Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Karnowski, Jakub, Szufel, Przemysław
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.02949
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1866908483393159168
author Karnowski, Jakub
Szufel, Przemysław
author_facet Karnowski, Jakub
Szufel, Przemysław
contents Oligarchic control exerts significant distortions on economic efficiency. Ukraine exemplifies this phenomenon, where oligarchs dominate key sectors and achieve economies of scale through vertical integration of coal mines, steel mills, and power plants while controlling critical infrastructure (e.g. access to transportation networks) to stifle competition. Their Soviet-era production chain monopolization strategies, coupled with political patronage networks (including both local and national governments), reinforce systemic inefficiencies and barriers to market entry. Although existing studies highlight the developmental benefits of de-oligarchization, this work advances the literature through computational modeling. We develop an agent-based model of a partially oligarch-controlled economy, where firms with heterogeneous production functions interact within a value-added network. Through numerical simulations, we quantify how different de-oligarchization policies affect aggregate GDP growth. The results indicate that the optimal de-oligarchization strategies are determined by the position of the oligarch in the production chain. Depending on the oligarch's position, dismantling oligarchic structures should either focus on removing oligarchs' access to raw materials or on breaking oligarchs' influence on other transactions in the production chain.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2508_02949
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Ukrainian-style oligarchic economies: how concentrated power undermines value added in production chains
Karnowski, Jakub
Szufel, Przemysław
General Economics
Economics
91B69
Oligarchic control exerts significant distortions on economic efficiency. Ukraine exemplifies this phenomenon, where oligarchs dominate key sectors and achieve economies of scale through vertical integration of coal mines, steel mills, and power plants while controlling critical infrastructure (e.g. access to transportation networks) to stifle competition. Their Soviet-era production chain monopolization strategies, coupled with political patronage networks (including both local and national governments), reinforce systemic inefficiencies and barriers to market entry. Although existing studies highlight the developmental benefits of de-oligarchization, this work advances the literature through computational modeling. We develop an agent-based model of a partially oligarch-controlled economy, where firms with heterogeneous production functions interact within a value-added network. Through numerical simulations, we quantify how different de-oligarchization policies affect aggregate GDP growth. The results indicate that the optimal de-oligarchization strategies are determined by the position of the oligarch in the production chain. Depending on the oligarch's position, dismantling oligarchic structures should either focus on removing oligarchs' access to raw materials or on breaking oligarchs' influence on other transactions in the production chain.
title Ukrainian-style oligarchic economies: how concentrated power undermines value added in production chains
topic General Economics
Economics
91B69
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.02949