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Published byLester Kelly Modified over 7 years ago
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Ukraine’s Economic Transformation: Radical But Not Complete
Anders Åslund, Senior Fellow Atlantic Council, Washington, D.C January 2017
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What Went Wrong No sharp break with the Soviet system
As a consequence, pervasive corruption evolved
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The Problem: No economic policy led to hyperinflation Rent seeking took over & small rent-seeking elite persists
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Three Reform Waves 1994-5: Financial stabilization
2000: Deregulation led to economic growth : Greatest reforms
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GDP per capita, PPP, 1990 and 2013
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Ukraine is an Outlier As corrupt as most post-Soviet countries But free & very open EU integration can combat corruption
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What Was Wrong with Yanukovych’s Policy
Pegged overvalued exchange rate caused current account deficit Rising budget deficit Big energy subsidies Predatory corruption
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Cost of Russian Aggression
GDP fell by 7% in 2014 & 10% in 2015 Output fall in occupied Donbas: 7% of GDP + losses in Ukrainian-held area Eliminated trade w Russia: 28% of trade from FDI eliminated: 4% of GDP/year
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Reform Achievements Political Reform Energy Reform
Current Account Balance Financial Stabilization Transparency & Deregulation
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Fix Politics First! Presidential elections, May 25, 2014
Parliamentary elections, Oct 26, 2014 New government of young, well-educated outsiders, Dec 2, 2014 Reform program, Dec 9, 2014
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Energy Reform Unified energy prices: Consumption -20%
Abolished all energy subsidies: 8% of GDP Provided social cash compensation Stopped buying gas from Russia Nov 2015 Improved corporate governance Legislation on markets for all gas & electricity Missing: Stimulation of private energy production- coming now?
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Foreign Account Floating exchange rate: Depreciation from UHA8/$1 end 2013 to UHA27/$1 now Current account deficit from 9% of GDP in 2013 to balance in 2015 International reserves: from $5bn Feb 2015 to $15bn December 2016
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Current Account Balance -9% of GDP in 2013, but 0 in 2015
Source: IMF World Economic Outlook, October 2016; World Bank Database
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International Reserves: From $5bn (Feb 2015) to $15bn (Dec 2016)
Billions of US Dollars Source: IMF, International Financial Statistics 2014; Central Bank of Ukraine
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Hryvnia Devalued from UHA 8 to 27/$1 Exchange Rate Stabilizing
Source:
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Financial Stability IMF program: March 11, 2015, $7.7bn disbursed
Fiscal Adjustment: reduced public expenditures from 50% of GDP 2014 to 44% of GDP 2015 Budget deficit from 10% of GDP to 2.1% of GDP Public debt reduced from $73bn 2013 to $71bn end 2016 Debt restructuring: postponed $15bn in debt service until 2020 Major tax reform: cut payroll tax from 45% to 22% Half of 180 banks closed; owners revealed
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Budget Deficit (with Naftogaz):
2.1% of GDP in 2015 (down from 10% in 2014) Source: : IMF World Economic Outlook, April 2014; : JP Morgan's EMEA July 8, Emerging Markets Report. Note: I use JP Morgan statistics for because the IMF WEO statistics do not include the Naftogaz deficit : Dragon Capital Ukrainian Economy: 2017 Budget Draft, October 2016
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Public Debt Stopped at 80% of GDP after Devaluation
Source: : IMF Database; : Dragon Capital Ukrainian Economy, 2017 Budget Draft: A Modest Step Forward, October 2016
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Ukraine’s Inflation: Up with Devaluation & Tariff Rises to 61% April ‘15; 12.4% Dec ‘16
Source: Dragon Capital Ukrainian Economy, 2017 Budget Draft: A Modest Step Forward, October 2016
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Next Key Reforms Judicial Reform: Prosecution & Courts
Privatization: 3,800 state enterprises remain. Sell off the easy ones first! Civil Service Reform: Raise salaries! Land Reform: Allow private sales! Pension Reform: Cost cut from 17% of GDP to 11% of GDP, but system must change
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Europe: Reform Anchor Political & legal standards
Market access: EU 16% of exports in DCFTA: 39% in H1 2016 But 36 quotas for main export items Financial assistance: Little Visa freedom key Ukrainian desire
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Three Growth Sectors Agriculture & food processing
Hi-tech: Computer programming 3.3% of GDP Future: Integration into European supply chain with manufacturing & services Note: Polish salaries are 5-6 times higher than Ukraine’s
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Ukraine Needs Investment Funding
Ukraine’s investment ratio: only 15% of GDP in 2015 FDI used to be $6bn/year – now 0 apart from bank recapitalization because of Russian aggression Reasonable: United West ought to provide $5bn a year in investment credits
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Big Questions Have Ukraine’s reforms become irreversible? Probably
Will reforms proceed? Yes but probably more slowly Is Ukraine getting enough financial assistance? No Enough market access? Hardly Will growth be 2-3% a year or 6-8% a year?
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