Agency-Based Pay Concept: Difference between revisions
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=Final Synthesis= | =Final Synthesis= | ||
In an agency-first abundance system, value accrues only through direct participation. Surplus is not redistributed; it collapses into lower costs and expanded opportunity. Pay reflects current scarcity, not personal merit, and declines as systems mature. Individuals who wish to earn more must act by entering higher-leverage work made accessible through fast learning and open systems. Exit is always available, adaptation is always encouraged, and dignity is preserved through choice rather than entitlement. | In an agency-first abundance system, value accrues only through direct participation. Surplus is not redistributed; it collapses into lower costs and expanded opportunity. Pay reflects current scarcity, not personal merit, and declines as systems mature. Individuals who wish to earn more must act by entering higher-leverage work made accessible through fast learning and open systems. Exit is always available, adaptation is always encouraged, and dignity is preserved through choice rather than entitlement. | ||
Revision as of 03:37, 18 January 2026
See also Learning Compression Factor
Source [1]
Final Synthesis
In an agency-first abundance system, value accrues only through direct participation. Surplus is not redistributed; it collapses into lower costs and expanded opportunity. Pay reflects current scarcity, not personal merit, and declines as systems mature. Individuals who wish to earn more must act by entering higher-leverage work made accessible through fast learning and open systems. Exit is always available, adaptation is always encouraged, and dignity is preserved through choice rather than entitlement.
The agency-first resolution
In the agency-based model:
- Pay is never shared
- Surplus is never pooled
- Prices remain fixed per cycle
- Baselines evolve predictably
- Opportunity migrates upward
- Only actors capture value