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World Marketplace
After the Revolution
Anders Åslund
01/01/2006

Ukraine’s December 2004 Orange Revolution was an epic event. Amid a sea of orange flags and placards, the beautiful, charismatic former gas-trading tycoon—and soon to be prime minister—Yulia Tymoshenko stood triumphantly beside democratic presidential candidate Viktor Yushchenko, who looked like a beast, his face disfigured by dioxin poisoning at the hands of his political opponents.

Yushchenko had chosen orange as his campaign color because it symbolized nothing else—and this was to be a revolution like no other. The Ukrainian people had arisen in protest after the old regime stole Yushchenko’s election victory the month before, spurring the country’s courts to step in and order another election, which Yushchenko won. Ukraine’s revolution became an international media phenomenon and brought this country of 47 million to the attention of the world.

TOP VIEW
Ukraine’s heady Orange Revolution of 2004 has given way to political and economic uncertainty in the former Soviet satellite. President Viktor Yushchenko’s decision to remove Yulia Tymoshenko—his revolutionary partner and the country’s prime minister—and others from office in September 2005 led many to wonder when the country will collapse. But Ukraine’s democracy is slowly maturing as Yushchenko strives to thwart an economic freefall and political corruption. As the country looks ahead to its elections in March, there is reason to be optimistic about the future.
But this beautiful saga seemed at an end on September 8, 2005, when President Yushchenko sacked the Tymoshenko government. Populists everywhere despaired over the division between the revolutionaries. But the qualities required for revolution do not serve ordinary government well. Ukrainian economic policies after the Orange Revolution were disastrous. Ukraine could not afford the ongoing and extravagant public quarrels between Yushchenko and Tymoshenko, who had shown her ineptitude as prime minister. The country needed a competent government able to pursue a sensible economic policy. There is reason to hope that the new prime minister, Yuriy Yekhanurov, can deliver this. Impressively, the newborn Ukrainian democracy proved strong enough to oust this government after only seven months. Rather than falling apart, Ukraine is gradually coming together.

Between 2000 and 2004, Ukraine enjoyed an annual average GDP growth of 8.4 percent, spearheaded by an industrial growth rate of 12.5 percent per year. In the past two years, capital investment surged by no less than 30 percent, and exports grew even faster. Even now, the capital, Kiev, looks like one huge construction site, with cranes punctuating the horizon. Ukraine’s dominant industry is steel, situated in the eastern portion of the country. For raw materials, Ukraine has both coal mines and iron ore. The country also inherited the best of the Soviet machine-building industry, and much of it is now recovering from the collapse of the Soviet system. New food-processing and light industries have also grown.

But Ukraine continues to suffer from pervasive corruption and a state bureaucracy that can be both intrusive and ineffective. Only in 2000, when Yushchenko was prime minister and after a decade of decay, did Ukraine finally liberalize sufficiently to unshackle the economy enough to spur growth. Despite his measures, today Ukraine still has rudimentary economic and market regulations; it lacks even such elementary laws as one on joint-stock companies. Minority shareholders have no rights, even on paper. To make matters worse, the courts are considered notoriously corrupt.

Millionaires Versus Billionaires
Gradually, the most valuable factories have been privatized, and sooner than anyone expected, their ownership has been consolidated. Naturally, the owners of large steelworks have become very wealthy, with many becoming billionaires. As in Russia, these tycoons are called oligarchs. The biggest oligarchic groups are located in the east, the heartland of steel and mining. In the city of Donetsk, two metallurgical mastodons face off. Rinat Akhmetov’s System Capital Management has 160,000 employees, while Vitaly Haiduk and Sergei Taruta’s Industrial Union of Donbass has 90,000. In the city of Dnepropetrovsk, Viktor Pinchuk’s steel pipe company, Interpipe, spars with Ihor Kolomoisky’s Privat Group. All these individuals are newly minted billionaires.

They have acquired their property through relationships with government officials, and such relationships cost a lot of money in direct contributions or campaign financing. Indeed, the Ukrainian oligarchs have come to dominate politics far more than their Russian counterparts. During the 2004 presidential elections, the candidate of the establishment, Viktor Yanukovich, was Akhmetov’s man. His campaign contributions from Russian and Ukrainian businessmen totaled between $600 million and $900 million. (George W. Bush’s last campaign spent $670 million, although the United States has a GDP that is more than 100 times greater than Ukraine’s.)
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