This paper argues that in a traditional single-currency system, money is alienated from a tool into an end in itself, leading to capital concentration, widening wealth gaps, a parasitic secondary market (status consumption), currency depreciation, and eventual stagflation. To break this vicious cycle, the author proposes “Symbiosis Order” — a dual-dimensional measurement system based on M + P = constant (Money + public Points always equals an individual’s original value). Under this rule, the more money a person accumulates, the fewer public credits they receive, making it impossible to hoard wealth permanently. Net material stock ultimately returns to zero, shifting competition from “who can buy more expensive goods” to “who can gain new life experiences faster.” This mechanism prevents enterprises from enslaving individuals, fills domestic demand gaps without printing money, and dismantles the secondary market that relies on wealth disparity. The fable of “unloading cargo for a meal” shows that the desire for shared experience is sufficient to drive efficient cooperation, without administrative orders or monetary incentives. The conclusion is that money must return to being a tool, and life experience is the true ultimate purpose.
Pige Li (Sun,) studied this question.
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