In a situation like that, I continue to be unable to see how all the money in the world can suddenly constitute a large group of people who can be paid to work for gold/silver that can be traded for life necessities that are now not be being generated as there is no one to generate those necessities. The new workers/soldiers can only come by taking them OFF what they were already doing. And now that job doesn't get done. It's a zero sum game in the short term even if it is a positive sum game over the long haul.
Sure, a couple of rounds of industrial pump priming and building up higher and and higher productivity in generating those necessities will alleviate this. But I don't see how to do it in a year or two or even a decade. It's a multidecade task to my mind.
PeterZ wrote:jgnfld wrote:All the gold in the world cannot suddenly provide for a pool of labor to build, equip, resource, and operate all this industry unless the gold can buy that labor food and other basic necessities. I have seen little at the moment that says that Safehold can suddenly support all these additional single, even double, digit percents of people away from the farms. Is there really that much spare capacity in the food supply? And the suppliers of other basic necessities?
Excellent questions. Think about the populations in the cities (outside Harchong) pre-SoS. There was 1 billion people on Safehold pre-SoS. Terra didn't hit that mark until the turn of the 19th century (1804 est.). The advances in the following 123 years double that population to 2 billion and reduced the percentage of people working farms.
The combination of advanced gene modified crops, dragons for transport, canals to facilitate transport and the availability of reapers well before merlin arrived suggests that there already is a good percentage of people not needed for aggriculture. Introduce steam engines to run farm equipment and that will free up more farm labor and allow the population to grow faster yet. Those steam engines will also reduce labor intensive industries', like mining, dependence on labor.
Because it will take fewer people in aggregate to produce the same amount of everything from food and raw materials to finished goods, more new things can be produced with the excess labor. That includes producing even more food to feed the rapidly growing population. I hazzard the guess that the population growth in the 19th century was aided by the massive increase in worldwide wealth of the period. So much wealth was produced in that period that more people could afford large families. That increased affluence is blossoming in Charis at the moment. IIRC, the Writ requires Safeholdians to be fruitful and multiply.