Financial Literacy among Kazakhstan Citizens and Their Engagement in Pension Asset Investment Management
Tatiana A. Zhuravleva
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Tatiana A. Zhuravleva: OSCO Group Services
Economic Consultant, 2026, issue 2, 22-43
Abstract:
Introduction. Recent sociological data reveal that only half of surveyed Kazakhstan citizens can confidently select an investment strategy, just half utilize a pension calculator, and fewer than a third understand the historical returns on pension assets. This pattern highlights a passive approach to the pension system: while citizens recognize basic services, their comprehension of complex financial instruments and long-term planning remains limited. This study aims to evaluate how financial literacy shapes citizen engagement in managing their personal pension assets. Materials and Methods. Data sources include peer-reviewed scientific journals, conference proceedings, and official government and industry portals such as gov.kz and enpf.kz. The empirical framework utilizes descriptive and comparative time-series analyses alongside an assessment of inflation trends and nominal versus real investment returns spanning from 2019 through early 2026. Results. Financial literacy directly determines pension behavior, specifically influencing long-term planning, savings rates, active investment management, and program participation. Strong quantitative and general financial skills reinforce retirement planning, while digital literacy increases a citizen’s readiness to execute complex investments. In 2025, pension assets under the management of the National Bank of Kazakhstan yielded a nominal annual return of 7.43%. However, with inflation reaching 12.3%, the fund’s real investment return dropped to minus 4.87%. These negative real returns systematically erode trust in the pension system, particularly among near-retirees and low-income demographics. Protecting these financially vulnerable populations requires stripping away academic jargon in favor of clear, accessible financial communications. Furthermore, a comprehensive evaluation of financial literacy must incorporate risk tolerance, institutional trust, and baseline financial stress rather than raw knowledge alone. Elevating financial literacy directly strengthens household financial resilience and optimizes retirement planning by encouraging rational asset selection and buffering emotional reactions to market volatility. Conclusion. The proposed strategic framework outlines systemic measures to elevate financial literacy among Kazakhstan citizens and deepen their direct involvement in pension asset management. Sustained implementation and continuous monitoring can significantly raise public financial awareness, optimize individual retirement planning, and restore institutional trust in the national pension system. Ultimately, project success depends on seamless multi-agency coordination, targeted regional adaptation, and reliable, long-term funding structures.
Keywords: financial literacy; Kazakhstan citizens; investment management engagement; pension asset management (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: F21 R42 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2026
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:ris:statec:022632
DOI: 10.46224/ecoc.2026.2.2
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