lyonheart
Fleet Admiral
Posts: 4853
Joined: Tue Sep 08, 2009 11:27 pm
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Hi BobfromSidney,
Kudos for pointing out the obvious, but sometimes it needs to be stated boldly.
From the textev so far the MMM on hand has been and is expected to be rather busy, so the huge unemployment for SEM merchant sailors some expect may be somewhat delayed.
If the SL is a 50/50 split between 300-400 LY in radius, the average radius of inhabited member systems is ~14.717 LY, or ~29.4 between neighbors or about 9-10 days for most freighters.
RFC had a post a while back about the relative low amount of non-MMM local traffic, as opposed to all that the wormhole network could affect which the MMM had come to dominate, though Beowulf also has a large MM, though I can't remember more details at the moment darn it, which may have been in 2012 or 2013.
From the beginning of the series the references to the MMM involved it's dominance of the non-core shell, verge [and protectorates] and the independents beyond.
Over the 20 years of the series, the MMM has somehow insinuated itself into the heart [if not becoming] of the SL's economic life blood, the dependence upon interstellar trade wasn't yet clear, and whenever I suggested the size of the MMM was at least 10,000 if not somewhere between 40,000 to 100,000 freighters etc because according to the textev, revenues from custom duties on the MMM equaled that of the WHJ, there were those who scoffed but then refused to suggest any such range themselves.
While the SL is obviously the richest market for the MMM, it isn't the only one by any stretch of the imagination, and from all the Sollie comments the MMM's access is often restricted or limited by the OFS etc, obviously sometimes at the behest of it transtellar clients/pardners and their pirate friends who harass their competitors.
Removing that bureaucratic limit ought to increase the MMM's traffic in the protectorates several times given the very limited traffic we've seen so far for rather little investment in the GA escorts, if a few [4-5] squadrons of LAC's, be they RMN, RHN, GSN or Beowulfian, are quite sufficient as the textev indicates for the SC and TQ etc, while LAC production in the RoH is evidently in the 1-2 thousand per month from Lovat [over 10,000 destroyed there], and carrying all of those required for the protectorates would keep quite a few freighters busy, just for the orbital bases, even if CLAC's carry just the LAC's as in the TQ, though several hundred systems may require freighting them as well.
Kolokoltsov knows there are at least several core systems quite willing to leave the SL as well, I doubt the GA will ignore the trade opportunities, indeed their example should encourage emulators who want the increased traffic and business in the their locale, so just how much trade the MMM loses for even a brief while may be far less than some think.
The 'old league' core includes several dozen systems that easily average over 30 Billion in population for ~2.5 Trillion, while the other ~1700 systems add another 10+ Trillion totaling 2/3 of the human race, so the SL 'old league' might be an eighth of the potential market by population for the MMM albeit the richest, for perhaps over 25% of the market value, yet much of that evidently will happily trade with the MMM, including the transtellars.
One of my first posts at the bar, which earned a kudos from Richard Earnshaw [RFC's interlocutor], which BTW impressed the heck out of me, was on the vast impact, because huge is simply too small a term to describe its effects, of the WHJ on the whole financial and economic aspects of the SL, NTM the rest of humanity, simply because the WHJ got news faster than anywhere else; almost everybody who could would head there to find the best deal for their cargo, or simply sell it to save time going wherever and picking up another head back, and while all termini have such, Manticore's having the most means it rather than the the SL and Sol in particular probably has the single largest financial/investment market of current humanity [despite any SL complaints about de jure versus de facto], which RFC essentially confirmed NTM wasn't affected much by OB, given how much such trade didn't involve Manticore's now damaged heavy industry, and is still pumping billions a day, if not trillions a month, into the SEM's economy, besides the WHJ fees and the MMM's excise taxes, etc.
Manticore's WHJ traffic doubled in twenty years despite a huge long war and doubling the fees, for a four fold increase before Lynx was added, which probably one reason the SKM/SEM can sell all the bonds it apparently needs, NTM tapping the SEM's huge internal wealth.
Given the size of the MMM, I suspect many of those with actual space suit time ratings would be among those recruited for infrastructure assembly crews if the MMM unemployment is as severe as some suggest.
It's too late to continue tonight, so I'll see you all tomorrow.
L
[quote="BobfromSydney"]What doesn't make sense to me is that people seem to think that there are exactly X Petatons of cargo in the galaxy to be shipped in X number of freighters.
The only thing that will happen is that freighters will substitute high margin cargo for slightly lower margin cargo. As long as the marginal profit of the cargo exceeds the operational costs of the freighter the freighter CAN remain in operation.
The shareholders/owners might not be happy about the haircut, but they wouldn't be hurting nearly as much as the planets which all of the sudden are getting only 1/3 of their usual trade volume.
Say there are three planets on a freighter's route: A, which produces Airplanes and Apples B, which produces Boats and Bananas C, which produces Cars and Carrots
Now the freighter no longer travels to planet C. What happens to the prices of Cars and Carrots on C? The prices go down, it may be possible that the Car and Carrot industries collapse if this continue for long enough. What happens to the prices of Airplanes, Apples, Boats and Bananas on C? They go up. However due to lack of shipping there are shortages.
Meanwhile what is happening on planets A and B? They are both experiencing Car and Carrot shortages and higher prices for both. They are also both experiencing slightly depressed prices for Airplanes, Apples, Boats and Bananas. This is bad for producers but good for consumers.
The freighter, as you might guess, is also less profitable, but still travels with full holds on each run.
Now eventually C is going to get so desperate they will want to lift the 'blockade' against themselves. A and B will be somewhat effected but will survive.
With the exception of the most underdeveloped systems I think it is unlikely that a freighter will turn up and not be able to fill its holds.
If present day Earth is considered a middle/low level economy in the Honorverse then consider the wide variety of goods that a freighter can pick up: 1. Minerals 2. Electronics 3. Manufactured Consumer goods 4. Heavy Industrial Equipment 5. Agricultural Products (Meat, Diary, Crops etc.) 6. Luxury Goods 7. Fisheries and Forestries Products 8. Textiles and Fashion 9. Hydrocarbon products 10. Chemicals 11. Pharmaceuticals 12. Cultural products and Media 13. Tools and Instruments
I'm certain that I'm only scratching the surface. There is bound to be a planet where such things are in demand.
Timber on a space station, seafood on a dessert world, exotic (to the off-world customer) forms of alcohol.
On any planet with a functional economy there will be something to export and a local demand for off-world goods.[/quote]
Any snippet or post from RFC is good if not great!
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