You are a great writer and obviously also a great mind Jared but with every respect, in a way it looks to me like you are unwittingly perpetuating a fundamental problem with money which is actually becoming existential.
I trust you agree money is energy.
Historically the energy property of money didn't matter much, to the planet, even though it might have been grossly unfair that money makes money, just by having some, one could make more but god help you if you couldn't get any.
But that is changing now, nature has a hand in it that was never there before. That hand is economic product created from solar energy.
Notice it doesn't need to have money to happen, but it is absolutely valuable economic product, and so far it has never been monetised, because money issued as debt can only monetise energy extracted from the planet.
The value of it in UK is more than £600Bn since around 2005.
Not monetising this has to result in inflation because as that valuable product continues to ramp up, with more and more households and communities going solar powered, this causing utilities energy businesses to shrink (20% already), money has to come to represent nothing.
Ironically JP Morgan had to know about this, he had to have had the conversation with Nikola Tesla, when NT expressed his view that free energy had to mean free money, and was subsequently defunded by Morgan. Tesla's project naively was aimed at supplying free energy (derived from solar, it was a plan that might technically have worked, we might never know), as well as Internet-like connectivity to all people.
Now the free energy is actually happening via solar panels and things like hydrogen backup, the evidence is there, we see the value of money starting to slide, it can only be expected that at some point the issue of money will have to come to align with the creation of economic product from solar, which also incidentally is the only energy we can use with the effect of reversing the temperature rise we are seeing across the planet.
As long as economists are stuck in considering money as an energy isolated phenomenon, we will never have understanding of the connection with energy, and this misunderstanding is now becoming existential.
I wish you could find a way to start including energy in your considerations.