Ray Dalio: "AI Is Eating Everything - and It Might Eat Itself"
Ray Dalio returns to dissect the compounding forces threatening American stability: a ballooning debt cycle, irreconcilable political divisions, and a global order in flux. A year after urging the U.S. to cut its deficit to 3% of GDP, the gap remains at 6%, interest payments consume half the deficit, and $9 trillion in debt must be rolled over. Meanwhile, gold has surged 80% while Bitcoin has fallen 25%, and AI companies face a profit paradox that may mirror the dot-com bust. Are we past the point where reform is structurally possible, or can strong leadership navigate the «stage five» crisis Dalio warns is already underway?
Puntos clave
The U.S. deficit remains at 6% of GDP, double the 3% stabilization threshold Dalio identified a year ago. Half the $2 trillion deficit goes to interest payments, and the government must roll over $9 trillion in maturing debt — a supply-demand crisis that no incremental reform can solve quickly enough.
Gold has risen 80% since the last interview, reflecting central bank flight from dollar-denominated debt and recognition that fiat money is a promise vulnerable to default or debasement. Bitcoin, by contrast, fell 25%, revealing it lacks the privacy, institutional adoption, and independence from tech-bubble dynamics required to serve as an alternative reserve asset.
Doge's failure to cut spending reveals a deeper truth: democracy at this stage of the cycle cannot deliver the swift, painful reforms needed. Any attempt to cut programs triggers mass opposition, and without «strong leadership» willing to override resistance, the system will remain gridlocked until crisis forces change.
AI is «eating everything and might eat itself» — not technologically, but financially. In a profit-driven system competing against China's open-source, usage-first model, Western AI companies may struggle to recoup massive capital investments, echoing the dot-com bust where technologies succeeded but most companies failed.
The U.S. is in «stage five» of the big cycle: large wealth gaps, irreconcilable political differences, and external threats converge. Midterm elections may flip the House, ensuring gridlock and preventing anyone from «taking charge.» Without bipartisan unity or authoritarian force, the nation drifts toward a choice between socialism and fascism.
En resumen
The United States is in «stage five» of a repeating historical cycle: unsustainable debt, political fragmentation, and external threats are converging, and incremental fixes like Doge cannot overcome the structural forces at play. Strong, perhaps authoritarian, leadership may be the only path to painful reforms — or the nation risks the fate of every empire that came before it.
The Debt Trap: Why 3% Is a Mirage
U.S. deficit remains at 6% of GDP; half goes to interest payments alone.
A year ago, Dalio identified 3% of GDP as the deficit threshold needed to stabilize the debt cycle. Today, the Congressional Budget Office estimates the 2026 deficit at 6% — double the target. The federal government is projected to spend $7 trillion and collect $5 trillion, running a 40% spending deficit. Accumulated debt now stands at 600% of annual revenue, or six times income. Half the $2 trillion deficit is consumed by interest payments, and the government must roll over $9 trillion in maturing debt.
This is not a liquidity problem; it is a supply-demand crisis. Foreign creditors — who hold a third of U.S. debt — face geopolitical risks (sanctions, confiscation) and portfolio concentration risks. Domestic buyers are tapped out. The debt-to-income dynamic mirrors «plaque in the circulatory system,» squeezing out productive spending and choking growth. Dalio warns that this pattern has repeated throughout history, most notably in the 1929–1945 period, and the outcome is always the same: defaults, debasement, or dramatic political change.
Why Doge Failed — and What It Reveals
Democracy cannot deliver swift, painful cuts when half the population depends on government.
Gold vs. Bitcoin: The Flight to Hard Money
Gold up 80% since last interview; Bitcoin down 25% and still vulnerable.
Dalio's Diagnosis: Why Gold, Not Bitcoin
Gold is transferable, private, and central-bank grade; Bitcoin is not.
Dalio frames money as debt: when you hold cash, you hold a promise from someone to deliver buying power. That promise is vulnerable to debasement when governments print to meet obligations. Gold, by contrast, is wealth you can spend without relying on anyone's promise. It is the only asset central banks can transfer across borders, cannot be printed, and has no counterparty risk.
Bitcoin lacks three critical attributes. First, it offers no privacy — all transactions are traceable, making it vulnerable to surveillance and control. Second, central banks will not adopt it, limiting its role to individual and institutional speculation. Third, it correlates highly with tech stocks, meaning holders sell Bitcoin when squeezed elsewhere. Quantum computing and regulatory risk further cloud its long-term viability. Dalio is emphatic: «There is only one gold.»
The AI Paradox: Eating Everything, Then Itself
AI technology will thrive, but most companies may fail to recoup capital.
The AI Paradox: Eating Everything, Then Itself
Dalio warns that investors confuse technology success with company success. Historically, transformative technologies — railroads, electricity, the internet — created enormous value, but most early companies failed. AI is «eating everything and might eat itself» because Western firms must generate profits to justify capital deployment, while China pursues open-source, usage-maximization strategies that treat AI like free electricity. In a global competition where Chinese models are nearly as capable and cost nothing, profit-driven firms face a structural disadvantage. The technology will win; many companies will not.
The K-Shaped Economy and the Productivity Crisis
Tariffs, Inflation, and the Misunderstood Revenue Tool
Tariffs are valid revenue and independence tools; economists ignore the tax component.
Dalio argues economists misunderstand tariffs by excluding tax burden from inflation calculations. If your taxes rise, that is inflation — it takes money out of your pocket just like rising housing costs. Tariffs historically provided the largest share of government revenue and remain a legitimate way to raise funds while forcing foreigners to share the burden. More importantly, tariffs address unsustainable trade deficits and capital dependence on adversaries.
The U.S. has «hollowed out» manufacturing and the middle class, creating both economic and geopolitical vulnerability. In a world moving from multilateral cooperation to power-based confrontation, nations must build independence. Tariffs are part of a broader industrial policy to reshore critical supply chains. Trump's proposal to replace income tax entirely with tariffs, however, is infeasible due to scale and the regressive burden it would place on lower-income households.
What the Founding Fathers Got Wrong
The marshmallow test as national policy; no rules prevent debt addiction.
“It's like the marshmallow test. You give them the choice between one marshmallow now and two marshmallows in 20 minutes, and the kid that chooses the two marshmallows in 20 minutes is going to have a better life. Therein lies our problem: immediate gratification.”
Stage Five: The Path Ahead
Midterms may flip the House; gridlock ensures no one can lead.
Midterm Elections (Next Milestone) Democrats likely take the House, creating divided government. No party will have the mandate or unity to impose painful reforms.
Gridlock and Fragmentation With irreconcilable differences and causes more important than the system, no one can «take charge.» Productivity stalls, reforms die, and disorder increases.
The Choice No One Wants History suggests two paths: socialism (redistribution and state control) or fascism (authoritarian order and forced reform). Dalio sees the U.S. drifting toward this binary.
The Big Cycle Completes Stage five ends in one of three ways: debt default/debasement, civil conflict, or external war. The system adapts or collapses — «remarkably adaptable» in the past, but never guaranteed.
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