PERSON
Charles Kindleberger
The economic historian who established the definitive anatomy of financial manias—displacement, credit expansion, euphoria, critical stage, panic, revulsion, recovery—and whose framework now reads as the most precise external analysis of the AI economic moment.
Charles Poor Kindleberger (1910–2003) spent a career at MIT documenting a pattern so reliable that he called it the closest thing financial history offers to a natural law: genuine technological displacement generates credit expansion, credit expansion generates euphoria, euphoria generates collapse, and collapse distributes its costs disproportionately to the people who were furthest from the original disruption and least equipped to absorb the shock. His masterwork, Manias, Panics, and Crashes (1978), established the taxonomy that remains the most reliable diagnostic instrument for understanding what happens when genuine innovation collides with a financial system that amplifies sentiment, rewards momentum, and punishes patient analysis. The displacement is always real; the financial superstructure erected upon it is not. The AI transition exhibits this structure with particular clarity: the genuine productivity gains documented by builders like Edo Segal—the twenty-fold multipliers, the thirty-day development cycles, the collapsed imagination-to-artifact ratio—are the displacement. The trillion-dollar valuations, the circular vendor-financing loops, and the career decisions made on euphoric extrapolation of those