Difference between revisions of "Economy"

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Beginning in the [[21st century]], the center of production moved from large [[corporation]]s to individuals and tightly organized groups, the latter eventually being called [[geren]]s.  As three-dimensional [[printer]]s developed, the word eventually came to subsume [[replicator]], as limits on their capabilities and civilian chemical synthesis dropped.
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Civilian and other 'open source' designs began competing with commercial ones in various arenas, and more and more people became capable of producing hard goods of all sorts - from tools to computers.  Many large conglomerates simply collapsed - how can you compete when any individual can easily produce and recycle your entire product offering?  A few items remained scarce, or at least semi-scarce - food, lumber, and other organics were key examples, and their relative price would soar outside the Americas by the start of the [[22nd century]].  This, actually, is what precipitated the move to [[arcologies]] - land was valuable, more importantly fertile land.
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Some other corporations sought to control vast swaths of intellectual property, to the point where some even tried to claim rights on categories of ideas - 'mystery' would be a license as if it were a form of public airwave.  These maneuvers were forged on increasingly shaky ground, and the [[Martian Compact]] had no place for them.  Before the [[Martian Conflict]], seven of the largest corporations saw their ultimate fate, and threw in their lot with [[Mars]] over [[Earth]].  What was left after the rise of the [[Solar Consortium]] was a slim, efficient system with comparatively staggering productive capacities, with seemingly infinite room for growth.
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Technically, [[human]]ity reached type II on the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kardashev_scale Kardashev scale] during the [[23rd century]], scant decades after it reached type I, rapidly building a [[Dyson swarm]] around [[Sol]].  The discovery of [[mobius pattern]]s and the [[Contact War]] led many to consider the Kardashev scale to be rather arbitrary, and instead used to an Order Of Magnitude-Efficiency scale ([[OOME scale]]) instead.  Before the [[Purge]], [[mankind]] would be rated at 27-S on such a scale, with [[Sirius]] producing half of the energy allotment.
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A sort of 'republican' system was designed wherein major, desired projects took up the vast swath of resources - at least by those desiring to use them.  [[Megastructures]] like the [[Clarke ring]]s, exploration and colonization of nearby [[star system]]s via the [[Mission]]s, and the [[terraform]]ing of [[Venus]] are only a few examples.  Those not of the [[content]] were given an energy allotment, and could either throw their weight in with an extant development or try to convince others to support theirs.  This also created rogue developments such as [[Ouranos Prime]].
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The [[Anti-Homogenization Act]] put a mild damper on human expansion, intended to guarantee that future generations would be able to capitalize on the wealth of the previous.  This, combined with the above, serves as a basic model for most systems controlled or influenced by any [[cerevate]] race - not just humanity.  This includes the [[Concorde]] and the [[Triad]], though these more primitive empires still have a rigid caste structure dominating and limiting them.  The production capabilities of nearly any [[star system]] are immense by 21st-century standards, though not entirely incomprehensible.
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== Currency ==
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With the atomic age so far gone, few isotopes are truly 'scarce'.  Although changing one element into another is not exactly child's play, it is sufficiently common that the most extreme examples are energy-cost dominated - the price of [[hawkinium]], for example, is almost entirely based on the amount of energy used in its production.
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Although not 'truly scarce', the pervasiveness of [[fusion]] among the populace has caused [[deuterium]] to be the standard currency.  Class B [[mobius pattern]]s are also traded frequently, as is [[mirror matter]].  These three resources form the basis of trade, and most things can be traced back to these initial costs.
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[[Human]]s and the [[Concorde]] trade deuterium on the gram, often called the [[credit]], while [[renlai]] trade on a unit called the [[angse]], which [[mass]]es approximately 30 grams.  The [[First]] predominately use the renlai system, and through them so do the [[Triad]].  When sold, [[mirror]] matter is usually traded on the kilogram - or 'thousandlot'.  Its price is closely related to that of deuterium, by mass.  [[Hadronium]] items will command between thirty and ten thousand times this price, reflecting the immense amounts of power needed for their construction, and the advanced equipment needed to produce them.
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In terms of productive capacity, a gram-credit represents about seven thousand US dollars worth of energy in 2007 terms, and can be considered roughly equal to that level of wealth in raw materials.  Rare isotopes, like gold, and extremely complex processes that require extant territory like organic foods and such are considerably more valuable.
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[[Pattern]]s were priceless during the [[Diaspora]], as humans would not willingly part with any of them, and would voraciously hunt down any that fell into [[alien]] hands, including [[infusion]]s from [[soronen]] relics.  The [[First]] and [[renlai]] are similarly greedy regarding such objects, and infusions and wraiths still remain nearly priceless commodities, along with [[hypomatter]] - they may be traded, but only for another item of similarly priceless value.  Class B patterns are another story, as they grew and bred by the trillion, they have become rather difficult to control.  As such, they are occasionally sold, commanding a price commiserate with being a key to infinite wealth.
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While deuterium typically cannot be used for such a purchase, usually they are used to commission a rather advanced piece of [[exomatter]], such as a star[[ship]], which would have such a raw cost, typically over ten trillion tonnes worth.  This sort of immense currency trade also governs things like planets - [[Earth]] would be worth around 25 patterns, ignoring any other value it possessed.
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== Work ==
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Amongst the [[Triad]], most labor is done by lower castes, though since the [[Diaspora]] some have come to accept robotic labor.  The more advanced civilizations use non-[[Sapient]] robot
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Economics are slightly whacked compared to modern times, just as current economics would seem insane compared to medieval times. On one scale, it is an economy of plenty - most basic needs can be fulfilled a thousandfold, even for a very loose definition of needs. On the other hand, certain substances - food being the most common - are in very high demand outside of [[Earth]], though even this 'scarcity' is more inconvenience than actual problem.
 
Economics are slightly whacked compared to modern times, just as current economics would seem insane compared to medieval times. On one scale, it is an economy of plenty - most basic needs can be fulfilled a thousandfold, even for a very loose definition of needs. On the other hand, certain substances - food being the most common - are in very high demand outside of [[Earth]], though even this 'scarcity' is more inconvenience than actual problem.
  

Revision as of 19:34, 4 April 2007

Beginning in the 21st century, the center of production moved from large corporations to individuals and tightly organized groups, the latter eventually being called gerens. As three-dimensional printers developed, the word eventually came to subsume replicator, as limits on their capabilities and civilian chemical synthesis dropped.

Civilian and other 'open source' designs began competing with commercial ones in various arenas, and more and more people became capable of producing hard goods of all sorts - from tools to computers. Many large conglomerates simply collapsed - how can you compete when any individual can easily produce and recycle your entire product offering? A few items remained scarce, or at least semi-scarce - food, lumber, and other organics were key examples, and their relative price would soar outside the Americas by the start of the 22nd century. This, actually, is what precipitated the move to arcologies - land was valuable, more importantly fertile land.

Some other corporations sought to control vast swaths of intellectual property, to the point where some even tried to claim rights on categories of ideas - 'mystery' would be a license as if it were a form of public airwave. These maneuvers were forged on increasingly shaky ground, and the Martian Compact had no place for them. Before the Martian Conflict, seven of the largest corporations saw their ultimate fate, and threw in their lot with Mars over Earth. What was left after the rise of the Solar Consortium was a slim, efficient system with comparatively staggering productive capacities, with seemingly infinite room for growth.

Technically, humanity reached type II on the Kardashev scale during the 23rd century, scant decades after it reached type I, rapidly building a Dyson swarm around Sol. The discovery of mobius patterns and the Contact War led many to consider the Kardashev scale to be rather arbitrary, and instead used to an Order Of Magnitude-Efficiency scale (OOME scale) instead. Before the Purge, mankind would be rated at 27-S on such a scale, with Sirius producing half of the energy allotment.

A sort of 'republican' system was designed wherein major, desired projects took up the vast swath of resources - at least by those desiring to use them. Megastructures like the Clarke rings, exploration and colonization of nearby star systems via the Missions, and the terraforming of Venus are only a few examples. Those not of the content were given an energy allotment, and could either throw their weight in with an extant development or try to convince others to support theirs. This also created rogue developments such as Ouranos Prime.

The Anti-Homogenization Act put a mild damper on human expansion, intended to guarantee that future generations would be able to capitalize on the wealth of the previous. This, combined with the above, serves as a basic model for most systems controlled or influenced by any cerevate race - not just humanity. This includes the Concorde and the Triad, though these more primitive empires still have a rigid caste structure dominating and limiting them. The production capabilities of nearly any star system are immense by 21st-century standards, though not entirely incomprehensible.

Currency

With the atomic age so far gone, few isotopes are truly 'scarce'. Although changing one element into another is not exactly child's play, it is sufficiently common that the most extreme examples are energy-cost dominated - the price of hawkinium, for example, is almost entirely based on the amount of energy used in its production.

Although not 'truly scarce', the pervasiveness of fusion among the populace has caused deuterium to be the standard currency. Class B mobius patterns are also traded frequently, as is mirror matter. These three resources form the basis of trade, and most things can be traced back to these initial costs.

Humans and the Concorde trade deuterium on the gram, often called the credit, while renlai trade on a unit called the angse, which masses approximately 30 grams. The First predominately use the renlai system, and through them so do the Triad. When sold, mirror matter is usually traded on the kilogram - or 'thousandlot'. Its price is closely related to that of deuterium, by mass. Hadronium items will command between thirty and ten thousand times this price, reflecting the immense amounts of power needed for their construction, and the advanced equipment needed to produce them.

In terms of productive capacity, a gram-credit represents about seven thousand US dollars worth of energy in 2007 terms, and can be considered roughly equal to that level of wealth in raw materials. Rare isotopes, like gold, and extremely complex processes that require extant territory like organic foods and such are considerably more valuable.

Patterns were priceless during the Diaspora, as humans would not willingly part with any of them, and would voraciously hunt down any that fell into alien hands, including infusions from soronen relics. The First and renlai are similarly greedy regarding such objects, and infusions and wraiths still remain nearly priceless commodities, along with hypomatter - they may be traded, but only for another item of similarly priceless value. Class B patterns are another story, as they grew and bred by the trillion, they have become rather difficult to control. As such, they are occasionally sold, commanding a price commiserate with being a key to infinite wealth.

While deuterium typically cannot be used for such a purchase, usually they are used to commission a rather advanced piece of exomatter, such as a starship, which would have such a raw cost, typically over ten trillion tonnes worth. This sort of immense currency trade also governs things like planets - Earth would be worth around 25 patterns, ignoring any other value it possessed.

Work

Amongst the Triad, most labor is done by lower castes, though since the Diaspora some have come to accept robotic labor. The more advanced civilizations use non-Sapient robot


Economics are slightly whacked compared to modern times, just as current economics would seem insane compared to medieval times. On one scale, it is an economy of plenty - most basic needs can be fulfilled a thousandfold, even for a very loose definition of needs. On the other hand, certain substances - food being the most common - are in very high demand outside of Earth, though even this 'scarcity' is more inconvenience than actual problem.

Any device which can be synthesized with two-dimensional layers, or have parts entirely composed of such, can be replicated, and some three-dimensional objects can as well. Only a few rare elements and isotopes hold significant value, with deuterium, due to the energy economy, being worth one credit per gram by definition, or about 3.5 sols.

Organics are still in high demand, because they are difficult to grow en masse off of Earth, though the terraforming of Mars has closed down the Terran monopoly on food. Even Ouranos Prime possesses its own gardens, forests, and lakes with sea life, however - the outer stations are not without their own food supply.

The overall wealth of the Solar Consortium is staggering by modern standards, so, when looking at numbers, it is important to think of what our society would look like to someone from two centuries ago, or, more appropriately, four centuries ago, just after the invention of the printing press.

Most work in the Solar System is done by non-sentient drones, or biological equivelants in some cases. Humans and Artificial sapiences are usually used to manage these drones, rather than perform menial work themselves, except as a hobby. People are generally quite independant, and corporations are largely relics of an ancient past, long since replaced by the more informal and flexible gerens.


For all this industrial might, there is a very real problem with using it. In theory, any single human could make their weight among the stars, start producing like mad, come back and overwhelm the rest of the species. Obviously, for several reasons, this situation is not desirable.

In response to this potential threat, and to head-off another situation like Ouranos Prime and the Contact War, the new Solar Consortium Council passed the Anti-Homogenization Act, to actively promote the diversification of the human species and to consider the development of a hegemonizing protocol to be an act of war.


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