From the DW:
“How much could it cost to
rebuild Ukraine?”
As Ukraine's energy
infrastructure comes under sustained Russian attack, two summits in Berlin will
seek to spur the country's post-war reconstruction. Germany has proposed a
Marshall Fund for Kyiv — but who will pay? Exactly eight months to the day
since Russian tanks first rolled into Ukraine, Moscow's forces are intensifying
their attacks on its neighbor's energy infrastructure. Russian shells and drones have also targeted
Ukrainian cities for the first time in months, including the capital Kyiv, in
retaliation for recent Ukrainian military gains. As Moscow escalates the
conflict, Germany will this week host two summits in Berlin aimed at helping
Ukraine quickly rebuild its critical infrastructure and ensure the country's
postwar recovery. The first event, on Monday, will be a German-Ukrainian
economic forum; while the second, on Tuesday, is the Recovery of Ukraine
conference organized by the German government in its role as the current holder
of the rotating G7 presidency and the European Commission. Berlin has insisted
that Tuesday's event is a summit of experts, not a donor conference.
Representatives from the G7 and G20 leading economic powers are expected to
attend alongside international organizations, civil society and business
leaders.
War bill grows by the day Meanwhile,
the mammoth cost of supporting Ukraine against Russia's forces is multiplying
day by day. At least a third of the existing loans and grants pledged by
the rest of the world go to plug a roughly €4 billion ($3.94 billion) monthly
shortfall in the Ukrainian government budget. The European Union, along
with the United States and other countries, including Britain and Canada,
already jointly committed €93 billion in weapons, loans, and humanitarian aid
to the Kyiv government between February and early October, according to a tally
by the Kiel Institute for the World Economy. With an estimated 30-35%
contraction in gross domestic product this year alone, Ukraine is already
struggling to pay for the war, let alone meet its existing debt commitments or
its own reconstruction.
New Marshall Plan touted As
Kyiv's finances worsen, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and European Commission
President Ursula von der Leyen have proposed a Marshall Fund for Ukraine. The
name is a reference to the multibillion-dollar program created by Washington
following World War II to help rebuild Europe. In a joint article for
the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung newspaper published Monday, the pair said a
"generational effort" to rebuild Ukraine must begin immediately. "We
have to start building destroyed residential buildings, schools, roads, bridges
— the infrastructure and the energy supply now so that the country can get back
on its feet quickly," the two European leaders wrote. "The
shape of the reconstruction will determine which country Ukraine will be in the
future. A constitutional state with strong institutions? An agile and modern
economy? A vibrant democracy that belongs to Europe?" In his video
podcast on Saturday, Scholz said the international community would need to make
a huge commitment to Ukraine's reconstruction in order "to make it work
well" and said countries would need
to pledge financial support for
"many, many years" or even "decades."
Russian damage estimated at
$750 billion Ukrainian Prime
Minister Denis Schmyhal told the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung on Sunday that
the damage caused by Russia's invasion has already reached "more than $750
billion (€762 billion)." In August, the World Bank, the European
Commission and the Ukrainian government put aggregate losses in the country as
of June 1 at more than $252 billion, with estimated reconstruction and recovery
needs at $348.5 billion. But that was before Russia stepped up its
conflict by targeting Ukrainian power facilities and cities. An op-ed
that appeared in The Washington Post this weekend estimated the bill could even
reach $1 trillion. Schmyhal called for the release of the estimated
$300-500 billion in Russian assets frozen by Western sanctions in retaliation
for launching the war, which could be used for reconstruction. "We
should develop a mechanism for seizing Russian assets," he urged.
Donors' budget woes,
transparency will determine response Donor nations must grapple with the
prospect of huge financial commitments to Kyiv while many deal with their own
high levels of indebtedness, surging inflation and slowing economic growth. At
the same time, they will be looking for cast-iron guarantees from Kyiv that the
funds will be used for their intended purposes. After all, the group
Transparency International has ranked Ukraine as Europe's third-most-corrupt
country after Russia and Azerbaijan. The editorial by The Washington
Post detailed how hundreds of millions of dollars in foreign aid has been
siphoned off in recent years by Ukrainian oligarchs, describing how the
government has been complicit in allowing them to use Ukraine’s state-run
companies as ATMs.
EU must address donation
deficit Corruption concerns may explain the EU's hesitancy in committing
and dispersing funds to the Kyiv government until now, compared with the US, as
noted by Kiel's Ukraine Support Tracker. "The US is now committing
nearly twice as much as all EU countries and institutions combined," wrote
Christoph Trebesch, head of the team compiling the tally. "This is
a meager showing for the bigger European countries, especially since many of
their pledges are arriving in Ukraine with long delays. The low volume of new commitments
in the summer now appears to be continuing systematically." Guy
Verhofstadt, a European parliamentarian from Belgium, also lambasted the EU's
response on Twitter last week, saying "Europe is slow to pledge and even
slower to deliver," labeling the policy "political amateurism &
geopolitical madness." European leaders will be keen to learn from
the mistakes of previous postwar rebuilding efforts, including in Afghanistan,
Iraq and Bosnia, and will likely insist that Ukraine show concrete plans to
make the rule of law and judicial reforms needed to weed out corruption before
they disperse with billions of reconstruction funds.
^ It is 8 months to the day that
Russia started their Genocidal War in Ukraine. With each day of Russian bombs,
drones and missiles destroying more Ukrainian towns and cities and killing more
Ukrainians the cost only goes up. Russia needs to be defeated and quickly.
The following link has a good tracker
on which Countries and Groups have supported Ukraine and which have not:
https://www.ifw-kiel.de/topics/war-against-ukraine/ukraine-support-tracker/?cookieLevel=not-set
^
https://www.dw.com/en/how-much-could-it-cost-to-rebuild-ukraine/a-63533638
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