India | UK | US

IMF to give Ukraine additional 2.8 billion dollar loan

Kiev - The International Monetary Fund (IMF) should give Ukraine an additional 2.8 billion dollars assistance loan, Fund managers said on Friday. An IMF mission visiting the former Soviet republic recommended Ukraine receive the badly-needed credit a...
Posted : Fri, 17 Apr 2009 12:30:01 GMT
By : DPA
Category : Business
News Alerts by Email ( click here )
Business News | Home
Kiev - The International Monetary Fund (IMF) should give Ukraine an additional 2.8 billion dollars assistance loan, Fund managers said on Friday. An IMF mission visiting the former Soviet republic recommended Ukraine receive the badly-needed credit after meetings with the country's governmental leadership.

At least half of the money to be advanced by the IMF will go towards balancing Ukraine's government budget, mostly by helping service foreign-issue bonds, Ukraine Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko said, according to an Interfax news agency report.

An IMF team led by mission head Ceyla Pazarbasioglu had been in Ukraine for more than a week discussing a continuation of loans to Ukraine.

The Fund in February refused to advance a second tranche of a total 16.5 billion dollar loan, because Ukraine's government had failed to enact reforms as per the loan terms.

The first tranche of the loan, 4.5 billion dollars, was given to Ukraine in November.

"We have agreed (with the Tymoshenko government) to recommend to Fund headquarters another tranche of 2.8 billion dolars," Pazarbasioglu said at a Kiev press conference.

A final IMF approval of the loan would depend on the Tymoshenko government's sending a former letter to IMF headquarters, confirming in writing Kiev was in agreement with the terms of the second tranche.

An IMF decision would come in May, Pazarbasioglu said.

Provided Ukraine continued to meet IMF conditions a third tranche, also of 2.8 billion dollars, could be made available "relatively quickly," she added.

The two 2.8-billion-dollar tranches newly agreed upon by the IMF and Ukraine were a change from loan terms agreed last year, originally forseeing a 4.5-billion-dollar credit to Ukraine in November 2008, a second 1.87-billion-dollar credit in February 2009, and a third credit of 3.73 billion dollars in May 2009.

IMF and Ukrainian officials had come into conflict over the use of the first tranche of the loan, with the Tymoshenko government wishing to use the money primarily to cover the budget deficit, and the IMF insisting the money be used to refloat shakey Ukrainian banks.

The IMF refused to issue the scheduled second tranche of the loan programme, a planned 1.87 billion dollars, as a result of the dispute.

Ukraine's government on Thursday announced a refinancing plan for half a dozen weak banks, according to Tymoshenko "exclusive of any money we might get from the IMF."

A second IMF-pleasing step came earlier in the week, with Tymoshenko ordering wide-reaching reforms of budgetary policy, cuts to food and energy price subsidies, and and slashed social suppor payments - all measures highly unpopular with middle- and lower-income Ukrainians.

Pazarbasioglu praised Tymoshenko's cost-cutting, sayingUkraine's economy had "weathered much of the shock" of the international financial crisis, setting the stage for economic recovery.

Pazarbasioglu cited a cheaper national Ukrainian currency the hryvna, stablising inflation, and a slightly-narrowing deficit as indicators Ukraine's economy was turning the corner.

Economic indicators still are among the worst in the world, with The IMF on Thursday revising downwards estimates of Ukrainian economic performance to a predicted 8 per cent national GDP contraction in 2009.

Copyright DPA

Share/Save/Bookmark

Article : IMF to give Ukraine additional 2.8 billion dollar loan
Print this article
Email this article

Stay Updated
News gadget on your Google homepage
Subscribe to a news feed in Google Reader


Related News



Have your Say
Name
Email
Subject
Your Comment

Enter Verification code
 
  


 

More Business News click here
Follow The Earth Times
Subscribe to RSS Follow Earth Times on TwitterNews by email
Share/Save/Bookmark

 
 



 
Subscribe to free Earthtimes
News Alerts by Email Click here
For RSS Feeds Click here
or Create your own RSS

Add to Google Toolbar
Breaking News
Press Releases

 

 

The Earth Times
News Category

© 2010 www.earthtimes.org, The Earth Times, All Rights Reserved | Privacy Policy
Earth Times accept no responsibility or liability either directly or indirectly for views or opinions expressed in articles or comments.