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Baghdasarian Woos Small Business, Pledges Tax Cuts

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  • Baghdasarian Woos Small Business, Pledges Tax Cuts

    BAGHDASARIAN WOOS SMALL BUSINESS, PLEDGES TAX CUTS
    By Ruzanna Stepanian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Jan 23 2008

    Artur Baghdasarian, an opposition leader and major presidential
    candidate, sought the backing of Armenia's small and medium-sized
    businesses on Wednesday, denouncing a recent government measure that
    will force many of them to pay higher taxes.

    In a campaign meeting with several dozen businessmen Baghdasarian
    claimed that the very existence of such firms employing tens of
    thousands of Armenians is now under threat because of "imprudent tax
    policies" pursued by the government. He singled out government-drafted
    legal amendments that will make it harder for them to pay only
    so-called "simplified tax" and be exempted them from other, heftier
    duties.

    The amendments were approved by parliament in July and came into
    effect this month as part of a government plan to significantly reduce
    tax evasion in Armenia. Government officials say they are primarily
    directed against medium-sized and large companies that have used legal
    loopholes to qualify for simplified tax and thereby pay less taxes.

    Only small traders and some service providers will now be eligible
    for this preferential form of taxation, which was introduced in the
    late 1990s to spur the development of small business in Armenia. The
    State Tax Service estimates that the number of local firms covered
    by it will shrink from 26,000 to 14,000 as a result.

    Baghdasarian claimed that the changes in the Armenian law on simplified
    tax will "effectively eliminate small and medium-size businesses." "The
    de facto scrapping of simplified tax will hit hard about 30,000
    entrepreneurs," he said, adding that if elected president, he will not
    only abolish the enacted changes but extend the law to more businesses.

    In his election manifesto, Baghdasarian promises to initiate an
    across-the-board reduction in the basic tax rates but does not
    specify by how much. He remained vague on the subject on Wednesday,
    saying only that tax cuts would boost state revenues and result in
    thousands of new jobs.

    The government policy on simplified tax has also been attacked by
    another opposition candidate, former President Levon Ter-Petrosian.

    He has claimed that it is part of what he sees as an ongoing
    monopolization of the Armenian economy.

    Baghdasarian likewise accused the Armenian authorities of favoring
    government-connected "oligarchs" who effectively control lucrative
    sectors of the economy. "Imports of 21 basic consumer goods are in
    the hands of a few monopolists," he said. "What we are seeing is a
    monopolization of whole sectors of the Armenian economy. That means
    the number of people engaged in small and medium-sized business in
    our country will decline drastically."

    Meeting with some 60 wealthy entrepreneurs late last month, President
    Robert Kocharian denied the existence of de facto economic monopolies
    in Armenia, saying there are only companies holding "dominant
    positions" in commodity imports and other sectors. He claimed that
    other local and foreign firms do not dare to compete with them for
    purely "psychological" reasons.
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