{"id":97,"date":"2023-04-17T12:00:00","date_gmt":"2023-04-17T12:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/moneywithkatie.com\/everythings-a-pyramid-scheme\/"},"modified":"2025-09-03T18:56:16","modified_gmt":"2025-09-03T18:56:16","slug":"everythings-a-pyramid-scheme","status":"publish","type":"essays","link":"https:\/\/moneywithkatie.com\/essays\/everythings-a-pyramid-scheme\/","title":{"rendered":"Everything\u2019s a Pyramid Scheme"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"sqs-html-content\" data-sqsp-text-block-content>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">On <em>The Money with Katie Show<\/em> this week, we\u2019re discussing a flurry of scams designed to infiltrate hearts, minds, and wallets\u2014from MLMs to prosperity gospel megachurches (and all of the delightful contradictions therein).<\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">As we were developing the episode, I kept circling the concept of <strong>individualism<\/strong>: a cultural belief system (and, I suppose, a political system) that emphasizes autonomy, independence, and self-sufficiency. It generally pooh-poohs the idea of taking a holistic approach to universal needs that collectivist cultures celebrate. (\u201cIndividual merit\u201d and \u201cdeservingness\u201d were big talking points in the schemes we cover in the episode.)<\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">And while we could debate the ethical implications and capitalist merits for the next 48 hours until the episode drops and still not reach any definitive conclusions, what&#8217;s always struck me as fundamentally problematic isn\u2019t a moral issue, but a logical one:<strong> It doesn\u2019t scale.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">Individualism operates under the fragile assumption that the system grades on absolute terms\u2014that if everyone worked hard enough, <em>everyone<\/em> could receive an A.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<figure class=\"block-animation-site-default\">\n<blockquote data-animation-role=\"quote\" \n<p>   ><br \/>\n    <span>\u201c<\/span>Individualism operates under the fragile assumption that the system grades on absolute terms\u2014that if everyone worked hard enough, everyone could receive an A. <span>\u201d<\/span>\n  <\/p><\/blockquote>\n<\/figure>\n<div class=\"sqs-html-content\" data-sqsp-text-block-content>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">But our society grades on a bell curve, shuffling the most exceptional to the front of the class. If <em>everyone<\/em> became uniformly more exceptional, the curve would just shift to the right\u2014the bar for \u201caverage\u201d simply rising.<\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">(Look no further than the way post-secondary education went from something special that set you apart in the job market, to a prerequisite for being hired.)&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">There\u2019s no iteration of individualism wherein <em>everyone<\/em> ends up better off, <strong>because its core functioning mechanism is <em>competition<\/em><\/strong>\u2014and you can\u2019t have winners without losers!<\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">This plays out in a rather obvious way in something like a multilevel marketing company, which is transparently-but-somehow-not-legally a pyramid scheme. Your success is contingent upon your ability to recruit a greater fool, so widespread success in a pyramid scheme is mathematically impossible.<\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">It\u2019s less obvious in, say, a job market, where\u2014if you take one single company as a microcosm\u2014the hierarchical structure itself plays a definitive role in outcomes.&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">The CEO and mid-level manager may be equally competent, but only one person gets to be CEO. There\u2019s a fixed number of \u201cwinning\u201d spots, making the race to the top zero-sum. <em>Someone<\/em> has to be at the bottom of the pyramid, earning the entry-level wages and doing the work nobody else wants to do.&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">And while you could say the \u201closer\u201d in this scenario is still a winner because they have a job,&nbsp;the fact that there are far more people at the bottom than the top is the point: I remember when I started my career in an entry-level role at a Fortune 100 company and observed the path upward, it was clear how I would ascend to the next couple of levels (assistant manager, to associate manager, to manager, to senior manager, etc.), but then things got murky: I could see there were a <em>lot<\/em> more people on the bottom four levels than the top ones.<\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\"><em>I guess I\u2019m going to have to battle it out with these other young women for the few spots that the old men currently hold, <\/em>I thought to myself, doing some quick math that revealed the uncomfortable truth and wondering what happened to the careers of everyone else who didn\u2019t score one of the few top jobs.&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">The promise of career upward mobility, I realized, was a widely held corporate delusion that only came to pass for a select few. Some will work their way up. Most won\u2019t.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<hr \/>\n<div class=\"sqs-html-content\" data-sqsp-text-block-content>\n<h2 style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">Which got me thinking: Individualism is an absurd policy position<\/h2>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">A good barometer for testing the scalability of something is asking, \u201cIf <em>everyone<\/em> took this advice, what would happen?\u201d&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">Similarly to the hierarchical corporate structure, most individual advice can\u2019t or doesn\u2019t scale well in practice, which makes it an awfully wonky policy position for things like childcare, healthcare, and other infrastructure that a functioning society<em> <\/em>needs to operate properly.&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">A popular, hyper-individualist line of defense for the American childcare status quo is, \u201cIf you can\u2019t comfortably afford the average <a href=\"https:\/\/www.americanprogress.org\/article\/true-cost-high-quality-child-care-across-united-states\/\" target=\"_blank\"><span style=\"text-decoration:underline\">$16,000 per year<\/span><\/a> per kid in daycare expenses, maybe you shouldn\u2019t have those kids.\u201d It\u2019s a mighty strange position, considering roughly half of American households <a href=\"https:\/\/www.statista.com\/statistics\/203183\/percentage-distribution-of-household-income-in-the-us\/\" target=\"_blank\"><span style=\"text-decoration:underline\">earn less than $70,000 per year<\/span><\/a> <em>before taxes<\/em> and almost definitely couldn\u2019t \u201ccomfortably\u201d spend one-third of their take-home pay on daycare, no matter how low their other bills were.<\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">If <em>all of those people<\/em> followed the advice to not have children, birth rates (and by extension, the United States\u2019s economic system) would collapse in a few generations, because there wouldn\u2019t be enough replacement workers to keep things rolling. (We\u2019re setting aside the fact that \u201conly rich people should reproduce\u201d is textbook dystopian.) Birth rates are already on a <a href=\"https:\/\/econofact.org\/the-mystery-of-the-declining-u-s-birth-rate\" target=\"_blank\"><span style=\"text-decoration:underline\">dangerous decline<\/span><\/a>, according to some economists, so doubling down on individual hustle in the childcare realm is an all-around bizarre approach. (It\u2019s worth noting that <a href=\"https:\/\/www.pewtrusts.org\/en\/research-and-analysis\/issue-briefs\/2022\/12\/the-long-term-decline-in-fertility-and-what-it-means-for-state-budgets\" target=\"_blank\"><span style=\"text-decoration:underline\">women\u2019s participation<\/span><\/a> in the labor force and wide availability of contraceptives are some of the reasons given for low birth rates.)<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<figure class=\"block-animation-site-default\">\n<blockquote data-animation-role=\"quote\" \n<p>   ><br \/>\n    <span>\u201c<\/span>A lot of good advice simply doesn\u2019t scale, and therein lie the limits of individual solutions for certain issues that impact everyone in more or less the same way.<span>\u201d<\/span>\n  <\/p><\/blockquote>\n<\/figure>\n<div class=\"sqs-html-content\" data-sqsp-text-block-content>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">Another relevant example: I\u2019ve long pointed out the fact that financial independence and early retirement <em>cannot exist at scale<\/em>, because our economic system would cease functioning. If every young person in their thirties or forties achieved financial independence and quit working, the workforce would be limited to those under the age of 35, effectively removing roughly <a href=\"https:\/\/www.zippia.com\/advice\/working-age-population\/\" target=\"_blank\"><span style=\"text-decoration:underline\">66%<\/span><\/a> of the current labor force, or the equivalent of about 44 million people.<\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">For reference, approximately <a href=\"https:\/\/www.washingtonpost.com\/business\/2022\/05\/05\/retirement-jobs-work-inflation-medicare\/\" target=\"_blank\"><span style=\"text-decoration:underline\">4.2 million<\/span><\/a> people left the workforce because of the Covid-19 pandemic (because they passed away, retired, or couldn\u2019t work for some other reason) and it created an incredibly tight labor market. Imagine that x10, and you\u2019ve got a country where \u201cFI\/RE\u201d is prevalent.<\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">Of course, there\u2019s a funny redundancy in the system: If 44 million working-age people retired en masse and ceased most discretionary spending\u2026corporate profits would drop, the stock market would stutter to a halt, and the returns required to support early retirement would vanish, <em>driving everyone back to work<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">In the same vein, a popular suggestion for those who work for minimum wage is to \u201cgo back to school and get a better job.\u201d Fair enough for a handful of minimum wage workers, but the system might just break if <em>all <\/em><a href=\"https:\/\/usafacts.org\/articles\/minimum-wage-america-how-many-people-are-earning-725-hour\/\" target=\"_blank\"><span style=\"text-decoration:underline\"><em>1.6 million<\/em><\/span><\/a><em> minimum wage workers<\/em> applied that advice.&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">It\u2019s possible businesses would be forced to pay higher wages if there were suddenly no one willing to work for $7.25\/hour anymore, but on a smaller scale in the post-pandemic world, we\u2019re observing that scenario play out before our eyes amidst impassioned cries that \u201cnobody wants to work anymore.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">These are eye-opening thought experiments that illustrate the point: <strong>A lot of good advice simply doesn\u2019t scale<\/strong>, and therein lie the limits of individual solutions for certain issues that impact everyone in more or less the same way.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<hr \/>\n<div class=\"sqs-html-content\" data-sqsp-text-block-content>\n<h2 style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">Even our housing policy isn\u2019t exempt&nbsp;<\/h2>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">Well-intentioned individual solutions stop working if everyone enacts them.&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">There\u2019s even an interesting school of thought that suggests the housing market\u2014something traditionally believed to have intrinsic, indisputable value\u2014is a bit of a Ponzi scheme, as Jerusalem Demsas highlights in <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theatlantic.com\/newsletters\/archive\/2022\/12\/homeownership-real-estate-investment-renting\/672511\/\" target=\"_blank\"><span style=\"text-decoration:underline\">this piece<\/span><\/a> for The Atlantic:<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<figure class=\"block-animation-site-default\">\n<blockquote data-animation-role=\"quote\" \n<p>   ><br \/>\n    <span>\u201c<\/span>Homeownership works for some because it cannot work for all.<span>\u201d<\/span><br \/>\n  <\/blockquote><figcaption class=\"source\">&mdash; Jerusalem Demsas<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<div class=\"sqs-html-content\" data-sqsp-text-block-content>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">\u201cAt the core of American housing policy is a secret hiding in plain sight: <strong>Homeownership works for some because it cannot work for all.<\/strong> If we want to make housing affordable for everyone, then it needs to be cheap and widely available. And if we want that housing to act as a wealth-building vehicle, home values have to increase significantly over time. How do we ensure that housing is both appreciating in value for homeowners but cheap enough for all would-be homeowners to buy in? We can\u2019t.\u201d (Emphasis mine.)<\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">It\u2019s worth pointing out that homes in the US didn\u2019t begin appreciating beyond the inflation rate until about the <a href=\"https:\/\/reventureconsulting.com\/how-hgtv-and-alan-greenspan-created-a-perpetual-housing-bubble\/\" target=\"_blank\"><span style=\"text-decoration:underline\">1970s<\/span><\/a>. By the 1990s, it was a \u201cfree market\u201d heavily manipulated by government intervention: Everything from the 30-year fixed rate mortgage to the mortgage interest rate deduction to zoning restrictions and <a href=\"https:\/\/www.britannica.com\/topic\/NIMBY\" target=\"_blank\"><span style=\"text-decoration:underline\">artificially constrained supply<\/span><\/a> impacted the prices of homes.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<hr \/>\n<div class=\"sqs-html-content\" data-sqsp-text-block-content>\n<h3 style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">When we started working on the episode, I had a pretty clear-cut idea of what the criteria were for a scam, not the least of which was a core lack of scalability<\/h3>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">But the more my team and I unpacked the idea and \u201cindividualism\u201d became a common throughline between the various schemes we uncovered, I found myself asking: <em>Is <\/em><strong><em>everything<\/em><\/strong><em> a pyramid scheme?&nbsp;<\/em><\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">It\u2019s hard to point to anything in a modern economy that isn\u2019t contingent upon a new class of suckers coming up, to whom you can offload your overvalued real estate or stocks before cashing in your chips and going on your merry way.&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">All the individual advice often touted as the solution to \u201cwinning\u201d in modern life is built on the scaffolding of a flimsy contradiction, because\u2014by definition\u2014it cannot work for everyone. The system prescribes that there <em>must<\/em> be losers, which is all well and good if the prize you\u2019re vying for is a fancier car, a pair of designer shoes, or a lush corner office.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<figure class=\"block-animation-site-default\">\n<blockquote data-animation-role=\"quote\" \n<p>   ><br \/>\n    <span>\u201c<\/span>\u2018Individualism\u2019 became a common throughline between the various schemes we uncovered, [and] I found myself asking: Is everything a pyramid scheme?<span>\u201d<\/span>\n  <\/p><\/blockquote>\n<\/figure>\n<div class=\"sqs-html-content\" data-sqsp-text-block-content>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">It\u2019s not, however, a legitimate answer to our collective, universal needs like quality childcare and housing.<\/p>\n<p class=\"\" style=\"white-space:pre-wrap;\">The half-funny, half-sad thing is, these realizations <em>alone<\/em> aren\u2019t enough to render advice to individuals worthless, because the system of winners and losers is still the one we operate within\u2014but when individual merit is a society\u2019s answer for creating the conditions necessary for it to continue thriving, reproducing, and growing, things begin to resemble an economic <em>Mad Max<\/em>. That doesn\u2019t bode well for <em>anyone\u2019s <\/em>future, whether you\u2019re individually exceptional or not.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>On The Money with Katie Show this week, we\u2019re discussing a flurry of scams designed to infiltrate hearts, minds, and wallets\u2014from MLMs to prosperity gospel megachurches (and all of the delightful contradictions therein). As we were developing the episode, I kept circling the concept of individualism: a cultural belief system (and, I suppose, a political [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"featured_media":2499,"template":"","meta":[],"categories":[12],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-97","essays","type-essays","status-publish","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-economy"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v25.8 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Everything\u2019s a Pyramid Scheme - Money with Katie<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/moneywithkatie.com\/essays\/everythings-a-pyramid-scheme\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Everything\u2019s a Pyramid Scheme - Money with Katie\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"On The Money with Katie Show this week, we\u2019re discussing a flurry of scams designed to infiltrate hearts, minds, and wallets\u2014from MLMs to prosperity gospel megachurches (and all of the delightful contradictions therein). 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