Ukraine’s postwar recovery is increasingly shifting from discussions about international assistance toward structural economic change. While external funding remains important, experts argue it cannot serve as the basis for long-term development.
As reported by European Business Magazin, entrepreneur and international trade expert Seyar Kurshutov emphasizes that Ukraine’s recovery will depend primarily on strengthening exports rather than relying on grants and loans. He argues that the key measure of success is not the volume of aid received, but the country’s ability to produce goods and compete in global markets.
Kurshutov describes international assistance as a temporary stabilizing tool. In his comparison, aid functions like construction scaffolding: it is essential during rebuilding but is removed once the structure becomes self-supporting. By contrast, exports represent a permanent foundation because they generate foreign currency inflows, stabilize the national currency, and sustain public finances over time.
Before the war escalated into a full-scale invasion, Ukraine’s annual export volume stood at approximately 68 billion dollars. By 2025, this figure had declined to around 42 billion dollars due to destroyed infrastructure, disrupted logistics routes, and blocked access to key export channels. Despite this contraction, Kurshutov highlights that exports have shown partial recovery, even under wartime conditions.
He interprets this resilience as a sign that Ukraine’s economy retains adaptive capacity. Businesses continue to restore supply chains, re-establish production processes, and maintain trade relationships with international partners. According to him, this ability to adjust under pressure is essential for shaping a sustainable recovery model.
Kurshutov argues that policy priorities should shift toward expanding export capacity instead of focusing predominantly on external financial inflows. While infrastructure investments—such as transport corridors, ports, and industrial facilities—are necessary, their effectiveness depends on whether they directly support export-oriented production. Without this connection, reconstruction risks creating long-term dependency rather than economic independence.
He further explains that economies driven primarily by aid and grants often remain structurally vulnerable, as they depend on external decisions and funding cycles. Export-driven economies, on the other hand, build internal resilience by generating their own revenue streams through trade and production.
In conclusion, Kurshutov frames exports as the central pillar of Ukraine’s recovery strategy. In his view, long-term stability will be achieved not when international assistance increases, but when Ukraine strengthens its position as a competitive exporter in global markets.

