海角大神

Amid Western aid cuts, Ukraine families wonder how they鈥檒l get by

Ukrainian Olha Poltoratska holds her 9-month-old son, Ruslan, while daughter Dariia looks on, in a converted student dormitory that houses 178 Ukrainians displaced by war, in Kharkiv, Ukraine, Feb. 14, 2024.

Scott Peterson/Getty Images/海角大神

March 4, 2024

A budget crunch has brought new levels of uncertainty to the two cramped rooms of a student dormitory in Kharkiv.

There, Ukrainian mother Olha Poltoratska and her four children have been surviving on monthly payments provided to Ukrainians displaced by the war.

For most, those payments are now ending.

Why We Wrote This

With billions of dollars in additional U.S. aid to Ukraine held up in Congress for months, the impact is being felt not only by soldiers at the front, but also by civilians displaced by war and dependent on generosity.

鈥淚 can鈥檛 imagine how I can live without that,鈥 says Ms. Poltoratska, whose son, Ruslan, is 9 months old, has two teeth, and has a taste for the Ukrainian staple, beetroot borscht.

鈥淲hen I heard that news, I was amazed,鈥 says the distraught mother. 鈥淚 called my husband and said, 鈥榃hat are we going to do? Join the army to get money?鈥欌

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Ukraine relies on foreign aid for half of its annual budget, and months of continuing delays in American approval of a $60 billion military and support package for Ukraine is cutting deep, from a shortage of artillery shells on the battlefield to severe reduction in services.

The European Union in late February passed its own delayed package of $54 billion for Ukraine, for 2024 to 2027, which includes some $42 billion in direct budget support. Japan also gave $440 million in the first two months of the year, also for budget support.

But the uncertain Western cash flow to Ukraine has forced a broad belt-tightening, even as Russia鈥檚 invasion grinds into its third year and Russian forces go on the offensive.

Ms. Poltoratska first held her breath when Ukraine鈥檚 cash-strapped government announced that modest support payments to the legions of internally displaced people (IDPs) would end Feb. 1.

For her, that would have meant losing roughly $50 each for her and her two older daughters, and $75 each for her two small children 鈥撀燼 total of some $300 per month. They would then have to get by on $120 per month 鈥 the official payment to all mothers of four children.

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The cutoff was delayed until March 1, but today Ms. Poltoratska is still holding her breath, unsure if new rules that would continue payments to the most vulnerable people will include her family.

Olha Poltoratska speaks about the financial challenges she and other Ukrainians displaced by war face as foreign aid faces delays and monthly government payments become more uncertain, in Kharkiv, Ukraine, Feb. 14, 2024.
Scott Peterson/Getty Images/海角大神

Prices are high, for everything from diapers to vegetables, which they used to grow for themselves on their own plot in Kucherivka, a battle-scarred town just miles from Ukraine鈥檚 increasingly noisy northeastern front-line.

Both sides of her family, for three generations, worked at the nearby railroad hub, which is now destroyed. Ms. Poltoratska鈥檚 husband has stayed in the town, at the edge of territory liberated by Ukraine in a September 2022 counteroffensive, where he does volunteer work with occasional payment as a mechanic fixing military vehicles.

鈥淪ometimes he comes here, so we don鈥檛 forget what he looks like,鈥 says Ms. Poltoratska, who asked that his name not be used for his security. Two rooms in the converted student dormitory hang with drying laundry and are stuffed with cooking tools, a TV, and whatever else could be brought from home.

When the Russians were advancing in early 2022, the first shell to land in Kucherivka exploded in their front yard. Last August, after Russia stepped up air attacks on nearby Kupiansk and Ukrainian soldiers warned of the risk to the children, the family finally left for Kharkiv 鈥 Ukraine鈥檚 second-largest city, just 25 miles from the Russian border and itself a frequent target of rockets and missiles.

鈥淚f we believe what our government says to us, this money will be redirected to the army,鈥 says Ms. Poltoratska. She is not certain, though, that that is where it goes. Her older daughter, Lisa, had been in contact with a soldier from Lyman who told her that for three months in a row, the bulk of his $3,000 monthly salary had been delayed, and that he had instead received a tiny fraction of it.

鈥淚s this normal?鈥 Ms. Poltoratska聽asks.

For this family and so many others, the cash for IDPs has been a critical lifeline.

鈥淗ow can you leave these people with nothing?鈥 asks Valentyna Idrisova, who refurbished this student dormitory after it had been abandoned for two years in northwest Kharkiv. She calls the dorm her 鈥減ersonal combat zone鈥 and says it now accommodates 178 displaced Ukrainians, including 28 children.

Donations poured in after the sanctuary was open to IDPs last August, but they began to dry up in November, says Ms. Idrisova. Most of the temporary residents are retirees who receive a monthly pension of $60, she says, and live on that until the IDP payment comes.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 how it goes,鈥 she says. 鈥淭his is crucial money for them.鈥

Indeed, Ukrainian officials say that 40% of the displaced people depend entirely on state financial assistance for sustenance. But the cut in IDP payments 鈥 which reportedly aims to save $530 million of Ukraine鈥檚 annual budget 鈥 is just one facet of a broader financial shriveling, which partly stems from delayed Western support.

鈥淔inancial aid from the United States is crucial for maintaining macro-financial stability during the war,鈥 Ukrainian Finance Minister Sergii Marchenko tweeted in mid-February, after the Senate approved a long-delayed $60 billion aid package for Ukraine, which included $7.85 billion in direct budget support.

Still, the House has delayed its own vote, with Republicans tying the issue to domestic immigration measures.

Ukrainians pass blackened and boarded-up buildings at the National Academy of Legal Sciences in Kharkiv, Ukraine, Feb. 14, 2024. The academy was hit in a Russian missile strike Jan. 23.
Scott Peterson/Getty Images/海角大神

In Kharkiv, officials suggest that local budgets may shrink 40% this year. In a region that experienced widespread destruction during the invasion, then months of occupation and the Ukrainian counteroffensive, rebuilding depends on foreign cash 鈥 and, of course, the course of the war.

Anton Korotovskykh, director of the Department of Architecture and City Development for the Kharkiv region, lists a string of projects that have been identified for restoration.

鈥淏ut because Kharkiv is so close to the Russian border and there is shelling every day, most of these projects are in the aspirational phase,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he main challenge is refurbishing private residences, because people want to go back.鈥

Last year some 1,500 buildings, including multistory residential complexes, were restored. But with 50,000 buildings and homes damaged or destroyed in the region, 鈥渋t is going to be a long job,鈥 he says.

鈥淥f course, the biggest challenge is our big and reckless neighbor, which keeps destroying things,鈥 says Mr. Korotovskykh. 鈥淪o we focus on critical infrastructure like heating and electricity.鈥

The lack of resources is so profound, for example, that the fund for rebuilding destroyed roads 鈥渘ow is 0.0 鈥撀爐here is nothing,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e have expectations that this year we will have less for this, because we understand that the entire state budget is put into the military.鈥

Rebuilding must be done in a holistic way, such that those who might move back to refurbished homes also have schools, hospitals, and other facilities like bomb shelters for children, Mr. Korotovskykh adds.

鈥淥f course we have our fears鈥 about a shrinking or cutoff of Western aid, he says. 鈥淲e can鈥檛 talk of rebuilding without finance.鈥

Reporting for this story was supported by Oleksandr Naselenko.