Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Suffering Cost of Unjust Wealth

Recognition that accumulation built on exploitation creates karmic and psychological harm, violating both Yacob's dignity ethics and Buddhist economics.

Zera
Why It Matters

Buddhist economics teaches that attachment to wealth and willingness to harm others for profit generate suffering for both victim and perpetrator. Zera Yacob's philosophy adds that such behavior violates human reason and dignity—the rational person recognizes the damage they cause. This concept names the true cost of unjust wealth: karmic consequence, psychological alienation, and the breakdown of community trust. A billionaire's fortune built on wage suppression carries the weight of thousands of lives constrained. A business that pollutes carries the suffering of future generations. Practitioners of this concept develop the capacity to perceive these hidden costs, to trace the harm in their consumption, and to redirect economic choices accordingly. It is not primarily about guilt but clear seeing—understanding that no accumulation is worth the damage, and that genuine security comes only through practices that generate collective wellbeing.

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Money & Finance
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