Cabinet establishes a single standard for evaluating investment projects — how it strengthens control over public spending

The Cabinet of Ministers approved rules for verifying the outcomes of public investments after project completion. This is the first unified mechanism in Ukraine — and it changes the approach to transparency, budget planning, and donor confidence.

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What was approved

The Cabinet of Ministers approved a new procedure for assessing the performance of public investments after their completion. According to the Ministry of Economy, the document introduces a single form of official conclusion, clear deadlines for inspections, and a division of responsibilities among the client, the implementer, and supervisory authorities.

What will be assessed

The assessment goes beyond purely financial reports: it will analyze economic benefit, social effect, and environmental impact. In this way the state will be able to compare expected indicators with actual results and systematically incorporate lessons when preparing new projects.

"The new procedure will create a unified standard of evidence for the effectiveness of investments — from finances to social impact."

— Ministry of Economy

Why this matters now

The decision came after the completion in 2025 of several large-scale projects where the absence of a unified approach complicated the assessment of results. The new procedure makes it possible not only to show citizens where the money went, but also to increase the confidence of international partners and investors.

As an example of social proof: on January 22 the first specialized infrastructure fund for Ukraine raised €200 million. Standardizing the assessment makes such investments more understandable and less risky for partners.

Implications for the budget and governance

For the state this means better information for budget planning: the successes and failures of projects will be formalized and can directly affect funding priorities. For the public — increased transparency and access to results.

What next

Now the key is implementation discipline: whether transparent reports will appear on time, how well they will be prepared by implementers, and whether the conclusions will be used in shaping future budgets. This is a test of the ability of state institutions to turn rules into real results.

Question for the reader: will standardization be able to measure what matters to the community — not just the numbers in reports, but real changes in people's lives?

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