Svyrydenko named the most promising professions after the war
Once the war in Ukraine ends, the most promising career opportunities will be in the energy, mechanical engineering, IT, and defense tech sectors.
According to the head of the government, scenarios for the country’s post-war development were modeled, and sectors that could become drivers of economic growth were identified.
“We’ve modeled a strategy for what might happen after the war ends—how we’ll rebuild, on what foundations, and which sectors will be more progressive. These will be energy, mechanical engineering, IT, defense tech, and basically everything tech-related. These are the sectors where we demonstrated our strength during the full-scale invasion, where we gained unique experience—this is what we can export and build upon,” Svyrydenko emphasized.
The Prime Minister stressed that the future of the Ukrainian economy is largely tied to high-tech sectors. In her view, the experience gained during the full-scale war allows Ukraine to develop competitive advantages and use them to enter international markets.
Svyrydenko paid particular attention to the rapid development of the defense industry, which has demonstrated unprecedented growth in recent years.
The head of government noted that just a few years ago, few could have predicted such rapid development of Ukraine’s defense-industrial complex.
“Everyone dreams of peering into the future through a crystal ball to determine which professions will be most in demand. Few could have imagined, for example, that our defense sector would make such a quantum leap in five years and that we would have 900 companies in this very field today. So listen to yourselves, understand and hear what speaks to your heart. And follow that path,” Svyrydenko concluded.
According to the government’s assessment, it is the technology sector, energy, machine building, and defense development that could form the foundation of Ukraine’s post-war recovery and long-term economic development.
This was stated by Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko during the “Education of the New Ukraine 2.0” forum, according to Ukrinform.
Earlier, Russian dictator Vladimir Putin stated that he sees no contradiction between a peace agreement with Ukraine and establishing full control over Donbas. He also reiterated Russia’s readiness for negotiations but emphasized that compromises must come from both sides.
Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov stated that the war against Ukraine could allegedly end “by the end of the day” provided that Ukrainian troops withdraw from territories that Russia considers “its own.”