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German-Owned Mining Giant Remains Armenia's Top Taxpayer

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  • German-Owned Mining Giant Remains Armenia's Top Taxpayer

    GERMAN-OWNED MINING GIANT REMAINS ARMENIA'S TOP TAXPAYER
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Nov 2 2006

    A German-owned company mining copper and molybdenum remains Armenia's
    largest corporate taxpayer, having contributed 22.7 billion drams
    ($60 million) to the state treasury during the first nine months of
    this year, official statistics show.

    The Zangezur Copper and Molybdenum Combine continues to be followed
    by two other foreign-owned companies, the ArmenTel telecommunications
    operator and the ArmRosGazprom natural gas distributor. According
    to the figures provided to RFE/RL by Armenian tax authorities, they
    have paid 13 billion drams and 8.3 billion drams respectively during
    the same period.

    Also high on the official list of the country's 300 largest taxpayers
    are two fuel importing companies, two tobacco firms, the national power
    utility, a mobile phone operator, the Metsamor nuclear power plant,
    the Zvartnots international airport, a brandy distillery and even a
    car dealership. But the amount of various taxes and customs duties
    paid by each of them pales in comparison with Zangezur's contribution
    to Armenia's national budget.

    The mining giant is based in the southeastern town of Kajaran and
    employs thousands of people. It was privatized in December 2004 for
    $132 million by a consortium of local and foreign investors led by
    the German metals group Cronimet. The latter owns 75 percent of the
    company, both directly and through its Yerevan-based Makur Yerkat
    smelter.

    The Armenian government is on track to increase its still modest tax
    and customs revenues by 20 percent to 375 billion drams (almost $1
    billion) this year. It will need to achieve a similar increase next
    year in order to successfully implement its 2008 budget projected to
    be worth about $1.5 billion.

    At the urging of the World Bank and other Western donors, the
    government began publicizing two years ago the list of the top
    taxpayers as part of its declared crackdown on endemic tax evasion.

    It was hoped that the "name-and-shame" policy will embarrass the
    country's wealthiest citizens that are believed to grossly underreport
    their earnings. Government officials and some donors say that this
    measure alone has forced them to pay more taxes.

    The head of the State Tax Service (STS), Felix Tsolakian, insisted
    this week that no Armenian company is now off limits to tax
    inspectors. "Today tax inspectors have no trouble entering one or
    another business," Tsolakian told RFE/RL in an interview.

    Still, the latest rankings released by his agency show that many of
    Armenia's government-connected tycoons continue to post modest profits
    contrasting with their conspicuous wealth. Gagik Tsarukian, arguably
    the most influential and ambitious of the so-called "oligarchs," is
    a case in point. The biggest of the companies that are known to be
    owned by him, Multi-Leon, occupies a lowly 76 place in the STS list,
    with only 411 million drams ($1.1 million) in taxes and other duties
    paid from January through August.

    Another Tsarukian-controlled business, a big cement factory located
    in the southern town of Ararat, paid 248 million drams, or even less
    than Yerevan State University. The factory is thought to be operating
    at full capacity thanks to Armenia's construction boom and growing
    cement exports to neighboring Iran and Georgia.

    The modest taxes sharply contrast with sums spent by Tsarukian on
    the ongoing massive distribution of wheat, potato seeds and other
    agricultural aid to thousands of farmers across the country reeling
    from last summer's severe drought. The aid, heavily advertised by
    Tsarukian-funded media, is being handed out under the aegis of his
    Prosperous Armenia party that intends to do well in next year's
    parliamentary elections. Some leaders of Armenia's mainstream
    opposition parties have already denounced it as a large-scale vote
    buying operation.
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