All these articles are garbage. They can be summed up as such:
1. Start out well off
2. Get a good job and use (1) to launch yourself into a position making multiple 100ks a year
3. Fuck off until (2) gets you where you need to be.
I've read rich dad poor dad, and the millionaire next door. While the millionaire next door tackled this problem with data (for example, most millionaires never make more than 80,000 a year in their lives and are prolific savers), these examples in these tabloid-style articles don't help anyone. If anything, they make the problem worse.
I wish they'd talk about people who make less than 100k a year. The millionaires in this category are truly prolific, and would serve a good example to people who aren't C-suite executives or sales-types. When it's C-suites and sales-types it feels more like masturbation in public than an actual exercise in educating the would-be working man on how to create wealth.
It took me a long time to justify putting a down payment on my house, and I put down 5% as an escape hatch despite being able to afford more. Even though my balance sheet shows an asset, the house is a liability until it is paid off, and as such, I wanted to balance down payment with total PMI additions (its literally only $30ish dollars a month) instead of thinking in "payments" because if I wanted to I could chop down the loan considerably by shelling money into it. I also got lucky and bought at near the bottom of the interest rate nose dive which benefited this plan greatly.
I do believe the single most important thing someone can do is own a home and some land anywhere. If you can't - move. Your retirement calculations simplify considerably when you don't have to worry about your rent going up.
Your statement on starting life being short one house is a good way to think about it. I like that analogy.
1. Start out well off
2. Get a good job and use (1) to launch yourself into a position making multiple 100ks a year
3. Fuck off until (2) gets you where you need to be.
I've read rich dad poor dad, and the millionaire next door. While the millionaire next door tackled this problem with data (for example, most millionaires never make more than 80,000 a year in their lives and are prolific savers), these examples in these tabloid-style articles don't help anyone. If anything, they make the problem worse.
I wish they'd talk about people who make less than 100k a year. The millionaires in this category are truly prolific, and would serve a good example to people who aren't C-suite executives or sales-types. When it's C-suites and sales-types it feels more like masturbation in public than an actual exercise in educating the would-be working man on how to create wealth.
The number one benefit of some wealth is not being burdened with unproductive debt. That might seem obvious. But the money you have isn't worth as much as the debt that you do not have.
It took me a long time to justify putting a down payment on my house, and I put down 5% as an escape hatch despite being able to afford more. Even though my balance sheet shows an asset, the house is a liability until it is paid off, and as such, I wanted to balance down payment with total PMI additions (its literally only $30ish dollars a month) instead of thinking in "payments" because if I wanted to I could chop down the loan considerably by shelling money into it. I also got lucky and bought at near the bottom of the interest rate nose dive which benefited this plan greatly.
I do believe the single most important thing someone can do is own a home and some land anywhere. If you can't - move. Your retirement calculations simplify considerably when you don't have to worry about your rent going up.
Your statement on starting life being short one house is a good way to think about it. I like that analogy.
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