The Extraction Trap
Why Capitalism Works Until It Doesn't
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Maria Garcia
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
Why does capitalism feel productive and destructive at the same time?
Markets were never meant to consume the world they depend on. Yet today, economic growth coincides with burnout, ecological collapse, social fragmentation, and institutional fragility. These are not separate crises. They are expressions of a single structural failure.
The Extraction Trap explains why.
This book is not an argument for or against capitalism. It is a diagnosis of how capitalism works when it works, the precise point where it breaks, and why once it breaks, reform keeps failing.
At its core is a simple insight. Capitalism functions as a coordination system when profit acts as feedback. It turns extractive when profit becomes the goal itself. At that moment, ownership detaches from responsibility, costs are pushed outward, time horizons collapse, and extraction becomes rational rather than accidental.
From there, everything accelerates.
Drawing on systems thinking rather than ideology, The Extraction Trap shows:
- Why shareholder value guarantees extraction even without bad actors
- Why regulation, ESG, and stakeholder capitalism fail to interrupt the logic
- How financialization and short term incentives erase accountability
- Why concentration and burnout are outcomes, not anomalies
Most importantly, the book does not stop at critique.
It outlines the minimal structural changes required to break the extraction loop without destroying markets, innovation, or agency. By reconnecting ownership with responsibility, placing governance where impact lands, and treating surplus as capacity rather than leakage, capitalism’s strengths can be preserved without consuming its future.
This is not a utopian vision. It is a viable redesign.
The Extraction Trap is for readers who sense that something fundamental is wrong with the system, but are no longer convinced by moral blame, political binaries, or simple solutions. It offers a clear framework for understanding how modern systems fail, and what it would actually take to make them endure.