• FourPacketsOfPeanuts@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Cons - lack of normal workforce replenishment ~18-20 years after plague would cripple economies, social safety nets and essential government spending (state pensions, road upkeep, military). Demographic would skew older and older with each year limiting democratic governments ability to pass any kind of rescue legislation until it’s too late (assuming an increasingly older population votes in their own interest, being unable to work to help fix massive labour shortages, as so defensively protect government programs for elderly that government can no longer afford)

    Pros - I mean, what counts as a ‘pro’? Less pollution as the world economy collapses I guess…

        • infinite_ass@leminal.spaceOP
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          12 hours ago

          100% central planning works for schools, corporations, farms, bicycle repair shops… It works very well.

          If you think that an economy is special in this then you might want to check your sources. Consider who’s telling you that

          • AwesomeLowlander@sh.itjust.works
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            12 hours ago

            The fact that you’re comparing bicycle repair shops to an entire country economy tells me pretty much all I need to know. Even in corporations, the unexpected successes tend to be the most surprising and profitable ones. Guess what? None of them are ever planned for, and none of them would have existed in a planned economy.

        • FourPacketsOfPeanuts@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          My theory (maybe it’s not a theory maybe it’s obvious) is that students and people in their twenties are more given to “big government” idealism because they were only recently living at home - maybe still are - where, even if they had terrible parents (maybe especially if they had terrible parents) it’s easy to believe “if only the people in charge were good everything would had been so much better”. Of course, there’s very little in even a healthy childhood that properly models the importance of “balance of power”. Parents are good parents or bad parents, but they are always “in charge” just by virtue of the dynamic between adults and children. I can see how young people end up believing it would just take a “good parent” to fix so much that’s wrong about the way things run. Unfortunately no group of adults has ever had “total” control over a country without it in some way going to total shit. Realising the reality of this is I think one of those moments when you actually grow up.

          • tomi000@lemmy.world
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            23 hours ago

            The people who could singlehandedly run a country in a good way are the ones that have the least motivation to do so.

      • FourPacketsOfPeanuts@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Good luck convincing everyone to democratically support the same authoritarianism that would be required to pull that off while everything slowly falls apart. It would be chaos.

        • XTL@sopuli.xyz
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          1 day ago

          democratically support the same authoritarianism

          Did you see the US election results yet?

          • FourPacketsOfPeanuts@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            Half of America losing their minds and voting for a trump administration is in fact further proof you’d have civil war before you had a “100% planned economy”. People are provably irrationally selfish. Even in times of national emergency (cf covid etc)