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People living paycheck-to-paycheck cannot afford to ignore investing. Because inflation actively evaporates the value of their money, failing to put even small amounts into assets guarantees they will fall behind. It is a necessary defense, not a choice for the wealthy.
Holding cash is a losing strategy because governments consistently respond to economic crises by printing money. This devalues savings, effectively forcing individuals to invest in assets like stocks simply to protect their purchasing power against inflation.
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.
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.
In an economic system with persistent currency debasement, holding cash in a savings account guarantees a loss of purchasing power. Prosperity is no longer achievable through simple saving; it requires actively "betting" on assets that can't be inflated, such as stocks, real estate, or crypto.
During profound economic instability, the winning strategy isn't chasing the highest returns, but rather avoiding catastrophic loss. The greatest risks are not missed upside, but holding only cash as inflation erodes its value or relying solely on a paycheck.
Larry Fink's proposal to invest the Social Security fund in stocks highlights a broader truth: in an inflationary economy, the 'safe' strategy of avoiding market risk guarantees a loss of purchasing power. The fear of investing is ultimately more dangerous than the calculated risk of investing for long-term growth.
Inflation should be viewed as a form of government theft, not a natural economic occurrence. It devalues cash and wages while the resulting financial stimulus disproportionately benefits those who own assets (stocks, real estate). Not owning assets guarantees a loss of purchasing power through this wealth transfer.
While investing carries risks, holding cash guarantees a loss of purchasing power due to inflation. Therefore, the decision to abstain from investing is a far riskier financial gamble than participating in the market over the long term.
In an environment dominated by government debt and money printing, holding cash is not a neutral act of saving; it's direct exposure to inflation. As the government devalues the currency to manage its interest payments, the purchasing power of cash diminishes. The priority must shift from simply saving to owning productive or scarce assets as a defense.
Traditional saving is ineffective because inflation acts like an "iron dome," destroying its value. The only way to build wealth is to "dunk" directly into assets like stocks, bypassing the destructive force of currency devaluation.