Today's economy uses automation to either build your wealth through assets or drain it via consumer tech. There's no neutral ground; your financial systems determine whether you become automatically rich or automatically poor.

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Instead of a universal productivity boom, AI will eliminate repetitive white-collar jobs. This will shrink the consumer base, reducing overall demand and creating a powerful deflationary force, further entrenching a feudal economic structure with fewer 'lords' and more 'serfs.'

Widespread AI-driven job loss will reduce consumer spending. In response, businesses will be forced to cut costs further by accelerating AI adoption, which in turn leads to more job losses and even lower consumption, creating a vicious cycle.

Relying on willpower or manual budgeting is a losing strategy because it's unsustainable and causes friction. The only proven, long-term method for building wealth is to automate savings and investments, removing daily decision-making from the equation.

In an unpredictable AI-driven job market, the most reliable path to financial security is not a specific skill but owning assets. This allows individuals to participate in the massive wealth generated by the technology itself, providing a hedge against inflation and potential job displacement, and avoiding a future of dependency on government assistance.

Emad Mostaque argues that as AI makes intelligence abundant (e.g., free expert medical advice), our economic system, which is built on scarcity, interprets the resulting job displacement and disruption as poverty, even if overall well-being improves.

Understanding money, inflation, and assets is a critical skill. Without it, you become a passive participant—an NPC—in the economic game, where inflation erodes your earnings despite your hard work. Asset ownership is the primary mechanism to escape this trap and actively play the game.

Technology's share of the economy will grow as it underpins every industry. Conversely, the services sector, which sells human intelligence for repetitive tasks, is fundamentally threatened by AI that can automate processes and commoditize expertise.

Beyond simple efficiency, Amazon's automation drive is a strategic financial maneuver. It's designed to transfer value from its human workforce—by eliminating jobs and associated costs like wages, benefits, and union risks—directly to shareholders through higher margins and customers via lower prices.

True wealth isn't a high salary; it's freedom derived from ownership. Professionals like doctors or lawyers are well-paid laborers whose income is tied to their time. Business owners, in contrast, build systems (assets) that generate money independently of their presence.

Our economy has fractured into two. One part, driven by technology (electronics, media), is hyper-deflationary. The other, dominated by regulation that constrains supply (housing, education, healthcare), is hyper-inflationary. This explains why 'fun' gets cheaper but life's necessities become unaffordable.