Stunt
Diamond Member
I've been an avid poster on the P&N forums for years now and have participated in countless arguments over the most effective way to make people wealthier and better off. We all have debated various roles of government, taxation, political ideology and with all the various opinions (ie. raising minimum wage, cutting taxes, education investment, trade relations) we all strive for the same common goal even though our perceived path to these goals can contrast drastically.
What if wealth has nothing to do with where you are on the political spectrum, has nothing to do with a nations ideology, has nothing to do with the things we as a global community love so dear (government, patriotism).
It is my belief that a nations wealth is exclusively driven by a nation's natural resources, population, and climate. I read somewhere that the number of minerals and resources represents 90% of the world's total number. For example, Texas is known for oil, Pennsylvania for iron, Wyoming for coal, etc. During the industrial revolution, the US was able to provide it's own resources and didn't have to pay a premium or trade goods with other nations to progress their economy. No other nation in the world has the sheer diverse supply of natural deposits of resources than the United States. Combine that with a large population base to explore, excavate, produce and consume and you have a superpower in the making. Not because of a political party, not because of some act of patriotism, or domestic policies. The climate comes into play for the health and efficiency of the nation. If you cannot produce your own diverse and dietary complete food source, this can impact a nation's health and can serve as yet another resource; for example Wisconsin cheese, Idaho potatoes, Florida citrus, Maryland lobster.
Politics is merely a debate over two things 1) how services are administered to a population, 2) how much control one believes we should place on society based on personal morals. It is my honest opinion that private and public institutions are both wasteful (ie. too many people in public, too many bonuses and perks for private). The efficiency of each relative to each other is negligible. I mean in theory the free market thinkers understand the concept of economies of scale yet fail to concede that a single payer non-profit monopoly is able to offer the cheapest service (healthcare or law enforcement). Well some think national defense is still more efficient administered by the public sector 😉. In the end it's just a matter of who pays for it, either the individual though their take home income or individuals through their taxed income. I can't see how a shift from one payment method to another can stimulate so much growth that the person could significantly increase his wealth.
There's a reason why all wars in our history have been over resources, he who has the resources becomes the most powerful, not the country with the lowest taxes, or the country with the best trade deals; it is almost predetermined by the country's most basic landscape. Now that being said, obviously those who have this inherent wealth can squander it on making less opportunistic investments. I've heard that for every one dollar in education investment results in 40times that value in generated GDP. I'm sure there's a point where law enforcement becomes redundant and gives little payback for added investment. Pointless wars are another example of squandered wealth.
The sad thing is with all the resources in the US continuously being depleted and consumption growing rapidly with more and more citizens/businesses willing to take on more leveraged risk; the wealth is no longer being circulated within the nation but sent to other nations who have the resources required to satisfy the wildest dreams of each and every American. The "have" nation is slowly becoming a "have-not" nation and Americans need to ensure their limited resources are allocated in the most effective manner to maintain the superpower status they have enjoyed for so many years.
But getting back to the topic at hand; wealth being driven exclusively by resources, population and climate. European countries lack the diverse resources and climate required to support a diversified economy domestically. All goods must be bought or traded for. The Scandinavian countries, Russia and Canada lack the climate and population required for a thriving superpower. Asian nations lack resources but have turned their population into a means to trade for these resources quite successfully. African nations lack all 3 and that's precisely why economic development will never reach the same potential as other nations. In fact even with the huge wealth generation over the years though charity and global efforts, they continue to fall behind other nations. It's sort of sad to see that no matter how hard a nation or individual works, wealth and prosperity for the most part comes down to where you were born and nothing more.
That's my theory anyway...thoughts and opinions welcome.
What if wealth has nothing to do with where you are on the political spectrum, has nothing to do with a nations ideology, has nothing to do with the things we as a global community love so dear (government, patriotism).
It is my belief that a nations wealth is exclusively driven by a nation's natural resources, population, and climate. I read somewhere that the number of minerals and resources represents 90% of the world's total number. For example, Texas is known for oil, Pennsylvania for iron, Wyoming for coal, etc. During the industrial revolution, the US was able to provide it's own resources and didn't have to pay a premium or trade goods with other nations to progress their economy. No other nation in the world has the sheer diverse supply of natural deposits of resources than the United States. Combine that with a large population base to explore, excavate, produce and consume and you have a superpower in the making. Not because of a political party, not because of some act of patriotism, or domestic policies. The climate comes into play for the health and efficiency of the nation. If you cannot produce your own diverse and dietary complete food source, this can impact a nation's health and can serve as yet another resource; for example Wisconsin cheese, Idaho potatoes, Florida citrus, Maryland lobster.
Politics is merely a debate over two things 1) how services are administered to a population, 2) how much control one believes we should place on society based on personal morals. It is my honest opinion that private and public institutions are both wasteful (ie. too many people in public, too many bonuses and perks for private). The efficiency of each relative to each other is negligible. I mean in theory the free market thinkers understand the concept of economies of scale yet fail to concede that a single payer non-profit monopoly is able to offer the cheapest service (healthcare or law enforcement). Well some think national defense is still more efficient administered by the public sector 😉. In the end it's just a matter of who pays for it, either the individual though their take home income or individuals through their taxed income. I can't see how a shift from one payment method to another can stimulate so much growth that the person could significantly increase his wealth.
There's a reason why all wars in our history have been over resources, he who has the resources becomes the most powerful, not the country with the lowest taxes, or the country with the best trade deals; it is almost predetermined by the country's most basic landscape. Now that being said, obviously those who have this inherent wealth can squander it on making less opportunistic investments. I've heard that for every one dollar in education investment results in 40times that value in generated GDP. I'm sure there's a point where law enforcement becomes redundant and gives little payback for added investment. Pointless wars are another example of squandered wealth.
The sad thing is with all the resources in the US continuously being depleted and consumption growing rapidly with more and more citizens/businesses willing to take on more leveraged risk; the wealth is no longer being circulated within the nation but sent to other nations who have the resources required to satisfy the wildest dreams of each and every American. The "have" nation is slowly becoming a "have-not" nation and Americans need to ensure their limited resources are allocated in the most effective manner to maintain the superpower status they have enjoyed for so many years.
But getting back to the topic at hand; wealth being driven exclusively by resources, population and climate. European countries lack the diverse resources and climate required to support a diversified economy domestically. All goods must be bought or traded for. The Scandinavian countries, Russia and Canada lack the climate and population required for a thriving superpower. Asian nations lack resources but have turned their population into a means to trade for these resources quite successfully. African nations lack all 3 and that's precisely why economic development will never reach the same potential as other nations. In fact even with the huge wealth generation over the years though charity and global efforts, they continue to fall behind other nations. It's sort of sad to see that no matter how hard a nation or individual works, wealth and prosperity for the most part comes down to where you were born and nothing more.
That's my theory anyway...thoughts and opinions welcome.