Jürgen Hubert said:
Does he have the same priorities as you, though? What kind of economy does he see as "best"? And is it truly going to be one that benefits the greatest number of people?
"Is the option which benefits the greatest number of people in the first half of this list?"
No
"Is the option which benefits the greatest number of people in the last quarter of this list?"
No
"Is the option which benefits the greatest number of people in the fifth eighth of this list?"
Yes
"Is the option which benefits the greatest number of people option number ten?"
Yes
And if the god of economics can't sort out the economy, it's kind of pointless for the PCs to try, donchaknow.
Jürgen Hubert said:
But it'll be fun. We're talking about high level PCs.
Jürgen Hubert said:
What if the gods are remote and don't meddle in the affairs of the mortal realm directly (or might not even exist, as in Eberron)?
Looks like the bard will have to have a polite discussion with the high priests instead.
Jürgen Hubert said:
What if the religious strife is simply the result of decades or even centuries of mutual resentment threatening to boil over - and thus can't be easily solved by orders from high?
Then it isn't a very religious strife. And if the people in control of the religion can't do anything, then how can the PCs? Why not instead save the universe from the Krezlings of the Fourteenth Veil, who even now are destroying the barriers between the material plane and the world of shadows?
Jürgen Hubert said:
Better hope he has a good Craft(architecture), too - or else the new constructions might be rather unstable over the long run.
Covered by the magic item. If you're going to houserule that it requires a craft check, it's fortunate that there are spells like improvisation to give massive bonuses (twice caster level). That building? Made with a +40 to the check. It's double masterwork.
Jürgen Hubert said:
Besides, this won't stimulate the economy like a normal civic engineering project would. By doing all the work for your citizens, you ensure that they won't have any work.
Well, the amount of GP you listed as the cost is so ridiculously high (equivalent to the wages of 547945 people for a year), that I assumed that the economy was even worse off than the typical DnD economy.
Assuming a typical modern laborer works for $5/hour for 8 hours a day for 100 days/year (an extreme underestimation, to be sure), your building project would cost $2,191,780,000 USD.
That's about five times the cost of the entire US interstate highway system (adjusted for inflation).
If you want to use economics, you can't use the DnD rules as written. And if you're not using the DnD rules, this discussion is kind of pointless.
(For just one example, a piece of cheese costs an entire day's wages (the same as poor meals for a day). A bucket would take five days to earn.) I'm not going to go into the ridiculously inflated prices of iron, or any of the other materials than can be produced at no cost with magic.
Jürgen Hubert said:
Ah, so you don't have any ethical problems with using long-term mind control magic on others?
If using the spell was implicitly evil, it would have the [evil] descriptor. Since it doesn't, it isn't. Diplomacy is more surefire, though, which is why you brought the bard along.