Russian president Vladimir Putin revived the Czarist era term for a broad swath of southeastern Ukraine, Novorossiya, in a high-profile television appearance last month. “God knows” why Russia gave up the territory in 1920, he sighed.
Now that Crimea has been annexed by Russia, Donetsk and Luhansk have declared their independence, and tensions remain high in Odessa following bloody battles between factions earlier this month, the prospect of the government in Kyiv losing control of the southeast is rising by the day.
With
this in mind, Vadim Khramov at Bank of America Merrill Lynch recently
ran the numbers on several “separation scenarios” for Ukraine. If
Putin’s dream of restoring Novorossiya came true, it would cut Ukraine in half. Literally.
Subtracting
eight southeastern regions, along with Crimea, from what we currently
know as Ukraine would cut the country’s estimated GDP and population
this year by just under 50%. And since much of Ukraine’s heavy industry
lies in the southeast, Kyiv would lose an even larger share of exports
and industrial production:
Many
of Ukraine’s restive Russian-speaking regions take more from government
coffers than they give back, so Ukraine’s budget deficit would actually
improve without them. But since the breakaway regions are unlikely to
take responsibility for their share of Ukraine’s national debt
(following Crimea’s example), Kyiv’s debt-to-GDP level would surge
to dangerous levels—roughly the same as Cyprus, currently in the euro
zone’s intensive-care ward.
The
loss of exports would see the bottom fall out from Ukraine’s trade
balance, with only Mozambique and Liberia recording bigger current
account deficits this year, according to IMF forecasts. In short,
Ukraine would become even more beholden to international aid than it is
already.
IMF chief Christine Lagarde recently said that
Ukraine will need “much more” than the $17 billion in loans already
pledged by multilateral creditors. For the Ukrainian economy, which was hardly in good shape
before the crisis, the loss of Crimea, which accounts for only 4% of
GDP, has been manageable. If the self-proclaimed “People’s Republics” of
Donetsk and Luhansk were to fully separate, it would be much more
serious, but Khramov of Bank of America reckons that Ukraine would still
manage, thanks to the political will of its Western allies.
The restoration of historical Novorossiya,
however, would push the IMF to demand a default and restructuring of
Ukraine’s debts. The shrunken country’s daunting debt burden “would be
unlikely to stabilize, even under reasonable assumptions about
medium-term growth and cost of financing,” the analyst notes, ominously.
http://qz.com/209081/what-ukraines-economy-looks-like-without-its-russian-speaking-regions/
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