MONEY, DEBT AND GOLD: TWO SYSTEMS, ONE REALITY
https://www.livingintheair.org/2026/03/money-debt-and-gold-two-systems.html
Overview
We tend to think of money as a neutral reflection of the economy. More goods and services, more money. Simple.
But the modern system does not work like that. Money is not anchored to production. It is anchored to debt. That subtle shift explains why purchasing power erodes over time and why gold continues to play a role after 5,000 years
Two Worlds1. The Two Worlds: Financial Claims Vs Physical Reality
The first is the real economy. Goods, services, labour, energy. Tangible output.
The second is the financial layer. Money, deposits, bonds, derivatives. Claims on that output.
1.1 The Real Economy – Description
The real economy is the part of economic life that produces tangible value. It is where goods are made, services are delivered, and human effort is applied to transform resources into useful outcomes.
It includes factories, farms, transport, construction, energy production, and all forms of labour that create or support output.
It is grounded in physical constraints such as time, materials, skills, and energy.
Unlike the financial system, which deals in claims and abstractions, the real economy is concrete - It feeds, houses, transports, and sustains society.
Growth in the real economy comes from productivity, innovation, and human capital.
It is slower, harder, and limited by reality.
Real economy: production of goods and services in the physical world
Productivity: output generated per unit of input
Human capital: skills, knowledge, and experience of the workforce.
1.2. The Financial Economy – Description
The financial economy is the system of claims, contracts, and capital flows that sits on top of the real economy.
It does not produce goods or services directly. Instead, it allocates, prices, and redistributes claims on future output.
It includes banks, credit, bonds, equities, derivatives, and currencies. Here, money is created, lent, traded, and leveraged.
Its raw material is not labour or energy, but balance sheets and confidence. Value is expressed through prices, yields, and risk.
The financial economy can expand far more quickly than the real economy because it is not bound by physical limits. It is driven by credit creation, expectations, and policy.
At its best, it channels capital efficiently into productive use. At its worst, it becomes detached, inflating asset prices and amplifying instability.
Financial economy: system of money, credit, and financial assets representing claims on future value
Leverage: use of borrowed money to increase exposure
Balance sheet: record of assets, liabilities, and capital of an entity
1.3. Structural Imbalance – Description
In theory, these two should remain aligned. Money should reflect production. But in practice, the financial layer expands independently.
This creates a structural imbalance. More claims chasing a slower-growing base of real goods.
- Financial claims - promises on future economic value
- Real economy - production of goods and services
- Asset inflation - rise in prices of financial assets rather than real output
1.4. Gold – Bridging The Two Economies
Gold is our measuring stick for bridging that gap, trusted for the last 5,000 years. This is the important thing to recognise. Gold sits between the real and the financial economies as a unique hybrid. It is a physical asset, mined with labour, energy, and capital; yet it is held and priced as a financial reserve.
Unlike financial assets, it is not someone else’s liability, there is only one party and that is the person holding the lump of gold. Unlike a paper asset (eg a dollar bill, or a loan certificate) which is a promise to pay so two parties are involved.
Unlike most physical goods, gold is not consumed.
This gives gold a dual role. It anchors value in the physical world while remaining fully integrated into the financial system through pricing, trading, and reserves.
When the financial economy expands faster than the real economy (such as money printing by banks that expands the monetary base), gold tends to adjust upward to reflect that imbalance. It acts as a recalibration mechanism, translating excess monetary claims back into a physical reference point.
In this sense, gold does not eliminate the gap. It measures it, absorbs it, and over time, reflects it in the gold price.
Monetary anchor: asset that provides a stable reference for value
Non-liability asset: asset not dependent on another party’s promise to pay
Repricing mechanism: process by which markets adjust asset values to reflect underlying imbalances
Reserves - assets held by central banks and financial institutions to back liabilities, stabilise the currency, and provide liquidity in times of stress. Made up of foreign currencies, dollars, euros), government bonds (e.g. US Treasuries), gold (physical bullion - increasingly preferred by CBs to dollars).
2. How Money Is Really Created
Most people assume governments print money. That is only partially true.
The majority of money is created by commercial banks when they issue loans. A loan to a customer simultaneously creates a deposit. New money enters the system.
This means money supply is driven by credit demand, not just production.
When confidence is high, lending expands rapidly. When confidence falls, credit contracts.
The system is therefore cyclical and unstable by design.
- Endogenous money - money created within the banking system through lending
- Credit creation - process of generating new money via loans
- Money supply - total amount of money circulating in an economy
life cycle of money in a modern economy
3. The Ideal System: Money Follows Production
In a perfectly balanced system, money would expand in line with real output.
If productivity increases, or the workforce grows, more goods and services are produced. Money supply would increase proportionally.
Prices would remain broadly stable. Money would act as a measuring tool, not a driver of distortion.
This is the classical intuition many people still hold.
But it assumes discipline in money creation. That assumption no longer holds.
- GDP - total value of goods and services produced
- Productivity - output per worker or unit of input
- Price stability - condition where inflation is low and predictable
3.1. What “Not A Driver Of Distortion” Means
In an ideal system, money is neutral. It simply measures value. It does not influence it.
Prices would reflect real conditions:
- supply and demand
- productivity
- scarcity of resources
Money would behave like a ruler - It measures length, but does not change it.
Neutral money: money that does not influence real economic outcomes
Price signal: information conveyed by prices about supply and demand
3.2. What Distortion Looks Like In Practice
In the real world, money is not neutral. When money supply expands through credit, it affects behaviour:
- borrowing becomes easier
- asset prices rise
- risk-taking increases
This pushes prices away from underlying reality.
For example:
- property prices rise faster than incomes
- stock markets rise faster than earnings
- cheap credit fuels speculation
These are distortions.
Asset bubble: prices rising beyond fundamental value
Fundamental value: the true worth of an asset based on its underlying income, cash flow, or economic usefulness, rather than its current market price
Speculation: buying assets primarily for price gains, not underlying value
3.3. Why Money Becomes A Driver
Money is created through credit, but it flowzs the economy in a way that those closest to credit receive it first:
- banks
- large corporations
- asset owners
So they can be the first to deploy the new money into assets.
This lifts prices before wages or real production adjust.
So money itself becomes a force shaping outcomes.... They are the "early birds". This is called the cantillon effect.
Cantillon effect: early recipients of new money benefit more than later ones
Liquidity: availability of money and credit in the system
3.4. The Contrast In One Line
As ChatGPT puts it:
Ideal system: Money reflects reality.
Real system: Money reshapes reality.
That is the difference between a measuring tool and a driver of distortion.
4. The Real System: Money Follows Debt
Modern economies operate on a different principle. Money does not reflect reality, it follows debt, ie money expands because debt expands. “Follows” means money is created as a consequence of debt. Debt comes first, money is created as a result of debt.
Governments run deficits. They spend more than they collect in taxes.
The gap is financed through borrowing. The government will issue bonds (= a government debt) . Banks and investors absorb them - banks typically create money in order to buy the bond. Central banks support with liquidity when needed.
At the same time, private credit expands through mortgages, corporate loans, and financial leverage.
The result is persistent growth in money supply driven by debt accumulation.
This is not accidental. It is how the system sustains growth.
- Fiat currency - government-issued money not backed by a commodity
- Public debt - accumulated government borrowing
- Deficit - excess of government spending over revenue
5. The Consequence: Gradual Monetary Erosion
When financial claims grow faster than the real economy, purchasing power declines, because there is more and more money chasing the supply of goods and services.... This pushes up the price and so your money buys less in the future then it does today ie you lose purchasing power - your money is devalued - the currency is diluted or debased. In ancient Rome the emperor added c, opper to silver coins well this is the same thing there's less silver so the cost of a loaf of bread goes up too much this deficit - that's inflation.
The effect is not immediate collapse. It is gradual erosion of the currency. Currencies weaken over time, asset prices rise, inequality widens as those closest to credit benefit first.
This is monetary debasement in modern form.
- Purchasing power - amount of goods and services money can buy
- Monetary debasement - long-term decline in currency value
- Inflation - general rise in prices across the economy
6. Gold: Outside The Credit System
Gold operates under different rules.
It is not created through lending. It has no counterparty risk. Its supply through mining grows slowly and predictably.
Over long periods, gold tends to track the expansion of money supply. It preserves purchasing power when fiat currencies are diluted.
However, it is not a perfect hedge.
In the short term, gold is influenced by real interest rates and currency strength. It can underperform for years.
The role of gold is not income or growth. It is protection.
- Store of value - asset that preserves purchasing power over time
- Real yield - interest rate adjusted for inflation
- Counterparty risk - risk that the other party in a transaction fails
7. Two Systems, One Decision
We do not live in a purely productive system or a purely financial one. We live in both.
Fiat money enables flexibility, credit expansion, and economic growth. But it also creates long-term dilution.
Gold offers stability and independence from the credit system. But it provides no yield and requires patience.
The question is not which system is correct. The question is allocation. How much of your wealth do you want to remain inside the system, and how much to sit outside it?
- Portfolio allocation - distribution of assets across different categories
- Liquidity - ease of converting assets into cash, without much effect on price
- Systemic risk - risk of failure within the financial system itself
- “Long-Term Dilution” - the value of money is gradually spread thinner over time. There is more money in the system, but not a proportional increase in real goods and services. So each unit of money represents a smaller share of real output.
- Dilution - reduction in value caused by an increase in quantity
- Purchasing power - amount of goods and services money can buy
- Economic growth - increase in real output of goods and services: more output, more income, more consumption, more investment... More value than before. As measured by GDP
- GDP - total value of goods and services produced in an economy
- Nominal GDP growth - includes inflation
- Real GDP growth - adjusted for inflation. This is what matters as real growth tells you if the economy is really producing more or not.









