Does the economy serve us, or are we serving it?

Right now, it’s both—but tilted the wrong way.

Does the economy serve us in America—or do we serve it?

Right now, it’s both—but tilted the wrong way.
The U.S. economy generates immense wealth, yet many people experience it as something they must keep up with, sacrifice for, and survive within—rather than something designed to serve their well-being.


The Big Picture

The U.S. economy is one of the largest and most productive systems in history.

👉 Yet many Americans face:

  • Rising cost of living
  • Time scarcity (longer work hours, multiple jobs)
  • Financial insecurity despite economic growth

The tension:
Growth is happening—but not translating evenly into lived well-being.


What’s driving the imbalance

1) Growth-first design

  • Success measured by GDP, markets, and quarterly earnings
  • Less emphasis on health, stability, and quality of life

👉 Result: The system optimizes for output, not outcomes.


2) Financialization of everyday life

  • Housing, healthcare, education → increasingly expensive
  • Essential needs tied to profit-driven systems

👉 People don’t just participate in the economy—they must continuously feed it.


3) Productivity vs. pay disconnect

  • Workers are more productive than ever
  • Wages haven’t kept pace for many

👉 Value is created broadly—but captured unevenly.


4) Time becomes the hidden cost

  • Longer work hours
  • Less time for family, community, health

👉 The economy is efficient—but not always human-centered.


So… who is serving who?

When it works:

  • Jobs provide stability and purpose
  • Innovation improves lives
  • Markets create opportunity

When it doesn’t:

  • People work just to stay afloat
  • Debt replaces security
  • Stress replaces stability

👉 Reality: Many Americans feel like they are serving the system to access basic needs.


 Signs of a shift

Local & community economies

  • Growth of local businesses, co-ops, and mutual aid networks
  • Community-supported agriculture (CSA) models

 Redefining work

  • Remote work and flexible schedules
  • Experiments with 4-day workweeks
  • Rise of purpose-driven careers

Well-being economy thinking

  • Policies and frameworks prioritizing health, equity, and sustainability
  • Growing interest in models beyond GDP

 What we can learn

1. The economy is a design—not a law of nature
It can be redesigned to serve different goals.

2. Metrics shape outcomes
What we measure (GDP vs. well-being) determines what we optimize.

3. Local resilience matters
Stronger communities = less dependence on fragile global systems.

4. Participation is power
Where people spend, invest, and work shapes the system itself.


What would a people-serving economy look like?

  • Basic needs (housing, food, healthcare) are accessible and stable
  • Work supports life—not the other way around
  • Wealth circulates locally, not just accumulates at the top
  • Success measured by well-being, not just output

Systems Insight

Current pattern:
👉 Produce → extract → concentrate

Needed shift:
👉 Create → distribute → regenerate

From: growth at all costs
To: well-being by design


Flip the Script

Old question:
“How fast is the economy growing?”

New question:
Is life getting better for people?


What you can do now

  • Support local and community-based businesses
  • Invest in companies aligned with long-term value
  • Advocate for policies that prioritize well-being
  • Redefine success personally: time, health, relationships

The Bottom Line

The economy should be a tool—not a master.

Right now, many Americans feel like they’re working to keep the system running.
The opportunity ahead: redesign the system so it works for people, communities, and the future.