“We will regain trust and credibility from foreign investors,” said Yatseniuk, defending the plan. “This is the roadmap for Ukraine.”

That may be so. But as Jack Rasmus, a professor of economics at St. Mary’s College, pointed out following the announcement of IMF conditions now being pushed in Kiev, this roadmap might lift the street credibility of Yatseniuk among the world’s powerful financial elite (the Reuters report says western leaders are impressed by what they term his “clear-sightedness” on economic matters), but it’s the nation’s regular citizens and workers who will ultimately pay the price for these short-sighted policies.

“Those who will pay will not be the bankers and multinational businessmen, but the Ukrainian people,” argued Rasmus. “That is the essential and repeated history and legacy of IMF deals globally for the last three decades.”

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