This paper develops the mechanism by which entropy-informed consumer choice operates as a market effciency signal,driving convergence toward more effcient algorithms without central direction, price mandates, or prescriptive governance. Consumer Selection Pressure is an emergent market dynamic operating through every consumption event. The paper derives the action dierential as a marketplace metric rather than a ledger entry, shows how Qoin production measures make entropy costs legible for human decision-making, demonstrates the selfreinforcing convergence mechanism, and examines how resource scarcity becomes a demand for algorithmic innovation rather than a signal for competition. The paper closes by showing how Consumer Selection Pressure and Negative Wealth interact as mutually reinforcing signals that together constitute a complete cybernetic effciency mechanism.
Steve Kelsey (Fri,) studied this question.