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I dunno. The IPv4 address space is getting pretty tight, and aside from rejiggering existing inefficient allocations, there's not a lot you can do beyond NAT.
In the US, we had it pretty good for a long time, because we had a rather disproportionate chunk of the IPv4 address space -- Ford, MIT, and Apple alone each had their own Class A netblock, about half a percent of the IPv4 address space each, for example.
But things have steadily gotten tighter as more and more of the world uses the Internet more and more.
https://whatismyipaddress.com/ipv6-ready
Like, there's real scarcity of the resource. It doesn't require the scarcity to be artificially-induced.
My ISP used to let one get a /29 IPv4 block for residential users, though they stopped that years ago. Always have had a way to get publicly-facing IPv6 addresses, though.
End of the day, the real fix is to get the world on IPv6.
Not even offered in my area 🤡