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The Emperor in debt

This fascinating series is a combination of historical seafaring, swashbuckling adventure, and high technological science-fiction. Join us in a discussion!
Re: The Emperor in debt
Post by SYED   » Sat May 10, 2014 7:18 pm

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We know the empire is very corrupt, so why not use that in creating the canal system there. THe sheer scal and size of it would be a huge opportunity for graft and bribes, and they can use the chuch as it's main backer, if they want to get paid, they should use their influence to ensure the long term well being of the empire. All those men currently planned for the army, while they can not be used right now, can be used to build the canals? I wonder if the former madam of zion would know hte right people to approach concerning this plan.
Owl could design the perfect canal system for the empire, an make the plans detailed for usage.
THe worse the position of the church, the more they need money, so if the empire is tapped out on another project, fewer options for the temple.
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Re: The Emperor in debt
Post by niethil   » Tue May 20, 2014 2:10 pm

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runsforcelery wrote:Actually, they normally don't. They can get to the Temple via canal and overland, although the travel is a bear in winter.


There is something I have been wondering about for a long time : why do they move bullions around at all ? Back in the first books, we had the Church using paper money (Was it Corisande where they used the Church's credit to finance the artillery build up and wondered if people would accept it even without Zion's seal due to delays ?). And now it seems they ship bullions around for some reason.
Or might it be that the answer to this remark :
lyonheart wrote:But that doesn't seem enough for something the size of the Desnari empire, though it might not have been a whole year's tithe.

is that the Temple serves as a clearing house, and only the resulting imbalances are cleared by moving coins all over the planet ? But I don't see the Church using such a costly procedure instead of relying on credit ...

There must be something I don't understand in the way Safeholdian finance works. But what ?
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'Oh, oh' he said in English. Evidently, he had completely mastered that language.
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Re: The Emperor in debt
Post by SWM   » Tue May 20, 2014 4:05 pm

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niethil wrote:There is something I have been wondering about for a long time : why do they move bullions around at all ? Back in the first books, we had the Church using paper money (Was it Corisande where they used the Church's credit to finance the artillery build up and wondered if people would accept it even without Zion's seal due to delays ?). And now it seems they ship bullions around for some reason.
Or might it be that the answer to this remark :
lyonheart wrote:But that doesn't seem enough for something the size of the Desnari empire, though it might not have been a whole year's tithe.

is that the Temple serves as a clearing house, and only the resulting imbalances are cleared by moving coins all over the planet ? But I don't see the Church using such a costly procedure instead of relying on credit ...

There must be something I don't understand in the way Safeholdian finance works. But what ?

Interesting question.

I posit that paper currency is still backed by bullion. Now, remember that the Temple is the world's largest lender to other governments. Naturally, the Temple would want to make such loans in their own currency (bolstering its value). But to do that, they need bullion to back the paper. To get the bullion, perhaps they have rules promoting (or requiring) the payment of tithes in bullion.

In addition, other governments which want bullion to back their own currency may want to buy gold if they cannot produce enough in their own borders.
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Re: The Emperor in debt
Post by Halancar   » Tue May 20, 2014 5:07 pm

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niethil wrote:
runsforcelery wrote:Back in the first books, we had the Church using paper money (Was it Corisande where they used the Church's credit to finance the artillery build up and wondered if people would accept it even without Zion's seal due to delays ?).


Remember all the soul-searching Rhobair Duchairn did when he was issuing notes that he knew the Church would not be able to honor ? Or when he considered adulterating the church currency ? Clearly the Church does not have a purely paper money, or he (or Clyntahn, if Duchairn hesitated) would just have printed as much money as he wanted. Yes, I know it's a very bad idea in the long term, but would Clyntahn care ?

In fact, the impression I have is that they don't even have a paper currency backed by gold (as in, fully convertible into gold on presentation of the note), but a purely gold-based currency, with various promissory notes (basically I.O.U.s) circulating. While those might be traded around, and even be canceled against each other, eventually the underlying gold will have to be sent.

And if, like the Church, you are spending a lot more than you are bringing money in, that means you have to arrange for a lot of gold to be shipped off...
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Re: The Emperor in debt
Post by Direwolf18   » Tue May 20, 2014 7:55 pm

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My guess is they are on a gold standard, and that he who has the ACTUAL gold, holds the power. Kind of like when all the other nations gave the US their gold to back a stable US dollar. Yea that one didn't work out to hot but still, the initial idea sound, follow up politicians were corrupt. Paper is only worth something as long as people agree it is, gold has its intrinsic value. Gold being gold, and humans being humans that tends to be rather high.
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Re: The Emperor in debt
Post by SYED   » Wed May 21, 2014 1:15 am

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Merlin could potentially arrange for stores of the church money to be found to be adulterated. If no one trusts their money, easier to shatter it. also, their remotes would allow priesty corrupt and greedy enough to potentially commit the crime.
I wonder if any priests attempted to taint secular currencies, that could be known to the inquisition, great target.
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Re: The Emperor in debt
Post by niethil   » Sat May 24, 2014 10:40 am

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After re-reading some chapters, I have come to the following conclusions :

1 - There are no banknotes. I am guessing they are proscribed.

2 - There are sovereign bonds and Church bonds for sure.

3 - There are probably corporate bonds, but I don't think there is a corporate bond exchange.

4 - Corporate finance works mainly by direct investment or loans from associated businessmen or the Church or the state. If banks exist, we have not seen anything about them. I deem this very unlikely with all this "how are we going to finance all this" talks. I suspect Langhorn might have thought that proscribing banking would greatly impair development. I am also suspecting that wealthy individuals play the part of investment banks and it's only the deposit part that is a problem.

5 - There doesn't seem to be stock exchanges. Maybe it means that companies' shares are not tradable, or they are traded over the counter or ... they don't exist in the first place.

6 - I haven't been able to determine whether limited responsability exists. If I were Langhorn, I would have proscribed it though. It's an interesting point, because the risks Howsmynn and others will have to shoulder to launch and develop new companies depends on it.

7 - Bullions do get shipped around ... but until now I believe the Church is the only one we've seen doing it.

8 - Bullions shipping might be explained by proscriptions that we don't know about.

9 - Trade can probably be financed by letters of credit.

10 - There cannot not be insurance companies.

Which leaves me with a lot of questions :
How is the monetary system organised ?
How do Safeholdian businesses operate ?
What part of the financial system does the Church controls ?
What are the Proscriptions concerning finance ?
More broadly : we have seen Proscriptions against technology, what about proscriptions against innovations in organisation and institutions ?

I am using the french edition, which only has the first three volumes. So I am missing a lot of references (and the most interesting ones at that).

I think I might be lacking in Subtle-Extraction-of-Explanations-out-of-Secretive-Authors Wizardry skills too. :mrgreen:
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'Oh, oh' he said in English. Evidently, he had completely mastered that language.
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Re: The Emperor in debt
Post by n7axw   » Sat May 24, 2014 7:02 pm

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niethil wrote:After re-reading some chapters, I have come to the following conclusions :

1 - There are no banknotes. I am guessing they are proscribed.

2 - There are sovereign bonds and Church bonds for sure.

3 - There are probably corporate bonds, but I don't think there is a corporate bond exchange.

4 - Corporate finance works mainly by direct investment or loans from associated businessmen or the Church or the state. If banks exist, we have not seen anything about them. I deem this very unlikely with all this "how are we going to finance all this" talks. I suspect Langhorn might have thought that proscribing banking would greatly impair development. I am also suspecting that wealthy individuals play the part of investment banks and it's only the deposit part that is a problem.

5 - There doesn't seem to be stock exchanges. Maybe it means that companies' shares are not tradable, or they are traded over the counter or ... they don't exist in the first place.

6 - I haven't been able to determine whether limited responsability exists. If I were Langhorn, I would have proscribed it though. It's an interesting point, because the risks Howsmynn and others will have to shoulder to launch and develop new companies depends on it.

7 - Bullions do get shipped around ... but until now I believe the Church is the only one we've seen doing it.

8 - Bullions shipping might be explained by proscriptions that we don't know about.

9 - Trade can probably be financed by letters of credit.

10 - There cannot not be insurance companies.

Which leaves me with a lot of questions :
How is the monetary system organised ?
How do Safeholdian businesses operate ?
What part of the financial system does the Church controls ?
What are the Proscriptions concerning finance ?
More broadly : we have seen Proscriptions against technology, what about proscriptions against innovations in organisation and institutions ?

I am using the french edition, which only has the first three volumes. So I am missing a lot of references (and the most interesting ones at that).

I think I might be lacking in Subtle-Extraction-of-Explanations-out-of-Secretive-Authors Wizardry skills too. :mrgreen:


Wern't the Quentens in Siddamark running a bank or something very similar to it? As I recall, Aivah had some of her money there and she was depositing, withdrawing and investing. Sounds like banking to me. If it quacks and waddles like a duck, it probably is a duck!

Don
When any group seeks political power in God's name, both religion and politics are instantly corrupted.
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Re: The Emperor in debt
Post by DrakBibliophile   » Sat May 24, 2014 7:26 pm

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I believe that banks are mentioned, especially the ones in Siddarmark.

IIRC Duchairn comments in an earlier book that the Siddarmark banks would be the place that the Church might have gone to get loans but of course that was not possible thanks to Clyntahn. :twisted: :twisted:

n7axw wrote:
niethil wrote:After re-reading some chapters, I have come to the following conclusions :

1 - There are no banknotes. I am guessing they are proscribed.

2 - There are sovereign bonds and Church bonds for sure.

3 - There are probably corporate bonds, but I don't think there is a corporate bond exchange.

4 - Corporate finance works mainly by direct investment or loans from associated businessmen or the Church or the state. If banks exist, we have not seen anything about them. I deem this very unlikely with all this "how are we going to finance all this" talks. I suspect Langhorn might have thought that proscribing banking would greatly impair development. I am also suspecting that wealthy individuals play the part of investment banks and it's only the deposit part that is a problem.

5 - There doesn't seem to be stock exchanges. Maybe it means that companies' shares are not tradable, or they are traded over the counter or ... they don't exist in the first place.

6 - I haven't been able to determine whether limited responsability exists. If I were Langhorn, I would have proscribed it though. It's an interesting point, because the risks Howsmynn and others will have to shoulder to launch and develop new companies depends on it.

7 - Bullions do get shipped around ... but until now I believe the Church is the only one we've seen doing it.

8 - Bullions shipping might be explained by proscriptions that we don't know about.

9 - Trade can probably be financed by letters of credit.

10 - There cannot not be insurance companies.

Which leaves me with a lot of questions :
How is the monetary system organised ?
How do Safeholdian businesses operate ?
What part of the financial system does the Church controls ?
What are the Proscriptions concerning finance ?
More broadly : we have seen Proscriptions against technology, what about proscriptions against innovations in organisation and institutions ?

I am using the french edition, which only has the first three volumes. So I am missing a lot of references (and the most interesting ones at that).

I think I might be lacking in Subtle-Extraction-of-Explanations-out-of-Secretive-Authors Wizardry skills too. :mrgreen:


Wern't the Quentens in Siddamark running a bank or something very similar to it? As I recall, Aivah had some of her money there and she was depositing, withdrawing and investing. Sounds like banking to me. If it quacks and waddles like a duck, it probably is a duck!

Don
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Sometimes The Dragon Wins! [Polite Dragon Smile]
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Re: The Emperor in debt
Post by niethil   » Sun May 25, 2014 8:57 am

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You are both right, banking is mentioned, I found some references I had missed when I went back. I have come to realise that Siddarmark is often alluded to as an important financial center. Unfortunately, most of what unfolds in Siddarmark, happens in books I don't have. :cry:

Anyway point 3 and 4 become :

3 - Corporations have access to both direct investment by individuals, the state or the Church and bank loans.

4 - Individual bank accounts exist, at least for wealthy individuals.

At the moment I am more interested in limited responsability though. I am also interested in whether obligations from financial bets are enforcezable by courts (a crucial factor in the development of financial speculation).
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'Oh, oh' he said in English. Evidently, he had completely mastered that language.
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