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When governments print money to cover deficits, they devalue currency, effectively imposing a hidden tax on citizens. The only protection is owning assets like stocks, real estate, or businesses whose value rises with inflation. Since 90% of Americans lack significant assets, they are most exposed to this wealth erosion.
The primary driver of wealth inequality isn't income, but asset ownership. Government money printing to cover deficit spending inflates asset prices. This forces those who understand finance to buy assets, which then appreciate, widening the gap between them and those who don't own assets.
Decades of currency debasement through money printing have made asset ownership essential for wealth preservation. Since a house is the most intuitive asset for the average person, owning one transformed from a component of the American Dream into a compulsory defense against inflation.
In an economy where currency is being systematically devalued through money printing, holding cash is a losing strategy. The only way to preserve wealth is to own a diverse basket of 12-15 uncorrelated assets (e.g. stocks, commodities, real estate) that are subject to different economic pressures.
Deficit spending acts as a hidden tax via inflation. This tax disproportionately harms those without assets while benefiting the small percentage of the population owning assets like stocks and real estate. Therefore, supporting deficit spending is an active choice to make the rich richer and the poor poorer.
Having lived through hyperinflation where money became a meaningless number, the real store of value is owning productive assets. A portfolio of quality businesses that provide real goods and services offers tangible protection that fiat currency cannot, as these businesses can adapt and reprice.
Excessive debt forces governments to print money, which inflates asset prices. This process mechanically enriches the asset-owning class while devaluing currency for wage earners, hollowing out the middle class into either the wealthy or the poor.
To fund deficits, the government prints money, causing inflation that devalues cash and wages. This acts as a hidden tax on the poor and middle class. Meanwhile, the wealthy, who own assets like stocks and real estate that appreciate with inflation, are protected and see their wealth grow, widening the economic divide.
The core problem for the middle class is a direct chain reaction: national debt leads to money printing (inflation), which forces people to own assets to preserve wealth. Since only 10% of Americans own 93% of assets, the rest are left behind with devalued cash and stagnant wages.
Inflation is framed not just as rising prices, but as a form of secretive theft. Since only a small percentage of Americans own significant assets that appreciate with inflation, the policy mechanistically funnels wealth upward from the working and middle classes to the top 10%, creating vast, systemic inequality.
The focus on "the wealthy not paying their fair share" distracts from the primary mechanism eroding middle-class wealth: government deficit spending. This necessitates money printing, which devalues the savings of ordinary people and drives up asset prices, benefiting asset owners at the expense of savers.