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

February 14, 2026 5:24 AM EST

Newly appointed Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko attends a session of Ukrainian parliament, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine July 17, 2025. REUTERS/Andrii Nesterenko

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)



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