Fair question. This argument is all conditioned on A not actually having good ways to expand capacity—the case is that even then the funds are comparably good given to A as elsewhere. The possibility of A in fact having useful expansion might make it noticeably better than the alternative, which is what (to my mind) drives the asymmetry.
Fair question. This argument is all conditioned on A not actually having good ways to expand capacity—the case is that even then the funds are comparably good given to A as elsewhere. The possibility of A in fact having useful expansion might make it noticeably better than the alternative, which is what (to my mind) drives the asymmetry.