The Illusion of Wealth Part 1: Paper Claims

The Illusion of Wealth Part 1: Paper Claims

From Time Standard by Makoto Shibuya

April 28, 2026 · 6 min

About this episode

The episode discusses the illusion of wealth in relation to global debt and the emerging 'time standard' based on real productive capacity.

Despite headlines claiming nearly trillions in global wealth, much of it is an illusion because assets are deeply intertwined with the trillions in underlying debt—meaning if the debt becomes unstable, the “wealth” built on top of it collapses as well. With the world now borrowing roughly $4 to generate $1 of growth, and interest costs consuming a massive share of economic output, the system can no longer realistically repay what it owes—only roll it over, inflate it away, or default. This creates a fragile dynamic where there are far more financial claims than real productive assets, like a hotel overselling rooms, leaving the system vulnerable to a sudden loss of confidence. The piece argues that real wealth isn’t paper assets but the foundational elements of civilization—energy, food, infrastructure, shelter, computation, and knowledge—and that as trust in debt erodes, a new standard is emerging based on energy as the base, infrastructure as the multiplier, and Bitcoin as a neutral, time and energy anchored store of value. Together, these form a “time standard,” signaling a transition away from measuring prosperity by borrowing toward measuring it by real productive capacity.

People in this episode

Host: Makoto Shibuya

Topics covered

  • wealth
  • debt
  • economic output
  • financial claims
  • productive capacity
  • energy
  • Bitcoin

Keywords

  • wealth
  • debt
  • economic growth
  • financial system
  • productive assets
  • energy
  • infrastructure
  • Bitcoin

Mentioned in this episode

Organizations: Bitcoin

Places: global

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