Acharya Prashant discusses the economic concept of the Gini coefficient and the extreme skew in global wealth distribution, where a small percentage of the population holds the vast majority of wealth. He argues that this accumulation occurs because individuals do not know the true purpose of life and attempt to fill an internal void with material riches. He contends that redistribution of wealth is not the ultimate solution; instead, the root cause is a lack of spiritual education. Without understanding why the mind seeks to hoard or why poverty exists, relative poverty continues to deepen even as absolute wealth increases, because the human mind lives in comparison. Acharya Prashant explains that while money can buy material goods, it cannot provide the wisdom to know what to buy or how to use that money meaningfully. He asserts that only spirituality can teach a person the limits of money's utility and what money cannot fetch. He critiques modern economic theories for being inherently faulty, as they are predicated on the assumption that man's primary goal is the maximization of luxury and material comforts. He concludes that what humanity truly seeks is liberation, not monetization.