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EFSE To Extend Microcredit To Armenian Small Businesses

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  • EFSE To Extend Microcredit To Armenian Small Businesses

    EFSE TO EXTEND MICROCREDIT TO ARMENIAN SMALL BUSINESSES
    Lilit Gevorgyan

    World Markets Research Centre
    Global Insight
    February 11, 2010

    On 9 February the representative of the German KfW Bank in Armenia,
    Karapet Gevorkian, stated that Armenia will join the European Fund
    for Southeast Europe (EFSE). The preliminary decision was taken
    during Central Bank governor Arthur Javadian's December 2009 visit to
    Germany, where KfW, the initiator and promoter of EFSE, is based. The
    EFSE public-private partnership intends to include Armenia as well
    as Azerbaijan, Georgia and Belarus, all members of the European
    Neighbourhood Programme sponsored by the European Union (EU). The
    Fund, according to Gevorkian, will provide much-needed microcredit to
    Armenian micro, small and medium businesses. Over the next five years
    an estimated 300 million euro (US$413 million) will be allocated to
    the new member countries in the shape of some 70,000 micro loans. The
    EFSE is the largest microfinance investment fund in the world, with
    a 700-million-euro portfolio, and it currently operates in Bosnia and
    Herzegovina, Romania, Serbia, Kosovo, Montenegro, Moldova, the Former
    Yugoslav Republic (FYR) Macedonia, Albania, Bulgaria, and in Ukraine.

    Significance:Armenian small and medium business desperately needs
    credit, which has become very scarce in the wake of the global
    economic crisis. The Armenian economy has seen a dramatic 18% drop
    in its GDP, one of the worst among the former Soviet republics, and
    small and medium businesses have suffered most from the crisis. The
    EFSE membership is good news for many small business owners as well
    as low income households; however it will take some time for judging
    the outcome of the microcredit lending. A lot depends how the national
    credit lenders will carry out their task; if it would be without undue
    delays and based on proper creditworthiness assessment. Furthermore
    the repayment of the loans will be another factor determining the
    success of the EFSE plans. The Armenian government has a major role to
    play--if it fails to change the oligarchic structure of the economy,
    and root out the corruption that is widespread amongst tax and customs
    agencies, small and medium businesses may find it difficult to make
    good use of the EFSE extended credit and repay it.
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