Franklin
Staff View
LEADER 02253nam a22003974a 4500
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020129s2016 dcu o i00 0 eng d
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9977321100403681
020
a| 1475543506
020
z| 9781475543506
022
a| 1934-7685
024
7
a| 10.5089/9781475543506.002
2| doi
035
a| (IMF)IMFE1UKREA2016009
035
a| (IMF)1UKREA2016009
040
a| DcWaIMF
b| eng
110
1
a| International Monetary Fund.
b| Finance Department.
245
1
0
a| Ukraine
h| [electronic resource] :
b| Ex Post Evaluation of Exceptional Access Under the 2014 Stand-By Arrangement.
260
a| Washington, D.C. :
b| International Monetary Fund,
c| 2016.
300
a| 1 online resource (56 p.)
490
1
a| IMF Staff Country Reports
500
a| Part of the IMF eLibrary collection.
506
a| Restricted for use by site license.
520
3
a| Ukraine requested a 24-month SDR 10.976 billion exceptional access Stand-By Arrangement (SBA) in April 2014 against the backdrop of large internal and external imbalances, considerable domestic political upheaval, and an emerging conflict in the East. Inconsistent macroeconomic policies in the preceding years had led to a potent combination of an overvalued pegged exchange rate, large and growing twin deficits, and a weak banking system by end-2013. Domestic political turmoil and conflict in Crimea and Eastern Ukraine added to these problems, creating an urgent need for financial assistance from the international community. The 2014 SBA (of about
1| 7 billion) was Ukraine's third since 2008.
588
a| Description based on print version record.
650
4
a| Stand-By Arrangements
2| imf
650
4
a| Monetary Policy
2| imf
650
4
a| Banking Sector
2| imf
650
4
a| Fiscal Policy
2| imf
650
4
a| Energy Sector
2| imf
710
2
a| International Monetary Fund.
b| Finance Department.
776
0
8
i| Print Version:
t| Ukraine: Ex Post Evaluation of Exceptional Access Under the 2014 Stand-By Arrangement
d| Washington, D.C. : International Monetary Fund,2016
z| 9781475543506
830
0
a| IMF eLibrary
830
0
a| IMF Staff Country Reports
856
4
0
u| http://hdl.library.upenn.edu/1017.12/2191719
z| Connect to full text