- independence from Russia’s Gazprom,
- renegotiation of international debts,
- greater transparency of state purchases,
- improved trade with Europe, and
- a better business climate.
- a failure to get the economy growing under the stress of war,
- problems with the national currency,
- the collapse of the banking system,
- a tax system that oppresses many, and
- the fact that the billions that were stolen from the state in the past have “disappeared forever.”
- Unlike in Russia, pensions have been paid regularly and indexed again.
- Subsidies for the poor have increased.
- The system of social security has begun to be reformed.
- Education has been reformed.
- The national film industry has taken off.
- Jamala won the Eurovision contest which will bring that competition to Ukraine next year.
- And murals are transforming Ukrainian cities from their gray Soviet pasts.
On this Ukrainian Independence Day, the present author would like to suggest that Ukrainians might want to reflect even more broadly about what they have achieved by asking themselves the simple question: would they prefer to have the problems they had 25 years ago when Moscow controlled them and the world did not understand them? When it is as in 1991, many foreign leaders couldn't even find Ukraine on the map or insisted that the word “the” should be put in front of its name or that “the pursuit of independence is a form of suicidal nationalism”? Or would they prefer to be hearing what they are from Western leaders today, who are exploring how best to help Ukraine maintain its independence in the face of Russian aggression, who never put “the” in front of Ukraine, and who are sending their congratulations to Kyiv concerning Ukraine’s rejoining the international community? Such questions answer themselves. And thus, they are the questions that Ukrainians should be asking, not to avoid working on the problems they still face but to have the confidence that they can together with their friends and allies in the West achieve what all too many in both places only a few years ago thought impossible.If one looks only at the shortcomings and failures, the paper suggests, one might become quite pessimistic about Ukraine’s future; but if one considers its successes and how improbable they seemed only two years ago, one would draw an entirely different conclusion.
Related:
- Ukraine: 25 years of wandering in the desert
- How Russians see Ukraine's independence
- Interactive map of celebrations of Ukraine's 25th Independence Anniversary worldwide