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Deep Diver Audi Overview | Funding Biological Survival Before Accounting Rules
Critique | Turning Viability Budgeting Into Actionable Policy
Debate | Should Viability Budgeting Override Fiscal Constraints?
Video Explainer | Life First: Redesigning Money
Please click on infographic to enlarge
Executive Summary
This white paper begins with a provocative question:
Is the invention of money a form of violence?
The answer is no — but the way money is structured can produce harm.
The Problem
Modern monetary systems often embed a hierarchy in which financial ratios, debt targets, and market confidence take precedence over essential life-support systems. During fiscal stress, cuts frequently fall first on water maintenance, healthcare staffing, disaster preparedness, and food security — sectors that underpin societal stability.
When survival goods become conditional on market success, structural instability follows:
Austerity → Service degradation → Social stress → Enforcement → Volatility.
This pattern reflects not malicious intent, but sequencing design. Monetary constraints are treated as primary, while biological and ecological constraints are treated as flexible.
The result is recurring fragility.
The Core Insight
There are two types of constraints:
- Real constraints: labor capacity, materials, ecological limits.
- Artificial constraints: accounting rules, fiscal ceilings, policy conventions.
While real constraints must be respected, artificial constraints can be redesigned.
The critical error in many modern systems is allowing symbolic constraints to override survival constraints.
The Proposal: Viability Budgeting
Viability Budgeting reverses traditional sequencing.
Instead of beginning with revenue limits and debt targets, it begins with defining a Viability Floor — the minimum operational thresholds required to maintain societal stability.
These include:
- Reliable water and sanitation
- Primary healthcare and public health capacity
- Food system resilience
- Shelter stability
- Energy and infrastructure uptime
- Disaster preparedness
Only after these life-support systems are secured does fiscal optimization occur.
Markets continue to function. Innovation continues. Fiscal discipline remains — but it is measured by durability, not austerity.
Implementation Pathways
The paper outlines practical steps at three levels:
Community Level
- Protect maintenance budgets.
- Establish resilience buffers.
- Implement participatory viability audits.
- Pilot protected service floors in water and healthcare.
National Level
- Integrate viability thresholds into budgeting law.
- Redefine fiscal discipline to include infrastructure health.
- Build foreign exchange resilience strategies.
- Align debt management with life-support protection.
Global Level
- Incorporate protected expenditure floors into lending frameworks.
- Link debt restructuring to resilience investment.
- Treat climate adaptation as survival infrastructure.
The Strategic Choice
Societies can follow one of two cycles:
Fragility Cycle
Austerity → degradation → unrest → repression → volatility.
Stability Cycle
Protected services → reduced stress → trust → investment → resilience.
The difference lies in sequencing.
Conclusion
Money is not inherently violent. But when survival is subordinated to financial metrics, structural harm becomes predictable.
Viability Budgeting offers a pragmatic reordering:
Life first.
Accounting second.
This is not a rejection of markets.
It is an affirmation of durability.
The tools exist.
The institutional pathways exist.
The remaining question is collective:
Are we willing to choose stability over fragility?
Core Viability Categories and Performance Thresholds in Viability Budgeting
Please scroll right to see right columns| Viability Category | Description of Essential Service | Minimum Operational Threshold (Viability Floor) | Maintenance Protection Priority | Social Stability Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Water & Sanitation | Reliable access to clean water and safe waste management to prevent public health crises. | Meet quality and uptime standards; corrosion control protected; chemical supply buffers maintained; critical spares stocked. | Maintenance funding legally shielded and cannot be cut below safety thresholds. | Prevents infrastructure failure, public health crises, social stress, and political instability. |
| Healthcare & Public Health | Primary care, emergency response, vaccination, and disease surveillance acting as shock absorbers. | Clinics must maintain staffing ratios, medicine supply inventories, and immunization coverage thresholds. | Budgets for staffing and essential medicine inventories are protected during downturns. | Reduces panic, downstream costs, and the need for coercive responses during shocks. |
| Food Security | Access to nutritious food and resilient supply chains. | Food systems must maintain buffer stocks or supply diversity. | Strategic reserves and distribution continuity are protected as non-negotiable sectors. | Prevents food fragility from translating into social unrest. |
| Energy & Critical Infrastructure | Electricity, transport, and communications systems that enable all other services. | Guaranteed electricity reliability and infrastructure uptime standards. | Maintenance tasks for critical infrastructure are legally shielded from austerity cuts. | Ensures societal continuity and prevents systemic collapse. |
| Shelter & Housing Stability | Protection from displacement, extreme weather, and homelessness. | Minimum protection from displacement and maintenance of housing authority functions. | Housing stability programs are funded first and protected during economic downturns. | Reduces structural violence and systematic deprivation. |
| Public Safety & Disaster Preparedness | Emergency response capacity, resilience planning, and risk mitigation. | Maintenance of emergency response capacity and disaster readiness reserves. | Disaster preparedness is treated as a non-negotiable survival infrastructure. | Reduces long-term structural violence and inflationary shocks from disasters. |











