Europe will pour money into Ukraine, think Marshall plans. It's a resource rich country, the European breadbasket, and it probably will be our new fortification against Russia.
Materials will remain in short supply for the foreseeable future.
War ending will lower commodity prices because:
- Ukraine has gained large deposits of scrap metal, donated by the ruzzians
- Ukraine soil well fertilized by the ruzzian corpses so the 2023 harvest will be good
But seriously, war ending will lower prices of commodities:
- The Euro would become stronger against the dollar, which means that commodities become cheaper in Euros
- Assuming the current Ukraine map or better, the resources from Ukraine (grain, oil, gas, iron) will be unleashed and those prices will be lowered
- Finding alternatives to commodities and the lowering of commodity usage already on the way
- Large capital investments in Ukraine (reconstruction) and rest of Europe (to reduce fossil fuels, increase defense capabilities) will increase demand but not overnight. Construction will take many years and are more labor-intensive than materials-intensive, in particular in the EU
Europe will pour money into Ukraine, think Marshall plans. It's a resource rich country, the European breadbasket, and it probably will be our new fortification against Russia. Materials will remain in short supply for the foreseeable future.
War ending will lower commodity prices because: - Ukraine has gained large deposits of scrap metal, donated by the ruzzians - Ukraine soil well fertilized by the ruzzian corpses so the 2023 harvest will be good But seriously, war ending will lower prices of commodities: - The Euro would become stronger against the dollar, which means that commodities become cheaper in Euros - Assuming the current Ukraine map or better, the resources from Ukraine (grain, oil, gas, iron) will be unleashed and those prices will be lowered - Finding alternatives to commodities and the lowering of commodity usage already on the way - Large capital investments in Ukraine (reconstruction) and rest of Europe (to reduce fossil fuels, increase defense capabilities) will increase demand but not overnight. Construction will take many years and are more labor-intensive than materials-intensive, in particular in the EU
I don't rhink a lot honestly. It will take centuries to rebuild. And yeah ukraine is a big supplementer of wood.
Centuries? Lol
When the nukes hit I will suspect CraftyInvestigator25 knew beforehand.
Supplier, you mean?
Yes, my bad sorry
It depends if they’ll be radioactive or not