I'll take care of the report.

"Okay. But I'm not sure I can tell you everything in writing."

I feel a little anxious about what Paperino said, for example.

There, if you don't report me well, I could be the feather of being summoned by the great people once in a while.

"By the way, deputy. How would you like to know about fishing rights?"

"Fishing rights..."

Where the cultivation of beans is concerned, the fishing rights which have been abandoned must also be examined.

It is now in relation to the expulsion of the clan of village chiefs, with no users of fishing rights.

"Normally, we're about to leave new fishermen to fish..."

"It would be inefficient to leave fishing to those without know-how. It would be suspicious to be able to make a living."

With regard to fishing rights, ownership rests with lords and deputies, and fishermen are only in a state in which they owe their right to use it, which naturally incurs a tax of royalties.

Where non-professional persons have engaged in fishing, it is visible that they will be unable to pay taxes.

"Besides, too efficient a fishery might run out of fish."

"The fish...? Isn't that over-thinking?"

It is also not impossible for Paperino to be unfamiliar with the idea of the protection of fishery resources.

Even in the original world, the resources of the sea were thought to be infinite until recently.

In this world, where the natural threat of a monster is mighty, it may be worrying.

Still, it's too late when you regret it, so you don't have to take unnecessary risks.

"Firstly, I think there are two ideas: one is the idea of fishing rights as a direct source of tax. appoint fishermen and levy taxes from catches"

"Now, that's the way you think. What's the other way of thinking?

"The idea is to use fishing rights as an indirect source of tax. Free farmers of fishing rights on a rotating basis, improve their nutritional status by using fish food as a side meal, and reduce consumption of staple foods such as wheat and beans"

"I see. If you eat fish, you'll certainly get better health"

"In the first place, I just plundered the fisherman's supernatant, and it doesn't make a lot of tax revenue. Then you'd better free up the fishing grounds so you can feel comfortable in the main business."

By and large, fishing is unstable.

It would be an error as a policy of territorial management to rely on such a thing as tax revenue.

"As a deputy, will you take the second view?"

"Right. Letting certain people monopolize fishing rights inevitably makes it necessary to control clandestine fishing as well. I don't want to blame the inhabitants for holding a trial where who got five river shrimps, etc. That's about it. You should release them on a rotating basis and create a state of mutual surveillance."

If we limit the fishing season, poachers show up. No exceptions there.

Because rights are some kind of restriction.

I would like to avoid a mechanism whereby surveillance costs rise in conditions where the benefits from fishing are largely unanticipated.

"But how do we set the order? I'm sure you'll be very impressed."

Even the right not to make a big deal out of the deputies is the greatest right that will determine the life and death of tomorrow's family to the peasants who do not eat or eat.

"Totally fair, I don't suppose that's why"

Even on a rotating basis, there is no objective data here to be fair on a catch basis.

Even if we decide on our own, there will be dissatisfaction among the peasants.

It is visible that letting the peasants decide is just confusing and undecided.

"Do you have any thoughts?"

"Well, not"

It is up to us to decide the major muscles and leave the later adjustments to the mutual bargaining of the farmers.

What is needed is a visualization of rights and how to create a sense of personal satisfaction.

There are several ways I can think of specific methods.

"But what do you think? They're not used to negotiating with peasants, are they?"

From Kilik, a native of a merchant and raised in the city, I guess the peasant looks rustic.

The village chief clan where he is a cunning peasant is expelled from the village, so he may have those impressions extra.

"It could be. But you need to get used to it."

"Get used to what?

"Negotiations, deals, cash."

"Is it cash? For what you're plowing the fields... eh."

Speaking of which, Kirik seems to have noticed.

Soon, a large flour mill will be set up in this village.

In the process, civil workers involved in large-scale architecture, flour milling craftsmen, and sailors who bring wheat will be staying in the village.

Since people outside those villages are cash residents, a large amount of cash will fall into the village.

The lives of the villagers will soon be enriched. I have a business plan for that.

However, if the ability to handle that abundance only well is not developed, abundance is a curse to reject.

We need to get the villagers used to the monetary economy gradually, even now.

Mutual transactions within villages of fishing rights are just as good as teaching materials for this purpose.