Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Good; Not Good Enough: Pension Increase Lags Behind Cost Of Living S

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Good; Not Good Enough: Pension Increase Lags Behind Cost Of Living S

    GOOD; NOT GOOD ENOUGH: PENSION INCREASE LAGS BEHIND COST OF LIVING SURGE
    NAZIK ARMENAKYAN

    ArmeniaNow
    10.01.12 | 13:53

    By Gohar Abrahamyan
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    Pensioners are not as enthusiastic about benefit increases as the
    Government, which raised aid allotments beginning this year.

    Across the board, pensions will be raised by 10 percent. (The minimum
    pension, for example, will grow from about $27 to about $34.)

    There are approximately 522,000 pensioners in Armenia (about 16
    percent of the population), and many of them view the 10 percent
    raise in contrast to the 14 percent hike in food staples.

    While authorities believe that raising pensions means assistance to
    a solid share of the population, pensioners and experts point to the
    4.7 percent inflation and the perpetually increasing cost of living
    to conclude that the raise will not bring any positive change in the
    living standard of the socially vulnerable strata of society.

    "Over the past years, price hikes in Armenia have been so rampant that
    these raises [pensions, salaries] are absolutely not proportionate to
    that inflation and will not bring relief to pensioner's poor living
    conditions. This is just a campaign step prior to the fortcoming
    elections in order to attract the attention of that social class,"
    member of Heritage parliamentary faction Armen Martirosyan told
    ArmeniaNow.

    According to data posted by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, in the
    neighboring Georgia minimum service pension is 110 lari (some $66;
    25,500 AMD), in Azerbaijan it's 85 manat (around $108; 41,800 AMD). In
    Armenia the average pension is 25,000 drams (around $64.50), when,
    by official data, the minimum consumer basket per month in 2011 was
    62,600 drams (around $170).

    "The added amount won't even buy a kilo of beef, given that it costs
    3,000 drams ($8). If they were going to give a raise they'd better
    have given a proper raise to people with low pensions first, so that
    it could make a difference. The way they have done isn't of help to
    us," says pensioner Roza Balayan, 77.

    Many pensioners are living alone without families and their only
    source of income is their pension; they economize it trying to make
    it last, along with attempts to spend less. Almost all pensioners
    need medications and medical adssistance, but have neither medical
    insurance nor state assistance.

    "I worked for 55 years but only 35 is counted and after this recent
    raise my pension has become 31,300 (around $81). But I live alone and
    can hardly make both ends meet. I am trying to spend with extreme
    caution, counting every penny. I am not even heating my place, but
    it still does not suffice," says 75-year-old Arusyak Soghomonyan,
    adding that her utility expenses are 7,000-9,000 drams ($18-23) for
    her one-bedroom apartment, plus additional payments for property tax,
    garbage disposal, medicines and food.

    Economist Andranik Tevanayna told ArmeniaNow that the rate of the price
    hike is much higher than the raise in pensions, which, he believes,
    "nullifies the government efforts".

    "In order to be able to raise pensions, the government raises taxes,
    whereas our economy has to be developed and one of the most important
    steps in trying to develop it is to relieve the tax burden, and not
    add pressure. Our government is collecting taxes, which leads to
    inflation," says Tevanyan.

Working...
X