Emil Danielyan
Information technology (IT) companies remain the fastest-growing
sector of Armenia’s economy that has expanded by 25 percent in 2014,
according to official statistics.
Preliminary data from the Armenian Ministry of Economy shows the
combined output of the nearly 400 IT firms operating in the country
reaching almost $475 million. The figure is equivalent to about 5
percent of Gross Domestic Product and almost one-third of Armenian
exports in 2013.
The export-oriented sector had already expanded by an average of 22
percent annually from 2008-2013. The Armenian government expects this
growth to continue unabated in the years to come. Some government
officials have forecast that the sector’s annual operating revenue will
pass the $1 billion mark by 2019.
Much of this rapid growth has been driven by U.S. hi-tech firms such
as Synopsys, National Instruments, Mentor Graphics and VMware. Synopsys,
a global microchip design leader, employs about 700 engineers in
Armenia, making its local branch the country’s largest IT enterprise.
VMware, which posted a net profit of $1 billion in 2013, plans to
double the size of its Armenian subsidiary currently numbering over 60
specialists. “The business results that we are getting here give us
confidence to expand. We are going to invest around $100 million here in
the next four or five years,” Raghu Raghuram, a vice-president of the
California-based software giant, told the Mediamax news agency during a
November 2013 visit to Yerevan.
In another significant development, Oracle, the world’s second
largest software developer, set up shop in Armenia just over a month
ago. The Silicon Valley heavyweight reportedly plans to expand its
research and development office in Yerevan.
The IT industry has been further boosted in recent years by a growing
number of startups partly or fully owned by Armenians. According to the
Ministry of Economy, more than 200 such firms have been set up since
2007. Those include PicsArt, the manufacturer of one of the world’s most
popular mobile photo-editing applications. The Yerevan-based company
has reported more than 100 million software downloads since launching
its key product three years ago.
Another Armenian startup specializing in mobile apps, Inlight,
attracted strong interest from a Los Angeles-based company, Science
Inc., and was acquired by the latter in July.
The Armenian government hopes to facilitate the emergence of more
such home-grown firms with forthcoming tax breaks and a $6 million
venture capital fund that started functioning in February 2014. Over the
past few years, the government has also helped to set up about a dozen
centers providing logistical, technical and even financial assistance to
promising IT entrepreneurs. Two of those hi-tech “accelerators” are
sponsored by the world-famous Microsoft and Nokia corporations.
Another U.S. computer giant, IBM, announced earlier this month the
establishment of an Innovative Solutions and Technologies Center at
Yerevan State University (YSU). The center is due to modernize the YSU’s
laboratory equipment and computer science curricula.
The U.S. Agency for International Development and the
Texas-headquartered National Instruments inaugurated a similar facility
at the State Engineering University of Armenia (SEUA) in September 2013.
The $6.2 million Armenian National Engineering Laboratories gave the
SEUA’s professors and some 2,400 students enrolled in IT programs free
access to state-of-the-art equipment.
These facilities are meant to address what IT executives describe as
the number one problem facing their burgeoning industry: the still
inadequate quality of education at the IT departments of Armenian
universities. Most of their graduates are not qualified enough to work
for IT companies without undergoing additional training. There are
currently an estimated 2,000 job vacancies in the sector, a highly
unusual phenomenon for a country that has long suffered from
double-digit unemployment.
Armenia’s Union of Information Technology Enterprises (UITE) has also
been trying to address this problem with extracurricular robotics
classes organized in about 60 public schools across the country. “Our
objective is to detect in all schools children with engineering talent
and help them find jobs in the future,” the UITE chairman, Karen
Vardanyan, said in a recent interview. He argued that schoolchildren
involved in the classes are learning not only robot design but also
broader software development.
The UITE, which launched its Armrobotics program financed by several
private firms in 2008, is now lobbying the government to gradually open
such “study groups” in all 1,400 or so Armenian schools by 2018. The
government supports the ambitious $25 million project in principle but
has yet to make a final decision to finance it.
RFE/RL (www.azatutyun.am), December 30, 2014
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