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Toothache For Armenian Authorities

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  • Toothache For Armenian Authorities

    TOOTHACHE FOR ARMENIAN AUTHORITIES

    Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
    Feb 22 2013

    David Stepanyan, Yerevan. Exclusively to Vestnik Kavkaza

    It seems that the intention of the Armenian authorities to increase
    the tax burden in 2013 is being implemented from January 1. At the
    end of the last year the Head of the Committee for State Expenses,
    Gagik Khachatryan, announced that tax revenues should increase to
    118 billion drams, although the 108 billion drams in 2012 already
    provoked enormous dissatisfaction among the citizens. Armenian dentists
    became the first target of the Armenian tax inspectors. This field
    is relatively developed in Armenia, and people come from the entire
    CIS for cheap and high quality dental treatment. According to the
    information of the Associations of Armenian Dentists, Armenia now has
    750 dental centers. Armenia is a leader among European countries in
    the number of dentists per capita.

    It seems that the success of Armenian dentists did not allow the
    Armenian authorities to sleep in peace. Therefore it was decided that
    the taxes paid by dentists should be increased several times.

    According to the new tax package adopted by the Parliament late in
    2012, the dental clinics should pay taxes on each chair. The clinics
    of Yerevan will pay 60-100 thousand drams (150-250 dollars) for each
    chair per month. 100 drams will be paid by clinics in the center of the
    city, and others 60-80 drams. If the clinic has less than 3 chairs,
    the tax is 60-100 thousand drams, if more than than 3, then it is 48
    thousand drams per chair. Previously it was only 15 thousand drams
    (35 dollars) per month.

    The other victims of the tax inspectorate (although to a lesser extent)
    include real estate agents, employees of beauty salons and lawyers,
    who should now pay 24.5% tax instead of 10%.

    Obviously, this inappropriate move provoked a riot. Dentists
    held a protest in front of the government building, demanding
    the reconsideration of the tax changes. Earlier they held similar
    actions in front of the presidential palace and the building of
    the Armenian Parliament. The dentists claim that because of this
    inappropriatetaxation, many of them will have to cease their business,
    taking into account fluctuations in profitability, because dental
    services have a seasonal character. Dentists also believe that
    this will also cause at least a 50% increase in the costs of dental
    services, which will affect their clients. Physicians said that the
    innovation is like a cultural anaesthesia that will be followed by
    a new law for insuring the public health system.

    The main issue is not only the increase of taxation but its structure.

    Everyone understands that this structures creates conditions for
    the developments of the new Armenian monopoly integrated with the
    authorities. Today in Armenia almost all spheres of the economy have
    been monopolized - retail, import, public health, energy distribution,
    drinking water supply, banking, etc. The increased taxation of the
    dentists revealed a new potential monopoly. The dentists have already
    argued that the new law was aimed at pushing out the small clinics
    and the promotion of the large clinics supported by the government.

    To put it differently, the changes to the tax inspection are aimed
    at increasing the tax burden for small and medium-size businesses in
    favor of the big monopolies. It became a logical continuation of the
    policy carried out by the government for cooperating with oligarchs
    and defending their interests. Independent experts claim that small
    clinics are forced to leave the market. Dentists confirm that this
    pressure started last year with numerous check-ups and inspections
    that forced many private clinics to close.

    The leaders of the small Yerevan clinics claim that all these
    efforts were made in favor of the biggest dental center in Armenia,
    Natalie-Dent, that should open soon. The center belongs to an MP from
    the ruling party, oligarch Samvel Aleksanyan. In this situation the
    dentists have a dilemma - they can either get employed by Aleksanyan
    or leave the country in search of a better life abroad. It is clear
    that Armenian dentists will use the old and well-established second
    option. Several dozen dentists have shut down their clinics and moved
    abroad, mostly to Russia.

    Yet on February 8 the prime minister, Tigran Sarkisyan, beaming with
    his snow-white smile, told journalists that "no dentist will leave
    Armenia because of the new tax." He is convinced that businessmen are
    not intending to leave the country "because of their high profits
    here." He also excluded the possibility that the price of dental
    services will increase. Sarkisyan advised the dentists to study the
    experience of taxi drivers, whose tax-burden is even higher...

    http://vestnikkavkaza.net/analysis/economy/37338.html

    .

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