Ever noticed how the definition of 'scarce' keeps shifting in today's economy? The wealthy are chasing a different game now—less about hoarding tangible stuff, more about experiences and premium services. Real estate, bespoke consulting, exclusive memberships, curated travel. The stuff that can't be mass-produced. This shift matters because it rewires how we think about value, supply chains, and what actually moves markets. When demand flows toward services instead of goods, it changes everything—from investment strategies to how emerging wealth builds portfolios. The old scarcity playbook? Obsolete. Welcome to the service economy arms race.
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SoliditySlayer
· 5h ago
Nah, this is the real wealth game. The wealthy in first-tier cities are already tired of accumulating real estate. Now they're spending money on private consultants and membership experiences... I was wondering why those big shots suddenly fell in love with customized travel.
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PoetryOnChain
· 5h ago
Service scarcity is the real gold mine. No wonder the big players are burning money to buy experiences.
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FlashLoanPhantom
· 5h ago
No wonder wealthy people are now investing heavily in experiences; tangible assets are becoming more competitive.
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GoldDiggerDuck
· 5h ago
Hey, wait a minute, there's a bit of a problem with this logic... Are experiences and services really more scarce than physical objects? Or can you just buy them with money?
Ever noticed how the definition of 'scarce' keeps shifting in today's economy? The wealthy are chasing a different game now—less about hoarding tangible stuff, more about experiences and premium services. Real estate, bespoke consulting, exclusive memberships, curated travel. The stuff that can't be mass-produced. This shift matters because it rewires how we think about value, supply chains, and what actually moves markets. When demand flows toward services instead of goods, it changes everything—from investment strategies to how emerging wealth builds portfolios. The old scarcity playbook? Obsolete. Welcome to the service economy arms race.