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Mining Giant Remains Armenia's Top Taxpayer

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  • Mining Giant Remains Armenia's Top Taxpayer

    MINING GIANT REMAINS ARMENIA'S TOP TAXPAYER
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Jan 29 2008

    A large mining enterprise and three utility companies, all of them
    owned by foreign investors, remain Armenia's leading taxpayers, having
    accounted for almost 18 percent of its government's tax revenues
    last year.

    The Zangezur Copper-Molybdenum Plant continues to top the list of
    major corporate taxpayers published by the State Tax Service (STS)
    on a regular basis. The STS data for 2007 show it paying a total of
    33.6 billion drams ($110 million) to the state budget.

    Zangezur, which both mines and smelts ore, was privatized by the
    German company Cronimet in 2004 and has since significantly boosted
    output on the back of rising international prices of non-ferrous
    metals. Croniment pledged last August to invest $60 million in building
    a new copper and molybdenum smelter near its mines in the southeastern
    Syunik region.

    Zangezur is followed in the STS rankings by the national
    telecommunications company ArmenTel (20.8 billion drams), the
    ArmRosGazprom (20 billion drams) gas distribution network and the
    mobile phone company K-Telecom (15.5 billion drams). All three
    companies have Russian owners.

    The Armenian government collected 505.5 billion drams ($1.65 billion)
    in various taxes and customs duties in 2007, up by 31 percent from
    the 2006 level. Still, the figure makes up only 16.1 percent of
    Gross Domestic Product, one of the lowest proportions in the former
    Soviet Union.

    Two fuel-importing companies owned by government-connected businessmen
    are fifth and sixth in the STS rankings, having each paid more than
    9.5 billion drams in taxes. They are followed by Salex Group, a company
    that enjoys a de facto monopoly on equally lucrative imports of wheat,
    sugar and cooking oil to Armenia. Its owner, parliament deputy Samvel
    Aleksanian, is also a figure close to the country's leadership.

    Another prominent tycoon, Prosperous Armenia Party leader Gagik
    Tsarukian, continues to post more modest revenues contrasting with
    his extravagant lifestyle. One of Armenia's two cement plants located
    in the southern town of Ararat, is officially the most profitable
    of Tsarukian's businesses. It occupies only 45th place in the STS
    ranking with tax contributions totaling 1.3 billion drams in 2007.

    Another, smaller Ararat-based plant, which smelts gold ore, paid
    more taxes despite standing idle during much of 2007 due to a change
    of ownership.

    Armenia's second cement plant, located in the central town of Hrazdan
    and owned by another "oligarch," Mikhail Baghdasarov, occupies a
    lowly 277th place on the STS list, with 218 million drams ($700,000)
    worth of taxes paid last year. The figure pales in comparison with
    1.8 billion drams paid by Baghdasarov's Mika Armenia Trading company
    specializing in fuel imports.

    Both cement plants are believed to operate at full capacity, strongly
    benefiting from the ongoing construction boom and exporting a large
    part of their production to neighboring Iran and Georgia.

    Among Armenia's top ten taxpayers is also a cigarette-importing
    company controlled by Khachatur Sukiasian, a prominent businessman
    allied to former President Levon Ter-Petrosian. It appears to have
    been unaffected so far by the tax authorities' ongoing crackdown on
    Sukiasian-owned companies. One of them, which bottles mineral water,
    has already been charged with evading more than 3 billion drams in
    taxes. Sukiasian denies the accusations as politically motivated.
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