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Armenian President's "Crusade" Against Tax Evasion Fails to Impress

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  • Armenian President's "Crusade" Against Tax Evasion Fails to Impress

    EURASIA DAILY MONITOR
    Volume 2 Issue 17 (January 25, 2005)

    ARMENIAN PRESIDENT'S "CRUSADE" AGAINST TAX EVASION FAILS TO IMPRESS

    By Emil Danielyan


    Armenian President Robert Kocharian has announced a major crackdown on tax
    evasion, which is widely blamed for the highly uneven distribution of the
    benefits of Armenia's robust economic growth. In separate high-profile
    meetings with the leaders of his government's taxation and customs
    administration services earlier this month, Kocharian demanded that both
    agencies tackle the acute problem in earnest and said he will no longer
    tolerate rampant corruption within their ranks.

    However, there is widespread skepticism about the seriousness of the war on
    tax fraud. Local commentators believe that Kocharian will not address the
    root causes of the problem because he himself presides over a highly corrupt
    political and economic order that precludes the rule of law.

    And yet Kocharian's criticism of the tax authorities, heavily publicized by
    state television and other channels controlled by the Armenian leader, was
    extraordinary indeed. "I am sure that if you start from yourself, from
    taxing your friends and relatives, you will not let others stay beyond the
    taxation field," he told senior officials from the State Taxation Service on
    January 11.

    Kocharian thus admitted that Armenian tax officials routinely give
    privileged treatment to businesses owned by themselves, their relatives, and
    their cronies. But several newspapers have questioned the sincerity of his
    concerns. The popular weekly 168 Zham wrote on January 13 that he should
    have simply ordered law-enforcement bodies to bring the taxman to account
    instead of exhorting the latter to respect the law. Another paper, Haykakan
    Zhamanak, went further, saying, "One should start not from the employees of
    the Taxation Service and their relatives, but from Kocharian and his
    relatives. That would be more fair."

    Kocharian had a similar encounter with the leadership of the State Customs
    Committee on January 8. Without naming names, he bluntly accused
    various-level officials from the Committee and other government agencies of
    helping large-scale importers avoid taxes in return for kickbacks. This, he
    said, is hampering Armenia's post-Soviet economic recovery.

    Kocharian was equally outspoken at a December 27 meeting with a large group
    of businessmen that control much of the economic activity in Armenia. "Our
    employers are hiding [earnings] in such volumes that do not fit into any
    reasonable boundaries of decency. Be aware that there will be no concessions
    to anybody on this issue [in 2005]."

    The leitmotif of these meetings is the Armenian government's budget for this
    year. Worth approximately $800 million, it calls for a 25% rise in public
    spending. Kocharian is anxious to ensure that the tax and customs
    departments collect an extra 53 billion drams ($110 million) in taxes and
    import duties to finance the increase.

    But even a successful implementation of the 2005 budget would hardly deal a
    heavy blow to tax evasion. The Armenian government's tax revenues have
    increased steadily in recent years on the back of robust economic growth
    that hit (according to official figures) a record-high rate of 13.9% in 2003
    and remained in double digits in 2004. However, tax revenue makes up less
    than 16% of the GDP, a very small proportion even by ex-Soviet standards.
    The International Monetary Fund highlighted the "weak" tax collection in an
    extensive report on Armenia released in November 2004.

    The most serious form of tax fraud is the underreporting of corporate
    revenues. Many large and lucrative businesses falsely claim to operate at a
    loss to avoid paying taxes on profits. Government-connected individuals,
    including the millionaire "oligarchs" close to Kocharian, own many such
    enterprises. Their financial and logistical support was crucial for
    Kocharian's hotly disputed reelection in 2003. These businesses have been
    the prime beneficiaries of Armenian growth. Meanwhile, according to
    government data, at least 43% of Armenians still live below the official
    poverty line.

    Employers also evade taxes by underreporting the salaries and number of
    their employees. The Armenian Ministry of Labor estimates that more than
    400,000 workers are affected by the practice, which Kocharian particularly
    attacked. Therefore, the tax authorities launched large-scale business
    inspections in early January to uncover hidden employment. The head of the
    Taxation Service, Felix Tsolakian, said in a newspaper interview published
    on January 20 that his agency has already identified 10,000 hidden jobs.

    But there are already reports of tax authorities forcing the owners of
    small- and medium-sized companies to artificially increase the number of
    workers listed on their payroll. Tsolakian did not deny this, but defended
    the overall integrity of the process.

    The tax authorities have long harassed small firms not connected with
    influential government officials to meet their growing revenue targets, and
    there is no reason to believe that they will stop doing that now. Tax
    evasion is likely to remain a serious problem for Armenia as long as there
    is no solution to its genesis: a corrupt and unelected government not
    accountable to the people.
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