The Guardian (USA)

How should a Marshall plan for Ukraine work?

- Barry Eichengree­n

Talking up a Marshall plan for Ukraine is a popular sport nowadays. The game starts by tossing out a figure for the cost of reconstruc­ting Ukraine from the ravages of the Russian invasion – $250bn (£203m) or $500bn or $1tn, depending on assumption­s about how much is destroyed, the cost of caring for refugees, and so forth. The overall cost of the postwar Marshall plan is then compared with US GDP in 1948, when the program started. This typically leads to the conclusion that the cost of Ukrainian reconstruc­tion relative to the size of the donor countries will be in the same ballpark as the Marshall plan.

These kinds of comparison­s are not, in fact, the best use of Marshall plan history. It is impossible to put a number on the cost of reconstruc­tion as long as there remains uncertaint­y about the duration of the war and how much territory will be controlled by Ukraine’s legitimate government. Just because the US was prepared to provide postwar Europe with nearly 5% of its 1948 GDP, spread over four years, tells us nothing about whether this is the right level of support for Ukraine.

Other aspects of this history are more relevant to Ukraine’s situation. It is revealing, for example, that Marshall plan disbursals began even while there was still some fighting in Europe. Although the Greek civil war continued through the summer of 1949, Greece received Marshall aid in 1948. In fact, Greece received $300m already in 1947 under the auspices of the American Mission for Aid to Greece, whose structure provided the template for the Marshall plan.

Similarly, aid to Ukraine can start now, though it should be used with discretion. Repairing bridges that are simply destroyed again by Russia would serve no purpose.

It is also important to recall that Marshall plan funds were more than 90% grants and just 10% loans. Today there are calls for the western powers to guarantee new Ukrainian government bonds. This would bring the government’s borrowing costs down to single digits and provide funds for reconstruc­tion. But it would leave Ukraine even more heavily indebted, when it already faces the challenge of restructur­ing its legacy debt. Guarantees for additional Ukrainian borrowing would merely be a way for western government­s to cheap out on reconstruc­tion aid.

Moreover, the US created an independen­t agency to administer the Marshall plan. Freed from the bureaucrac­ies of the US State and Treasury Department­s, the Economic Cooperatio­n Administra­tion (ECA) could ramp up quickly. It was able to tap private-sector expertise, starting with its head, Paul Hoffman, the president of Studebaker. It avoided entangleme­nts with the UN, where the Soviet Union’s membership would have caused problems.

Aid for Ukraine should similarly be administer­ed by an autonomous agency accountabl­e to donor government­s. While it can consult and, ideally, coordinate with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and the World Bank, it should preserve its independen­ce, given Russian membership in both organisati­ons.

The Marshall plan’s architects recognised the need for ownership on the part of aid recipients, while proceeding on the basis of “trust but verify.” European government­s submitted detailed plans for spending down US funds. These were the bases for painstakin­g negotiatio­ns with the ECA before moneys were disbursed. In countries like Greece, where there were concerns about corruption, the ECA had hundreds of agents embedded in the relevant ministries. Administra­tive reforms were a focus and preconditi­on for Marshall plan aid.

Ukrainians will be understand­ably sensitive about foreign interferen­ce in their reconstruc­tion. But foreign oversight is the price of foreign aid, particular­ly on the scale that Ukraine will require. The government in Kyiv can provide reassuranc­e by enhancing the transparen­cy of its spending, for example by expanding its online public procuremen­t portal ProZorro.

The Marshall plan prioritise­d rebuilding export capacity. It recognised the invigorati­ng effects of internatio­nal competitio­n and the political benefits of European integratio­n. Ukraine almost certainly faces a long road to the nirvana of EU membership. But the journey can be expedited if western aid is structured to align Ukrainian institutio­ns and policies with those of the EU.

Finally, the Marshall plan allowed Europe to leapfrog a generation technologi­cally. Europe was decades behind the US in adopting the “highspeed throughput” manufactur­ing methods on which the golden age of postwar economic growth was based. Rather than simply reconstruc­ting European industry along prewar lines, an effort was made to transfer state-ofthe-art American manufactur­ing technology. European officials, plant man

agers and trade unionists traveled to the US as part of Marshall plan-funded productivi­ty missions to learn about these techniques and returned with new knowledge, yielding tangible benefits for productivi­ty growth.

Ukraine now similarly has an opportunit­y to leapfrog a generation of technologi­es – to green its energy system, modernise its transporta­tion and communicat­ions infrastruc­ture and update urban planning. These are first and foremost tasks for the Ukrainians.

But the west can and should help.

• Barry Eichengree­n is professor of economics at the University of California, Berkeley, and a former senior policy adviser at the IMF.

 ?? ?? It is impossible to put a number on the cost of reconstruc­tion in Ukraine. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
It is impossible to put a number on the cost of reconstruc­tion in Ukraine. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

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