le FMI (Fonds monétaire international) prévoit un PIB le plus élevé du Caucase pour l’Arménie
YEREVAN — Armenia’s GDP per capita is on course to exceed neighboring Azerbaijan’s and Georgia’s this year, according to the International Monetary Fund.
In its most recent World Economic Outlook, the IMF forecast a GDP per capita of $4,760 for Armenia in 2020, compared with $4,720 for oil-rich Azerbaijan and $4,630 for Georgia.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan made the same prediction when he spoke in the Armenian parliament in December.
Pashinyan seized upon the IMF projections in a Facebook comment posted on Monday. “Based on the results of 2019, we have surpassed Georgia [in terms of GDP per capita,]” he wrote. “In 2020, we will also surpass Azerbaijan and become the leading country of the South Caucasus.”
The Armenian economy has expanded robustly since 2017 after years of sluggish growth that followed the 2008-2009 global financial crisis. According to government data, economic growth reached 7.5 percent in 2017 but slowed to 5.2 percent in 2018, which saw a dramatic regime change in the country. It was projected to accelerate to at least 7 percent in 2019, translating into a GDP per capita of $4,530.
Vahagn Khachatryan, a Yerevan-based economist, said this growth is one of the reasons why Armenia’s GDP now roughly matches that of Azerbaijan and Georgia on a per capita basis.
Khachatryan also argued that unlike the national currencies of Azerbaijan and Georgia, the Armenian dram has avoided a major devaluation since the collapse of international oil prices which began in late 2014.
Azerbaijan’s GDP per capita shrunk from almost $8,000 in 2014 to just under $4,000 in 2016 for this reason.
In early 2018, the World Bank upgraded Armenia’s status from a “lower middle income” to an “upper middle income” nation. The official poverty rate in the country fell from 29.4 percent in 2016 to 23.5 percent in 2018.
Armenia’s GDP per capita is projected to exceed that of not only the two other South Caucasus states but also six other, poorer former Soviet republics, including Ukraine. But it will still be well below the income levels of the three Baltic states, Russia and Kazakhstan.
source : Massis Media