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Dev Diary #37 – Market Expansion

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Hi I’m Paul “PDJR_Alastorn” Depre - member of the QA team on Victoria 3. I’ve been asked to write about market expansion in Victoria 3 and how that can be done through the mechanics of a customs union. Apparently my credentials speak for themselves:

Have you ever had that day where multiple coworkers message you simultaneously to let you know you’ve become a meme by way of the Victoria 3 fanbase? [Twitter Link to greater Meme]
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So as you have no doubt seen in screenshots, dev diaries, after action reports, and the like, in Victoria 3 we have introduced the concept of a customs union but we’ve yet to truly go into detail about what they actually entail as a means of market expansion. [See Previous Dev Diaries]. That’s why I am here today, in no small part because I find the customs union one of the more interesting mechanics of Victoria 3 compared to its previous iterations such as Spheres of Influence, which after saying that I hope it doesn’t set your expectations too high but I guess it's on me to try and explain why I feel that way. Alright, no pressure then.

So, what exactly is a customs union and how does it relate to market expansion? Before I explain it mechanically, I would like to define the concept both conceptually and historically so we are all starting with a similar frame of reference. Promise me you will continue reading till the mechanical explanation before you make assumptions based on obscure historical examples? Good, then let's go forth.

A customs union, and I am literally pulling the definition from Wikipedia here folks, is generally understood to be a trade bloc or arrangement among nations. It is most commonly known as a free trade area with a common external tariff, or common external tariff policy. The bonds of a custom union are at the very least economical, they exist for the purposes of increasing trade, economic co-dependence, and mutual benefit that comes from such and can lead to closer political and cultural ties between countries. They do not necessitate a political union though they are certainly seen through history as the stepping stones towards such.

One of the more well known, at least to the Vicky fanbase, is the Zollverein which helped further facilitate the unification of Germany but by no means was the sole deciding factor of that movement. The European Union, it can be argued, started off as merely the European Coal and Steel Community, which was a more restricted definition of a customs union but certainly counts in my eyes. Whether or not the North American Free Trade Agreement counts as a customs union is up for debate. While trade agreements regularly cover similar topics of tariff and economic co-dependence they are usually of a smaller scope and scale. Ultimately the economics of it is tricky, because it involves politics and what defines a union vs an agreement is not always a coherent 1:1 and before I get into explaining all the counterarguments of historical note, let's actually talk about the game some now, shall we?

The Zollverein represented at game start.
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Within the scope of Victoria 3, a custom’s union is a bilateral agreement between two nations where one nation agrees to subject its national market to another and to be absorbed into an economic union. This means that it’s a diplomatic action, a.k.a. something another nation has to agree to as a customs union alone is not something that is normally able to be forced upon another nation. A customs union is not limited to only two partners, other nations may make themselves subject to the senior partner alongside other participant junior nations but a customs union can have only one senior member in control of the union.

A peaceful endeavor of France to assist Sardinia-Piedmont, not at all the beginnings of Hegemony in Italy.
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Slight variance to the above statement is possible, custom unions can be forced through by utilizing obligations by the previously owed country. This will only allow the diplomatic action to take place despite the nation’s disposition to say no, it should not be able to supersede any other limitations possible in the game. Thus it's entirely possible as a larger power to go, “you want me to pay off your debt? Sure, I’ll do it for a favor” and then force the unsuspecting debtor country into its market. Always be aware of the small text written into your diplomatic dealings!

Customs unions themselves cannot be forced through war but they can be forced as a result of other diplomatic entanglements. Certain subject relationships come with the implicit expectations of joining the shared market of their overlord but they also come with other strings attached. [See Subjects Dev Diary]

What allows a customs union to exist? That is dependent upon the trade policy of the participant nations, not all domestic laws allow for a nation to partake in a customs union (though most will alongside various other trade changes). Trade will be coming with a future dev diary so I will not be going into detail about that here, apologies.

But assuming that two nations both have trade policies that would allow them to do so, that’s all that’s needed to form a custom’s union? Well… no, economic unions of such are not simple agreements to be engaged in and reneged upon on a whim with anyone in particular. They have some more base level requirements.

The two nations (or more specifically the junior partner in question and the senior partner overseeing the market) must have neutral or positive relations to conduct this action. A nation who sees you in an antagonistic light as you are attempting to wipe them off the map isn’t going to give you access to its market willingly. Two nations that are trying to wipe each other off the map can both be junior partners in the same customs union led by another nation, just expect all the market disruption that would come with such chaotic developments if it's your frustration to handle as the overseeing power.

A senior member of a customs union must not be a subject of the junior partner or be a junior partner in another customs union. I'm not sure how the more lowly powers might feel about the matter, but the national prestige of this great power will not be subject to any Bavarian market. They must bow to Lubeck or there is no deal! AI considerations such as the requirements of port connection to facilitate market access, comparative GDP, rank, infamy and other diplomatic considerations are taken into account when accepting or proposing this relationship.

You are given the breakdown as to why the AI may not be so willing to join your Customs Union. And you can seek to overcome these differences peacefully.
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As well, this relationship is not a one and done, it must be maintained and this is seen both in an influence upkeep by the senior partner per junior member (as they hold the prestige of it being their market and policies which take priority) but a relations upkeep by all partners and the senior member lest they be booted from the union.

When a Customs Union can no longer be maintained (due to a variety of reasons) you will get a notification update that you can click for more information.
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In the end what does “subjecting themselves to the senior partners market” mean? For all intents and purposes it means that the national market of the junior partner no longer exists - they are part of the senior partners market, so all goods produced, bought and sold are done so within the confines of that new national market. This can mean many things and depending on the relative disparities of your previously independent markets, prices can shift towards a new equilibrium as supply and demand internally change to reflect this. Businesses will revisit their input costs and subsequently adjust their labor cost if necessary. You may see some industries boom and others start running on their reserves, hoping for trends to change before they shut their doors entirely, unable to compete with those industrialists in the far-off city.

Any trade routes you might have had as a junior partner may be disrupted, you are not barred from trading outright as a junior member of the union but since it's no longer your national market you will have to engage in a few extra steps to take part in such. This is something we will go into more detail within a future dev diary so it will be simple statements at the moment, apologies again.

For internal trade, market access will now be calculated based on infrastructure usage in the recipient state and whether it has a connection to the market capital of the senior member. If you cannot connect the routes by land then ports will need to be staffed and supplied to provide such connections. If you are the senior partner and you’ve found with the addition of new members they are struggling to connect to your market capital, you can always consider shifting the center of your market elsewhere to better accommodate all members.

Lower Canada has difficulty connecting to the British Market due to the shipping requirements for such connections to the Market Capital back in London.
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Domestically you will still be able to tax and encourage specific goods and services and their consumption, but your ability to embargo or take tariffs on goods coming into the market will depend on your relationship within the customs union… but I am getting ahead of myself - more on that in a future development diary so please be patient on that front.

So what are the benefits of expanding your market by customs union? Why not just gobble up the territory by forcing someone to be your vassal or taking them under your direct authority?

If you were to take the territory, well you might have to do so militarily if the nation is unwilling to come along willingly. If that is the case then it's going to be a national expenditure to mobilize and supply your armed forces, you’re certainly going to take some infamy on the world stage, you might even lose the conflict depending on who gets involved. What if you need to concede part of the market to another nation to assist you - what if it's the resources you really wanted yourself. Even in the winning scenario you end up with a bunch of pops in a devastated landscape, radicalizing and potentially discriminated against in your larger empire - all you wanted was some coal, was that cost worth it? Sometimes it is, sometimes it isn’t.

All of these factors affecting the state are related to each other. Devastation of a war means not only turmoil for the pops but that infrastructure is getting damaged which means goods are not flowing to and from the market efficiently and standard of living is suffering as a result.
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The benefits of the customs union are many but they can also be a double edged sword - it's not guaranteed to be beneficial and it's much more in the lines of choosing which problems you wish to face as is much of the way with Victoria 3.

A benefit of a customs union is that it decreases “relative transportation costs” compared to sticking to trading more manually among markets. You may not need to keep trade routes active though you may still need to utilize convoys for market connections. Instead of moving a more limited amount of goods between two markets you have the sum total of to markets buy orders and sell orders interacting. This may be very welcoming to some as it means less intensive micromanagement of their national economy and allows them to more natural growth of their industries. This also means the potential degradation if not dismissal of your transportation industry that fuels the trade sector of your economy, which also has implications. Which one is more beneficial to you ultimately depends on what you are trying to do, the size of your nation, and what you can afford.

A customs union means both increased goods accessibility and sales accessibility - for example you can trade with Prussia for your much needed coal as Lubeck (as you’ve seen me do in previous AARs) but trade is fickle, subject to changing winds of national priority, diplomatic scuffles, and possibly embargoes. Embedding yourself into the national economy of another gives you more concrete access to those goods and sales potential, but it also means they have access to your national economy with relatively less barriers. In the Lubeck AAR we turned the competitive advantage of our national industry focused on tools and shipping to further turn a profit in the larger Prussian market at the cost of less productive industries. Because we were able to keep the standard of living high and a Prussia devastated by revolt did not look as appealing (as it's never one single factor that determines these things) we profited further both monetarily and through migration.

Shipyard profits which were flagging within Lubeck see growth (and hopefully future profit) when being sold on the greater Prussian Market.
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As Greece (the most recent AAR) we joined the British Market with neither a stable standard of living nor a competitive advantage in any particular industry to carve our niche, thus our prices fell drastically and wages inflated as pops moved elsewhere to greener lands in the far British Empire. Could we have been successful as Greece? Certainly, the problems there are not guaranteed but we clearly moved into that market too soon with no clear plan to take advantage of it and thus we were the one’s being taken advantage of.

Greece, after joining the British Market sees its pops migrate to sunnier shores, well at least more economically thriving shores.
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The price and standard of living differences across customs unions can have an effect on your (and other partners) populations and whether or not they choose to migrate. There is a clear advantage here if you are a relatively prosperous nation either with a good standard of living or just the law of large numbers on your side that you will see a population growth due expanding a market with a customs union. More pops is usually good, but let me make the argument that in some cases having migration away from your country can also be good in the case of a customs union.

Let's say you are a multiethnic empire, and some of your pops are a little uppity with the ideas of nationalism and their own independence, thoughts that don’t really sit well with your own as they jeopardize the stability of the empire as a whole. You can discriminate, repress, put in police and security forces to try and keep things under control - but that’s expensive. It's even harder to maintain when there is the homeland state these pops yearn to join on their border. What… What if you brought that neighboring country (through agreement or force) into your custom’s union? Sure your hinterlands may have a population migration to their homeland but you no longer have an insurrectionary problem to deal with. As opposed to them just mass migrating away to another country and/or market, you can have them stay within your economic borders if not exactly your national borders, thus keeping all the production and consumption benefits of the pops with relatively less insurrectionary costs.

Now that is a very cherry-picked example, but ultimately not all migration seen through a customs union is bad - even as a small nation willingly allowing migration of your poorer population within can allow you to refocus your economy (economic policies willing) and potentially attract them back post reform. A custom union allows such plays to be one’s where you don’t have an immediate zero-sum loss and can pull such pops or new ones back to your nation.

And before I digress into every other mechanics I would like to cover the most important “why would I allow myself to be subjected as a minor nation within a customs union, when it's clearly not advantageous to me” scenario. Well it certainly beats the alternative of getting wiped off the map or subjected further doesn’t it? Thinking in a realpolitik sense, if you are a small or middling state and you don't want to have your domestic resources gobbled up by a larger power, but you don’t have a way to protect yourself without submitting to another power, the only way to succeed is to submit partially. Now you could take the diplomatic route and step under the larger power as a suzerain in some way, some of these may necessitate a customs union regardless. They also can necessitate a loss of your diplomatic potential as an independent entity, that might not be a prefered option on your end. Submitting to a customs union willingly might not be the most advantageous of your choices, but tying your economy to theirs might be a way to maintain some distance from an inevitable political union. Potentially you could turn this to your advantage and maintain a separate diplomatic policy because of such integration. In the AAR as Lubeck we submitted to the Prussian customs union because it was a way to guarantee the AI would not easily turn towards us as a means of expansion and hopefully if we tied our economies close enough together they would not seek to interfere in our affairs, lest we bring the institutions to a halt.

And in closing, that’s a smattering of the potential that market expansion through a customs union can have. I could probably no doubt talk on this point further, until release potentially but I sadly have some forum limit or another about how long this post can be. I look forward to hearing your ideas and feedback on this topic in the various channels. Even more, I look forward to seeing how you all take this feature and play with it in the future when the game releases.

And with that I would like to take a moment to address the elephant economics degree in the room. Never did I think that uttering those words before my introduction would come to be the meme it is today, but regardless of that, I would like to all correct you that the phrase “did you know Paul Depre the QA Lead on Victoria 3 has a degree in economics?” is no longer technically correct and has not been for some time as I have taken over the role of QA Manager on PDS Red. I am still heavily involved with Victoria 3, assisting in the onboarding of the new QA lead, giving input and the such. Just now I am making sure that not only does the game have a good level of quality, but that the QA team has what it needs to ensure that for release and onwards.

The team “celebrated” this news in the best way they knew how - the loading text was updated almost immediately to be “more correct” so I could not ask for it to be removed as a bug.
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And next week… is it me again with Trade Routes and Tariffs? Crap I better start writing. Wish me luck in trying to nail a “concise explanation” the second time around.
 
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Great dev diary Paul, I love your writing style. Quick question for you. Custom unions seem great if your primary interest in another country is resources, but I am wondering if there’s a way to help a country along in resource production? Say we’re the US and we just added Brazil into our customs union since they have a lot of tasty resources like rubber and tropical wood. The only problem is our industry quickly gobbles up their supply of resources. Is there a way we can help them along, either by directly investing our money into their buildings, or just giving them money in general? I know they’ll certainly profit from the higher prices, but we don’t want them investing that money in something silly, like a healthcare system :p


There is at current no way to build in your custom unions/subjects nations outright in the game. While its something that has been considered its also something that deserves a bit more nuance than in Victoria 2 and its thus not been touched upon yet, though where it stands in regards to on release or at some point in the future is not my place to say. What you can do though is bankroll them through a diplomatic action to give them the funds to spend, and assuming that you create a high enough demand of X resource in your market they may seek to expand those resources depending on how much extra profit doing such can bring them.

So right now primary means of engaging in such is limited but you do have secondary means of bankrolling and having the buy orders of your larger market motivate the AIs actions to build more industries and resource buildings to support you.
 
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I am not quite sold on the single market capital idea. It means a good that is produced in any Canadian state had to be shipped to London and back before being consumed in any other Canadian state. Even if the coal from Ontario had to flow right through Quebec to reach the Atlantic.
Technically that's true for any two British states as well, but it's not nearly as obvious of an issue there.
It also means that I can disrupt the entire Canadian industry and military as the US simply by blocking the gulf of St. Lawrence.
 
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Questions:

1. How do you leave a customs union as a junior partner?
2. How do you expel a junior partner from your own customs union?

Can it be done peacefully? Are the effects immediate? Is there a cooldown period before you can leave or join again?

Assuming you have not been forced in by obligation or other diplomatic relationship you can just leave... though good luck to your economy in the rebalance.
If you are the senior partner you can expel a junior partner, assuming they didn't utilize an obligation to enter themselves.

This can be done peacefuly for the most part - though if you do just go to war with your senior partner you will suffer the same result.
Right now its a fairly immediate affair with little to no cooldown (other than various other truces on specific diplomatic actions) but the idea of it taking place over time in a neat one.
 
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There is at current no way to build in your custom unions/subjects nations outright in the game. While its something that has been considered its also something that deserves a bit more nuance than in Victoria 2 and its thus not been touched upon yet, though where it stands in regards to on release or at some point in the future is not my place to say. What you can do though is bankroll them through a diplomatic action to give them the funds to spend, and assuming that you create a high enough demand of X resource in your market they may seek to expand those resources depending on how much extra profit doing such can bring them.

So right now primary means of engaging in such is limited but you do have secondary means of bankrolling and having the buy orders of your larger market motivate the AIs actions to build more industries and resource buildings to support you.
Well I’m glad that it’s been given thought at least! Good to see that you can influence it with bankrolling, that’s definitely a lot better than nothing. Thanks for the answer!
 
Yes. It's the same advice for an RPG group or any other multiplayer group where some people are being jerks. Find better people to play with.
I mean, it looks not like this problem could also be caused by an AI. I think that if you are unable to connect to overlord market, you should temporarily get your own market capital back for the duration of this problem
 
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Thanks for the dev diary. Will there be any way to avoid getting cheeky multiplayer scenarios when someone first gets a favor from your nation, then brute-forces it into custom union when it is entirely blockaded by third party to cause 0% market access in every state and destroy the economy that way?

Don't give favors to untrustworthy partners on the diplomatic stage?
I don't get to make design decisions (thankfully for all of you) but I like the idea of saying no to an "obligated favor" with a giant amount of international backlash seems neat to me.

Two questions here:

1. If obligations can be used to force smaller nations into customs unions, what are the possible actions of the junior partner who was forced into the union to leave the union? Can the junior partner leave the union right away? Is there a time limit or an influence cost?

2. Can the junior nation worsen relations with the senior nation after being forced into a union to get booted from it? Is there a period before this kicks in? My example would be if Prussia forced Hamburg into a customs union with a Play or an Obligation and Hamburg was already at 0 or 1 positive relations with Prussia and started worsening relations to fall below 0 very soon after. What is the time frame that Hamburg manages to get booted from the Prussian customs union? Is this time frame different for obligations and Plays vs. normal offers?
1. Currently its locked in like a truce timer, whether it stays like that who is to say.
2. Pretty sure the obligation would force the nation to stay in until the timer was up and then relations would autobreak that engagement based on not meeting the relations requirement (makes notes to verify that later, again - just in case). Right now there is no timer to the customs union breaking but that's because we have been sitting on the understanding that as a player you would make notice of the diplomatic actions of X nation damaging relations with you, etc. I think this would be a good usage of our current situation/alert system though and will be writing up that suggestion.
 
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This can be done peacefuly for the most part - though if you do just go to war with your senior partner you will suffer the same result.

Does this count only for direct wars only or for supporting wars against you, too? I'm a bit torn - on one hand, it will be a good way to ensure that countries in your market will think twice before engaging against you in, say, a minor colonial war (although the required minimum opinion should have the same effect). But on the other hand, I am a bit afraid of the AI non managing that correctly and every minor war upsetting the internal markets...
 
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So, from what I understand when a nation is a lesser partner/subject of another nation, they automatically join said nation's customs market. Why then is Luxembourg not part of the Dutch market in the screenshots provided? They were under a personal union with the Netherlands at the game start, after all, and thus should be part of the same market.
 
So, from what I understand when a nation is a lesser partner/subject of another nation, they automatically join said nation's customs market. Why then is Luxembourg not part of the Dutch market in the screenshots provided? They were under a personal union with the Netherlands at the game start, after all, and thus should be part of the same market.
Not every subject relationship requires the junior partner to be in a customs union with the senior partner. From the diplomatic action dev diary it sounds like protectorates' markets are independent but puppets' markets aren't, for instance.
 
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I know it has been mentioned before that markets will replace the sphering mechanics of VIC2, but if members can't be brought into a market through war then how will the Brother's War be modeled in game? How will it be possible for Austria to prevent Prussia from forming Germany, if they don't even have any control over the Southern German states?
 
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Modeling remittances would require individuals within pops to remember their exact migration history, which sounds like way too much work to add for what little it would actually contribute to the game.
Not necessarily, I don't think. If a POP that migrates spawns off of an existing POP that remains "at home" (which would be sensible as a way to do it), then all that needs to be recorded is the relation between those two POPs (probably with a timeout or degradation).
 
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I'd like to see some more "de facto" in this system. When a sea route is inefficient to a degree where the overseas nation would have far better access to its own states if it had its own market, the market should automatically split off, at least till the route is stable again. No matter what kind of subject they are. Hell, wouldn't it even be possible for a player's nation to have two seperate markets in the unfortunate event it gets split in half?
 
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Modeling remittances would require individuals within pops to remember their exact migration history, which sounds like way too much work to add for what little it would actually contribute to the game.
You could just have pops of a non-accepted culture send wealth to pops of their own culture residing in that culture's homeland.
 
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So on the market screen (ie the maps, where large swaths of Europe say "Prussian Market") does that represent only strict customs unions? I'm wondering in particular about cases where a nation may not have a formal customs union and refuses to enter one but cannot escape domination of its market by another power. Let's say...Denmark abjectly refuses to enter a union. But the Swedish market is enormously powerful and effectively controls its market even without war. Is there a way to reflect both of these facts? Or is anyone not in a union considered to be treated equally independently of all others? Is this where treaty ports enter the picture, by allowing the nation with the port to insert goods into the market area of a nation it does not strictly speaking share in?

Additionally, a customs union can only have one senior partner. Can a junior partner, however, join multiple customs unions?
 
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I know this might be the wrong dev diary for this question and I might forgotten what they said about clickable UI elements but I have come to notice a Split State in Quebec. Now this could just mean that the state is split because provinces belong to another nation or because it is split population wise. The childish enthusiast in me first read it as a feature to split a state, to say reorganize it, which is a feature I deeply long for.
 
i'd thought this before this DD but i'll grab this opportunity to say that the tooltips in this game look amaaaaazing. clear, very informative and very detailed. nice job.
 
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Loved the maps and UI images, thank you. :D



Is it possible to split a nation (like China or Iran historically) into multiple markets/spheres of influence (maybe split by strategic region)?

Can colonies exist in a customs union separate from their political suzerain? Are decentralized nations ineligible for customs union membership?

Can joining/leaving a customs union be used as a bargaining chip in diplomatic plays?
 
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There is at current no way to build in your custom unions/subjects nations outright in the game. While its something that has been considered its also something that deserves a bit more nuance than in Victoria 2 and its thus not been touched upon yet, though where it stands in regards to on release or at some point in the future is not my place to say. What you can do though is bankroll them through a diplomatic action to give them the funds to spend, and assuming that you create a high enough demand of X resource in your market they may seek to expand those resources depending on how much extra profit doing such can bring them.

So right now primary means of engaging in such is limited but you do have secondary means of bankrolling and having the buy orders of your larger market motivate the AIs actions to build more industries and resource buildings to support you.
So in game there's no way to replicate, for example, United Fruit building up banana plantations in central america?