Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

TOL: Living Well And Badly

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

  • TOL: Living Well And Badly

    LIVING WELL AND BADLY
    by Haroutiun Khachatrian

    Transitions Online, Czech Republic
    June 26 2006

    South Caucasus and international experts find tentative agreement and
    lingering tensions over the region's political-economic affairs. From
    EurasiaNet.

    A recent economic conference held in the Georgian capital Tbilisi
    sought to lay the groundwork for closer regional cooperation among
    the three South Caucasus states of Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia.

    Regional economic integration was not formally on the agenda of the
    1-2 June conference, titled the International Monetary Fund and the
    South Caucasus in the 21st Century. Participants officially explored
    best practices as each state attempts to modernize its respective
    economy. However, the underlying hope was that sharing experience would
    provide an impulse for officials to explore integration opportunities
    down the road, provided that existing political obstacles, including
    the lack of a settlement to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict between
    Armenia and Azerbaijan, are eventually removed.

    The regional IMF representatives from all three states - James McHugh
    in Armenia, Basil Zavoico in Azerbaijan, and Robert Christiansen in
    Georgia - were featured participants, and all faced a diplomatically
    delicate task of outlining economic problems without appearing
    to overly criticize government policies and responses. While each
    Caucasus country features specific development conditions, conference
    attendees generally agreed that corruption and tax evasion were among
    the most serious problems prevalent in all three states.

    "A large shadow economy should be brought into the formal economy
    through an efficient tax [system] and improved corporate governance,"
    said McHugh, referring to the situation in Armenia.

    Georgian Minister of Finance Aleksi Aleksishvili said Tbilisi had
    managed to improve its revenue collection capabilities, while stressing
    that the government has stopped a practice common during the first
    months following the 2003 Rose Revolution, in which entrepreneurs
    were arrested, only to be released after making substantial payments
    to the state treasury.

    The conference scrutinized the unique economic situation in Azerbaijan,
    where oil and gas development is causing revenues to spike. Several
    participants focused on the potential threat of "Dutch disease,"
    in which a rapid rise of income from the energy sector renders other
    economic sectors of a given state uncompetitive in the global market.

    Given that only about one percent of Azerbaijan's population is
    directly involved in the oil sector, the energy windfall stands to
    be enjoyed by relatively few Azeris. Sabit Bagirov, president of the
    Azerbaijan Entrepreneurship Foundation, warned that social tension
    could grow worse in the country. "In several years, we may face a
    situation that, with huge oil revenues, still a great number of poor
    people are in the country, and the unresolved Karabakh conflict will
    make their situation even worse. This may [make] millions of people
    unhappy," Bagirov said.

    Most participants avoided making direct comparisons about the successes
    and failures of economic development in the Caucasus.

    Tigran Sargsian, chairman of the Central Bank of Armenia, was
    perhaps the only participant who sought to place developments in each
    individual state within a regional context. "Today, the countries
    of the South Caucasus live similarly badly and differently well,"
    he said. Sargsian highlighted differences among the three Caucasus
    countries. For example, according to Sargsian, Armenia was recognized
    as a leader in terms of market reforms, while possessing a bad
    record on poverty reduction. Georgia, meanwhile, was labeled as more
    competitive than Armenia. Yet at the same time, Tbilisi must struggle
    with a deficit of power producing capacity.

    Given the underlying political differences, it did not come as a
    surprise to participants when Sargsian's analysis was characterized by
    Azer Alasgarov, an Azerbaijan National Bank official, as "politicized."

    "I agree with your critical notions, but I would like the Azerbaijan
    National Bank to have presented its own vision of the situation,"
    was Sargsian's answer. The conference was organized by the Caucasus
    Research Resource Centers, the IMF, and the National Bank of Georgia.

    "Living Well and Badly"

    Haroutiun Khachatrian is a Yerevan-based writer specializing in
    economic and political affairs. This is a partner post from EurasiaNet.
Working...
X