World Bank approves $1.49B additional financing for Ukraine

Ukraine has said that it needs at least $5 billion per month in the near term to keep its government operating in the face of ongoing Russian onslaught.

The World Bank has been working with donor countries to use its various financing programs to support health care, education, social services, power and water supplies and roads.
AP

The World Bank has been working with donor countries to use its various financing programs to support health care, education, social services, power and water supplies and roads.

The World Bank's executive board has approved $1.49 billion of additional financing for Ukraine to help pay wages for government and social workers, expanding the bank's total pledged support to over $4 billion.

The World Bank said in a statement on Tuesday that the latest funding is supported by financing guarantees from Britain, the Netherlands, Lithuania and Latvia. 

The project is also being supported by parallel financing from Italy and contributions from a new Multi-Donor Trust Fund.

Ukraine has said that it needs at least $5 billion per month in the near term to keep its government operating amid continued fighting that has shut down vast portions of its economy. 

READ MORE: Ukraine launches crowdfunding platform to defeat Russia

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Non-military support reaches $20B

Finance leaders from the Group of Seven industrial democracies last month pledged $9.5 billion in new funding, bringing their non-military support to nearly $20 billion.

The World Bank has been working with donor countries to use its various financing programs to support health care, education, social services, power and water supplies and roads.

The core services were "essential to preventing further deterioration in living conditions and poverty in Ukraine beyond the suffering inflicted because of the war," World Bank Eastern Europe country director Arup Banerji said in a statement.

Such services would also be "the bedrock of any recovery and reconstruction," Banerji added.

READ MORE: $60B and rising: World Bank's estimate on Ukraine infrastructure damage

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