Democracy 3 complacency
![democracy 3 complacency democracy 3 complacency](https://static01.nyt.com/images/2019/08/02/opinion/02caldwell/02caldwell-videoSixteenByNine3000.jpg)
DEMOCRACY 3 COMPLACENCY MOD
And I personally feel like introducing a simulation for this purpose alone in every single mod is rather inefficient.įor Complacency, I find it okay. While it is possible for modders to add an invisible simulation and make it reduce Bureaucracy, many modders don't.
DEMOCRACY 3 COMPLACENCY MODS
It's not that hard to find mods adding dozens of new policy options to implement.
![democracy 3 complacency democracy 3 complacency](http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-sNAzYh7WNzA/UhvrZHIUXNI/AAAAAAAATAA/4Mgd-nFyJf4/s1600/3663+Serious-Games.jpg)
![democracy 3 complacency democracy 3 complacency](https://quotefancy.com/media/wallpaper/800x450/7046489-Malka-Ann-Older-Quote-There-is-nothing-that-suits-us-more-than.jpg)
What modders generally do is adding policies over and over. Devaluing one's currency is one of the typical ways to regain price competitiveness for exporters.įor Bureaucracy, I find it kinda okay in the base game. Nonetheless, I want to see more factors affecting it. If you are not doing none of these, you really can't overcome their labor cost advantages. Or you can impose high import tariffs too. If you want to compete with third world countries exploiting cheap labor, you need to either flood labor market with immigrants or automate lots of jobs. I know not all players will agree with my reasoning on these topics (and this is one of many reasons we make modding easy, so people can adjust this stuff), but I hope that it helps to hear that its been thought about.įor Uncompetitive Economy, you can actually remove it by going a bit extreme. I think the problem is a lot of player see it in red and think this must be a bad thing I have to fix, whereas really its just the flipside of decent healthcare and employment protection. It absolutely does not mean that this is neccesarily a bad trade off. In some ways, uncompetitive economy is just a reminder that there are other countries out there with lower wages, fewer holidays, and worse maternity pay and sick pay. A lot of products people think are German are assembled in Poland or eastern-European countries with much cheaper labour. The Ford Mach-E electric car is assembled in Mexico. so much stuff bought in the US is actually manufactured by cheap labour in China. because its meant to represent uncompetitive with respect to developing world countries and their labor costs.įor example, the US is probably considered a pretty competitive and successful economy by most Americans BUT. This may suffer from a slightly harsh name, but the reason its in the game, and the reason so many people get annoyed with it, is that yes.it is pretty prevalent for almost every country in the game. Perhaps we need a 'policy simplification dept' policy that can fight it? Its a bit of a blunt instrument, because it treats all policies the same (except UBI which nerfs Bureaucracy), but I didn't want to over-complicate the UI by manually adding inputs to it from every single policy. I thought this might be a stereotype, but some research showed that its absolutely a major problem in Italy, and a number of other countries. This was introduced when play-balancing Italy. The US gun lobby aren't cheering a candidate who wants to ban assault rifle because they still allow shotguns. The only voting impact now of lead-free petrol would be a negative, if it was un-banned.Īs a game mechanic, it can be annoying if you find it creeping up, but its definitely a real world phenomena that massively influences politics. In a sense, those past victories have been 'banked'.
![democracy 3 complacency democracy 3 complacency](https://www.anneapplebaum.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/A-citizens-guide-to-defending-democracy.jpg)
If you say "but we have lead-free petrol, catalytic converters and some ethanol in fuel right?", they will not give a government any credit for it. If you asked an environmentalist if they are happy with a government, they will likely say no. We campaign for catalytic converters on cars We campaign for pollution controls on power stations next. We campaign for lead-free petrol, and you did that. As an example: Environmentalist (I pick this because I consider myself one :D) When you are *in* a voter group personally, its hard to detect. Take any group of campaigners or voter groups and you can definitely see it. This is annoying, but omg it is such a real world thing. I have to admit, the uncompetitive economy thing might need a tweak, but to address each point: