Scarcity as Governance: How Systems Control Through Deprivation is a canonical SignalRupture essay analyzing scarcity as a deliberate governance architecture rather than an economic failure. In contemporary society, deprivation is engineered through low wages, unaffordable housing, rising food prices, and chronic precarity—conditions that narrow autonomy, shape behavior, and maintain systemic stability. This essay maps how scarcity functions as a tool of control by compressing the field of possible actions, transforming survival into a full‑time occupation, and creating dependencies that the system then monetizes. By reframing scarcity as a structural design that governs through constraint rather than force, the work deepens the SignalRupture framework for understanding coercion, economic asymmetry, and the infrastructural production of compliance in the post‑web era.
Signal Rupture (Sun,) studied this question.