Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian trade gap remains wide during 2012

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

  • Armenian trade gap remains wide during 2012

    Global Insight
    February 1, 2013


    Armenian trade gap remains wide during 2012

    by Venla Sipila


    Armenian goods trade continues to signal significant external
    financial risks. According to the latest customs-based trade figures
    published by the Armenian National Statistical Service, exports over
    the whole of 2012 totalled USD1.4 billion, rising by 7.0% from 2011,
    while imports climbed by 2.9%, reaching USD4.3 billion. As a result,
    the trade balance showed a deficit of USD2.8 billion, remaining nearly
    stable compared with 2011. In December alone, exports increased by
    10.7% year-on-year (y/y), while imports rose by 7.1% y/y.

    Significance:Last year saw the recent trade trends continuing, in that
    export growth proved higher than the gain of imports. This has been
    the case since 2010, following a deep contraction in both during the
    crisis year of 2009. Prior to this, import growth had for several
    years registered clearly unsustainably high rates, significantly above
    export gains. Even with the latest indicators of economic activity
    suggesting that GDP growth for the whole of last year may come in
    somewhat above our latest forecast, it still seems likely to us that
    the ratio of trade deficit to GDP in 2012 will remain relatively
    stable compared with 2011, at around 27-28%. Even if the customs-based
    trade gap remained more or less stable in annual comparison, the trade
    deficit on a balance-of-payments basis is still expected to narrow
    somewhat in 2012 as a whole. This should allow for some improvement in
    the overall current account gap for 2012, as already suggested by the
    improvement of some 10% y/y seen in the January-September 2012 current
    account data (seeArmenia: 10 January 2013:). Nevertheless, Armenia's
    external imbalances are clearly unsustainable. On the other hand,
    continued access to concessional lending should keep the external
    financing requirement manageable in the medium term.

Working...
X