What they're not telling you: # No, AI Won't Make Money Obsolete Even if artificial intelligence achieves extraordinary feats of productivity, money will remain as essential to human civilization as it is today—a fact tech utopians conveniently ignore when imagining a post-scarcity future. The prevailing narrative among AI evangelists assumes that technological abundance will eventually render money unnecessary. This vision mistakes the purpose of currency itself.

Diana Reeves
The Take
Diana Reeves · Corporate Watchdog & Markets

# THE TAKE: Why AI Actually *Needs* Money More Than Ever Peter Earle's rebuttal misses the real story: AI won't abolish money because capital requires it as a control mechanism. Here's the data. As AI automates labor, wealth concentrates faster—not slower. We're watching a 40-year compression of inequality trends. The 1% doesn't need AI to eliminate scarcity; they need currency systems that **quantify and gatekeep** remaining human value. Money doesn't disappear in post-scarcity. It *mutates*. Digital currencies, programmable wallets, algorithmic income distribution—these aren't bugs, they're features. They're how power concentrates when you can't rely on traditional wage labor anymore. Earle assumes capitalism self-corrects. It doesn't. It calcifies. The real question: *Who programs the algorithm that decides what your labor is worth?* That's where money gets interesting. That's where power goes.

What the Documents Show

According to economic analysis via the American Institute for Economic Research, money is not simply a convenience that disappears once frictionless exchange becomes possible. Instead, money solves fundamental problems that persist regardless of technological advancement: how to allocate scarce resources, coordinate complex economic activity, and compare alternatives under conditions that define human existence. These problems don't vanish when productivity soars. The critical error in the "money becomes obsolete" argument lies in a misunderstanding of scarcity itself. Abundance in one domain does not eliminate scarcity universally.

🔎 Mainstream angle: The corporate press either ignored this story entirely or buried it in a 3-sentence brief. The framing, when it appeared at all, focused on process rather than impact.

Follow the Money

AI may dramatically reduce production costs for digital goods and easily replicable services, potentially collapsing prices in those sectors. But vast portions of economic life operate under constraints that no algorithm can overcome. Location is inherently scarce—a studio apartment in Manhattan or a neighborhood in Tokyo cannot be replicated merely because construction costs fall. The same immutable scarcity applies to proximity to infrastructure, culture, and social networks. These remain rival and excludable goods, meaning access must be allocated somehow. Money remains the most efficient mechanism humanity has devised for that allocation.

What Else We Know

Time presents an equally irreducible constraint that technology cannot dissolve. Human attention—particularly skilled human attention—cannot scale infinitely. A surgeon's expertise, a trial lawyer's strategic mind, or a performer's presence in the room remain finite and rivalrous goods, regardless of AI augmentation. Even if artificial intelligence enhances individual capability, it does not eliminate the fact that any person's hours must be divided among competing demands. Live experiences, one-on-one advisory relationships, and genuine human interaction face the same immovable limitation. Someone must decide who gets access, and under what terms.

Primary Sources

What are they not saying? Who benefits from this story staying buried? Follow the regulatory filings, the court dockets, and the FOIA releases. The truth is in the paperwork — it always is.

Disclosure: NewsAnarchist aggregates from public records, API feeds (Federal Register, CourtListener, MuckRock, Hacker News), and independent media. AI-assisted synthesis. Always verify primary sources linked above.