Washington, DC:
An International Monetary Fund (IMF) team, led by Iva Petrova visited
Armenia during June 20–24, 2022. The team’s discussions with the
authorities covered recent developments, the economic outlook, and the
authorities’ policy priorities that could underlie a future IMF-supported
program. At the end of the visit, Ms. Petrova issued the following
statement:
“Armenia’s economic activity grew by 9.4 percent (YoY) in the first four
months of 2022 driven by domestic consumption and investment, supported by
the construction, tourism, financial, real-estate, and IT sectors, and
boosted by a large inflow of external income and capital. Inflation
accelerated to 9 percent in May (YoY) due to buoyant domestic demand,
supply constraints, and an increase in global food and fuel prices. The
overall budget position was in surplus in the first quarter of 2022 owing
to strong revenue collection in line with economic activity and an
under-execution of expenditures. The banking system remained solid, and the
dram appreciated against the US dollar.
“IMF staff projects real GDP to grow by about 5 percent in 2022, driven by
domestic demand and benefiting from the strong economic momentum in the
first four months of the year. Inflation is expected to increase
temporarily before moderating by the end of the year, when past monetary
policy actions and the passthrough of the recent dram appreciation have
their full impact. The Central Bank of Armenia should stand ready to adjust
its monetary policy stance as necessary, while allowing the exchange rate
to be a shock absorber. Nonetheless, the risk that the recent inflow of
external income and capital to Armenia could face an abrupt reversal calls
for re-building greater foreign reserve buffers. As the economy is
operating near capacity, it does not require additional fiscal stimulus,
and the authorities should save the revenue overperformance, else
inflationary pressures could persist.
“It is important to maintain macro-fiscal-financial stability amid the war
in Ukraine, sanctions on Russia, and increased global financial market
volatility; steer inflation toward the CBA target of 4 percent; and restore
fiscal buffers through growth-friendly and inclusive policies. Structural
policies should focus on building economic resilience, including against
climate change; developing capital markets; pursuing digitalization and
public administration reforms; improving governance, transparency, and
fiscal risk management; fully operationalizing the PIM/PPP framework, and
facilitating an investment-driven, knowledge-based, and export-led growth.
The authorities’ emphasis on building human capital through health and
education reforms is welcome. The pace of these reforms should be fiscally
prudent and consistent with the fiscal rules. The increase in minimum and
average pensions should be gradually phased in alongside measures that
foster labor force participation and preserve the Pillar II component of
the system.
“Discussions on a new IMF-supported program are expected to commence in
September.
“The IMF team thanks the Armenian authorities, development partners, and
diplomatic community for fruitful discussions and cooperation.”