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Tobacco Tycoon Threatens To Close Shop In Armenia

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  • Tobacco Tycoon Threatens To Close Shop In Armenia

    TOBACCO TYCOON THREATENS TO CLOSE SHOP IN ARMENIA
    By Atom Markarian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    June 15 2006

    Hrant Vartanian, a wealthy businessman who owns Armenia's two main
    tobacco companies, warned on Thursday that he will close down his
    factories and move them abroad if the Armenian dram continues to
    appreciate against the dollar.

    "We are now making plans to move some of our manufacturing operations
    to Georgia and Russia in order to produce things there and import
    them to Armenia," he told RFE/RL. "If the dollar continues to fall
    at this pace, we will resort to that step in the next four or five
    months in order to save our business."

    The dram has gained more than 30 percent in value against the dollar
    in the last two and a half years, significantly raising production
    costs of local firms dependent on exports. Vartanian's Grand Tobacco
    and International Masis Tobacco firms not only account for much
    of cigarette sales in Armenia but also sell a large part of their
    products, notably fermented tobacco leafs, abroad. They employ more
    than a thousand people and but raw tobacco from hundreds of Armenian
    farmers.

    Vartanian, who already co-owns a cigarette plant in Georgia, agreed
    with the widely held belief that the dram's strengthening has benefited
    a handful of large-scale importers of fuel and foodstuffs that have
    close ties with Armenia's leadership. "For local manufactures the
    effects [of the dram appreciation] will be very negative, while for
    importers it is a source of huge profits," he said.

    "Those companies that are mainly involved in exports and generate the
    bulk of their revenues in hard currency are experiencing difficulties
    and failing to meet their profit targets," agreed Tigran Khachatrian,
    commercial director of the ACP copper giant, one of Armenia's largest
    exporters.

    Khachatrian complained that ACP is not only unable to raise its
    workers' wages but is increasingly having trouble paying them. "Even
    if there are no pay increases, our expenditures on wages are constantly
    going up," he said.

    The Armenian Central Bank, which sets the dram's exchange rate, argues
    that its main mission is to suppress inflation, rather than protect
    local exporters and jobs. It has said all along that the dram's
    appreciation, which resumed last month, is a natural phenomenon
    stemming from an increased influx of dollars, most of them cash
    remittances from Armenians working abroad.

    Opposition leaders and other government critics insist, however,
    the Armenian authorities have artificially boosted the national
    currency's value in order to further enrich "oligarchs" involved
    in lucrative imports. The Central Bank, backed by the International
    Monetary Fund and the World Bank, has repeatedly dismissed such claims.
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