It wasn’t supposed to be like this.
Nearly two years after Ukrainian protesters drove out their pro-Russian
leader, investors, voters and some officials are disappointed with progress
toward building a European-style state and eradicating the post-Soviet
scourge of corruption. Allies of the deposed Viktor Yanukovych are bidding
to make a comeback.
For French businessman Jean-Noel Reynaud, the situation has led to what
he calls an illegal takeover at one of his vodka plants.
“Ukraine isn’t fulfilling its commitments to clean up the country,"
Reynaud, chief executive officer of Paris-listed Marie Brizard Wine
& Spirits, said in a phone interview. “This isn’t acceptable in a nation
that’s aspiring to adopt European Union values. This is a black spot on its
reputation.”
Wrong Direction
The struggle over Ukraine’s future is shifting away from the
battlefield near its eastern border, where optimism is building that a truce there will hold. Failure to make a dent in graft risks
eroding support for the leaders that took charge after the revolution and
further damaging confidence in an economy crying out for investment. with
two thirds of Ukrainians saying the country’s heading in the wrong
direction, the Oct. 25 elections will
be a chance for voters to vent their frustration.
Andrey Pavlichenkov, who manages a $100 million bond fund with
investments in Ukraine, has seen no streamlining of the country’s
bureaucracy. He said difficulties including raider attacks and overbearing
checks by prosecutors and the security service haven’t gone away, and he fears
the government isn’t doing enough to make foreign investors return.
“Ukraine isn’t attractive enough as an investment destination that
such problems can exist," Pavlichenkov said. "Bureaucrats have
no idea how to regulate and just look for ways to get a bribe -- the system
doesn’t want to change."
Asset Sales
The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development also says more
needs to be done to lure investment, particularly into state assets, according
to Francis Malige, the London-based lender’s managing director for eastern
Europe and the Caucasus.
"It’s difficult to sell assets because the current processes for
privatization aren’t adequate and can be used by well connected people to make
sure there’s a very little competition,” Kiev-based Malige said by phone. “It’s
very important that the state shouldn’t sell them using procedures that don’t
guarantee complete transparency."
The lack of momentum in revamping Ukraine has shattered
support for the ruling coalition, led by President Petro Poroshenko’s
party, according to a September poll by the International Republican Institute.
Controlling a third of seats in parliament at present, the Solidarity
Party would get 13 percent in elections for the legislature, the survey showed.
The party of his prime minister, Arseniy Yatsenyuk, ranked in April by one newspaper as Ukraine’s least reform-minded politician, isn’t even contesting
the local ballot.
‘Long Road’
Luckily for Poroshenko, the opposition is divided between populists,
nationalists and backers of the former regime, while presidential and
parliamentary elections aren’t due until 2019. That helps to insulate him from
a growing chorus of discontent, including businesses that complain officials
are resisting change to protect vested interests of corporate allies and
oligarchs.
Ukraine is relying on an $18 billion restructuring of its foreign debt
and $17.5 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund to revive an
economy that hasn’t grown since 2013 and help restore confidence in
the past year’s second-worst-performing currency, the hryvnia, which has
plunged 43 percent against the dollar. Lenders have made the flow of
bailout cash contingent on continued reform and inroads into
corruption.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel, speaking with Yatsenyuk at the
opening of an economic forum Friday in Berlin, said there’s a
"long road" ahead for Ukrainian reforms. The U.S., which has provided
$2 billion of loan guarantees on top of the IMF rescue, has been critical of
some elements within the country.
‘Undermining Reform’
"Corrupt actors within the Prosecutor General’s office are making
things worse by openly and aggressively undermining reform," Geoffrey
Pyatt, the U.S.’s ambassador in Kiev, told a business conference in the
the Black Sea port of Odessa last month. "In defiance of Ukraine’s
leaders, these bad actors regularly hinder efforts to investigate and prosecute
corrupt officials."
Davit Sakvarelidze, a deputy prosecutor general, says it’s harder to
stamp out corruption in Ukraine than his native Georgia, which shot up
Transparency International’s rankings under then-President Mikheil Saakashvili.
Saakashvili, named this year by Poroshenko as Odessa’s regional
governor, has sought to curb graft in the local customs service, falling out
with Yatsenyuk in the process.
Ukraine is 142nd-lowest of 175 nations in Berlin-based Transparency’s
latest corruption survey, six places below Russia.
‘Oligarchic Clans’
"You have a lot of interests, a lot of oligarchic clans that
control politicians, members of the government," Sakvarelidze said in an
interview. "You have more problems here because everybody tries to lobby
his part of the cake.”
While Poroshenko has pledged to reign in tycoons such as Ihor
Kolomoyskyy, the president was himself a billionaire when he was elected and
hasn’t fulfilled promises to sell off assets that include Ukraine’s largest
candy business.
Ukraine is moving ahead with reforms to eliminate
corruption, outsource customs functions to an international company,
overhaul courts and sell off state-run companies, according to Boris
Lozhkin, Poroshenko’s chief of staff, who said the nation may be enjoying
a period of relative peace as President Vladimir Putin seeks to have EU and
U.S. sanctions against Russia lifted.
“We’re working on all of these kinds reforms at the same time,” he
said Oct. 13 in an interview in his office in Kiev. He said results were
more likely next year, when more funds arrive from the EU and the U.S.
IMF Warning
While the IMF has praised progress on economic measures, such as
creating an anti-corruption agency, it says "significant" challenges
remain.
"It is essential to stay the course of reform and, indeed, deepen
the effort," IMF managing director Christine Lagarde said last month in a
statement.
Reynaud, the French CEO, vows to continue fighting for the factory his
company has lost. He’s banking on a positive outcome in local courts having
sought help from Poroshenko’s administration and the French embassy in Kiev,
which is tracking the case along with the European Commission. But Reynaud has
a warning for the nation’s current leaders.
“I hope Ukraine will be able to join the EU one day," he said.
"But with these kinds of maneuvers, it can’t.”
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