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Ukraine, IMF ease conditions on new $8.2 billion loan program

By Thomson Reuters Feb 14, 2026 | 4:24 AM

By Olena Harmash

KYIV, Feb 14 (Reuters) – Ukraine’s government and the International Monetary Fund have agreed to ease some conditions, including sensitive tax increases, for a new $8.2 billion lending ​programme, Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko said on Saturday.

She said ‌the IMF board was expected to review the programme at its next meeting, noting its approval was crucial for unlocking other international support, including a 90‑billion‑euro ($106.8 billion) EU loan.

As the war with Russia grinds into its ‌fifth ​year, Ukraine relies on Western financial aid ⁠to sustain its defences, ⁠keep the economy running, and pay wages and pensions.

After discussions, “the mission has simplified the agreements reached in November” and revised some structural benchmarks, Svyrydenko said, in remarks released by her ​office on Saturday.

In November, the IMF and Ukraine reached a staff-level agreement on the new four-year program. A key prior ⁠action for board approval was raising ⁠taxes for individual entrepreneurs.

ECONOMIC SITUATION DETERIORATES DUE TO RUSSIAN ​STRIKES

In recent months, Ukraine’s economic situation has worsened as intensified Russian ​airstrikes have battered the energy system and infrastructure, cutting ‌power, heat and water for millions in bitterly cold winter temperatures.

Costly energy imports and generator-produced electricity kept Ukrainian businesses running, but many cut working hours and output, prompting a review of economic forecasts.

The ⁠central bank lowered its 2026 GDP growth forecast to 1.8% from 2% due to larger-than-expected energy deficits.

Svyrydenko said the most sensitive part of ⁠the IMF programme ‌was taxing individual entrepreneurs.

The government agreed to ⁠introduce a value-added tax for them, raising the ​revenue threshold ‌to 4 million hryvnias (85,000 euros) from 1 ​million hryvnias.

Analysts ⁠now expect about 250,000 entrepreneurs to be affected by the increase, instead of over 600,000 in earlier plans.

The government was discussing the changes with lawmakers as it prepared draft legislation with other tax increases, Svyrydenko said.

($1 = 0.8427 euros)

(Reporting by Olena HarmashEditing by Tomasz Janowski ​and Bernadette Baum)