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Utility Firms Armenia's Main Pension Contributors

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  • Utility Firms Armenia's Main Pension Contributors

    UTILITY FIRMS ARMENIA'S MAIN PENSION CONTRIBUTORS
    By Anna Saghabalian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Dec 12 2007

    Social security taxes levied from Armenia's leading utility companies
    are the single largest source of pensions paid to hundreds of thousands
    of elderly citizens, a senior government official said on Wednesday.

    Vazgen Khachikian, head of the State Social Security Fund, unveiled
    the list of the country's biggest pension taxpayers, which is topped
    by the Armenian electricity and natural gas distribution networks as
    well as ArmenTel, the national telecommunications company.

    Armenia's moribund state railway is in a surprising fourth place,
    paying more to the pension fund than the country's largest corporate
    taxpayer, the Zangezur Copper-Molybdenum Plant. Zangezur is only
    sixth on the list made available to RFE/RL by Khachikian.

    Other big and lucrative Armenian companies are much lower in the
    rankings. The Sanex company, for example, which enjoys a de facto
    monopoly on imports of basic food commodities, paid less in social
    security taxes than each of the country's main hospitals.

    According to Khachikian, this does not necessarily testify to gross
    tax evasion as the main factor in pension tax collection is the
    number of people employed by a particular company and the size of
    their wages. "We have to keep in mind that it is possible to make
    big profits with few employees," he said.

    "But this doesn't mean there are no companies evading social security
    and other taxes," Khachikian said, adding that the practice is
    particularly widespread among construction companies, restaurants
    and numerous taxi firms.

    They are believed to artificially reduce their contributions to the
    State Social Security Fund by underreporting the number of their
    employees. It is also not uncommon for private firms to underreport
    their workers' wages. The practice is thought to be commonplace in
    all sectors of the economy.

    With the total annual amount of officially declared wages paid in
    the private and public sectors estimated at 500 billion drams ($1.65
    billion), analysts say the Armenian government should be able to
    collect at least 110 billion drams in social security tax this year.

    However, the pension fund's revenues are expected to come in at only
    85 billion drams.

    In an effort to address the problem, the government decided two years
    ago to transfer the authority to collect pension tax from the fund
    to the State Tax Service. Khachikian said the move has worked as his
    agency rapidly balanced its books and posted a net surplus of more
    than 4 billion drams in 2006. The surplus is on course to reach at
    least 7 billion drams next year, he said.
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