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Geopolitics & PoliticsSunday, June 28, 2026

Ukraine’s $154 Billion Western Aid Request Coincides with Russian Fiscal Strain

As EU funds enable a jump in Kyiv’s defence spending, Swedish voices demand labour rights in reconstruction, while a former Russian central banker warns of Moscow’s eroding economic buffers.

The European Union’s release of 90 billion euros has enabled Ukraine to increase its defence budget by 55 per cent, a step that Russian military bloggers view with unease, according to Swedish media reports. Simultaneously, data from the Ukrainian finance ministry, relayed by Russian state agency TASS, projects that Kyiv will require at least 154 billion dollars in Western aid through 2030 to maintain government operations. These figures, described as preliminary, encompass loans, non-repayable assistance, and the anticipated use of frozen Russian assets under the Economic Resilience Action (ERA) programme.

Amid this financial calculus, reconstruction planning is being shaped by calls to embed labour standards. A senior Swedish trade union official, writing in Göteborgs-Posten, argues that channelling investment through social dialogue and adherence to International Labour Organization core conventions is essential to prevent cost overruns and delays. The commentary urges the government in Stockholm to condition Swedish-backed projects on trade union involvement and workplace protections. Viewed from northern Europe, the integration of such industrial-relations frameworks is perceived as a prerequisite for turning infrastructure pledges into durable economic activity.

On the Russian side, fiscal buffers are shrinking. Former central bank adviser Alexandra Prokopenko, in a Financial Times commentary cited by Indonesian publication Republika, describes how the Kremlin is dismantling its own budgetary rules to sustain war spending. The federal deficit has reached roughly 2.6 per cent of GDP, double the level recorded for all of 2024, and the National Wealth Fund is being depleted. Prokopenko warns that Moscow can no longer simultaneously finance the war, control inflation, and maintain growth, a dynamic she characterises as a “retreat of a regime.” Concurrently, Ukrainian drone strikes against oil refineries and defence plants inside Russian territory are adding to logistical and political pressure.

International support presents a mixed picture. While Bulgaria has halted military aid following a change of government, EU-level financing is partly compensating for reduced U.S. engagement under the Trump administration. In Sweden, civil society groups remain highly active, raising funds for humanitarian relief and energy infrastructure, and preserving Ukraine’s political visibility during events such as Almedalen Week. Kyiv’s funding projections are expected to be refined in ongoing talks with the IMF, World Bank, and Western capitals, with the ERA mechanism forming a central pillar. On the Russian side, analysts note that the rewriting of fiscal rules may buy time but deepens long-term economic fragility.

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Upd. 01:40 PM2 languages · 3 outlets
PreviousGeopolitics & PoliticsNext
3 outlets|2 languages|2 min read
Sunday, June 28, 2026

Ukraine’s $154 Billion Western Aid Request Coincides with Russian Fiscal Strain

As EU funds enable a jump in Kyiv’s defence spending, Swedish voices demand labour rights in reconstruction, while a former Russian central banker warns of Moscow’s eroding economic buffers.

The European Union’s release of 90 billion euros has enabled Ukraine to increase its defence budget by 55 per cent, a step that Russian military bloggers view with unease, according to Swedish media reports. Simultaneously, data from the Ukrainian finance ministry, relayed by Russian state agency TASS, projects that Kyiv will require at least 154 billion dollars in Western aid through 2030 to maintain government operations. These figures, described as preliminary, encompass loans, non-repayable assistance, and the anticipated use of frozen Russian assets under the Economic Resilience Action (ERA) programme.

Amid this financial calculus, reconstruction planning is being shaped by calls to embed labour standards. A senior Swedish trade union official, writing in Göteborgs-Posten, argues that channelling investment through social dialogue and adherence to International Labour Organization core conventions is essential to prevent cost overruns and delays. The commentary urges the government in Stockholm to condition Swedish-backed projects on trade union involvement and workplace protections. Viewed from northern Europe, the integration of such industrial-relations frameworks is perceived as a prerequisite for turning infrastructure pledges into durable economic activity.

On the Russian side, fiscal buffers are shrinking. Former central bank adviser Alexandra Prokopenko, in a Financial Times commentary cited by Indonesian publication Republika, describes how the Kremlin is dismantling its own budgetary rules to sustain war spending. The federal deficit has reached roughly 2.6 per cent of GDP, double the level recorded for all of 2024, and the National Wealth Fund is being depleted. Prokopenko warns that Moscow can no longer simultaneously finance the war, control inflation, and maintain growth, a dynamic she characterises as a “retreat of a regime.” Concurrently, Ukrainian drone strikes against oil refineries and defence plants inside Russian territory are adding to logistical and political pressure.

International support presents a mixed picture. While Bulgaria has halted military aid following a change of government, EU-level financing is partly compensating for reduced U.S. engagement under the Trump administration. In Sweden, civil society groups remain highly active, raising funds for humanitarian relief and energy infrastructure, and preserving Ukraine’s political visibility during events such as Almedalen Week. Kyiv’s funding projections are expected to be refined in ongoing talks with the IMF, World Bank, and Western capitals, with the ERA mechanism forming a central pillar. On the Russian side, analysts note that the rewriting of fiscal rules may buy time but deepens long-term economic fragility.

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