Chaos and Volatility Favor the Rich
There is a story told about economic recessions: that they are accidents, the unfortunate byproduct of complex systems nobody fully controls.
There is a story told about economic recessions: that they are accidents, the unfortunate byproduct of complex systems nobody fully controls. But over seventy years of Federal Reserve policy, the outcomes follow a remarkably consistent pattern. Boom-bust cycles, whatever their origin, function with remarkable consistency as a mechanism for transferring wealth upward. Whether by design or by structural inevitability, the outcome is the same.
Wealthy individuals and institutions hold their wealth primarily in assets — real estate, equities, businesses, and capital reserves. Ordinary people hold their wealth primarily in their home and their job. This distinction matters enormously when interest rates move.
When the Federal Reserve cuts rates and expands liquidity, asset prices inflate. Stockholders and property owners get richer without doing anything. When the inevitable contraction comes, those same asset-holders have cash reserves and credit access that ordinary people don’t. They can buy at the bottom. Foreclosed homes, distressed businesses, and undervalued equities move from those who needed liquidity to those who had it. The cycle then repeats.

















