Fri. Nov 22nd, 2024

The agency will reportedly demand more effort from Kiev to cover the country’s budget gap

The International Monetary Fund is expected to ratchet up pressure on the Ukrainian government to cover the country’s budget gap in order to continue receiving aid, Bloomberg reported on Wednesday, citing people familiar with the matter.

An IMF team is set to visit Kiev later this week to review whether the government is hitting targets that include cutting interest rates, strengthening tax-raising efforts, and devaluing the currency. Pursuing these steps is required for Ukraine to receive the next $1.1 billion tranche from a $15.6 billion loan program.

Ukraine’s state finances have been backed by around $122 billion in international aid from the US, EU, and IMF. However, Kiev still faces a $15 billion budget gap in 2025 that has not yet been covered by financial commitments from creditors, Prime Minister Denis Shmigal said last month.

To help bridge the deficit, the Washington-based institution is reportedly planning to urge the National Bank of Ukraine to devalue the hryvnia at a faster pace and ease its monetary policy amid moderate inflation, the sources told the news agency. The measures are expected to boost Ukraine’s budget revenues in the local currency and make borrowing cheaper for the Finance Ministry.

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The regulator has reportedly opposed further depreciation of the national currency, which has lost more than 30% against the US dollar since the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in February 2022. In October, Ukraine’s central bank eased the fixed exchange rate as part of a broader effort to support the economy. Allowing the currency to weaken further would challenge the central bank’s ability to maintain price stability, the sources said.

In addition, the IMF has reportedly criticized Kiev’s tax raising efforts as being too lenient and urged the authorities to consider increasing a broader range of taxes. Raising the value added tax from the current 20% is among the potential proposals, people familiar with the matter told Bloomberg.

The proposed measures are reportedly a serious cause for concern for officials in Kiev, as currency depreciation along with higher taxes would be politically damaging amid wartime mobilization drives, state corruption concerns, constant blackouts, and soaring energy prices.

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