Abstract
Introduction
The demand for donated ova in Europe continues to rise, with over 80,000 egg donation treatment cycles performed annually (Wyns 2022). Yet the supply remains constrained, as European Union policy permits only altruistic egg donation—with no financial compensation beyond reimbursement for the donor’s expenses and inconvenience—offering limited incentives for participation (European Parliament and the Council 2004). This model is interpreted unevenly across countries, resulting in significant variation in donor availability and prompting patients to seek cross-border reproductive care in settings with more liberal legislation, better access, and lower costs (Hudson et al. 2011; Hudson and Culley 2011; Gunnarsson Payne 2015; Homanen 2018). Countries like Spain and Ukraine have become popular destinations for such arrangements due to their less restrictive assisted reproductive technologies (ART) laws and compensation levels considered attractive by local donors, contributing to a steady supply of ova from individuals with desirable phenotypes (Shenfield et al. 2010; Bergmann 2011; Kroløkke 2014a; Lafuente-Funes 2017; Degli Esposti and Pavone 2019; Alkorta 2021; Molas and Whittaker 2022).
Both Spanish and Ukrainian fertility clinics have increasingly relied on the banking and transport of donor eggs (Tober and Pavone 2018; Tober et al. 2023). 1 This practice is especially prominent in Ukraine where cross-border egg donation depends heavily on shipping vitrified eggs abroad, allowing foreign patients to undergo treatment in their home countries or other preferred locations (Vlasenko 2023). Although the Russian full-scale invasion has disrupted parts of Ukraine's ART industry (König 2023), major players have adapted by increasingly relocating operations abroad and prioritizing the shipment of biomaterials to mitigate safety concerns associated with travel to Ukraine.
In this article, we ask how the valuation of donor ova is shaped by state regulation and market design in Spain and Ukraine, in relation to each country's position within the European market, its quality standards, and prevailing narratives of altruism. The theoretical framework of core–periphery dynamics and global value chains provides the basis for understanding how countries such as Ukraine and Spain generate value in the global ART market. The regulatory disparities and compliance with European quality standards are central to this analysis. We argue that being situated within the EU, along with the presence of state legislation ensuring European quality standards and the altruistic framing of donation, provides a pathway to accessing and gaining a competitive advantage in the European ART market. In the following, we explore how discourses and practices surrounding the regulation of (a) quality standards and (b) donor altruism act as valuation mechanisms that directly shape the market dynamics of oocyte economies in both countries.
In this respect, a comparison between Spain and Ukraine offers valuable insights. Both countries have developed distinct norms and practices for performing and governing ova donation. While both are successful in export-oriented ova commodity chains, their valuation dynamics differ due to contrasting regulatory regimes and unequal positions within the core–periphery hierarchy. As an EU member, Spain has a clearly but liberally regulated egg donation industry and access to the EU market, whereas Ukraine, a non-EU country, operates under more fragmented legislation and faces challenges in navigating European market restrictions, a situation further aggravated by the ongoing war. Additionally, Spain and Ukraine have implemented different market designs. The Spanish market has been described as quasi-social, combining relatively attractive compensation with the effective framing of ova provision as altruistic donation (Degli Esposti and Pavone 2019). In contrast, Ukraine has adopted a more explicit, business-like approach, which effectively works according to more traditional market mechanisms (Vlasenko 2015; 2024). While this grants Ukrainian fertility clinics greater operational freedom, it may also pose risks to their credibility.
In the following section, we discuss how discourses surrounding state regulation of quality standards and altruism act as valuation mechanisms, with a particular focus on how these are shaped by core–periphery dynamics within global reproductive value chains.
ARTs, State Regulation, and Global Value Chains
The theoretical foundation for this article draws on insights from science and technology studies (STS), feminist political economy, and global value chain analysis. These approaches allow for an examination of how regulatory frameworks, market design, and narratives of quality and altruism influence the value assigned to donor eggs within transnational ART markets, while also reproducing economic inequalities, gender power dynamics, and postcolonial relations embedded within their operational and institutional structures. Central to this discussion is the concept of core–periphery dynamics, which highlights that countries like Spain and Ukraine occupy different positions within global reproductive value chains based on their regulatory environments and market practices.
Valuation Mechanisms
In STS literature, valuation mechanisms refer to the processes and structures through which social, ethical, economic, and political values are produced and expressed within scientific and technological practices. These mechanisms shape and are shaped by the development, implementation, and reception of scientific knowledge and technological artifacts (Winner 1980; Jasanoff 2005). Such values are not only inscribed in the design and operation of scientific and technological systems (Flanagan and Nissenbaum 2014; Beaulieu and Leonelli 2021), but are also articulated through discourses, standards, and norms that steer research agendas, funding priorities, and regulatory frameworks (Miller and Edwards 2001; Jasanoff 2011). Their meanings are continuously negotiated and contested by a range of actors, including researchers, policymakers, industry representatives, activists, and members of the public (Hess 1997). Crucially, values are also embedded in the organization and functioning of markets, informing the emergence of distinct market regimes (Callon 1998; 2021; Callon, Millo and Muniesa 2007; Zelizer 2010).
Recent contributions from valuation studies (Kjellberg et al. 2013) have extended these debates by examining the practices and devices through which value(s) are generated in markets, particularly in the context of bodies and tissues. For instance, Sunder Rajan's (2006) work on post-genomic life highlights how biotechnologies must be understood in relation to the markets in which they emerge. Waldby's (2002) concept of
Applying these insights to assisted reproduction, scholars argue that oocyte provision constitutes an extension of women's underpaid or unpaid labor, essential for biovalue accumulation yet largely rendered invisible (Cattapan 2016; Nahman 2018; Vertommen and Barbagallo 2021). Building on their pioneering research in reproductive markets (Inhorn 2015; Rudrappa 2015; Deomampo 2019), this article employs a feminist political economy lens to explore how reproductive technologies are shaped by global institutions, interconnections, and inequalities, while highlighting their distinctive value and exchange dynamics (Namberger 2019; Vlasenko 2021; Vertommen, Pavone and Nahman 2022). Specifically, it advances STS discussions by analyzing how state-enforced quality standards and altruistic narratives are mobilized as valuation mechanisms in the reproductive bioeconomies of Ukraine and Spain, driving ova value creation while perpetuating postcolonial and gendered stratifications.
Core–Periphery and Global Value Chains
Postcolonial and feminist STS scholars emphasize that colonial histories continue to shape contemporary reproductive practices and policies, reinforcing racial hierarchies and exacerbating global inequalities through technology use (Briggs 2002; Pande 2014; Benjamin 2019). A central debate focuses on cross-border reproductive care and its implications for reproductive justice, capitalist accumulation, and the postcolonial logics underpinning “global fertility chains” (Vertommen, Pavone and Nahman 2022). While global ART markets appear increasingly expansive and fluid—where a single treatment cycle can span multiple countries (Parry 2015; Müller and Schurr 2016; Schurr 2018)—national borders continue to structure the geography and success of egg donation industries. This apparent “fluidity” is not fully captured by the concept of reproductive tourism; rather, it reflects many countries’ failure to meet their citizens’ reproductive needs (Inhorn 2011; 2015) and sustains entrenched North–South asymmetries of market entanglements, racial imaginaries, and extractive legacies (Deomampo 2016). We propose that the expanding global connections within egg donation markets are better understood through the lens of core–periphery dynamics, which illuminate economic dependencies and gendered and racialized labor circuits (Hopkins and Wallerstein 1977).
In STS literature, the concept of core–periphery highlights the unequal distribution of technological resources, knowledge production, and innovation across regions, emphasizing global disparities and power imbalances in science (Jasanoff 2005). Drawing from world-systems theory and global value chains analysis (Gereffi and Korzeniewicz 1994; Hopkins and Wallerstein 1994; Gereffi et al. 2001; Bair 2005), we examine how ART markets reflect core–periphery dynamics and maintain postcolonial hierarchies through an uneven flow of resources, technology, and labor. Core countries—typically higher-income with robust regulatory systems—set dominant quality and ethical standards. Peripheral regions, often characterized by weaker regulations and lower costs, must adapt to externally imposed norms that may not align with local priorities. While these regions supply lower-cost materials and labor, they capture a disproportionately small share of the profits. These stratified global relations embed European values as markers of legitimacy in ART markets, reinforcing civilizational and geopolitical hierarchies within increasingly entangled transnational bioeconomies (Van Wichelen 2019).
This disparity is evident in how Ukraine and Spain generate value in global value chains: due to its peripheral status, Ukraine generates value by offering low-cost, high-demand reproductive materials within a flexible regulatory environment, while Spain's value is rooted in its adherence to European regulation, capitalizing on credibility, quality, and altruism. In the remainder of this section, we explore two key topics in recent debates and integral to this article's contributions: The role of (a) state-enforced regulation of quality standards and (b) altruism as valuation mechanisms in reproductive markets, and how both are shaped by core–periphery dynamics within global value chains.
Regulation
The role of state regulation in shaping reproductive markets has long been debated, with scholars arguing that increasing regulation drives clients, opportunities, and business actors to less regulated countries (Rudrappa 2015; Schurr and Perler 2015; Whittaker and Chee 2015; Mitra 2018). In this view, countries with minimal regulation often become hot spots for reproductive travel, offering advantageous conditions for businesses to thrive (Schurr 2018). Thus, a government's inaction can be as impactful as its actions in giving countries a competitive edge in the global ART market (Pavone and Goven 2017; Degli Esposti and Pavone 2019; Vlasenko 2021; Vertommen, Pavone and Nahman 2022). At the same time, clear and enforceable regulatory frameworks are recognized as essential in morally significant areas like human embryology and reproduction, as they establish boundaries that do not merely restrict but actively enable the functioning of these fields by balancing scientific innovation with rigorous oversight, ultimately fostering public trust and upholding ethical principles (Franklin and Jackson 2024).
Building on these debates, we argue that the reproductive market's reliance on regulation is emblematic of broader patterns in modern economies, reinforcing neoliberal trends toward state-supported capitalism as the norm rather than the exception (Davies 2018). Contrary to popular belief that “free markets” naturally emerge from human profit-seeking behavior, modern economies depend on government regulation to sustain operations and underpin growth, which relies on state-established institutions like legal contracts and property rights (Polanyi 1944; Block 2008; Fligstein 2018; 2005). Sunder Rajan (2006) further shows the constitutive role of policymakers, regulation, market designs, and political institutions in shaping “biocapital.” Similarly, Mazzuccato (2013) underscores the entrepreneurial state's pivotal role in creating and sustaining markets, as well as supporting knowledge- and innovation-based economies. Contributing to these STS discussions, this article examines regulatory frameworks that not only enable the functioning of ART markets but also actively embed moral, social, and political values into market practices. This dual role positions the state not merely as a regulator but as an architect of markets, shaping valuation and global flows of reproductive biomaterials and labor, and influencing hierarchies and the distribution of risks and rewards within global value chains.
State regulation acts as a vital valuation mechanism, establishing competitive advantages that differentiate countries like Ukraine and Spain, whose contrasting regulatory environments and EU alignment influence their positioning within global value chains. Ukraine's minimal state intervention and lack of alignment with EU standards initially allowed it to profit from supplying lower-cost biomaterials within the global reproductive bioeconomy. However, the absence of robust legal oversight has raised credibility concerns, prompting Western clients to question quality standards and donor motivations. In contrast, Spain's regulated market—balancing mild European regulations with financial incentives—has fostered a reliable egg supply, strengthened the fertility industry, and increased market value while allowing unrestricted exports. This regulatory alignment has established Spain as a core player, setting standards and generating greater value through perceived credibility and quality, while Ukraine serves as a peripheral supplier to core countries by adapting to these standards. Although we do not directly compare the quality and ethical standards in both countries, we acknowledge that core–periphery dynamics shape the perceived value of donor eggs—like viewing Ukrainian eggs as less desirable due to concerns about quality and ethics—reflecting how core countries establish and use regulations and standards to protect their markets from lower-priced competition from peripheral regions.
Compliance with European quality standards serves as a gatekeeping mechanism while creating opportunities for some countries to become key players in global value chains. Studies show that it provides a competitive advantage, as seen when Hungarian farmers struggled to meet EU quality standards (Gille 2016) or when the Polish meat industry faced specific EU audit requirements, limiting their market access and profitability. These regulations represent a new mode of governmentality in post-socialist Eastern Europe, facilitating flows of capital and goods (Dunn 2005, 175). In the ART market, only vitrified egg cells assigned a Single European Code (SEC) by authorized European clinics included in the Registry of Tissue Entities can be used in treatments (The European Commission 2015). While this process is straightforward for Spanish egg banks, non-EU countries like Ukraine face significant regulatory barriers. Ukrainian egg banks must partner with EU clinics to assign an SEC, proving compliance with EU standards and demonstrating donor altruism, as required by the EU Tissue and Cells Directive (European Parliament and the Council 2004). Compliance with such regulations could enable peripheral markets, like Ukraine's, to move toward the core and increase their market value.
Altruism
Another contested debate centers on the altruistic nature of egg provision. Exchanges of biological materials have sparked fierce scholarly discussion over whether they circulate as gifts or commodities, represent choice or exploitation, or if they exist on a continuum between the two (Parry 2008; 2015; Hoeyer 2013; Nahman 2013; Waldby et al. 2013; Waldby 2015; Kroløkke 2018). Traditional perspectives often posit that market participation—where donors are paid—is opposed to altruistic donation, which is perceived as having higher moral and social value (Kimbrell 1997; Nelkin and Andrews 2001; Kenney and McGowan 2014). Hannah Gibson's work on traditional surrogacy challenges this altruistic/nonaltruistic dichotomy, revealing the complexity of altruistic motivations. Her research shows how traditional surrogates are driven by both the desire to help others create kin, and the pursuit of personal fulfillment (Gibson 2021).
Existing studies have primarily addressed altruism as a motivational mechanism that mobilizes egg providers (Fielding et al. 1998; Braverman and Corson 2002; Byrd, Sidebotham and Lieberman 2002; Almeling 2006; Purewal and Van den Akker 2009; Pennings et al. 2014; Jadva et al. 2015; Graham et al. 2016; Thaldar 2020). However, we propose that altruism can function as a valuation mechanism or a “market device” (Callon, Millo and Muniesa 2007), emphasizing how certain regulations or narratives can function strategically within markets to shape perceptions, behaviors, and ultimately the value assigned to goods and services. Following Hoeyer's (2013, 110) encouragement to examine “what the moral ideal does to the mode of exchange” and Rudrappa's (2021) critique of altruistic exchanges as seemingly egalitarian but ultimately rooted in domination, we suggest that the moral framing of body part transfers as altruistic may be “an essential part of commercial research conditions on positive terms” (Hoeyer 2013, 108).
To develop a care-centered narrative as an alternative to neoliberal capitalism, Lynch (2022) emphasizes how neoliberal framings of altruism are integral to the accumulation process of capitalism, functioning as gendered disciplinary devices. Similarly, Panitch (2016) highlights how the construction of egg providers as “altruistic donors” plays a highly gendered and constitutive role in egg donation markets. Less attention, however, has been paid to the role of altruism in the design and operation of markets and in the commodification regimes of ova procurement, where a delicate balance between altruism and compensation exists (Degli Esposti and Pavone 2019; Lafuente-Funes 2020; Molas and Whittaker 2022). In this article, we question whether altruism facilitates the extension of capitalist logic into the reproductive domain, serving both as a powerful mobilizing incentive and an effective valuation mechanism in reproductive markets.
The comparison between Spain and Ukraine is illuminating. Both countries frame egg provision as a donation to avoid overt commercialization, but they differ in execution. In Spain, compensation is capped and unrelated to the number of eggs or donor characteristics, while in Ukraine, it fluctuates with market prices and can vary based on these factors. Although financial motivation exists in both contexts, it draws criticism of exploitation in lower-income Ukraine, whereas Spain's higher-income context shields it from similar accusations. As a result, the altruistic narrative enhances the value of “Spanish” eggs, while “Ukrainian” eggs' value is diminished due to donors’ financial motives. This narrative, operating within core–periphery dynamics, may also be used by core countries to undermine peripheral industries by labeling them as commercializing the practice. Ultimately, altruism functions as a market device that controls costs by preventing compensation from rising to match market prices, while simultaneously enhancing the perceived value of eggs by appealing to ethical donation standards.
In the rest of the paper, we compare how the complex interplay of regulation, market mechanisms, and emerging technologies within the core–periphery dynamics of Spain and Ukraine co-produces distinct economic regimes of egg provision. Specifically, we examine whether a liberal yet robust regulatory framework, which establishes fixed compensation and ethical guidelines, offers a competitive advantage over a market-dominated system, where supply, demand, and fluctuating compensation determine who can participate and how prices are set, within the limits of state-enforced health and age criteria; and whether altruism, rather than opposing commercialization, serves as a central valuation mechanism in the commercial dynamics of egg donation in Ukraine and Spain.
Methods
This article draws on independent qualitative data gathered through fieldwork in Spain and Ukraine. All names of individuals and organizations have been changed to protect confidentiality. The Ukraine fieldwork, conducted for 18 months between 2015 and 2018, included 47 semistructured interviews with medical professionals and agents in eight private fertility clinics in Kyiv, L’viv, Kharkiv, and Odesa, and 15 months of participant observation at a Ukrainian ova bank “Cryova,” which retrieves, stores and exports donor eggs to meet global demand. 2 These data collected prior to Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine primarily reflect the preinvasion context. However, a small number of follow-up interviews with medical professionals conducted in 2022 and 2024 provide additional insight into the current situation. Permission to conduct participant observation and interviews was secured by directly contacting the clinics/agencies, and participants. The sample included clinics and agency directors (often medical professionals themselves), embryologists, gynecologists or ART specialists, medical coordinators (often nurses) and international coordinators, psychologists, accountants, marketing and PR specialists, couriers, and donor/surrogacy recruitment agents (Table 1). The project received IRB approval from Indiana University.
Sample of Professionals Interviewed in Ukraine.
The Spanish data proceed from two years of fieldwork between 2013 and 2015, through semi-structured interviews with 20 professionals (8 men and 12 women) across 10 different centers (Table 2), mostly private clinics located in the top five regions (Table 3). One public IVF hospital offering egg donation was also included in the sample. This fieldwork sought to capture a broad range of views on the practices adopted in clinics located in tourist areas, such as the Mediterranean coast, as well as in less touristy regions. The sample included gynecologists, embryologists, psychologists, marketing directors, and fertility program coordinators. The fieldwork was conducted by the PI and a PhD student, who conducted 20 face-to-face, semi-structured interviews, lasting between 45 and 90 min. The project was formally approved in 2012 by the ethics committee of the Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad, Secretaría de Innovación.
Samples of Professionals Interviewed in Spain.
The Regional Distribution of the Assisted Reproductive Technology (ART) Clinics in Spain.
In both fieldwork studies, informed consent was obtained from all participants. Semi-structured interviews with open-ended questions were audio recorded when permitted by the interviewee. Although the questionnaires differed between the two case studies, both focused on the following topics: (a) Socio-economic background and motivation of donors; (b) donor recruitment; (c) donor–recipient matching; (d) recipient preferences for donor traits (Ukraine only); (e) medical examination of donors, stimulation protocols, and egg retrieval; (f) medical and health risks; (g) the role of regulation and the state; (h) altruistic donation vs. commercialization; (i) the formation of egg banks; (j) international cooperation; (k) transportation of biomaterials (Ukraine only).
Interviews were conducted until saturation was reached in both case studies, after which they were transcribed, coded, and analyzed using thematic analysis (Marshall and Rossman 2014). The goal was to systematically develop analytic categories and concepts (Silverman 2015). Initial analyses of interview transcripts were performed independently by the researchers. In a subsequent phase, differences between coding systems were discussed, and a common set of codes was developed to re-analyze the interviews until consensus was reached. Open coding was employed to identify common categories and recurrent themes, allowing the coding categories and theoretical concepts to emerge from the data, according to grounded theory (Corbin and Strauss 1990; Glaser and Strauss 1999). Interview data were cross-referenced with information from secondary sources, including clinic websites, as well as national and regional laws and reports.
Findings
Legal Regulation and Quality Standards as a Valuation Mechanism
This section analyzes how state regulation, core–periphery dynamics, and global value chains shape oocyte markets through a comparison of the regulatory frameworks in Ukraine and Spain. Ukraine's regulatory freedom and lower costs position it as a peripheral supplier, offering more affordable services but facing unique challenges in demonstrating quality and compliance. In contrast, Spain's alignment with EU norms and state-enforced quality standards reinforces its status as a core player, fostering international trust and enhancing market value.
In Ukraine, reproductive technologies evolved from a niche scientific field in Soviet-era public universities and hospitals into a thriving private industry by the 2000s. Free from the constraints of the bureaucratically burdened state-run healthcare system, the private sector's control over the ART industry played a pivotal role in driving its development, rapid growth, and global relevance. Since 2001, more than 70 licensed private fertility clinics have been established, 3 making access to donated eggs relatively easy, and positioning egg donation as one of the most profitable treatments.
The shift to a market economy, coupled with the state's withdrawal from critical social support structures, created economic pressures that led many Ukrainian women to donate eggs as an income strategy. Marketed by local clinics as “Slavic” and “beautiful,” these donors often possessed “European” traits highly sought after by international clients. With technology and infrastructure comparable to that of higher-income countries, Ukraine's significantly lower labor costs allowed clinics to price their services competitively on the global market. Petro, the director of Kyiv's clinic “Lida,” explained how international partnerships capitalized on these conditions. His comments highlight how Ukraine's distinctive phenotype, economic hardships, and lack of state intervention have fueled the export of reproductive materials to higher-income countries (referred to as “civilized”), where restrictive legal environments and limited financial incentives, given the higher quality of life, make it difficult to recruit donors: For ten to twelve years, we have been working with Western medical professionals who didn’t have access to donor material, which we, in Ukraine, always had in abundance. Our girls are very beautiful….Ukraine is Slavic, and people here have “anthropological features” desired by those seeking genetic material. Moreover, there has always been a social problem in Ukraine—the low quality of life….Many things that are connected to the advancement of reproductive technologies are allowed here and forbidden in other countries…So we have formed certain flows to “civilized” countries like the UK, Italy, Israel….where high income levels make it nearly impossible to find donors, especially since donation is mostly altruistic there. (Petro, Kyiv)
Ukraine's permissive ART regulatory framework—allowing remunerated egg donation, gestational surrogacy, and cross-border biomaterials transport—has been instrumental in generating value, positioning the country as a peripheral supplier of low-cost reproductive labor and materials to core countries within global value chains. While Ukraine does not have a stand-alone law governing ART, Decree #787 from the Ministry of Health (2013) provides clinical guidelines, with additional norms spread across various legal documents. 4 Although donation attempts are limited to eight over the course of the donor's life, the absence of a national egg donor registry makes enforcement challenging. Egg donation is considered “voluntary” (out of free will), with women receiving variable compensation typically ranging between USD700–1,200. Ukrainian clinics permit couples to select donors from online catalogs featuring personal profiles, photos, and videos. Although donor anonymity is generally required, donors can sign a non-anonymity agreement when requested by the recipient country.
Ukraine's flexible regulatory environment outside the EU framework grants clinics more operational freedom but can result in fewer quality assurance mechanisms, ethical oversight, and standardized medical practices. This has led some European IVF partners to increasingly question Ukrainian quality and ethical standards. Nikolas, the director of a clinic in Alicante, Spain, expressed these concerns: Ukraine, unfortunately, does not belong to the European Union, which has specific quality standards, and this leaves Ukraine behind. I think you should make a big effort in your country to convince the rest of the scientific landscape that you are working properly, in the sense of the highest European standards. Doctors probably have good technical skills, but are economically too hardline. What they miss is emotional empathy and an ethical legal environment. (Nikolas, Alicante)
These concerns are echoed by Ukrainian medical professionals facing a paradox: while they appreciate the flexibility afforded by minimal regulation, they also recognize the risk of poor practice in the absence of stronger state oversight.
5
The director of fertility clinic “Sono” described how these conditions damage Ukraine's international reputation: There are negative things on the market. Some clinics offer donors more money to boost volumes, but fall short in following the standards….There are no defined criteria for medical care. Because of that, we have real moral and quality-related failures in positioning Ukraine in the world….I do not want state regulation to obstruct our work. But let’s set the rules of the game. Not every gynecological office should run an egg bank—it requires meeting specific criteria such as number of cycles, safety, and quality standards. This is how a normal, civilized market functions globally, but we won’t have it in Ukraine anytime soon. I am for the open, free market without limitations—but a civilized one. (Alex, Lviv)
In this context, regulation acts as a valuation mechanism, influencing the value assigned to Ukraine's reproductive services in global ART markets. Ukrainian professionals aspire to a market that balances their decision-making autonomy with state regulation to uphold norms of good practice. Aware that market-driven logics can compromise care standards, they oppose unchecked commercialization and emphasize the state's role in enforcing the “rules of the game” to distinguish reputable clinics from those that prioritize profit over safety and quality or lack adequate infrastructure. As part of their collective strategy to improve Ukraine's standing in global value chains and overcome its peripheral status, ART specialists emphasize their European values and reassure clients and partners of their adherence to European standards. Alex, for example, highlights this point: They [European partners] worry whether we meet certain quality standards. They don’t completely understand that Ukraine is a European country. In their [European] imagination, we do it in the cave with dirty hands. But we are extremely European! We look much better than clinics of the old Europe, Austrian or Swiss. (Alex, Lviv)
Eggs play a central role in a complex value creation process, where not only economic and social values are generated, but national identity is also constructed and reinforced through association with European culture and norms. For Ukrainian professionals, Europe serves as an idealized model of “normal” and “civilized” markets, characterized by state-enforced quality and safety standards. As perceived industry standards—rather than merely transmissible traits—determine the value of donor eggs in transnational markets, further value generation in Ukraine is contingent on alignment with European ART frameworks, which many believe requires the introduction of state regulation and controls.
Moreover, compliance with stringent EU quality and safety standards is essential for market access, but poses significant challenges for peripheral players due to variations in regulatory oversight and quality control, effectively serving as a gatekeeping mechanism. Ukrainian fertility clinics, such as the egg bank “Cryova,” which supplies vitrified donor eggs to foreign clinics, must navigate EU restrictions to import donated tissues and cells into Europe. Consequently, “Cryova” first transports eggs to a clinic within Europe authorized to assign a SEC, enabling their distribution across Europe and beyond as “European” eggs.
Despite complex regulatory burdens, disrupted transportation routes, and security risks during wartime, Ukrainian fertility clinics have sustained their global market presence by further transitioning to a model that relies on egg vitrification and transportation, setting up overseas representation and facilities—the only viable way to ensure the industry's survival and profitability, according to professionals. During the early months of the Russian invasion in spring 2022, when traffic on roads leading out of Ukraine came to a standstill, egg bank director Solomiia made five trips to Bratislava, transporting six large tanks of liquid nitrogen containing approximately 1,000 frozen reproductive material samples. 6 Today, some of the bank's staff remain in Ukraine, handling initial consultations with egg donors, overseeing stimulation protocols, and vitrifying eggs, while others are based in Europe and beyond, managing new egg retrieval sites in Slovakia, Albania, and Georgia, and coordinating the sales and global shipping of vitrified ova. This model links cost-efficient retrieval locations to high-demand markets in Western Europe and North America, while navigating complex regulatory import restrictions.
Spain's adherence to European regulation and structured yet liberal ART market positions it as a credible core participant in global value chains, with state-enforced quality standards functioning as a valuation mechanism that generates greater value through alignment with EU policies. Spain's ART sector, initially developed in the private sector, has benefited from state-enforced quality standards that have earned international trust. Spain's law It is kind of smart, brilliant. It is oriented toward couples’ real needs in a way that allows us to develop and implement innovations. On the other hand, it restricts behaviors that are dangerous from an ethical point of view, the commercialization of childbearing itself. (Nikolas, Alicante)
Spanish professionals, like their Ukrainian counterparts, recognize that the reliability of the regulatory framework and the responsible conduct of medical staff are essential for attracting customers. A gynecologist in Andalusia emphasized the importance of quality and trust in the industry: We are going to brand positioning, eh, that we were the first to do an egg donation. It is a matter of trust and that we have the strictest donor selection procedure in the market….We care about our quality policy. It's not about something else, it really is a question of quality. (Antonio, Sevilla)
The comparison between Ukraine and Spain illustrates how core–periphery dynamics shaped by EU regulation, influence each country's regulatory approach, market strategies, and capacity to generate value within global reproductive value chains. In both cases, regulation functions as a valuation mechanism. Ukraine's market freedoms and competitive pricing underscore its peripheral position, yet professionals increasingly acknowledge the need to align with European quality standards to play a more central role in global value chains. While minimal state intervention initially fueled the growth of Ukraine's ART industry, there is now a growing recognition that stronger regulation is necessary to safeguard its reputation and weed out irresponsible players. Conversely, Spain's EU-aligned, regulated industry generates greater value through established credibility, built on state-enforced quality and ethical standards. Both industries seek selective state involvement to balance market freedom with quality assurance, with the state playing a crucial role in enhancing industry credibility and facilitating value generation.
Altruism as a Valuation Mechanism
In both Ukraine and Spain, donors regard compensation as crucial, even when altruistic reasons may also be present. Ukrainian medical professionals acknowledge the material pressures behind donation and often prefer donors who are transparent about their financial motivations, believing that this drives them to perform more reliably. A fertility specialist at a Kharkiv clinic viewed economic insecurity as a key motivator, giving women a practical incentive to engage in the work: Of course, it is their work. They receive financial compensation for it. I have never seen an altruistic donor or surrogate mother, none. The woman needs to have a motive. If everything is great in her life—she has a husband, house, work—she doesn’t need this work. (Taras, Kharkiv)
The director of egg bank “Cryova” confirms that financial compensation is the primary recruitment tool, shaped by market expectations: Donor recruitment is a matter of having a market wage. We probably are the only clinic that still survives with such small payment to donors, but on the market, they are paid more and they start to be capricious (вередливі). (Solomiia, Lviv)
Nevertheless, Ukrainian clinics employ altruistic narratives to enhance the market value of eggs, because portraying them as altruistically donated improves the clinic's international image in markets where commercial transactions are viewed as exploitative (Vlasenko 2021). This valuation mechanism helps Ukrainian clinics comply with foreign rules mandating altruism and appeals to Western clients, who are more likely to purchase eggs if they believe donors were motivated by altruism or “free will” rather than financial necessity (Kroløkke 2014b; Gunnarsson Payne 2015). A representative of a Swedish partner of “Cryova” emphasized the importance of presenting donors as making a “free choice:” We are very interested, but we need to sort out the question about compensation to the women. In Sweden egg donors are compensated for the medication and for the time they are away from work. The legislation is to prevent women from being used or put in a position where they get so much money for selling their body parts that they cannot resist. It has to be a free choice. It is therefore important for our further cooperation that we know how the women are compensated. (Robert, Lviv)
This reflects how altruism is selectively interpreted across economic contexts, reflecting core–periphery dynamics. Donors from core and peripheral countries are viewed differently despite receiving similar financial incentives: Spanish donors, though economically motivated, are viewed as “freely choosing,” while Ukrainian donors receiving comparable compensation are often portrayed as “victims of exploitation,” “coerced,” or driven by desperation. This framing also acts as a valuation and gatekeeping mechanism, it upholds the ethical perception of core countries while devaluing peripheral industries by questioning their ethics and standards, thereby preventing them from competing in higher-revenue Western markets. 8 To align with a core rather than a peripheral context, Ukrainian egg banks must ensure donors are not perceived as primarily driven by compensation.
Compliance with altruistic donation is also a crucial standardization mechanism for exporting eggs to countries that require evidence of altruistic motivation. Ukrainian egg banks must demonstrate this proof of altruism to ship oocytes to certain European countries, as well as Australia and Canada. For instance, after providing eggs for 244 egg donation cycles with UK partners since 2015, cooperation was frozen in 2018 when the egg bank “Cryova” exceeded British compensation limits for donors from overseas. To resume collaboration, the bank had to prove that donors were reimbursed in line with the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority Code of Practice (HFEA 2019), ensuring compensation stayed below GBP250 per cycle, with all receipts provided. As an accountant from “Cryova” explained: Compensation to the donors did not match their regulations. I was trying to understand what kind of documents they wanted us to prepare for them. Their donors are altruists, or so they say, and all the documentation has to be formed around that. Even if they order eggs, all the documents will go through HFEA and be under their vigilant control—who those donors are, what their motivation is, and whether they received less than 250 pounds. (Diana, Lviv).
Beyond export legal requirements, clinics must manage the commercial aspects of egg donation, which increases pressure to raise compensation. Local donors often gravitate toward clinics offering higher payments, prompting medical professionals to advocate for compensation caps at the state level to prevent continuously rising rates. The discourse of altruism is employed not only to maintain commercial ties with Western countries, but to control national market prices. However, clinics admit that controlling compensation remains a challenge. As the bank director explains: When we had a monopoly on the market, compensation was lower. Now, with the growing commercialization of the process, donor compensation increases almost every month. This is one of the major cost factors. And clinics manipulate compensation, it's true. There's no point in banning it, but it does need regulation. (Solomiia, Lviv)
Similarly, in Spain, while altruistic motivations may be present, economic compensation is crucial to maintaining a steady supply of eggs. The dominant narrative among doctors in private clinics is that donors have mixed motivations—women-to-women solidarity combined with the importance of compensation. A gynecologist at a private clinic explained: There may be a motivation…a more or less attractive economic compensation, which, if we look at how the issue of supplying eggs is [handled] in other countries, we are talking about nothing here, eh? Here, the donation is a donation because the cost of the eggs is not what it should be; it is a compensation established by law for the inconvenience. But for some families, this may be what they need to feed their children. This is a fact. (Pilar, Barcelona).
The altruistic narrative makes egg donation more appealing to donors while discouraging an overtly commercial approach, preventing them from questioning the value of their contribution or demanding a fair share of the profits. By framing compensation as merely covering the inconvenience of the procedure, the actual market cost of the eggs is obscured. Private clinics often reject donors who are too explicit about their financial motivations. As a gynecologist at a private clinic in Malaga, noted: Even if they don’t say it openly, it's clear that many come because the economic aspect will help them. But I’ll tell you, if we know someone comes only for the money, that donor will be rejected. It doesn’t mean they don’t want their economic compensation—they do. But if someone says…“I am here for 900 euros,” that one will be rejected. (Cristina, Malaga)
In public hospitals, where egg donation cycles are low, the importance of compensation is more openly acknowledged, as demonstrated by another gynecologist's concerns about the lack of financial incentive negatively affecting donor supply: In private centers…in the words of the law, it is “compensatory”…The law does not allow payment but establishes compensation. That makes supply offset demand. On the other hand, in our hospital, we do not have financial compensation of any kind, and that means that there is a huge imbalance between candidates to receive eggs and those who actually access egg donation treatment. (Alberto, Bilbao)
Some public hospitals have recently secured funds to compensate donors, making treatments more accessible, while others are now outsourcing egg procurement to private egg banks, a practice also adopted by small IVF clinics. Ukrainian doctors’ concerns about the higher market value of altruistically retrieved eggs are echoed by Spanish doctors, who use the altruistic narrative to legitimize their operations and emphasize the ethical nature of their eggs. Kroløkke's (2014a, 2014b) observations of Spanish clinics marketing altruistic donations to Danish clients align with some of our interviewees’ experiences. In Spain, presenting egg donation as fundamentally altruistic is central to a self-legitimizing marketing strategy. Two gynecologists from Barcelona private clinics emphasized: We must also consider the mentality here—donation is very well established. They [the Spanish people] donate a lot—organs, blood—we rank among the top in Europe…Here, the girls talk about donations, and most come to us by word of mouth, because a friend or sister has done it. While in Italy, they don’t talk about egg donation, nor do they even think about it. (Laura, Barcelona) Despite all the misfortunes, Spaniards are ultimately generous and altruistic. (Pilar, Barcelona)
The altruistic narrative is crucial for maintaining the perceived ethical status of eggs, particularly in marketing campaigns targeting Western clients. Clinics use altruism as a valuation mechanism to enhance the social and economic value of eggs, boosting their market appeal and access. This mandate of altruism acts as a façade, masking the economic constraints that render commercial egg donation a form of informal labor and diminishing the agency of women who choose this work. Discourses in core countries that frame altruism as a safeguard against the exploitation of less wealthy women serve as a competitive market strategy—raising the value of eggs from the core while devaluing those from the periphery, where economic need is often more pronounced or openly acknowledged. The altruistic narrative keeps compensation low, discouraging egg providers from questioning their working conditions. Far from countering exploitation, altruism operates as a gendered disciplinary device, further fueling biomarkets by extending capital accumulation to women's bodies while suppressing wages.
Conclusions
Recent STS debates have extensively examined valuation mechanisms in shaping scientific and technological practices (Callon 1998; Helgesson and Muniesa 2013; Kjellberg et al. 2013; Dussauge et al. 2015). These studies show how social, ethical, and political values are embedded in technology development, regulation, and market design, informing the co-production of science, technology, and society (Jasanoff 2005). A growing body of STS scholarship has focused on ARTs and their associated bioeconomies (Cooper and Waldby 2014; Waldby 2019), offering critical insights into how bodies, tissues and reproductive labor are mobilized within market economies (Inhorn 2015; Cattapan 2016; Deomampo 2019). Postcolonial and feminist scholars have further demonstrated how global economic inequalities, patriarchal and colonial dynamics structure reproductive markets, challenging conventional views on altruism and commercialization (Pande 2014; Schurr 2018; Vertommen and Barbagallo 2021; Vlasenko 2021).
By highlighting the role of regional quality standards and regulatory credibility in the valuation of ova within a stratified transnational fertility industry, our analysis expands current STS discussions on how national and international regulations, core–periphery dynamics, and global value chains shape ART markets (Vertommen, Pavone and Nahman 2022). Moreover, by revealing the importance of altruistic narratives in mobilizing biological resources and shaping value-setting mechanisms, our work advances research on the multifaceted role of altruism in the co-production of medical technologies and market economies (Degli Esposti and Pavone 2019).
This article advances STS debates by examining how regulatory frameworks and market design shape value creation and appropriation in global reproductive bioeconomies. Drawing on qualitative comparative analysis of data from Ukraine and Spain, we argue that state-enforced quality standards and altruistic narratives act as key valuation mechanisms driving capitalist accumulation in ART markets. These mechanisms enable reproductive markets to function effectively by relying on state regulation to implement quality standards and manage donors’ motivations, suggesting that the solution to market dysfunction lies not in greater market freedom but in a liberal yet effective regulatory framework. By applying a feminist political economy lens, we demonstrate how valuation mechanisms not only enhance the market value of eggs but also perpetuate gendered and racialized divisions of labor and extractive postcolonial hierarchies within the core–periphery dynamics of transnational reproductive markets.
The comparison of Spain and Ukraine highlights three main empirical conclusions. First, Spain's regulated, quasi-social market gives private businesses a competitive edge over Ukraine's commercial approach and laxer rules. Eggs donated in Spain, an EU member state with clear quality standards, are more desirable and hold higher market value. In contrast, Ukraine's lack of state-enforced standards and position outside the EU, along with import restrictions requiring proof of quality and donor altruism, diminishes the value of its eggs. Here, EU quality standards function both as a valuation mechanism and a gatekeeping tool, determining access to the market.
Second, altruism and commercialization are not at odds; altruism functions not only as a motivational factor but as a key valuation mechanism that drives commercialization, challenging the notion that it solely shields biomaterial exchanges from market forces or obscures their commercial nature (Hoeyer 2013). Clinics strategically frame donations as altruistic to enhance the market value of eggs, as this narrative is widely supported and highly desirable in the EU and beyond. By emphasizing altruism, the industry can encourage participation while downplaying the financial aspects, which in turn justifies relatively low compensation for donors and prevents them from viewing their eggs as valuable commodities in a market-driven system. Especially in Spain, this combination of economic compensation and altruism ensures a stable egg supply and raises the value of eggs by reducing the perceived costs of harvesting and increasing their appeal to recipients. In addition, medical professionals use ethical claims of altruism to counter critiques of exploitation and to improve their country's position within global reproductive value chains.
Third, pre-existing imaginaries of Spain as a European core and Ukraine as peripheral underpin the uneven global flows of reproductive labor, biomaterials, and value. Europeanness is associated with state-regulated markets, high-quality standards, and altruistic donation, while the absence of regulation and uncapped compensation is perceived as unreliable and exploitative, lowering the value of eggs. In response, the Ukrainian ART industry seeks to align with European values and standards, lobbying for regulation that ensures quality and altruism to enhance the value of Ukrainian eggs and reposition the country closer to the core.
Building on these results, we offer a conceptual contribution to STS studies on reproductive bioeconomies from a feminist political economy perspective. We demonstrate that biomedical valuation mechanisms are deeply shaped by normative and policy dynamics grounded in moral, social, and economic considerations. These processes emerge through the co-construction of regulatory frameworks, egg freezing technologies, and market logics, sustained by highly gendered narratives of donation. Such narratives obscure the strategic role of altruism as a market device and conceal the postcolonial core-periphery relations embedded in reproductive value chains, where Spain and Ukraine serve as key nodal points. In this context, regulation and market design do more than facilitate or constrain medical and financial transactions within reproductive bioeconomies: they actively construct assisted reproduction as a legitimate and socially valuable practice, define egg providers as altruistic donors, and position the market economy as the appropriate framework for governing these exchanges.
Footnotes
Acknowledgments
First and foremost, we want to thank the most important contributors to this project—our research participants: Egg donors and fertility specialists in Ukraine and Spain, who shared with us their aspirations and concerns. Polina Vlasenko would like to thank Estonian Research Council for supporting this research under Grant MOBJD1077, The School of Humanities and her supervisor Eeva Kesküla at Tallinn University, the Department of Anthropology and her advisor Sarah D. Phillips at Indiana University. Vincenzo Pavone would like to thank Sara Lafuente for her collaboration in the data gathering and analysis during the BIOARREME research project, from 2012 to 2015.
Declaration of Conflicting Interests
The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The authors disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This work was supported by the Eesti Teadusagentuur (grant number MOBJD1077).
