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  • Analysis: Azerbaijan looks to stash cash

    Analysis: Azerbaijan looks to stash cash
    Posted on : 2007-10-25 | Author : World News Editor
    News Category : World

    WASHINGTON, Oct. 25 (UPI) In a world of record-high energy prices,
    several former Soviet states flush with cash from hydrocarbon exports,
    notably Russia and Kazakhstan, have begun to invest their surplus
    energy revenue abroad, primarily in their energy-poor
    neighbors. Current estimates allocate Azerbaijan 0.6 percent of global
    proven oil reserves while Baku's rapidly expanding energy
    infrastructure in 2006 shipped 50 percent more than in 2005.

    Azerbaijan's $21 billion economy, expanding at more than triple the
    rate of China's, can now be added to that select category of former
    Soviet states so flush with clash that it can afford to consider
    foreign investment. Like its massive energy-rich colleagues, Baku has
    begun to acquire assets in neighboring states. Azerbaijan's
    hydrocarbon production is on a steep increase, having grown by 45
    percent from 2005 to 2006, while it is expected to grow another 30
    percent between 2006 and 2007. While at $60 a barrel, Azerbaijan's
    revenue stream was estimated at around $230 billion; currently, world
    energy prices are hovering at nearly $90 a barrel, producing more cash
    than the economy can absorb, in a pattern similar to the Organization
    of Petroleum Exporting Countries' windfall in 1973 following the oil
    embargo imposed after the Arab-Israeli war.

    According to the U.S.-Azerbaijan Chamber of Commerce, the economy of
    Azerbaijan is the fastest growing in the world with a growth rate in
    2005 of 26 percent, while it exceeded 30 percent in 2006. For 2007 the
    International Monetary Fund in February predicted Azerbaijan's growth
    would be 29 percent, down from 31 percent in 2006.

    Speaking last month to journalists, President Ilham Aliyev said
    Azerbaijani investments had reached several billion dollars.

    "For instance, the State Oil Company of Azerbaijan has started
    investing in the economies of Georgia, Turkey, and East European
    countries," he said, adding SOCAR "has a high credit rating, which
    allows the company to draw any funding both for its activity in
    Azerbaijan and for investment projects abroad."

    Profit was not the sole consideration of the Azeri government,
    however, as Aliyev said Baku should invest primarily in countries that
    are "friendly to Azerbaijan." SOCAR is also considering investing in
    Romania.

    Aliyev had even more positive data for his parliamentarians, telling a
    Cabinet meeting that Azeri gold and foreign exchange are now $6.3
    billion, adding Azerbaijan's 2008 consolidated budget will be $12
    billion. As a measure of how far the Azeri economy has come in a short
    time, in 2002 Azerbaijan's government budget was $1.5 billon. Since
    2004, Azerbaijan's state budget quadrupled.

    The massive influx of oil revenues has not been an unalloyed blessing
    for the Azeri economy, however. According to Azer Amiraslanov, the
    deputy chairman of the Majlis permanent parliamentary commission on
    economic policy, inflation in Azerbaijan next year is projected to hit
    13 percent, but he downplayed its potential impact.

    "The level of inflation is not the major problem. It is important to
    have inflation within a regulated level, which can be achieved through
    pursuing the right macroeconomic policy."

    Azeri inflation is being fueled not only by increased energy prices
    but also by a rise in grain prices, a commodity Azerbaijan imports
    mainly from Russia, Ukraine and Kazakhstan.

    Baku is also diverting revenue to some dubious projects such as an
    expanded defense budget that, according to Deputy Economic Development
    Minister Mikayil Jabbarov, in 2006 accounted for 15 percent of all
    government spending, exceeding $1 billion, an extraordinary amount for
    a nation of 8.1 million citizens. A further factor influencing any
    "trickledown" effect of energy revenues to the Azeri population is the
    country's rampant corruption.

    Complicating Azerbaijan's gold rush is its geographical location,
    bounded as it is by its fellow Caspian petroleum neighbors Russia and
    Iran. Baku's prosperity is based on a carefully calculated reading of
    the foreign policies of its giant petro-state neighbors to the north
    and the south. Despite Azerbaijan's ardent desire for closer relations
    with NATO and Washington, the recent Caspian Sea Littoral States
    Summit apparently decoupled Baku from its earlier efforts to secure
    U.S. and NATO backing for its efforts at safeguarding its independence
    by acknowledging that Iran and Russia remain primary foci in its
    foreign policy -- this despite massive Western investment in its
    energy export infrastructure in the from of the Baku-Supsa and
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipelines, both free of Russian or Iranian
    control. Should Russia and the United States come to a major
    disagreement over Iran's nuclear and energy policies, it seems certain
    Azeri prosperity will suffer. Azerbaijan's prosperity will only
    continue as long as it mollifies Washington, Moscow and Tehran, a
    complicated balancing act at best.

    (e-mail: [email protected])

    WASHINGTON, Oct. 25 (UPI) --
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