Close Menu
  • Breaking News
  • Business
  • Personal Finance
  • 2nd Amendment
  • Videos
  • Forum
  • More
    • Prepping & Survival
    • Health
    • Top Stocks
    • Stocks Portfolio

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news and updates directly to your inbox.

Popular Now
Russia’s Lavrov says Iran has ‘inalienable’ right to enrich uranium, openly defying Trump’s demands Breaking News

Russia’s Lavrov says Iran has ‘inalienable’ right to enrich uranium, openly defying Trump’s demands

By Dewey LewisApril 15, 20260

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Russia’s foreign minister Sergey Lavrov said that…

In letter to Xi, Trump asks China not to send weapons to Iran

In letter to Xi, Trump asks China not to send weapons to Iran

April 15, 2026
NHL coach rips players after stunning late-season collapse extends playoff drought: ‘They don’t care’

NHL coach rips players after stunning late-season collapse extends playoff drought: ‘They don’t care’

April 15, 2026
Federal Spending Rises to Post-Covid High in Wake of DOGE Failure

Federal Spending Rises to Post-Covid High in Wake of DOGE Failure

April 15, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Russia’s Lavrov says Iran has ‘inalienable’ right to enrich uranium, openly defying Trump’s demands
  • In letter to Xi, Trump asks China not to send weapons to Iran
  • NHL coach rips players after stunning late-season collapse extends playoff drought: ‘They don’t care’
  • Federal Spending Rises to Post-Covid High in Wake of DOGE Failure
  • Family’s spring break hike turns into life-or-death rescue after parent falls 70 feet off Utah cliff
  • US destroyer interdicts two oil tankers trying to leave Iran during Trump’s blockade
  • Where you live could shape your risk of cancer mortality, study suggests
  • ‘Concerning’: Ex-Biden official under fire as pay-to-play allegations emerge in top gubernatorial race
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn VKontakte
Wednesday, April 15
Republican Investor
Banner
  • Breaking News
  • Business
  • Personal Finance
  • 2nd Amendment
  • Videos
  • Forum
  • More
    • Prepping & Survival
    • Health
    • Top Stocks
    • Stocks Portfolio
Subscribe
Republican Investor
You are at:Home » The Real Threat Is Artificial Credit, Not Artificial Intelligence
Prepping & Survival

The Real Threat Is Artificial Credit, Not Artificial Intelligence

Dewey LewisBy Dewey LewisMarch 10, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp
The Real Threat Is Artificial Credit, Not Artificial Intelligence
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

This article was originally published by George Ford Smith at The Mises Institute. 

Artificial intelligence is rapidly becoming one of the most capital-intensive industries in history. Consider: Semiconductor fabrication plants cost tens of billions of dollars. Massive data centers consume extraordinary amounts of electricity, sending power bills soaring. Specialized engineering talent commands premium wages. (Although the median salary for an AI professional is $160K annually, the top 1 percent of AI researchers receive compensation packages exceeding $1 million). Global supply chains must coordinate rare materials, precision manufacturing, and complex infrastructure.

Yet discussions about artificial intelligence almost never address the most important economic variable shaping its development: money.

From an Austrian perspective, the future of artificial intelligence ties directly to the monetary system that finances it. Whether AI produces sustainable prosperity or another boom-bust cycle depends less on algorithms than on interest rates.

As we’ve seen throughout history, interest rates in a fractional-reserve banking system trend ever lower when a new technology gets underway. This generates the illusion of prosperity called a boom, followed inevitably by a bust.

As a reminder of what is meant by a “bust,” keep in mind the figure $16.2 trillion—“The total net worth American households lost between 2007 and 2009 of the Great Recession.”

Artificial intelligence is best understood economically as a higher-order capital good—a tool that enhances the productivity of human performance. Like machinery during the Industrial Revolution or computers in the late twentieth century, AI operates within a time-structured production process involving multiple stages before consumer goods emerge. Here’s how ChatGPT works as a consumer good, for example, providing an indispensable research tool for millions.

Nobel laureate F.A. Hayek emphasized that production requires coordination of dispersed knowledge across time. Interest rates serve as the critical signal aligning savings with investment. When that signal is distorted, the capital structure becomes misaligned.

Artificial intelligence offers super-advanced intellectual performance, but as a capital good is still subject to interest rate signals. Economically, under our central bank fiat system, distorted interest rates intensifies capital misalignment.

The Neglected Relevance of the Monetary System

The current AI boom is unfolding after more than a decade of unprecedented monetary expansion. Following the 2008 financial crisis—and again after 2020—the Federal Reserve expanded its balance sheet dramatically while maintaining near-zero interest rates for extended periods. The Fed has been unwinding since its April 2022 peak, but is still 59 percent above pre-pandemic levels.

In the world of Federal Reserve economics, cheap credit is a necessary fuel for economic development. But as Mises warned,

What induces an entrepreneur to embark upon definite projects is neither high prices nor low prices as such, but a discrepancy between the costs of production, inclusive of interest on the capital required, and the anticipated prices of the products. A lowering of the gross market rate of interest as brought about by credit expansion always has the effect of making some projects appear profitable which did not appear so before. (emphasis added)

When the Fed artificially suppresses interest rates, entrepreneurs undertake projects that appear profitable but cannot be sustained once monetary conditions change. This is the core of Austrian business cycle theory: Credit expansion causes malinvestment.

Artificial intelligence investment is particularly vulnerable to this dynamic because it involves long time horizons, uncertain demand, and enormous upfront capital requirements.

Warning Signs of Malinvestment

Several familiar signals are already visible:

Technological revolutions often coincide with speculative manias. The railroad booms of the nineteenth century, the stock market excesses of the 1920s, the dot-com bubble of the 1990s, and the housing boom before 2008 all followed this pattern. In each case, the technology survived, while the speculative capital structure collapsed. Artificial intelligence may follow a similar trajectory if monetary conditions continue to distort investment signals. As long as money is under the monopoly control of political appointees instead of the free market, distortion is guaranteed.

Gold historically constrained credit expansion because banks could not create unlimited claims without risking the wrath of defrauded depositors. Interest rates reflected real savings more accurately, and investment discipline was stronger.

Under a monetary system anchored by market forces rather than quarreling politicians, artificial intelligence would develop in a manner more closely aligned with genuine demand and less vulnerable to speculative collapse.

Conclusion

Artificial intelligence is likely to become the most transformative technology in history, but under the auspices of a money-printing counterfeiter such as the Federal Reserve it’s certain to create massive economic problems. The real threat is artificial credit, not artificial intelligence.

People rightfully fear losing their jobs. What actually threatens workers, though, is not automation but monetary distortion. When credit expansion drives speculative booms, capital is misdirected into unsustainable ventures. When the correction arrives, workers suffer the consequences of decisions made far above them. And they tend to direct their anger at the market, rather than the politically-influenced decision makers.

Ron Paul was right. We need to end the Fed and end the property rights violations of fractional reserve banking.

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleAndrew Schulz warns ‘Americans are furious’ about prospect of new war while they struggle with affordability
Next Article Stephen Colbert mocks Paramount while accepting WGA award for confronting ‘social injustice’

Related Posts

Federal Spending Rises to Post-Covid High in Wake of DOGE Failure

Federal Spending Rises to Post-Covid High in Wake of DOGE Failure

April 15, 2026
How to Survive Nuclear Fallout

How to Survive Nuclear Fallout

April 15, 2026
US Says ‘No Ships Made It Past Blockade’ As Iran Mulls Hormuz Shipping Pause To Preserve Talks

US Says ‘No Ships Made It Past Blockade’ As Iran Mulls Hormuz Shipping Pause To Preserve Talks

April 14, 2026
Rival Vessel Passes Through Strait of Hormuz Despite Trump’s Blockade

Rival Vessel Passes Through Strait of Hormuz Despite Trump’s Blockade

April 14, 2026
JD Vance Says “We’ve Accomplished Our Objectives” In Iran

JD Vance Says “We’ve Accomplished Our Objectives” In Iran

April 14, 2026
U.S. Begins Blockade of Strait of Hormuz

U.S. Begins Blockade of Strait of Hormuz

April 14, 2026
Add A Comment

Comments are closed.

Follow us
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
Highlights
In letter to Xi, Trump asks China not to send weapons to Iran Business

In letter to Xi, Trump asks China not to send weapons to Iran

By Press RoomApril 15, 20260

President Donald Trump says he warned China against supplying weapons to Iran, and Chinese President…

NHL coach rips players after stunning late-season collapse extends playoff drought: ‘They don’t care’

NHL coach rips players after stunning late-season collapse extends playoff drought: ‘They don’t care’

April 15, 2026
Federal Spending Rises to Post-Covid High in Wake of DOGE Failure

Federal Spending Rises to Post-Covid High in Wake of DOGE Failure

April 15, 2026
Family’s spring break hike turns into life-or-death rescue after parent falls 70 feet off Utah cliff

Family’s spring break hike turns into life-or-death rescue after parent falls 70 feet off Utah cliff

April 15, 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news and updates directly to your inbox.

About
About

Republican Investor is one of the top news portals to cover business, personal finance and second amendment news, follow us to get the latest news.

We're social, connect with us:

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn VKontakte
Popular Posts
Russia’s Lavrov says Iran has ‘inalienable’ right to enrich uranium, openly defying Trump’s demands

Russia’s Lavrov says Iran has ‘inalienable’ right to enrich uranium, openly defying Trump’s demands

April 15, 2026
In letter to Xi, Trump asks China not to send weapons to Iran

In letter to Xi, Trump asks China not to send weapons to Iran

April 15, 2026
NHL coach rips players after stunning late-season collapse extends playoff drought: ‘They don’t care’

NHL coach rips players after stunning late-season collapse extends playoff drought: ‘They don’t care’

April 15, 2026
Latest News
Federal Spending Rises to Post-Covid High in Wake of DOGE Failure

Federal Spending Rises to Post-Covid High in Wake of DOGE Failure

April 15, 2026
Family’s spring break hike turns into life-or-death rescue after parent falls 70 feet off Utah cliff

Family’s spring break hike turns into life-or-death rescue after parent falls 70 feet off Utah cliff

April 15, 2026
US destroyer interdicts two oil tankers trying to leave Iran during Trump’s blockade

US destroyer interdicts two oil tankers trying to leave Iran during Trump’s blockade

April 15, 2026
Copyright © 2026. Republican Investor. All rights reserved.
  • Privacy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.