alexander rodnyansky, really good to see you again. alexander, let me start with this.nd look like today in ukraine? so, we are in a wartime economy. weapons are usually the best tools of economy policymaking during wartime, and that is because expectations are formed on the front line. if expectations are good, that leads to investment, etc. but the rest is also true. another example is air defence. if there is no air defence, the enemy can bombard our facilities, anything we use for infrastructure. that has a direct effect on the economy too. number two, we're obviosuly trying to stabilise the economy. initially, inflation went out. 0bviously, capital was flowing out, but our central bank did a very good job at managing the storm, essentially. controlling the exchange rate. and that led, actually, to a decline in inflation to the point where we actually reached our pre—invasion, normal peacetime inflation target, which is 5% inflation. alexander, i want to ask you is ukraine turning factories from one use into another, such as fridges to weapons of war? absolutely, th