IMF Executive Board Completes the Third Review Under the Stand-By Arrangement with Armenia

June 17, 2024

  • The IMF Executive Board completed the third review under the Stand-By Arrangement (SBA) with Armenia, providing the country with access to SDR 18.4 million (about US$24.5 million).
  • On the back of high domestic and external demand, GDP growth remained strong by historical standards at 8.7 percent in 2023 and is expected to moderate to a more sustainable level of around 6 percent in 2024.
  • The SBA, which the Armenian authorities are treating as precautionary, aims to support the government’s policy and reform agenda to preserve economic and financial stability and support strong, inclusive, and sustainable growth.

Washington, DC: The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) completed the third review under the Stand-By Arrangement (SBA) with Armenia. The completion of the review enables access of SDR 18.4 million (about US$24.5 million), bringing total access to SDR 73.6 million (about US$97.7 million). The SBA was approved by the IMF’s Board on December 12, 2022 (see Press Release No. 22/429). The Armenian authorities continue to treat the arrangement as precautionary. The Executive Board’s decision on the third review of the SBA was taken without a meeting.[1]

Armenia’s strong growth momentum continued in 2023, with the economy growing by 8.7 percent, supported by robust private consumption, trade, and investment. Inflation declined significantly, reaching -0.7 percent in April year-on-year, mainly due to lower global and domestic prices of key food items, Dram appreciation, and tight financial conditions. The current account deficit remained contained at 2.0 percent of GDP in 2023, supported by strong tourism. The 2023 fiscal deficit at 2 percent of GDP was lower than anticipated due to spending under-execution. The banking system has strong capital and liquidity buffers, and its profitability continues to remain high.

Growth is expected to moderate but to remain robust at 6.0 percent in 2024, driven by consumption and public capital spending. Inflation is expected to pick up in the second half of the year. Risks to the outlook are elevated, stemming from geopolitical and regional tensions, potential slowdown in major trading partners, lower trade, and capital outflows. Growth could also surprise on the upside in the event of stronger-than-anticipated export receipts, and faster implementation of structural reforms.

The program is broadly on track. All quantitative performance criteria and indicative targets for end-December 2023 were met. However, low inflation breached the lower outer MPCC band. Progress on structural benchmarks continues, with all but two completed, some with delay.

The uncertain outlook calls for continued prudent policies and steadfast implementation of structural reforms:

  • Fiscal policy should strike a balance between preserving macro-fiscal stability and accommodating rising spending pressures. Careful spending prioritization and decisive tax policy and revenue administration efforts will be needed to create fiscal space, including for social integration, security spending, further infrastructure development, and a healthcare overhaul.
  • The Central Bank of Armenia (CBA) has successfully lowered inflation, but inflation is likely to remain volatile, and future policy rate decisions should remain dependent on the evolution of inflation and inflation expectations. The flexible exchange rate should continue to serve as a key shock absorber, with foreign exchange interventions limited to addressing disorderly market conditions and opportunistically building reserves to maintain strong buffers.
  • Structural reforms should focus on strengthening revenue mobilization, fiscal risk and public investment management, the CBA’s supervisory framework, the employment and social assistance programs, export diversification, enhancing governance, and reducing corruption vulnerabilities.

 

Table 1. Armenia: Selected Economic and Financial Indicators, 2021–29

   

2021

2022

2023

 

2024

2025

2026

2027

2028

2029

       

Prel.

 

Proj.

                       

National income and prices:

                     

Real GDP (percent change)

 

5.7

12.6

8.7

 

6.0

5.3

4.5

4.5

4.5

4.5

Final consumption expenditure, Contrib. to Growth

 

1.2

4.8

6.6

 

5.8

3.2

3.1

2.9

2.7

3.0

Gross fixed capital formation, Contrib. to Growth

 

4.2

1.7

2.2

 

2.1

2.3

2.0

2.1

2.0

2.0

Changes in inventories, Contrib. to Growth

 

0.3

-0.2

-0.2

 

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

;0.0

Net exports of goods and services, Contrib. to Growth

0.1

6.3

0.2

 

-1.9

-0.3

-0.6

-0.5

-0.3

-0.5

Gross domestic product (in billions of drams)

 

6,992

8,501

9,503

 

10,396

11,381

12,363

13,437

14,605

15,875

Gross domestic product (in millions of U.S. dollars)

 

13,879

19,514

24,212

 

25,210

26,938

28,935

31,086

33,397

35,896

Gross domestic product per capita (in U.S. dollars)

 

4,685

6,572

8,095

 

8,428

9,005

9,672

10,390

11,162

11,996

CPI (period average; percent change)

 

7.2

8.6

2.0

 

2.2

3.8

4.0

4.0

4.0

4.0

CPI (end of period; percent change)

 

7.7

8.3

-0.6

 

3.3

4.0

4.0

4.0

4.0

4.0

GDP deflator (percent change)

 

7.0

8.0

2.8

 

3.2

4.0

4.0

4.0

4.0

4.0

Unemployment rate (in percent)

 

15.5

13.5

12.6

 

13.0

13.5

14.0

14.0

14.0

14.0

Investment and saving (in percent of GDP)

                     

Investment

 

23.0

21.6

21.3

 

20.6

20.4

20.2

20.3

19.9

19.5

National savings

 

19.5

22.4

19.2

 

18.0

15.6

15.3

15.3

15.0

14.5

                       

Money and credit (end of period)

                     

Reserve money (percent change)

 

17.1

5.0

-4.0

 

6.2

7.7

7.9

7.9

7.9

7.9

Broad money (percent change)

 

13.1

16.1

17.4

 

13.9

8.1

8.7

8.7

8.7

8.7

Private sector credit growth (percent change)

 

-3.9

4.5

18.5

 

11.4

9.2

9.7

9.7

9.7

9.7

Central government operations (in percent of GDP)

                     

Revenue and grants

 

24.1

24.3

24.8

 

25.6

25.7

26.6

26.8

26.4

26.5

Of which: tax revenue

 

22.1

21.9

22.4

 

23.4

23.7

24.2

24.4

24.5

24.6

Expenditure 1/

 

28.7

26.4

26.8

 

30.2

30.3

30.9

30.6

29.9

29.7

Overall balance on a cash basis 1/

 

-4.6

-2.1

-2.0

 

-4.6

-4.6

-4.3

-3.8

-3.5

-3.2

Public and publicly-guaranteed (PPG) debt (in percent of GDP)

63.4

49.2

50.5

 

52.5

53.1

53.3

53.2

53.0

52.1

Central Government's PPG debt (in percent)

 

60.2

46.7

48.1

 

49.9

50.8

51.5

51.7

51.4

50.7

Share of foreign currency debt (in percent)

 

71.2

62.1

52.7

 

56.3

57.8

57.8

58.8

60.0

61.3

External sector

                     

Exports of goods and services (in millions of U.S. dollars)

5,012

10,038

14,131

 

13,933

12,518

12,493

12,901

13,324

13,897

Imports of goods and services (in millions of U.S. dollars)

-6,120

-10,186

-14,280

 

-14,678

-13,885

-13,955

-14,528

-15,101

-15,849

Exports of goods and services (percent change)

 

31.3

100.3

40.8

 

-1.4

-10.2

-0.2

3.3

3.3

4.3

Imports of goods and services (percent change)

 

20.4

66.5

40.2

 

2.8

-5.4

0.5

4.1

3.9

5.0

Current account balance (in percent of GDP)

 

-3.5

0.8

-2.1

 

-2.5

-4.9

-4.9

-4.9

-4.9

-5.0

FDI (net, in millions of U.S. dollars)

 

342

948

389

 

316

437

454

468

492

516

Gross international reserves (in millions of U.S. dollars)

3,230

4,112

3,602

 

3,748

3,486

3,458

3,450

3,469

3,665

Import cover 2/

 

3.8

3.5

2.9

 

3.2

3.0

2.9

2.7

2.6

2.6

End-of-period exchange rate (dram per U.S. dollar)

 

480

394

405

 

Average exchange rate (dram per U.S. dollar)

 

504

436

392

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                       

Sources: Armenian authorities; and Fund staff estimates and projections.

                 

1/ Acquisition of non-financial assets may increase, and the balance may decrease, by an amount

of AMD 107.0 billion in 2025, AMD 86.6 billion in 2026, and AMD 95.0 billion in 2027 on account

of investment spending in high-quality foreign financed projects above the amount of AMD 67.2 billion.

       

2/ Gross international reserves in months of next year's imports of goods and services, including the SDR holdings.

       

 

[1] The Executive Board takes decisions under its lapse-of-time procedure when the Board agrees that a proposal can be considered without convening formal discussions.

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