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Former Premier Says Global Financial Crisis Yet To Hit Armenia

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  • Former Premier Says Global Financial Crisis Yet To Hit Armenia

    FORMER PREMIER SAYS GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS YET TO HIT ARMENIA

    Aravot
    Oct 10 2008
    Armenia

    A former Armenian prime minister has dismissed the Armenian
    authorities' optimism that the global financial crisis will not affect
    the Armenian economy, predicting that the crisis is going to hit the
    county hard in two to three months.

    Speaking at a news conference on 9 October, Hrant Bagratyan,
    an economist by training, said that the Armenian authorities'
    statements that the crisis would not affect the Armenian economy
    were not serious and absurd, the pro-opposition newspaper Aravot
    reported on 10 October. It is also quite likely that the incumbent
    prime minister and members of his cabinet "don't really understand
    the link between the American crisis and our country", he added.

    "The Russian VTB bank, which has a branch in Armenia] has a liquidity
    problem, oil and gas prices are going down [on the world market],
    and the prices for copper and molybdenum have sunk catastrophically,"
    Bagratyan said. "The British government is trying to bail out the
    HSBC. Now they [the Armenian government] are going to say that this
    bank has nothing to do with us either."

    Speaking on the possibility of opening the Armenian-Turkish border,
    Bagratyan said he favoured the opening "but it should not be linked
    to the Karabakh issue".

    "I can see no economic threats," he said. "At first, there will be
    something similar to what happened in 1991-92, when cheap Iranian
    goods flooded Armenia. Some short-term shocks might happen, but in a
    year or so, we'll see that our development opportunities are bigger. I
    am sure we have relative advantages over our nomad neighbours."

    He also slammed President Serzh Sargsyan for not mentioning the
    tragic consequences of the 1-2 March unrest in Yerevan in his recent
    address to nation. "If there are casualties, there are killers. It
    was a shame not to speak about it," Bagratyan said.

    At a separate news conference on the same day, another economic expert
    and former member of the Armenian parliament, Tatul Manaseryan, said
    the global financial crisis had had almost no effect on the Armenian
    economy. "The Armenian market is very small, so it cannot sustain
    serious damages," Aravot quoted him as saying.
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