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Cost of conflict: Ukraine’s economy stabilises after shock of war

Local residents buy food at a street market in front of apartment building heavily damaged in the beginning of Russia's attack on Ukraine, in the town of Borodianka, Kyiv region, Ukraine December 15, 2022.

OLENA HARMASH, of Reuters, reports on the impact of the ongoing war on Ukraine’s economy…

Kyiv, Ukraine
Reuters

When Russia invaded Ukraine a year ago, the shelves of the Novus supermarket chain in Kyiv quickly emptied as its supply chains – domestic and overseas – collapsed. Fresh produce became scarce and panic buying spread.

Oleksiy Panasenko, deputy director general for operations at the popular outlet, recalls how the business reeled before Novus, like many other large retail chains, managed to adapt.

“On the second day [of the war], there was already fighting on the outskirts of Kyiv,” he told Reuters. “In February and March, our shops became more than a place to buy food: they were a place to meet, to communicate; so-called islands of stability.”

And when Ukrainian troops forced Russia’s army to retreat from the capital in the spring, the retail sector and the broader economy rebounded.

Local residents buy food at a street market in front of apartment building heavily damaged in the beginning of Russia's attack on Ukraine, in the town of Borodianka, Kyiv region, Ukraine December 15, 2022.
Local residents buy food at a street market in front of apartment building heavily damaged in the beginning of Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in the town of Borodianka, Kyiv region, Ukraine on 15th December, 2022. PICTURE: Reuters/Valentyn Ogirenko/File photo.

Data from Ukraine’s European Business Association – which groups over 1,000 foreign and Ukrainian businesses – showed that by the end of May, 47 per cent of their members had fully restored operations and another 50 per cent were working with some limitations.

But then missile attacks began in October, dealing Ukraine a hammer blow. Russia struck at power grids and sub-stations across the country, leading to outages during the freezing winter and hitting heavy industry hard.

Data from Ukraine’s European Business Association – which groups over 1,000 foreign and Ukrainian businesses – showed that by the end of May, 47 per cent of their members had fully restored operations and another 50 per cent were working with some limitations.

The economy shrank by a third last year, the largest fall since Ukraine’s independence from the Soviet Union in 1991. Before Russia’s invasion, annual economic output had topped $US200 billion.

As the war enters its second year with no sign of slowing, the challenges are formidable. Reuters canvassed seven economists whose forecasts for 2023 ranged from a sizeable – though far less dramatic – decline of five per cent in gross domestic product to a small expansion.

Access to reliable power will be a major obstacle. While many businesses are finding ways to cope with war, those that cannot run on generators alone will struggle this year, according to the economists, two government officials and executives from two private companies.

ArcelorMittal Kryvyi Rih, Ukraine’s largest steel mill, said its production was currently at about 25 per cent of pre-war levels amid electricity blackouts.

“We see small and medium-sized businesses adapt fairly quickly to power shortages by purchasing generators, batteries, and other equipment, while infrastructure damage remains moderate,” said Olena Bilan, chief economist at Dragon Capital investment house, whose forecast was the most negative among the economists surveyed.

“If this situation persists, the fall in GDP in 2023 will not be as significant as we expect. But our forecast also envisages an end of the war’s hot phase at the end of third quarter of 2023,” said Bilan.

She added that because of international support for Ukraine, it was “realistic” to expect its forces to continue to win back territory occupied by the Russians.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has said the war is going according to plan, and casts it as a “special military operation” to protect Russia’s own security.

Ukraine’s central bank predicts GDP will grow by 0.3 per cent this year, while the economy ministry forecasts 3.2 per cent growth.

People walk in a park near the monument of Ukrainian poet Taras Shevchenko covered with a protective construction to protect against shelling, amid Russia's invasion, in central Kyiv, Ukraine February 8, 2023.
People walk in a park near the monument of Ukrainian poet Taras Shevchenko covered with a protective construction to protect against shelling, amid Russia’s invasion, in central Kyiv, Ukraine, on 8th February, 2023. PICTUIRE: Reuters/Gleb Garanich/File photo.

By last summer, Ukrainian officials had already started sounding more confident about the country’s economy, in particular after a UN-brokered grain export deal.

The agreement saved Ukraine’s agriculture, which accounted for about 12 per cent of GDP and some 40 per cent of overall exports before the war.

As of mid-February, Ukraine’s grain exports for the 2022-2023 season – which runs July to June – had fallen 29.3 per cent year-on-year to 29.7 million tonnes.

A massive increase in military spending, including army wages, has also provided a boost to the economy, said Vitaly Vavrishchuk, head of research at ICU investment house. Ukraine spent 1.5 trillion hryvnias ($US40.6 billion) on its defence sector in 2022 – equivalent to around one-third of its economic output – according to the National Security Council.

That was around five times higher than its planned pre-war defence budget.



Tens of billions of dollars in foreign assistance have poured in, both to help plug the budget deficit and arm Ukrainian forces.

But despite the positives, Ukraine is well behind where it was before the war began. And the economic toll is staggering.

The invasion destroyed schools, hospitals, ports, roads and bridges. The Kyiv School of Economics estimated the damage to infrastructure due to the war at $US138 billion as of December.

Poverty rates have soared and the budget deficit is forecast to hit $US38 billion in 2023 following a collapse in tax revenues. The government is depending on Western aid to cover it – most of it from the United States and the European Union.

“Ukraine’s government took measures that helped to reduce the monthly deficit in 2023 to $US3 to $US3.5 billion, which is still a huge figure,” Finance Minister Serhiy Marchenko said, noting there was also a need for infrastructure investment to fuel a recovery.

Vessels are seen as they await inspection under the Black Sea Grain Initiative, brokered by the United Nations and Turkey, in the southern anchorage of the Bosphorus in Istanbul, Turkey December 11, 2022.
Vessels are seen as they await inspection under the Black Sea Grain Initiative, brokered by the United Nations and Turkey, in the southern anchorage of the Bosphorus in Istanbul, Turkey on 11th December, 2022. PICTURE: Reuters/Yoruk Isik/File photo. 

President Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s government has called on donors to start planning for the massive task of reconstruction this year, though it recognizes large scale building will be difficult until some peace returns.

Between 40 per cent and 60 per cent of the energy sector has been damaged, according to Marchenko, who said at a recent roundtable in February that he could often hear attack drones buzzing above his house or the building of his ministry.

Business events are often held in underground shelters for security. Blackouts are regular. Novus’s Panasenko said the company lost about 30 per cent of the stores’ opening hours in Kyiv in December and some 20 per cent in January.

The steel sector, a key pillar of the economy, is among the hardest hit. Ukraine was the world’s 14th largest producer of steel before the war.

Two leading steel producers, Azovstal and MMK Illicha in Mariupol, were destroyed and are officially bankrupt.


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Those that remain are struggling with power outages.

“Blackouts for companies like us are a big issue,” Mauro Longobardo, general director of ArcelorMittal Kryvyi Rih. The company recently started to import electricity, but the costs were high. He did not provide further details.

Ukraine’s electricity system is connected to the European grid, where prices are higher, and it has imported energy from neighbouring Slovakia.

Energy deficits are not the only challenge for ArcelorMittal.

Its warehouse in Kryviy Rih, some 400 kilometres south-east of Kyiv, was hit by three Russian missiles in early December and one worker was killed, Longobardo said.

ArcelorMittal’s mining facility in a recently liberated area was strewn with landmines and most of the related infrastructure damaged.

Logistics are another headache for the company, which used to export up to 80 per cent of its output. Russia blocked Ukraine’s Black Sea ports and Longobardo had to work on new export routes through Poland.

Despite the challenges, ArcelorMittal, Ukraine’s biggest foreign investor, is committed to stay.

FILE PHOTO: A view shows the Kharkiv TEC-5 thermal power plant after being hit by a Russian missile strike during an attack on Ukraine, Kharkiv, Ukraine September 11, 2022. REUTERS/Gleb Garanish/File Photo
A view shows the Kharkiv TEC-5 thermal power plant after being hit by a Russian missile strike during an attack on Ukraine, Kharkiv, Ukraine, on 11th September, 2022. PICTURE: Reuters/Gleb Garanish/File photo.

The largest employer in Kryviy Rih, the birthplace of Zelenskiy, it has kept its 26,000 employees on the payroll despite a production fall. Longobardo said ArcelorMittal would invest $US130 million this year. Such plans are rare now.

The outlook for some other sectors is more positive.

Economy ministry data showed Ukraine imported 669,400 generators last year, including over 300,000 in December alone. Panasenko said 52 out of Novus’s 82 stores were already equipped with generators.

ICU’s Vavrishchuk saw the economy continuing to adapt, and sectors with high state financing would benefit the most.

But obvious security risks were deterring private investments, crucial for a robust recovery.

Ukraine has a mixed record on attracting foreign private investment. In 2021, it ranked as the second-lowest country in Europe on Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index, behind only Russia.

Vavrishchuk said the country would need to enforce the rule of law, ensure transparency and fair competition.

“Participation in the post-war reconstruction could be attractive for investors,” he said. “But still we will have to address all those issues (transparency and corruption) that we have not had time to before the war began.”

 

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