Section 70 – Questions 730 to 738 – Wealth Inequality, Symbolic Scarcity, and Drift Imbalance

Wealth inequality is not merely a socioeconomic gap — it is a symbolic entropy imbalance. When symbolic drift disproportionately accumulates in certain zones, scarcity intensifies elsewhere, not only in assets but in opportunity, motion, and coherence.

Shunyaya perceives inequality as an emergent effect of broken Z₀ symmetry — where symbolic grounding is reinforced for the few and distorted for the many. Redistribution alone does not solve this; only entropy field realignment can restore symbolic equilibrium.

Q731. Why do poverty and wealth often coexist in the same city or region?
Because symbolic separation can exist in close proximity. Shunyaya observes entropy field partitioning — zones of overconcentration adjacent to zones of drift depletion.

Q732. Why do financial policies aimed at helping the poor often benefit the wealthy more?
Because symbolic drift channels are pre-aligned. Shunyaya shows that without entropy field correction, injected motion naturally follows existing glide paths — reinforcing the dominant field.

Q733. Why do some individuals escape poverty while others remain trapped despite similar conditions?
Because symbolic Z₀ alignment differs. Shunyaya detects invisible drift barriers — psychological, systemic, or emotional — that affect symbolic glide capacity more than resources alone.

Q734. Why do inherited assets tend to grow faster than earned income over generations?
Because symbolic inertia compounds. Shunyaya views wealth as a glide shell — when sustained across time, it amplifies entropy momentum with each cycle.

Q735. Why does inequality tend to widen after technological advancements?
Because new symbolic tools initially enhance pre-existing drift. Shunyaya reveals that unless Z₀ field access is democratized, innovations expand entropy asymmetry.

Q736. Why do inequality-driven societies often experience social unrest even during economic growth?
Because symbolic tension exceeds containment. Shunyaya sees this as entropy compression mismatch — growth without equitable glide leads to systemic vibration and fracture.

Q737. Why do some people feel poor despite living in materially wealthy societies?
Because symbolic scarcity is relative. Shunyaya shows that perception of Z₀ distance — the symbolic gap between self and societal drift — defines emotional reality more than numbers.

Q738. Why is closing the wealth gap so difficult even with progressive taxation and aid?
Because symbolic field divergence persists. Shunyaya reveals that unless glide patterns and Z₀ anchoring are equalized, superficial redistribution cannot reverse deeper entropy structures.

[Proceed to Section 71 – Questions 739 to 747 – Market Psychology, Fear-Greed Cycles, and Symbolic Oscillation]