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I noticed that Robert Kiyosaki has been increasingly outspoken lately about the state of the global economy. His warnings sound almost like alarms: markets are in a historic bubble, and a crash is inevitable. But what is he so concerned about? Let’s figure it out.
According to Kiyosaki, the main problem is government debt, which has already become an unbearable burden, especially for the U.S. government. Governments cannot pay it off honestly, so they choose the easiest way: printing money. But printing money does not create wealth — it creates inflation. And now the dollar is gradually losing value, and the purchasing power of ordinary people is falling.
The second issue is the policy of the Federal Reserve. After the COVID crisis, the Fed flooded markets with trillions of dollars at near-zero interest rates. All assets soared in price, but it was an illusion. Now, as rates increase, the entire system begins to crack. The system was built on cheap money, and with tightening policies, the bubble will burst.
Kiyosaki also sees a third risk: a financial architecture based on debt. Banks and financial institutions operate like casinos — they win when people lose. The next crisis will expose the fragility of this system and show that relying on banks to secure the future is a dangerous illusion.
History confirms his concerns. In the 1970s, the dollar was decoupled from gold — that was the first warning sign. In 2008, the real estate system collapsed. Every time a problem was solved by printing money, it only meant one thing: we are living in a delayed explosion system.
So what saves us? Kiyosaki is convinced: those who own real assets. Gold, silver, Bitcoin, land, real estate — things that cannot be printed. The wealthy don’t hoard cash; they buy assets. And in every crisis, they see an opportunity because wealth shifts from weak hands to strong ones.
Overall, he assesses the state of the global economy as critical. But Kiyosaki isn’t just spreading panic — he’s warning about financial blindness. Those who understand the game now and protect themselves will be the ones to create the next generation of the wealthy. Others will be left with devalued paper money.