Bank Of Baku

World Bank, EBRD to extend $31 billion to East Europe

World Bank, EBRD to extend $31 billion to East Europe
# 27 February 2009 13:47 (UTC +04:00)
Baku- APA-Economics. The World Bank, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development and the European Investment Bank will provide up to 24.5 billion euros ($31 billion) to help central and east European banks and businesses cope with the global financial crisis, Bloomberg reports.

“We have a special responsibility for the region and because it makes economic sense,” EBRD President Thomas Mirow said in a joint statement issued by the international organizations today in London. “For many years, the growing integration of Europe has been a source of prosperity and mutual benefit and we must not allow this process to be reversed.”

The EBRD will provide about 6 billion euros, the EIB about 11 billion euros and the World Bank about 7.5 billion euros, the statement said. The aid will take the form of equity and debt financing, credit lines and political risk insurance.

East European nations are struggling to refinance foreign- currency loans taken out by borrowers during years of prosperity through 2007, when economic growth averaged more than 5 percent. The International Monetary Fund, which has bailed out Latvia, Hungary, Serbia, Ukraine and Belarus, warned on Jan. 28 that bank losses may widen as “shocks are transmitted between mature and emerging-market banking systems.”
The IMF welcomed the plan to assist east Europe.

“This initiative will help mitigate the effects of the financial crisis on credit flows in the region,” IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said in a statement. “The joint efforts under this initiative will assist individual financial institutions and sectors, while IMF lending will continue to support countries at the macroeconomic level.”

The global credit crisis that has left banks with more than $2 trillion in losses and writedowns and triggered a simultaneous recession in the euro region, the U.S. and Japan, is taking its toll on emerging economies.

The region will have a recession this year as demand for exports collapses, the IMF said in January. The economies will shrink 0.4 percent, the IMF forecast. The slump combined with rising unemployment and falling currencies increases the risk of more borrowers defaulting on their loans.
The EBRD is investing a record 7 billion euros in central and east Europe this year to help the region weather the global economic crisis, compared with about 5.8 billion euros last year. Almost half of that amount will be used to help recapitalize the region’s banks, stung by the credit crunch to revive the flow of credit to companies, the lender said.

Moody’s Investors Service warned on Feb. 17 that Austrian, Swedish and other banks with subsidiaries in eastern Europe may face rating downgrades as economies in the region deteriorate.

Non-performing loans in the region rose to 8 percent from 5 percent through last year, and Standard & Poor’s has forecast they may top 25 percent on average, Nomura Holdings Inc. said in a Feb. 13 report.
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