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  • They keep talking about fiscal cost as though money is a resource. MONEY IS NOT A RESOURCE. It's an arbitrary medium of exchange. It's only useful to measure money cost if you can translate it to either A) natural resource consumption, B) labor, C) externalities you want minimized, D) deepening ensnarement in foreign debt, or E) an increase in money supply disrupting exchange.

    If China didn't borrow internationally to make those investments, it didn't get deeper into debt to it's enemies.

    If China isn't seeing inflation, it didn't flood the money supply.

    No country has come even close to fully pricing its externalities and China uses democracy to manage those, so the fiscal cost doesn't represent that.

    If China has better things to do with its labor, then this could represent missed opportunities to do those better things. However, as we've seen, China has ever improving living conditions, infrastructure, education, cost of living, etc. It would be difficult for someone to argue what specific things that labor should have been allocated to.

    And natural resource consumption is very much the same.

    Writing an entire article about the 'fiscal cost' as though money is an actual resource with real use valuebis exactly the sort of brain rot to expect from the North Atlantic.

9 comments