The arrangement in question represents a fraudulent investment model disguised, often subtly, as a legitimate business opportunity. Participants are lured by promises of high returns, predicated not on the sale of actual goods or services, but on the recruitment of new members into the network. These new recruits contribute funds that are then used to pay earlier members, creating an unsustainable cycle dependent on constant expansion. The eventual collapse of such structures is inevitable, leaving the vast majority of participants with significant financial losses.
Its inherent instability is a significant drawback. The reliance on recruitment, rather than genuine economic activity, means the model is doomed to failure once the pool of potential new members is exhausted. Historically, these schemes have resurfaced under various guises, adapting their outward appearance to remain appealing while retaining the same fundamentally flawed structure. The absence of a tangible product or service as the primary revenue source distinguishes it from legitimate multi-level marketing businesses.