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Europe can’t afford to balk at fund­ing Ukraine’s war effort

Europe is strug­gling to come up with the cash to fund Ukraine’s war effort. Its debt-laden coun­tries would rather not stump up them­selves. And the European Com­mis­sion is still attempt­ing to get full sup­port for its pro­posal to use frozen Rus­sian assets to back up to €210bn in loans. The danger, however, is that inactiv­ity will be far more costly.

Think of this for a moment as a purely fin­an­cial ques­tion. On the one hand, Europe com­mits to fund­ing Ukraine’s war efforts for, say, four years, whether through one of the vari­ous schemes to lever­age frozen Rus­sian assets or, at a pinch, with mem­ber states put­ting up the money them­selves.

Estim­ates over how much this would cost vary: the IMF cal­cu­lates a fin­an­cing gap of $136bn to 2029, while a report from con­sultancy Cor­isk and the Nor­we­gian Insti­tute of Inter­na­tional Affairs reck­ons between €522bn and €838bn.

The pay-off comes if Ukraine can con­sequently push Rus­sia into a reas­on­able cease­fire. Pres­id­ent Vladi­mir Putin would hardly be in a pos­i­tion to demand the return of Rus­sia’s €210bn of frozen assets, mean­ing some or all of the ini­tial out­lay would be recouped.

And, while Europe has good reas­ons to raise its defence spend­ing any­way, Putin would be less likely to pose a fur­ther mil­it­ary threat.

Now con­sider the altern­at­ive path, where Europe fails to get its act together. Ukraine is then more likely to capit­u­late to a cease­fire on Rus­sia’s terms, which could see Putin shake off cur­rent sanc­tions and per­haps even return to the G8.

Europe, facing a wealth­ier and emboldened Rus­sia, would be under enorm­ous pres­sure to spend furi­ously on rap­idly bol­ster­ing its defences.

The costs of this scen­ario, too, could vary widely. Cor­isk thinks that a Rus­sian vic­tory would cost Europe between €1.2tn and €1.6tn over four years, includ­ing raised defence spend­ing and the prob­able influx of refugees. Dur­ing the cold war, UK defence spend­ing peaked in 1955-56 at 7.6 per cent of GDP. Get­ting Europe to that level from its cur­rent 1.6 per cent entails extra spend­ing of over $1tn a year.

These are sim­pli­fied out­comes, and there are oth­ers that lie some­where in between. But fund­ing Ukraine’s war effort is a bet­ter return on Europe’s buck than hav­ing to deter a vic­tori­ous Rus­sia itself.

War tran­scends pecu­ni­ary decisions, of course, but in so far as fin­ance mat­ters, the logical course is fairly clear.

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