Why “Savings With Returns” in the Traditional System is Broken
The lie of financial growth, the hamster wheel of inflation, and the path to real savings.
For as long as most of us can remember, the mantra has been repeated by parents, financial advisors, and HR managers alike: “You need to make your money grow.” Get a job, put money in your retirement fund, invest in mutual funds, maybe even play around with stocks and over time, your savings will “grow.”
This advice is so common that hardly anyone ever questions it. But when you step back and examine the structure of our financial system, the whole idea starts to look absurd. The truth is that what most people think of as saving is not saving at all - it is perpetual risk-taking, cleverly disguised as responsible financial planning.
The Lie of “Growing” Money
Money is supposed to store value. When you exchange your time and labor for wages, the money you earn should allow you to preserve that value into the future. In a sane world, saving money would simply mean holding onto the value you’ve already created, so you can use it later.
But that is not the world we live in. Central banks have engineered our currencies to lose value year after year. The Federal Reserve, like most central banks, targets around 2% inflation annually. That means your dollars are designed to buy less in the future. Over ten years, that 2% compounds into more than a 20% loss in purchasing power. Over twenty years, you’re looking at a 35% erosion.
This is not an accident. It is policy. And it forces every working person into a trap: either watch your savings melt away like an ice cube, or take risks in financial markets just to try to stay in place.
The Hamster Wheel of Financialization
Here’s how the hamster wheel works:
Money loses value every year.
To “make up” for that loss, you’re told you must invest.
Investing means putting your savings at risk.
Financial markets balloon with demand for products designed to “help” you beat inflation.
The cycle repeats.
Stocks, bonds, ETFs, mortgage-backed securities, derivatives - the list of financial products grows longer every year. Many of these products exist not because they serve a productive role in the economy, but because people are forced to chase returns to counteract inflation.
The result? An economy that is over-financialized. Instead of focusing on producing goods and services, society channels enormous energy into financial engineering. Teachers, doctors, engineers—people who already take risk by investing years of their lives into learning a craft—are then pushed into becoming part-time investors, navigating Wall Street just to preserve their savings.
That’s not saving. That’s survival under a broken monetary system.
Why This System is Stupid
At a basic level, the system is stupid because it confuses saving with investing. Saving is supposed to mean holding money without risk. Investing is choosing to risk savings in pursuit of more. The fact that we’ve blurred these two concepts is a sign of how distorted our incentives have become.
Think about it: every dollar you earn already represents risk. You’ve risked your time, your energy, and your skill to create something of value. Saving that money should not require you to risk it again. Yet because of central bank policy, it does.
The system forces everyone into unwanted risk. It produces malinvestment, bubbles, and instability. And it leaves most people perpetually anxious about their finances, obsessing over portfolios, watching interest rates, and chasing “returns” that often barely keep up with inflation.
It’s like running on a treadmill that speeds up over time—you can’t stop running, but you also never actually move forward.
Enter Bitcoin: Money That Doesn’t Melt
The insanity only exists because money itself has been corrupted. If your money didn’t lose value, you wouldn’t need to “grow” it. You could simply save.
That’s what Bitcoin changes. With a fixed supply of 21 million, Bitcoin is money that cannot be debased. No central bank can arbitrarily create more of it. That means holding Bitcoin is not risk-taking—it is actual saving.
This shift has profound implications. Instead of being forced onto the hamster wheel of financialization, individuals can simply hold money and know it will store value over time. Economic decisions—whether to consume, invest, or defer—become sharper and more rational because the foundation is sound.
The Great Definancialization
Bitcoin represents what Parker Lewis calls the Great Definancialization. The financial system has metastasized precisely because fiat money loses value. When that changes, the incentives that built today’s Wall Street circus unwind.
People won’t feel compelled to dump their savings into index funds or junk bonds. They’ll have a real choice: save safely in money, or invest selectively in productive ventures. Financial products will still exist, but they’ll be right-sized, serving genuine needs instead of acting as lifeboats in a sinking fiat system.
As Bitcoin adoption grows, wealth will flow out of fragile financial assets and into a stable monetary base. This shift won’t just simplify personal finance—it will make the entire economy more resilient.
Back to Sanity
The idea that “cash is trash” has become so normalized that even legendary investors like Ray Dalio say it out loud. But think about how insane that is. Cash—the very thing meant to represent stored value—is now universally dismissed as garbage. Why? Because the rules of money have been rewritten to ensure it loses value.
Bitcoin flips that script. It restores sanity by letting money do what money is supposed to do: store value. In a Bitcoin world, savings become real again. People can focus on their work, their families, and their communities instead of constantly juggling financial products.
Conclusion
The traditional system of “saving with returns” is stupid because it is not saving at all. It is coerced risk-taking, born out of a monetary policy that deliberately erodes value. Financial advisors may call it wisdom, but it is really a giant hamster wheel designed to keep you running forever.
Bitcoin offers a way out. With a fixed supply and incorruptible rules, it reestablishes the line between saving and investing. It ends the lie that your money must “grow” and restores the possibility of simply storing value.
In short: fiat savings is financial engineering. Bitcoin savings is freedom. And when people finally grasp that difference, the age of financialization will end, and the age of definancialization will begin.