PeterZ wrote:n7axw wrote:The Raven Lands don't have enough people to serve as a significant source of labor for the empire. Nor is their clan structure and culture suitable for that.
The EOC has about 72 million people and its agriculture has developed to the point where they have a fairly substantial work force in its nonagricultural sectors. The big multiplier already developing and which is enabling the EOC to compete with the mainland along side its military tech is the mechanization of its industrial sector which makes it possible for its labor force to be far more productive than its competition.
Don
Don,
The current disparity in industrial productivity can't last. IIRC, the US had 60% of its population working farms until the 20th century. I hazzard to guess that Charis won't reduce that percentage by much until after the Proscriptions have been recinded and the OBS removed. I would further guess that the mainland will approach that percentage much more closely than Charis would wish.
Between Charis, Siddermark and Silkiah there are ~250 million people supporting those nations' economies. That leaves 750 million everywhere else. Assuming Charis manages 40% of its population working outside aggriculture and the CoGA nations manage 30%, the EoC has to be 8 times more productive in industrial production to match the CoGA. That's easily done right now, but the CoGA has a steeper learning curve. If the CoGA employs some less efficient steam engines in their industrial production, streamlines their processes and imrpoves productivity 3 fold from their base, Charis has to increase by 3 times along a much flatter improvement curve. At one point the gains in productivity for Charis can't keep pace with those of the CoGA nations. They have to increase their population.
So long as Siddermark remains part of their alliance, all is well. Should Siddermark leave for any reason, the Charisian population has to grow much more quickly than their mainland rivals or they will be out produced.
Hi Peter,
Great post as always. First of all, Siddarmark isn't about to leave the alliance at least for the duration of the war if for no other reason than they are dependent of the Charisian industrial sector for their survival. And I doubt that after what Clyntahn tried to pull, the COGA and the inquisition will be invited back anytime soon.
I think my previous post stands up pretty good. I don't remember the figures very well. But think about the agricultural sector, for example. Each Charisian farmer is enormously more productive than his mainland counterpart. All those extra people that the mainlanders need to farm just as well be sitting in the bleachers.
Or think about the industrial sector. The Temple Lands are starting to organize their guild workers into teams called circles. An improvement but not enough. All Housmyn has to do to up his production is add another assembly line with powered tools to produce huge results. And the EOCs labor market is far from saturated. Its still got lots of room to grow.
The thing hurting the Temple right now is the mentality that all change is against the prescriptions and thus counter to God's will. So they are constantly behind the curve as they imitate what Charis does, being dragged kicking and screaming into change they don't want. As long as that remains true, they will never be able to compete.
I suspect that where your assertion about the EOC needing more numbers hold true is in the long term. Imagine the war being over, the power of the COGA broken, the ability of the inquisition to coerce abolished, the proscriptions discredited. Then, and only then, will the mainland economies begin to successfully compete with Charis. Then the assertion that the EOC needs more people may well hold true.
By tthe time those things happen, it won't matter. Merlin's goal of getting Safehold on the road to recovering its tech will have been accomplished. That will only be the first step. But you know what they say about the road to Rome.
Don