This paper asks whether the transition from today's debt-based money system to Gradido — a monetary order based on the positive-sum principle — can succeed in an orderly manner: voluntarily, without expropriation, and so that no one loses, rather than only in collapse. It understands itself as a feasibility and mechanism study, not a forecast; what is examined is the structural possibility of such a transition, not its occurrence. The foundation is the two-layer principle: only the financial layer of claims is dissolved, which nets to zero, while the real economy carries over unchanged into the new order. The conceptual core is an incentive reversal — in place of coercive seizure (debt haircut, bail-in) comes a voluntary partial-transformation offer, wealth preservation through wealth transformation, in which the creditor loses nothing but receives a value-secured GDT credit. Tested on the hard case of sovereign debt and on sixteen economies, a four-tier dissolvability ladderorders every sovereign debt by its dissolvability (public-internal, domestic-private, currency-area partner, reserve core outside). Three findings follow. On the paths: in every country examined, the predominant share of the debt lies in dissolvable tiers — between roughly two-thirds and over nine-tenths. On the limits: the hard remainder is the global reserve core; it is dissolved not by any holder swap, but only once GDT becomes a neutral, gold-like store-of-value reserve — a late-phase lever. To this are added two non-financial barriers, one geopolitical and one administrative, which is why the assessment separates three axes. On the timing: the mechanism is prepared in calm times and is available in crisis; the same preparation serves the orderly transition and the collapse case alike. A robustness test on three economies confirms that the method is reproducible — all four tiers within ±2 percentage points. What ultimately carries the case is the positive sum: the transformation is not a zero-sum cut with losers, but a positive-sum process that remains legitimate even when decided collectively and democratically. This shows that an evolutionary path — orderly rather than revolutionary — structurally exists; whether it is taken remains a political question. The paper names its open points — the bridge between today's money and Gradido, the legal transition of the credit into an enforceable claim — and positions Gradido as a convergence finding alongside related traditions (Gesell, Keynes, Lietaer): connectability as a stance, not superiority. It understands itself as an invitation to monetary and reform economics and to debt research to examine the finding and think it further. Together with the following Parts 2 (private debt) and 3 (the global reserve core), it forms a trilogy on the entire financial layer.
Bernd Hückstädt (Fri,) studied this question.