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  • Is Armenia A Poor Or Developing Country?

    IS ARMENIA A POOR OR DEVELOPING COUNTRY?
    By Appo Jabarian

    USA Armenian Life Magazine
    April 5, 2010

    Armenia is a developing country. In fact, during the last decade,
    Armenia has registered an impressive economic growth rate. But how
    fast is Armenia moving to being fully developed?

    It survived a devastating earthquake in 1988. It overcame the
    calamities of war with Azerbaijan in the 1990's. It underwent brutal
    transition from Soviet centralized economy to free market economy.

    Since then the Armenian economy has been steadily developing. Armenia
    now is economically one of the more advanced states in the Caucasus
    region.

    However, unlike developed countries such as the United States, and
    the European Union, Armenia has more than its share of poverty. Is
    this a temporary problem?

    "In the wake of the global recession, poverty has come to afflict
    much of Armenia once again. For the first time in over a decade,
    poverty increased in Armenia in 2009, with as many as half of
    Armenia's residents now living below the poverty line and unable
    to meet basic food, shelter and healthcare needs. And yet, these
    families continue their struggle to live, carving out an existence
    at society's margins where people regularly live off garbage dumps,
    children battle malnutrition, and families sleep in barns and tin
    shacks," reported a press release disseminated by Tufenkian Foundation,
    the main sponsor of "How We Live: Life on the Margins in Armenia",
    a special exhibit by photographer Sara Anjargolian.

    The press release was published in the March 19 issue of USA Armenian
    Life Magazine. The publication of the photo on the cover of the same
    issue has ignited communitywide discussions on the issue of poverty
    in Armenia.

    When the idea emerged to give the exhibition front-page coverage, I
    struggled between my objective to market Armenia as a very desirable
    tourism and investment destination; and my journalistic duty to help
    our people to adequately address the crucial issue of poverty.

    Even before its opening in late March in Los Angeles, the exhibit
    sparked a strong reaction from the Consulate General of Armenia in
    Los Angeles.

    On March 29, Consul General Grigor Hovhannissian issued a statement
    to USA Armenian Life saying: "We would have welcomed this intention
    of charity had there been no texts accompanying the exhibition
    photographs. The generalizations of the phenomenon of the lifestyle
    and living conditions of socially vulnerable families in Armenia may
    create a wrong perception about the country's and its population's
    living conditions."

    Hovhannissian continued: "The webpage of this art exhibition literally
    says the following: 'Today, Armenia's families struggling with poverty
    are living off garbage dumps, children are battling malnutrition,
    and alcoholism and domestic violence have become commonplace and
    families are sleeping in tin shacks.' This paragraph does not reflect
    the overall image of Armenia's population, including those living
    in poverty. The tragic condition of families living off garbage and
    struggling with alcoholism and violence is not a common phenomenon
    and can not become 'ordinary' for Armenian families."

    Despite acknowledging the existence of poor families in Armenia, Mr.

    Hovhannissian stressed: "We believe that the exhibition organizers
    have intensified the colors of poverty, and as a consequence, many
    people may be disappointed with a country that's full of negative
    aspects of life. Many entrepreneurs may refrain from investing and
    several tourists may be afraid to visit a country where 'living off
    garbage dumps' and struggling with addiction and domestic violence
    are commonplace. It would have been better had the evaluations been
    made for specific cases. It would have been good to see the authors
    of those texts go overboard in order to win the hearts of donors; and
    in the process, not end up hurting Armenia, instead of helping. We
    ourselves agree that indeed those families are in desperate need of
    assistance, but not at the price of their dignity and ours."

    Regardless of the extent of poverty in Armenia, it is unacceptable to
    see even a tiny segment of its population live in inhumane conditions
    caused by poverty.

    According to a United Nations report in early 2000's by Thomas
    Kelly and Armen Yeghiazarian, income has been distributed across the
    population in Armenia as follows: "One half of all income accrues
    to just the richest 12 per cent of the population; the income of
    the wealthiest quintile is 32 times higher than that of the poorest
    quintile; and the poorest 55 per cent of the population - those whose
    fall below the poverty line - receive just 16 per cent of the total
    income. ... Income inequality in Armenia is extremely high. ...

    Armenia's income inequality is among the highest for transition
    economies."

    The report further elaborated on income inequality: "This high level of
    inequality appears to be caused by the extreme concentration of incomes
    in the top deciles of Armenian households. ... Armenia's transition
    to a market economy can be divided into two stages. The first stage,
    from 1990 to 1994, included an energy crisis, international conflict,
    and the disruption of trade routes, hyper-inflation, and a severe
    contraction of output. The second stage, beginning in 1995, has been
    characterized by solution to the energy crisis, an end to conflict,
    easing of transportation restrictions, a return to macroeconomic
    stability, and moderate economic growth."

    The report continued: "Since the second stage of the transition began,
    the economy has been growing at roughly five per cent a year. The
    current pattern of economic growth will not cause inequality to fall,
    however. There are several reasons for this. The most important is that
    the base of growth in industry, construction, and services is quite
    narrow and is not generating a great deal of employment. At the same
    time, the drive for higher productivity per worker in agriculture and
    the reforms in the social sector will substantially reduce employment
    in these sectors."

    New sectors, namely High-Tech, Renewable Energy, and Agricultural
    Exports have been added. But more are needed to generate enough
    growth to enable the national economy to absorb the high levels of
    unemployed workers from obsolete and noncompetitive industrial firms,
    from agriculture, and from the overstaffed social infrastructure. Plans
    must be developed to change the distribution of assets in order to
    expedite employment growth to ultimately alleviate the magnitude
    of inequality.

    During the second stage of the transition, Armenia has registered
    impressive growth rate, but little poverty reduction has been achieved
    because of unequal redistribution of wealth.

    Obviously, Armenia has not completed its transition to free market
    economy. The first (1989-1994) stage was totally mishandled, and the
    second stage (1995-present) was poorly handled albeit there has been
    notable economic development.

    One can easily envision the real growth Armenia is capable of by simply
    taking into consideration the industrious characteristics of Armenians.

    How can a nation like Armenia produce successful entrepreneurs, and
    reputable industrialists, on international scale and still allow a
    sizeable segment of its homeland population subsist in abject poverty?

    High levels of inequality, greed, and corruption hinder both economic
    growth and poverty reduction.

    I propose that we collectively increase business investments
    particularly in the sectors of Tourism, High-Tech, Education,
    Agriculture, Consumer Goods, coupled by massive and long-term
    educational efforts to eradicate corruption, and greed in the entire
    spectrum of Armenian society. We must break up the monopolies that
    grossly perpetuate income inequality.

    Armenia's domestic and international affairs urgently need to be
    governed more efficiently so that we can collectively empower Armenia
    leapfrog into the status of a developed nation.

    It's high time that an increased number of pro-active Armenians
    everywhere take full ownership of both Armenia-Artsakh and the
    Diaspora. It is absolutely necessary that Armenians worldwide further
    harmonize their collective human and material resources for the sake
    of a fresh and promising re-start.
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