On Thu, 23 May 2013 07:55:49 -0700 (PDT),
"
chromo...@googlemail.com" <
jl...@sofluc.co.uk> wrote:
>On Monday, 20 May 2013 21:41:46 UTC+1, Jymesion wrote:
>> If a spy from PlanetA is caught on PlanetB, and PlanetB has a prisoner
>> from PlanetA, a private citizen from PlanetB can bring the spy,
>> registered at customs as his slave, to this planet, and a citizen from
>> PlanetA does likewise with their prisoner.
>> A bribe (considerable but not onerous) causes a bureaucrat to mix-up
>> the slaves' name tags. Voila! Everybody's happy -- PlanetA has their
>> spy back, PlanetB gets their guy back, no one has to admit to a
>> prisoner exchange, and this planet profits (the income tax rate for
>> bribes in 99.5%).
>
>This part of your vignette doesn't work for me. I can't see why Planets
>A and B would go to so much trouble. They could just swap spies with
>no one admitting to a prisoner exchange anyway.
There's always a need for neutral territory and consent by that
government for it to take place on their turf. Each such action
requires separate permission, which sometimes isn't easy to get if
there's any chance it might become high-profile or if it's corporate
espionage.
Then too, there's always a danger of a doublecross, escape, or other
complication, things not likely under this arrangement.
>But even if you handwaved an explanation of why it had to happen
>that way (which I doubt I'd find credible, but let's suppose), I can't
>see it being more than 0.0000....0001% of the GDP of the planet!
The income would be a pittance compared to the exports of an
industrialized planet situated in a high-traffic area, but for a
planet with few natural advantages, it's any port in a storm. And
remember -- they're collecting from both sides.
>How often do spy swaps happen on our world (with a population
>of six billion)?
Probably about three times a year. I've heard estimates it might be as
high as one a week, somewhere in the world, but it depends on your
definition and what reports you're willing to believe.
Cruise lines and companies establishing colonies at convenient
stopover planets indicate a large and active culture. Activity always
begets illicit activity.