Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Season's Greetings

This being the season for giving, please consider sponsoring an Armenian student.


Happy New Year and Merry Christmas


Շնորհավոր Նոր Տարի եւ Սուրբ Ծնունդ

2009 Household Survey Released

The 2009 Household Integrated Living Conditions Survey was recently released by Armstat. As with the previously released 2004-2008 surveys, observations are aggregated at the household level and information is released for a subset of the variables. You may download the survey for free but registration is required. As always, links to this and other survey data on Armenia are provided in the Resources page of aea.am.
The survey of 7872 households is available as an xls and sav (spss) files. See my previous post to read or convert sav files to dta (stata).

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Paper on the monetary transmission mechanism in Armenia

A recent IMF working paper addresses the effectiveness of monetary policy in Armenia.
Here is a summary:
The introduction of inflation targeting in 2006, together with important economic developments such as dedollarization, marked the beginning of a new macroeconomic framework in Armenia, which is likely to have changed the effectiveness of monetary policy. This paper is the first attempt to analyze whether the transmission mechanism in Armenia has been subject to a structural break by employing a Markov-Switching VAR framework. Results support the existence of such a structural break around the time inflation targeting was introduced and reduced levels of dollarization were observed. Results from introducing a threshold variable into this framework furthermore show that reduced levels of dollarization are an important determinant of the effectiveness of monetary policy.

Monday, October 25, 2010

A very bumpy recovery

The rapid recovery experienced through May of this year seems to have stalled. Except for the drop in July, the economy seems to be growing at a rate around one percent now (compared to same month in 2009). The cumulative growth for the year through September is 2.8 percent.



Source: Cumulative GDP growth from Armstat (Blue); Monthly GDP growth (Orange) computed from Armstat published cumulative GDP and GDP deflator figures. Also see May and January posts.

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Real estate prices through 2010Q1

After peaking in 2008, and jolted by the global financial crisis, real estate prices seem to have stabilized recently. Stated in USD, the slide in prices accelerated with the devaluation of the Dram in March of 2009. But stated in Drams, the decline has been more modest. More specifically, the price per sqm in Yerevan in 2010Q1 was 761 USD compared to 968 in 2008; down by 27 percent. Converted to Drams, the respective prices are 271400 vs 296300, for a reduction of 8 percent only.

Properties changing hands also follow a similar pattern but up through 2007. The number of transactions peaked in 2007, with August 2008 as a major turning point.

A recent IMF working paper attributes much of the growth in housing prices in Armenia and a number of countries in the region to factors such as GDP, remittances, and external financing. See House Price Determinants in Selected Countries of the Former Soviet Union.



Average price in USD per sq meter in Yerevan (excluding New Marash): 2003-2010Q1
Source: Calculated from Cadastre data. For greater detail see data page of http://www.aea.am/ (under Resources).








Number of transactions in Armenia: 1998-2009.
Source: Cadastre. For greater detail see data page ttp://www.aea.am/ (under Resources)

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Rapid Recovery

The government reported that the economy grew by 7.2 percent during the months January through April when compared to the same period last year. However, if one were to look at indicators for the monthly performance of the economy a much faster growth pattern would emerge. In April, for instance, the economy grew at a rate of 12 percent; 10.5 in March, 2.8 in February, and 2 percent in January. But because the governmental statistical agency (Armstat) reports these figures on a cumulative basis for the year, sharp expansions and contractions are smoothed over. An example of the latter, GDP shrank by some 20 percent in April of last year; the published cumulative figures showed 9.8 percent contraction only.

There are potentially many factors at play in shaping this recovery. But regardless of the nature or sources of these factors, if this trend continues the country is likely to experience very rapid growth that could very well be in the double digits.




Source: Cumulative GDP growth from Armstat (Blue); Monthly GDP growth computed from Armstat published GDP and GDP deflator figures (Orange). Also see earlier post.

Friday, April 23, 2010

2008 Household Survey Released

The 2008 Household Integrated Living Conditions Survey was released recently by Armstat. As with the previously released 2004-2007 surveys, observations are aggregated at the household level and information is released for a subset of the variables. You may download the survey for free but registration is required. As always, links to this and other survey data on Armenia are provided in the Resources page of aea.am.
The survey of 7872 households is available as an xls and sav (spss) files. See my previous post to read or convert sav files to dta (stata).

Thursday, February 04, 2010

Educational assortative mating

The choices that men and women make in who to marry have implications that go well beyond the social fabric of a society. Income mobility, for instance, is an important consideration. If highly educated women always marry highly educated men, and the least educated intermarry, then little income mobility may take place.

The 2001 Armenian population census provides an opportunity to gauge the extent of educational assortative mating in Armenia. Do Armenian women marry men of similar education, do they marry down, or do they marry up? These questions can be explored by comparing the educational level of husbands and wives.

The top panel of the table below summarizes the choices made by women as gleaned from a 10 percent sub-sample of the 2001 census data (Armstat). About 60 percent married men with similar educational attainment (sum of main diagonal), 20 percent married down and 20 percent married up. About 8.2 percent of women had education below the fourth grade (primary or less). Close to 18 percent had completed tertiary education (university), but only 15 percent married university graduates.

The middle panel reports similar statistics but restricted to women born in the 1920s. About 62 percent of women married men with similar education, 23 percent married up, and 15 percent married down. About one third have an education below the fourth grade level, and around 10 percent are university graduates; 15 percent of male partners are university graduates.

The bottom panel replicates the analysis for those born in the 1960s. Here 60 percent of women married men of similar education, 19 percent married up, and 21 percent married down; more marry men with lower education when contrasted with the older generation. About one percent of the women have an education at the third grade level or below in contrast to one third of those born in the 1920s. This highlights the spectacular educational expansion from the formative years of Soviet Armenia.

This is part of a paper co-authored with Shushan which contains further description of the data and additional analyses that address the choices made in the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s, as well as estimation of the probability of the various choices made (ordered probit). One finding of interest is that women who marry younger men are more likely to have married down. Drop a note if interested.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Is the worst over?

Here is the monthly year over year real GDP growth in Armenia. Is the economy at a turning point?




Source: Constructed from cumulative monthly GDP and deflator figures reported by Armstat. Any errors are mine.

Monday, January 04, 2010

Armenian micro data

As an early present for the new year, Armstat made available for public use household surveys for the years 2004 through 2007. For the first time researchers will be able to examine the size and sources of household income, among other variables of interest; registration is required to access the databases.

The variables made available represent a subset of those compiled by Armstat (see databases on armstat.am or armstat.info). For instance, information is available at the household and not its members level. Obviously confidentiality of the information is critical, and the new releases strike a balance between the interest of the research community and the protection of the privacy of those surveyed.

Earlier in the year, Armstat made available a 10 percent subset of the 2001 population census for public use. The provision of these micro databases is nothing short of impressive. It would be good to see researchers make use of these.

Technical notes:

The surveys are available in xls and so there is little need for programming skills. But for more advance analyses they would need to be imported into some statistical software. Fortunately, the data are also available in SPSS. However, spss files (sav files) are not very useful to economists. But it is very easy to convert these files into Stata. Just install an ado file, and the data can be converted into dta files (and retain the labels). More specifically, in Stata type the following to install (and describe) usespss ado file.

ssc describe usespss
ssc install usespss

Next, and at any time using Stata to read "sav" files, type:

usespss using "filename.sav"

For more further info, consult the Stata website as well as RePEc.
As always, links to the databases are reported in the data page of aea.am.