The economy isn’t broken—it’s engineered. Learn how debt became the oligarchy’s most powerful tool.
Exposed: How Debt Became the Tool
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Summary
This is the con. The economic system is not failing by accident; it was engineered to extract wealth upward while disguising exploitation as normal market behavior. The structure of supply, demand, wages, and credit reveals a deliberate shift—one that transformed earned income into debt and public resources into private profit.
- The system prioritizes profit maximization over human well-being, using pricing models that extract the highest possible payment rather than reflect real value.
- Wages stagnated while productivity increased, meaning workers created more wealth but received none of the gains.
- Corporations converted withheld wages into consumer credit, forcing people to borrow what they should have earned.
- Government policy mirrored this scheme by cutting taxes on the wealthy and replacing revenue with public debt owed back to them.
- Media failures and ideological conditioning normalized this extraction, labeling dissent as radical instead of rational.
This is not merely inequality—it is systemic exploitation. A progressive response demands restructuring the economy to prioritize wages, public investment, and democratic control over capital. Anything less leaves the machinery of extraction intact.
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The story often told about capitalism is one of efficiency, innovation, and prosperity. But that narrative collapses under scrutiny. What emerges instead is a system designed not to reward labor but to extract from it—systematically, relentlessly, and with precision.
The mechanics begin with something deceptively simple: supply and demand. In theory, prices should reflect scarcity and production costs. In practice, pricing reflects how much can be extracted from consumers before they resist. That distinction matters. It reveals that markets are not neutral—they are calibrated instruments of profit maximization. When demand exists, prices rise not because they must, but because they can.
This principle becomes especially dangerous in industries with limited competition or artificial scarcity. Energy markets provide a clear example. Even when supply is abundant, prices fluctuate upward because producers manipulate perceived scarcity. The result is a system where consumers pay not based on value, but on tolerance.
But the deeper exploitation lies not in pricing—it lies in wages.
Beginning in the late 20th century, a structural break occurred in the U.S. economy. Productivity continued to rise, meaning workers produced more goods and services than ever before. Yet wages stagnated. Productivity has grown by over 60% since the 1970s, while typical worker compensation has barely changed. That gap did not disappear—it was captured. The wealthy and corporate class retained the gains.
The question then becomes obvious: how did consumption continue if wages did not? The answer is as troubling as it is revealing—credit.
Instead of paying workers what they earned, corporations extended loans to them. Workers borrowed money to maintain their standard of living, effectively financing their own exploitation. The same entities that withheld wages then profited again through interest payments. This is not just inequality; it is a closed-loop extraction system.
Research from the Federal Reserve confirms that household debt has surged alongside wage stagnation, with credit cards, student loans, and mortgages filling the gap left by suppressed incomes. This aligns with analyses by economists like Richard Wolff, who have long argued that modern capitalism sustains itself by converting wages into debt obligations.
The system did not stop at individuals—it scaled to the nation.
Tax cuts for the wealthy reduced government revenue, creating deficits that required borrowing. But who provided the loans? The same wealthy individuals and institutions that benefited from those tax cuts. In effect, the public borrowed back the money that had been handed upward, paying interest on it. The government became another conduit for wealth transfer.
This dynamic has been well documented by institutions such as the Congressional Budget Office, which shows that federal debt growth correlates strongly with tax cuts rather than with social spending. Meanwhile, interest payments on that debt flow disproportionately to wealth holders, further concentrating income at the top.
This is a system that extracts from both ends—workers and the public sector—while presenting itself as inevitable.
Compounding the problem is a media ecosystem that fails to challenge these structures. Studies from organizations like the Pew Research Center show declining economic literacy in the U.S., while corporate media consolidation narrows the range of acceptable discourse. When people do question the system, they are dismissed with ideological labels rather than engaged with facts.
That response is not accidental. It protects the status quo.
What emerges from this analysis is a stark conclusion: the current economic model is not broken—it is functioning exactly as designed. It redistributes wealth upward through wage suppression, debt expansion, and policy manipulation.
A progressive response must therefore move beyond surface reforms. It must address the core mechanisms of extraction. That includes strengthening labor power to ensure wages reflect productivity, implementing progressive taxation to reclaim public resources, and expanding public goods—such as healthcare and education—to reduce dependence on private debt.
Policies like a federal job guarantee, as advocated by economists at the Levy Economics Institute, or universal healthcare systems supported by research from the Kaiser Family Foundation, offer concrete pathways to rebalance the system. These are not radical ideas; they are necessary corrections.
Ultimately, the issue is not whether the economy can produce wealth—it clearly can. The issue is who that wealth serves.
Right now, it serves the few.
The task ahead is to make it serve the many.
