Transcript of EBRD President Jean Lemierre's press conference at the Annual
Meeting in London, Monday 22 May 2006
SPEAKER: Thank you very much for coming. President Lemierre will make a few
brief introductory remarks about the events of the conference and what went on
here, and then he will be open to questions.
THE PRESIDENT: Good evening. It is my pleasure to see you this evening. We
have not had the pleasure of meeting earlier. You know that I stay in the
Governors’ meeting, and you are in the Annual Meeting as a whole, so perhaps I
should ask you if it has been a good meeting! I shall say a few words about
what has happened in the official part of the meeting with the Governors, but
first I should like to thank you for being here with us for this Annual
Meeting. It is good that you are here. It is important for us, it is important
for the Governors and it is important for the business people. It is good that
you pay attention. I hope that your working conditions have been good and that
you have had access to people and to facilities in the way that you need. If
not, please tell me afterwards and we shall try to improve the situation.
I shall say a few words, mainly about what happened today and yesterday in the
official meetings of the Bank. You know that the most important item for
decision of the Governors was the strategy for the years to come. You know
about it; I shall not bother you with figures and details. All the debates
have been very clear, and today there was a very clear endorsement of this
strategy. I should like to make two comments about the strategy itself.
The first concerns the EU8 countries. You know that the Board of the Bank has
taken the view that the eight countries which joined the EU in 2004 would
graduate by 2010. This view has been approved by the Governors but one of
these countries, the Czech Republic, has indicated its intention to open
discussions with a view to graduating in 2007. This is not only the view taken
by the Board; the intention to graduate has now been expressed by one of the
eight countries. A few other countries have clearly indicated that they will
graduate. They have not yet indicated the date on which they will do so, but
this is on their agenda and I am confident that they will make the decisions
later. We shall, of course, have close consultations with all these countries,
and timing and modalities will be decided in close consultation with them
later. The important point in these discussions is the point made by the Czech
Republic.
The second comment is that the Governors have strongly endorsed our intention
to move east and south-east. You may know that all the countries of operation
have expressed views about the priorities, the importance for them of
developing infrastructure and a private sector, developing the market,
supporting banks and SMEs, creating jobs. We agree on that, of course. In a
nutshell, the strategy has been fully endorsed.
The second matter I should like to report to you concerns the cooperation we
have with donors. I have felt, today especially, in all the speeches made by
Governors their very strong commitment to initiatives taken. The first of
those is without doubt the Early Transition Countries Initiative. You may
remember that that was launched two years ago here in London, with the strong
support of many countries, the first of which was the UK. This has been
repeated today. In view of the success of this initiative, many countries have
made the commitment to put more funds into it. We have already financed 151
projects in the early transition countries. These countries are highly
indebted. At the same time, large investors do not invest in these countries.
We have therefore taken the view that we should take more risks and be more
focused on the capacity to develop investment in medium sized companies,
making medium-sized loans and taking equity stakes. It works well and we shall
continue to do this with the support of the donors.
The second initiative, which is very important, is the matching initiative for
the western Balkans. We shall use the skills and the understanding of the
types of project we have carried out in the early transition countries and
extend them to the countries of the western Balkans. You may have noted that
all donors have been highly supportive of replicating what we do in the early
transition countries.
I should like to add a comment in this connection about a very moving moment
which I mentioned yesterday but which I should like to repeat today. For the
first time, one of the Bank’s countries of operation has decided to be a donor
country on this initiative. That country is Slovenia. Slovenia has taken a
major step forward, as a country of operation, to say: “We have received a lot
in the past and we are going to help our neighbours.” For the first time, a
country of operation will participate in the funding of an initiative of this
type. Slovenia will be part of the Western Balkans Initiative. They are
probably the first to say that they will do so.
The third initiative on which there is very strong support and focus is
energy, and especially energy efficiency and climate change. The Sustainable
Energy Initiative is concerned with the fact that the region is growing, that
more and more energy is needed, while at the same time energy is wasted. You
know the figures. I mentioned them this morning and shall not repeat them this
evening. This is a very important initiative. We took a lot of comfort from
what the countries of operation themselves said about this. They all mentioned
that it is crucial for them. First was Russia, which indicated a very strong
commitment to this area, saying that it is at the top of their priorities and
they welcome it. It is the same in all the other countries. It was the same
for Ukraine, it was the same for Georgia, it was the same for Armenia. I could
mention all the countries. Of course, we have received very strong support
from donors, with the UK taking the lead. Like many other countries, the UK
will contribute to the initiative.
Why do we need donor money? Mainly to increase awareness of the importance of
this type of effort. We see a good business case for investment of this kind
in most companies and public utilities. But there is a need to increase
awareness of this, especially in two respects. The first involves being ready
to finance quick and free energy audits in companies to demonstrate to large
companies that there is a good business case for moving forward in this
direction. That is important in some countries. The second concerns training
people. That has a lot to do with the facilities that we have already put in
place with some banks to finance SMEs and households. In many countries there
is a need to train credit officers so that they have a good understanding of
the challenges and how to do things.
I am confident that we will receive strong support from both sides: the policy
makers who will promote the regulations and tariff needed to do this; and
donor countries that will help to promote it. That was a strong commitment
from all Governors.
From my point of view, on these two points there is both a strong endorsement
of the strategy and a commitment by Governors to support initiatives of this
type.
This has been a good and clear meeting. I hope you have learnt a great deal
and met many people. My colleagues took part in many forums and discussions
but I did not. You were there and so you will know better than I do. I know
that all the debates were interesting.
In opening the debates in the Annual Meeting, we wanted you to understand the
region and to go deeper into some questions in dialogue with the countries,
business people and the officials of these countries, but also to be open to
new approaches. We have tried to open the debate on benchmarking. You may have
heard Joe Stiglitz making comparisons within the region and with China and
Vietnam. It is interesting to do that because we can learn a lot by opening a
debate not only on the short term but also on the medium term and even more so
the long term, and it is interesting to look at the challenges 15 years ahead
to try to stimulate debate in favour of the region and the people of the
region and to understand better what we should do.
I will stop here. I would be very happy to take any questions you may have.
RAYMOND BOYD(?) (Editor Party Democrat, Westminster): I have two questions.
Two of those I will ask immediately and the other I will leave until later.
Several days ago China announced that in the next few years it would send some
3,000 farm experts to African and other developing countries under the
auspices of FAO. Has any one of the EU8 countries offered to send, say, 100
loan and other banking experts to the ETCs under EBRD auspices?
The second question is this. On Saturday and today you drew our attention to
Slovenia’s intention to donate funds to the Bank’s Western Balkans Programme.
This November we will mark the 50th anniversary of Austria and a dozen other
countries welcoming some 200,000 Hungarian refugees. Will Hungary commemorate
this generosity of the western democracies by becoming a donor either to the
Western Balkans where there is a Hungarian speaking minority or to other EBRD
programmes?
THE PRESIDENT: As for your first question, to a certain extent I have already
answered you point. The fact that a country like Slovenia is moving to support
the initiative we have in the Western Balkans is the type of approach you
mention for China.
You must keep in mind that this can be done in a different way. Today we see
more and more successful companies in central Europe, in the EU8 countries,
beginning to make cross-border investments and to move in particular to the
Balkans. I could mention to you large retail companies investing in Serbia,
for instance. The cross border approach can be done on the basis of donor
funding but it would probably be better if it were done on a business footing.
That is simply knowing well what transition is, having gained some success
through investing and trading cross-border. We are seeing that movement more
and more, and I am sure you will see it increasing.
If your second question is about Austria’s generosity ---
MR BOYD: It is about Hungary and particular what the Hungarians receive,
particularly with regard to 3 November and having 200,000 of their refugees
settled in Austria and elsewhere and whether, in a sense, they will repay that
generosity by investing, for example, in the Western Balkans.
THE PRESIDENT: My clear view is that Hungary and Hungarian companies, and
certainly in the future the Hungarian Government, will do so.
Do you want to ask your third question now?
MR BOYD: It seems very likely that Montenegro will soon become an independent
member of the EBRD, perhaps to be followed in 2007 by an independent Kosovo.
Will such accessions be essentially an administrative and constitutional
matter or would you expect to expand and diversify Bank activities in these
new democracies?
THE PRESIDENT: We have already taken the decision to open an office in
Montenegro, and we shall. That decision was taken in the context of the budget
for 2006 and it had nothing to do with independence. It is a clear indication
of our commitment to Montenegro and to support activities there. We have
started mainly through banks. We support SMEs, micro-finance and trade. We are
considering projects in tourism. There are also a few projects working on the
need to restructure some industrial activities in Montenegro. You may know
that. Yes, we are committed. We have already invested and we are going to
diversify the portfolio.
MR BOYD: And Kosovo?
THE PRESIDENT: I will not make any comment on the independence of Kosovo. I
will not answer your question but make the point differently. We have already
invested in Kosovo. We have a bank in Kosovo and we are doing micro-finance.
We have put credit lines in place to finance SMEs in Kosovo. We are working
these days on financing modernisation of the airport.
MR BOYD: And an office in Pristina?
THE PRESIDENT: We already have some staff in Kosovo.
ALEXANDER SMOTROV (The Russian News Agency): The next Annual Meeting will be
held in Kazan in Russia. Can you outline an agenda for this meeting? Maybe you
could extend the connection there with an increasing role of EBRD projects.
THE PRESIDENT: You want us already to tell the story as it will be in a year’s
time. The Bank wanted to have a meeting in Russia. We had one a long time ago
in St Petersburg and the time has come to have another meeting in Russia. We
had discussions with President Putin and Prime Minister Fradkov about when and
where.
It is clear that the reaction of the Russian authorities has been to say very
quickly, “We want the next Annual Meeting as soon as possible in the regions”,
and that is exactly our view. The time has come to go there and to show what
is happening in the regions in Russia, not just in Moscow and St Petersburg,
which is important, but we do much more than that. The choice has been made to
go to Kazan, which I think is very interesting. It is a growing region. It
will be a very good opportunity for investors – and for journalists – to go to
the regions in Russia in order to understand what is happening, what the
transition challenges are and what the successes, the expectations and the
difficulties are – and there are difficulties. We look forward to going to
Kazan and to having a good meeting there. I hope you will come.
SUJATA RAO (Reuters) Some documents emerged this week on the Sakhalin project
showing that what Shell officially reported may not have been completely
true. Do you feel misled by Shell? Is this likely to influence your
decision? Secondly, has there been pressure on the Bank from the United States
to approve the financing for Sakhalin?
THE PRESIDENT: I am sure you well know where we stand on the Sakhalin
project. Consultations have taken place and we are in the process of reviewing
the results of them. We are also making an assessment about what is happening
in Sakhalin with regard to the river crossings, and that is not yet
finished. I have been informed of the concern raised by some NGOs about the
point you have mentioned. I have no opinion. Of course, we shall check, as we
always do. That is the way we operate. It is premature to make any comment.
As to the second question, the answer is no, we have not received pressure on
the project. Management of the Bank and the Board make their own decision in
an independent way.
MR PETER SEMMLER (Merger Market): You state that the EBRD will be increasing
investment in Russia and south-east Europe. Particularly regarding Russia, can
you quantify the increase in investment, especially in equity investment in
companies?
THE PRESIDENT: What do you mean, “qualify”?
MR SEMMLER (Merger Market): “Quantify.”
THE3 PRESIDENT: “Qualify” is risky, but we can do it. “Quantify” is a
different question. To be very clear with you, we are working on this because
we preparing the strategy for our activities in Russia for the coming two
years. You are aware that we have strategies for two years. We are working on
this at the moment; we are making an assessment of the situation. It is very
clear that – perhaps not in amounts because equity investments are not very
large by themselves – as a risk-taking institution we shall certainly increase
substantially the volume of equity stakes that we take. This is crucially
needed by Russian companies. It is true for foreign companies but more and
more true for medium-sized Russian companies themselves. I can give you not a
quantitative answer but a qualitative one on the trend. You will see,
certainly over the coming two years, a sharp increase.
MR PETER O’NEILL: I am probably the oldest hack here, who has been covering
the EBRD since 1991. You wanted some straight comments. I was surprised that
there was no tea and coffee. I know there was a heading in Emerging Markets
saying “Bank profits declining”, or something like that. I do not think there
was even a glass of water in the press room. If someone does not tell you, you
will not know.
Following the response to my questions on the ETC and what went on in the
Russian session about lack of investment in infrastructure, municipalities and
water, my comment is that this was the fundamental remit of the Bank
originally. Are you embarrassed or cautious about saying publicly that you are
shifting back into the core of the Bank’s remit? It seems to be a good
thing. That is presumably where the American question came from, as well.
There seems to be a shift back to the Bank’s remit. Maybe we are seeing too
much in something that is simple. Is it clear what I am saying?
THE PRESIDENT: No. I shall be as clear as you were: no. What is the question?
MR PETER O’NEILL: There seems to be a shift from investment only in the big
private companies back into infrastructure, public utilities and services.
That seems to be a very clear shift, looking at what has been going on with
regard to loans. My specific question in the Russian meeting was the
following. With the Russians making so much money at the moment from oil and
gas, why is the Bank having to put money into municipal infrastructure? That
is a straight question.
My final point is this. Someone commented to me, and I had already reacted
myself, that the NGOs were getting into bed with the Bank too much and in fact
at the British Museum they use the word “corruption”. I should like you to
tell us quite clearly that the NGOs’ independence is not under threat because
they depend on the Bank for funding for coming to the meeting, and that kind
of thing.
THE PRESIDENT: I welcome your first remark. It shows that no-one is perfect
and that we have room for progress. Next time we shall pay attention to coffee
and tea. It is a fair point.
On your second point, I do not see this as a shift back to what could have
been a core activity of the Bank. I shall explain this to you in a different
way. We have invested a lot in central Europe. We started with infrastructure
and then moved to large private sector deals. In fact, we are starting a new
life, moving east. It is absolutely clear that we are going back to needs that
countries have; but we have already done this in many countries. In the EU8
countries we have financed this quite a lot in the past. We are going back to
this today. It is absolutely clear in the early transition countries but it is
also clear in a country like Russia or Ukraine.
What we do is changing, especially in Russia. What we have in mind today is to
move more and more to PPPs, and we are having a good discussion on this with
Russia. It has a strong link with the other point you made about Russia and
money. Let us be very clear. Russia has resources from oil and gas. But look
at the needs in Russia. They need a lot of money, and long-term money. They
need to use, in a much better way, the liquidity of the financial
markets. They need skills and they need to be able to attract more private
sector skills and funds to these needs. This is exactly what we do. It has a
lot to do with public utilities, concessions and new skills to manage their
needs. It is the same in many sectors in Russia. There is potential to finance
ports, airports and bridges. Russia is moving to a situation in which, on one
hand, they will use their budget and gas and oil money to finance some
infrastructure. It is clear that they are financing more and more roads this
way today. There are also needs which have to be addressed by tapping the
markets. I have mentioned a few examples and I shall mention another, which is
absolutely obvious in Russia today. That is the modernisation of the railway
system, which is crucial. Russia needs to improve quickly all of this
infrastructure, including electricity grids. You may know that in Russia there
are electricity cuts during the winter. There were electricity cuts in two
regions last winter and the forecast is that that could happen in 10 regions
next winter. It is a serious matter and they need to invest quickly and with
long-term maturities for this to be acceptable. Budget money is not
enough. They need to tap the market. Once again, they can use the money and
the skills of the private sector to do this. We are helping the private sector
to do it. This is absolutely crucial, otherwise there will be bottlenecks in
Russian growth and that would cause a serious problem.
With regard to NGOs, from my point of view, I have never seen dialogue as a
limit to the independence of people. It is the beginning of independence.
When you are independent and you have clear views and remarks to make, you
open the dialogue and have a dialogue. NGOs are not dependent on us. I can
repeat that we have very good discussions and dialogue with NGOs. I have never
seen that their independence might be at stake if they open discussions with
an international institution.
MR PETER O’NEILL: I specifically asked about dependence on the Bank for money
to come to meetings and so on. There was a meeting on Saturday which some of
us turned up for but that turned out to be a secret meeting and we were not
allowed near it. It was on Sakhalin and bilateral talks. I can only tell you
that some NGO people said to me that they are concerned that some NGOs are
getting into bed too much with the Bank and losing their independence. I
cannot tell you more than that.
THE PRESIDENT: What should I do? Should I stop talking to them? It is an
interesting question for them. We do not in any way try to do that. We try to
provide facilities to people when they need them to engage in a positive way
so that they are able to have a say.
I will tell you a story. A few years ago, and I think you were there, we had a
meeting in Uzbekistan.
MR PETER O’NEILL: I did not go for the same reasons others did not go.
THE PRESIDENT: Human rights NGOs asked us to engage with people and we did
that. Some of them have come to London. I think it is a great opportunity for
me and the Bank proudly to give them the opportunity to engage and make their
point in such conditions. This is not about their independence but about their
capacity to say what they want and to play a role in the decision-making
process.
MARIA AHMED (Emerging Markets): I was wondering whether in the view of EBRD
Russia is restructuring fast enough and if not, why not?
THE PRESIDENT: My answer to the question whether Russia is restructuring fast
enough is that in many sectors it could be doing so more quickly. That is
obvious. This is always the case. All this must be done in a way that is
sustainable and compatible with the country’s needs. When you make this type
of judgment, you have to look carefully at sectors.
There are some sectors in Russia that have moved forward quite a lot. I would
like to mention one where there have been real improvements, and that is the
banking sector. A few years ago we were saying here that we would welcome more
reform in the banking sector. There have been reforms. Banking supervision is
now being implemented. Foreign banks are operating in Russia today, Russian
regional private sector banks are growing and we have taken equity stakes in
many of them. You do see reforms in many sectors. The railway sector is being
reformed. The electricity sector is being reformed and those reforms are being
implemented. You can see reforms that are being implemented.
Yes, we would like to see some reforms implemented well. That is needed in the
implementation of the rule of law, the quality of the judiciary system and the
courts. Yes, that is needed and it must be done.
MARIA AHMED: Do you have any view on how quickly it must be done?
THE PRESIDENT: You do not make the grass grow faster by pulling it! That may
not be a good answer. We are speaking about reforms that have to be
implemented. I have made the point about training people and appointing
people. That involves a lot of work. Clearly, Russia has to move forward and
progress. That is key for investors and for the sustainability of investment.
I think this is well understood by the Russians. President Putin has mentioned
many times that he would like to see Russian GDP doubled by 2010. That is
necessary for Russia to grow their economy, provide jobs and improve the
social situation. In order to do that, many reforms need to be implemented
well to attract investment, Russian and foreign investment.
ODILE DUPERRY (AFP) This morning Mr Zalm said that he was disappointed because
Mongolia could not be announced as the 28th country of operation of EBRD. I
would like to know if you too are disappointed and what is the country that
did not sign the ratification?
THE PRESIDENT: I am confident that Mongolia will be a country of operation of
the Bank this year,
QUESTION: Can you answer my second question? May I mention the country? It is
Russia?
THE PRESIDENT: Yes. I would like to comment on that. It is a question of
timing. There is a ratification process and it has to be voted by parliament.
I have spoken to the Russians about this. I know that this is on the Duma’s
desk. It is to do with the agenda and processing. That is why I am confident
that it will be done.
QUESTION: May I follow up on your PPP remark? You invited today’s honorary
lecturer and he gave a terrific lecture. I do not know whether you heard it
because you had to go off, did you not? Did you see the content? He said that
most of the privatisations either failed or have caused more trouble than they
were worth. They have actually set a number of countries well back.
I am wondering how much you are wedded to the PPP approach only to find out,
five years down the line, as we are finding with the National Health Service
in this country, that it does not work so well for the recipient. It is good
for those who make a fast buck like £90 million on a contract for which they
paid peanuts to start with.
THE PRESIDENT: I will not comment about the UK or Western Europe but I may
share with you some views about PPPs in the region. The first question is: is
it necessary? Yes, it is necessary. Why is that? It is because all the
countries of the region have very serious fiscal constraints. For various
reasons, such as EU rules and the IMF, they have constraints. At the same
time, there is a real need for improvements for the people.
My view is that within their fiscal constraints they should allocate their
resources to their social needs and have priorities. At the same time, they
have the capacity to use the PPP to finance some infrastructure. This is a
relief from the budget point of view and it will help them to do more on the
social side. I have mentioned ports, airports and this type of investment. So
this is necessary. The quicker you move in this direction, the better it is
for job creation, to put it simply
The PPP approach is not developed in the regions. There are reasons for that.
One is that the notion of tariff is not common in the region. In all the
ex-COMECON countries, most of these utilities and services were provided free,
or at a very cheap price. At the bottom of the PPPs there is a tariff. There
must be a flow of resources, otherwise there is no PPP. That is a serious
question. There is a political debate about how to implement this type of
tariff. It is needed now. If you want good equipment, you need to do this,
The second point is about the complexity of the structure. From a legal point
of view, PPP is a complex design. The third element is that in some cases
political leaders in the region may feel some frustration at the way it has
been structured. It has to do with whether we get value for the tariff,
whether we get the equipment we pay for, whether the profits are too high.
You know the type of questions, and they are serious. We know a few successful
PPPs in the regions. I could mention two, one in Bucharest, for water
treatment, and another in Tirana, for financing the rehabilitation of the
airport. What is the value that the EBRD can take there? It answers your
point. I think it has to do with a few questions. One is about risk-taking
capacity. There is no PPP, in fact, if there is no risk-taker. If you want to
have a sound budget, you need to avoid the country’s budget being too involved
in the financing of the PPP, otherwise you go back to square one. The first
element we can contribute is that we have this capacity, and we can offer long
maturities. The second element, which is even more important, is to work with
the government and with the potential utility companies to design the best
structure possible and to work on the financing and the tariff. That is
something we are committed to doing with the countries to try to address the
concern you raise. It is very important that we are successful there.
MR GREG AITKEN (Press Officer, Bank Watch): I wanted, first of all, to
reassure the gentleman that the Sakhalin meeting on Saturday night, at which
one or two people here were present, was not a “getting into bed” session
between NGOs and EBRD; rather the opposite.
To go back to Sakhalin, which we are all aware is probably the most
significant project the Bank has ever faced, I was struck by your comment that
you have no opinion on what came out in the press at the week-end. We have
very strong evidence that Shell is breaching its river strategy. Not only
that, it is also trying to cover up these breaches. In the past you have been
very clear in meetings like this that Bank standards would be followed to the
letter on Sakhalin. The Bank’s leverage has always been a very big argument,
with its involvement in Sakhalin II. Do you not see that, with 75 per cent of
the project complete, when there are instances like this with such abuse and
such deception, perhaps the leverage is withering to almost nil?
THE PRESIDENT: That is not a question, it is a statement.
MR GREG AITKEN: It is …
THE PRESIDENT: I listened to you; you listen to me. It is a statement you have
made, not a question.
QUESTION: (No microphone) NGOs should not be allowed to sit in a press
conference.
THE PRESIDENT: I shall answer the point in a different way. I take your
statement as a statement. I shall answer the beginning of your statement. No,
I have not yet made an assessment of this. It is a serious allegation which
has been made. I do not say it is right, I do not say it is wrong; I simply
say that I was here with Governors and I need to make an assessment, because
it is a serious matter. If your question is “Are the Bank’s standards going to
be respected?”, the answer is “Yes”.
EMILY BARRETT (Dow Jones) : On that theme, is there not a consideration that
the Bank’s duty or job from now on is going to be a lot harder? In a sense,
moving into Russia and further east, you are moving into areas where perhaps
EU standards of corporate governance and transparency are no longer real
incentives for these countries per se. I wonder if you consider that this is a
great challenge for the EBRD and how you think it can be tackled.
THE PRESIDENT: Yes, it is a great challenge for the Bank; I have no doubt
about that. I said this morning that part of the success of the EU8 countries
is that the whole process has been driven by the possibility of EU accession
and then negotiations. It is clear that in many countries of the region this
does not exist. In some it does exist, and that will help a lot. In some it
does not; it is a different process. I think that in all the countries in the
region there is a real wish to improve the situation. Methods can be
different, policies can be different, but the wish to do something is very
strong.
What does it mean from our point of view? It means that we need to engage more
at the level of policy dialogue with governments and regional
authorities. It is not only a matter of government; many questions are for the
regional or municipal authorities. That is why we are going to open new
offices in the region and locate more bankers and staff in the region. You
know that we are going to open a new office in Ukraine and two new offices in
Russia. It is for that reason: to be closer to the people, to engage more and
to support more, because that is the right way to do it.
At the same time, we shall have to adapt the tools and the financial
instruments we use. We use a broad range of tools, from the capital markets to
the ETC approach. We need to be very innovative and efficient, using various
tools. There is a very good staff in the Bank. We have experience. We have
made some mistakes, and we have learned from them. I am confident that, with
this experience, we shall be able to address the challenges you mention.
EMILY BARRETT In the context of that, would future projects of the scale of
the Sakhalin project be undertaken by the Bank?
THE PRESIDENT: Will there be large projects for the Bank? Yes, for sure.
There will be small projects and large projects. That is part of what we do.
QUESTION: What are the plans of the EBRD with regard to Ukraine? Will there be
some changes? Experts predict very negative economic trends in our country.
THE PRESIDENT: We see a strong interest for investors investing in Ukraine.
When you look at the decisions taken by them last year, you see remarkable
news. Just for you, as an indication of what we did last year, we doubled the
volume of our investments in Ukraine compared to 2004 and we have it in mind
certainly to maintain this level and probably to increase it this year. The
trend of our own investments in Ukraine is positive and going upwards.
QUESTION: Can you say what you think about negative trends in Ukraine?
THE PRESIDENT: It depends on the perspective you take. You can compare 2004,
which was to some extent an exceptional year from the budget point of view,
and 2005, which was very different, with some tension and inflation, and so
on. At the same time there are political changes in Ukraine. There were
elections. Everyone is expecting a new government. I am sure that the budget
situation and the monetary situation will be tackled once there is a new
government.
If you take a different approach, namely the point of view of the investors,
that is not the point of view they take. You see large foreign investors
making investments in Ukraine. A bank like RZB has invested in Aval Bank;
French banks have invested. Investors are becoming more positive.
RAYMOND LLOYD: The European Investment Bank is, I think, always invited to the
informal meetings of the European Finance Ministers, Ecofin, but I do not
think I have ever seen the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
there. Is there a particular reason?
THE PRESIDENT: There is a particular reason, but I have been invited.
Nevertheless, I will explain to you what the difference is. The EIB is a
European institution, according to the European treaties. It is owned by the
25 members of the EU. It is a pure European institution. The EBRD is not
legally a European institution. We have European shareholders in all of them,
but we also have non-European shareholders and that is the difference. At the
same time, I have been invited to Ecofins or lunches with Ecofin ministers.
We have permanent discussion especially with the EU Commission.
QUESTION: But I have not seen you there.
THE PRESIDENT: Next time I will tell you when I am going to be there.
QUESTION: For example, in Vienna?
THE PRESIDENT: No, I was not.
QUESTION: And the one before in Manchester?
THE PRESIDENT: No. You are talking about informal Ecofins. I am invited to the
formal Ecofins.
QUESTION: Those are the ones always in Brussels.
THE PRESIDENT: We have very good discussions with all the EU countries and
they are shareholders of the Bank and with the EU Commission. Commissioner
Almunia was here today and we have very good cooperation with them. Do not be
concerned. We are very close to them all.
SPEAKER: Thank you very much.