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Kocharian Orders Tax Exemption For Armenian Farmers

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  • Kocharian Orders Tax Exemption For Armenian Farmers

    KOCHARIAN ORDERS TAX EXEMPTION FOR ARMENIAN FARMERS
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Armenia
    Aug. 8, 2006

    Most Armenian farmers will be exempt from a 20 percent sales tax for
    agricultural products to be introduced in 2009 in line with Armenia's
    commitments to the World Trade Organization, President Robert Kocharian
    said on Tuesday.

    The value-added tax (VAT), levied from sales of all non-agricultural
    goods, has long been the Armenian government's' single largest source
    of revenues. Yerevan pledged to extend it to the agricultural sector
    when it was admitted to the WTO in February 2003 after a decade of
    membership talks with its more than 140 member states.

    With agricultural production making up approximately one fifth of
    Armenia's Gross Domestic Product, a broader enforcement of VAT would
    give a sizable boost to the government's tax revenues. However, most
    Armenians living in rural areas are subsistence farmers that already
    struggle to eke out a modest living and pay a separate tax on their
    land. Very few of them receive can count on government compensation
    for hail, droughts and other adverse weather conditions that regularly
    wreak havoc on Armenian agriculture.

    Kocharian was quoted by his office as telling Agriculture Minister
    David Lokian to ensure that farmers whose annual turnover does not
    exceed 8 million drams ($20,000) do not have to pay VAT when it comes
    into force in January 2009. The vast majority of villagers will almost
    certainly not pass this income threshold.

    A statement by the presidential press service also said VAT will be
    set at an average of 10 percent for less vulnerable rural households
    with a turnover of between 8 million and 12 million drams. Other,
    wealthier farmers will have to pay the tax in full.

    The tax breaks will presumably require corresponding changes to
    Armenian tax legislation. It is not clear if they might put Armenia
    at loggerheads with longtime WTO members like Australia and Canada
    that set specific conditions for its entry into the organization
    setting rules on international trade. The Armenian government agreed
    in particular to scrap a 10 percent duty on some imported foodstuffs
    and limit its agricultural subsidies to just $40 million a year.

    Some local manufacturers feared that WTO membership and the resulting
    further liberalization of Armenia's trade regime could reflect
    negatively on their businesses. But those fears seem to have been
    misplaced so far, with Armenian exports growing more rapidly than
    imports between 2003 and 2005.
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