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  • Lack of long-term thinking

    Lack of long-term thinking

    January 25 2014


    We are not used to make long-term plans for our lives. It is, perhaps,
    partly national peculiarity, but basically, a phenomenon caused by
    external factors. Planning can be made when the country is in stable
    condition. During the Soviet period, for instance, I was planning to
    become a PhD (I achieved), then an associate professor, then a
    professor, to write about music, educate a few private students and so
    on. The collapse of the Soviet Union hurled a stone on my plans.
    Having a positive and light attitude towards life, I did not make a
    tragedy out of it. They did and up to now are living under the
    influence of this stress. In addition, for 22 years, we are constantly
    living in the `turbulent' situation and we can not say what will
    happen tomorrow. Not to speak about a long-term plan. Uncertainty
    about the future, to some extent, is generating from the mistrust
    towards the authorities. Here, the real and popular folklore are
    intertwined and become a stable stereotype. Recently, for example,
    someone explained to me quite seriously, `Do you think that a ton of
    heroin was really identified? No, they present that they have
    identified it, they have shown it and now they will little by little
    sell it. Have you seen that they had burned the heroin?' That's it.
    Overwhelming majority of Armenia's population does not believe that
    any of our state officials, even theoretically, is capable of doing
    something good. Of course, those, who `ex officio' are engaged in
    propaganda, also contribute to the strengthening of this folklore. The
    habit of not making long-term plans and not believing in any
    initiative of the authorities has been intertwined in the funded
    pension issue. `If you give two penny to them (i.e. the government)
    and tomorrow go and get it, they'll tell you what money you, you have
    not given me any money.' The roots of such thinking are too deep, and
    it is impossible to change it in one day. The matter is not only the
    money lost in the Soviet savings banks, nor the banks `exploded' in
    the first half of 90s. The matter is that the government and the
    parliament are constantly changing the rules of the game. In
    particular, they are increasing the tax burden. Recently, for example,
    I, not a big businessman, was made to buy a $1,000 CCM. The matter is
    that we do not believe that our taxes that we are paying reach our
    pensioners and budgetary workers, and are not possessed by our
    managers, this way or another way. These taxes are added by an
    additional 5 percent tax defined for people up to 40 years old. No
    matter they say that it is not a tax payment, this 5 percent is
    perceived accordingly. I, particularly, see the solution of this
    `funded' issue not in endless delay, anyway, this reform is necessary,
    but in adoption of a decision agreed upon by all parliamentary
    factions and, naturally, in compliance with the Constitution. I hope
    that times when the president was calling the members of the
    Constitutional Court and imposing them to pass this-or-that decision
    are gone.


    ARAM ABRAHAMYAN
    Read more at: http://en.aravot.am/2014/01/25/163499/


    From: Baghdasarian
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