In its April 2026 statement, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) projects 2% GDP growth for Ukraine in 2026, which is the same as it previously projected for 2025. This is despite the country suffering from Russia’s energy strikes in January this year, according to a press release on the Regional Economic Outlook for Europe at the 2026 IMF Spring Meetings.
The IMF’s stance turned out to be a silver lining, although the difference between the IMF’s more optimistic figure and the National Bank of Ukraine’s (NBU) more pessimistic figure is minuscule – the NBU slashed Ukraine’s real GDP forecast from 2.2% to 1.8% in February this year.
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Russia’s attacks in 2026 massively damaged the energy grid, disrupted logistics and enlarged the electricity deficit to approximately 7% in the fourth quarter of 2025, the NBU previously said during its briefing on monetary policy.
This spring, the IMF projects real GDP growth at 2.0% for 2026, 3.5% for 2027 and 4.2% for 2028, but these projections are based on the assumption that Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine will end in 2026. It is still a slight decrease since publishing the previous outlook in October 2025, when the IMF estimated GDP growth for 2026 at 4.5%, and 4.8% in 2027.
As for headline inflation, the IMF projects it at 6.1% for 2026 (down from 7.6% in the October 2025 Outlook), 7.7% for 2027 (up from 5.3% in the October 2025 Outlook), and 5.7% for 2028. The full report has not been published at the time of writing to explain what stands behind the IMF’s calculation.
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