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No need to panic over Ukraine economy: IMF

Published: 02 Mar 2014 - 01:55 am | Last Updated: 26 Jan 2022 - 04:17 pm

WASHINGTON: International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde urged calm over Ukraine’s economic situation as talks on cobbling together international aid for the country stepped up pace.
With the new government in Kiev seeking “at least” $15bn for this year, Lagarde said it was “highly premature” to toss around large figures before a proper assessment of the country’s needs.
“We do not see anything that is critical, that is worthy of panic at the moment,” Lagarde said after talks on Ukraine with German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier in Washington.
“We need to rely on facts,” she said, adding that an IMF team would arrive in Ukraine early this week to begin an assessment. That team, she added, would be discussing current policies “as well as expected policies” that would be crucial in a support program for the country. She spoke as discussions to muster a financial rescue for the country in the wake of the overthrow of Russian-backed president Viktor Yanukovych gained speed.
The revolt led to Moscow cancelling a much-needed $15bn loan to the country after only $3bn had been disbursed, leaving Kiev with little cash in its coffers and dwindling foreign exchange reserves.
But US Secretary of State John Kerry said that Russia had assured him that it was willing to rejoin the effort. Kerry said Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov indicated during a Friday phone call that Russia would be “involved in helping to deal with the economic transition that needs to take place at this point.”
Steinmeier said that any support should have a wide base of contributors. “The stabilisation of Ukraine can only be successful if we get as many partners as possible on the table,” he said.
While earlier this week Ukraine officials put the country’s needs at $35bn, on Thursday finance minister Olexandr Shlapak said the immediate request was for less than half that.
“We will be asking for at least $15bn. But things will become more clear when the time comes,” he said, according to the Interfax-Ukraine news agency.
Earlier on Friday, the new Ukrainian prime minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk began preparing the ground for an aid package. He announced capital controls to slow the flight of money and the currency’s depreciation, and pledging to undertake tough reforms.
“The Ukrainian government will do everything to stabilise the situation... Now the main thing is to keep calm,” he said at the central bank, according to Interfax-Ukraine.
He said he was prepared to attack subsidies and social programmes and increase tariffs, all remedies which the IMF has urged in recent years. “The government will take extremely unpopular measures,” he said.
The capital controls announced by the central bank — a daily cap on foreign currency withdrawals from bank accounts — had immediate effect, strengthening the currency, the hryvnia, to 9.18 per dollar after it hit a record low of 11.31 per dollar on Thursday. 
Analysts said that Kiev needs some funds quickly because the government’s cash levels are near bottom and its foreign exchange reserves levels low.
Yatsenyuk said reserves were down to $15bn, and the cash in government acounts was a paltry 4.3m hyrvnias, less than $500,000.
“They need to get some money just to allow the budget to operate,” said economist Lubomir Mitov of the global banking association, the International Institute of Finance. “Soon is a matter of days.”
Mitov described a dire situation in the Ukraine economy in which banks, already extremely weak, have seen runs on deposits, the government has missed pension and salary payments, and factories in some areas have halted production due to a lack of orders.
Reuters