Economics is treated as policy.
In reality, it behaves like a disaster system.
Just as hurricanes, pandemics, and environmental hazards are categorized by severity, economic conditions can—and should—be classified the same way.
Because economics isn’t neutral.
It directly determines life expectancy, mental health, housing stability, birth rates, and death.
Yet unlike pandemics, economic collapse is normalized.
Why Economics Should Be Treated Like a Health Hazard
Economic stress causes:
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suicide
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chronic illness
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family breakdown
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homelessness
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malnutrition
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shortened lifespans
By body count alone, economic systems are among the deadliest forces on Earth—but they are never framed as emergencies.
No alerts.
No evacuation plans.
No system shutdowns.
Just “adapt or fail.”
The Economic Severity Scale (ESS)
🟢 Category 1: Strained Economy
Symptoms:
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wages stagnate
-
housing still possible, but stressful
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full-time work barely covers essentials
Public narrative:
“Work harder.”
“Upskill.”
“Be grateful.”
Reality:
Early warning signs ignored.
🟡 Category 2: Structural Stress
Symptoms:
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housing unaffordable for large groups
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dual-income households required to survive
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debt becomes normal
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people delay children, marriage, healthcare
Public narrative:
“This is just how things are now.”
Reality:
The system begins eating the middle class.
🟠Category 3: Economic Health Crisis
Symptoms:
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full-time workers still homeless
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mass burnout
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declining birthrates
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rising suicide and addiction
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youth opt out of work, dating, or society
Public narrative:
“People are lazy.”
“Young people don’t want to work.”
Reality:
The economy has become biologically incompatible with human life.
🔴 Category 4: Economic Emergency
Symptoms:
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mass homelessness
-
survival crimes increase
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healthcare inaccessible
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families collapse under pressure
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migration spikes
Public narrative:
“Crime problem.”
“Moral decay.”
Reality:
A failed system producing predictable outcomes.
⚫ Category 5: Economic Pandemic
Symptoms:
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generational poverty locked in
-
life expectancy drops
-
entire populations psychologically collapse
-
people abandon traditional life paths entirely
Public narrative:
“There is no alternative.”
Reality:
This is mass harm through policy—not accident.
Why Governments Refuse to Use This Framework
Because if economics were classified like pandemics:
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systems would be shut down
-
emergency interventions would be mandatory
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leaders would be held responsible
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profit-first policies would be questioned
You cannot tell people to “ride it out” during a pandemic.
But that’s exactly what governments do with economic collapse.
Economics as a Slow-Moving Virus
Unlike viruses that kill quickly, economic systems kill slowly:
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stress-related illness
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delayed death
-
preventable suffering
This makes them easier to deny.
No dramatic moment.
No single villain.
Just quiet damage.
Why This Framing Changes Everything
If economics were treated like a health emergency:
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housing would be non-negotiable
-
food access would be guaranteed
-
work would serve life—not consume it
-
systems would be redesigned, not defended
The question would shift from:
“Is this profitable?”
to:
“Is this survivable?”
Conclusion: The System Is the Hazard
When a system consistently produces:
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despair
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death
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instability
…it is no longer an economy.
It is an active threat.
We don’t debate whether pandemics should exist.
We respond to them.
Economics should be no different.
Until we treat economic systems as public health hazards,
we will keep normalizing one of the deadliest forces humanity has ever created.