Most welfare systems denominate the survival floor in the same instrument

    as market participation — cash. This means the floor is always vulnerable

    to indirect capture: landlords raise rents to absorb transfers, employers

    adjust wages, and successor governments can cut the floor through budget

    processes rather than constitutional amendment.

    One proposed structural fix is instrument separation: a non-convertible

    survival entitlement denominated in physical basket units (food, shelter,

    healthcare, transit) that cannot become cash, collateral, or a status marker.

    The argument is that the walls between instruments do structural work that

    legal protection alone cannot.

    I've been developing this as a formal constitutional architecture with

    adversarial threat modeling — there's a threat register, patch log, and

    formal acceptance protocol. But the core economic question I can't fully

    answer from first principles is: **what are the strongest economic arguments

    that legal protection of a cash floor is sufficient, and instrument

    separation is unnecessary complexity?**

    White Paper (14 pages): https://github.com/Sczitzo/twelve-pillar-protocol/blob/main/White_Paper.md

    What are the economic arguments for and against separating a survival entitlement (denominated in physical basket units) from market currency?
    byu/Which-Food4506 inAskEconomics



    Posted by Which-Food4506

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