VoxTalks Economics

S9 Ep15: What's next for Ukraine: Reconstruction

Feb 27, 2026
Andrii Parkhomenko, urban economist tracking Ukraine's housing and population shifts. Martina Kirchberger, economist on procurement, labour flexibility, and prep for big investment. Edward Glaeser, Harvard urban economist on city-scale rebuilding. They debate where to concentrate reconstruction, balancing planning with individual choice. They compare decentralised Tokyo-style rebuilding to centralised approaches and discuss procurement, labour supply, and sequencing challenges.
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INSIGHT

Soviet Housing Makes Ukrainian Cities Fragile

  • Ukraine's urban fabric is Soviet-era and poorly adapted to modern needs, with 90% of housing built before 1990 and severe congestion in medium-size cities.
  • Edward Glaeser and Andrii Parkhomenko highlight Kyiv's outsized role and examples like Kyiv and Lviv ranking among the world's top 40 most congested cities despite modest population sizes.
INSIGHT

Rebuild Where The Economy Was Already Moving

  • Economic activity had been shifting westward before the war, moving away from heavy industry in the east and south toward services and EU-linked cities.
  • Parkhomenko uses pre-war trends to argue reconstruction should at least partly follow where people and markets were relocating, not only where damage is greatest.
ADVICE

Let People Choose Where To Rebuild

  • Prioritize individual choice: let Ukrainians decide where to live rather than imposing a single planner's view of efficiency.
  • Edward Glaeser argues reconstruction must respect autonomy while sensibly locating infrastructure where people choose to settle.
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