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Armenia: Waiting For Second-Generation Reforms

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  • Armenia: Waiting For Second-Generation Reforms

    ARMENIA: WAITING FOR SECOND-GENERATION REFORMS

    Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
    June 3 2013

    Author: Susanna Petrosyan, Yerevan, exclusive to VK

    The presidential elections in Armenia were held more than three months
    ago, but the situations in the economy and the social sphere are still
    a matter of great concern. Only in May huge crop losses in some areas
    took place due to heavy hail, and in mid-May dairy products became
    more expensive by 8-10%.

    Companies that produce dairy products explain this rise by the increase
    in purchase prices for milk and for imported raw materials.

    The State Commission for Protection of Economic Competition began
    studying the market of dairy products and requested the Ministry
    of Agriculture of Armenia to provide information on the dynamics of
    the purchase prices for milk. But history shows that if prices for
    something rise in Armenia, despite all the assurances and discussions,
    the prices will not drop.

    At the end of last year, Armenia's foreign debt stood at 1.508
    trillion drams or $ 3.738 billion. In January-May, the inflation rate
    rose to 3%. The main catalyst for the acceleration of inflation was
    the group of food products, for which the average prices this year
    raised stepwise from 101.6% in January to 104.2% in April. Similarly,
    the prices of clothing and footwear also increased; the prices for
    essential commodities rose significantly. According to the National
    Statistical Service, consumer prices in April rose by 3.9% - compared
    to the same period last year. The expected increases in tariffs for
    gas and electricity will also significantly complicate the situation
    of citizens in the summer.

    According to the chairman of the Union of Employers Gagik Makaryan,
    the country still does not create conditions for development of small
    and medium-sized businesses, and many small businesses today, after
    years of work, can only be closed, because of the reduction in the
    number of consumers, the cause of which, in turn, was the decrease
    in the level of life and the increase in the number of poor.

    Today, many experts see a way out of the situation in the reform
    of the second generation. The need for reform was pointed out by
    the representatives of the International Monetary Fund. After the
    election of the Council of Elders of Yerevan head of the Armenian
    IMF mission Mark Horton and IMF Resident Representative in Armenia
    Guillermo Tolosa in a joint statement called on the authorities to
    implement decisive and radical reform. According to representatives of
    the IMF, there is the need for further measures to stimulate private
    investment, create a level playing field for all market investors,
    improving tax collection, etc.

    The first phase of reforms in Armenia began in the early 90s and has
    been held back by the Government Grant Bagratyan. The reforms demanded
    their logical continuation, but the transformation process stalled in
    1999. According to the professor, vice-rector of the Russian-Armenian
    University Edward Sandoyan, today Armenia is in a situation where its
    economy is very difficult to be called a "free market": the Armenian
    economy has characteristics which formally belong to a market economy,
    but on the content they are far from that, "We have high levels of
    corruption and low competitiveness of the economy as compared to our
    peers. The country is inefficiently promoting the export-oriented
    economy, and this is the only direction for our future development",
    the scientist and economist says, who believes that the country has
    institutions that protect property rights at a rudimentary level, and
    there is still no effective legislation, administration or judiciary.

    What kind of philosophy leads the Armenian government today? The most
    striking indication of its ideology is the statements made by various
    members of the ruling Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) that only
    in the ranks of political power there are the most professional and
    competent staff. In this regard, the statement by one of the leading
    ideologues of the Republican Party, vice-chairman of the party Galust
    Sahakyan that the Republican Party is going to be in power as long
    as there is a danger of war, is even more surprising for its candor.

    Judging by the current trends of the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict, the period when the Republican Party will be in power
    will last a long time. And when we consider the role and place of
    Sahakyan in the hierarchy of the ruling party, it is possible to
    make an unambiguous conclusion about a serious intention for the
    continuation of essentially a one-party rule and holding further
    monopoly of power by the Republican Party.

    In the economic sphere, the monopoly of power of the RPA is expressed
    in the rule of clan-oligarchic system that ensures the development of
    large monopolies at the expense of small and medium-sized businesses.

    However, these political and economic realities leave an imprint on
    the appropriate social services. The situation is characterized by the
    further impoverishment of the people, the further loss of economic
    independence by the vast majority of them, which in turn greatly
    facilitates the manipulation of these segments of the population
    by the authorities, whose main task is to maintain at all costs
    the monopoly on power and to ensure its reproduction. The existing
    system is a reality. While this scheme works, all statements about
    the need for a second phase of reforms will remain empty promises,
    even regardless of who makes these statements.

    http://vestnikkavkaza.net/analysis/economy/41012.html

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