Document of The World Bank FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Report No. 86951-UA INTERNATIONAL BANK FOR RECONSTRUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM DOCUMENT ON A PROPOSED DEVELOPMENT POLICY LOAN IN THE AMOUNT OF US$ 750 MILLION TO UKRAINE FOR THE FIRST DEVELOPMENT POLICY LOAN May 9, 2014 Poverty Reduction and Economic Management Unit Belarus, Moldova and Ukraine Country Unit Europe and Central Asia Region This document has a restricted distribution and may be used by recipients only in the performance of their official duties. Its contents may not otherwise be disclosed without World Bank authorization. UKRAINE: GOVERNMENT FISCAL YEAR January 1 – December 31 CURRENCY EQUIVALENTS (Exchange Rate Effective as of May 12, 2014) Currency Unit = Ukrainian Hryvnia (UAH) US$ 1.0 = 11.6 ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS AAA Analytic and Advisory Activities IFI International Financial Institution Business Environment and Enterprise ILO BEEPS International Labor Organization Performance Survey CPI Consumer Price Index IMF International Monetary Fund CPS Country Partnership Strategy JICA Japan International Cooperation Agency CSO Civil Society Organization M&E Monitoring and Evaluation DB Doing Business NBU National Bank of Ukraine Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade National Commission for Regulation of DCFTA NCRCS Area Communal Services Department for International DFID NERC National Energy Regulatory Commission Development DGF Deposit Guarantee Fund NPL Nonperforming Loan Organization for Economic Cooperation DH District Heating OECD and Development Public Expenditure and Financial DPL Development Policy Loan PEFA Accountability DSA Data Sustainability Analysis PDO Program Development Objectives EFC Error, Fraud and Corruption PFM Public Finance Management EU European Union PSIA Poverty and Social Impact Analysis ECA Europe and Central Asia SBA Stand-By Arrangement FDI Foreign Direct Investment SDR Special Drawing Rights FY Fiscal Year SLB State Land Bank GDP Gross Domestic Product TA Technical Assistance GMI Guaranteed Minimum Income UAH Ukraine Hryvnia HH Household USD United States Dollar HUS Housing and Utility Subsidy VAT Value Added Tax International Bank for Reconstruction and IBRD WBG World Bank Group Development Implementation Completion and Results ICR YTD Year-to-date Report Vice President: Laura Tuck Country Director: Qimiao Fan Acting Sector Director: Roumeen Islam Sector Manager: Carolina Sanchez-Paramo Task Team Leaders: Sebastian Eckardt, Lalita Moorty ii UKRAINE FIRST DEVELOPMENT POLICY LOAN TABLE OF CONTENTS SUMMARY OF PROPOSED LOAN AND PROGRAM ....................................................................... iv INTRODUCTION AND COUNTRY CONTEXT ................................................................................... 1 2. MACROECONOMIC POLICY FRAMEWORK ............................................................................... 3 2.1 Recent Economic Developments .................................................................................................. 3 2.2 Macroeconomic Outlook and Debt Sustainability ........................................................................ 6 2.3 IMF Relations ............................................................................................................................. 10 3. THE GOVERNMENT’S PROGRAM ................................................................................................ 10 4. THE PROPOSED OPERATION ........................................................................................................ 11 4.1 Link to the Government Program and Operation Description .................................................... 11 4.2 Prior Actions, Results and Analytical Underpinnings ................................................................ 11 4.3 Link to CPS and other Bank Operations..................................................................................... 21 4.4 Consultations, Collaboration with Development Partners .......................................................... 22 5. OTHER DESIGN AND APPRAISAL ISSUES.................................................................................. 22 5.1 Poverty and Social Impact .......................................................................................................... 22 5.2 Environmental Aspects ............................................................................................................... 25 5.3 PFM, Disbursement and Auditing Aspects................................................................................. 26 5.4 Monitoring and Evaluation ......................................................................................................... 27 6. SUMMARY OF RISKS AND MITIGATION ................................................................................... 27 ANNEXES ANNEX 1: UKRAINE: POLICY AND RESULTS MATRIX .............................................................. 29 ANNEX 2: LETTER OF DEVELOPMENT POLICY.......................................................................... 32 ANNEX 3: FUND RELATIONS ANNEX .............................................................................................. 33 The Ukraine First Development Policy Loan was prepared by a World Bank Group team consisting of (in alphabetical order): Irina Babich (ECSO3); Oleksii Balabuishko (PRMPS); Dmytro Derkach (ECCUA); Sebastian Eckardt (ECSP3,TTL); Anastasia Golovach (ECSP3); Vlad Grigoras (ECSH3); Iva Hamel (CICBR); Yevghen Hrebeniuk (ECSF1); Vidmantas Jankauskas (Consultant); Maiada Kassem (CTRLA); Tetiana Kovalchuk (ECCUA); Alexander Krauss (ECSP3); Jana Kunicova (ECSP4); Peter Ladegaard (CICBR); Caterina Ruggeri Laderchi (ECSP3); Lalita Moorty (ECSPE. TTL); Kseniya Lvovsky (ECSEN); Eugeniu Osmochescu (CEUIC); Jonathan Pavluk (LEGOP); Katerina Petrina (ECSH3); Ruslan Piontkivsky (ECSP3); Yadviga Semikolenova (ECSEG); Iryna Shcherbyna (ECSP4); Irina Shmeliova (ECSO2); Viktoria Siryachenko (ECCUA); Heinz-Wilhelm Strubenhoff (CEUIC); Emil Tesliuc (ECSH3); Ruslan Yemtsov (HDNSP) and Moses Wasike (ECSO3). We gratefully acknowledge guidance from: Laura Tuck (ECAVP); Qimiao Fan (ECCU2); Roumeen Islam (ECSPE); Alejandro Cedeño (ECCU2); Adrian Fozzard (ECSP4); Carolina Sanchez-Paramo (ECSP3); Paloma Anos Casero (ECSF1); Andrew Mason (ECSH3); and Edward Mountfield (OPSPQ). We also thank Paolo Belli (ECSH1); Alex Pankov (ECSPF); and Tamara Sulukhia (ECSSD) for their support. iii SUMMARY OF PROPOSED LOAN AND PROGRAM UKRAINE FIRST DEVELOPMENT POLICY LOAN Borrower Ukraine Implementation Agency Ministry of Economic Development and Trade Financing Data IBRD Loan Terms: IBRD DPL loan in USD plus variable spread , with a total maturity of 16 years including 7 years of grace Front End Fee: 0.25 percent of loan amount Amount: US$ 750 million Operation Type Programmatic (1of 2); Single tranche Pillars of the Operation The proposed Program Development Objectives are to: i) Promote good And Program governance, transparency and accountability in the public sector (Pillar A); ii) Development Strengthen the regulatory framework and reduce costs of doing business Objective(s) (Pillar B); iii) Reform inefficient and inequitable utility subsidies while protecting the poor (Pillar C) Result Indicators - Share of competitive procurement selection (by value) - Share of new eligible public investment projects appraised and selected through the public investment management system - Share of financial disclosures subject to external verification - Coverage of external audit - Ratio of VAT refund claims older than 74 days/ quarterly flow of VAT refund claims - Number of Permits - Distance to the Frontier by DB 2016 - Fiscal subsidies to District Heating companies - Revenue of Naftogaz from sales of gas to residential consumers - Number of families below defined income threshold who receive new targeted program Overall risk rating High Operation ID P150313 iv IBRD PROGRAM DOCUMENT FOR A PROPOSED FIRST DEVELOPMENT POLICY LOAN TO UKRAINE 1. INTRODUCTION AND COUNTRY CONTEXT 1. The First Development Policy Loan (DPL1) supports high-priority reform measures to address key structural roots of the current economic crisis in Ukraine and to lay the foundation for inclusive and sustainable growth. This proposed DPL1 – first in a series of two operations – is in the amount of US$ 750 million. The Program Development Objectives of the DPL series are to: (i) promote good governance, transparency, and accountability in the public sector; (ii) strengthen the regulatory framework and reduce costs of doing business; and (iii) reform inefficient and inequitable utility subsidies while protecting the poor. 2. The operation is an integral part of a package of coordinated financial assistance from international partners to help Ukraine address urgent macroeconomic challenges, while embarking on medium-term structural reforms. The DPL1 was prepared on an accelerated timeline for several reasons. First, it will help cover some of the large gross financing needs of the general government, estimated at 12.6 percent of GDP (equivalent to US$ 17.9 billion) 1 in 2014 in an environment where the Government has limited access to market financing. Swift financial support is especially critical given the spike in upcoming external public debt repayments in June and September, 2014. Second, the timing of the operation and its policy content is aligned with and complementary to support by other international partners, including the IMF, the EU and JICA. 2 Third, the Government is keen on moving quickly on reforms that have stalled for a number of years and the DPL1 seeks to support these efforts. Finally, the DPL1 is part of broader World Bank support to Ukraine, which includes a financial sector DPL and five new investment operations in urban infrastructure, district heating, health, power transmission and social safety nets. 3. The programmatic DPL series is aligned with strategic directions set out in the Country Partnership Strategy (FY12-16) and builds on long-standing policy dialogue with the authorities. The CPS envisaged a calibrated engagement depending on the pace and strength of reforms. Due to lack of progress in adopting a sustainable macroeconomic framework and structural reforms in the past five years, the World Bank has not provided budget support to Ukraine. Instead, the policy dialogue was sustained through technical assistance based on a ‘fiscal, governance and structural reform matrix’ that identified and tracked progress on a set of priority reform measures: public procurement, VAT refund processing, grain export market, investment climate, utility sector and public sector governance. This DPL series builds on this long-standing engagement. 4. The DPL1 is being prepared against the backdrop of political uncertainty. After months of protests, Ukrainians now have heightened expectations that the newly-formed government will promote transparent governance, deliver public services free of corruption, and provide enabling conditions for creating good quality jobs and raising standards of living comparable to those in the EU. The political unrest that began in November 2013 culminated in a 1 Gross financing needs comprise net financing (US$ 7.2 billion) plus domestic and external amortization needs (US$ 10.5 billion, including repayment from the budget to the IMF equal to US$ 2.1 billion) in 2014. This excludes Naftogaz gross financing needs and potential need for recapitalizing banks. 2 JICA committed to provide parallel financing based on the policy program included in this operation. 1 change of Government, reinstatement of the 2004 constitution transferring powers from the President to the Parliament, and a call for early Presidential elections now scheduled for May 25, 2014. Geopolitical tensions and deep-rooted domestic divisions over the future direction of the country create an exceptionally fragile political environment. The outcome of the Presidential election is uncertain and risks of escalating tensions are acute. 5. Amidst these political uncertainties, the Government needs to undertake daunting economic reforms. After a near reform paralysis over the past years, Ukraine urgently needs to restore macroeconomic stability, undertake a complex set of structural reforms, and confront a crisis of poor governance. Economic growth came to a halt while a combination of de-facto fixed exchange rate and loose fiscal policy – together with considerable quasi-fiscal subsidies in the energy sector – led to unsustainable macroeconomic imbalances. These pressures are compounded by significant political risks, a still weak global economic environment, and rising regional tensions. Meanwhile, poor governance and corruption that permeate virtually every aspect of public service delivery have undermined the investment climate, resulted in wasteful use of public money, and eroded government capacity as well as citizen’s trust in public institutions. Deteriorating public infrastructure, burdensome tax environment, byzantine laws and regulations, and poor contract enforcement have depressed private investment and growth. 6. Recent political events have opened a short window of opportunity to accelerate difficult but much-needed reforms. The Government took office with high expectations for change and has accelerated long-delayed but urgent reform measures. To avoid a balance of payment crisis, the authorities requested a Stand-By Arrangement (SBA) with the IMF which was approved by the IMF Board of Executive Directors on April 30th, 2014 and which will anchor the macroeconomic adjustment. The authorities have also identified a number of structural reform priorities, including improving regulatory quality, more transparent and accountable public sector governance, and fiscal reforms to correct structural imbalances. If the authorities sustain these reform efforts with timely assistance from international partners, Ukraine could finally address deep-rooted structural weaknesses, reach its growth potential, and ultimately ensure broad and lasting gains in living standards. 7. Poverty in Ukraine has been declining, with notable consumption growth among the bottom 40 percent of the population. As a result of rapid growth, especially before the global economic crisis, the poverty rate declined from 14.7 percent in 2006 to 3.9 percent in 2012. 3 From 2007-2012, consumption for the bottom 40 percent grew by more than two times that of the rest of the population (3.9 vs. 1.5 percent). This reflected higher growth in wage income for the bottom 40 percent than for the average of the population (24 vs. 19 percent), driven by improvements in their education profile and a slight decrease in the share of unemployed over the period. Higher growth in social assistance receipts and child benefits also played a role. 8. To enhance shared prosperity and protect gains made in reducing poverty, this DPL series focusses on reforms that support a balanced distribution of the social burden resulting from the necessary economic adjustment. Real incomes are expected to decline as a result of the exchange rate adjustment, high inflation and projected economic contraction in 2014. A public sector wage freeze will further affect the welfare of the middle class and the poor. 3 Based on ECAPOV methodology and the US$ 5 a day poverty line. 2 Moreover, increases in utility tariffs, while removing regressive subsidies, will also affect the poor. After several years of robust growth, consumption is expected to fall. Willingness to endure these painful economic adjustments could be undermined if reforms are perceived to leave corruption unaddressed and to disproportionately affect low and middle income groups. To achieve a more balanced social burden sharing, the DPL program includes reforms aimed at reducing leakage – including decisive steps to curb widespread high-level corruption – and closing loopholes for tax avoidance and evasion. In addition, the DPL series supports the Government in undertaking steps to strengthen social safety nets to cushion the impact of reforms on the poor and vulnerable. By strengthening the investment climate, the DPL lays the basis for higher growth – a precondition for sustained improvements in living standards. 9. This is a high risk operation. There is a risk that the adjustment and financing needs may be greater than anticipated, especially in case of a deeper output contraction, a slower recovery and/or additional external shocks. Weak external demand and imminent risks in the banking sector, could complicate efforts to contain macroeconomic imbalances. Meanwhile, the upcoming Presidential elections, heightened geopolitical tensions and escalating conflicts, especially in eastern Ukraine could undermine the ability of the authorities to continue reforms. Adverse immediate social impacts of some of the economic reforms and vested interests that may resist fundamental change, amplify risks that reforms may slow or even be reversed. A backsliding of the reform agenda would, in turn, increase the probability of a protracted contraction in the near term, endanger the macroeconomic framework and reduce the potential for a sustained economic recovery over the medium term. 2. MACROECONOMIC POLICY FRAMEWORK 10. Faced with economic stagnation, mounting fiscal and external pressures, and a fragile banking system, the authorities undertook urgent measures to stabilize the economy. In late February 2014, to avoid an imminent balance of payment crisis, the authorities switched to a flexible exchange rate regime, resorted to fiscal consolidation, and requested an SBA with the IMF. Macroeconomic risks remain high because of vulnerabilities to external shocks, banking sector instability, geopolitical tensions, insufficient institutional capacity and related slippages in implementing reforms. Despite these risks, the macroeconomic framework anchored in the IMF SBA is considered adequate for the DPL1 to proceed. 2.1 RECENT ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTS 11. A weak external environment, delayed structural reforms, and poor macroeconomic management have led to stagnation. During 2001-2008, real GDP growth averaged 7.5 percent. After a deep contraction in 2009 precipitated by the global economic crisis, Ukraine experienced a modest recovery in 2010-2011 followed by economic stagnation during the past two years due to economic mismanagement, declining investment, and weak external demand (Figure 1). In 2013, real GDP remained below its 2007 level. Moreover, Ukraine’s economic performance has lagged its regional peers over the last 5 years (Figure 2). After a peak in 2009, inflation remained close to zero in the last two years mainly because of lack of utility tariff adjustments and tight monetary policy to support the de facto fixed exchange rate (Table 1). Lending rates remained high at 17.5 percent in 2012-2013, constraining private investment and growth. Credit growth to the economy averaged at only 7 percent in the past two years. 3 Figure 1: Figure 2: Growth stagnated… …and was below regional peers... Consumption Fixed Investment Real GDP 130 30 Romania 125 20 Russian 120 Federation 10 115 Ukraine Index 2007=100 0 Percent Change 110 Moldova -10 105 ECA -20 100 -30 Hungary 95 -40 EU17 90 -50 85 -60 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Figure 3: Figure 4: …with growing twin deficits… …which put pressure on foreign reserves External Current Account Balance NBU gross reserves Interbank exchange rate General Government Balance, incl Naftogaz 40 10.5 0 35 10.0 -1 -2 9.5 -1.5 30 Billion US$ UAH/1US$ -3 -2.2 9.0 Percent, GDP -4 25 8.5 -5 -4.4 20 -6 -5.4 8.0 -7 -6.3 15 7.5 -6.7 -8 -7.4 10 7.0 -9 -8.4 2010m10 2011m10 2012m10 2013m10 2010m1 2010m4 2010m7 2011m1 2011m4 2011m7 2012m1 2012m4 2012m7 2013m1 2013m4 2013m7 2014m1 -8.8 -10 -9.2 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Source: National authorities, World Bank staff calculations. 12. Economic stagnation was accompanied by an accumulation of unsustainable fiscal and external imbalances. Weak revenue performance, delayed tariff hikes in the gas and district heating sectors, and increases in wages and pensions led to a growing general government deficit that – including the deficit of the state energy company, Naftogaz – reached 6.7 percent of GDP in 2013. The rising fiscal deficit, in turn, exacerbated pressures on the external current account which widened to 9.2 percent of GDP in 2013 (figure 3). Balance of payment pressures were amplified by large external debt refinancing needs, limited access to external financing, and political uncertainty. Given the de facto exchange rate peg to the US$, these growing internal and external imbalances led to depletion of foreign exchange reserves that reached a low level equivalent to 2.8 months of import cover 4 by end 2013. A financial package agreed with the Russian Federation in December 2013 – of which US$ 3 billion was disbursed immediately – helped alleviate acute balance of payment pressures but allowed the authorities to postpone the much-needed macroeconomic adjustment. 13. In early 2014, currency pressures intensified eventually forcing an exchange rate adjustment. Against the backdrop of political turmoil and the suspended disbursement of the second tranche of US$ 2 billion from the Russian Federation initially scheduled for late January, exchange rate pressures intensified in the first two months of 2014. These pressures were 4 In months of next year’s imports of goods and services. 4 compounded by outflows of deposits from banks due to heightened devaluation expectations and political uncertainty. By late February, faced with rapidly declining reserves, the National Bank of Ukraine (NBU) switched to a flexible exchange rate regime, setting the official exchange rate based on the average interbank rate. Consequently, the Hryvnia lost a quarter of its value and reserves stabilized around 2 months of import cover by end March (figure 4). Table 1: Key Macroeconomic Indicators 2011 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f Real economy Nominal GDP, UAH billion 1302.1 1411.2 1454.9 1506.6 1745.1 1951.0 2160.9 Real GDP, percent change 5.2 0.3 0.0 -5.0 2.5 4.0 4.0 Per Capita GDP, US$ Atlas Method 3140 3640 3960* … … … … Contributions: Consumption percent points of GDP 9.4 8.2 5.2 … … … … Investment percent points of GDP 3.2 -2.6 -4.2 … … … … Net exports percent points of GDP -7.4 -5.3 -1.0 … … … … Consumption, percent volume change 11.1 9.6 5.6 -7.6 0.7 3.4 3.2 Investment, percent volume change 7.1 0.9 -6.6 -23.2 6.2 5.2 3.6 Exports, percent volume change 4.3 -7.7 -8.8 -0.9 4.6 4.8 6.4 Imports, percent volume change 17.3 1.9 -5.9 -12.5 2.4 4.1 4.8 Unemployment rate (ILO definition), percent 7.9 7.5 7.5 8.5 8.0 7.5 7.0 GDP deflator, percent change 14.3 8.1 3.1 9.0 13.0 7.5 6.5 CPI (pa), percent change 8.0 0.6 -0.3 8.3 12.9 6.5 5.9 CPI (eop), percent change 4.6 -0.2 0.5 16.0 7.5 6.5 5.6 Fiscal Accounts Expenditures, percent GDP 45.7 48.9 48.4 49.6 49.2 48.0 47.6 Revenues, percent GDP 42.9 44.5 43.6 44.4 45.0 44.9 44.7 General Government Balance, percent GDP -2.8 -4.4 -4.8 -5.2 -4.2 -3.1 -2.9 PPG debt (eop), percent GDP 36.3 36.6 40.3 56.6 62.7 61.2 57.9 S elected Monetary Accounts Base M oney, percent change 6.3 6.4 20.3 21.5 14.8 14.2 13.8 Credit to non-government, percent change 9.5 2.2 11.8 8.7 11.7 10.8 11.0 Interbank overnight rate (annual average), percent 5.8 10.8 3.8 … … … … Balance of Payments Current Account Balance, percent GDP -6.3 -8.1 -9.2 -4.6 -4.3 -3.9 -4.1 Exports, percent GDP 54.6 51.0 48.1 56.8 56.6 54.9 54.5 Imports, percent GDP 60.8 59.3 56.8 61.3 59.8 57.6 56.3 Foreign Direct Investment, percent GDP 4.3 3.8 1.8 2.1 2.8 3.1 3.4 Gross Reserves, billion US$, eop 31.8 24.5 20.4 … … … … In months of next year’s imports 3.7 2.9 2.8 2.6 3.4 3.9 4.0 Percent of short-term external debt 55.4 38.1 30.3 36.0 54.7 63.0 60.5 External Debt, percent GDP 77.6 76.6 78.6 99.5 99.7 95.7 91.3 Exchange Rate, UAH/US$ (average) 8.0 8.0 8.2 … … … … Memo: Nominal GDP, US$ billion 162.8 176.4 177.4 … … … … * Preliminary estimate Source: National authorities, IMF, and World Bank staff calculations. 14. To contain rising fiscal imbalances, the Government tightened fiscal policy through a combination of revenue and expenditure measures. Fiscal adjustment measures, adopted in March 2014 add up to 1.2 percent of GDP increase on the revenue side and 2.0 percent of GDP reduction on the expenditure side (compared to the originally adopted 2014 Budget). Overall, the Government now targets a fiscal balance of 5.2 percent of GDP for 2014, excluding Naftogaz. The main revenue measures include: i) VAT base broadening through cancellation of zero VAT rate application for grain and industrial crop exports and introduction of 7 percent VAT rate for 5 Pharmaceuticals (0.4 percent of GDP) and ii) Excise rate increases and indexation of land prices (0.3 percent of GDP), iii) improved tax and customs administration (0.4 percent of GDP) and iv) increased fees on use of mineral resources (0.1 percent of GDP). The main expenditure measures include: i) public sector wage freeze in 2014 (0.5 percent of GDP) ii) changes in indexation of pension benefits in 2014 (0.2 percent of GDP), iii) rationalization of subsidies to enterprises (0.1 percent of GDP), iv) curtailment of capital expenditures (0.5 percent of GDP) and v) other expenditure measures (0.7 percent of GDP). To reduce imbalances of Naftogaz, the regulators increased residential gas and district heating tariffs by an average of 56 and 40 percent respectively, 5 while the Government adopted a new targeted social assistance program to offset negative impacts on the poor. The fiscal impact of the tariff increases is 0.5-0.7 percent of GDP (see Table 5). The additional expense of the targeted program is 0.2 percent of GDP. 15. Meanwhile, currency depreciation along with eroding public confidence is putting the already fragile banking system under further stress and risks remain elevated. The continuing political, economic and currency crisis are putting a severe strain on liquidity and capital positions of Ukrainian banks. As a result of eroding public confidence, the banking system lost 12 percent of retail deposits in the first three months of 2014 Depreciation is putting additional pressure on banks' capital through losses from significant open short foreign exchange positions and increase in non-performing loans which are already high. Potential instability in the banking system could in turn require recapitalization or resolution of select banks through the Deposit Guarantee Fund (DGF). 2.2 MACROECONOMIC OUTLOOK AND DEBT SUSTAINABILITY 16. Real GDP is expected to decline by 5 percent in 2014 in the baseline scenario before recovering to 2.5 percent in 2015. This scenario takes into account slower growth in key trading partners, higher gas import prices announced in March 2014, and disruptions of economic activity in eastern Ukraine. The ongoing macroeconomic adjustment is expected to be contractionary in the short term and will negatively affect purchasing power of households and businesses. Therefore, a decline is expected in both consumption and fixed investment in 2014. Meanwhile, external demand from Ukraine’s largest trade partners is likely to be muted. Despite this, contribution from net exports to growth is projected to be positive, as imports will contract more due to depreciation of the real effective exchange rate. From 2015 onwards, a moderate recovery is expected driven by growing domestic and foreign investment because of growing investor confidence following restoration of macroeconomic stability and improvements in investment climate. Exports are projected to recover, fueled by rising external demand. Consumption is also expected to grow from 2016 onwards, albeit at a slower pace than before. 17. The current account deficit will narrow in 2014-2015 due to the substantial decline in domestic demand engendered by the strong fiscal consolidation and exchange rate adjustment. While the potential positive impact of depreciation on exports will initially be limited due to sluggish external demand, imports are expected to contract significantly. Therefore the current account deficit is expected to decline to 4.6 percent of GDP in 2014. Going forward, macroeconomic stabilization, supported by an IMF program, should boost investor confidence and lower costs of external financing. Due to heightened security risks, FDI is expected to remain subdued in 2014 (in nominal terms it will remain below the already low 5 Further increases are planned for the outer years. 6 levels observed in 2013, but rise slightly as a share of GDP due to the GDP contraction) and is projected to recover slowly from 2015 onwards as political and economic conditions improve. Table 2: Balance of Payment Financing Requirements and Sources 2013 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f Financing requirements (US $ billion) 66.6 59.5 53.6 55.1 56.6 Current account deficit 16.3 6.5 6.5 6.4 7.2 Long-term debt amortization (excl. IM F) 17.5 17.7 12.3 13.2 13.6 Short-term debt amortizations 34.8 35.3 34.8 35.5 35.8 Other short-term capital outflows -1.9 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 Financing S ources (US $ billion) 66.6 59.5 53.6 55.1 56.6 FDI and portfolio investments (net) 11.9 3.5 2.0 6.0 6.7 Long-term debt disbursements (excl. IM F) 21.0 16.3 16.5 17.5 18.2 Short-term debt disbursements 35.3 34.8 35.5 35.8 36.3 Change in reserves 4.1 1.2 -7.5 -5.6 -2.6 IM F credit (net) -5.6 3.7 7.1 1.4 -1.9 Source: National authorities and World Bank staff calculations. 18. Despite the projected adjustment of the current account, balance of payment financing needs continue to be significant while access to external liquidity will remain limited in 2014 due to political and economic uncertainty. Therefore, the aggregate roll over rate of external debt (excluding IMF) is assumed to drop to 97 percent (down from 107 percent in 2013, when access to external financing was already affected by growing economic challenges). While the maturity structure of corporate external debt is heavily weighted on the short term (around 40 percent), a large portion is for trade credits, thus limiting roll over risks. Nevertheless corporate roll over rates are expected to drop to 90 percent. For external debt of the banking sector, roll over rates of 88 percent are projected due to continued deleveraging, especially of foreign owned banks. Net outflows in the banking and corporate sector will be offset by inflows of large official assistance (see paragraph 20). Under the base case, therefore, available external financing is expected to be sufficient to meet balance of payments requirements. However, high external debt refinancing needs may not allow NBU to rebuild reserves in 2014. From 2015 onwards, a gradual buildup of international reserves to 4 months of imports cover is expected by 2017 (Table 2). 19. The NBU is expected to move to inflation targeting within a year, in line with the IMF recommendation. In 2014, inflation is projected to be high (16 percent y/y, end of period) due to utility tariff increases and Hryvnia depreciation. Given the move towards inflation targeting, it is expected to decelerate over the medium term to around 5 percent by 2017. 20. The fiscal deficit is expected to decline gradually over the next three years. In the base case, the Government is expected to meet the fiscal targets agreed with IMF to reduce the fiscal deficits over 2015-2017. The general Government deficit is projected to be 5.2 percent of GDP in 2014 and 8.5 percent of GDP taking into account the Naftogaz deficit. 6 While the recession is expected to dampen revenue collection in 2014, the tax policy changes outlined in paragraph 14, will contain revenue shortfalls. Starting from 2014, the Government is expected to rationalize expenditures in line with World Bank and IMF recommendations mainly by lowering 6 Increases in residential gas tariffs will reduce the Naftogaz deficit. Estimated fiscal savings are presented in Table 5. Despite tariff increases Naftogaz deficit is expected to increase in 2014 because of escalating cost of gas due to depreciation. 7 public consumption and current transfers. As a result, the general government deficit is expected to narrow to 2.9 percent by 2017. Further scheduled annual increases in gas and district heating tariffs should eliminate losses of Naftogaz by 2018. In terms of financing, gross financing needs of the Government (equivalent to US$ 17.9 billion) in 2014 are expected to be covered by external official inflows (US$ 6.3 billion), Eurobonds (US$ 1 billion), IMF gross disbursement to the budget (US$ 2.1 billion) 7 and the rest from domestic financing (US$ 8.2 billion). However in 2015 compared to 2014, official inflows are projected to drop to US$ 4.4 billion while repayments are higher – requiring greater reliance on domestic financing (Table 3). Table 3: Key Fiscal Indicators, Percent of GDP 2011 2012 2013 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f General Government Balance -2.8 -4.4 -4.8 -5.2 -4.2 -3.1 -2.9 Total Revenues 42.9 44.5 43.6 44.4 45.0 44.9 44.7 Tax revenues 38.4 38.9 37.9 39.2 39.9 39.8 39.7 Corporate profit tax 4.2 4.0 3.8 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 Personal Income tax 4.6 4.8 5.0 4.8 4.9 4.8 4.7 Payroll tax 12.4 13.0 13.3 12.9 13.2 12.9 12.7 Property tax 0.8 0.9 0.9 0.9 0.9 0.9 0.9 VAT 10.0 9.8 8.8 9.5 9.6 9.7 9.7 Excises 2.6 2.7 2.5 3.2 3.3 3.3 3.4 Taxes on international trade 0.9 0.9 0.9 1.6 1.6 1.5 1.5 Other tax 2.9 2.8 2.7 2.9 2.9 3.1 3.1 Non-tax revenues 4.5 5.6 5.7 5.2 5.1 5.1 5.0 Expenditures (economic cl.) 45.7 48.9 48.4 49.6 49.2 48.0 47.6 Current expenditures 42.3 45.7 46.2 47.7 47.2 45.9 45.3 Wages and compensation 10.4 11.2 11.5 11.6 11.4 10.8 10.6 Goods and services 6.8 7.4 7.1 7.3 6.9 6.4 6.4 Interest payments 2.0 1.9 2.5 3.4 4.3 4.7 4.8 Subsidies to corporations 1.9 3.1 2.0 2.1 2.0 2.0 2.0 Current transfers 21.2 22.1 23.1 23.3 22.6 22.0 21.5 Pensions 16.2 16.6 17.2 17.3 16.9 16.3 15.9 Unemployment, disability and accident insurance 1.8 1.6 2.0 1.8 1.7 1.7 1.6 Social programs 3.2 3.9 3.9 4.2 4.0 4.0 4.0 Capital expenditures 3.0 2.9 2.0 1.5 2.0 2.1 2.3 Net lending 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.4 0.0 0.0 0.0 General Government Financing 2.8 4.3 4.8 5.2 4.2 3.1 2.9 External (net) 1.2 2.0 1.3 3.8 0.3 2.1 0.6 Domestic (net) 2.4 2.4 3.5 1.4 4.0 1.0 2.3 of which: privatization 1.8 0.9 0.1 0.6 0.8 0.7 0.6 Naftogaz Financing 1.6 1.1 1.9 3.3 1.9 1.3 0.2 Bank Recapitalization Requirements 0.7 0.0 0.1 1.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 Total financing 5.1 6.6 6.7 9.5 6.1 4.4 3.1 Source: National authorities, IMF, and World Bank staff calculations. 21. The Debt Sustainability Analysis (DSA) indicates that public and external debt remain sustainable in the base case, but are subject to high risks. In the base case, public debt rapidly increases to 57 percent of GDP in 2014, driven by large financing needs and substantial real depreciation of Hryvnia. It is projected to peak at 63 percent of GDP in 2015, but will then steadily decline. Risks to the base case are high, especially from lower growth, real exchange rate depreciation, and contingent liability shocks. A growth shock, with a cumulative 7 Total IMF gross disbursements in 2014 will be US$ 7.4 billion. 8 growth decline of 9 percent in 2015-2016, would result in the debt-to-GDP ratio of 86 percent in 2016, breaching the 70 percent indicative threshold (Figure 5). In the base case, total external debt peaks at some 100 percent of GDP in 2014-2015 due to real depreciation and then steadily declines as exchange rate misalignment disappears and the current account deficit is reduced. A growth shock in 2015-16 would keep external debt above the 100 percent threshold in the medium term. A real depreciation shock would drive debt to some 120 percent of GDP before retreating back to a 100 percent (Figure 6). Figure 5: Figure 6: Public and Publicly Guaranteed Debt Dynamics External Debt Dynamics (percent of GDP) (percent of GDP) Baseline Primary balance shock Baseline 30% real depreciation shock Real exchange rate shock Real GDP growth shock Real GDP growth shock interest rate shock 100 140 90 120 80 70 100 60 80 50 40 60 30 40 20 20 10 0 0 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 Source: IMF, 2014. 22. Downside risks to the macroeconomic outlook are high. First, a deeper than expected recession during 2014 and a slower recovery during 2015 could make the adjustment more challenging. Lower levels of bank liquidity, especially in the context of significant risks in the banking sector, could constrain credit supply, in turn delaying the expected pick up of domestic investment while foreign investment may remain subdued due to heightened political uncertainty. Meanwhile, the recovery in consumption growth could be undermined by the combined effect of the fiscal adjustment, depreciation and higher inflation. Second, external liquidity constraints could emerge if financing needs rise above those projected in the baseline or if roll over rates drop more due to tighter financial conditions in global markets, heightened risk perception and/or delays and shortfalls in official financing due to inconsistent implementation of reforms. Third, slippages in implementing macroeconomic and structural reforms could potentially reduce external support and complicate efforts to finance current account and fiscal deficits. Fourth, weaker growth of key trade partners could undermine exports, dampening growth and adjustment of the current account. Fifth, economic disruption associated with a possible escalation of tensions in the heavily industrialized, eastern part of Ukraine could negatively affect growth. In this context possible disruption in gas supply and restriction on exports to the Russian Federation could also reduce growth and lead to larger than expected external imbalances. Finally, there are significant risks in the banking sector, related to credit quality, liquidity and capital adequacy concerns at select banks. While the authorities are making efforts to reduce risks, some of them are inherent to the economic structure and may not be fully mitigated, at least in the short to medium term. 23. The macroeconomic policy framework, coordinated with the IMF and development partners, is adequate for this DPL to proceed. The authorities have taken initial steps to 9 stabilize the economy, including a switch to a flexible exchange rate regime and fiscal consolidation, anchored in the SBA with the IMF. The current program of macroeconomic stabilization is expected to be successful in addressing external financing needs and in reducing external and internal imbalances accumulated over recent years. As part of coordinated support with the IMF and others, this DPL responds to urgent external financing needs and contributes to macroeconomic policy resiliency and growth through support to fiscal adjustment in reducing the fiscal burden of energy subsidies, and to spurring growth by removing constraints to private enterprises and improving governance in the public sector. 2.3 IMF RELATIONS 24. On April 30, the IMF Board of Executive Directors approved a 2-year SBA, in the amount of SDR 10.976 billion (or US$ 17.1 billion equivalent). The SBA aims to restore macroeconomic stability, strengthen economic governance and transparency, and spur growth. The approval of the SBA enables the immediate disbursement of US$ 3.19 billion, with US$ 2 billion being allocated to the budget. The second and third disbursements will be based on bi- monthly reviews, and the remainder of the program period will be subject to standard quarterly reviews and performance criteria. The World Bank team has shared information in the following areas where it has long-standing engagements with the authorities: energy sector, social safety nets, procurement, VAT administration, governance, and financial sector. 3. THE GOVERNMENT’S PROGRAM 25. A Program was prepared by the new Government that came into office in February 2014. 8 The program outlines the following broad strategic directions: • The Government signaled its intention to begin working with international partners to immediately stabilize the economy by adopting austerity measures. As part of this, the Government plans to use a balanced approach by re-examining both revenues and expenditures. On the revenue side, the Government plans to revise personal and corporate taxes to assess their efficiency and raise revenue. On the expenditure side, apart from reducing waste, the Government plans to review subsidies that inhibit competition and undermine fiscal discipline. In addition, by raising energy tariffs, the Plan aims at reducing fiscal and quasi-fiscal deficits and coupling this with increases in social protection to the poor and vulnerable. • The Government Program also emphasizes transparency and anti-corruption measures. In particular, it stresses transparency in the use of state funds by adopting a sound public procurement law. • Additionally, the Government Program encompasses structural reforms to improve the investment climate by removing restrictions that hinder competition and by limiting the role of state “control” in economic activities. The Plan emphasizes the need to make Ukraine attractive to foreign investors by introducing laws that provide for a level playing field and by protecting the rights of investors and their property. The Government also highlights the need for reforms in the energy sector to improve energy efficiency and security. 8 The program can be found at: http://www.kmu.gov.ua/control/uk/publish/article?art_id=247060213&cat_id=244274130 10 4. THE PROPOSED OPERATION 4.1 LINK TO GOVERNMENT PROGRAM AND OPERATION DESCRIPTION 26. DPL1 is the first of two lending operations in a series aimed at supporting high- priority reform measures. The operation has seven prior actions structured around three pillars and aims to promote good governance, transparency and accountability in the public sector; strengthen the regulatory framework and reduce costs of doing business; and reform inefficient and inequitable utility subsidies while protecting the poor. 27. Four principles guided the selection of prior actions and triggers. First, the program is focused on policy actions that are government priorities and where the WBG could rely on existing analytical work and an established engagement to underpin a substantive policy dialogue with the authorities even within the short timeframe available to prepare this operation (Table 6). Second, across the three pillars the program seeks to address governance challenges, by combining policy and institutional reforms. Third, prior actions were selected to balance the distributional impact of the adjustment while cushioning impact on the poor. Fourth, the program leverages complementarity with other development partners, most notably with the prospective IMF SBA which contains parallel conditionality related to utility tariffs and public procurement. 28. The design of the DPL series incorporates lessons learnt from earlier budget support operations in Ukraine as well as the Bank’s global experience. While designed around a frontloaded program of short-term reform measures to address the crisis, the programmatic design will help sustain momentum beyond the immediate actions supported by this first operation. 9 In addition, the risk assessment provides a candid discussion of powerful vested interests that could likely slow the pace of reforms and undermine the impact and results of the operation. Consultations were held with civil society to strengthen demand for the reforms supported under the program. Finally, consultations were held with other development partners to leverage limited lending resources of the WBG. 4.2. PRIOR ACTIONS, RESULTS AND ANALYTICAL UNDERPINNINGS Pillar A: Promote good governance, transparency and accountability in the public sector 29. Ukraine needs to confront an urgent crisis of poor governance. 10 Distrust between citizens and the state is one of the principal challenges facing the new Government. The unrest that swept the country in recent months reflects discontent over fundamental governance failures, state capture by vested interests and deep-rooted corruption in the delivery of public services. Restoring confidence in the public sector, improving governance and curbing widespread corruption are priorities of the new Government. The challenge is to sustain this momentum over 9 The previous DPL series (with three operations) was designed in the aftermath of the 2004 Orange Revolution when expectations were high. While overall direction of the reform agenda in the series was maintained, prior actions and expected development outcomes had to be changed in the second and third operations to reflect changing reality – especially in the third operation that had to deal with the 2008/09 crisis. In this case, however, the situation is reversed. This series starts out with an operation to deal with a crisis, and is designed to use the subsequent operation to sustain momentum. But learning from the past, the time frame for this series is kept short. World Bank (2011), “ICRR on Second and Third Development Policy Loans,” IEG (2011), “ICR Review – Development Policy Loan 2.” 10 Ukraine has persistently low rankings on critical aspects of governance. A range of indicators, such as the Index of Economic Freedom of the Heritage Foundation and the Corruption Perception Index of Transparency International reveal a further deterioration in the past three years. 11 the longer term so that institutional reforms needed to realize improvements in governance can be put into place. The governance pillar is supporting initial steps towards these institutional reforms. It includes measures to increase transparency and efficiency of public procurement and public financial management thereby safeguarding the use of public funds. It seeks to strengthen accountability of senior public and elected officials through systematic disclosure and verification of asset declarations. Finally, it reinforces measures to close loopholes in the tax system that have allowed for widespread tax avoidance and created opportunities for corruption. 30. Results. Prior actions and triggers under this pillar are initial steps towards improving governance and transparency in the public sector. Results will pertain to more transparency and competition in public procurement and public investment management (prior action 1 and trigger 1). The pillar will also improve accountability of elected and senior public officials by facilitating public scrutiny and reducing opportunities for illicit enrichment (prior action 2 and trigger 2). Finally, extension of external audit coverage will strengthen checks and balances on the revenue side of the budget while closing loopholes in the transfer pricing law will reduce opportunities for tax avoidance (triggers 3 and 4 respectively). Prior Action 1: Enact 11 legislative amendments to reduce exemptions in public procurement from competitive procedures 31. This prior action supports the Government in restoring the integrity of the Law on Public Procurement. About 15 percent of government spending – around US$ 9 billion in 2013 – was used for procuring goods and services. The 2010 Law on Public Procurement put in place a robust legal framework for public procurement, but provisions of the Law were subsequently eroded by a series of amendments that expanded the number of exemptions from public procurement law and resulted in a frequently-changing legislative framework. As a result, competition in procurement was limited with an average of just 2.8 participants in each procurement transaction and only 35 percent of procurements by value used competitive methods in 2013, undermining value for money and creating opportunities for corruption. This prior action supports amendments to the Law on Public Procurement that reduce the scope for exemptions from competitive procedures 12 and provide for the use of eProcurement. In addition, the Law on Procurement in Certain Sectors regulating procurement by natural monopolies and utilities was also amended to increase transparency of procurement processes by lowering thresholds 13 for application of the procurement legislation. Moreover, the Law also requires the Government to publish procurement information. The prior action builds on many years of the reform dialogue between the Government, the World Bank and the EU and is aligned with the IMF SBA in this area. Greater competition and better governance of the procurement process are expected to generate savings over time and enhance value for money. Trigger 1: Enact legislative amendments, including to the Budget Code, to improve the public investment management framework 32. This trigger supports establishing a public investment management framework for projects financed from the state budget. The 2011 Public Expenditure and Financial 11 Enact means legislation is approved by Parliament, signed by the President and published in official gazette. 12 From 45 exceptions to 15. 13 From UAH 5 million to UAH 1 million for goods and services and UAH 10 million to UAH 5 million for works. 12 Accountability Assessment (PEFA) and 2012 Public Investment Management Assessment identified public investment management as one of the weakest elements of the PFM system in Ukraine. Discretion in the identification, appraisal and selection of public investment projects, coupled with weak implementation monitoring creates opportunities for corruption. 14 The Government plans to amend the Budget Code to provide for a definition of public investment project and delineate responsibilities and rules for project preparation, selection, appraisal, monitoring and evaluation. Prior Action 2: Government adopts and submits to Parliament legislation to establish centralized external verification of financial disclosures by elected and senior public officials and disciplinary and administrative accountability for those who fail to comply with financial disclosure requirements or misrepresent financial information 33. To strengthen prevention of corruption, this prior action supports Cabinet action to institutionalize a robust system of financial disclosures of elected and senior public officials. To overcome the crisis of confidence in public sector governance, decisive steps need to be taken to curb opportunities for high-level corruption. While addressing these fundamental governance weaknesses will require a multifaceted approach – combining steps to recover stolen assets, preventive measures, more transparency and effective checks and balances – it is important for the Government to signal to citizens that it is serious about ensuring the integrity of elected and senior public officials. Financial disclosures are one of the tools for introducing such accountability. However, currently the process of verification of asset declarations is weak. It is decentralized to the level of Human Resources department in every ministry or agency, and as such provides only a means of internal verification. In addition, even if the provision of untruthful information in asset declarations by public officials were uncovered, current Ukrainian legislation allows for limited accountability for misrepresenting financial information. This prior action supports Cabinet submission of legislative amendments to establish external verification of financial disclosures and to strengthen accountability for those who fail to comply with financial disclosure requirements. This reform is expected to improve accountability of elected and senior public officials by facilitating public scrutiny and reducing opportunities for illicit enrichment. Trigger 2: Enact legislation to establish centralized external verification of financial disclosures by elected and senior public officials and disciplinary and administrative accountability for those who fail to comply with financial disclosure requirements or misrepresent financial information and establish an independent anticorruption preventive agency responsible for the verification of asset declarations 34. Going forward, the Government plans to further strengthen requirements for asset declaration and establish a verification mechanism with support of DPL2. This trigger supports enactment of the law supported by prior action 2, which centralizes the system of verifications of financial disclosures by delegating the verification to the tax authority. While this provides for external means of control, it is still vested within the executive branch of the Government. To further strengthen independence of the verification mechanism, this trigger further supports fully independent verification of asset declarations by a new independent 14 2012 Public Investment Management Assessment scored all the elements mentioned as D or D+ on an A to D scale, where D is the lowest score. 13 preventive anti-corruption agency. Trigger 3: Enact amendments to the Law on the Accounting Chamber to expand coverage of external audits to state budget revenue 35. DPL2 will strengthen oversight arrangements for public funds. The Law on the Accounting Chamber of Ukraine limits coverage of external audit to expenditures of the State Budget of Ukraine, omitting responsibility for state revenues and a wide range of public institutions. 15 The approval of a legal framework for the Accounting Chamber expanding its authority to undertake external audits of state budget revenue would bring the scope of the audit closer to standards under the Lima Declaration of Audit Precepts and the Mexico Declaration on Supreme Audit Authority Independence. By strengthening checks and balances on the revenue side of the budget, this trigger is expected to reduce opportunities for leakage, thereby contributing to more transparent management of state revenues. Trigger 4: Enact amendments to the Law on Transfer Pricing to reduce tax avoidance in line with OECD guidelines 36. This trigger supports amending the Law on Transfer Pricing, which currently allows excessive discretion. Provisions include a special method for defining transfer prices (article 21) until 2018 and discretionary authority of the Government to expand or reduce the number of sectors to which this method could be applied. The Law is also applied to domestic transactions contrary to OECD principles. The current legal framework opens opportunities for corporate taxpayers, especially large ones with political connections to minimize their tax burden, thus eroding fiscal revenues, undermining the fairness of the tax system and distorting competition in favor of large corporate entities. The Government commits to improving the transfer pricing legislation and plans to work with experts and business community to address key deficiencies of the current law with the aim to close existing loopholes. Pillar B: Strengthen the regulatory framework and reduce costs of doing business 37. Stunted growth of the private sector, linked to poor investment climate, goes a long way in explaining Ukraine’s poor growth performance. Ukraine made substantial efforts to improve its investment climate as reflected in improved World Bank Doing Business indicators. 16 But challenges remain. First, legislative reforms do not translate into effective implementation, reflected in discretionary application of laws and regulations. In particular, tax administration is often not transparent and imposes high compliance costs on the private sector. Second, business regulations are excessively focused on ex-ante controls, rather than in ex-post risk management resulting in an excessive number of licenses, permit requirements and inspections. The process for obtaining business permits is lengthy and costly. Third, the incentives for productive firms to invest and export are hindered because of weak investor protection and insolvency framework. In addition, regulations particularly those related to product standards, food safety, and land management are cumbersome and not aligned 15 The 2011 PEFA Assessment has scored external audit performance in Ukraine at D+ on an A to D scale, where D is the lowest score. 16 The country has risen from 140th place in World Bank’s Doing Business (DB) 2013 ranking to 112th place in DB 2014, thanks to focused efforts to improve in several DB areas. Many of these reforms were spurred by a deregulation exercise (“guillotine”) implemented in 2005, which helped repeal 4,900 regulations that could no longer be justified, out of about 10,000. The reforms enabled Ukraine to reduce its distance from global best practice in most areas of doing business in 2005-2014, especially in property registration, access to credit, and construction permits. 14 requirements of key export markets. The reform agenda should focus on: (i) business deregulation and simplification; (ii) closing the implementation gap of business legislative reforms through greater transparency and accountability of key implementing agencies and overall coordination of government efforts on investment climate reforms; and (iii) institutional capacity building and inter-sector coordination. Within this vast agenda, this DPL pillar supports actions to improve regulatory quality for a stronger investment climate. The pillar also addresses a major distortion in the agricultural land market, by eliminating legislative provision that allowed for the creation of the State Land Bank. 38. Results. In combination, the expected results of these measures are to reduce the costs and risks of doing business in Ukraine. Improvements in the investment climate will come from reductions in administrative and regulatory costs, and from higher predictability, transparency, and quality of business regulation. Prior Action 3: Enact legislation requiring publication of monthly data on VAT refund processing including claims, refunds, automatic refunds, and arrears; revoke order of the Ministry of Revenue and Duties that establishes targets for additional assessments and fines resulting from audits 39. This prior action supports policy changes to increase transparency and compliance orientation in the tax administration. The prior action addresses two distinct, but related issues in current tax administration procedures. First, a target-driven approach to revenue collection has ensured high collection ratios but at significant cost to business. Second, a non-transparent and discretionary VAT refund process and problems in the payment of VAT refund claims have been a recurrent issue in Ukraine, imposing liquidity costs on businesses, especially exporters. These problems were rooted in fiscal pressures to withhold refunds, limited use of risk-based audit and governance weaknesses. By revoking directives that set target for tax collections from each tax audit, the Government will reduce unplanned audits and reorient the audit system to ensuring compliance with tax legislation, contributing to a change in the nature of interactions between tax officials and taxpayers. To increase public accountability, the Government will also mandate the Ministry of Revenue and Duties to e-publicize monthly data on VAT refunds dynamics. 17 The World Bank and the IMF have worked on this issue with the Government for many years. Trigger 5: Improve VAT refund processing by extension of automatic VAT refund procedures and revising automatic refund eligibility criteria 40. The DPL2 will support changes to the automatic VAT refund system to ensure timely and transparent handling of refund claims. Implementation of the automatic refund system started in 2011, but risk criteria have limited the use of this process. 18 Out of 1907 VAT refund claims by exporters in January 2014, only 330 claims were eligible for automatic refunds. This trigger will support eliminating discretion and delays in the refund process. To prevent the 17 The data will include the opening balance of VAT claims, new VAT claims, cash refunds, offsets with other taxes, payments under the “automatic” system (within 30 days), denied requests, and refund claims in arrears (above 74 days). 18 Criteria include, among others: verification of transactions of the VAT claimer’s suppliers, which is equivalent to a desk audit; average wages of a company wishing to qualify for the refund system should be equal or more than 250 percent of the official minimum wage, taxpayer’s share of zero-rated sales should exceed 50 percent; the taxpayer should not have tax debt or be under a bankruptcy procedure or closure; the taxpayer should have at least 20 employees or have a value in assets higher than the VAT refund claims and its profit tax to income ratio should exceed the average for the sector. 15 accumulation of refund arrears and ensure transparent and non-discretionary process of handling refund claims, the Government will establish a truly automatic VAT refund window for low risk taxpayers. This will entail revision of the criterion of counterparty risk through invoice cross- checking and of criterion of having average wages of the company above 250 percent of the official minimum wage. A more efficient and transparent VAT refund process will reduce compliance costs for taxpayers, especially exporters. Prior Action 4: Enact legislation to ease business and property registration and reduce the number of permits 41. This prior action supports enactment of a package of regulatory reforms. Ukraine has an excessive number of permits putting undue burden on businesses. The process of obtaining permits is long and costly, and technical regulations are not aligned with good international practices Legislation on permits will establish a positive list of required permits and reduce the number of activities subject to required permits (the total number of permits has been reduced from 143 to 85). These modifications will lead to simplified permitting procedures, including by improving internal coordination among state authorities involved in issuing permits to lower transaction costs for businesses. Trigger 6: Enact legislation to continue overhaul selected priority areas of regulation, establish regulatory impact assessment, rationalize construction permits, ease licenses, strengthen investor protection and harmonize Ukraine’s standardization system, legal framework for food safety, technical regulations and conformity assessments with EU requirements 42. The Government will continue and deepen the regulatory overhaul under DPL2. The legislative package will strengthen investor protection by reinforcing disclosure requirements and increasing directors' liability in related party transactions. The trigger also supports steps to harmonize standardization and metrology legislation with EU requirements, which will lead to: voluntary application of standards; standards regulation by the line authority; institutional separation of metrology and standardization. The adoption of this measure will facilitate harmonization of Ukrainian product standards with EU standards for a significant number of manufacturing product categories. The ultimate dual objective of the action is to increase safety of products for consumers in the domestic market and enable Ukrainian producers to meet standards demanded by export markets. Further steps will include reforms of food safety legislation to comply with key international and EU principles, to rationalize construction permits, and improve the inspection regime. Prior Action 5: Cabinet adopts and submits draft law to Parliament revoking possible use of land as bank capital (State Land Bank) 43. This prior action will annul the legislative framework that allows for use of land as bank capital, thus removing a significant distortion and governance risk in the land market and banking system. The State Land Bank (SLB) – which was created in 2012 through a number of legislative amendments – combines agricultural financing with land administration functions. The legal framework allowed the SLB to use the appraised value of land plots as part of its statutory (tier 1) capital, contradicting both the principles of Ukrainian banking legislation and Basel norms, which require statutory capital to be formed by cash (or state bonds in 16 exceptional circumstances). The SLB was also granted a preemptive purchase right for land plots, creating a quasi-monopolistic structure in the land market. This framework, possibly established to serve vested interests, creates significant risks to both the land market and the financial sector. Revoking legislation that allowed use of land as bank capital will address these concerns, reduce potential banking sector risks and contribute to competitive land market. Trigger 7: Enact legislation to abolish use of land as bank capital (State Land Bank) 44. This trigger completes the action to cancel all legislative acts that allow for the creation of institutions such as the State Land Bank. Pillar C: Reform inefficient and inequitable utility subsidies while protecting the poor 45. Low residential gas and heating tariffs in Ukraine are bad for the budget, bad for energy efficiency, bad for service delivery and bad for energy security. Despite facing one of the highest import prices for gas supplies, Ukraine’s residential gas and district heating tariffs are among the lowest in Europe. On average, Ukrainian households pay around 20 percent of the full import price of gas. 19 To compensate for financial losses on residential gas and heat sales, the Government provides direct budgetary and quasi-fiscal subsidies to households amounting to around 7 percent of GDP per year (Table 4). 20 These subsidies are regressive – with around 30 percent going to the top quintile in the income distribution. This pillar will support gradual tariff increases for residential gas and district heating services to improve financial cost recovery. These tariff increases need to be accompanied by targeted social assistance to protect the socially vulnerable. Based on analytical work, the World Bank has advised the Government on residential gas and district heating tariffs, energy efficiency and social safety nets for many years and the IMF SBA is aligned with this ongoing dialogue and knowledge base. 46. Results. The prior actions and triggers under this pillar will begin to address fiscal and quasi-fiscal subsidies in the utility and energy sector while strengthening social safety nets. While the initial fiscal and quasi-fiscal impact of tariff increases is limited and partially offset by increased cost of social protection programs (Table 5), cost reflective tariffs provide better incentives for energy efficient behavior on the demand side while providing utilities the financing and incentives for needed investment to improve efficiency on supply side. The gradual elimination of tariff differential will increase transparency of the sector and reduce opportunities for arbitrage. Complementing tariff reforms, the pillar also supports measures to improve governance and market structure in the sector, including steps to enhance the independence of the regulators and to move forward with restructuring of Naftogaz. The pillar also introduces new targeted social assistance program as a temporary measure to mitigate the impact of tariff increases on the poor. 19 The average gas import price from the Russian Federation in 2012 was about US$ 425/tcm and US$ 408 in 2013; Ukrainian households paid on average a little over US$ 100/tcm and district heating companies pay under US$ 150/tcm for gas used to produce residential heat. 20 Quasi-fiscal subsidies are calculated as the difference between short-term economic value of gas in Ukraine and domestic cost of gas. Commodity cost of gas is driven by the market value of marginal supply source of natural gas as any changes in volume would be impacted directly by this cost of supply. Gas supply in Ukraine consists of mostly of Russian gas and indigenous Ukrainian gas. Ukrainian gas production has been relatively constant over the past eight years, at about 20 billion cubic meters annually, about 35 percent of total domestic gas consumption. Current indigenous gas production cannot fully meet demand, making the Russian Federation the marginal supplier of gas. Hence, the economic value of gas in Ukraine, at least in the short term, is equal to the commodity cost of Russian gas. 17 Table 4: Estimated Direct Budgetary and Quasi-Fiscal Subsidies on Gas and Heating in Ukraine (Post-Tax), percent of GDP Subsidies to… 2011 2012 Households, gas only (quasi- 4.9 4.6 (Import price of Russian gas – Average domestic price of gas fiscal) to households) X Volume sold to households District heating companies, production 2.2 2.1 (Import price of Russian gas – Domestic price of gas to of residential heat (quasi-fiscal) utilities to produce residential heat) X Volume of gas sold to district heating companies to produce residential heat District heating companies, difference 0.4 0.3 (Cost/Gcal – tariff/Gcal) X Volume of heat sold to households between tariffs and costs (direct budgetary support) Total 7.5 7.0 Note: Excludes transmission and distribution subsidies Table 5: Estimated Fiscal Impact of Tariff and Social Assistance Reforms Policy Measure UAH billion % GDP Impact of Tariff Reforms a. Reduction in quasi-fiscal subsidy from 56 % Increase in Residential Gas Tariff (Weighted 3.5-5.6 * 0.2%-0.4% Average) b. Reduction in Budget Subsidy to DH from 40% Increase in Residential DH Tariff (Weighted 3.7 0.3% Average) Impact of Social Assistance c. Additional Cost of Expanding Benefits of Housing and Utility Subsidy and Privileges 1.4 0.1% e. Cost of New Targeted Program 1.8 0.14% Note: * The two estimates assume demand elasticity for gas consumption -0.3 and 0, respectively. The IMF working paper on Ukraine gas pricing policy (Ukraine Gas Pricing Policy: Distributional Consequences of Tariff Increases by Pritha Mitra and Ruben Atoyan, 2012, IMF Working Paper WP/12/ 247) estimated price elasticity of gas consumption by Ukrainian households in the range of -0.26 to -0.28 depending on income quintile. Prior Action 6: National Energy Regulatory Commission (NERC) adopts resolution to increase residential gas prices by 56 percent (weighted average) and National Commission for Regulation of Communal Services (NCRCS) adopts resolution to increase residential heating tariffs 176 licensees by 40 percent (weighted average) 47. The prior action supports the Government in increasing the weighted average residential gas tariff by 56 percent. To protect the most vulnerable households, the gas tariff increase for households consuming less than 2.5 thousand cubic meters (tcm) per year will be 50 percent while gas price increase for the rest of the households will be 62-63 percent. Moreover, households that use gas only for cooking and water heating will be put into a separate group; their tariffs will be increased by 63 percent. 21 Increasing gas tariffs to households by 56 percent on average will bring residential gas sales closer to full cost recovery, decrease quasi-fiscal subsidies to households and provide incentives to improve efficiency of residential gas consumption. 48. The prior action also supports the Government in increasing district heating tariffs for 152 largest district heating utilities by 40 percent on average. The tariff increase for the remaining district heating utilities is planned before May 1, 2014. The 176 selected utilities cover over 90 percent of Ukrainian heat market. The new tariffs will become effective as of July 1, 21 Most of the households that use gas only for cooking and water heating live in multistoried apartment buildings in urban areas that use district heating; their annual gas consumption is about 0.3 tcm per household. Hence, under old pricing system they were in the group that consumed below 2.5 tcm per household annually. 18 2014. Increasing residential heating tariffs will result in reduced need to compensate district heating utilities for below-cost recovery tariffs. It will also provide incentive to implement sector-wide consumption-based billing and start improving residential heat consumption. After the reform, the direct fiscal support to district heating utilities is expected to decrease from 0.3 percent of GDP to 0.01 percent. Trigger 8: Enact amendments to the Law of Ukraine on Regulation of Communal Services to enforce independence of the national regulation of communal services by making it impossible to set tariffs below cost-recovery levels; the Government approves the draft law on regulation of energy sector consistent with the Third Energy Package 49. The Government also plans to strengthen independence of regulators responsible for heating and gas tariff increases to depoliticize the setting of tariffs. Both regulators – NCRCS and NERC – are supposed to be independent, but a number of factors limit their independence in practice. For example, both regulators follow decisions of the Cabinet of Ministers on tariff increases. Because of the lack of independence, both regulators are unable to perform their functions efficiently and are constrained by politics. To remedy the lack of political independence, the Government intends to amend the article in the “Law on Regulation of Communal Services” that currently allows Cabinet of Ministers to request NCRCS to set below- cost recovery tariffs. The Government also plans to prepare and approve the draft of the “Law on Regulation of Energy Sector” that is in compliance with the requirement of the Third Energy Package. 22 This law would ensure that NERC is legally able to act independently, that its staff and persons responsible for its management act independently from any market interest and do not seek or take direct instructions from any Government or other public or private entity when carrying out regulatory tasks, as it is required by EU Directive 2009/72/EC. Trigger 9: Approval of concept 23 for Naftogaz restructuring, acceptable to the World Bank 50. DPL2 will support the Government in meeting its commitment to restructure Naftogaz, which is a vertically integrated, state-owned company consisting of a number of subsidiaries. Its current organizational structure is not fully compliant with the requirements of EU Directive 2003/55/EC, which Ukraine committed to implement by January 1, 2012. The provisions of the Directive require unbundling of the natural gas transmission and distribution activities from natural gas production and supply to ensure free access to the gas transmission network and prevention of conflict of interests. The World Bank team, together with other IFIs and EU, made efforts to engage in a dialogue with Naftogaz for the past two years, but progress has been slow. Naftogaz approached the World Bank recently to renew its request for support in restructuring. Preparation and approval of Naftogaz’s restructuring strategy, together with a sequenced and dated reform plan, acceptable to the World Bank, would be a turning point in improving transparency and governance of the sector. But risks remain substantial given strong vested interests and poor track record. 22 The European Union's Third Energy Package is a legislative package for an internal gas and electricity market in the European Union. Its purpose is to further open up the gas and electricity markets in the European Union. Core elements of the third package include ownership unbundling, which stipulates separation of companies' generation and sale operations from their transmission networks, and establishment of an independent National Regulatory Authority for each Member State and the Agency for the Cooperation of Energy Regulators which provides a forum for national regulators to work together. 23 Concept here refers to an official document, cleared by Ministry of Economy, Ministry of Finance, Ministry of Justice, and approved by Cabinet of Ministers which includes among other things a strategy with time bound reform steps. 19 Prior Action 7: Cabinet adopts regulation to introduce new targeted program to compensate increase in gas and heating bills of the poorest 30 percent of the population 51. This prior action supports implementing a new, temporary social assistance program, targeted to the poorest 30 percent of the population to mitigate the impact of tariff reforms. Ukraine has two established programs to protect households from the impact of high utility expenditures. First, the housing and utility subsidy (HUS) program compensates utility cost in excess of 15 percent (or 10 percent if they include disabled family members or have children) of household income. The program is not means-tested and its targeting accuracy is moderate. In 2012, the program covered only 3 percent of the poorest decile and 4 percent of the poorest quintile. Only 9 percent of the benefits of HUS program reached households from the poorest decile (and only 34 percent of the funds are reaching the poorest 20 percent of the population). Second, there are categorical consumer subsidies extended to certain groups of privileged recipients (war veterans, certain occupational groups, etc.) to cover utility bills up to 100 percent. Currently, about one quarter of the population receives these kinds of benefits, but these programs are expensive and poorly targeted. As a result of tariff increases the Government is expecting increased expenditures under these two existing programs (increase from UAH 6.1 billion to UAH 7.5 billion). However, given the limited coverage of existing programs among low-income households, the Government has introduced a new, income-tested program targeted to the poorest 30 percent of the population. The program, which has been adopted by a Cabinet of Ministers resolution, will compensate the increase in gas and heating bills during the next heating season. However, given that the new program is intended only as a short-term fix to mitigate the immediate shock of tariff increases during the upcoming heating season, sustainable protection for poor and vulnerable families over the medium-term, will require further consolidation and rationalization of existing (untargeted) programs (and overall spending on safety nets), combined with an increase in the coverage of the means-tested Guaranteed Minimum Income (GMI), which should become the main vehicle to deliver transfers to the poor. Trigger 10: Include social inspection as a centralized function in the bylaws governing the functions of the Ministry of Social Policy to improve targeting efficiency and contain errors and fraud in social protection programs, including in new targeted program 52. DPL2 will support institutional reforms to improve fraud prevention and efficiency in the administration of social assistance programs. The Government is planning to include social inspection as a centralized function to improve targeting efficiency and detect errors, fraud and corruption across all social protection programs. During its first year of operation, inspection will focus on social assistance programs; expand later to disability benefits and non-reporting or under-reporting of wages; and finally to cover social insurance benefits, including pensions that amount to 18 percent of GDP in Ukraine. Trigger 11: Government adopts further measures to improve targeting of social assistance to the poor 53. Ukraine spent around 3.3 percent of GDP on social assistance in 2012, compared to 20 an average of 2 percent in the ECA region. 24 Among the 17 social assistance programs, a majority provide categorical or universal benefits to broad groups of population. 25 Only the Guaranteed Minimum Income (GMI) program and the newly introduced housing and utility services compensation are targeted to low-income households based on means or income tests. The composition of spending on social assistance has changed in recent years, with share of GMI spending in total social assistance expenditure falling from 20 percent in 2005 to 5 percent in 2012. To further improve targeting of social assistance programs and reduce costs of expensive social assistance system in Ukraine, the Government plans to (i) reduce costs of universal child benefits while increasing the child benefits to poor families; (ii) expand the coverage of the GMI program as the main vehicle to protect the poor against shocks; and (iii) strengthen administration of social benefits and services (supported by trigger 10). Given the current economic, political and social context, implementation of these reforms needs to proceed cautiously to avoid an escalation of social tensions. Specific measures will be discussed during the preparation of DPL2. Table 6: DPL Prior Actions and Analytical Underpinnings Prior actions Analytical Underpinnings Pillar 1: Promote good governance, transparency and accountability in the public sector Prior Action 1 Fiscal, Structural and Governance TA (P130146); Ukraine Public Expenditure and Financial Accountability Assessment (P125931) Prior Action 2 Fiscal, Structural and Governance TA (P130146) Pillar 2: Strengthen the regulatory framework and reduce costs of doing business Prior Action 3 Fiscal, Structural and Governance TA (P130146); State Tax Service Modernization Project (P057815); Ukraine Public Expenditure and Financial Accountability Assessment (P125931); Public Finance Review II (P102035) Prior Action 4 Country Economic Memorandum (P107252); Opportunities and Challenges to Private Sector Development in Ukraine (P133464); Fiscal, Structural and Governance TA (P130146); Doing Business Reports Prior action 5 Policy Note on Land Bank Pillar 3: Reform inefficient and inequitable utility subsidies while protecting the poor Prior Action 6 Country Economic Memorandum (P107252); Modernization of the District Heating Systems in Ukraine: Heat Metering and Consumption-Based Billing, World Bank, 2012 - District Heating AAA (P112754); Gas and District Heating Tariff Reform in Ukraine: Mitigating the Impact of Tariff Increases through Targeted Cash Transfers and Energy Efficiency.- Forthcoming, World Bank - Gas and District Heating AAA (P112754); Ukraine District Heating Energy Efficiency Project (P132741) Prior Action 7 Gas and District Heating Tariff Reform in Ukraine: Mitigating the Impact of Tariff Increases through Targeted Cash Transfers and Energy Efficiency.- Forthcoming, World Bank - Gas and District Heating AAA (P112754); Country Economic Memorandum (P107252); Ukraine Social Safety Net Modernization (P128344) 4.3 LINK TO CPS AND OTHER BANK OPERATIONS 54. This programmatic DPL is aligned with the strategic directions set out in the Country Partnership Strategy (FY12-16). The CPS is structured around two pillars: i) improving public services and public finances and ii) improving policy effectiveness and economic competitiveness. The lending engagement was calibrated to the pace and strength of reforms leaving scope for a programmatic, cross-sector DPL to support better governance and economic competitiveness. This DPL is linked to a parallel financial sector programmatic DPL series, currently under preparation, which will support the authorities in restoring stability in the banking sector, making the system more resilient to future shocks, and creating conditions for resumed financial intermediation on a sustainable and affordable basis. The proposed DPL 24 Source: Social Protection Database: Spending on Social Protection Programs, October 2013 version. 25 Families with children/foster families, persons with disabilities, elderly without contributory pensions, and privileged citizens. 21 complements several Bank investment lending operations, including Social Safety Nets Modernization Project and District Heating Energy Efficiency Project currently under preparation. The DPL also build on results of the State Tax Service Modernization Project. 4.4 CONSULTATIONS, COLLABORATION WITH DEVELOPMENT PARTNERS 55. Despite the condensed preparation time for DPL1, discussions have been conducted with civil society organizations, IFIs and development partners. The World Bank team organized a presentation to civil society organizations, outlining the reform program supported by the DPL series. In addition, many of the reforms supported by the DPL, e.g., gas and district heating tariff reforms, targeted social assistance, public procurement, business environment, VAT refund, have been discussed publicly and extensively through the Bank's economic and sector work publications. The WBG worked with other IFIs and development partners including EU, DFID, and the Government of Japan through JICA, which is providing parallel financing. The WBG team has also worked with the IMF on macroeconomic, structural and financial sector issues. In this regard, the fiscal/governance matrix developed by the World Bank formed the basis for part of the IMF program as well as for other development partners. 5. OTHER DESIGN AND APPRAISAL ISSUES 5.1 POVERTY AND SOCIAL IMPACT 56. By enhancing the growth potential of the economy, the reforms supported by the programmatic DPL series are expected to contribute to improved living standards, shared prosperity and poverty alleviation. Given the cross-cutting nature of many of the supported governance and business climate reforms, some of the expected social impacts of this DPL are difficult to quantify. In the short run, the adjustment – necessary to restore a sustainable macroeconomic framework and a precondition for this operation to proceed – may lead to adverse social impacts through income and employment shocks that may hurt the poor despite mitigation efforts. In the medium run, by laying the foundation for a sustainable recovery, the policy program is expected to generate positive social impacts through better public services, growth and employment channels. The measures aimed at curbing corruption and reducing the costs of doing business are expected to curtail opportunities for rent-seeking among those at the top of the income distribution, while facilitating higher investment and bringing benefits to the population at large, as well as to the poor segments of the population. Removal of barriers to trade in agricultural goods, supported under DPL2, is likely to open up new employment opportunities and increase returns of agricultural assets in a context in which deeper poverty is experienced in rural areas. 57. The increase in residential tariffs for gas and district heating, supported by DPL1, is expected to affect households, especially the poor. Tariff increases and higher utility bills will affect the purchasing power of households particularly during the “cold season” (October 15- April 15). 26 This is the case for households connected to district heating, as they do not have the option of disconnecting from the service while the scope for adjustment in energy demand is limited in the absence of individual meters and consumption-based billing for most residential 26 Until then the only impacts are going to be on households that use gas for cooking or have gas water heaters, and possibly on the households who are served by the few district heating utilities that have adopted a policy of spreading the cost of heating over the whole year. At this stage, it is not clear when these utilities will start factoring in the new tariff in their monthly bills. 22 consumers. 27 In absolute terms, richer households are going to be affected the most by these tariff increases as they tend to consume more energy. However, in relative terms poorer households are going to be more affected as they spend a higher proportion of their household resources on energy. 28 In the cold season, poor households spend about 10 percent of their income on gas and district heating, against a share of 8.3 for the non-poor. Without compensatory social assistance measures, the combined rise in gas and district heating tariffs would lead to an increase in poor households’ spending on these items by 48 percent during the cold months (49 percent for the bottom 40 percent of the population), resulting in an increase of the poverty incidence by 4 percentage points to 13 percent (approximately 1.8 million people). 29 In contrast, the top quintile would see an increase in energy spending of 24 percent. 58. There are two existing social assistance programs to support household spending on utility bills, but these programs are poorly targeted. As discussed under prior action 7 above, there are a number of existing programs to support the affordability of energy and housing services. First, housing and utility privileges are provided to certain groups of the population (war veterans, certain occupational groups). These categorical benefits are poorly targeted with the bottom 20 percent of the income distribution receiving less than 10 percent of the overall resources while top 20 percent of the income distribution receives 25 percent of the resources dedicated to the program. Second, universal housing and utility subsidies (that compensate the cost of utility bills if they exceed a certain share of household income) are more progressive as they are strongly concentrated in the second and third deciles (combined, they receive 44 percent of the benefits). Table 7: Benefit Incidence of the Three Programs Cushioning the Increase in Gas and DH Tariffs Subsidies Privileges New 3 programs program combined Base after tariff base after tariff after tariff after tariff increase increase increase increase q1 23 20 7 8 54 18 q2 29 26 18 18 46 25 q3 24 24 26 26 0 23 q4 16 19 23 24 0 20 q5 7 11 25 25 0 14 Note: quintiles of the income distribution net of transfers Source: HHS 2012, World Bank staff estimates 59. These existing programs are expected to automatically expand as a result of tariff increases, cushioning the impact of tariff increases for a wide section of the population. By design, the housing and utility subsidies will compensate more households as their heating bills rise as a share of their incomes (particularly in the context of a contracting economy), and 27 In our simulations, demand is assumed to be perfectly inelastic for both district heating and gas. While this might somewhat overestimate the impact of the increase in gas tariffs, no estimates for the elasticity of the demand for gas exist. There is a consensus that it might be highly nonlinear, so it is not clear that assuming any particular constant would significantly improve the estimates. 28 There is an expectation that the impact of the tariff increases will vary for different groups of customers, particularly by region, depending on patterns of energy consumption and efficiency of supply. Further work on understanding this differentiation is expected to take place under the upcoming planned TA. 29 This is an estimate based on the cold season only. While it overestimates the annual impact, it points to the pressures which the most vulnerable households would have to withstand, particularly if they have difficulties in smoothing consumption over the year. 23 crosses the 15 percent threshold which defines eligibility for most households. 30 In the case of privileges, the program does not expand in terms of coverage, but in terms of benefits as they are linked to the overall utility spending of beneficiaries. The impact of this automatic expansion is significant. The automatic expansion in existing programs would partly insulate poor households from these increases, but they would still see their bills on gas and heating rise by 5 percent during the cold season. For the bottom 40, the increase would be 9 percent. An important feature of this automatic increase is that it has sizeable fiscal cost, and that only a portion of the overall benefit would benefit the most vulnerable (41 percent of the combined subsidies and privileges would reach the bottom 40 percent – Table 7). 60. A new targeted program was introduced to shield the poor from the impact of tariff increases. The protection offered by existing programs to the bottom decile (which approximates the poor) is limited, with approximately 11 percent of the benefits directed towards them but only 3 percent of this group benefiting. To address this protection gap, the Government has introduced a new targeted program to accompany the tariff increase. The program aims at insulating entirely the bottom 30 percent of the distribution from the planned tariff increases, for one year. The program operates in conjunction with the other two as households might receive benefits from all of them. The program, which started on May 1st, aims to leave household bills unchanged with respect to a typical month in the relevant season (cold or hot depending on the month for which the bill is prepared). If properly implemented, the new program would shelter the poor from the effects of the tariff increase. 31 In addition, as the program targets the bottom 30 percent of the population, the increase of spending on gas and heating for the bottom 40 percent would be only 5 percent on average, and concentrated in the top decile of the group. Moreover, the new program is more equitable than existing ones in terms of gender. Indeed, 48 percent of potential beneficiaries are female-headed households, as opposed to 43 percent for housing and utility subsidies and privileges combined (after the tariff increase). Privileges in particular are less likely to benefit female-headed households than the other programs. As Table 7 above shows, by design the program is much more progressive than existing programs. 61. The temporary nature of the new program raises concerns for the medium-term impacts of tariff increases. This is all the more of concern as further tariff increases are being announced for next year, even if not directly supported by this operation. Given that the protection provided by the other energy related programs comes at a high price in terms of leakage to higher income groups, and is not complete as far as the poor are concerned, the government should learn from and build on the experience of the new program to further push towards the rationalization of social assistance spending away from regressive categorical programs towards programs which better protect the most vulnerable. The ongoing policy dialogue on strengthening the GMI could offer an opportunity to make this shift more permanent at no additional fiscal costs. 62. Addressing the challenges of implementing the new assistance program will be crucial for their distributional benefits to materialize. Specific challenges relate to setting up 30 The high costs of energy might therefore contribute to increasing take-up, thereby reversing recent trends in the number of households applying. 31 This assumes that costs in a given season (cold season from October 15 to April 15, or hot season) do not fluctuate significantly as the compensation provided to the utility company on behalf of eligible household is equivalent to the difference between the average bill in that season before the increase, and the amount billed after the increase. As data are available only on a quarterly basis, this assumption cannot be verified. 24 and administering such a large program in a relatively limited span of time (3.5 million households are expected to participate, starting on May 1st) as well as general concerns that have been voiced regarding other social assistance programs. These include exclusionary effects of registration requirements, with internal migrants being unable to apply in their area of residence if not officially registered there. 32 Similarly, there are concerns on personal costs to the applicants (as well as administrative costs) of providing extensive documentation required. A planned TA could help address these concerns including support to developing a communications campaign around these reforms. 33 63. Gender differentiated impacts and/or risks, associated with the operation are limited. The majority of reforms supported by this operation is cross-cutting in nature and therefore expected to equally affect men and women in Ukraine. The results framework does therefore not capture gender disaggregated results. Reforms to reduce the number of permits and licenses, including specific legislation for the construction sector, are expected to have neutral or positive effects on gender equality. According to the 2008 Business Environment and Enterprise Performance Survey (BEEPS) for Ukraine, female-managed firms are as likely as male-managed firms to identify business licensing and permits as a major overall constraint. Female-managed firms also report that they require slightly more days to obtain an operating license and over six times as long to obtain a construction-related permit as male-managed firms. Improved legislation to reduce costs in doing business could therefore mean improved gender equality in access to economic opportunities in Ukraine. 5.2 ENVIRONMENTAL ASPECTS 64. Reforms supported by this operation are largely expected to have either neutral or positive environmental impacts. Prior action 6 will lead to more efficient use of these resources, including energy efficiency measures in the medium term. At the same time, targeted assistance to the poor to compensate for tariff increases – also supported by this operation – will prevent a potential negative impact of switching from gas to lower quality, higher emission residential fuels for heating and cooking. In parallel to this operation, the Borrower is implementing several programs to promote energy efficiency in municipal and residential applications, including with support from the World Bank, which will further reinforce the positive environmental impact of these measures. The overall result is likely to be an improvement in local air quality and reduction in CO2 emissions. Prior action 4 aimed at easing business registration is expected to boost business development, including growth of industry. Potential impacts from increased industry will be managed by a well-developed system of environmental permits, environmental impact assessment and compliance monitoring. Attention will be given – by the World Bank and other development partners – to further strengthening this system and harmonizing with EU requirements. Prior action 5 to abolish the State Land Bank is 32 Such concerns are compounded by some of the design features of the program; if a household applying for the new energy benefit includes a member of working age not reporting any income, that person is deemed to earn the minimum subsistence level for someone in that age group. There are concerns that elderly parents of rural urban migrants whose children are still registered in their place of birth but do not contribute to household income might be unfairly affected by such measures. Anecdotal evidence suggests that it is very difficult for someone not officially employed to be recognized as low-income. 33 As recently as 2012 only 11 percent of the population reported any knowledge on the reforms planned by the Government in the area of housing and utilities services, according to the Socis Center for Social and Marketing Research in 2012. Available at: http://i- soc.com.ua/institute/svs-2012.pdf. Such lack of knowledge might compound the effects of lack of trust in state institutions which, at least until recently, was pervasive (in 2013, 72 percent of the population reported that they do not trust the central government and 60 percent reported no trust in local government according to the Sociology Institute of the National Academy of Science of Ukraine “Ukrainian Society in 1992–2013: Status and Evolution. Sociological Monitoring,” Local utilities tend to be seen as closely associated with government institutions). 25 not anticipated to have any impact on the environment, natural resources or protected areas. Harmonizing food safety legislation with the EU will have a positive impact. Other actions supported by the operation have no significant environmental implications. 5.3 PFM, DISBURSEMENT AND AUDITING ASPECTS 65. Public Financial Management. The latest available Public Expenditure and Financial accountability (PEFA) assessment for Ukraine was undertaken in 2011. It concluded that Ukraine continues to have in place fundamental systems for macro-fiscal management, some elements of a framework to enable strategic allocation of resources, and selected tools for improving operational efficiency. The PEFA found that a consistent driver of performance improvement was expansion in the use of the Treasury system, supporting adequate internal controls and reporting. Key findings of the assessment were that weaknesses remain in: (i) disconnects between policy objectives, recurrent budget allocations, and decisions on capital investment; (ii) a fragmented budget with large special purpose extra-budgetary funds for social insurance etc. that are not subject to the same standards of financial reporting and oversight by parliament and the Supreme Audit Institution; (iii) a target-driven approach to revenue collection that negatively impacted the cost of doing business; (iv) deficient oversight of state-owned enterprises; (v) flaws in public procurement that limited competitiveness; (vi) limited focus on systems performance by the internal audit function; (vii) limitations on the scope of work of the Supreme Audit Institution and weaknesses in parliamentary oversight. There are ongoing reforms supported by Bank financed operations in several of these areas, and the most critical have been considered and included in policy recommendations, prior actions and triggers for this operation. 66. Fiduciary Risk. The financial management assessment, undertaken for this operation, concludes that fiduciary risk for DPLs is substantial. This rating considers proposed prior actions and also takes account of ongoing PFM reform efforts currently being supported by the Bank, including support for modernizing public procurement legislation; support to budget preparation, budget execution and the public investment management system; strengthening effectiveness of the Accounting Chamber (Supreme Audit Institution) and the Public Internal Financial Audit and Control function. 67. Foreign Exchange. The IMF conducted a Safeguards Assessment of the NBU in 2011. The assessment observed that the NBU had strengthened its safeguards framework since the 2008 assessment by implementing the majority of the related recommendations. While certain changes to the NBU law were enacted in 2010, deferred implementation of key improvements was observed to weaken their effectiveness. The update assessment also found that new financial risks had emerged because of special legislation and resolutions impairing the NBUs autonomy. NBU continues to make progress towards addressing unresolved issues, none of which directly impacts this operation. The IMF is currently conducting a new NBU safeguards assessment and will finalize it later during 2014. The report will provide updated knowledge of the borrower’s central bank foreign exchange environment. 68. The most recent audit opinions on the financial statements of the NBU for the 2011 and 2012 financial years were unmodified. Issues raised in prior period reports mainly related to the need to fully adopt international financial reporting standards, a matter that has since been fully addressed and resolved. 26 69. Disbursement Arrangements. This operation is a single-tranche loan of US$ 750 million. The loan proceeds will be made available to the Government upon loan effectiveness. Upon approval of the loan and notification by the Bank of loan effectiveness, the Government will submit a withdrawal application. The proceeds of the loan will be deposited by IBRD in an account designated by the Borrower and acceptable to the World Bank at the NBU. The Borrower should ensure that upon the deposit of the loan proceeds into the said account, an equivalent amount in local currency is credited into the Treasury current account at the NBU. If the proceeds of the loan are used for ineligible purposes (e.g., to finance goods or services on the Bank’s standard negative list), the Bank will require the Government to promptly, upon notice from the Bank, refund an amount equal to the amount of said payment to the Bank. Amounts refunded to the Bank upon such request shall be cancelled. This condition will be reflected in the terms of the Financing Agreement. The Government will maintain accounts and records showing that loan disbursements were made in accordance with provisions of the Financing Agreement. Within seven days of remittance of funds by the Bank, the Borrower will provide a confirmation to the Bank that the funds have been received by the treasury account in NBU and that these funds are available for financing budget expenditures. 70. Overall Conclusion. The public financial management system, together with the Borrower’s commitment to reform, is adequate to support this operation. 5.4 MONITORING AND EVALUATION 71. Since taking office, the Government has operated in an emergency mode, limiting focus on systematic M&E. Given this situation, limited resources have been devoted to developing an M&E framework to track progress and impact of reforms. Through the preparation of this operation, in consultation with the authorities, we identified a set of indicators together with baselines and targets to assess the impact of the policy program. Going forward, the team will continue to work with counterparts to anchor M&E arrangements with the central coordinating unit for the DPL in the Ministry of Economic Development and Trade. 6. SUMMARY OF RISKS AND MITIGATION 72. Risks to this operation are high and can be grouped as follows: 73. Political and governance risks. The security situation especially in eastern Ukraine remains volatile. Possible disruptions of the upcoming Presidential elections and a further escalation of violent clashes and prolonged confrontation could undermine the authorities’ ability to continue reforms, including those supported by the operation. Reforms may be reversed or watered down and the overall pace of reforms could slow after the Presidential elections on May 25. Meanwhile, powerful special interest groups that are lying low in the wake of recent protests may seek to reassert themselves after the elections. These groups, in the presence of weak institutions, could undermine the reform program supported by the DPL even if the Government maintains its strong commitment to reforms. The programmatic design of the operation moderates risks of reversals. In addition, the World Bank team will continue to work with other partners and IFIs on designing and tracking the reform program and will remain engaged through policy dialogue, technical assistance, and public advocacy for strong reforms. Moreover, the team consulted civil society organizations that are energized following recent events in Ukraine 27 and may help keep pressure on the Government to sustain reforms. Finally, this DPL series seeks to combine policy measures with institutional strengthening in all three pillars to enhance sustainability of reforms. 74. Geo-political risks. Escalation or widening of regional tensions could have serious economic consequences because Ukraine has strong ties with the Russian economy. Around a quarter of Ukraine’s exports find their way to the Russian market. In addition, Ukraine imports around 60 percent of the gas needed for domestic consumption from the Russian Federation. Disruption in exports and/or gas supplies could seriously affect Ukraine’s economic prospects in the short run and these risks cannot be mitigated by this operation. 75. Macroeconomic and financial sector risks. The risks outlined in paragraph 22 could affect implementation, impact and sustainability of the reforms supported by this series. Possible macroeconomic instability and/or deepening banking crisis would undermine the adequacy of the macroeconomic framework that underpins this operation. These risks are partially mitigated by recent steps taken by the authorities to stabilize the economy, underpinned by a two-year SBA with the IMF. The proposed Financial Sector DPL series will help mitigate some of the risks in the banking sector through its focus on: (i) external diagnostic audits of large and medium-sized banks and subsequent enforcement action based on audits' results; (ii) orderly resolution of insolvent banks through strengthened DGF; and (iii) improvements in regulatory and institutional framework for bank supervision. 76. Social, environmental and fiduciary risks. Social risks are significant. The macroeconomic adjustments necessary to restore a sustainable macroeconomic framework will have wide-ranging welfare effects and social impacts in the short run. Balancing the burden of the adjustment among different segments of the population is therefore an explicit focus of this operation and the Government program. Moreover, as highlighted in the PSIA section, gas and heating tariff increases will affect the welfare of households, including of the poor and vulnerable. The operation mitigates these risks by supporting explicit policy measures to provide targeted support to affected households. The operation does not entail environmental risks while the reforms of the energy and utility sector are expected to contribute to higher energy efficiency with positive impacts on the environment. Fiduciary risks are substantial due to remaining weaknesses in the PFM system. 77. Implementation risks. The DPL program is focused on putting in place improved legal frameworks. Enacting good laws is an important and necessary first step, but consistent implementation is required for this to translate into effective change. Incomplete implementation either due to lack of resources, capacity constraints, resistance from special interest groups, changes in reform directions due to upcoming elections or escalating unrest could undermine the impact of the operation. Continuity in the policy program of the programmatic DPL series mitigates these risks. 28 ANNEX 1: UKRAINE - POLICY AND RESULTS MATRIX Prior Actions DPL 1 Triggers DPL 2 Results Pillar 1: Promote good governance, transparency and accountability in the public sector Prior Action 1: Enact 34 legislative amendments Trigger 1: Enact legislative amendments, Share of competitive procurement selection by to reduce exemptions in public procurement including to the Budget Code, to improve the value (Source: State Statistics Service) from competitive procedures public investment management framework Baseline 2013: 35% Target 2015: 55% Share of new eligible public investment projects appraised and selected through the public investment management system Baseline 2013: 0% Target 2015: 100% Prior Action 2: Government adopts and submits Trigger 2: Enact legislation to establish Share of Financial Disclosures Subject to to Parliament legislation to establish centralized centralized external verification of financial External Verification: external verification of financial disclosures by disclosures by elected and senior public officials elected and senior public officials and and disciplinary and administrative Baseline 2013: 0% disciplinary and administrative accountability for accountability for those who fail to comply with those who fail to comply with financial financial disclosure requirements or Target 2015: 100% disclosure requirements or misrepresent financial misrepresent financial information and establish information an independent anticorruption preventive agency responsible for the verification of asset declarations Trigger 3: Enact amendments to the Law on the Coverage of External Audit Accounting Chamber to expand coverage of external audits to state budget revenue Baseline 2013: State Revenues not included in External Audit (2012 Budget execution) 34 Enact means legislation is approved by Parliament, signed by the President and published in official gazette. 29 Target 2016: State Revenues included in External Audit (2015 Budget execution) Trigger 4: Enact amendments to the Law on Transfer Pricing to reduce tax avoidance in line with OECD guidelines Pillar 2: Strengthen the regulatory framework and reduce costs of doing business Prior Action 3: Enact legislation requiring Trigger 5: Improve VAT refund processing by Ratio of VAT refund claims older than 74 days/ publication of monthly data on VAT refund extension of automatic VAT refund procedures quarterly flow of VAT refund claims processing including claims, refunds, automatic and revising automatic refund eligibility criteria refunds, and arrears; revoke order of the Baseline 2013: 153 percent Ministry of Revenue and Duties that establishes targets for additional assessments and fines Target 2015: 20 percent resulting from audits Prior Action 4: Enact legislation to ease Trigger 6: Enact legislation to continue Number of Permits business and property registration and reduce the overhaul selected priority areas of regulation, number of permits establish regulatory impact assessment, Baseline (2013): 143 rationalize construction permits, ease licenses, strengthen investor protection and harmonize Target (2015): 84 Ukraine’s standardization system, legal Distance to the Frontier Doing Business 35 framework for food safety, technical regulations and conformity assessments with EU Baseline: DB 2014: 58.44% requirements Target: DB 2016: 66% Prior Action 5: Cabinet adopts and submits Trigger 7: Enact legislation to abolish use of draft law to Parliament revoking possible use of land as bank capital (State Land Bank) land as bank capital (State Land Bank) Pillar 3: Reform inefficient and inequitable utility subsidies while protecting the poor 35 This measure shows the distance of each economy to the “frontier.” The frontier represents the highest performance observed on each of the indicators across all economies measured in Doing Business since the inclusion of the indicator. An economy’s distance to frontier is reflected on a scale from 0 to 100, where 0 represents the lowest performance and 100 represents the frontier. In the case of Ukraine, a score of 61 in DB 2014 means the economy is 39 percentage points away from the frontier constructed from the best performances across all economies and across time. .. 30 Prior Action 6: National Energy Regulatory Trigger 8: Enact amendments to the Law of Fiscal Subsidies to DH companies Commission (NERC) adopts resolution to Ukraine on Regulation of Communal Services to increase residential gas prices by 56 percent enforce independence of the national regulation Baseline (2012): 37 UAH 10.4 billion (weighted average) and National Commission of communal services by making it impossible to for Regulation of Communal Services (NCRCS) set tariffs below cost-recovery levels. The Target (2015): UAH 0.29 billion adopts resolution to increase residential heating Government approves the draft law on regulation Revenue of Naftogaz from sales of gas to tariffs 176 licensees by 40 percent (weighted of energy sector consistent with the Third residential consumers: average) Energy Package Baseline (2013): UAH 6.9 billion Target (2014): UAH 10.4 billion Trigger 9: Approval of concept 36 for Naftogaz restructuring, acceptable to World Bank Prior Action 7: Cabinet adopts regulation to Trigger 10: Include social inspection as a Number of families below defined income introduce new targeted program to compensate centralized function in the bylaws governing the threshold who receive new targeted program increase in gas and heating bills of the poorest functions of the Ministry of Social Policy to 30 percent of the population improve targeting efficiency and contain errors Baseline (2013): 0 and fraud in social protection programs, including in new targeted program Target (2014): 2 million Trigger 11: Government adopts further Share of means and income tested programs in measures to improve targeting of social overall social assistance spending assistance to the poor Baseline (2012): 13 percent Target (2015): 20 percent 36 Concept here refers to an official document, cleared by Ministry of Economy, Ministry of Finance, Ministry of Justice, and approved by Cabinet of Ministers which includes among other things a strategy with time bound reform steps. 37 2012 was chosen as a baseline because the explicit subsidy actually included in the 2013 budget did not fully cover the difference between costs and revenues of District Heating companies. 31 ANNEX 2: LETTER OF DEVELOPMENT POLICY 32 CAiilNt!T OF MINISTERS OF UKRAINE ~!>(;~~~·181•)(;" 5808/0/2-14 Bi.zl 08.05.14 JincT YpHAY Y~epainn CTOCOBHO UOJiiTHKH p03BHTKY lllaHoBHHH naHe KiM! 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