• @tal
    link
    English
    1125 days ago

    I’d personally rather that countries send resources as grants and reserve the frozen assets for funding reconstruction in Ukraine, because I think that it’ll be politically-harder to obtain funds for that, and Ukraine will need aid then too.

    That being said, I’m coming from an American perspective; my understanding is that the American public has historically been more-okay with military aid than economic aid, relative to Europe, so…shrugs

    • @T00l_shed@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      425 days ago

      That is a valid point. I wasn’t thinking about the rebuilding post war bit. Doesn’t the US have its own stash of Russian money. It can send to Ukraine for rebuilding?

      • @tal
        link
        English
        425 days ago

        Probably. The US did freeze some. I don’t know whether the thing is being collectively-handled or on a per-country basis.

        kagis

        It sounds like there is some level of collective-decision-making involving both, and that more of the funds are frozen by Europe than the US.

        reads further

        This talks about both that and reconstruction costs:

        https://www.cfr.org/in-brief/how-frozen-russian-assets-could-pay-rebuilding-ukraine

        A recent assessment from the European Commission, the Government of Ukraine, the World Bank, and the United Nations estimated that at the one-year mark of the invasion, rebuilding Ukraine would cost $411 billion, with aid coming in from both the public and private sectors. This is more than double the size of Ukraine’s pre-invasion economy. The government says it needs some $14 billion to fund critical infrastructure projects in this year alone.

        So I’d guess that if anything, the number is higher now, if that represented damage at the one-year mark.

        The governments of the United States, Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the European Commission seized roughly $300 billion in Russian central bank assets not long after Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine last year, an extraordinary sum totaling about half of Russia’s foreign reserves at the time. Most of this money—more than $200 billion—is frozen in European accounts. These governments have also seized tens of billions of dollars in assets belonging to Russian oligarchs and private entities.

        So at least two-thirds of it was frozen by European governments. If they take different routes, whatever the Europe does – if it does one thing – will probably be where the larger portion of the funds go.