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IMF Issues Loans To Armenia Due To "Mild" Policy On Turkey, Karabakh

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  • IMF Issues Loans To Armenia Due To "Mild" Policy On Turkey, Karabakh

    IMF ISSUES LOANS TO ARMENIA DUE TO "MILD" POLICY ON TURKEY, KARABAKH

    Haykakan Zhamanak
    Nov 13 2009
    Armenia

    The International Monetary Fund (IMF) continues to provide loans
    to Armenia due to Armenia's "mild" position in the process of
    normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations and the Nagornyy Karabakh
    settlement although the Armenian government violates a condition for
    the provision of IMF loans.

    The Armenian government has broken one of the "important conditions"
    for the provision of IMF loans to Armenia, which is that the Armenian
    government should stay committed to its policy of floating exchange
    rate of the Armenian national currency dram, the paper said. Instead,
    the Armenian government spent about 700m dollars from its foreign
    reserves to keep the dram stable at the end of 2008 and beginning of
    2009, the paper quoted the IMF's permanent representative to Armenia,
    Nienke Oomes, as telling a news conference in Yerevan on 12 November.

    The paper said the move could have been a basis for the aggravation of
    relations between Armenia and the IMF. However, after a 480m-dollar
    IMF loan had been spent to replenish Armenia's foreign reserves,
    the IMF decided on 30 October to provide Armenia with an additional
    60m-dolalr loan, Nienke Oomes told the news conference.

    Armenia's Central Bank has spent 180m dollars to keep the exchange rate
    stable within the past couple of months, and the bank was carrying
    out another 3.5m-dollar intervention at the moment Oomes was holding
    the news conference, Haykakan Zhamanak said in a separate report on
    13 November. Oomes told the news conference that the IMF criticized
    the government, but not in public, and added she was trying to
    convince the Armenian authorities not to carry out interventions in
    January-March 2009, but in vain, Haykakan Zhamanak reported. The IMF
    and international financial organizations, in general, are supporting
    the Armenian authorities in their best way "exclusively in exchange
    for [Armenia's] 'mild' position displayed in the improvement of
    Armenian-Turkish relations and the issue of the Karabakh settlement",
    the paper quoted unnamed pro-government experts as saying. The experts
    believe that the IMF is carrying out a "risk-free" test on Armenia.

    "Even if the test is not successful, Armenia will owe the IMF money
    and will depend on it even more," Haykakan Zhamanak reported.

    Armenia's Central Bank announced on 3 March 2009 that it would be
    guided by a floating dram exchange rate from that time on, with the
    dram depreciating by 22 per cent within one day alone. The World
    Bank's Armenia office welcomed the depreciation of the dram and the
    International Monetary Fund announced the provision of a 540m-dollar
    loan to Armenia, Haykakan Zhamanak reported on 4 March. The paper
    opined that the shift to the floating exchange rate was "primarily to
    the benefit of oligarchs" and was an attempt to "create an illusion
    of stability so that ahead of the 1 March [opposition] rally people
    do not understand what disaster will come". Interventions worth 600m
    dollars were made in the domestic market out of only 1.6bn dollars of
    Armenia's foreign reserves in order to maintain 305 drams per dollar
    exchange rate, Haykakan Zhamanak reported on 4 March. The chairman
    of the country's Central Bank, Artur Javadyan, said on 3 March that
    the dram exchange rate would be 360-380 drams per dollar in 2009,
    Haykakan Zhamanak reported on 4 March.
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