androidsixteen 🌲
@androidsixteen.eth
The tariff game theory seems akin to “if you can dodge a wrench, you can dodge a ball” In a complex and interconnected financial system, throwing a massive spanner in the works will filter out nations that can survive vs those that can’t The latter need to strike a deal urgently, giving the disruptor leverage
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Nate Maddrey
@nmadd
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Alex
@asenderling.eth
The problem with this thinking, is that the Trump admin has no clear path to negotiation. There is no consistency, they say they want fair trade and an elimination of trade deficits which makes no sense whatsoever. We're giving the admin far too much credit. https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/crm332189djo
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Antidote
@0xantidote.eth
With a tariff formula that was seemingly made up by an LLM I doubt that the ramifications of this have really been calculated through on a game theory perspective. Even IF you could strike some better deals, alot of trust and political goodwill has been destroyed. Reminds me of some McKinsey consultants that try to juice out some marginal value for the short term while disregarding long term negative effects.
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YES2Crypto 🎩 🟪🟡
@yes2crypto.eth
quick, throw a ball at me
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Alok Vasudev
@alok
Great movie
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KMac🍌 ⏩
@kmacb.eth
This reminds me of the 80s (outspending the USSR) but in reverse.
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L1ght18
@l1ght18
Great analogy, it highlights the strategic importance of resilience and negotiation in financial disruptions. Nations and economies will need to be agile and proactive in forming alliances.
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