The End of Capitalism May Not Come From Revolution. It May Come From a Memory Shortage
Everyone talks about AI replacing jobs, but I think we’re missing a much bigger issue.
Right now, every major tech company is pouring hundreds of billions into AI infrastructure. Data centers, GPUs, memory chips, power generation, networking equipment the scale is unlike anything we’ve seen before.
As demand explodes, the cost of the underlying components rises. More capital gets directed toward AI. More energy gets directed toward AI. More manufacturing capacity gets directed toward AI.
But here’s the question:
What happens to consumers?
A healthy capitalist system depends on people buying things. Phones. Consoles. Cars. TVs. Games. Streaming subscriptions. Vacations. All the little luxuries that make modern life enjoyable.
If AI infrastructure becomes the dominant destination for capital and resources, consumer goods become more expensive. Companies pass costs along. Consumers get squeezed.
Eventually people stop upgrading their phones every year.
Then every three years.
Then every five.
Maybe they stop buying game consoles. Stop subscribing to extra services. Stop replacing perfectly functional products.
At some point the economy runs into a paradox:
The companies building AI need customers with money.
But AI itself is helping eliminate jobs while simultaneously increasing the cost of the technology ecosystem that consumers rely on.