The Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), launched in 2013, has significantly boosted interest in learning Mandarin Chinese across Central Asia (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, and Turkmenistan). Driven primarily by economic opportunities in Chinese-invested projects, trade, logistics, and scholarships, Mandarin has emerged as the second most popular foreign language after English in several countries. Confucius Institutes serve as key institutional drivers, providing language courses, cultural programs, HSK testing centers, and pathways to study in China. Quantitative evidence from HSK examinations shows dramatic growth: cumulative test-takers reached 143,000 by the end of 2024, with over 16,700 candidates in 2024 alone (a threefold increase from 2020) and approximately 50,000 participants in the past five years. Kyrgyzstan leads regionally with ~9,400 test-takers in 2024 and rapid annual growth of ~40%. Motivations are predominantly instrumental (employment 28%, travel 25%, cross-border communication 20%), though integrative factors (cultural interest, friendships) play a secondary role. Challenges include Mandarin's linguistic complexity (tones, characters), limited job market demand compared to English or Russian, lingering Sinophobic perceptions, and uneven returns on investment in language proficiency. Despite these barriers, expanding integration into national curricula and professional sectors underscores Chinese as a strategic asset in a multipolar economic landscape. The article analyzes motivations, institutional frameworks, trends, and implications for regional human capital and China-Central Asia ties.
Ismailova Zhyrgal2 Jia Jing Fang1* (Thu,) studied this question.