With talks on resuming credit from the International Monetary Fund stalled, President Viktor Yanukovych heads to Moscow tomorrow to see what Russia might offer in exchange for freezing a strategic trade deal with the European Union.
Analysts say that if President Vladimir Putin offers anything to Ukraine, one of Europe's poorest countries, it could be a mix of credit, investment pledges, and a discount on energy prices, particularly natural gas.
Putin's aim "will be to keep Ukraine on the edge and dependent on Russian credits, to continue to pressurise Ukraine to eventually sign" the Moscow-led Customs Union, an organisation that now includes Belarus and Kazakhstan, said Timothy Ash, an emerging markets analyst with Standard Bank in London.
"This is still Putin's No. 1 strategic objective, as part of his grand neo-imperial design to rebuild Russia's great power status," said Ash.
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Without cash and cheaper natural gas, Ukraine's public finances will be increasingly untenable and could lead the country toward a default next year.