Using standard financial accounting principles:
If an enterprise pays $12 per hour and labor represents 13% of total revenue, then revenue generated per labor hour equals $12 divided by 0.13, resulting in approximately $92.31 per hour.
When the Rousix 80/20 framework is applied—and costs of goods and services sold are fully accounted for—labor’s share of that revenue increases through structural reallocation.
Under these conditions, average hourly wages adjust mathematically to approximately:
$46.15 per hour
This adjustment reflects a redistribution of existing revenue toward productive labor, rather than an expansion of currency or reliance on debt-based issuance.
Currency Issuance Structure
Under the Rousix framework:
● Currency is not issued to satisfy debt.
● Currency is not printed to service liabilities.
● Currency enters circulation only after labor is performed and revenue is realized.
Money functions as a settlement instrument representing completed economic activity.
War-Related Revenue Controls
If corporations seek to participate in or generate revenue from war-related activity under this framework, they must:
● Fully collateralize all corporate assets.
● There are no taxpayer guarantees.
● There is no debt-funded backstop.
● There is no inflationary absorption of risk.
If revenue is generated through conflict, corporate balance sheets bear the exposure. This requirement prevents the labor-anchored model from being undermined by externalized risk.
Why Rousix Is Implementing This Framework
Rousix was built to enforce structural accountability in economic systems.
● Labor is the source of value.
● Currency must reflect completed work.
● Risk must remain with the entity that generates it.
● Debt-based issuance mechanisms are structurally excluded.
This framework replaces leverage-based growth with productivity-based allocation.
Rousix is executing an economic system in which:
● Wages scale with verified revenue productivity
● Currency represents settled labor
● Corporations internalize risk
● Currency issuance tied to debt is eliminated
These structural principles emerge from current market realities, not abstraction.
Global markets have drifted far beyond nominal value due to decades of leverage, debt expansion, speculative instruments, and asset inflation that have become untethered from wages, productivity, and realized revenue. When this imbalance corrects, the adjustment will not be mild.
Many analysts anticipate a contraction more severe than the Great Depression because modern markets are exponentially more leveraged, highly interconnected, and deeply dependent on debt. This correction is expected to impact financialized assets and concentrated capital structures far more than productive labor. For this reason, it is increasingly described as the “Greatest Elite Depression.” This reversion is not a failure of the real economy. It represents a reconciliation of inflated valuations with what underlying productivity can sustainably support.
Once this bear market and broader deleveraging cycle has passed, systems designed around leverage and debt issuance will no longer function effectively. At that point, the Rousix Economic Framework is implemented. Rather than issuing or printing currency to stabilize debt, Rousix anchors economic participation to completed labor, realized revenue, and delivered value. Wages, currency issuance, and risk allocation are aligned with productivity rather than speculation. This transition is not ideological. It is structural. When markets return to nominal value, frameworks built on accountability rather than leverage become inevitable.