KIEV, Ukraine -- The mission of the International Monetary Fund (IMF)  completed its work in Kyiv on February 14, but more difficult talks are  ahead. Ukraine still has to prove that it qualifies for the next $1.6  billion IMF loan tranche.
The government of President Viktor Yanukovych like its predecessor,  whose economic populism prompted the IMF to freeze assistance in late  2009, failed to meet its commitments as many reforms remain unfinished.
The  IMF approved a $15 billion loan for Ukraine last July and $3.4 billion  arrived last year in two tranches. If the tranche expected in March is  delayed, the schedule may be changed so fewer than four tranches would  be received this year.
This may strain public finances ahead of  the crucial Euro-2012 soccer championship, a costly event which Ukraine  will co-host with Poland.
The IMF mission stated on February 15  that though the economy performed well last year and the economic  program supported by IMF loans had been broadly on track, more  discussions would be held. In particular, agreement was yet to be  reached on household gas price hikes. The mission said a more gradual  schedule of hikes was agreed than planned earlier.
Last year, the  government promised to hike gas prices for households by 50 percent  from April 2011, in addition to a 50 percent hike last August. It is not  clear how the combined deficit of the government and the debt-ridden  national oil and gas company Naftohaz Ukrainy would be narrowed to 3.5  percent this year as promised to the IMF without the April hike.
On  February 17, the IMF released on its website documents dated December  10, 2010 containing Ukraine’s obligations under the mutually agreed  reform plan. The publication of the documents had been delayed by the  IMF apparently at the government’s request in order to avoid negative  reactions in Ukraine as many of the reforms agreed with the IMF are  likely to prove unpopular.
The agreements with the IMF were  reached in the wake of the popular protests against a new tax code last  fall so the precaution was apparently justified. Now that more than two  months have passed, it is clear than many obligations have not been met.
The  government promised a 5.5 percent state budget deficit in 2010, yet the  target was exceeded. It pledged to approve pension reform by January  2011, however parliament plans to pass it only in March.
The  government admitted that Naftohaz’s deficit would be reduced to 0.4  percent of GDP in 2011 rather than to zero as promised earlier. At the  same time, the government pledged to hike household gas prices by 50  percent in April. However, the government made clear to the IMF mission  this month that this plan was abandoned.
Ukraine’s central bank  reportedly rejected the IMF’s advice that only one of the three  mid-sized banks which were bailed out in 2009, Ukrhazbank, should be  rescued. Instead, the government is going to revive at least two of  these banks plus the large ailing bank Nadra.
In order to rescue  Nadra, the central bank plans an increase in the capital of the  state-owned Oshchadbank so that Oshchadbank should issue a loan to the  equivalent of $440 million to Nadra while the same sum should be  contributed by private investors.
Another large state-owned bank,  Ukreximbank, should lend to Rodovid, which is in the worst condition  among the three bailed-out banks. Later, Rodovid should be transformed  into a “bad bank” for the toxic assets of Ukrgazbank, the Kyiv bank and  possibly Nadra, while Kyiv would be merged with Ukrgazbank, according to  the plan.
Later on, IPO’s would be conducted for several of  those banks. The IMF has yet to approve the plan.
Central bank  governor, Serhy Arbuzov, confirmed most of these developments in a  recent interview. Arbuzov also said the IMF was recommending remedies  which had been used elsewhere but could not be implemented in Ukraine.
The  government has invested over $2 billion in Rodovid, Ukrgazbank and Kyiv  since 2009, but an audit conducted in late 2010 showed that more should  be invested. Nadra has been in limbo since late 2008 while the central  bank’s plan has been to rescue it jointly with the energy and chemical  tycoon Dmytro Firtash who co-owns the RosUkrEnergo (RUE) gas  intermediary with Gazprom.
International and independent domestic  experts have been against state participation in Nadra, arguing that  either Firtash should rescue the bank on his own or Nadra should be  liquidated otherwise it will continue to drain public funds.
The  government has invested over $2 billion in Rodovid, Ukrgazbank and Kyiv  since 2009, but an audit conducted in late 2010 showed that more must be  invested.
Nadra has been in limbo since late 2008 while the  central bank’s plan has been to rescue it jointly with the energy and  chemical tycoon Dmytro Firtash who co-owns the RosUkrEnergo (RUE) gas  intermediary with Gazprom.
International and independent domestic  experts have been against state participation in Nadra, arguing that  either Firtash should rescue the bank on his own or Nadra should be  liquidated otherwise it will continue to drain public funds.
Firtash  should have cash to rescue Nadra as RUE will receive 12 billion cubic  meters (bcm) of gas from Naftohaz this year as emerged from the December  10 documents released by the IMF.
Last year, courts ruled that  the former Ukrainian government illegally seized 11 bcm of gas from RUE  in early 2009. Naftohaz was ordered to return the gas plus damages.  Naftohaz started returning the gas to RUE last December and RUE will  sell it in Europe.
Meanwhile, former Prime Minister Yulia  Tymoshenko, who reportedly thwarted Firtash’s intention to take over  Nadra in early 2009, has opposed the new plan for Nadra. Tymoshenko  predicted that the plan to help Firtash rescue Nadra with the help of  Oshchadbank would spark a corruption scandal.
 
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