Share.

    15 commenti

    1. Horsepankake on

      Summary:

      Since the all-out Russian invasion in 2022, Ukraine’s economy has faced immense challenges but has demonstrated remarkable adaptability. Farmers like Mykhailo Travetsky, operating under wartime conditions, have pivoted to new products and adjusted business models to survive. The economy has evolved through three phases: crisis management during heavy fighting, stabilization after military successes, and a current phase of addressing acute shortages in power, labor, and finances.

      Key developments include:

      Economic Resilience: Ukraine’s GDP is stabilizing, with expected growth of 4% in 2024, outperforming Russia’s projected growth. Inflation and interest rates are under control, and the currency is stable. (Ukraine’s central bank forecasts GDP to grow 4.3% in 2025. The currency is stable and interest rates, at 13.5%, remain near their lowest in 30 months. Contrast that with Russia, where rates should soon hit 23% to arrest the rouble’s fall, banks look fragile and GDP is set to grow by just 0.5-1.5% in 2025.)

      Adaptations: Businesses have relocated to safer regions, shifted operations abroad, and war-proofed assets. Private and public firms have innovated, with initiatives such as mapping war damage and using alternative energy sources.

      Exports and Aid: Despite Russian blockades, Ukraine has reopened maritime corridors and resumed exports of grain and metals. Western aid has bolstered foreign reserves and financed public spending, which now accounts for two-thirds of GDP.

      Power Shortages: Russian attacks on energy infrastructure have created electricity deficits, but coping mechanisms like imports, renewable energy, and generators have limited the impact.

      Labor Shortages: The workforce has shrunk by over 20%, complicating efforts to balance military needs with economic productivity. Rising wages and low unemployment highlight the tight labor market.

      Financial Strain: Borrowing is challenging, business costs are high, and the government faces a 20% budget deficit for 2025, largely reliant on external aid.

      Ukraine’s future depends on continued Western support, especially from the U.S., which may waver after 2025. While businesses show cautious optimism, significant obstacles remain, including energy reliability, labor constraints, and financial stability.

    2. Astarogal on

      Why am I hearing about economic disasters for Russia since the start of the war but don’t really see it in reality? Our country is still number 1 exporter of alcohol to Russia and you would think that should have been ended.

      Yet our politicians are more focused to enforce confiscation of Christmas presents from and to Russia instead because going after single people is easier than businesses they earn from.

    3. The_Hussar on

      Even if this is true it’s a Pyrrhic victory given how much aid they received and the economic crisis in Germany. Also I wouldnt describe 20% deficit as victory.

    4. WallabyInTraining on

      Unfortunately economic hardship for the population does not topple the regime. An uprising is unlikely and voting is pointless. As long as there are bodies for the meat grinder and shells for the artillery Russia will advance.

      That doesn’t mean sanctions are ineffective, just that they don’t end the war.

    5. Illustrious_One9088 on

      Considering how active the troll farms are on these news posts, things truly seem dire. “Guys everything is fine in Russia” is almost as believable as the shit Lavrov keeps spewing.

    6. Russian local goverments provide and duma is planning to provide food stamps on global level for ~12 million people. It does not look like economical success.

    7. Fickle-Message-6143 on

      Ukraine currently is only winning PR war against Russia.

      For most of Russians life became little worse, just like for EU people, while for Ukrainians just having life is luxury.

    8. Next_Yesterday_1695 on

      You can’t be serious about this. Ukraine is on life support with massive cash infusions from the EU. Take that away and there’s a massive budget deficit.

    9. Working_Sir9082 on

      And let us not for get all the winning that Germany, one of the main sponsors, is getting. We got here already tired of all the winning.

    10. JoiousTrousers92 on

      Yea, the RU economy has been crashing since the first month of the war. Anytime now. -.-

    11. kissja74 on

      EU financial support wins, not Ukranie. And EU countries, the citizens want peace asap,, nobody cares with the pride of the Ukrainian leader.

    Leave A Reply