When we talk about Ukraine’s recovery, the conversation almost always starts with numbers. The latest Rapid Damage and Needs Assessment (RDNA5) released by the Government of Ukraine, the World Bank Group, the European Commission, puts reconstruction and recovery needs at nearly $588 billion—a staggering figure that rightly commands global attention. Yet in my work with communities across Ukraine, I have come to see that there is a more difficult question, one asked far less often but may ultimately determine whether recovery succeeds or fails: who will actually deliver it?
Recovery is not built in spreadsheets. It is built in communities, by people who have the skills, the capacity, and the support to turn investment into real outcomes. Today, that is where the real constraint lies.
Across Ukraine, funding pipelines are taking shape and strategies are being developed. Yet on the ground, a different reality emerges. Local governments—the actors responsible for implementing recovery—often lack sufficient capacity in project management, procurement, and coordination. Businesses struggle to find qualified workers, even as many people remain unemployed or underemployed. This is not simply a labor shortage, but a structural mismatch between available skills and the demands of recovery.
Years of war have deepened this gap. Military mobilization, displacement, migration, and economic disruption have reshaped the workforce, leaving skilled professionals far from where they are needed most, while entire sectors are forced to adapt to new realities. The result is a paradox: there is both a shortage of skills and an untapped workforce at the same time. Until this gap is addressed, even well-financed recovery efforts will struggle to translate into results.
It is not enough to rebuild physical assets; we must also rebuild the human systems and capacity that make recovery possible. This means investing in people who can design and manage complex projects, strengthening institutions that can coordinate across sectors, and creating local ecosystems that connect education, business, and communities.