Russia's war to shrink Ukraine economy 45 per cent: World Bank

By :  AP
Update: 2022-04-11 10:49 GMT

London, Apr 11: Ukraine's economy will shrink by 45.1 per cent this year because of Russia's invasion, which has shut down half of the country's businesses, choked off imports and exports, and damaged a vast amount of critical infrastructure, the World Bank has said.

Unprecedented sanctions imposed by Western allies in response to the war, meanwhile, are plunging Russia into a deep recession, lopping off more than a tenth of its economic growth, said the World Bank report on Sunday.

The war is set to inflict twice the amount of economic damage across Europe and Central Asia that the COVID-19 pandemic did, the Washington-based lender said in its "War in the Region" economic report.

"The magnitude of the humanitarian crisis unleashed by the war is staggering," said Anna Bjerde, the World Bank's vice president for the Europe and Central Asia region.

"The Russian invasion is delivering a massive blow to Ukraine's economy and it has inflicted enormous damage to infrastructure."

The report said economic activity was impossible in "large swathes of areas" in Ukraine because productive infrastructure like roads, bridges, ports and train tracks had been destroyed.

Ukraine plays a major role as a global supplier of agricultural exports like wheat but that's in question now because planting and harvesting have been disrupted by the war, the report said.

The war has cut off access to the Black Sea, a key route for exports, including 90 per cent of Ukraine's grain shipments, it said.

The World Bank said the humanitarian catastrophe will be the biggest shockwave from the war and likely its most enduring legacy, as the wave of refugees fleeing Ukraine is "anticipated to dwarf previous crises".

More than four million people have fled Ukraine, with more than half going to Poland and others heading to countries like Moldova, Romania and Hungary.

An additional 6.5 million have been displaced internally. Those numbers are expected to swell as the war drags on, the World Bank said.

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