PayPal chief executive Dan Schulman told Deputy Prime
Minister Mykhailo Fedorov in a letter that Ukrainians would also be able to
transfer funds from their PayPal accounts to eligible credit and debit cards.
The company has waived its fees on such transactions through June 30.
More than 3 million Ukrainians have fled the country since
Russia launched its invasion on February 24, an action Russia has described as
a "special military operation.".
PayPal's move will allow refugees and Ukrainians to receive
funds from friends and family members in the United States and elsewhere, and
could also be used to transfer social payments by governments in the future,
said Vladyslav Rashkovan, Ukraine's alternative executive director at the
International Monetary Fund.
"It makes a huge difference for people," Rashkovan
told Reuters, lauding Schulman's personal engagement in accomplishing the
change in just two weeks.
Rashkovan said he spoke with some Ukrainians on the street
outside his office about the new capability and they immediately opened an
account at PayPal.com to send money to their relatives. Ukrainian officials
have been pushing for the expanded services since 2015, after Russia annexed
the Crimea region, he added.
PayPal said it would start making the expanded services
available on Thursday, with customers able to send and receive funds from their
Ukrainian PayPal Wallet in dollars, Canadian dollars, British pounds and euros.
Once a customer transfers funds from their PayPal Wallet to
an eligible Visa or MasterCard debit or credit card, the money will be
available in the currency associated with that card.
While PayPal is waiving its fees for several weeks, it noted
exchange rates and fees charged by a customer's card issuer or bank account may
still apply.
Previously, Ukrainian citizens could send money from PayPal
accounts, but were unable to receive funds.
PayPal earlier this month shut down its services in Russia,
joining many financial and tech companies in suspending operations there after
its invasion of Ukraine. © Reuters