Modern civilization is not trapped only by great-power rivalry, ecological overshoot, technological acceleration, institutional distrust, or spiritual fragmentation. Beneath these crises lies a deeper civilizational trap: the monetary-financial capture of the life-ground. Money, credit, property, debt, rent, corporate power, asset values, investor confidence, and financial claims were created as instruments for coordinating social life across time. Yet these instruments have increasingly become self-protecting abstractions, often more strongly defended than the living conditions from which all real value arises.
This white paper names this condition the Midas Trap: the civilizational tendency to convert land, housing, health, education, care, nature, attention, public goods, and future possibility into monetizable claims until life itself becomes subordinated to the preservation of financial value. The ancient warning of Midas is not treated here as a mythological curiosity, but as a civilizational diagnostic. The curse is not wealth itself. The curse is the conversion of the living world into claim-bearing abstraction without sufficient life-accountability.
Building on prior life-coherent work in health, healing, Beyond GDP, progress, peace, spirituality, and geopolitical repair, this paper extends the framework into the monetary-financial architecture of civilization. It argues that the economy must be judged not by whether it expands money-value, but by whether it protects, repairs, and expands life-capacity within the life-ground. In this framework, finance becomes life-coherent only when it serves provisioning, care, ecological regeneration, public health, housing, education, peace, social trust, democratic self-governance, and future generations.
The paper brings together multiple streams of scholarship and critique: McMurtry’s life-value onto-axiology and diagnosis of money-value sequencing; Hudson’s analysis of rentier finance and neo-feudal extraction; Werner’s theory of bank credit creation and credit allocation; Keen’s account of private-debt instability; Lietaer’s monetary-diversity and monetary-monoculture framework; Modern Monetary Theory’s critique of fiscal myths and false household analogies; Mosley’s democratic challenge to bank-created money; Galtung’s structural violence; Ostrom’s commons governance; and Wilber’s developmental warning concerning technically advanced but morally immature institutions. The Bank of England’s own account confirms a key premise: in modern economies, most money is created by commercial banks when they make loans, and banks do not simply lend out pre-existing deposits in the textbook intermediary model (McLeay et al., 2014; Jakab & Kumhof, 2015).
The central claim is that humanity will not escape the Midas Trap by better growth, smarter finance, greener investment, technological innovation, or philanthropic compensation alone. It must restore money, credit, property, law, technology, and governance to life-service. The highest realism is no longer financial growth, but viability. No financial claim is legitimate if its enforcement requires the disposability of life.










