Armenian Aviation Chief Rejects World Bank Criticism

ARMENIAN AVIATION CHIEF REJECTS WORLD BANK CRITICISM
By Shakeh Avoyan

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
April 6 2007

Armenia’s civil aviation authority rejected on Friday a recent World
Bank study which concluded that its protectionist policies not only
restrict air travel but also impede overall economic development.

The study, officially presented late last month, listed civil
aviation among lucrative sectors of the Armenian economy that have
been effectively monopolized by businessmen close to the government.

It said the government is keeping prices of air transport artificially
high in order to benefit the Armavia national airline.

Artyom Movsesian, head of the government’s Civil Aviation Department,
admitted that Armavia is enjoying privileged treatment by the state,
but insisted that that is good for the country. "Why should our
aviation market be controlled by a foreign carrier?" he said. "It’s
better to give [control of the market] to our carriers because they
pay taxes here, while foreign companies don’t."

"This is also a matter of national security. We need to have a national
airline," he said, adding that foreign carriers rarely flew to Armenia
during it war with Azerbaijan and may well do the same in the event
of renewed fighting.

"We have rejected many points made by the World Bank," Movsesian told
a news conference. "We have had numerous meetings with World Bank
officials and presented our financial and economic justifications."

Armavia enjoys the state-guaranteed rights to fly to popular
destinations in the former Soviet Union and Europe, having inherited
most of them from Armenian Airlines, the now bankrupt state-run
carrier. The company, owned by a Russian-Armenian businessmen with
close government ties, has faced greater competition in recent years,
with several Western airlines currently carrying out regular flights
to Yerevan.

However, that has not led to a sizable reduction in air fares which
World Bank experts say remain well above the European per-mile
average. Their study blamed the high fares for the fact that the
volume of freight shipped by air to and from the landlocked country,
blockaded by two of its neighbors, fell by more than two thirds
between 1997 and 2003. It said making air travel and transport more
affordable will be increasingly essential for maintaining Armenia’s
high rates of economic growth.