In the Numeric Haskell Repa Tutorial Wiki, there is a passage that reads (for context):
10.1 Fusion, and why you need it
Repa depends critically on array fusion to achieve fast code. Fusion is a fancy name for the combination of inlining and code transformations performed by GHC when it compiles your program. The fusion process merges the array filling loops defined in the Repa library, with the "worker" functions that you write in your own module. If the fusion process fails, then the resulting program will be much slower than it needs to be, often 10x slower an equivalent program using plain Haskell lists. On the other hand, provided fusion works, the resulting code will run as fast as an equivalent cleanly written C program. Making fusion work is not hard once you understand what's going on.
The part that I don't understand is this:
"If the fusion process fails, then the resulting program will be much slower than it needs to be, often 10x slower an equivalent program using plain Haskell lists."
I understand why it would run slower if stream fusion fails, but why does it run that much slower than lists?
Thanks!