Originally posted by DanS
S. Korea has a higher population density than N. Korea. But both S. Korea and Taiwan seem to do OK managing extreme population densities. Japan seems to do reasonably well managing a huge city (Tokyo-Yokohama).
I don't know why China or India wouldn't be able to organize things equally well or better.
S. Korea has a higher population density than N. Korea. But both S. Korea and Taiwan seem to do OK managing extreme population densities. Japan seems to do reasonably well managing a huge city (Tokyo-Yokohama).
I don't know why China or India wouldn't be able to organize things equally well or better.
If markets are so perfect why haven't they been able to effectively solve this? If goverments have all the solutions, why have they failed to implement them?
The world isn't as perfect as you'd like to hope it'd be. That some countries have been able to overcome these dificulties does not mean all of them, and should the problems truly become critical where's the guarantee that the solutions will be able to be applied globally? Wishful thinking if you ask me.
Take the AIDS issue for example. The devloping world can afford to keep its HIV-positive population still active yet Africa is suffering tremendously under the epidemic. If the solution is out there, why isn't it implemented as effectively as the solutions you have posted in this thread?
Comment