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Armenia, Georgia Vow Joint Effort To Attract Foreign Investment

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  • Armenia, Georgia Vow Joint Effort To Attract Foreign Investment

    ARMENIA, GEORGIA VOW JOINT EFFORT TO ATTRACT FOREIGN INVESTMENT
    By Shakeh Avoyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Oct 15 2007

    Armenia and Georgia pledged to boost bilateral trade and join forces
    in attracting badly needed foreign investment into their economies
    on Monday.

    Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian and his visiting Georgian counterpart,
    Zurab Noghaideli, said they agreed to create a "common investment
    environment" that would make their small countries more attractive
    to large foreign investors.

    "We are going to start working on presenting Armenia and Georgia
    as a single investment and trade entity to investors interested
    in working with us," Noghaideli said after a meeting in Yerevan
    of the Georgian-Armenian inter-governmental commission on economic
    cooperation.

    "Only together can we be of interest to big foreign firms," said
    Sarkisian. He argued that the small size of Armenia's and Georgia's
    populations is a major factor discouraging foreign direct investment.

    "Whereas several years ago we were talking about how to make sure our
    cargos go through Georgian territory without problems and unfettered
    electricity supplies [to Georgia,] we are now discussing issues that
    are more important to our peoples. One of those issues is the formation
    of a common market," Sarkisian added at a joint news conference.

    Neither premier would say how the two countries plan to harmonize
    their investment and other economic legislation. A separate statement
    issued by the Armenian government also gave no details, saying only
    that the idea was high on the agenda of the commission's meeting.

    The meeting also focused on ways of increasing the still modest
    volume of Georgian-Armenian trade. According to official Armenian
    statistics, it rose by 16 percent to $51 million in the first half
    of this year. The figure is equivalent to less than 3 percent of
    Armenia's overall external trade during this period.

    "Georgia mainly produces goods that are not produced in Armenia and
    vice versa," he said. "We are not competitors and can complement
    deficiencies of our markets."

    Noghaideli agreed, singling out the chemical and food-processing
    industries. The government statement also cited him as stressing the
    need to boost the capacity of Georgia's railway network that processes
    the bulk of cargos shipped to and from Armenia.

    It was not clear if the two sides discussed the situation in Georgia's
    restive Armenian-populated Javakheti region or the persisting
    Georgian-Russian tensions.
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