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  • 'Serious' Armenian Business Projects

    'SERIOUS' ARMENIAN BUSINESS PROJECTS

    Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
    Nov 19 2013

    19 November 2013 - 12:22pm

    By David Stepanyan, Yerevan. Exclusively for Vestnik Kavkaza

    Mark Davis, head of the Yerevan of the European Bank for Reconstruction
    and Development (EBRD), said that investments of the EBRD in Armenia
    in 2013 could exceed the 90 million euro invested in 2012. The volume
    in 2014 has not been set yet, but the bank plans to invest as much
    as possible in new and interesting projects.

    The EBRD has been one of the largest investors in Armenia since 1994.

    Eurobank has invested 652 million euro in Armenia for realization
    of 123 programs. The EBRD has focused investments in small and
    medium-scale business, agriculture, services, construction, production,
    mining industry and energy. According to Davis, agricultural programs
    of the EBD could be expanded because the field was especially
    important in Armenia and had perspective and promising business
    projects to offer.

    The government of Armenia does all that its modest authority can
    to encourage the EBRD, although developing no promising projects,
    for example, in the agricultural field. Instead, it implements new
    multifunctional cash registers. This innovation of the Committee for
    State Incomes will cost Armenian economic subjects 367,000 drams, or
    $900. The 'dire need' for implementation of the new cash registers
    has not surprised anyone in the long-suffering economic subjects,
    considering the fact that they are being replaced for the third time.

    Curiously, people who are both willing and unwilling to get the
    registers will have to buy them at the Office for Implementation of
    Cash Registers. Rumours say that the organization belongs to Armenian
    Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan who is notable for his aptitude of
    having offshore accounts on the Cyprus and appetites for easy money.

    European financial experts cannot miss the vain attempts of the
    Armenian government to 'assist' the efforts of Eurobank. The money
    continues to flow to Armenia under some unexplained logic. However,
    Armenian citizens these days no longer trust the government or the
    EBRD, according to social polls of Gallup. Its report says that 74%
    of Armenians regard the state management system as corrupt. Economists
    making the analytical report of the US non-commercial organization
    Policy Forum Armenia in the Armenian community of the US believe that
    influence of corruption on Armenian economy is enormous. For instance,
    additional expenses of large companies caused by corruption, in other
    words, 'bribes', total 5% of annual sales, the highest rate among
    countries studied. It undermines the competitive ability of companies.

    Moreover, the public policy is developed and realized mainly to serve
    interests of the corrupt elite, rather than Armenian citizens. It
    appears that forced sales of cash registers brought by a state
    functionary was just a small example reflected in the Policy Forum
    Armenia. The list of corrupt officials keeping posts for many years
    says that the new initiative could be taken as a childish frolic
    of the prime minister. Ex-President Robert Kocharyan, ex-Minister
    for Natural Resources Vardan Ayvazyan, Speaker of Parliament Ovik
    Abramyan, head of the State Committee for Taxes and Customs Gagik
    Khachatryan are just a few names of the list.

    Tigran Sargsyan has recently admitted dropping the economic rate in Q4
    2013. Though the 'official' economy demonstrated a growth rate of 3.2%
    in the first three quarters and good results in certain field. The EBRD
    should have wondered why the GDP growth was fading. The fact that no
    such considerations were made proves the politicized activities of
    the organization in Armenia.

    The list of Armenia's top 1000 tax-payers published in late October
    cannot be left without questions either. The structure of the list
    demonstrated a high density of tax burden in the economy. The first
    50 companies paid about 240 billion drams to the state budget in
    the first three quarters of 2013, exactly half of all the taxes paid
    by the 1000 names in the list. 62% of all the taxes paid by the top
    1000 belonged to the first 100 names in the list, the last 100 names
    paid only 1.6%. Such polarization in the structure of tax payments is
    very risky for economy. Considering the small tax role of companies
    belonging to indirectly affiliated with the government, distribution
    of tax pressure in the top 1000 list gave European financial experts,
    who were planning to invest millions of dollars in the 'liberalized'
    economy of Armenia, some food for thought.

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