This paper advances a single, operationally precise thesis: financial bubbles do not have to destroy the societies that produced them. The failure of a leveraged financial superstructure is not, in principle, the same event as the failure of the productive economy beneath it — provided that institutional actors possess both the analytical model and the political will to distinguish between the two. Modern financial systems have layered speculative capital atop real productive activity to a degree that conflates the two in public perception, in regulatory architecture, and in crisis response. The predictable consequence is that when the speculative layer corrodes — as it inevitably does — the corrective machinery defaults to preserving phantom liquidity at the expense of households, small enterprises, and wage-earners. This is the error this paper seeks to correct. The Controlled Collapse Model (CCM) proposes a three-stage framework: 1. Strategic Contraction of Leverage — the deliberate pre-positioning of financial conditions to reduce the altitude of any eventual fall, without asphyxiating productive credit. 2. Managed Deleveraging Event — the orchestrated absorption of losses within the speculative layer, using resolution tools already codified in post-2008 regulatory architecture. 3. Real Economy Protection Dome — the targeted deployment of liquidity and restructuring mechanisms specifically to households and productive enterprises, insulating them from residual financial volatility. The paper proceeds in nine substantive sections, supported by case studies from Japan (1990s), the United Kingdom (2008), and the containment of the Archegos Capital collapse in 2021. A set of structural tools, policy recommendations, and scoring frameworks completes the analytical scaffolding.
Essentia Vera (Sat,) studied this question.