The Disintegration of U.S. Financial Power: Monetary Overextension, Demographic Deterioration, Geopolitical Fragmentation, and the Black Swans That Triggered Collapse

★★★★★ 4.9 91 reviews

$35.09
Price when purchased online
Free shipping Free 30-day returns

Sold and shipped by mangatamilos.gr
We aim to show you accurate product information. Manufacturers, suppliers and others provide what you see here.
$35.09
Price when purchased online
Free shipping Free 30-day returns

How do you want your item?
You get 30 days free! Choose a plan at checkout.
Shipping
Arrives Jul 21
Free
Pickup
Check nearby
Delivery
Not available

Sold and shipped by mangatamilos.gr
Free 30-day returns Details

Product details

Management number 236917062 Release Date 2026/07/10 List Price $14.04 Model Number 236917062
Category

The Disintegration of U.S. Financial Power: Monetary Overextension, Demographic Deterioration, Geopolitical Fragmentation, and the Black Swans That Triggered Collapse is a forensic analysis of how the world’s most powerful economy entered irreversible decline. Rather than political commentary or ideological framing, this book presents a mechanistic, systems‑level reconstruction of national failure—an examination of how complex societies collapse when internal degradation intersects with external shocks.Charles B. Engelberg, M.D., draws on clinical systems thinking, epidemiology, demography, metabolic science, and geopolitical modeling to explain the four converging forces that dismantled American financial primacy. Chronic monetary overextension eroded fiscal resilience; demographic deterioration reduced productive capacity; institutional erosion weakened coordination and adaptive response; and accelerating geopolitical fragmentation exposed structural vulnerabilities that had accumulated for decades. These forces interacted through reinforcing feedback loops that pushed the system past its recovery threshold.The book details how long‑term fiscal imbalance, declining human capital, and the loss of institutional coherence created a structural environment in which stabilization was no longer possible. Engelberg shows how global realignments, supply‑chain fragility, and adversarial state actors exploited these weaknesses, accelerating the breakdown of a system already approaching critical limits. A dedicated section on thermodynamic economics explains how energy constraints, entropy accumulation, and declining system efficiency shaped financial behavior, asset bubbles, and the eventual breakdown of monetary stability. Collapse is presented not as a sudden event but as the predictable outcome of interacting failures in metabolism, information flow, and adaptive capacity at the scale of a civilization.Inside the book, readers will find a structured analysis of the mechanisms that drove U.S. financial collapse, organized around interacting domains of failure. Chapters examine the long‑term consequences of monetary excess, the demographic inversion that reduced productive capacity, and the erosion of institutional competence that weakened national coordination. Detailed sections explore supply‑chain fragility, declining human capital, metabolic and cognitive deterioration, and the strategic exploitation of these weaknesses by adversarial state actors. The thermodynamic‑economics chapter provides a rigorous framework for understanding how declining energy return, rising systemic entropy, and falling efficiency destabilized financial structures and amplified fragility. The book maps the feedback loops linking these forces, showing how they amplified one another and drove the system toward irreversible decline. Rather than narrative history, the text provides a mechanistic model of collapse grounded in data, systems theory, and the hard constraints of demography and economics.For readers seeking a rigorous, non‑partisan explanation of how great powers fail, The Disintegration of U.S. Financial Power offers a clear, unsentimental account of the forces that ended American financial dominance—an autopsy of a system that could not survive the pressures acting upon it. This work reflects decades of interdisciplinary analysis, integrating clinical systems thinking, financial modeling, and thermodynamic economics into a unified explanatory framework rarely attempted in contemporary collapse literature. Engelberg’s ability to synthesize epidemiology, demography, metabolic science, and geopolitical strategy into a coherent model of national decline sets this book apart. The result is a level of analytical clarity and structural insight not commonly found in studies of great‑power failure. Read more

ASIN B0H6HDDGSR
ISBN13 979-8183914108
Language English
Publisher Independently published
Dimensions 6 x 0.57 x 9 inches
Item Weight 12 ounces
Print length 252 pages
Publication date June 24, 2026

Correction of product information

If you notice any omissions or errors in the product information on this page, please use the correction request form below.

Correction Request Form

Customer ratings & reviews

4.9 out of 5
★★★★★
91 ratings | 37 reviews
How item rating is calculated
View all reviews
5 stars
89% (81)
4 stars
1% (1)
3 stars
0% (0)
2 stars
0% (0)
1 star
10% (9)
Sort by

There are currently no written reviews for this product.