THE VON GREYERZ PERSPECTIVE - vongreyerz.substack.com

GLOBAL POPULATION TO GO FROM 8 BILLION TO 4 BILLION

4 min · 11 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio GLOBAL POPULATION TO GO FROM 8 BILLION TO 4 BILLION

Descripción

For most of recorded human history, the world’s population barely moved. Empires rose and collapsed. Entire civilizations disappeared. Wars, plagues, famine, and monetary destruction repeatedly reset societies back toward survival rather than expansion. And yet through thousands of years of human history, the global population remained below one billion people. Then, in the span of barely two centuries, everything changed. The industrial revolution unleashed a force unlike anything humanity had previously experienced: concentrated energy. Coal, oil, mechanization, industrial agriculture, automation, and later debt-fueled globalization allowed civilization to accelerate vertically. Human productivity exploded. Food production scaled. Transportation compressed geography. Medicine extended lifespans. Population growth went from historical stagnation to near exponential expansion. In historical terms, the modern world is not normal. It is an anomaly. The global population remained relatively stable for thousands of years before entering a near-vertical expansion after the industrial age. What took humanity thousands of years to build was multiplied in just a few generations. The world surged from one billion people in the early 1800s to more than eight billion today. But history also teaches that no system — biological, monetary, or civilizational — moves vertically forever. Every exponential trend eventually encounters limits. And when such limits are reached, the correction is rarely gentle. Throughout history, periods of rapid expansion have almost always been followed by periods of contraction. The Black Death of the 14th century reduced large parts of Europe’s population by nearly half. Entire empires throughout history have collapsed under combinations of war, disease, food shortages, debt, resource depletion, and social fragmentation. Modern civilization assumes itself immune from historical cycles because technology appears more advanced. Yet history repeatedly shows that complexity itself often becomes fragility. Today, many of the same structural pressures are quietly re-emerging simultaneously. Geopolitical tensions are rising. Sovereign debt has reached levels previously unimaginable. Social cohesion across many nations continues to deteriorate. Birth rates are collapsing throughout much of the developed world while resource pressures intensify beneath the surface of the global economy. These are not isolated events. They are interconnected symptoms of a system under mounting strain. Perhaps the most overlooked signal of all is demographic decline itself. While markets remain focused on short-term cycles, the long-term trajectory of birth rates points toward something far more structural. Across much of the world, populations are aging while fertility rates continue falling steadily lower. A civilization built upon perpetual expansion is beginning to encounter the mathematics of exhaustion. None of this guarantees an imminent collapse. History does not unfold in straight lines, nor do demographic shifts occur overnight. But the assumption that the modern age can expand indefinitely — economically, financially, energetically, and demographically — is becoming increasingly difficult to defend. The great illusion of every era is the belief that “this time is different.” History rarely agrees. KEY INSIGHTS: 00:00 – 01:18 | Modern population growth was built on energy Egon explains that for most of human history, population growth remained relatively flat.The explosive rise from 1 billion to 8 billion people only began after industrialization, cheap energy, machines, and automation transformed the modern world. 01:19 – 02:28 | Exponential growth never lasts forever The video argues that any chart moving vertically upward for long enough eventually reaches a breaking point.What appears permanent during expansion often becomes unstable in hindsight. 02:29 – 03:35 | Every vertical trend eventually corrects Egon argues that population growth has entered historically unsustainable territory.Wars, economic instability, disease, declining birth rates, and resource pressures could eventually force a major global correction. 03:36 – 04:42 | Governments are preparing for the wrong future The closing section argues that most governments and institutions continue assuming endless growth.But if the structural foundations behind modern expansion begin to weaken, the consequences could be far larger than most policymakers expect. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit vongreyerz.substack.com [https://vongreyerz.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

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67 episodios

episode GOLD WILL NOT GO UP IN THE NEXT 5-10 YEARS artwork

GOLD WILL NOT GO UP IN THE NEXT 5-10 YEARS

For decades, investors have been conditioned to focus on asset prices. They watch stock indexes, property values, bond yields and commodity prices. They celebrate gains and fear losses, assuming wealth can be measured by the number of dollars, euros, pounds or yen attached to an asset. But what if the measuring stick itself is broken? What if the real story of the last century has not been the rise of stocks, property or even gold, but the steady destruction of the currencies used to measure them? Before discussing gold, inflation, debt or financial markets, it is worth stepping back and examining a much bigger picture. The chart below may be one of the simplest—and most important—charts in finance. Measured against gold, every major paper currency of the last century has lost between 97% and 99% of its purchasing power. The German mark collapsed. The British pound steadily declined. The Japanese yen, the euro and even the U.S. dollar followed the same path. Different countries. Different governments. Different economic systems. Yet the outcome has always been remarkably similar. As Voltaire observed nearly three centuries ago: “Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value: zero.” The final stage of every monetary era tends to follow a familiar pattern. Governments accumulate debts they cannot realistically repay. The printing press becomes the preferred solution. Confidence gradually erodes. Purchasing power disappears. History offers many examples, but few are as dramatic as Weimar Germany. Between 1919 and 1923, the price of gold in German marks exploded from roughly 100 marks to more than 100 trillion marks. Gold itself did not change. What changed was the currency. The mark became progressively less valuable until it eventually lost all credibility as money. Most people assume such collapses happen suddenly. In reality, they usually follow a different pattern. Imagine a stadium being filled with water. One drop falls in the first minute. The amount doubles every minute thereafter. How long before the stadium is full? Only fifty minutes. Yet after forty-five minutes, the stadium is still just 7% full. The overwhelming majority of the filling occurs in the final moments. Debt growth, money creation and inflation often behave in exactly the same way. What appears manageable for years can rapidly become uncontrollable once exponential growth takes over. According to Egon von Greyerz, the modern monetary system may now be approaching that final stage. The turning point came in 1971. When President Nixon closed the gold window, the dollar was severed from gold and the world entered a new era of unconstrained credit expansion. Since 1971, gold has risen more than 130-fold in U.S. dollar terms. Most investors see this chart and conclude that gold has become dramatically more valuable. Von Greyerz argues the opposite. Gold is not rising. Paper money is falling. That distinction is critical because it changes how investors think about wealth preservation. If gold were truly becoming more valuable, its purchasing power should constantly increase. Yet history suggests something very different. For thousands of years, a cow has generally cost between half an ounce and one ounce of gold. Empires rose and fell. Wars were fought. Currencies appeared and disappeared. Yet gold continued to buy roughly the same amount of real-world goods. Its purchasing power remained remarkably stable. What changed was not gold. What changed was the value of the currencies used to measure it. This is why Von Greyerz describes gold not as an investment, but as money itself. For over 5,000 years, gold has served as a store of value across civilizations, monetary systems and political regimes. Paper currencies come and go. Gold remains. That is why the central question for investors may not be: “How high will gold go?” The more important question may be: “How much purchasing power will paper assets lose?” Von Greyerz believes the answer could be devastating. He argues that investors who remain concentrated in stocks, bonds and other financial assets could eventually lose 90–95% of their wealth in real terms as the current monetary era comes to an end. Whether that process takes five years or ten years is impossible to know. But history suggests that monetary systems, like all cycles, eventually reach their conclusion. And when they do, those holding assets with enduring purchasing power tend to survive the transition far better than those holding promises denominated in depreciating paper currencies. KEY INSIGHTS 00:00 – 01:18 | We are at the end of a monetary era Von Greyerz argues that the current debt-based monetary system is approaching its final stage after decades of money printing. 01:19 – 03:43 | Fiat currencies always die History shows that every paper currency eventually returns to its intrinsic value: zero. 03:44 – 05:30 | Exponential collapse comes suddenly Using the stadium analogy, he explains why monetary crises appear slow for years and then accelerate rapidly. 05:31 – 06:57 | Gold is not going up Gold’s rising price reflects the declining value of paper currencies, not a change in gold itself. 06:58 – 08:25 | Money printing drives gold higher The expansion of global money supply has closely mirrored the rise in gold since 1971. 08:26 – 10:28 | Gold preserves purchasing power Using the “cow analogy,” he argues that gold has maintained its buying power for thousands of years. 10:29 – 11:45 | Most investors are asking the wrong question Instead of asking how high gold will go, investors should ask how much purchasing power they risk losing. 11:46 – 12:44 | Gold and silver are wealth protection Physical gold and silver are presented as insurance against the destruction of paper wealth. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit vongreyerz.substack.com [https://vongreyerz.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

Ayer12 min
episode GLOBAL POPULATION TO GO FROM 8 BILLION TO 4 BILLION artwork

GLOBAL POPULATION TO GO FROM 8 BILLION TO 4 BILLION

For most of recorded human history, the world’s population barely moved. Empires rose and collapsed. Entire civilizations disappeared. Wars, plagues, famine, and monetary destruction repeatedly reset societies back toward survival rather than expansion. And yet through thousands of years of human history, the global population remained below one billion people. Then, in the span of barely two centuries, everything changed. The industrial revolution unleashed a force unlike anything humanity had previously experienced: concentrated energy. Coal, oil, mechanization, industrial agriculture, automation, and later debt-fueled globalization allowed civilization to accelerate vertically. Human productivity exploded. Food production scaled. Transportation compressed geography. Medicine extended lifespans. Population growth went from historical stagnation to near exponential expansion. In historical terms, the modern world is not normal. It is an anomaly. The global population remained relatively stable for thousands of years before entering a near-vertical expansion after the industrial age. What took humanity thousands of years to build was multiplied in just a few generations. The world surged from one billion people in the early 1800s to more than eight billion today. But history also teaches that no system — biological, monetary, or civilizational — moves vertically forever. Every exponential trend eventually encounters limits. And when such limits are reached, the correction is rarely gentle. Throughout history, periods of rapid expansion have almost always been followed by periods of contraction. The Black Death of the 14th century reduced large parts of Europe’s population by nearly half. Entire empires throughout history have collapsed under combinations of war, disease, food shortages, debt, resource depletion, and social fragmentation. Modern civilization assumes itself immune from historical cycles because technology appears more advanced. Yet history repeatedly shows that complexity itself often becomes fragility. Today, many of the same structural pressures are quietly re-emerging simultaneously. Geopolitical tensions are rising. Sovereign debt has reached levels previously unimaginable. Social cohesion across many nations continues to deteriorate. Birth rates are collapsing throughout much of the developed world while resource pressures intensify beneath the surface of the global economy. These are not isolated events. They are interconnected symptoms of a system under mounting strain. Perhaps the most overlooked signal of all is demographic decline itself. While markets remain focused on short-term cycles, the long-term trajectory of birth rates points toward something far more structural. Across much of the world, populations are aging while fertility rates continue falling steadily lower. A civilization built upon perpetual expansion is beginning to encounter the mathematics of exhaustion. None of this guarantees an imminent collapse. History does not unfold in straight lines, nor do demographic shifts occur overnight. But the assumption that the modern age can expand indefinitely — economically, financially, energetically, and demographically — is becoming increasingly difficult to defend. The great illusion of every era is the belief that “this time is different.” History rarely agrees. KEY INSIGHTS: 00:00 – 01:18 | Modern population growth was built on energy Egon explains that for most of human history, population growth remained relatively flat.The explosive rise from 1 billion to 8 billion people only began after industrialization, cheap energy, machines, and automation transformed the modern world. 01:19 – 02:28 | Exponential growth never lasts forever The video argues that any chart moving vertically upward for long enough eventually reaches a breaking point.What appears permanent during expansion often becomes unstable in hindsight. 02:29 – 03:35 | Every vertical trend eventually corrects Egon argues that population growth has entered historically unsustainable territory.Wars, economic instability, disease, declining birth rates, and resource pressures could eventually force a major global correction. 03:36 – 04:42 | Governments are preparing for the wrong future The closing section argues that most governments and institutions continue assuming endless growth.But if the structural foundations behind modern expansion begin to weaken, the consequences could be far larger than most policymakers expect. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit vongreyerz.substack.com [https://vongreyerz.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

11 de may de 20264 min
episode THE US$ HAS DIED artwork

THE US$ HAS DIED

For decades, investors have been conditioned to believe that rising asset prices represent growing wealth. Higher stock markets, more expensive homes, and larger numbers in retirement accounts are all interpreted as signs of prosperity. Yet history repeatedly shows the same uncomfortable truth at the end of every monetary cycle: Assets are not always becoming more valuable.Very often, money itself is becoming worth less. That distinction is critical because most people still measure wealth in currencies designed to lose purchasing power over time. Some currencies have already reached the end of this cycle. Others are still moving through it. And a small group of monetary assets has survived every monetary regime in recorded history. 1. Three forms of money — but only one survives The Zimbabwe dollar and the Weimar mark represent the final stage of fiat currency collapse — paper money destroyed by excessive debt creation and hyperinflation. Today’s major currencies, including the US dollar, euro, pound, and yen, still retain public confidence, but structurally they are built on the same foundation: debt-driven monetary expansion that requires ever larger injections of liquidity just to keep the system functioning. Gold and silver are fundamentally different because they are outside the political system. They cannot be printed into existence or diluted by central banks. For thousands of years, monetary metals have survived while paper systems repeatedly disappeared. The long-term decline of paper currencies becomes far more visible when they are measured against gold rather than against one another. 2. Gold exposes the true decline of currencies Over the last century, virtually every major currency has lost between 97% and 99% of its value relative to gold. While governments redefine inflation metrics and adjust economic calculations over time, gold remains one of the few consistent monetary reference points across generations. The pattern has repeated for centuries: paper currencies slowly lose purchasing power until confidence eventually breaks, while gold preserves value across monetary eras. What many people perceive as growing wealth is often nothing more than the declining value of the currency measuring it. 3. Rising house prices are often a reflection of falling money In nominal dollar terms, US housing prices have risen dramatically over the last hundred years. But when measured in gold, the opposite occurred. A house that once required roughly 300 ounces of gold can now be purchased for substantially fewer ounces. The house did not suddenly become exponentially more valuable. Instead, the purchasing power of the dollar steadily deteriorated over time as the monetary system expanded through debt and currency creation. That process accelerated significantly after 1971, when the final link between the US dollar and gold was removed. 4. Gold did not surge — the dollar collapsed Once Nixon closed the gold window in 1971, the world entered an era of unconstrained fiat expansion. Debt growth accelerated, central banks gained unlimited monetary flexibility, and paper currency creation expanded on a scale never before seen in history. What appears to be an extraordinary rise in the price of gold is, in many ways, the mirror image of a long-term decline in the purchasing power of the dollar itself. The greatest risk in the years ahead may not simply be inflation or recession, but the realization that most financial wealth is still denominated in currencies structurally designed to lose value over time. And historically, when confidence in paper systems weakens, capital eventually migrates back toward real money. KEY INSIGHTS: 00:00 – 01:10 | Two kinds of money: destroyed vs eternal The opening draws a sharp distinction between currencies that eventually collapse and “eternal money” that survives every monetary era. Gold is framed as nature’s money — something that cannot be printed, manufactured, or politically manipulated. While fiat currencies rise and fall throughout history, gold has preserved value for more than 5,000 years. 01:11 – 02:00 | The end of the current monetary era What began with the creation of the Federal Reserve in 1913 — and accelerated after Nixon closed the gold window in 1971 — is described as another temporary monetary experiment reaching its final stage. Massive global debt and systemic instability are presented as signs that the current era is nearing its breaking point. 02:01 – 03:13 | Every fiat currency follows the same path From the Roman denarius to Weimar Germany, Yugoslavia, and Zimbabwe, history repeatedly shows the same pattern: currency debasement, inflation, and eventual collapse. The argument here is that today’s major currencies are not fundamentally different — only larger and more globally interconnected. 03:14 – 04:00 | World currencies have already lost most of their value According to the speaker, the yen, pound, euro, and US dollar have already lost around 99% of their purchasing power over time. The remaining 1% represents the final phase of the cycle, where confidence in fiat systems could deteriorate far faster than most people expect. 04:01 – 04:50 | Inflation is currency destruction Rather than viewing inflation as simply “higher prices,” the discussion reframes it as the steady decline in the value of money itself. Unlimited money creation allows governments to sustain debt-driven systems temporarily, but at the cost of silently destroying savings and purchasing power. 04:51 – 06:00 | Gold preserves purchasing power across generations A comparison between US housing prices in 1926 and today illustrates the difference between nominal value and real value. While house prices exploded in dollar terms, they became significantly cheaper when measured in gold. The conclusion is simple: gold maintained purchasing power while fiat currency steadily lost it. 06:01 – 06:30 | 1971 marked the turning point Nixon’s decision to close the gold window is presented as the moment currencies became fully detached from hard assets. From that point forward, debt expansion, money printing, and long-term currency debasement accelerated dramatically. 06:31 – 07:20 | A historic shift from paper assets to real assets The coming years are expected to bring a major transition away from paper wealth and toward tangible assets. As confidence in stocks, bonds, and fiat savings weakens, gold ownership could rise substantially as investors look for stability outside the financial system. 07:21 – END | Preserve wealth before the reset arrives The closing message focuses on protection rather than speculation. Physical gold and silver are presented as tools for preserving purchasing power during a period of monetary instability, while paper wealth is portrayed as increasingly vulnerable in the years ahead. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit vongreyerz.substack.com [https://vongreyerz.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

6 de may de 20268 min
episode SILVER BULL UNSTOPPABLE - 100s of BILLIONS OZ OF PAPER SILVER WITH NO PHYSICAL artwork

SILVER BULL UNSTOPPABLE - 100s of BILLIONS OZ OF PAPER SILVER WITH NO PHYSICAL

Clarity has become increasingly rare in today’s financial landscape. Headlines shift constantly, narratives evolve without resolution, and yet the deeper forces shaping outcomes remain largely unchanged. Geopolitical tensions, oil markets, and central bank actions dominate attention, but they do not determine the direction ahead. Because the direction has already been set. When Julius Caesar crossed the Rubicon, the significance of the moment was not in the events that followed, but in the fact that there was no longer a path back. We are at a similar juncture today. What lies ahead is not dependent on short-term developments, but on structural imbalances that have been building for decades. This is not the beginning of a crisis, but the late stage of a monetary system approaching its conclusion. The scale of that imbalance is now becoming visible. In the real economy, supply constraints are emerging, particularly in energy markets, while the gap between quoted prices and actual availability continues to widen. Increasingly, the price of commodities is not defined by futures markets, but by the cost of securing physical supply. This divergence between paper markets and physical reality is especially evident in precious metals. For years, gold and silver pricing has been shaped by derivatives and synthetic supply, creating the illusion of liquidity. Yet this structure depends on the assumption that delivery remains possible. As that assumption weakens, price begins to reflect scarcity rather than expectation. In this context, silver is not merely an asset but an indicator of systemic stress. When confidence in paper claims erodes, capital shifts toward what cannot be created at will. Under such conditions, repricing is not driven by speculation, but by necessity. To understand the implications, one must consider the broader system. Global financial markets are supported not by accumulated wealth, but by accumulated obligations. Debt, derivatives, and unfunded liabilities now extend to levels that far exceed the capacity of the real economy. Against this structure stands a limited base of tangible reserve. Even gold represents only a fraction of global liabilities, highlighting an imbalance that is mathematical rather than theoretical. History suggests that such conditions do not resolve gradually, but through a process of reset. For decades, policymakers have sought to delay this outcome through monetary expansion and credit growth. While effective in the short term, these measures have only increased the scale of the imbalance. At a certain point, the strategy of delay ceases to function. The system can no longer be stabilized; it can only be sustained temporarily. And when that moment arrives, the response is always the same: more money creation. Yet printing money does not resolve a debt crisis. It transforms it into a currency crisis. This is the final phase of every monetary cycle. It is the stage at which assets do not rise because they are becoming more valuable, but because the currency used to measure them is losing value. Gold and silver are not changing in any fundamental sense; they are simply revealing the weakness of the system around them. When this realization becomes widely understood, the adjustment will not unfold slowly. It will already be in progress. The question, therefore, is no longer whether this transition will occur. It is how close we already are. KEY INSIGHTS: 00:00 – 00:45 | The outcome is already decided The video opens by stressing that despite the flood of conflicting news, the end result is no longer uncertain. Markets are reacting to noise, but the underlying trajectory has already been set. 00:46 – 01:30 | “The die is cast” — point of no return Referencing Caesar, he explains we’ve crossed a critical threshold where events may vary, but the final outcome will not. This marks the beginning of the end of the current system. 01:31 – 02:15 | The largest global bubble in history This is not a typical downturn. It’s the unwinding of the biggest debt-driven financial bubble ever seen, now operating on a fully global scale. 02:16 – 03:05 | Short-term news vs long-term reality Oil shocks, geopolitical tensions, and gold headlines may move markets temporarily, but none of them will change the ultimate direction. 03:06 – 04:00 | The collapse of purchasing power Since 1971, fiat currencies have already lost over 99% of their value. What remains is the final phase — the most aggressive and visible decline. 04:01 – 05:00 | Early signs of systemic stress Real-world disruptions begin to surface: fuel shortages, airport closures, and logistical breakdowns. These are not isolated events, but signals of deeper instability. 05:01 – 06:00 | The illusion of pricing vs physical reality There is a growing disconnect between quoted market prices and actual availability, especially in energy. The “real price” is far higher than what is officially reported. 06:01 – 07:00 | Shortages will redefine value As supply tightens, pricing will no longer be determined by futures markets, but by real scarcity. This shift could drive extreme price spikes across commodities. 07:01 – 08:00 | Silver and gold under pressure Massive demand for physical metals contrasts with limited supply. Delivery systems may fail, triggering sharp upward repricing in both silver and gold. 08:01 – 09:02 | The endgame: collapse and revaluation The system cannot sustain itself through more debt. Money printing will accelerate, currencies will lose value, and real assets will be repriced dramatically. The message is clear: the end of this monetary era will not be gradual. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit vongreyerz.substack.com [https://vongreyerz.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

25 de abr de 20269 min
episode ROADMAP TO A JAW-DROPPING $75,000 GOLD PRICE artwork

ROADMAP TO A JAW-DROPPING $75,000 GOLD PRICE

Road To $75,000 Gold April 18 (King World News) – Jonathan Haycock, partner at VON GREYERZ: “A lot of people say to me, Eric, how do I value gold? I can see that it’s outperformed the S&P for the past 25 years, and I don’t own any, but how do I value it? I look at it three ways: One, just look at gold market cap as a percentage of global stock markets. The long-term average is 40%. Today it’s just under 20%. So just to get back to the average that’s $10,000. Let’s look at metric number two, US gold reserves as a percentage of federal debt. Today it’s 3%. Go back to the 1980 peak it was 18%! So if we were to get back to that 1980 peak, Eric, that would mean the price of gold would be $26,000 an ounce. And for a bit of fun let’s go back to that ratio at the end of World War II, what was it? It was 51%. That would put gold at $75,000 an ounce, Eric. You’ve got to think about…to listen to Jonathan Haycock discuss $75,000 in this powerful and timely audio interview This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit vongreyerz.substack.com [https://vongreyerz.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

23 de abr de 202621 min