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Armenians Are Not So Poor

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  • Armenians Are Not So Poor

    ARMENIANS ARE NOT SO POOR
    By Albert Khachatryan

    news.am
    Nov 17 2009
    Armenia

    In dealing with the consequences of the global economic crisis, many
    governments' top priority is improving the population's solvency. They
    are employing various mechanisms, the aim being the same - preventing
    the reduction of population's real incomes and, within the limits of
    the possible, improving the population's solvency.

    Of course, steadily rising prices for goods and services causes a
    relative reduction in solvent demand. The recently observed steady
    tendency toward higher wages, which form a major part of the Armenian
    population's incomes, is counterbalancing this process. The minimum
    basket of goods may serve as a standard for estimating wages.

    Specifically, this January-September the average nominal monthly wages
    reached 98,400 AMD (about U.S. $258) in Armenia - 3.6 times as much
    as the cost of the minimum basket of goods in the 3rd quarter of 2009.

    One would only be happy about such "fine figures" but for...

    The monthly cost of the minimum basket of goods for a four-member
    family (two parents and two children) is 109,500 AMD. Thus, if only
    one of the parents is the breadwinner (which is usual in Armenia),
    the aforementioned average monthly wages mean such a family will
    find itself among "poor" families. With the income tax, 6,500 AMD,
    withheld from the nominal monthly wages, the actual amount received
    by an employee is reduced to around 91,900 AMD.

    According to the Introduction to a table compiled by the RA Statistical
    Service, the cost of the minimum basket of goods was calculated
    "as a result of an integrated survey involving 6,816 households and
    conducted with the use of methods developed by the World Bank, from
    April 1, 2004, to March 31, 2005." The first question is: who are
    the respondents? The richest sections of the population were hardly
    involved in the survey. We do not think that the statisticians would
    deny this fact. So the actual figures could have been better. It is
    not a question of principle, however. What is worse is that the "aim"
    of the basket itself is poverty - abject poverty.

    Citizens of developed countries may be shocked at the figures showing
    the minimum daily amount of food used by their counterparts in Armenia,
    so we are citing annual indices. Well, the annual amount of meat
    per capita is 19.3 kg (against 40 kg in the mind-1980s), fish 3 kg
    (several kilos less than 20 years ago), and so on and so forth. On the
    other hand, baked goods and potatoes "have made progress" - 178.5 kg
    and 56.4 kg respectively. Of course, Armenians are great lovers of
    bread, and bread consumption in Armenia much exceeds the "refined"
    European standards. It is a deplorable fact, but low-income families
    have to use relatively cheap bread as "compensation" for high-calorie
    and much more expensive products - meat, fish, eggs...

    The daily caloric value of the minimum basket of goods is 2,232
    calories. Before analyzing this figure, we would like to note that
    children aged 7-10 need at least 2,380 calories daily. This shows that
    the caloric value of the food basket in Armenia actually means chronic
    malnutrition. The problem is, however, much more serious. Baked
    goods are the main source of calories, their share in the daily
    "caloric content" being 61%. The caloric value of one "weight unit"
    of baked goods is 1.4 times as much as that of meat products, whereas
    the price of one kilocalorie is 3.9 times as low. So minimizing the
    cost of the minimum food basket will bring double "gain"!

    Although our citizens are complaining about a massive price rise,
    the cost of the minimum food basket rose by only 249.6 AMD in the
    3rd quarter of this year as compared with the corresponding period
    last year! The explanation is quite simple. Against the rising prices
    for most of the "basket-forming" products, a 7.9% fall in the price
    for baked goods was registered. As a result, due to baked goods, the
    cost of the minimum food basket even "fell" by 513 AMD, which was a
    partial compensation for a rise in price for meat products (3.2%),
    for fish (86.8%!), for fats (3.6%), and so on.

    As regards the fall in the prices for baked goods, particularly for
    bread, it is common knowledge that the actual weight of one loaf of
    bread is much lower than the figures indicated on the labels. The
    competing producers reduce the price - and weight -- of one loaf to
    attract consumers. So what is really behind the "cheaper" bread -
    a lower price or producers' new trick?

    The low caloric value of the minimum food basket and the "overweight"
    of "cheap" baked goods result in its purely "symbolic cost." In the
    3rd quarter of this year it was less than 17,700 AMD, which, in turn,
    allows the "derivative", minimum food basket, to be "optimized."

    Unlike many countries, where the nonfood component of the "basket"
    is calculated on the basis of natural consumption coefficient for key
    products and services, Armenia chose a much easier way - multiplying
    the cost of the monthly food basket by 1.55. Thus, the monthly cost
    of the minimum food basket turned out to be less than 27,400 AMD in
    the 3rd quarter - less than U.S. $77 a month, a "standard" amount in
    poor countries. The situation is slightly better in the Baltic States,
    which had the same initial position as the Commonweal of Independent
    States (CIS). Specifically, in Latvia in the 2nd quarter of this year,
    the monthly cost of the minimum basket of goods was around U.S. $348.

    It would be naïve to speak "in terms of prices." We are all well
    aware of the fact that the prices for consumer goods have reached
    the much talked-about European standards, and, in some cases, have
    even exceeded them.

    In "rich" countries the cost of the minimum basket of goods is much
    higher than in Armenia, with even recreation and car maintenance costs
    included. We had better not make any unfavorable comparisons. The
    social consumption standard in effect is essential for normal life,
    and its norms must be constituents of the basket of goods. The "1.55"
    coefficient implies that expenses on food constitute a major part
    of the population's expenses (almost 65%), against 10% in developed
    countries.

    Other questions can be raised as well. In Russia the law determines the
    "federal basket of goods", and the Government approves the quarterly
    living wage (the cost of the minimum basket of goods inclusive of
    mandatory taxes and duties). In Armenia, it is a speculative index,
    which is not "underpinned" by any statutory acts or Government
    resolutions. Even in the statistical reports released by the RA
    Statistical Service this most important index is included in the
    section entitled "Entertaining statistics". No comments... A logical
    question is: who, and what for, needs a "basket" without any legal
    force?

    The answer is a simple one. The low cost of the minimum basket of
    goods "justifies" the low minimum monthly wages (30,000 AMD or about
    U.S. $90). The average monthly wages are 2,000 or 3,000 AMD higher
    than the cost of the minimum basket of goods, aren't they? Well
    and good! The employer, without feeling any remorse, can square up
    with a hired worker by paying him the aforementioned sum! Another
    important fact is that the minimum basket of goods makes "struggle"
    against poverty much easier. Armenia has made "dramatic" progress on
    this front: 56% of Armenia's population was below the poverty line in
    1998-1999 (the per capita income was lower than the cost of the minimum
    basket of goods), whereas the figure was brought down to 25% in 2007!
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