kzt wrote:PeterZ wrote:What I calculated was the PRIVATE wealth invested OUTSIDE the star kingdom available to be liquidated and reinvested. So yes, I do believe they have those sources of PRIVATE wealth to liquidate and re-invest.
Given that 80% of the population and over 95% of the wealth of humanity is in a star nation that the SEM is at war with where is this supposed to be squirreled away? I understand that it was pretty hard for an US or UK citizen liquidate their Messerschmitt AG stock in January 1942. Do you really think the notoriously rapacious SL bureaucrats won’t take advantage of the situation? Not to mention that the SEM seems to think that trading with the enemy is a big deal.
Those assets have value. Those bonds, shares of stock, direct loans backed by property, loans for ships with liens on those ships and all sorts of other legal rights over securities and real assets are owned by SEM entities. They are all worth something to SL entities. They may not be worth 100% of market value but they are worth something. Once the SLN is proven incapable of defending any .....unreasonable interpretation of Solarian law, those assets will be worth what the market will bear.
Those assets will also be very uncorrelated to interstellar trade. No Manticoran entity would invest in an interstellar enterprise antagonistic to the SEM. Given that access to the WJ is most likely denied to those entities, what fool opens themselves up to such risk? Not successful ones. Because as you post, SL firms entities hold upwards of 90% of galactic wealth, the SEM can sell their assets at need. There is sufficient liquidity in the SL to manage even that. But 336 years of capturing a growing share of the 10%-15% of the Solarian Systems' Product adds up. I believe the mandarins estimated that percentage close to 35% of SL interstellar trade.
The previous wars were paid for largely from cash flows. They didn't go into debt until they built their Buttercup new construction. Their 20 year war was cash and carry until he last 5-6 years. So again yes, the citizens of the SEM has the wealth and the markets to finance rebuilding the nation's infrastructure.
Your assumption that the SEM can't pay for rebuilding is flat wrong. David said as much and text provides infers the same thing.