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  • The Armenian Dram Collapses

    The Armenian Dram Collapses

    16.03.2009 Da Yerevan, scrive Onnik Krikorian

    After years of economic growth that surprised many, the global financial
    crisis finally hit Armenia early last week forcing the Central Bank to
    devalue the local currency, the dram


    As if in expectation, mobs of people were already becoming a frequent
    sight outside many banks in the Armenian capital, Yerevan, all
    frantically seeking to exchange drams into dollars. The authorities
    moved in swiftly to restrict such transactions.

    However, on 3 March, the inevitable happened and in the space of a few
    hours the dram traded as high as 380-400 drams against the dollar before
    dropping to 360-70. Banks and exchange booths continued to limit dollar
    transactions and many shops shut for a few hours while owners assessed
    the potential damage and saw an opportunity to increase profits. Despite
    stocks being purchased before the devaluation, prices on many imported
    goods increased when they reopened.

    Sugar, pasta, vegetable oil, rice, pharmaceuticals, cigarettes and
    petrol were particularly affected with prices increasing by 10-30
    percent. Other items such as flour were marked up by over 50 percent
    while the price of butter jumped by 125 percent.

    Two days later, the dram stabilized at around 360 drams against the
    dollar, but the 20 percent depreciation from its previous rate of 305
    drams to the dollar caused alarm among much of a population reliant on
    remittances abroad and salaries paid in the local currency. As the money
    in their pocket lost its value, citizens stocked up on essential items.

    The collapse of the dram soon became known as `Black Tuesday' as ripples
    of concern soon turned into waves of panic. Highlighting various
    deficiencies in a largely import-driven local economy, the main concern
    was speculative trading and other questions regarding the financial
    health of the nation resonated once again.

    Indeed, the opposition had for months alleged that the dram's value
    against the dollar had been artificially strengthened by the Central
    Bank at the expense of $800 million in foreign reserves to benefit
    government-connected importers. However, according to the authorities,
    the reserve is only down $400 million from last September.

    `I am deeply convinced that the country is simply descending into an
    abyss,' said former president and leader of the extra-parliamentary
    opposition, Levon Ter-Petrossian, to thousands of supporters gathered in
    central Yerevan just a few days before the crash to mark the first
    anniversary of the 1 March post-election clashes which left 10 dead and
    hundreds injured.

    `The current crisis will most probably be more severe and more difficult
    to overcome than even the crisis of the early 1990s, which occurred in a
    healthy global economic environment,' he continued, predicting not only
    the collapse of the dram, but also skyrocketing unemployment and cuts in
    government spending. His words, no doubt, must have started to ring true
    to many.

    Even so, many in international circles had been anticipating such a
    move. Speaking to Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso just weeks before the
    collapse, one senior Western diplomat said it was only a matter of time.
    And while critics of the Armenian government understandably used the
    crash to validate earlier claims of economic mismanagement, officials
    and international financial lending institutions instead attempted to
    put on a brave face for journalists.

    In a written statement, the Central Bank said that the devaluation would
    benefit local manufacturers as well as exporters while also encouraging
    job creation. If so, critics countered, why did it not happen before?
    Meanwhile, international financial institutions praised the move in
    exchange for the provision of $540 million in stand-by loans on top of
    $500 million already allocated by the Russian Federation.

    `The comprehensive policy package developed by the Armenian authorities
    in consultation with IMF staff includes the return to a floating
    exchange rate regime ... with supporting monetary, fiscal and financial
    sector policies, and well-targeted structural reforms,' said the
    International Monetary Fund's managing director, Dominique Strauss-Kahn.

    However, while the World Bank also supported the move and stressed its
    benefits, local manufacturers were not as upbeat, stressing that
    competitiveness on the international market is limited by other factors.
    Blockaded by Azerbaijan and Turkey, export routes mainly through Georgia
    are already more costly and local production is also reliant on the cost
    of imported raw materials which will now increase.

    Some also speculate that interest rates from local banks will also be
    raised and that the local economy will be hit by the continuing decline
    in remittances from migrant workers abroad, and particularly Russia. As
    some local businessmen speculated that the stated benefits brought about
    by depreciation of the dram would be offset by other realities, official
    Tbilisi then entered the debate.
    "[The] Armenian economy virtually collapsed in a couple of weeks,'
    Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili said at the weekend. `Why did
    Armenia collapse? Because it had been completely dependent on the
    Russian market. The Russian market collapsed and the Armenian economy
    collapsed too." Yerevan was quick to criticize the remarks and linked
    them to increasing internal political pressure on the Georgian president
    to resign.

    The coming weeks and months will tell whether Armenia is able to ride
    the economic crisis, but other warning signs have already appeared on
    the horizon. While layoffs are reported in key sectors of the economy
    such as the mining industry, inflation looks likely to increase.
    Initially planned at around 4 percent, it is now slated to rise to 8-9
    percent.

    The World Bank also believes that the country's GDP growth is likely to
    stand at zero percent for 2009 instead of the 9.2 percent initially
    predicted by the government. Others are even more pessimistic,
    suggesting that the country will enter a slight recession and that the
    dram will depreciate by a further 30 percent over the coming months.

    On the other hand, some analysts suggest, increased momentum in the
    current process of rapprochement between Armenia and Turkey could act as
    another reason for opening the border between the two countries. Closed
    by Turkey in 1993 while fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan raged
    over the disputed territory of Nagorno Karabakh, such a move could
    benefit both countries as the global crisis ushers in an uncertain
    economic future.

    http://www.osservatoriobalcani.org/articl e/articleview/11043/
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