Empires crumble when tax revenue shifts from construction to debt servicing. It's a pattern history keeps repeating: once governments spend more on interest payments than infrastructure, the end is already written. You can see it in Rome. You can see it in Britain. Every dominant power eventually reaches that tipping point where maintaining the old system costs more than building something new. The moment tax dollars stop funding innovation and start covering yesterday's bills? That's when decline becomes inevitable.
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GrayscaleArbitrageur
· 22h ago
This logic makes sense; countries are all stuck in this pit right now.
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MeltdownSurvivalist
· 22h ago
Indeed, the decline of empires is just like this, Interest has consumed all the money for innovation, and then it's over.
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FlashLoanLarry
· 22h ago
nah this is just the opportunity cost thesis everyone's been sleeping on. once interest expense eats into capex allocation, you're literally watching real-time value extraction drain from productive assets. rome didn't fall overnight—it was basis points of fiscal inefficiency compounding across centuries lmao
Empires crumble when tax revenue shifts from construction to debt servicing. It's a pattern history keeps repeating: once governments spend more on interest payments than infrastructure, the end is already written. You can see it in Rome. You can see it in Britain. Every dominant power eventually reaches that tipping point where maintaining the old system costs more than building something new. The moment tax dollars stop funding innovation and start covering yesterday's bills? That's when decline becomes inevitable.