Political events in Ukraine and diplomatic tensions with Russia are
filling the headlines this week, but behind these recent developments is
a story of persistent economic weakness. Although a change of
government in Kiev may eventually bring needed reforms, in the short run
it can only worsen the economic situation. Bloomberg reports that
Ukraine's interim president, Oleksandr Turchynov, has said that the
country's economy is "spinning out of control" and has entered a
"pre-default situation." All this raises the question of whether
economic collapse in the Ukraine will drag the already faltering Russian
economy down with it.
Let’s look at some data. The first chart
below shows annual growth rates of real GDP for the two countries,
including IMF preliminary data for 2013 and forecasts, made before the
latest crisis, for 2014. As we see, both countries prospered in the
early and mid-2000s but suffered sharp recessions during the global
financial crisis. Neither has managed to return to its previous growth
rate. In the past two years, growth has slowed further. The IMF thinks
final data for both countries will show slight positive growth for 2013,
but some other sources suggest that both are in or close to actual
recession. Before the latest events, the IMF was moderately optimistic
about recovery in 2014, but that hope seems less likely now.
Energy
is a big part of the nexus between Russia and Ukraine. Russia is the
world’s largest exporter of oil and natural gas. Ukraine is one of the
world’s most energy-dependent economies, and one of the least energy
efficient. Data
from the World Resources Institute show that Ukraine uses 3.5 times
more energy per dollar of GDP than Germany, 2.5 times more than the
United States, and about 10 percent more than its also inefficient
neighbor to the north. >>>Read more
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