In April, within the framework of the Jean Monnet module project “EU experience in public debt management: conclusions for Ukraine in the war and post-war period” funded by the Erasmus+ program (101127602-EUEPDM-ERASMUS-JMO-2023-HEI-TCH-RSCH), the first trainings on “Conceptual framework for public debt management: the EU-Ukraine case” were held.
The main goal of these events is to familiarize participants with the principles and approaches to public debt management used in the European Union and Ukraine, as well as to provide the necessary knowledge and skills for effective public debt management in times of crisis and post-crisis recovery, based on European experience.
The first trainings and lectures were devoted to the theoretical and practical foundations of public debt management, debt classification and structure, as well as sources of financial information and legal regulation in the context of the EU and Ukraine. At the same time, the trainings focused on the practical aspects of debt management, including the analysis of financial information on public debt, modeling financial strategies in crisis conditions, and the use of international standards in debt management.
The events were organized by:
- PhD, Assistant Hanna Filatova;
- PhD in Economics, Associate Professor Olena Kravchenko;
- PhD in Economics, Senior Lecturer Nataliia Ovcharova.
For more information and to register for the following events, please fill out the registration form here: https://forms.gle/iAKfzK22NK782SSY7
To receive a file questionnaire, please send an e-mail to: a.filatova@biem.sumdu.edu.ua.
Invitations to the next events will be sent to the registered participants to the email addresses indicated in the registration form.
We will be glad to see you among the participants of the Trainings!
This event is funded by the European Union. However, the views and opinions expressed are those of the authors alone and do not necessarily reflect the views of the European Union or the European Executive Agency for Education and Culture (EACEA). Neither the European Union nor EACEA can be held responsible for them.