The Divergence chart does not show a market outcome. It shows a policy sequence. Each inflection point in the data corresponds precisely to a legislative act — not a technological disruption, not globalization, not a demographic shift.
Dollar anchored to gold at $35/oz. Productivity and compensation rise in lockstep. Workers capture the gains they produce. The Gap does not exist yet.
Nixon invokes the Trading with the Enemy Act to unilaterally abandon Bretton Woods. The external monetary constraint on extraction is removed. The Gap opens for the first time.
Section 151 grants the Executive Branch authority to renegotiate domestic labor regulations through trade agreements, bypassing Congressional amendment. The mechanism for exporting the Gap is created.
Investor-State Dispute Settlement creates a private arbitration layer above domestic courts. Governments may legislate for workers only if they can afford the arbitration damages corporations claim as "lost expected profits." The Gap is legally protected.
Removes regulatory visibility from $531 trillion in derivatives. The Shadow Ledger is created — a parallel financial system whose growth requires the Gap as its collateral base. Debt-to-GDP begins its vertical climb.
Shadow banking losses transferred to the public balance sheet. The Gap does not close. Debt-to-GDP crosses 70% and begins accelerating toward 122%. Workers did not receive the sequestered value — they received the debt that financed it.
The Divergence chart establishes three conclusions beyond reasonable statistical dispute:
The divergence is real and sustained. Productivity rose approximately 261% from 1948 to 2024; real hourly compensation rose approximately 122%. This is confirmed independently by the Economic Policy Institute, the Bureau of Labor Statistics, and the Federal Reserve using separate methodologies. The gap is not a measurement artifact.
The divergence is not explained by technology or globalization. Both metrics rose together during the post-war era when globalization was already underway and technological change was rapid. The separation begins at a specific year — 1971 — and accelerates at subsequent specific years that correspond to legislative events, not market conditions. Technology made workers more productive. The Post-1980 trend line (red dashed) shows productivity accelerating precisely as compensation stopped growing. Workers created more value per hour; they were paid less of it.
The 2008 bailout did not close the gap. The Debt-to-GDP line shows that the government absorbed the Shadow Ledger's losses — but the productivity-pay gap did not recover. The public took the liability. The sequestered value remained in the corporate sector.
| Chart Feature | What It Shows | Supporting Document |
|---|---|---|
| Lines converge 1948–1971 | Workers captured the gains they produced — this is what a functional labor market looks like | Chapter 1, Part I — Historical Template |
| Gap opens at 1971 | Monetary constraint on extraction removed; Nixon Shock | Chapter 1, Part II — Phase 1 (1971) |
| Post-1980 trend acceleration | Productivity accelerates precisely as compensation stops growing — disproves "technology replaced workers" narrative | Chapter 1, Section 3.3; EPI Productivity-Pay Gap |
| Gap reaches 87 pts by 2000 | CFMA eliminates regulatory visibility; the Shadow Ledger is created with the Gap as its collateral base | Chapter 1, Part II — Phase 3; Index B |
| Debt/GDP climbs post-2008 | The Gap's debt transferred to public balance sheet; workers did not receive the sequestered value — they received the bill | Index B — Master Fraud Data Table |
| LFP declining post-2000 | Workers exiting the labor market — the Gap becomes so wide that participation itself declines | FRED LBSSA41 (Oregon); BLS National LFP |
| Gap holds at 139 pts in 2024 | No recovery. The Terminal State — the system has no path to equilibrium within its current architecture | Index B — SDI Phase 4 Terminal Classification |
Table 1. Each visible chart feature, its forensic interpretation, and its supporting document in the audit series.
The gray shading between the two lines is not an abstraction. It is 139 index points of value created by American workers between 1948 and 2025 that did not appear in their paychecks. That value was not destroyed. It was rerouted — into corporate profits, into the financial sector, into the derivatives market that requires the Gap as its collateral base.
The Debt-to-GDP line on the right axis shows where the bill arrived: on the public balance sheet, transferred there in 2008 when the Shadow Ledger's private debts became too large to conceal. Workers did not receive the sequestered value — they received the debt that made the sequestration possible.
The Divergence chart is the empirical anchor for the entire audit series. Every legal argument, every legislative timeline, every case study of platform fraud traces back to this image: the moment the lines separated, and the decades they refused to converge again. The system did not fail. It extracted. This chart is the proof.