Thursday, May 21 2026 13:12
Alexandr Avanesov

Armenian authorities want to modernize the tools of the Productivity  Enhancement Target Program

Armenian authorities want to modernize the tools of the Productivity  Enhancement Target Program

ArmInfo.  Armenian authorities want to modernize the tools of the Productivity Enhancement Target Program. At a meeting on May 21, the RA government amended its decision of March 26, 2020.

In his speech, RA Minister of Economy Gevorg Papoyan noted that this  is essentially a program to subsidize interest rates for leasing  transactions. Specifically, it is proposed to grant economic  operators the right to transfer subsidized loan/leasing agreements  from one financial institution to another while maintaining state  support. It is also planned to subsidize projects for the  construction and reconstruction of hotel facilities in the regions of  the Republic of Armenia (excluding Yerevan) that promote tourism.   Projects for the acquisition of solar power generation systems will  be excluded from the list of priority projects. At the same time,  waste processing and disposal, as well as materials recycling, are  being expanded into the project's scope.

The project aims to improve the targeting of state support, promote  competition in the financial market, and effectively redistribute the  program's financial resources without significantly increasing the  budget burden.

It should be noted that the program's implementation from 2022 to  2025 resulted in the formation of a total loan and lease portfolio of  approximately 471 billion drams, with an average ratio of  state-supported borrowings to private investment of 1:10,  demonstrating the program's high investment efficiency. At the same  time, experience with the program has revealed a number of systemic  limitations.

The lack of refinancing options for subsidized loans and leasing  limits competition in the financial market and the financial  flexibility of economic operators. The development of hotel  infrastructure in the regions is not being targeted in accordance  with state policy priorities, and the rapid expansion of solar power  plants poses risks to the balancing and technical stability of the  energy system.

The teaching of artificial intelligence fundamentals will also be  expanded. This curriculum is currently being implemented in  approximately 40 schools with the support of the Foundation for  Armenian Science and Technology (FAST). This school curriculum is  groundbreaking globally, and recently won an award at an industry  competition for school curricula in the United States, the minister  noted. "We are developing a new initiative with Firebird (the  founders of a large data center in Armenia, which will be completed  in the coming months - ed.) and OpenAI," the minister stated.