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by pharke
2228 days ago
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I'll admit that it is well written and makes for a compelling description of the growth of an urban center but it doesn't answer the questions it poses. It seems to say that the value of land and resources increases as the population does, this is true to some extent in that as demand increases for limited resources the value of those resources is driven higher. New goods and services are needed to support larger populations and more of them. A coal deposit may be worthless to a rancher since his concern is with the prairie that lays over top of it and he has neither the need nor the means to make use of it but if an urban center grows up beside that prairie then he may be coaxed into selling his land rights for a greater reward than his herd can provide. This is all perfectly sensible but doesn't say anything about how we should assign a fundamental value to those resources. Nor does it describe what should be done in a world in which that savannah is for the most part already settled and exploited or how we would replace an extant system. It is not always true that a resource based business can relocate. They are often tied to the land they are on due to some local condition whether that is suitability for farming, grazing, the presence of natural deposits or features such as waterways. Only urban businesses that simply require square footage are purely fungible when it comes to location (although that often isn't entirely true since urban landscapes have their own happenstances that make certain businesses viable). A lot of this seems to have the flavour of a just-so story that ignores a great deal of important ground truths. |
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