100 Concrete Steps
The 100 Concrete Steps is a national plan announced in May 2015 by President Nursultan Nazarbayev. The initiative outlines a set of 100 measures aimed at modernizing state governance, strengthening the rule of law, ensuring economic growth, fostering national identity, and improving transparency in government institutions.
The plan was introduced following Nazarbayev's re-election in 2015 and was positioned as a roadmap for implementing five institutional reforms to achieve its ambition of joining the top 30 developed countries by 2050.
Background
In March 2015, President Nursultan Nazarbayev, during his nomination as the Nur Otan candidate for the 2015 presidential election, presented a vision for strengthening Kazakhstan's statehood in a changing global environment. He proposed five institutional reforms: modernizing the civil service, strengthening the rule of law, promoting industrialization and economic diversification, building a united "Nation of a Common Future", and ensuring a transparent and accountable government. To oversee the implementation of these reforms, Nazarbayev proposed the establishment of the National Commission for Modernization under the President.During his inauguration in April 2015, Nazarbayev announced that he would shortly present the 100 Concrete Steps plan, designed to address domestic and global challenges and to guide Kazakhstan toward joining the world's 30 most developed countries, with implementation of the reforms as the nation's principal task for the next 10 to 15 years. On 6 May 2015, at the first governmental meeting of the newly formed National Commission for Modernization, he formally presented the program, outlining a roadmap to implement his five institutional reforms and strengthen Kazakhstan's statehood.
The full detailed document of the programme, titled Plan of the Nation – 100 Concrete Steps to Implement Five Institutional Reforms, was publicly published on 20 May 2015 in Kazakh newspapers. Shortly after its publication, on 22 May at the 7th Astana International Forum, Nazarbayev addressed the plan as a roadmap for implementing the five institutional reforms, strengthening statehood, and guiding Kazakhstan toward sustainable development and entry into the world's 30 most developed countries.
Content
The 100 Concrete Steps national plan is organized around five key reforms, each broken down into specific steps.Each of the 100 steps was designed as a phased measure, to be implemented in stages over several years.
Implementation
The 100 Concrete Steps was implemented under the supervision of the National Modernization Commission under the President of the Republic of Kazakhstan, which coordinated five working groups of national and foreign experts. The Commission guided the step-by-step execution of the five institutional reforms, monitored progress by ministers and regional governors, and ensured proposals were approved by the President and turned into legislation. An International Consultative Council of foreign experts provided recommendations and independently evaluated the implementation of the reforms.The program was overseen by the government of Kazakhstan, with regular reporting on progress. Implementation was planned in two stages: institutional foundations and comprehensive modernization. Some measures were incorporated into long-term state development strategies, including Kazakhstan 2050 and Nurly Zhol.
In the State of the Nation Address on 10 January 2018, President Nazarbayev reported that 60 of the 100 steps had been implemented, with the remaining steps primarily focusing on long-term objectives.
After Nazarbayev's resignation in 2019, President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev continued the implementation of the 100 Concrete Steps by explicitly referencing it in his 9 March 2020 decree approving Kazakhstan's Foreign Policy Concept for 2020–2030, ensuring that the program remained a guiding framework for the nation's foreign policy and long-term development. In his 2020 State of the Nation Address, Tokayev emphasized accelerating and completing the program.
As of late 2021, Prime Minister Asqar Mamin reported 76 of the 100 steps of the programme, had been implemented across the five reform areas, with continued work planned in healthcare, education, investment, energy, digitalization, and other priority sectors.