CostofdamagetoUkrainianinfrastructure
Estimated,Febth-Aprth,$bn
Source: KyivSchoolofEconomics
Housing
.
Roads
.
Airports,ports
andrail
.
Healthcare.
Schools.
Military
Other
.
.
The damage to Ukraine’s infrastructure
sofar has been put at more than $50bn,
according to a new estimate from Kyiv.
Theeconomy is devastated, so it will
needa lotofoutsidehelp.Littlehasyet
beenpledged.
World food prices soared to another
record high, as fears grew about the
impact of a poor harvest in Ukraine,
sanctions on Russia, and a shortage of
potash, a key ingredient of fertiliser,
from Russia and Belarus.
Damage to Ukraine Food prices
World Bank estimate of the reduction
in Ukraine’s GDP this year.
45%
20 Briefing The war in Ukraine The Economist April 16th 2022
Economic costs
The builder’s bill
W
hen the devastating war ended, the
country resembled a wasteland. Its
industrial infrastructure had been flat
tened by air raids and its great cities
bombed out with terrible loss of life. Rus
sianled forces occupied the east, with mil
lions fleeing their brutality. But West Ger
many’s economy recovered strongly after
1945, in what would soon be coined the
Wirtschaftswunder(economic miracle).
The parallels are hardly precise. Uk
raine was not the instigator of the war cur
rently laying much of it waste. It may end
up being the victor, and even if it does not
its devastation will not be as total. Never
theless, rebuilding will be a monumental
task. The war waged by Vladimir Putin has
not only claimed thousands of lives and
displaced millions of people, 7.1m inter
nally, 4.6m abroad. It has laid waste to
homes and hospitals, bridges and ports.
With no end to the hostilities in sight,
more destruction will surely follow.
Researchers from the Centre for Eco
nomic Policy Research (cepr), a network of
economists, have used data on property
damage, figures on the country’s capital
stock and historical analogies to estimate
the overall cost of what will have to be done
to rehabilitate the country after the war at
€200bn500bn ($220bn540bn). The up
per bound is over three times Ukraine’s
prewar gdp; the lower number is roughly
four times the eu’s foreignaid budget.
As the war continues, the damage will
increase and the economic wherewithal to
put it right will be eroded as the economy
contracts. Electricity consumption, a rea
sonably reliable proxy for economic activi
ty, is currently down by around a third
compared with a year ago. The Vienna In
stitute for International Economic Studies
(wiiw), a thinktank, reckons that the re
gions directly affected by the war account
for about 29% of Ukraine's output, and that
in those areas economic activity has more
or less ceased. According to a survey by the
central bank, 30% of firms around the
country have stopped producing entirely
and another 45% have reduced their out
put. The World Bank reckons that gdpwill
contract by 45% this year.
The challenge is vast. Yet the way in
which reconstruction happens, and the re
forms that accompany it, will be just as im
portant as the money spent. In principle
such sums could do more than just restore
Ukraine to its status quo—a good thing,
since that status quo was corrupt and dys
functional (see previous article). But if re
building is to transform the Ukrainian
economy into something more open and
dynamic a lot will have to change.
At the moment, the government is try
ing to limit the damage where it can.
Around $7bn in loans and financial aid
from the West has just about kept the pub
lic finances afloat. In an interview with the
Financial Times, Ukraine's finance minister
put the fiscal deficit at $2.7bn for March
alone, and projected monthly losses of
$57bn in April and May.
Despite this, various sectors of the
economy are getting bespoke help. Farm
ershave been given 20bn hryvnia ($675m)
with which to buy inputs and seeds for the
planting season now getting under way.
Manufacturers can apply for help to relo
cate within the country. With Russia block
ading Ukraine’s main export route through
the Black Sea, the government is working
with the euto make trading by land easier.
For all this, the postwar economy will
be a lot smaller than the prewar economy
was even as it faces new challenges. One is
clearing affected areas of landmines and
other explosive debris. Before the invasion
of February 24th Ukraine’s defence minis
try estimated it would cost €650m to de
mine the Donbas region, which was invad
ed by Russia in 2014. The figure will obvi
B ERLIN
The Ukrainian economy is in tatters and much of its infrastructure wrecked.
Setting things right could cost half a trillion dollars