'It could be trillions': how much will it cost to rebuild Ukraine?
Ukraine was russia - REUTERS
Ukraine was russia - REUTERS

Russian forces have retreated from Kyiv and its surrounds, pulling back in the face of fierce resistance from Ukrainians.

But locals cannot relax yet: the war is far from over and Moscow has showered every corner of the country with missiles, so more bombs could yet hit the capital.

Professor Igor Burakovsky, Kyiv resident and director of the Institute for Economic Research and Policy Consulting, says May 9 is a date when locals fear more Russian action.

“They celebrate victory in the Second World War, and for them it would be a kind of opportunity to demonstrate something,” he says.

“I’m not sure if they will launch another attack against the city of Kyiv, but some bombardments or military actions could be launched. I know a lot of people who are a bit afraid of coming back. Russia does not want to leave my poor country.”

Despite the violence, he hopes to travel to Warsaw next month for a conference on rebuilding Ukraine.

It might seem premature to plan reconstruction when destruction is still being wrought on Mariupol and the East, but economists are preparing to spring into action to restore the nation at the first opportunity.

Valeria Gontareva, former governor of the National Bank of Ukraine, says she put in place plans for just this eventuality after the earlier war in Donbas and Russia’s annexation of Crimea. The plan fixed exchange rates, restricted capital outflows and injected support into the banking system from day one of this invasion.

Those previous conflicts were extremely damaging - she estimates Ukraine lost a fifth of its GDP - but this war is of a far more devastating scale.

The World Bank expects Ukraine to lose 45pc of its GDP this year.

Gontareva lists the damage: a budget deficit amounting to 30pc of GDP this year, “export capacity destroyed completely; the main ports are occupied; it is catastrophic loss not only for today, it is for years ahead,” she told an event at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

“The total economic loss of today is estimated at $564bn, including $270bn of infrastructure. Even when I prepared my presentation one week ago it was $150bn.

“It happens daily. It could be trillions. Nobody knows exactly when this war will be stopped.”

Analysts at the Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR) compared the situation to previous reconstruction efforts, from the Marshall Plan after the Second World War to the reunification of Germany in the 1990s to aid for Afghanistan and Iraq in the 2000s.

They tentatively estimate restoring Ukraine could take anywhere between €200bn and €500bn.