Economists Discuss the Financial Repercussions of the Destruction of the Death Stars (hackaday.com) 171
szczys writes: What would the Galactic Economy look like following the destruction of two Death Stars? This is the informed Star Wars debate taking shape between to people who know their economics. Elliot Williams, a Ph.D. in Econometrics, has just debunked the work of Zachary Feinstein who claimed that the Rebel Alliance would have been off had they not destroyed the two Death Stars because what they're left with is a Galactic Economy in ruin. Feinstein, a professor at Washington University in St. Louis, published a scholarly paper early this month saying it was financial suicide to destroy both of the giant construction projects. Williams' take on things is that the project was a sunk cost; destroyed or whole the Death Star expenditures already made are gone and not likely to further cost or benefit the new government. Perhaps most interesting in the discussion is how you estimate the cost of the Death Star projects and the GGP — the Galactic Gross Product of the fictional universe.
This is stupid. (Score:4, Funny)
Work on real problems, and if you can't see any and you're an economist, you're also fired.
Re:This is stupid. (Score:5, Insightful)
"News for Nerds. Stuff that matters."
This is the first topic in a long time that's firing on all 8 cylinders, baby!
Re:This is stupid. (Score:5, Insightful)
Work on real problems, and if you can't see any and you're an economist, you're also fired.
Well, it does illustrate a basic economic concept: If you buy guns instead of butter, you cannot later change your mind and transmogrify the guns into butter. It is surprising how many people don't understand the principle of sunk costs.
Re:This is stupid. (Score:5, Insightful)
You can if there's someone else with butter and no guns.
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Presumably that's where the empire would get the money to pay back these hypothesized massive loans -- looting breakaway planets after forcing them to give up.
Re:This is stupid. (Score:4, Insightful)
Wouldn't it be quicker to just blow up the lenders?
But even for that you do not need a Death Star. Even with our primitive technology, we could easily wipe out a planetary civilization with a few thousand tonnes of lithium deuteride and a plutonium trigger. The total cost would be less than $1B. The Death Star likely costs at least a few quadrillion dollars. The Death Star was a great plot device, but from the viewpoint of an economist, it made very little sense.
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It's even easier than that. All you need to do is lob a few big asteroids or comets. Even better it won't leave the planet a radioactive wasteland.
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And plenty of time for a civilization that travels through space like we drive down to the drug store to evacuate.
Re:This is stupid. (Score:4, Funny)
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You can't threaten planets - they aren't sentient.
As for intimidation, turning the surface (and everything on it) to lava or turning its atmosphere to smoke would have the same effect.
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You can if there's someone else with butter and no guns.
Which is exactly the central growth engine of many Empires.
Conquering new lands was a form of economic expansion. At a minimum they paid tribute (aka protection money) to you, more commonly your treasure was looted, your lands taken, your people taken back as slave labor, and so on.
The Death Star is just an efficiency improvement in the Empire's ability to conquer and control systems.
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You can if there's someone else with butter and no guns.
Sure, if you don't understand the word "transmogrify" - just sayin'.
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Fair point, but economists don't tend to fuss over the magical/mystical aspects much. Cr butter is all they see.
They're a dour bunch. Some might even call them dismal.
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Yes, but that way lies a slippery slope [youtube.com].
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Maybe, but with guns, I can get all the butter I want.
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Sunk cost implies the guns have no ongoing value, whereas they become an asset you can use or sell later on - so yes, you can turn them into butter at a later date.
What you cannot do is use butter and then turn it into guns.
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Sunk cost implies the guns have no ongoing value, whereas they become an asset you can use or sell later on - so yes, you can turn them into butter at a later date.
The problem with this would be that the death star is like a F-22 loaded with nukes, not something you're willing to sell to anybody else.
So you consider using it to intimidate others into paying 'not the empire' tax. Problem, the empire is most of the galaxy. What's the maintenance costs on it? How much does it cost to go from system to system.
Remember, any planet you actually use it on is gone, including all infrastructure. I imagine the core materials are easier to reach afterwards, but as technology
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Your F-22 with nukes is still very valuable as it stands, even if you don't want someone to have it as a usable single component - the flyaway cost of an F-22 was $150million in 2009, plus an average cost of $350,000 in 2014 for a nuclear weapon.
The engines are worth about $20million each, giving you $40million or so of recoverable value, then you need to consider the cost of the high grade aluminium in the airframe itself, giving you another few million. Avionics, radar etc are also saleable, especially t
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then you need to consider the cost of the high grade aluminium in the airframe itself, giving you another few million.
Actually, modern fighter jets are built with a whole bunch of titanium, including big arsed plates of it. So that's worth the big bucks, while Aluminum isn't. What makes a particular grade of aluminum expensive isn't the alloying, but the heat treating. That's destroyed when it's recycled, and has to be done again anyway, so it's a genuine sunk cost. They're also starting to use more composites, which are not really recyclable...
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The major structural frames for both the F-22 and the F-35 are aluminium - titanium is used in particular places for its strength, but its too expensive to be used for standard airframe structural frames, as its too difficult to machine and work with. The major structural frames for the F-22 and F-35 are made on 50 year old presses owned by Alcoa - something that couldn't be done if the material used was titanium.
No aviation grade aluminium is recycled into more aircraft because its cheaper to start from s
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The major structural frames for both the F-22 and the F-35 are aluminium - titanium is used in particular places for its strength, but its too expensive to be used for standard airframe structural frames, as its too difficult to machine and work with.
Yes, at the time you had to work with Titanium plates. Today, we can cast it. The amount of Ti in the military airframe is increasing.
No aviation grade aluminium is recycled into more aircraft because its cheaper to start from scratch for certification purposes, but that doesnt mean that aviation grade aluminium doesn't have properties which make it sought after on the second hand market.
It does, but it's not worth millions just because the completed airframe costs millions. It's only worth thousands.
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Of course you can. It's called trade.
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Shortsighted.
The production capacity used to make the guns can much more easily be turned around into a means of producing mechanical butter churns and automatic milking machines than it would be to produce the machinery to do so from scratch (ie from a "we must churn butter faster, now!" perspective. Short term delay, long term benefit.
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Death Stars are an incredibly cost-effective project, so long as you build them for the IRS and not for the military.
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If all knowledge of religion, economics, and the sciences were to be wiped off the face of the earth, only 1 of those would be look the same after re-discovery.
You really think that people wouldn't figure out again markets, money, or capital?
Stupid Assumption (Score:1)
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In dictatorships, money is nothing more than an exchange medium for resources, it has no power, access to resources is the power. In a dictatorship, the cost of expenditure of assets is meaningless, it is simply a selected measure, don't like the capital measure, disagree and in a dictatorship they kill you. Stuff is worth what they tell you it is worth, disagree and die, so wait in queue or smuggle, either way you are likely to die. So all about access to and expenditure of resources. So in space, a galac
Re:Stupid Assumption (Score:4, Insightful)
An empire has an emperor. Communism has no government.
The Empire had a dictator. Communist USSR had a dictator. Communist China had a dictator. Communist Cuba had a dictator. Was there ever a Communist country that didn't have a dictator?
You want to hire someone to fix your space station? Though luck, everyone remotely competent is dead.
Nah, the population of the Empire was vast compared to the Death Star, and further the Empire was racist and (at least on screen) only employed humans on their flagship.
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There's never really been a Communist country. The USSR, for example, was officially "State Capitalist".
And who are all these guys living in Scotland? Not one of them is a True Scotsman!
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They were socialists...
Until they killed Ernst Roehm, as it was his faction that had ties with the military and was supporting the Socialist part of the party and looking to make things better for the German workers. He wouldn't drop that plank of the party line and thus was removed from power with a bullet from a gun and some propaganda. After that, the Nazis were pretty much a straight oligarchy of people with power who would use it any way they saw fit and weren't willing to share it and only used the socialist part to tell pe
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Fascism implies the protection of corporate power, even the merger of corporate power and the state
That's a modern definition contrived to help explain away the fact that Hitler came to power as a Socialist.
But even if we accept it at face value: both Communism and Fascism are the merger of corporate power and government. The only difference is the job titles of the guys who run both the government and the economy: whether they have government or private job titles (or, as in China today, half one, half the other).
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Hitler would condemn capitalism as a Jewish conspiracy, not just Marxism. The stated ideals of the Nazi party were to combine socialism with nationalist (i.e., pro-war) ferver.
The Nazis instituted a "full-employment" program, and drastically reduced unemployment, made May Day a national holiday to celebrate labor, stressed that Germany should honor all it's workers and break down traditional class barriers.
State economic control increased, and free markets dwindled. Corporate income tax was over 100% in s
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Hitler did not consider capitalism to be inherently Jewish. He went with it. He attained power partly by allying with large industrialists. Got cite? The stated ideals of the National Socialist party were a lot of B.S., as with any other Nazi propaganda. The socialist wing was eliminated with extreme prejudice in the 1930s.
The Nazis had a lot of propaganda, and outwardly celebrated labor while in fact crushing labor unions and the like. There was one national labor union, so it could be controlled.
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Fascists can be communists. Such as Hitler. If you doubt me, then what is "Nazi" a nickname for? The (translated into English) National Socialist Party.
Uh, yeah ... and North Korea is known more officially as the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. How's that working out?
What's in a name is not necessarily what's in the truth.
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" If it was .000001% of the budget then it was nothing."
If it were .000001% of the imperial budget it would be not such a feat to build TWO!
The emperor and his right hand were busily involved in the project and they threw big hopes on its success. Therefore it must eat a big chunk of imperial economy. Since it were considered a good idea, if they could build them for peanuts they would build a thousand, not just two.
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wtf? It wasn't outside of the empire, it had imperial stormtroopers on it.
The Hutts didn't run the planet, or they'd have been the Government which would make their trade activities legal and not smuggling.
Your whole assumption base is flawed, except the bit about relevance.
Before you think this is some sort of joke (Score:1)
This could be used as an allegory for the abrupt closure of banks "too big to fail."
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No problem, they just need to buy too-big-to-fail insurance. $1 trillion per year ought to be enough.
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Hilary, is that you?
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Hilary, is that you?
Hillary would never do that to her buddies.
Mortgage (Score:2)
"It's not even paid for!!!"
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Really, would it have been that much of the galactic budget anyway? I mean, I get that it was huge. But the Empire was said to be, what, 1 1/2 billion developed worlds and 60 billion colonies, with crazy-advanced manufacturing technology... I think that giant construction projects would be pretty run of the mill for them, even if that one was, individually, rather large. Like a nation building an aircraft carrier or something - a big expense, but not one that's going to bankrupt you.
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The only plausible answer is "no-one, because the galaxy doesn't run on anything as mundane as 'money' any more".
That only works if you assume that Star Wars is science fiction, but it isn't. It's Fantasy. The galaxy of Star Wars most certainly does run on money, and all of the canon makes that abundantly clear from the very beginning.
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HAN: Yes, Greedo. As a matter of fact, I was just going to see your boss. Tell Jabba that I've got his money.
The problem is that Han gives himself away with this contradictory statement. If he was headed to see Jabba with the money, he wouldn't need Greedo to pass a message.
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HAN: Yes, Greedo. As a matter of fact, I was just going to see your boss. Tell Jabba that I've got his money.
The problem is that Han gives himself away with this contradictory statement. If he was headed to see Jabba with the money, he wouldn't need Greedo to pass a message.
Han is thinking about how he's going to get out of this, and buying time while he unholsters his blaster. The message doesn't have to make a whole lot of sense. Also, he might well be planning to head to see Jabba right after he gets paid for delivering the old man and the whiny boy.
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Do you have any idea what this is going to do to my credit? [youtube.com]
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It isn't subtly funny any more if you post a link to the video.
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I was not shooting for subtle.
Meanwhile, back in the real world (Score:2)
Everyone else is discussing what utter fucking oxygen parasites economists are.
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The witch doctor has a theory that a disease like malaria is caused by a spirit which comes into the air; it is not cured by shaking a snake over it, but quinine does help malaria. So, if you are sick, I would advise that you go to the witch doctor because he is the man in the tribe who knows the most about the disease; on the other hand, his knowledge is not science.
-- Richard Feynman, The Feynman Lectures on Physics
For better or for worse, economists are our "witch doctors" when it comes to the economy.
Seems like a weird thing to work on... (Score:2)
But then again, I suppose this is fun to an economist...
Whatever floats your boat man.
I guess I don't recall anyone ever talk about money in any of the movies. Do we even know that the whole galaxy was on a capitalist system? I just can't imagine that you could build a Death Star in a capitalist society where you are paying all of your workers a living wage... not to mention your huge standing army....
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"Republic credits are no good here". "I always knew there was more to you than money".
That's without even looking it up, scholar.
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I guess I wasn't thinking hard enough.
After I posted, I thought, oh yeah, Han was negotiating with Obi Wan in the cantina about the cost of passage.
Oh well, thanks for pointing those out.
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I guess I don't recall anyone ever talk about money in any of the movies.
Did you watch the movies?
What 10 minutes in Owen buys the droids from the Jawas.
Luke's request to join the academy was denied because they couldn't afford it. "Maybe after the harvest I'll have enough money to hire some help, and you can go to the academy next year."
Further on...
Han solo demanded 10,000 to fly Luke to Alderaan.
Han: 10000, all in advance ...
Luke: 10000, we could almost buy our own ship for that!
Han: Yeah, but whose going to fly it kid, you?
Ben: We can pay you 2,000 now, and 15,000 when we we
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Yeah, I wasn't thinking hard enough.
You are absolutely right.
Thanks
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I guess I don't recall anyone ever talk about money in any of the movies. Do we even know that the whole galaxy was on a capitalist system?
I don't know about "the whole galaxy," but you did have bounty hunters.
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Clearly I have been proven to not be a SW nerd :)
Thanks for the reply.
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But then again, I suppose this is fun to an economist...
Whatever floats your boat man.
Sure. It's not like engineers and physists don't figure out the details of Sci-Fi spaceships all the time. I'm sure some computer scientists have worked out the computational power of the Matrix. I suspect that economists do gedankenexperiments on fictional economies all the time also.
Too Big To Fail (Score:1)
So the Death Star may be too-big-to-fail? Well, then break up the monopoly into many smaller Death Asteroids and let them compete with each other. If you want to fry big planets, then you use multiple Death Asteroids on the same target.
It's also easier to sell off Death Asteroids because only big clusters could afford a full Death Star. Death Aste
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They already had fuck-off big capital ships called Star Destroyers. It was false advertising by the manufacturers though, they weren't at the star destroying level.
Then again the Death Star wasn't a star. Imperial bragging, etc.
But your theory is flawed. Take the Challenger II tank; it's capable of taking out another Challenger II tank, but if the opposition only has RPGs they can use 90 of the fuckers and the tank is still operational.
I'd assume a planet can take an awfully large amount of damage from a st
Well, there's another benefit of Star Wars... (Score:1)
It's helping to keep at least two economists focused on something other than real-world situations, where their advice would inevitably cause more harm than good.
Not likely to benefit the Empire? (Score:2)
That doesn't make sense.
I don't count myself an expert in Star Wars trivia, but if the Empire is anything like the Roman empire, then economic expansion via military force is a key part of its economic growth. You conquer new lands for tribute, booty, resources, labor/slaves, and so on.
A death star is a valuable military weapon that could conceivably improve the economy by allowing the Empire to more easily (and more cheaply) conquer new systems. In terms of conventional industrial economics, it's like ha
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Where are they going to expand to? They already rule the fucking galaxy.
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It seems highly unlikely that the empire could have conquered any reasonable part of the galaxy in the 25 years they were in power. A bunch of the core worlds (some of which were still resisting like Mon Calamari, Corellia, and Alderaan), sure, but not everything. Even the Old Republic didn't rule the whole galaxy: there were lots of unknown regions.
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That doesn't make sense.
I don't count myself an expert in Star Wars trivia, but if the Empire is anything like the Roman empire, then economic expansion via military force is a key part of its economic growth. You conquer new lands for tribute, booty, resources, labor/slaves, and so on.
A death star is a valuable military weapon that could conceivably improve the economy by allowing the Empire to more easily (and more cheaply) conquer new systems. In terms of conventional industrial economics, it's like having a vastly superior factory.
A loss of the Death Star would both be an economic loss of the investment and much slower revenue growth because you'd have to fight harder to conquer new systems with more conventional weapons (to the extent that a Super Star Destroyer is a conventional weapon).
That is sort of like arguing that the allies in WW2 were destroying an economic investment and slowing revenue by dismantling the Nazi work camp system. Why get rid of the camps when slave labor can make so many goods for so cheap? Besides that both the Death Star and the camps aren't necessarily sustainable or that economics wasn't the main goal of either, the allies and rebels found their enemies tactics deplorable and one of the reasons they were being fought.
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It depends on your perspective. To the Nazis, the work camps were economically valuable.
To the allies, destroying them was an economic value because it made the Nazis easier to fight.
There's no argument that economic expansion through conquest is self-limiting and economically inefficient, and I'm pretty sure it features in many explanations as to the fall of the Roman empire.
Idiots (Score:1)
Similar to Endor Holocaust (Score:2)
Reminds me of the Endor Holocaust which would have pretty much ended life on Endor due to the billions of tons of material raining down on the planet.
http://www.theforce.net/swtc/holocaust.html [theforce.net]
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costs of Death Stars (Score:2)
Aleron Death Star (Score:2)
If the GGP can survive the total destruction of Alderon, I think the galactic economy can survive the loss of two Death Stars. Then there is also the clone wars. Frankly, it requires a bit of suspension of disbelief to think that the Galactic economy can function at all since the Galaxy seems to be perpetually at war.
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Parts of our world are always at war, yet we function.
Who owned credit default swaps on Alderon MBSs? (Score:2)
Just like the last financial crisis, whoever owns the derivatives on the AAA Mortgage Backed Securities on all that Alderon Property, that will never be paid back, is going to make quadrillions of credits.
Wouldn't they die if they did not destroy them? (Score:4, Insightful)
The problem with economics ... (Score:2)
On a logarithmic scale annihilation is an infinite loss. 50% loss is equivalent to 100% profit, which makes much more sen
High Guard (Score:2)
Traveller's High Guard rules would probably be the best. You'd just have to have the Referee figure out what the cost of a "Turbo Laser" is, either by assuming it's just a meson gun or something else that would be determined by percentage of ship.
Wartime Economics Fail (Score:3)
Because a galaxy living in fear is better? (Score:2)
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It would have been far better to capture it, if they could pull that off. Even if they have no use for a Death Star per se, it represents a huge quantity of high-value dual-use technology and raw materials which could be put to better use. Destroying it is still preferable, of course, to leaving it in the hands of the Empire.
Seems pretty obvious that blowing up planets (Score:4, Insightful)
for things as trivial as trying to get a prisoner to talk is going to have a larger impact on the galactic economy than the destruction of the death star.
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oh please, Alderaan was jerks. ;)
Death Star my ass. (Score:5, Funny)
Seriously. It's a Death Moon. Ya, I know I/we heard someone say it wasn't a moon, but it is. Though I'm sure that if the International Astronomical Union (IAU) had there way, it would be called the Death Dwarf Planet or Death Asteroid. I'm going with Death Moon. Not nearly as sexy as "Death Star" or "AT&T" though.
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Well, I'm pretty sure it's capable of clearing its own orbit. So Death Planet it is.
Both are incorrect (Score:3)
The true story is somewhat different, and it is about corruption. It's Empire, you know. Darth Wader got a government contract to build a Death Star. It was built not from iron and steel, but from cheapest available materials, using non-qualified workers and third-world subcontractors. In fact, the quality of the construction was so low, that it could fire only once. The Emperor somehow was aware of this affair and arranged an investigating committee (everything goes slow in Galactic Empires). At the time of Episode 4, this committee was already on board of the Death Star. Darth Wader had to do something to get away from this trouble. And he asked his children for help. He gave drawing of the Death Star to Leia and she delivered them to rebels. Rebels successfully destroyed the Death Star and the investigating committee. The only person who could run away was Darth Wader. And later he got another contract from the government - to build another Death Star. Which was never finished.
From the economical point of view, corruption is not good, but the waste of valuable construction materials was not so substantial. Most of the money went to Darth Wader's pockets.
What's the economic loss.... (Score:2)
Of having an entire planet obliterated from your economy by a Death Star?
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Of having an entire planet obliterated from your economy by a Death Star?
Probably less than one two hundred billionth of your GGP. That would be equivalent to losing $17k dollars from the US GDP.
what? these people make a living doing this? (Score:2)
On the contrary, it'd have resulted in an economic boon for the Republic. The deathstar is a sunk cost; the production and supply facilities which were not in orbit for the purposes of construction are now sitting idle. This is likely many star systems worth of mining operations, refinery,
Think about what happened in WWII in the US: typewriter manufacturers, automotive manufacturers, etc. all quickly shifted gears to produce planes, tanks, and guns - enough weapons that we were supplying the Russians, Briti
The costs are way overblown (Score:2)
As I said when the first story was posted... go look at the Senate of the Old Republic. Even assuming two Senators, instead of just one... how many *thousands* of boxes, one for each planet, in the OR did you count?
So, this estimate's wrong, also, because they scale is off of the *sources* of the Empire's revenue. I'd guess their revenue is orders of magnitude larger than either economist is estimating. I'd put the cost of a Death Star at about the cost of maybe two of the next generation of nuclear aircraf
Black project, off books&budget, cost immateri (Score:2)
Re:Closed framed mind (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah, ever try negotiating loan terms with a Sith Lord? Not fun, my friend.... not fun.
Re:Closed framed mind (Score:5, Funny)
The problem isn't the negotiating, it's the unilateral modifications afterwards.
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I find your lack of faith disturbing
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It depends on whether you are Lando Calrissian or Boba Fett.
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"ever try negotiating loan terms with a Sith Lord? Not fun, my friend.... not fun."
I am altering the deal. Pray I don't alter it any further.
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"I'm sorry, Mr. Vader. Your financial history just doesn't support us extending you a line of credit."
"I find your lack of faith... disturbing."
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The Soviet Union needed to devote 40% of its GDP just to keeping up appearances with the US over the decades...and didn't. Compare vs 2-4% of the US.
The Empire is not like the Soviet Union, it's more like the modern day dictatorships we have. Pretty much after the Emperor dissolved the Galactic Senate it was more like Nazi Germany without the nationalism. Access to a vast economic system with a strong military manufacturing base and large armies that are pretty much under the direct control of one person. Hitler had massive amounts of resources to pour into both military science and military research. It is important to note that the only reason that t