That's nice, but it won't get me to come back and throw money at Haxus. In the time I played, and since, I've seen Haxus show a seeming belief in his own infallibility, leading him to "fix" bugs, declare them fixed without verifying that his fix works at all, and to then ignore further reports of that bug because he already "fixed" it.
I've also seen him disable existing functioning features, implement new features that make no sense at all, don't work properly or don't even work, and then leave them that way for a year or more.
He also has a habit of saying completely absurd things, which almost explain some of the absurd features in Hazeron.
The fact is, government does not contribute to the economy. All they do is redistribute wealth that is earned by the non-government portion of the economy.
Apparently willfully ignoring everything that the
Federal Reserve does, and also that the Treasury Department mints/prints new currency.
Elsewhere he says that fiat currency is terribad and metal currency is the best, and so this is what Hazeron uses now, except that
because he thinks it's impossible to use up all the resources on a planet, all the mines are infinite and you can mint currency forever, and yet he did not implement inflation. He understands it, as far as it goes with fiat currency, anyways:
When a government wants your private wealth in a fiat currency system, they simply print more dollars. Due to the way it is valued, all the fiat currency in existence is uniformly devalued by the act of printing more of them. The effect is called inflation.
But he thinks gold has intrinsic value:
Hard currency is a commodity with intrinsic value that is broadly accepted in trade. It is a natural progression of a barter system, where one commodity sort of becomes the "default" commodity for trade. Historically, gold and silver have filled this role most often, though other commodities have been used.
...
The price of gold gets quoted a lot. Everyone gets excited when the price rises or falls. Did that ounce of gold get bigger or smaller? No, it is the same ounce of gold it was 10,000 years ago. It is the value of the fiat currency that is falling or rising, inversely to the "price" of the gold, a commodity with intrinsic value. That "value" does not change from day to day.
Hmm, it occurs to me, are the subscription prices for Hazeron in gold or dollars? Do the dollar prices fluctuate because they're fixed to gold, or the other way around?