Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Russian Credit To Armenia Without Additional Terms

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Russian Credit To Armenia Without Additional Terms

    RUSSIAN CREDIT TO ARMENIA WITHOUT ADDITIONAL TERMS

    ARKA
    June 19, 2009

    YEREVAN, June 19. /ARKA/. Russia has issued a credit to Armenia on
    a commercial basis, without any additional terms, RA Prime Minister
    Tigran Sargsyan told RIA Novosti.

    On May 20, RF and RA Ministers of Finance, Alexey Kudrin and
    Tigran Davtyan, signed an agreement on a 15-year US$500mln credit
    to Armenia. The credit was to be issued at LIBOR plus 3% for the
    Armenian economy to survive the crisis. The credit is a soft one,
    its annual interest rate being 4%, and grace period four years.

    On June 2, the RA Parliament ratified the Armenian-Russian
    intergovernmental agreement. The Heritage faction voted against the
    agreement, while the Dashnaktsutyun faction abstained from voting.

    "The terms of the credit were discussed for a long time before we
    found some common ground," Sargsyan said, commenting on the some
    Armenian politicians' discontent with the credit terms.

    According to him, the Government has decided on the areas the funds
    will be directed to. Sargsyan said that the credit will exclusively
    be used under the Government's anti-crisis program.

    "Most of the funds will be directed to commercial projects, and we have
    every reason not to be concerned over additional risks," Sargsyan said.

    Earlier the RA Premier reported that 10.8bln AMD (US $56.2mln) would
    be directed to the rehabilitation of the Spitak earthquake zone.

    He also said that the Government plans to allocate a total of US
    $30mln for small-to-medium business development. The funds will be
    provided to the National Center for SMB Promotion.

    Some of the funds will be provided to a mortgage company to be
    established at the CBA. Sargsyan stressed that the measures are
    supposed to temper the impact of the global crisis.
Working...
X