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While The EU Ponders Its Fate, Armenia Continues On The Road To Reco

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  • While The EU Ponders Its Fate, Armenia Continues On The Road To Reco

    WHILE THE EU PONDERS ITS FATE, ARMENIA CONTINUES ON THE ROAD TO RECOVERY

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    May 25, 2012

    Armenia has managed to reduce poverty, slash inflation, stabilize
    its currency, and privatize many business enterprises.

    Financial markets are keenly focused on the continuing travails in
    Europe, but peripheral countries near to the Eurozone cannot wait
    for their lead. Armenia, for one, has suffered through a debilitating
    recession, but, through the efforts of its domestic institutions and
    businesses, it has carved out a respectable recovery track record,
    sporting GDP growth in excess of 4% a year after the fall in 2009.

    PanARMENIAN.Net - The Central Bank of Armenia also deserves a share of
    the credit for this economic turnaround. Central banks are typically
    the "fulcrum" that stands between a local economy and the economic
    events on the international stage, absorbing both good and bad "shocks"
    before they can wreak havoc on a much smaller financial market. In
    today's modern era of globalization where our economies are totally
    interconnected and interdependent, it is much more difficult to
    shield local activity from the harsh realities across our national
    borders. This task, however, falls directly on the central bank.

    The Central Bank of Armenia was formed in 1993, following the
    accepted global design for an independent group managed by a board
    of financial professionals. Aside from tending to the distribution of
    local currency, the primary responsibilities of the bank is to bring
    stability to local prices, manage the national currency's position in
    the international marketplace, oversee the nation's foreign exchange
    reserves and gold, and generally promote growth and employment through
    its monetary policies and actions.

    Before the recent "Great Recession", Armenia had benefited from years
    of double-digit growth, but 2009 brought a severe cutback of 14.2%
    in domestic business activity. A gradual return to growth, some 2%
    in GDP, took place in 2010, followed by 4.6% in 2011. Inflation peaked
    at 7.6%, but higher discount rates from the central bank has brought
    consumer prices back in line. Current price indexes are well below 4%,
    the designated target for 2012, while GDP is expected to come in at
    4.2% for the year.

    The primary balancing act for a small country is to encourage foreign
    investment for the development of domestic business opportunities,
    promising the necessary legal infrastructure to protect those
    investments and local price stability to allow for reasonable
    projections for future profitability. The other variable in the mix is
    the country's foreign exchange rate. Since imports currently exceed
    exports for Armenia, one would expect the Armenian Dram ("AMD") to
    devalue with respect to other major currencies. This result has been
    the case over the past five years. The U.S. Dollar can now purchase
    400 Drams, as opposed to roughly 300 in 2009. This depreciation is
    not that great in the scheme of things.

    Foreign exchange reserves, however, facilitate international trade,
    establishing a basis for credit in exchanges with other governments.

    The central bank literally settles daily with other central banks
    around the world, either by accepting or paying foreign exchange
    deposits or securities to finance the daily capital flows. Armenia
    has nearly $2 billion in foreign exchange reserves, easily enough to
    cover seven months worth of imports. Many other peripheral countries
    to the EU have far less.

    Deficits are also an issue, but far less of one that can be found
    with weaker member states of the EU. Funding has come from Russia,
    the IMF, and other international financial institutions. Over time,
    Armenia has managed to reduce poverty, slash inflation, stabilize
    its currency, and privatize many business enterprises, but economic
    reforms are still on the table. The country is also leaning towards
    becoming a member of the EU in future, but for now, economic prospects
    remain bright while the EU continues to flounder.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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