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European Bank Warns Of Armenian Growth Pitfalls

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  • European Bank Warns Of Armenian Growth Pitfalls

    EUROPEAN BANK WARNS OF ARMENIAN GROWTH PITFALLS
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    June 19 2007

    The ongoing appreciation of the dram will endanger continued economic
    growth in Armenia unless local companies increase their productivity,
    according to the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
    (EBRD).

    "Without faster productivity gains, a further appreciation of the
    Armenian currency would threaten the country's competitiveness," the
    EBRD warned in an explanatory appendix to an economic report that will
    be debated the Council of Europe's Parliamentary Assembly next week.

    The Armenian dram has gained more than 50 percent in nominal value
    against the U.S. dollar since the start of its dramatic rise in late
    2003. The process slowed down in the first quarter of this year only to
    gain new momentum last month. Local manufacturing firms claim to have
    been hit hard by the dram's appreciation, criticizing the Armenian
    authorities for their refusal to intervene in the foreign-exchange
    market.

    The authorities and the Central Bank in particular have dismissed
    the criticism, arguing that the much stronger dram is the inevitable
    result of recent years' surge in hard currency remittances sent home
    by hundreds of thousands of Armenians living and working abroad. They
    say the manufacturing sector can successfully adapt to the new reality
    with productivity gains.

    Central Bank officials say the exchange rate fluctuation has also
    suppressed inflation which has remained in single digits despite the
    country's robust economic growth. The World Bank and the International
    Monetary Fund take a similar view, having repeatedly endorsed monetary
    policies pursued by the Armenian authorities. A senior IMF economist
    went farther late last month, saying that the dram's strengthening
    has actually spurred economic growth.

    The EBRD, by contrast, seems more worried about the trend. In an annual
    report issued last month, the London-based lending institution, which
    is tasked with facilitating former Communist countries' transition to
    market-based economics, listed continued currency appreciation among
    factors which it believes pose "significant risks for the [Armenian]
    economy in the medium term."

    The other factors included Armenia's "vulnerability to commodity
    prices," dependence on low-interest loans and grants from Western
    donors, and skyrocketing real estate prices.
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