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Will Ukraine commit economic suicide?

Friday, October 10th 2014 - 09:12 UTC
Full article 2 comments
Ukrainian President Poroshenko signed off on the new tax code on Aug. 1, which effectively doubles the tax private gas producers in Ukraine will have to pay Ukrainian President Poroshenko signed off on the new tax code on Aug. 1, which effectively doubles the tax private gas producers in Ukraine will have to pay

Ukraine is on the brink of committing economic suicide after imposing a crippling 55% tax on private gas producers, while parliament prepares to vote on next year's budget, which aims for a continuation of the same.

The Oct. 14 budget vote—which is already a month late—is a major condition for Ukraine's next credit tranche from the European Union, but if the 2015 budget goes through as proposed, it will decimate independent gas production, remove any potential for Ukrainian energy independence and deal a further blow to the already struggling economy.

“Kiev's attempt at fiscal discipline to fund the war effort in the east and stave off an economic crisis is not working, and the end result is going to be economic suicide,” Robert Bensh, majority shareholder of Cub Energy, Ukraine's fourth-largest independent gas producer, told Oilprice.com from Kiev.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko signed off on the new tax code on Aug. 1, which effectively doubles the tax private gas producers in Ukraine will have to pay, calling into question any new investment, as well as commitment, by key producers already operating in the country.

For now, the new code will remain in force until the end of this year, during which time private gas drillers will be required to pay 55% of their subsoil revenue for extracting under five kilometers. This is up from 28%. Additionally, for any extraction beyond five kilometers, the tax will be 28%, up from 15%.

Despite strong lobbying efforts, the interim government plans to continue the new tax regime for next year, if it approves the budget.

The dire economic situation ahead of the Oct. 26 elections is accompanied by a growing sense of pessimism internationally.

“Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk's cabinet has raised taxes and is attempting to tighten fiscal discipline. However, these measures have not enabled Kiev to break the vicious cycle,” Vladimir Fedorin, founding editor of Forbes Ukraine, told Russian media.

Fedorin also said ”the list of (election) candidates includes out-and-out sociopaths, civic activists, second-rate businessmen, career politicians, crooks of all kinds and even major embezzlers of state funds.

“The one group missing is reformers—the leaders who understand that you should not favor short-term relief measures over long-term economic development,” he added.

Bensh said the outlook is dismal. “The gas tax isn't going to generate material tax revenues for the state. Ukrainians realize this isn't a revenue-generating issue; it's an energy security issue. Kiev is discouraging investment in the independent sector and destroying any chance for Ukraine to have any semblance of energy independence from Russia.”

JKX Oil & Gas Plc, another private producer, said earlier this month it would substantially reduce its capital expenditure to offset the impact of higher production taxes.

JKX said the rise would cost it an estimated 10 million, with the cost to be covered by slashing spending in the country by 25%.

With a gas tax on private producers, Russia wins. “It's the economy, not the Russian army, that has brought Ukraine close to the brink,” notes Business Insider's Walter Kurtz. Beyond this, there will be reverberations across sectors, as the gas tax scares away foreign direct investment in general.

Meanwhile, not just international donors have lost confidence in Kiev's economic policy -- domestic depositors have, as well, and are rushing to convert their holdings into dollars. The National Bank has been forced to print more money, further exacerbating the devaluation, and the government might find itself soon enough bailing out the banks with budget money it doesn't have.

As elections approach, Western Skepticism over Ukraine is growing, with the general consensus that Ukraine will not pursue any real reforms, nor will it be able to accept any aid without seeing it disappear through the cracks of corruption.

President Poroshenko's goals to rebuild the economy and make it attractive to outside investors appear overly ambitious at best, and utterly impossible at worst--particularly if the one lifeline to energy independence through private gas production is definitively severed with the October budget vote.

Said Bensh, “Attracting 40 billion in foreign investment and joining the European Union by 2020 is a pipe dream for a country that is holding current investors hostage and making the atmosphere prohibitive for any new investors.”

By James Stafford of Oilprice.com
 

Top Comments

Disclaimer & comment rules
  • Briton

    Life between the frying pan and the fire aint goner get any colder
    anytime soon.

    Oct 10th, 2014 - 12:35 pm 0
  • Kirk Nelson

    I do not see any good transformation in benefit of Ukraine's economy if Poroshenko runs against private gas drillers insvestors.
    I can see the need of increase cash flow in the country, especially generated from foreign investors, but this new tax code temporarily will generate some cash until investors soon will reduce substantially their capital expenditure projects and eventually move away from the country. In addition, if the country prints money, inflation will scale and indeed the country will be in default or bankruptcy. Why not consider Dollarize its currency?
    Poroshenko new running economic program is bad news. Ukraine will increase its gas dependency from Russia.
    Until this article, I was under the impression that was exactly what Poroshenko did not want to happen .
    Hey, the winter season is in the corner.
    Currently, the 40 million and plus people can not afford to comsume basic food needs, while on the other hand, unemployment keeps its way up.
    I hope Poroshenko's Government and team members will realize that their effords is to serve its people, instead of deeply hurt them.
    The war itself is not enough?

    Kirk Nelson,
    New York, USA

    Oct 13th, 2014 - 07:30 pm 0
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