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Unchecked Sovereign Governance: How Excessive Debt Dilutes National Wealth — Sovereign Debt Expansion, Monetary Inflation, and Wealth Erosion

Abstract

This paper analyzes how modern states, under fiscal expansion and financial liberalization, convert debt and monetary creation into mechanisms of silent wealth dilution. Using data from the U.S., China, Japan, and the Eurozone, we examine the correlations between debt growth, monetary expansion, GDP, labor share, and wealth concentration. Results show that since the 1990s, major economies have witnessed debt growth rates exceeding GDP growth by 3–6 percentage points and monetary expansion twice the pace of production. Labor’s share in GDP has fallen sharply — from 64% to 56% in the U.S. and from 52% to 45% in China — revealing an illusion of prosperity built on debt-financed inflation rather than real productivity.

 

I. Debt Expansion and Monetary Creation

From 2020–2023, the U.S. deficit expanded by nearly $6 trillion, while the Fed’s balance sheet rose by $2.4 trillion in Treasury purchases. M2 expanded by 40%, compared to just 5% GDP growth.

 In China, local government financing vehicles reached RMB 70 trillion (≈60% of GDP) by 2024, financed largely by refinancing existing debt — turning future tax revenue into present liquidity.

 

II. Trend: Labor Share vs Sovereign Debt Growth (1990–2024)


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Interpretation:

 As illustrated in Figure 1, there is a strong negative correlation between labor share and debt accumulation. In the U.S., sovereign debt rose 84 percentage points while labor share fell 8 points. Similar divergence occurred in China. Debt expansion correlates with declining labor compensation, reflecting a redistribution from production-based to credit-based income.

 

III. Dual-Axis Trend: Wealth Concentration vs M2 Growth


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Interpretation:

 Figure 2 shows that as M2 grows, wealth becomes more concentrated. In the U.S., when money supply quintupled, the top 1% increased their wealth share by nearly 18%. In China, M2 expansion of roughly 10× coincided with a 15-point rise in top 1% control.

 This confirms that monetary expansion primarily benefits capital markets and asset holders, not wage earners or the real economy.

 

IV. Mathematical Model of Wealth Dilution

WDR = ΔM – ΔP

Global data (BIS, IMF 2020–2024) show ΔM ≈ 7.8%, ΔP ≈ 3.1%, implying an annual wealth dilution rate around 4.7%.

 When sustained, this translates to a cumulative erosion of purchasing power and a silent transfer of wealth from labor to debt holders.

 

V. Conclusion

Debt-driven prosperity is a macroeconomic illusion sustained by monetary expansion.  Governments refinance debt and expand money supply to maintain nominal stability, but in doing so, they dilute citizens’ real wealth.

 Behind GDP growth lies the systematic erosion of labor value and public welfare — the true cost of unrestrained sovereign governance.

 

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