Lord Aubrey, the governor of the Union, seemed troubled.
The reason was that the return of former Inbury citizens who fled to the Kingdom after the annexation of the Inbury Duchy by the Union was slower than expected.
Which was due to the deteriorating public order situation in the eastern region of the Kingdom.
During the war, those who fled the Duchy to the Kingdom were accepted into the Kingdom as so-called refugees.
Most of them first fled to the eastern region of the Kingdom, but since the security situation in the eastern region of the Kingdom was already deteriorating at that time, many of them did not stay in the eastern region but went further to the northern, southern, and even the central regions of the Kingdom where the royal capital is located.
Even when the war in Inbury was over and they were ready to return to their home country, they found it difficult to return because of the dangers in the eastern region of the Kingdom that lies in between.
âRoughly twenty percent of our initial estimate.â
Lord Aubrey let out a small sigh at the report of his aide, Lamber.
âIf I were a refugee, I wouldnât want to go back to Inbury, if it means going through that eastern region of the Kingdom, thatâs for sure.â
âExactlyâŚâ
Both Lord Aubrey and his aide Lamber understood that in their heads.
But even so, twenty percent of their estimate was still too small.
âI suppose this is also one of the Emperorâs schemes, huhâŚâ
âThat canât be right, you think His Majesty Rupert has something to do with it?â
âI should think so. At the very least, the Empire is certainly behind the chaos in the eastern region of the Kingdom. And if the refugees are not able to return because of this, wouldnât it be more prudent to assume that this is within the Emperorâs plans?â
âOkay, but why would the Emperor take such measures to keep the Inbury refugees within the Kingdom?â
âI have no ideaâŚâ
Lamberâs question could not be easily answered, not even by Lord Aubrey.
âLamber, whatâs the biggest problem that will result from the influx of refugees?â
âThat would beâŚthe deterioration of public order, I guess.â
An increase in the number of refugees will cause a deterioration of public order.
This is a problem that cannot be avoided no matter how well-organized the governing structure is.
The same is true on âPhiâ as it was on Earth.
âBut more people means a better economy, doesnât it? I donât see how the Kingdomâs economy improving benefits the Empire.â
Lamber asked.
ââŚHas the Kingdomâs economy improved since our annexation of Inbury?â
ââŚNoâŚactually, thereâs no such indication at all.â
âRight? Just simply accepting refugees is not enough to boost a countryâs economy. Unless they are properly integrated into the countryâs commerce and tax collection system, the economy will not improve. And with the current governing capacity of the Kingdom, it seems unlikely that the refugees can be smoothly integrated into the national economy.â
Itâs plain stupidity to think that a countryâs economy will automatically improve if the number of refugees increases.
It is only when the increased number of people earn money, spend, and pay taxes that they contribute to the countryâs economy.
Unless the country proactively performs the integration, âaccepting refugeesâ wonât make anyone happyâŚ.
The refugees will just become economic slaves for cheap laborâŚ.
Even refugees are people who have familiesâŚand there is no way they will continue to accept such a situation forever.
And if legal methods donât improve the situationâŚthey will try a not-so-legal approach.
Violent solutions, represented by riots.
Which will further worsen public safety.
Which begs the question, how many people in the heart of the government understand thatâŚ.
Unfortunately, not nearly enough in the Kingdom.
âIs the Emperor purely trying to disrupt the Kingdom, further aggravating public securityâŚ?â
âIf so, to what end? Thatâs the question we should be asking.â
Lord Aubrey muttered, and Lamber picked up on his mutterings with yet another question.
âI should probably move, even if itâs just the elite troops to the border area. So that we can respond in time in case something happens.â
Lamber simply nodded at Lord Aubreyâs mutterings.
âDeteriorating public securityâŚnothing could be more bothersome.â