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Central bank raises key rate for 3rd time
Journal Staff Report

KIEV, Jan. 25 - The Ukrainian central bank unexpectedly raised its key rate for a third time on Thursday and said the $17.5 billion International Monetary Fund program and future cooperation with the Fund remained vital for economic stability, Reuters reported.

The bank would initiate talks soon on a new IMF aid program for the 2019-20 period to help Ukraine meet high external debt payments, the bank’s top official said.

Delays in implementing reforms have held up disbursement of funding under the present program, which expires in the first quarter next year, and raised concern about Ukraine’s willingness to modernize the economy and root out corruption as elections approach in 2019.

Acting central bank governor Yakiv Smoliy said it was vital Ukraine continued working with the Fund as it faces external debt payments in 2018-2020 of more than $16 billion.

“A new IMF program is an integral part of macro-financial stability and support for the central bank’s reserves will be essential given that payments to service external debt hit a peak in 2019-2020,” he told a briefing.
Earlier the bank lowered its end-2018 reserves forecast to $20.5 billion from $22.2 billion and estimated central bank coffers would shrink further to $17.8 billion in 2019.

It said the 2018 estimate depended on Ukraine receiving a long-delayed loan tranche of $2 billion from the IMF this year, as well as funding from the European Union and the World Bank.

Meanwhile it raised the main interest rate 1.5 percentage points to 16 percent to contain stubbornly high inflation of 13.7 percent as of end-December, despite economists’ forecasts in a Reuters poll that rates would be kept on hold.

Rates could be raised further if there are no signs of inflationary pressures easing in the short term, the bank said in a statement, adding that rising food prices and household incomes remain a key risk in 2018.

“The tighter monetary policy will help decrease inflation and bring it back to the target range in the middle of 2019,” the bank said.

It raised its 2018 inflation forecast to 8.9 percent from 7.3 percent and forecast for 2019 to 5.8 percent from 5 percent.

The bank said the government’s softer fiscal policy, including higher social spending, also posed a considerable risk to inflation expectations. (rt/ez)




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Currencies (in hryvnias)
  26.04.2024 prev
USD 39.67 39.47
RUR 0.430 0.427
EUR 42.52 42.18

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  25.04.2024 prev
PFTS 507.0 507.0
source: PFTS

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