whereas mortality and net migration decrease it (β = –0.150 and β = –0.037, p < 0.01). The model explained 37.1% of the variance in intra-regional inequality in Kazakhstan (R2 = 0.371). The results suggest that without balanced investment and territorially differentiated policies, cluster-based innovation in healthcare can even reinforce rather than alleviate regional disparities.Acknowledgment
This paper was carried out within the framework of the following grant projects funded by the Science Committee of the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Republic of Kazakhstan: IRN AP26198345 “Reducing socio-economic inequality in the regions of Kazakhstan through investment in and improvement of the organization ofthe healthcare system”.
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