Planned economies, just like in real life, are excellent for small societies, and fail miserably when attempted on a huge scale.
I almost always go Planned at the beginning of the game. I can hardly notice the inefficiency at that point, and the extra expansion has implications for the far future. Planned becomes less and less viable as time goes on for two reasons:
1) The efficincy begins to hit when you start getting big. After a while you could be losing about 1/3 of your energy to inefficiency, not a good thing.
2) There is an oppurtunity cost for running Planned over Market. Once your empire is big enough to sustain a healhy economy, I recommend going Market. I usually make the switch right after building the Planetary Energy Grids. That seems to be about the right time for it.
Personally, I've never used Planned to force a pop-boom, except when playing as Aki or Sven. I find that it is more economical to simply run Democracy +Golden Age +Creches. People seem to think that diverting 20% for your energy into psych to get the Golden Age is a big deal, but it really isn't. The +1 economy bonus that Golden Ages greatly defray the costs, and if your empire is big enough, you'll actually be getting more money than when you weren't paying for psych! Compare this to the hamstringing effect Planned has on large economies, and it's just no contest, especially when you take Market into consideration.
Planned is one of those SE choices that empires eventually outgrow (I consider Wealth to be the other one, which is usually replaced by Knowledge arounf the mid game). The growth bonus can be gotten from other sources, and the industry bonus is a big deal when you're hauling in several hundered ec's a turn.
In fact, I strongly suggest that you edit your alphax.txt so that the Progenitors don't have Planned as an aggenda anymore. Otherwise, they just suck in the mid-game.
On the other hand, if you are running the all specialist approach, Planned is easily the best peacetime economy you can run.
I almost always go Planned at the beginning of the game. I can hardly notice the inefficiency at that point, and the extra expansion has implications for the far future. Planned becomes less and less viable as time goes on for two reasons:
1) The efficincy begins to hit when you start getting big. After a while you could be losing about 1/3 of your energy to inefficiency, not a good thing.
2) There is an oppurtunity cost for running Planned over Market. Once your empire is big enough to sustain a healhy economy, I recommend going Market. I usually make the switch right after building the Planetary Energy Grids. That seems to be about the right time for it.
Personally, I've never used Planned to force a pop-boom, except when playing as Aki or Sven. I find that it is more economical to simply run Democracy +Golden Age +Creches. People seem to think that diverting 20% for your energy into psych to get the Golden Age is a big deal, but it really isn't. The +1 economy bonus that Golden Ages greatly defray the costs, and if your empire is big enough, you'll actually be getting more money than when you weren't paying for psych! Compare this to the hamstringing effect Planned has on large economies, and it's just no contest, especially when you take Market into consideration.
Planned is one of those SE choices that empires eventually outgrow (I consider Wealth to be the other one, which is usually replaced by Knowledge arounf the mid game). The growth bonus can be gotten from other sources, and the industry bonus is a big deal when you're hauling in several hundered ec's a turn.
In fact, I strongly suggest that you edit your alphax.txt so that the Progenitors don't have Planned as an aggenda anymore. Otherwise, they just suck in the mid-game.
On the other hand, if you are running the all specialist approach, Planned is easily the best peacetime economy you can run.
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