Wednesday, Government Keen To Minimize Cash Payments In Armenia • Sargis Harutyunyan Armenian authorities will start enforcing next month serious restrictions on cash payments in the country as part of their fight against tax evasion. A government bill approved by the Armenian parliament earlier this year requires private firms and individual entrepreneurs to carry out transactions worth more than 300,000 drams ($700) only through the banking system. For other citizens the limit is set at 500,000 drams. But it will be brought down to 300,000 drams in July 2023. The law, which will come into force on July 1, also prohibits local and central government agencies from making or accepting any payments in cash. It envisages a similar, albeit gradual, ban on payments of all medical and education tuition fees as well as private sector wages. The ban will first apply to Yerevan and be extended to the other parts of Armenia over the next two years. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian touted the impending entry into force of these restrictions during a cabinet meeting last week. He said that his government will also ban cash payments for real estate and cars. The head of the State Revenue Committee (SRC), Rustam Badasian, confirmed that these measures are aimed at reducing the still sizable informal sector of the Armenian economy. They will result in a “certain increase in tax revenues,” he said without making concrete financial projections. Armenia -- The entrance to the State Revenue Committee headquarters in Yerevan, November 29, 2018. Garegin Gevorgian, a senior official from the Armenian Central Bank, was likewise confident that restricting the widespread use of cash as a payment method will improve tax collection. Central Bank data cited by Gevorgian shows that payments made in Armenia via bank transfer, check and credit or debit card have steadily increased over the last 12 years. Still, they accounted for only a quarter of all transactions last year. Suren Parsian, an independent economist, welcomed the government efforts to curb cash transactions. But he said the authorities should do more to raise public awareness of the upcoming restrictions and help small and help medium-sized businesses prepare for their enforcement. One small business owner, Garegin Gevorgian, criticized the limitations, saying that many such firms will have to pay more taxes and banking fees. Their tax burden could be doubled as a result, he claimed. Individual car traders are also concerned. As one of them, Tigran Hovannisian, explained, “We are going to have disputes with buyers. A buyer will say that ‘I won’t transfer the money until you register the car in my name,’ while I will say ‘I won’t register it in your name until you transfer the money.’” There are also questions about the authorities’ ability to enforce the new rules in car and property transactions. Real estate agents warn that home buyers and sellers may formalize their deals as free donations but carry out them in cash to evade taxes. Parliament Majority ‘Undecided’ On Ousting Opposition Lawmakers • Astghik Bedevian • Anush Mkrtchian Armenia - Empty seats of opposition deputies boycotting a session of parliament, Yerevan, . The leadership of Armenia’s parliament affiliated with the ruling Civil Contract party has still not carried out its threats to strip opposition lawmakers boycotting parliament sessions of their seats. The 35 lawmakers representing the opposition Hayastan and Pativ Unem alliances began the boycott in April in advance of their daily demonstrations demanding Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s resignation. Under Armenian law, a lawmaker can lose their seat if they skip, for “non-legitimate” reasons, at least half of parliament votes during a single semi-annual session of the National Assembly. The final decision to that effect is to be made by the Constitutional Court at the initiative of the parliament’s leadership or at least one-fifth of the deputies. Parliament speaker Alen Simonian said on May 17 that he is considering initiating such an appeal to the court. Several other pro-government parliamentarians voiced support for the idea in the following weeks. One of them, Hovik Aghazarian, said on Wednesday that members of the ruling party’s parliamentary group discussed the possible expulsion of their opposition colleagues but did not reach a consensus at a meeting held on Monday. “I personally agree with [Simonian’s] view because that [opposition boycott] can be considered a violation of the law,” Aghazarian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. According to the parliament’s press office, 14 opposition lawmakers, including parliament vice-speaker Ishkhan Saghatelian, can now be formally accused of absenteeism. Armenia - Ishkhan Saghatelian (second from right) and other opposition lawmakers lead an anti-government rally in Yerevan, May 18, 2022. Speaking to reporters late on Tuesday, Saghatelian again scoffed at the threats to strip him and other oppositionists of their mandates. “We got our mandates from the people, and the people are now demanding that we remove them from power as soon possible,” he said after announcing the opposition’s decision to end the daily demonstrations in Yerevan and to rally supporters on a weekly basis instead. Saghatelian also made clear that the two opposition blocs will not end their boycott of the parliament for now. Deputies representing them interrupted the boycott on June 3 to try to push through the National Assembly a resolution rejecting any peace accord that would restore Azerbaijan’s control over Nagorno-Karabakh. The parliamentary majority blocked the resolution by boycotting an emergency debate on it. Opposition boycotts of parliament sessions have not been uncommon in Armenia in the past. No opposition lawmaker has been stripped of their seat because of that. Textile Giant Hit Hard By Armenian Currency Appreciation • Karine Simonian • Sargis Harutyunyan Armenia - Workers at the Gloria textile factory in Vanadzor, . Armenia’s leading textile company is planning to lay off some of its 3,000 workers or cut their wages because of a significant appreciation of the national currency, the dram, which began shortly after the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Like the Russian ruble, the dram weakened against the U.S. dollar and the euro in the immediate aftermath of the invasion but rallied strongly in the following months. Since the outbreak of the war on February 24, the dram has strengthened by 13 percent against the dollar and 22 percent against the euro on aggregate. The Armenian currency has been boosted by relative macroeconomic stability in Russia, Armenia’s number trading partner, as well as an influx of thousands of mostly middle-class Russians. Its continuing appreciation is prompting growing concerns from Armenian companies oriented towards Western and other non-Russian markets. They include Gloria, the country’s largest textile factory located in the northern city of Vanadzor. Its owner, Bagrat Darbinian, complained on Tuesday that Gloria has been hit hard by the stronger dram because it sells the bulk of clothing manufactured by it in Europe. Darbinian said he has to cut production costs to make up for the loss of revenue. He said he has already told the company’s workers to agree to a 30 percent reduction in their wages or risk being sent on unpaid leave or losing their jobs altogether. “I am ashamed of entering our production units,” Darbinian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “People are already not paid much and I want to cut their wages. But there is no other way out.” Armenia -- The building of the Central Bank in Yerevan. The businessman, who claims to have invested $5 million in the factory in the last three years, said he has already appealed to Armenia’s government and Central Bank to help weaken the dram. The authorities are receiving similar complaints from other export-oriented entrepreneurs and business executives, notably representatives of Armenian software companies. The Central Bank governor, Martin Galstian, made clear on Tuesday that the bank will not cut interest rates or intervene in the domestic currency market to cut the dram’s value. Galstian said that the stronger dram is somewhat easing inflationary pressures on the Armenian economy aggravated by the Ukraine war. “By artificially weakening the dram we would create an even worse inflationary situation which would hit all citizens, including exporters,” he told reporters. Galstian also argued that the stronger dram is making many imported raw materials cheaper for exporters. Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc. 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.