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Armenian Economy Emerging From Recession

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  • Armenian Economy Emerging From Recession

    Armenian Economy Emerging From Recession

    Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 7 Issue: 38
    February 25, 2010 04:16 PM

    Category: Eurasia Daily Monitor, Home Page, Economics, Armenia
    By: Emil Danielyan
    World

    Bank Managing Director Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala (right) with Armenian Prime
    Minister Tigran Sargsyan in October, 2009 at the opening of the bank's
    Yerevan office. (Photolur)

    Armenia appears to be emerging from its first economic downturn in
    over 15 years, which was triggered by the global financial crisis. The
    latest macroeconomic data released by authorities in Yerevan suggests
    that its unfolding economic recovery may well surpass government
    expectations for this year.

    After a decade of robust growth, the Armenian economy contracted by as
    much as 14.4 percent in 2009 -one of the sharpest declines in GDP
    registered in the former Soviet Union. Economists blamed it on a
    slump in construction (a key driving force in the previous growth),
    international prices of base metals (the country's number one export
    product) and multimillion-dollar remittances from Armenians working
    abroad and in recession-hit Russia in particular.

    The Armenian government scrambled to alleviate the consequences of the
    recession with heavy borrowing from Russia, the International Monetary
    Fund (IMF), the World Bank and other international lending
    institutions. It secured some $1.3 billion in anti-crisis loans, which
    nearly doubled the country's foreign debt by the end of 2009. A large
    part of those funds was used to offset a serious shortfall in tax
    revenues and thereby prevent major cuts in government spending on
    social and other programs. The government has also been using such
    loans to shore up the national currency (the dram), finance
    infrastructure projects, improve small and medium-sized enterprises'
    access to credit and provide direct financial assistance to mining and
    construction firms. These anti-crisis measures have clearly not proven
    sufficient to avert a decline in living standards in the
    country. According to a World Bank report published in November 2009,
    the proportion of Armenians living below the official poverty line
    rose to 28.4 percent in the second quarter of 2009 from 25.6 percent
    registered during the same period of 2008. `These developments are a
    setback for Armenia after a decade of nearly double-digit growth -
    and reduction in poverty from 56.1 percent in 1998-1999 to 23.5
    percent in [late] 2008,' said the report (Kapital, November 18,
    2010).

    Nonetheless, Armenian Finance Minister Tigran Davtian claimed
    afterwards that Armenia is coming out of the recession with minimal
    losses. On February 22, the Trade and Economic Development Minister
    Nerses Yeritsian declared that the economic crisis was over. `I want
    to assure you that we have come out of that crisis well,' he told
    journalists (www.armenialiberty.org, February 22).

    Yeritsian pointed to official statistics that show the Armenian
    economy grew by 2.4 percent year on year in January 2010, despite a
    continuing downturn in the construction sector, which has been hit
    hardest by the recession. According to the National Statistical
    Service (NSS, www.armstat.am), Armenian economic growth returned
    primarily because of a 6.5 percent rise in industrial output. The
    manufacturing sector seems to have been significantly boosted by the
    strong rally in recent months in the prices of copper and other
    non-ferrous metals.

    Armenian authorities and the IMF forecast late last year that GDP will
    grow by only 1.2 percent in 2010. Mark Lewis, the head of an IMF
    mission to Armenia, said the full-year growth rate should exceed 2
    percent as he ended a two-week visit to Yerevan on February 17. He
    reaffirmed the IMF's positive assessment of the authorities' handling
    of the crisis and said the mission will recommend that the IMF board
    disburses the next $74 million tranche of a $827 million stand-by loan
    for Armenia approved in March 2009 (Arminfo, February 17).

    `The authorities have successfully implemented a broad range of
    policies to address the macroeconomic challenges in 2009 - and
    macroeconomic policies are on track,' read a separate statement issued
    by the IMF. The statement at the same time stressed the need for
    `Ccontinued structural reforms' and `additional efforts to increase
    competition' in Armenia. That was a clear reference to the country's
    flawed business environment, which Western donors have long regarded
    as a key obstacle to sustainable economic development (Arminfo,
    February 17).

    The World Bank, in particular, believes that a stronger rule of law is
    critical for diversifying the landlocked country's economy and making
    it less vulnerable to future crises. Visiting Yerevan in October 2009,
    the bank's managing director, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, bluntly warned that
    Armenia cannot attain a higher level of development as long as the
    most lucrative sectors of its economy are controlled by a handful of
    government-linked businessmen and other `oligopolistic structures.'
    She also called for a sweeping reform of tax administration, the
    creation of a `strong and independent judicial system,' and a tougher
    fight against government corruption (www.armenialiberty.org, October
    19).

    Armenia's reformist Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan subsequently
    publicly acknowledged the existence of `oligopolies and a low level of
    competition in the economy' and pledged to do his utmost to remedy
    the situation (Armenian Public Television, November 18,
    2009). However, he has yet to follow up with any meaningful action.

    The Armenian government is only raising more questions about the
    seriousness of Sargsyan's reform agenda with a continuing crackdown on
    Khachatur Sukiasian, a wealthy opposition-linked businessman, and his
    extended family. Last December, the government completed a highly
    controversial confiscation of the Bjni mineral water plant belonging
    to Sukiasian's SIL Concern resulting from its refusal to pay hefty
    fines imposed by tax authorities. Bjni and several other SIL Concern
    firms were raided by tax officials and accused of tax evasion shortly
    after the tycoon voiced support for opposition leader Levon
    Ter-Petrosian in September 2007. The Sukiasian family rejected the
    charges as politically motivated.

    Earlier this month, the Armenian police briefly detained
    Sukiasian's younger brother Saribek before charging him with
    intimidating a fellow entrepreneur. Officials from the London-based
    European Bank for Reconstruction of Development (EBRD), which holds a
    minority stake in an Armenian commercial bank controlled by the
    Sukiasians, expressed serious concern about the case on February 16.
    `We are glad that Mr. Sukiasian has been released, but that does not
    improve the image of Armenia,' Valery Razlogov, the Head of the
    EBRD's Yerevan office, warned at a news conference, adding: `Nor does
    it strengthen the business environment here' (Aravot, February 17).

    The Jamestown Foundation
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