The Economy Was Never Built for This
The economy your grandparents depended on is quietly coming apart and automation is accelerating the shift. Stable careers are giving way to gig work. Healthcare costs keep rising, while wages barely move. You’ve seen the reports and heard the debates. You’ve tried to understand the proposed solutions, but they often feel small, incremental almost beside the point.
You’re not imagining it.
America’s economic system was built for an era of steady jobs and rising incomes. That era is gone. Adjusting tax rates or fine-tuning interest policy won’t repair a structure that was never designed for intelligent machines, an aging population, or a workforce that can’t rely on traditional employment. This isn’t just a political problem it’s a design problem. And deep down, you already sense that.
Loginomics lays out a blueprint for what comes next.
Loginomics doesn’t just point out what’s broken it sketches the blueprint for what comes next.
Sanjeev Jain holds dual doctorates in biochemistry and medicine and practices as a physician specializing in allergy and immunology. Known for his analytical depth and inventive approach to problem-solving, he has consistently bridged scientific rigor with real-world innovation. As an allergy specialist, Jain developed novel treatment protocols for food and environmental allergies and co-authored a book on food allergy therapy. During the COVID-19 shutdown, he identified three foundational challenges confronting humanity, which led to his co-authorship of Logiverse: A New Paradigm for a Grand Unified Theory and to the sole authorship of Loginomics. He is currently working on Loginance: A New Form of Governance for the 21st Century.
This isn’t another book that diagnoses the problem and stops there. It offers a clear, research-driven framework for how a modern economy could actually function—one built around human capacity rather than employment status.
Using real-world examples like housing and healthcare, it makes complex economic ideas easier to grasp and more relevant to everyday life. It also introduces a practical set of terms and a structured lens you can use in your own thinking—or when engaging with policymakers.
Here’s what you’ll walk away with:
The Crises You See Aren’t Accidental
Gain a clear understanding of why today’s economic breakdowns exist. Housing shortages and income instability aren’t random they’re predictable outcomes of a system built on artificial scarcity. You’ll also explore a new way to think about sovereign money and public revenue, moving beyond the limits of simple household budgeting analogies.
A Framework You Can Apply
Explore three core commitments for a post-employment economy: guaranteed access to essential needs, a redesigned tax system, and formal recognition of creative, athletic, and scholarly work as genuine economic value.
The Ideas Inside This Book Will Change How You Think
Understand why economic crises are structural, not accidental
See beyond household budgeting analogies politicians always use
Learn how sovereign money works in practice
Discover why housing and healthcare failures were predictable
Get three clear commitments for a post-employment economy
Understand how to restructure revenue away from income tax
Recognize creative and scholarly work as real economic value
Apply the framework directly in research and policy conversations
Use real case studies to ground abstract economic theory
Develop a vocabulary that reflects the realities of the world we actually live in.
THE THREE PILLARS OF LOGINOMICS
A Fresh Approach for the Modern Era
Loginomics has three core commitments. Each replaces outdated assumptions with principles that match the world we live in today.
Guaranteed Access to Essentials
Every person deserves access to essential needs, regardless of their employment status or income level.
A Restructured Revenue System
Eliminate income tax. Tax rents and system usage instead. Align public revenue with how modern economies generate wealth.
Recognition of Human Contribution
Creative, athletic, and scholarly work has real economic value. The 21st century economy must acknowledge that truth.
How to Build an Economy for People, Not Just Machines
Preface: An Economy Designed for Humans in the Age of Automation
Chapter 1: America’s Fiscal Model Was Built for a Different Century
Chapter 2: Why the Old Toolkit Fails
Chapter 3: Technology Has Upended the Job Market Before. But This Time Is Different
Chapter 4: The Illusion of Government Finance
Chapter 5: What Money Actually Is
Chapter 6: The Federal Reserve and the Plumbing of Money
Chapter 7: Government Spending and Money Creation
Chapter 8: The Mission of the Federal Reserve Under Loginomics
Chapter 9: The Dollar Cycle and the 15 Percent Rule
Chapter 10: Dual Treasury Accounts—Essentials and Discretionary Spending
Email Address
sjain@oridigm.org
Location Address
Oridigm Inc 43575 Mission Blvd #716 Fremont, CA 94539 USA