This paper documents the beneficial ownership structure of the global debt market (315 trillion USD), demonstrating that despite apparent institutional diversification, ultimate economic interest concentrates in a hereditary creditor class of approximately 150-300 family lineages whose identities remain structurally obscured through custodial intermediation, trust networks, and passive fixed-income vehicles. We trace capital flows from sovereign, corporate, and household debt issuance through institutional asset managers (BlackRock, Vanguard, PIMCO) and custodian banks (Northern Trust, BNY Mellon) to beneficial owners representing 250-year-old accumulations from Gilded Age, European banking, and petro-monarchical origins. Unlike equity ownership, which confers governance rights but contingent returns, debt ownership provides priority claim on cash flows, government taxation authority, and central bank backstops constituting what we term "command capital" versus equity's "influence capital." We estimate that 12-18 trillion USD in annual global interest payments flow ultimately to this creditor substrate, creating a rent-extraction architecture where nation-states, corporations, and households transfer wealth to invisible bondholders through legally guaranteed, central-bank-protected mechanisms. This represents the largest and most opaque concentration of economic power in human history, with profound implications for democratic accountability, geopolitical stability, and wealth inequality.
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Essentia Vera
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Essentia Vera (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6971bdcf642b1836717e2829 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18310392