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Barriers to EU will reduce Kiev to begging

Barriers to EU will reduce Kiev to begging

Russia Today24-05-2025

The EU's latest decision to reinstate import duties on Ukrainian exports will leave Kiev begging for money, according to Dmitry Natalukha, a member of the nation's parliament. His claim comes shortly after the European Commission (EC) announced that the bloc won't extend the current duty-free trade regime that is set to expire in early June.
On Friday, the EU executive branch said that the bloc's member states have backed the reimposition of import quotas on Ukrainian agricultural goods that were suspended in the wake of the escalation of the country's conflict with Russia in February 2022.
'This could create an idiotic situation where we will be forced to come and beg you [the EU] for money, instead of simply earning money through trade – which, in my opinion, is a very wicked and twisted situation, because rather than trading and profiting both from the trade in a normal way, Ukraine is being pushed to become a beggar,' Natalukha, who heads Economic Affairs Parliamentary Committee, said on Friday in an interview with Euractive.
Brussels adopted special regulations, known as Autonomous Trade Measures (ATMs), aimed at enabling grain and other agricultural goods from Ukraine to reach global markets. However, the massive inflow of cheap produce into Eastern Europe sparked widespread protests among the country's neighbors, where farmers said they could not compete. In response to the outrage, the EU has reintroduced some of the restrictions over the past year, targeting such commodities as oats, sugar and eggs.
Natalukha also stated that the suspension of the ATMs could cost the country more than €3 billion – equivalent to around 70% of Ukraine's projected total economic growth for the current year, sending its economy into a near-recession.
The EC has, however, cast doubt on Kiev's figures. Earlier this month, a senior official at the Directorate General for Trade and Economic Security, Leon Delvaux, stated that the €3 billion estimate was inflated, arguing the real value of the ATMs is half of the amount.
Last week, Politico reported, citing proposed legislation, that Brussels was considering replacing the ATMs with revised limits under Ukraine's existing trade framework with the bloc, known as the Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade Area (DCFTA), rather than extending the measures on a yearly basis.

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