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  • Armenia enjoys excessive harvest

    Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
    Sept 19 2012


    Armenia enjoys excessive harvest



    by David Stepanyan, Yerevan. Exclusively for VK

    2012 was productive for Armenian agriculture. Fruits and vegetables
    flooded the Ararat Valley, the main agricultural region of the
    country. But instead of gaining additional income, farmers lost what
    they earned in the previous years.

    Supply of peaches, plums, grape and some vegetable types exceeded the
    demand, resulting in average prices of about $0.25-1.25. The prices
    were formed by resellers who pay half of it at best or a third in some
    cases. But even that price does not allow farmers to make profit from
    their hard work, because Yerevan cannot consume fruits and vegetables
    in quantities offered.

    Peasants had to sell their products, for example, peaches, at a
    ridiculously low price of $0.13 per kg. Factories, for example, the
    canned food factory in Borodino in the Ararat Region or Spaika, a
    company exporting fruits and vegetables from Armenia) select only the
    best fruits and leave the rest. Moreover, the little cash they offer
    is not paid immediately. They are handed only in a few months after
    being processed in affiliated banks. Farmers are forced to take loans
    at the very same banks before they get their payments.

    Armenian fruits and vegetables have high demand in Russia due to their
    ecological benefits. Prices for fruits and vegetables in Russia are
    tens of times higher. Armenia could have organized exports of
    high-quality products to Russia, not to mention other CIS states,
    instead of having it rot in fields and gardens. The question is why
    cannot Armenian farmers organized exports of their products
    themselves?

    Gagik Agajanyan, Executive Director of Apaven, an international
    transport company, told VK that exports of any products made in
    Armenia do not undergo taxing. The mechanisms are simple, cargo
    registration are customs offices on the border is realized basing on
    documents presented by authorities of communities where the fruits
    were grown. Then, an export declaration is presented. Verkhny Lars is
    open, there are no car transport problems in Georgia, illegal fees are
    only common in North Caucasus republics. Although Russian executives
    are trying to resolve the problem. Thus, it seems that nothing gets in
    the way of agricultural exports from Armenia, at first view. However,
    Armenian tax laws set a 20% VAT for any goods being exported.

    Exporters get the sum back later, but the process takes a year. Where
    would a farmer get enough cash to pay VAT and wait a whole year to get
    the money back. The government does not let itself remain idle.
    Armenian Deputy Minister for Agriculture Robert Makaryan said that if
    processing and exporting enterprises of Armenia use their potential at
    full power, there would be not problems in realizing agricultural
    products. A state structure monitoring harvesting and exports of
    products has been organized this year. President Serzh Sargsyan
    ordered grape prices to be set at 140 drams per kilo. Owners of
    factories reacted to the urge and the situation started improving.

    Ara Grigoryan, Executive Director of the Yerevan Cognac Factory, the
    largest processing enterprise of Armenia, called the president's 140
    drams price the happy mean and decided to prepare 24,000 tons of grape
    in 2012, exceeding the previous year's quantity by 3,000 tons.
    Purchases of grape started on September 10. The cognac factory (owned
    by Pernod Picard) decided to increase purchase prices to 140 drams.
    Grigoryan said that the factory will start signing long-term deals
    with farmers in spring 2013, to purchase grape for 9 years. It would
    help farmers solve their present problems and plan business for the
    future with greater harvests. Long-term contracts will encourage banks
    to give loans for development.

    A new factory to process apricots, peaches, apples, plums and tomatoes
    was launched. It belongs to Euroterm and is the only agricultural
    processing facility built from scratch and equipped with advanced
    European technologies, allowing 300-500 tons of fruits and vegetables
    to be processed. Euroterm exports about 70% products to Russia, USA,
    France, Germany, UAE, Kazakhstan and Australia.

    But these achievements cannot resolve the problem of realizing
    agricultural products in Armenia. In order to understand the reasons,
    one needs to recall the collapse of the USSR, when Armenian
    authorities started bringing their innovative plans to life.
    Agriculture was the first to face the impact of reforms started in the
    1990s. As a result, the situation in gardens and fields this year has
    become unsatisfactory. Problems with realization of fruits and
    vegetables are caused by fragmentation of farms and lands. 430,000
    farms were formed during privatization of the 1990s, an absurd figure
    for a country as small as Armenia. Finland, for instance, has 67,000
    farms. According to the Ministry for Agriculture, only 470,000
    hectares of fields were planted, which means that a farmer has an
    average of only 1.1 hectares of land. Specialists VK interviewed say
    that the optimal land size is about 100 hectares. It will allow
    circulation of agricultural lands, solve watering issues, fertilizers,
    efficient use of equipment and organized realization of products. 46%
    of Armenian population is agricultura, compared with 2-6% in advanced
    states.

    These `results' were achieved after 20 years of market `reforms' and
    market `development', proving that all agricultural reforms,
    especially privatization, were ignorant and mischievous. They were so
    mischievous that if there were no reforms and the collective farms of
    the USSR were left as they were, the result would most likely be a lot
    better. Belarus can boast the best confirmation of the idea.
    Agriculture became so shattered with the help of almost all
    governments since President Levon Ter-Petrosyan. Consequently, modern
    farming resembles that of Medieval times, unproductive and
    uncompetitive. The agriculture minister still calls for cooperation of
    farmers in order to solve all agricultural problems, including
    products rotting at `uncooperative' fields. Words and actions of
    Armenian functionaries have always been contradicting each other,
    although that would not stop them from announcing `increase of volumes
    and income of processing industry' belonging to the wealthy part of
    the population. The 430,000 farms of Armenia will probably feel no
    better from this increase.


    http://vestnikkavkaza.net/articles/economy/31579.html

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