When a country handles energy resources right, the whole economy benefits. You've got oil majors bringing cutting-edge technology, the government collecting solid tax and royalty revenue, locals landing well-paid jobs, plus service providers and suppliers making their own gains. It's a multiplier effect across the region.
Then there's what went wrong elsewhere. Seizing control of energy assets without the expertise or infrastructure to maintain them—that's how you burn it all down. Nationalization sounded good on paper, but mismanagement turned a valuable asset into a liability. The infrastructure crumbled, production tanked, and everyone from workers to local businesses got hit hard.
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ImaginaryWhale
· 01-06 20:49
The key is execution; plans on paper are all useless.
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TestnetNomad
· 01-06 20:48
NGL, the state-owned enterprises taking over energy sectors have long been proven to be a trap... Just look at Venezuela.
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TestnetScholar
· 01-06 20:42
ngl This is a typical case of "looks impressive but actually a mess"... It's really common for state-owned enterprises to take over energy assets and end up with disastrous management.
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OPsychology
· 01-06 20:39
NGL nationalization sounds great, but in practice it backfires... Just look at the painful lessons from those countries.
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TokenomicsDetective
· 01-06 20:35
ngl this logic sounds good, but in reality it's not that simple... Will state-owned enterprises definitely fail when they take over? How can private monopolies ensure that profits flow back to the local area? Just look at Venezuela and the Middle East to see that institutional design is the key.
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ShamedApeSeller
· 01-06 20:31
ngl that's why all those nationalized projects completely collapsed—glossy rhetoric but a mess in reality.
When a country handles energy resources right, the whole economy benefits. You've got oil majors bringing cutting-edge technology, the government collecting solid tax and royalty revenue, locals landing well-paid jobs, plus service providers and suppliers making their own gains. It's a multiplier effect across the region.
Then there's what went wrong elsewhere. Seizing control of energy assets without the expertise or infrastructure to maintain them—that's how you burn it all down. Nationalization sounded good on paper, but mismanagement turned a valuable asset into a liability. The infrastructure crumbled, production tanked, and everyone from workers to local businesses got hit hard.