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Armenia: Government Kicks Off Tax, Customs Reforms

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  • Armenia: Government Kicks Off Tax, Customs Reforms

    ARMENIA: GOVERNMENT KICKS OFF TAX, CUSTOMS REFORMS HAROUTIUN KHACHATRIAN 6/11/08

    EurasiaNet, NY
    June 11 2008

    Armenia's new government has taken the first steps towards a shake-up
    of its notoriously corrupt and inefficient tax and customs agencies.

    Improving Armenia's business environment has emerged as a top
    priority for Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisian, a former chairman
    of Armenia's Central Bank, and newly inaugurated President Serzh
    Sarkisian (no relation to the prime minister). In 2007, the country's
    economy expanded by 13.7 percent, marking the sixth straight year of
    double-digit growth. In an effort to maintain a robust growth rate, the
    government is banking on an overhaul of the tax and customs sectors,
    two areas that Sarkisian has pledged will be "at the center of his
    attention," the presidential administration reports.

    "In our country, apart from tax and customs revenues, there are
    no sources of solving social problems," Sarkisian told an April
    18 meeting of the State Customs Committee broadcast by state
    television. "Therefore, we must follow the path of self-cleansing."

    The push for reform first targeted customs, an area where President
    Sarkisian claimed that corruption is "thriving." The Armenian leader
    threatened to fire any official who failed to "work honestly."

    The opposition press has hailed the criticism - albeit with a dig
    at the government for past failures. "Customs officials are ordered
    not to take bribes. This means that previously they were ordered to
    take them," concluded Haykakan Zhamanak, a newspaper close to the
    opposition movement led by ex- President Levon Ter-Petrosian. The
    clean-up campaign cannot last for long, the publication argued, since
    senior officials, it alleged, will not voluntarily give up the income
    bribes provide.

    Some entrepreneurs, though, say they have already seen a change. In
    particular, implementation of a rule that allows businesspeople to
    fill out their own customs declaration has played a role, one leading
    member of Armenia's business community contends. The regulation has
    existed since 2001, but was never observed until recently.

    "Traditionally, Armenian importers had to go through a long procedure
    for presenting customs declarations, and they could not do this without
    the participation of customs officials," recounted Gagik Poghossian,
    chairman of the Foundation for Small and Medium Businesses, a lobbyist
    group. "This used to result in high corruption."

    With no need to meet with customs officers, opportunities for bribery
    have decreased, he added. At the same time, authorities have encouraged
    the use of specialized customs brokers to help businesspeople fill
    out their documents correctly, he said.

    But the transition has not come problem-free.

    One businessman who requested anonymity told EurasiaNet that the
    absence of bribes has, in fact, delayed his taking a routine stock of
    imported computers through customs. In the past, bribes facilitated
    the clearance for lower fees -- an excise dodge that this businessman
    alleges meant lower retail prices for consumers. The new shipment,
    however, comes bribe-free and will be assessed at a higher excise
    rate, meaning that it cannot be sold until previous, cheaper stock
    is sold out, he said.

    Poghossian, though, reports that while most businesspeople in general
    are happy with the changes, they remain anxious about whether or not
    the government will make sure that the changes are permanent.

    Meanwhile, President Serzh Sarkisian's administration has moved on
    to tackle the tax service.

    In a May 29 meeting with business representatives, President Sarkisian
    affirmed that "the state is on the same side as business." Particular
    emphasis was put on the need for an equitable application of taxes,
    and the closure of de facto payment loopholes for big business. Members
    of the business community have been asked to propose additional areas
    for reform or to amend suggested changes.

    "If we fail to improve tax administration, we will destroy our
    country, our state and our statehood," Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisian
    admonished senior tax officials at a June 3 meeting. Tax officials'
    style of work must "fundamentally" change to reverse the business
    community's negative attitudes, Sarkisian added. Salary increases for
    tax officials and regular training sessions have been slotted to help
    in that transition.

    Government critics remain skeptical about the motivation for the
    overhaul of the tax and customs systems. "My feeling is that these
    changes will lead to a situation where, instead of a dozen people
    having privileges in the tax and customs spheres, we will have just
    two people with such privileges," Hrant Bagratian, who served as
    prime minister from 1993-1996 under former President Ter-Petrosian,
    said in reference to the current president and prime minister.

    Prime Minister Sarkisian reminded officials at his June 3 event that
    "[p]arliament members and ministers have no right to be involved
    in business," but the extent to which that maxim will be executed
    remains in doubt.

    Local representatives of anti-corruption watchdog Transparency
    International, one of the most outspoken international critics of
    the shadowy line between governments and businesses, could not be
    reached to comment.

    For now, though, one of Armenia's richest business leaders maintains
    that the time has come for change. "We have to forget what was in
    the past," oligarch Gagik Tsarukian, leader of the pro-government
    Prosperous Armenia Party, a member of Armenia's ruling coalition, told
    reporters after the May 29 meeting with President Sarkisian. "From now
    on, everybody should work with proper documents and must pay taxes."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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