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Armenia Scores Highest Among CIS on Economic Freedom Index

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  • Armenia Scores Highest Among CIS on Economic Freedom Index

    ARMENIA SCORES HIGHEST AMONG CIS ON ECONOMIC FREEDOM INDEX

    WASHINGTON, January 7 (Noyan Tapan). The Armenian National Committee
    of America (ANCA), in letters sent on January 5 to Members of
    Congress, Administration officials, think tanks, the media, and the
    broader Washington, DC foreign policy community, welcomed Armenia's
    high rating from the Index of Economic Freedom, prepared jointly by
    the Heritage Foundation and the Wall Street Journal. The Index
    measures 161 countries against 50 variables divided into 10 factors of
    economic freedom. Armenia received a 2.58 rating and was ranked 42nd
    overall - ahead of both France and South Korea. Armenia's scores
    places it, by a considerable margin, as the highest scoring nation
    among the Commonwealth of Independent States. Within the Caucasus,
    Armenia was listed as the only "Mostly Free" nation. Georgia ranked
    100th overall with a score of 3.34, and Azerbaijan came in at 103rd
    with a score of 3.38. Turkey continued to slip on economic freedoms,
    coming in with a score of 3.36 and a ranking of 112th overall. Lower
    scores on the Index's five-point scale are more desirable. "Armenia's
    strong economic growth and steady progress in each of the ten areas
    weighed by the Heritage Foundation and the Wall Street Journal are
    reflected in the expansion of U.S.-Armenia economic relations," said
    ANCA Chairman Ken Hachikian. "We look forward to helping further
    expand these commercial ties and to building on the passage of
    Permanent Normal Trade Relations legislation - spearheaded last year
    by Congressman Joe Knollenberg and Senator Mitch McConnell - by ending
    double-taxation, securing a Social Security Agreement, and paving the
    way toward free trade between the United States and Armenia."
    Armenia's ratings in each of the ten factors covered by the Index are
    provided below (Lower scores are more desirable): Trade: 2.0 Fiscal
    Burden: 2.3 Gov. Intervention: 2.5 Monetary Policy: 2.0 For.
    Investment: 2.0 Banking: 1.0 Wages & Prices: 3.0 Property Rights: 3.0
    Regulation: 4.0 Informal Market: 4.0 According to the Index, Armenia
    has made steady progress on economic freedom over the past
    decade. Below find Armenia's past scores: 2005: 2.58 2004: 2.63 2003:
    2.59 2002: 2.78 2001: 3.03 2000: 3.21 1999: 3.50 1998: 3.50 1997: 3.50
    1996: 3.69
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