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EBRD Revises GDP Forecast For Armenia For 2010 From 2% To 10%

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  • EBRD Revises GDP Forecast For Armenia For 2010 From 2% To 10%

    EBRD REVISES GDP FORECAST FOR ARMENIA FOR 2010 FROM 2% TO 10%

    Arminfo
    19.05.2010

    ArmInfo. European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD)
    has revised GDP forecast for Armenia for 2010 from 2% to 10% in
    the updated WEO "Regional Economic Prospects in EBRD Countries of
    Operation". Thus, EBRD forecasts 3% GDP growth for Armenia in 2011.

    Average annual inflation is expected at 7% versus 3.4% in 2009. GDP
    growth for Q1 2010 totaled 5.5% as compared to the same period of
    2009. EBRD forecasts 11.7% GDP growth for Q2 2010l, an 8.1% growth
    for Q3 and 12.9% growth for Q4.

    "Country-specific developments related to political turmoil (Kyrgyz
    Republic) and trade shocks (Turkmenistan) also warrant downward
    revisions in growth projections for 2010. At the other extreme lie
    Turkey and Armenia where much faster recoveries appear to be underway,
    backed by restocking, government demand, a projected recovery in
    capital inflows (Turkey) and rising copper prices and remittances
    (Armenia)," the report says. "Armenia has seen an exceptionally sharp
    output contraction as remittances fell, and the remittances-fuelled
    construction boom came to an abrupt halt. Preliminary data suggest
    that vigorous growth has returned in recent months following growth
    in remittances, an agreement on an IMF programme and substantial
    financing from other IFIs and bilateral donors."

    "In Russia, the growth momentum of late 2009 is likely to be sustained,
    implying a growth of about 4.4 per cent in 2010 (after a 7.9 per cent
    reduction in 2009). With real incomes increasing again, asset quality
    deterioration in the banking sector is levelling off and remains
    manageable under our baseline scenario, also given the dominance of
    the state in the banking system," the report says.

    "Reflecting upward revisions in growth forecasts in several of the
    region's largest economies, the average regional growth projection for
    2010 has been revised up to 3.7 per cent from 3.3 per cent in January.

    The upward revisions mostly affect commodity exporters (Russia,
    but also Armenia and Mongolia) and recipients of renewed capital
    inflows (Ukraine, Poland, Turkey, and Hungary). Upside risks mainly
    arise from a stronger than projected increase in external demand,
    along with improvements in domestic fundamentals. Loose monetary
    policy in the Eurozone and restocking may yet translate into faster
    growth. If this were to occur, several countries in the region would
    benefit both from expanded trade opportunities and from capital
    inflows in search of higher yields. Inflation remains low, and some
    countries that experienced large depreciations continue to benefit
    from improved competitiveness, positioning them well for a recovery
    in external demand. Finally, several countries, including Hungary,
    have established multi-year fiscal consolidation programmes, which
    - if implemented - could meaningfully set them apart from fiscally
    weaker EU countries. Most transition countries have begun to recover,
    but the pace of recovery remains slow on average, with increasing
    divergence across countries, and is now being overshadowed by
    Eurozone market volatility and increasing pressures to accelerate
    fiscal consolidation in East and West. In light of this, the path
    of recovery is exceptionally uncertain, with risks skewed to the
    downside in the short run, and more symmetric risks to both the
    upside and downside over the medium term. The recovery has begun, but
    remains fragile, and is generally expected to be slower than in other
    emerging market regions. A sluggish recovery in the European Union,
    the region's main trading partner, is dampening the potential for an
    export-Real GDP Growth, 2008-2011 driven rebound. The deep recessions
    of late 2008 and 2009 continue to have knock-on effects in the form
    of high non-performing loans and unemployment, which constrain credit
    growth and the recovery of domestic demand. Crisis-induced deficits
    and limited sovereign market access will require fiscal consolidation
    in many countries," the report says.
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