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Taxing times for Armenians

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  • Taxing times for Armenians

    Institute for War & Peace Reporting
    Aug 18 2005

    TAXING TIMES FOR ARMENIANS

    IMF pressure prompts government to shed light on skewed tax system.
    By Naira Melkumian in Yerevan

    Big businesses in Armenia pay far less tax than their counterparts
    in other post-Soviet countries, with the burden of taxation borne by
    ordinary citizens and small companies, official statistics reveal.

    After urging from the International Monetary Fund, IMF, the state tax
    department recently published two lists of the country's 300 highest
    taxpayers, which paint an extraordinary picture of the country's
    economy that is embarrassing to both government and big business.

    According to the latest list, published last month, the Armenian
    treasury received a total of 78.4 billion drams (178 million US
    dollars) in the first half of this year, an amount that James McHugh,
    the IMF's representative in Armenia, said was very disappointing.

    "The tax collection level in Armenia is the lowest among the countries
    of the CIS," McHugh told IWPR.

    Economists say this is because some of the country's best-known
    businesses are not paying big tax bills - a fact that although
    commonly believed in Armenia for many years has now been proved by
    the publication of the two lists detailing which taxpayers pay what
    into the treasury.

    Even Armenian president Robert Kocharian expressed his concern with
    tax collection recently. Meeting leading tax officials last month,
    he said of their work, "The results are not bad, but they are hardly
    satisfactory." He promised more reforms of the tax system.

    In the latest list, as with the last published in April, Armenians
    learned that the biggest taxpayer in the country was not one of
    the big businesses based in the capital but the Zangezur copper and
    molybdenum factory which contributed more than 24 million dollars to
    the budget in the previous six months.

    Asked to comment on the nature of the list, one of the government
    officials dealing directly with the issue, Vakhtang Mirumian, who
    is the head of the finance ministry's department of tax methodology,
    told IWPR that he had "nothing to say".

    Only two big companies, Grand Tobacco and International Masis Tabak,
    are among the leading taxpayers in the current list.

    Grand Tobacco is in fifth position having paid 2.3 billion drams
    (more than five million US dollars) for the first half of this year
    or 2.9 per cent of all taxes collected by the tax department.

    Other big Armenian business concerns, running big factories and making
    well-known products, however were not high up on the list.

    According to the IMF 2004 report, the country's biggest businessmen
    pay only 23 per cent of all taxes while they can potentially contribute
    75 per cent.

    McHugh says that the lists are bringing transparency to Armenia's tax
    collection system and highlighting what needs to be done to raise
    more taxes. "All Armenians should pay more taxes, and most of it
    should come from large businesses," he said.

    The tax revenue figures have led to accusations that the system
    delivers tax breaks to some companies while penalising others.

    "There is a unique situation in Armenia - a businessman's success
    does not depend on the quality of business at all, it only depends
    on how close they are to authorities," former statistics minister
    Eduard Aghajanov told IWPR.

    There has been criticism for example that Kotaik Beer, which dominates
    60 per cent of Armenia's lucrative beer market, has paid no profit
    tax at all - at the same time as its smaller competitor Yerevan Beer
    paid 128 million drams (290,0000 dollars).

    Tigran Mejlumian, chief accountant for the Kotaik factory, 71 per cent
    of which belongs to the French firm Castel, told IWPR that because
    it receives foreign investment it does not have to pay profit tax.

    Under the law, companies that acquire more than one million dollars
    of over overseas funds every two years are exempt from such taxation.


    With big businessmen paying far less than their counterparts in other
    post-Soviet countries, the brunt of Armenia's tax burden is being
    borne by ordinary citizens and small businesses.

    Opposition parliamentary deputy Viktor Dallakian argues that because of
    the heavy tax bill they paid, small businesses were being "destroyed,
    while the oligarchs remain free to play".

    Dallakian estimates that large businesses actually earn 300-350
    million dollars every year - equivalent to half the country's budget.

    However, top businessman Hachik Manukian, who heads the Max Group,
    a prominent group of businesses, argued that the main tax burden
    should indeed fall on small and medium enterprises.

    Manukian rejected the IMF recommendations. "They want 300 large
    taxpayers to provide 70 per cent of the collections," he told IWPR.
    "Who told them that it is correct?

    "Large businesses are transparent enough and it is necessary to audit
    the medium enterprises."

    When asked to declare the amount of the taxes paid by Max Group -
    only some of its companies appear on the tax department list - the
    businessman declined to comment, saying only, "Why are you interested
    in this?"

    Most of the taxes collected in Armenia are collected indirectly.
    Parliamentary deputy Victor Dallakian estimated that 80 per cent of
    revenues come from indirect taxes, while developed economies collect
    around 70 per cent of their revenue from direct taxes.

    According to the finance ministry, 46.2 per cent of tax revenues come
    from VAT, while profit tax provides only 17.4 per cent, and income
    tax 8.4 per cent of the budget.

    "Filling the budget through VAT is like picking pockets, in other
    words, the state is putting its hand in every consumer's pocket,"
    said Arthur Tamarjian, deputy head of the department for legislative
    analysis and legal control in the Armenian parliament.

    Felix Tsolakian, head of the tax department, told IWPR that over
    the last two years there has been a 40 per cent increase in the
    proportion of direct taxes in total tax revenues. He said the lists
    of taxpayers had been published in accordance with the law and the
    president's wishes.

    Naira Melkumian is a freelance journalist in Yerevan and IWPR
    contributor.
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