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Armenia: Time to Change the Pace

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  • Armenia: Time to Change the Pace

    Armenia: Time to Change the Pace


    Armenia has made great progress since independence - thanks to the
    efforts of successive governments. Long gone are the days of severe
    energy shortages, high inflation and persistent economic contraction.
    Gone are the days when Armenians could not find what they needed in
    shops, or lost their savings in banks. Gone, too, are the recent days
    when some believed the global crisis would cripple Armenia's economy
    for years. Now, a new government is inheriting a growing economy that
    provides better-paying jobs, better infrastructure, and stable prices,
    a country with a wide variety of products and services, and a sound
    financial system for saving and borrowing.

    Nevertheless, the new government will also face significant
    challenges, as unemployment, poverty, and emigration are still too
    high. Armenians are renowned as well-educated and entrepreneurial, and
    have done very well in other countries where they have emigrated. This
    success abroad raises a key question: what could be done better at
    home, so that more Armenians can do very well inside Armenia?

    Armenia's isolated geographical situation represents a critical
    handicap, especially given the small domestic market. Overcoming this
    must be a priority. Geography can't be changed, but its effects can be
    mitigated: history has shown repeatedly that geography and geopolitics
    do not condemn countries to economic mediocrity. Armenia's isolation
    demands better policies: free trade agreements, infrastructure
    upgrades, an improved aviation framework, and further diplomatic
    efforts to establish ties with neighbors are all part of the needed
    mix.

    Armenia has come a long way in carrying out reforms that other
    successful transition countries have undertaken. Inefficient state
    firms have long been privatized, guaranteeing better services and more
    reasonable prices. Costly and inefficient subsidies have been
    eliminated, and targeted protections for the most vulnerable put in
    place. Foreign trade has been liberalized: consumers have access to
    inexpensive and varied goods and services, and producers have access
    to materials for further processing and production in Armenia.
    Well-managed monetary policy has helped to keep inflation low. Fiscal
    policy has helped stabilize the economy when Armenia has confronted
    shocks, and public debt is sustainable. Pension reforms will support
    the dignity of old age in Armenia while reducing fiscal risks
    associated with pension spending. New legislation has helped to grow a
    functioning market economy.

    However, the agenda is not yet finished. Further, ambitious measures
    are needed to support private investment as the primary engine of
    economic growth. In particular, more needs to be done to protect
    investors' rights to have a fair chance to earn profits. It is still
    common for well-connected parties to have privileged market position,
    or for profits to be wrongfully lost. Until a more decisive approach
    and proper incentives for risk-taking are well established, there will
    not be enough investment, jobs, or hope in Armenia's future.

    Also, the state needs to be more effective. It lacks sufficient
    resources to materially improve services like health, education, roads
    and energy generation. The government needs to do more to collect
    taxes: some, such as excises, are low by international comparison, and
    tax collections from some firms and sectors are also too low. The
    government also needs to do more to ensure that its spending is
    efficient, transparent, and gets to the right places. It also needs to
    continue to ensure that public resources are not used to rescue
    private firms that have been poorly managed.

    A new government, with fresh political capital and a horizon free of
    elections, needs to take action to advance this agenda. We think the
    gradualist approach has run its course. Unless changes are deep and
    swift, the positive results that Armenians desire will also be gradual
    in coming, if they come at all. Decisive changes, made quickly and
    comprehensively, should persuade Armenians and others abroad that
    society rewards those who work hard, think big and take chances, not
    those whose best asset is a privileged connection. Armenian workers,
    managers, students and pensioners - all Armenians - should perceive that
    the game is fair, open and reaching for best solutions for ordinary
    Armenians; they should be able to trust that the state is a partner
    and not an adversary or a protector of vested interests.

    Such dramatic changes don't come about as a result of passionate
    rhetoric, or of slow and incremental policy change; they require a
    transformational strategy with clear, irrevocable signs that some
    behaviors will not be welcome anymore in Armenian society. And they
    can unleash the Armenian people's full potential.

    Armenia can shift gears and speed up the pace to a better future. The
    people are ready to fasten their seat belts. Now it's time for the
    government to act.

    Mark Horton, IMF Mission Chief to Armenia

    Guillermo Tolosa, IMF Resident Representative in Armenia

    12:41 15/05/2013
    Story from Lragir.am News:
    http://www.lragir.am/index/eng/0/economy/view/29884

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