Money, Scarcity, and Violence: Monetary Architecture, Institutional Design, and the Conditions of Civilizational Viability | ChatGPT5.2 & NotebookLM

Modern civilization possesses unprecedented productive and technological capacity, yet preventable deprivation persists across societies. This white paper investigates a structural paradox: under what institutional conditions does money function as a neutral coordination utility, and under what conditions does it operate as a scarcity gate that conditions access to essential provisioning?

Drawing on civilizational history, institutional political economy, systems analysis, and ecological constraint theory, the paper identifies four recurring structural mechanisms — obligation, dispossession, discipline, and rent — through which monetary systems can mediate survival access. It distinguishes physical and ecological limits from institutional monetary constraints and proposes a diagnostic framework for evaluating claims of affordability and scarcity.

The analysis argues that when survival access is structurally contingent on monetary acquisition within obligation-driven architectures, enforcement mechanisms become embedded across legal, bureaucratic, and cultural domains. Conversely, when monetary design aligns with real resource capacity and ecological ceilings, and when a provisioning floor is secured, macroeconomic stability can be achieved without chronic precarity.

Rather than advocating unlimited expansion or ideological realignment, the paper advances a viability-oriented framework for institutional redesign grounded in constraint realism, transparency, and long-term social stability.

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Life First: Monetary Architecture, Structural Violence, and the Case for Viability Budgeting | ChatGPT5.2 & Gemeni (Figures) and NotebookLM

Modern monetary systems are widely treated as neutral coordination mechanisms. Yet the sequencing of fiscal and monetary rules often conditions access to essential life-support systems — water, healthcare, food security, shelter, and infrastructure — on market performance and financial ratios. This paper examines how monetary architecture can contribute to direct, structural, and cultural violence when survival is subordinated to accounting constraints.

Drawing on peace theory, macroeconomics, behavioral research, and public infrastructure governance, the paper distinguishes between real constraints (biophysical and ecological limits) and artificial constraints (institutional or symbolic rules treated as natural laws). It introduces the concept of Viability Budgeting, a fiscal sequencing framework that prioritizes life-support systems before financial optimization.

Through diagnostic models, implementation pathways, and local-to-global scaling strategies, the paper argues that monetary systems can function either as fragility amplifiers or as peace infrastructure. The central claim is not that money is inherently violent, but that its design determines whether it stabilizes or destabilizes society.

Viability-first monetary architecture is presented not as ideological transformation, but as institutional reordering: life first, accounting second.

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