What will be the primary use of the $20 billion loan by Ukraine in 2025?
Economic stabilization • 25%
Military support • 25%
Infrastructure development • 25%
Humanitarian aid • 25%
Emergency services • 25%
Economic support • 25%
Military spending • 25%
Other • 25%
Ukrainian government budget reports or World Bank reports
U.S. Grants $20 Billion Loan to Ukraine Using Frozen Russian Assets as Part of G7's $50 Billion Plan
Dec 10, 2024, 06:56 PM
On December 10, the U.S. Treasury Department announced the disbursement of a $20 billion loan to Ukraine as part of the G7's $50 billion Extraordinary Revenue Acceleration Loans Initiative. The loan will be repaid using proceeds earned from immobilized Russian sovereign assets, specifically profits generated from frozen Russian central bank assets. According to U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, these funds will be disbursed through the World Bank's intermediary fund to sustain Ukraine's emergency services and support its economy amid the ongoing conflict with Russia.
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Infrastructure development • 25%
Macro-financial stability • 25%
State-owned enterprises support • 25%
Other • 25%
Other • 25%
Economic Recovery • 25%
Military Spending • 25%
Infrastructure Development • 25%
International aid • 25%
Other • 25%
Ukrainian government budget • 25%
Frozen Russian assets • 25%
Military strengthening • 25%
GDP growth • 25%
Debt reduction • 25%
Infrastructure development • 25%
Not repaid • 25%
Partially repaid • 25%
Fully repaid • 25%
Canceled • 25%
Fully repaid and positive economic impact • 25%
Other • 25%
Not repaid with negative impact • 25%
Partially repaid with moderate impact • 25%
Other • 25%
Interest from frozen Russian assets • 25%
Direct repayment by Ukraine • 25%
G7 financial support • 25%
Economic recovery • 25%
Military expenses • 25%
Humanitarian aid • 25%
Infrastructure development • 25%
Other Military Equipment • 25%
Anti-Personnel Landmines • 25%
HIMARS Munitions • 25%
Counter-Drone Systems • 25%
Economic reform • 25%
Defense spending • 25%
Infrastructure rebuilding • 25%
Humanitarian aid • 25%
Economic Development • 25%
Military Support • 25%
Humanitarian Aid • 25%
Debt Repayment • 25%
Infrastructure • 25%
Other • 25%
Healthcare • 25%
Defense • 25%
Significant positive impact • 25%
Negative impact • 25%
No significant impact • 25%
Moderate positive impact • 25%