To give an example; the article mentions Dave Ramsey talking down to his callers and giving generic advice such as cutting up your credit cards. I don't follow Ramsey too closely and can't read his mind, but I'd bet he's optimizing his advice for the least common denominator within a mass audience of financially troubled people. A small percentage of financially desperate people would hear great advice about credit cards (only use cards to buy stuff you have 100% of the cash for, and pay them back instantly to get some cash and rewards back) and not internalize that as something like (it's okay to keep using my card because I'm getting money back as long as I try and pay my bill every month). For a mass audience, the safest advice on credit cards that might make an impact is to just tell everybody with a financial problem to stop using them. On an individual level, a financial expert can probably give better advice that's more suitable.
If I had to give 1 bit of general financial advice though: develop your talent stack. It doesn't matter if it's learning a new programming language, wood-working, learning to fix cars or toilets, taking a foreign language class, learning how to paint, or growing a great garden. If you have multiple skills you have more opportunities to make money as well as combining those skills in unique ways to create new business ideas and concepts. And baring some health issue, nobody can ever take a skill away from you.
This is crucial, but having a relatively high savings / investing rate is as important.
> And baring some health issue, nobody can ever take a skill away from you.
Time absolutely can. Even someone in a sedentary job in a field where their expertise won't necessarily become outdated will eventually have to hang up their cleats for one reason or another.
Balancing that with risk and liquidity is a challenging barrier. What’s your take?
I think its 100% matters which talent you pick. Some will on average pay out 1000x over others.
Seconded. When you are wasting time you might as well develop your skills. Fortunes are to be found on the intersection of almost any two skills, if you can add more to the pile you are adding more chances for capturing that value.
Do you have some anecdotes to share regarding this?
And, there is nothing wrong with not using credit cards. Especially if you don't have a job that pays $200,000+ per year so you can afford to buy a house. But for someone making $35,000, of what use is credit?
I suppose that buying groceries and gasoline and getting cash back is fine, and worth it. And making sure you can return items if there's a problem. But the way a lot of people talk about credit cards, is that they are some kind of holy grail.
But for people who are halfway intelligent, I don't think that financial expert is really that necessary. Just read a lot of great books on the subject, watch a lot of videos, and manage it yourself. It's not that difficult. Why even pay someone. But, this does not apply to someone who has super high worth, like $250 million plus, but it's kind of dumb to talk about them, because they're going to know what to do anyways, or at least 99.9% of them.
Also, try to develop a talent stack that actually is valuable, if that's what you're going to do. Nothing wrong with learning how to grow roses, for example. That is a hobby, not a skill or talent, in my opinion. Sure, maybe one out of 100 million will somehow write a book on rose growing, but that is the exceptionally rare exception. However, learning to landscape and taking classes at your local college and getting certifications is a different issue. But even then, you have to be able to actually DO it if needed, for money - so you have to be able to life heavy stuff, work in the sun all day, etc. If you can't, what's the point. Same with your example of painting - that's a pretty useless thing to learn. And again, this is in terms of money, which you stated in the first part: "1 bit of general financial advice though: develop your talent stack"
Learn computer programming. Learn plumbing. Learn auto repair. Stuff you can make money at.
And again, nothing wrong with doing stuff as a hobby because you enjoy them, but that is a different topic.
> Yet you almost never hear the financial experts recommending that you start a business.
Is the average business owner any better off? I know that there are plenty of successful business owners, but we tend to completely ignore the many that filed bankruptcy after taking cash advances on credit cards to live one more month.
> Nor do these guys tend to mention the importance of understanding how taxes work.
Only really matters if you make a lot of money. My Dad is a tax accountant. We optimize the heck out of our personal taxes. But at our 100Kish incomes, it doesn't make a big difference beyond what the personal finance people say.
Obviously anecdotal, but not really IMO. I've bounced back and forth between being in business for myself and working for the man.
Between healthcare, saving for retirement, etc. things are really optimized against someone "pulling themselves up by the bootstraps" in this way. I've listened to the politicians in the US scream how important small business only to vote against that very interest (tax cuts for rich + corporate tax breaks).
I can't get good healthcare unless it's tied to my employment here. The healthcare I get independently is of lower quality for much, much more money out of pocket... Lord help you if you do something stupid and show a profit on your books... etc etc... The first 2-3 rungs of the "small business owner" ladder are missing by design.
If I had a family I would likely never consider being a business owner again due to the health implications, financial risk, and time commitment.
100% the average working Joe is better off.
Perhaps we need the term "micro business" to gain more traction? I suspect that's where more work is heading.
It can be used as a good tax harvesting vehicle but again this requires so much knowledge and ultimately I think running a business (even at a strategic loss) requires more depth of knowledge than the average saving/investing tips.
Would definitely agree that starting a business is a path to becoming RICH, but definitely not a path to being financial stable/above average
I am 35 and still spend like in a teenager. I grew up really poor where if the money didn’t get spent right away it would just sort of disappear, into drugs or beer or whatever my mom and stepdad were spending it on. My only real asset is my house which has appreciate significantly in value, but all it would take is one job loss to get me behind on that. I take Adderall because it makes me an effective engineer and I’ve really struggled for multi year periods where I’ve tried to stop it, but my life gets measurably worse. I cashed out my $5,000 at one point and blew it on I don’t even know what, but it was something stupid I’m sure.
I guess the real enemy is future me. I don’t feel like I can consistently trust myself to make good financial decisions so the me of right now acts as if future me will just blow all my savings irresponsibly anyway. It’s depressing just writing it out.
I wish I could put money into an account that would then only disburse small amounts of it over the year, and I couldn’t override that.
I’m really ashamed of it but end up paying the mortgage with one biweekly paycheck, paying all my bills with the next biweekly paycheck, and despite making a very good salary for where I live, I’m living paycheck to paycheck.
I don’t really know how to develop impulse control, I spend hours and hours scrolling Amazon and websites trying to think of things to buy.
I know the answer is “just act like an adult” but I guess spending has become a coping mechanism because I’ve got a disabled kid, I don’t really know how to enjoy things that aren’t going to Costco or buying a new 3D printer or a shiny new computer.
Is there anyone here who has gone from being extremely irresponsible with money to having savings? How do I get over the trauma of my grandparents losing millions of dollars in the 2008 financial collapse, which happened right as I came of age? How do I stop “shopscrolling” Amazon until 2 in the morning?
I know it’s pathetic, and I feel like this is a place I might get an answer that’s actionable.
You know what you're doing is unhealthy but you can't stop. A good mental health professional can help you deal with the pain you're trying to cover up with buying junk.
Also, one short term hack I haven't seen explicitly mentioned yet. Try to enjoy a healthier kind of buying: buy your house piece by piece. In other words, pay off your mortgage early. If you can direct some of your impulse buying towards early mortgage repayment like that, that would be a win!
Try to experience the process of increasing your ownership as close to your senses as possible:
- Can you make the repayments cash transactions instead of online?
- Make these early repayments as frequent as possible. If the bank allows monthly, quarterly or annually only, arrange for a trusted friend to collect weekly or even daily.
- Visualise your progress:
- Make a drawing/real life 3d model/photo/lego model of your house.
- Colour the bits of the drawing you now own.
- Move the lego bits over from "the bank" to "mine/ours".
- Mark individual stones or pieces of siding as your own versus the bank's.
- ...
Just don't forget about finding a good therapist!That's kinda what I've started doing after getting a child: every time I look at a new shiny thing, I think how many ETF shares I can get for that money. A younger me would just buy the thing, a parent me buys the shares. A nice number of money invested, that I can instantly check out in the app, is just as good feeling as having a shiny thing.
I speculate that growing up in poverty is not the cause of behavior; rather it's the reverse. Her family behaves in particular ways that make them poor and she has inherited those traits, either biologically or environmentally. From talking with her about how her family operates, this seems to be true. They have very low income but buy a new 4K HD TV every year along with trading up their vehicles to new models. They manage everything by an ever expanding debt load collateralized on their house/credit cards. I don't think these behaviors are 'breakable' because they aren't habits. It's almost like they are built into the default mode network.
In situations like this, when you can observe your behavior as something beyond your control, the best bet is to influence your environment rather than your behavior. Put your money beyond your easy reach (401k, IRA, pay down mortgage early etc.)
I personally struggle with eating behavior that is beyond my control. The only way I've been able to successfully control it is to put a lock on my kitchen cabinet that I don't have the combo to. This acts as a big moderator that gets me through the self destructive impulse periods.
1. I set up a goal to only have one meal eating out per week and I did it by keeping track of whether I go to a restaurant that day. I used uHabit, an open source ads free android app to help me do this.
2. I also keep a spreadsheet for a certain aspect of my life: electronics and crafting. Each time I buy something craft related, I entered the expense. I have an expense goal that I try to keep it under per month.
These two strategies has allowed me to save me a lot of money and sometime I would go on for months without spending much money at all.
Also, it is likely that your spending habit is an emotional problem, not a discipline issue. I think it may be prudent to talk to a mental health professional.
As for money advice: Can you automate some saving, and have that happen before your money hits your bank account? E.g. if your workplace offers a 401k, you should definitely be maxing that out, and that means your employer will save that money before you have access to it, and doing that for long enough will set you up for retirement even if you mis-manage the rest of your pay.
If you can set up more systems like that, you should! You may be able to set up an after-tax account at fidelity or vanguard or similar that automatically gets a portion of your paycheck deposited in, and you can set it up to automatically buy stocks/bonds/reits on a regular schedule. That money would still be accessible, but you'd have to sell your investments and wait a few days to transfer into a checking account, which might be enough friction to help keep it saved.
> the me of right now acts as if future me will just blow all my savings irresponsibly anyway.
I know this horrible feeling, but it isn't really true. It's a self fulfilling prophecy. It may take some work and time to change yourself and your habits, but it is possible. Even just commiting to yourself that you're going to work on this can go a long way to easing your feelings about it and breaking the cycle.
And if you can't do it alone, don't! Therapy is an option. Consider it splurging on your retirement.
That being said, the number 1 thing that helped move me out of a situation similar to yours financially (grew up in poverty, poor impulse control, etc) was listening to the Dave Ramsey podcast every day. It probably doesn't matter if you listen to Dave Ramsey or one of the others mentioned in the article, so just go with someone. Though I will say that once every episode Dave Ramsey has someone come on and do their Debt Free Scream where they tell their story of getting out of debt, and then they shout at the top of their lungs, "I'M DEBT FREE!!!" And that was incredibly motivating, and at times emotionally moving and I even cried sometimes.
Anyway, listen to it as often as you can: on your commute, in the shower, while working out, while cooking, while eating, etc. Get it in to your bones.
What this did for me was it began changing the way I think about money. As I listened to hours of Dave Ramsey tell people everyday that saving money was cool, paying off debt is cool and the best way to financial freedom, that the 7 baby steps are achievable, my thoughts around money slowly changed, and so did my behavior. At first I disagreed with Ramsey a lot, especially how he treated some callers (that has improved a fair amount over the years, thankfully). But eventually I saw the wisdom in what he was saying.
In addition to the advice to use accounts with penalties for early withdrawals, I’d consider if setting a fun money budget would give you a metered amount of “yeah, no one’s perfect” escape valve but then have other accounts that are harder to readily access.
Consider splitting your direct deposit (after 401k deferral) into multiple accounts, some of which you don’t have ready access to. Put $100/check into an emergency fund account, $150/check into a travel or big fun account, $400/check into a house/car repairs account, $X/check to an after-tax Vanguard account, and the rest into your daily usage account.
You’ll have setbacks over the years, just as your grandparents did. But over the long run, there’s never been a 15-year run of negative nominal returns on the broad based US stock averages. Bet with that trend to continue, including there being some 5-year losing periods ahead.
You can do this, it won’t be easy but setting in place a few mechanisms to support, not letting the wheels come off the bus entirely if you skip up a little, and just committing to being better every year than the last probably has positive correlation with an ok outcome.
Even though HN is full of smart, data-orientated people, it's rare to see this level of self-awareness, vulnerability and curiosity demonstrated in a single comment. We could all benefit from more of this set of skills. Most of us dole out advice far more willingly than we ask for it. Through revealing your own frailty, you've opened the door for others who are less courageous to hear some good advice.
There's nothing pathetic here at all -- it's how we learn and grow. I hope this doesn't come across as condescending: I genuinely wanted to say, "thank you".
Work for a company with stock trading blackout periods. Setup a 10b5-1 plan to periodically sell your company stock, then when the blackouts are lifted invest the money you want to save into your company stock.
This has the drawback of being undiversified, but undiversified savings may be preferable to no savings at all.
1. Before opening the laptop I decide how much time I want to spend, and what I will do immediately after.
2. Set a timer that I'll have to get up to turn off.
3. Do the thing I had decided to do. It can be a little thing, like washing 1 dish, taking out the trash...
I tried many strategies before finding one that works, and will still try to develop more so I'm not completely sunk if/when this one stops working.
Regarding your shopping habits, it sounds like you're acquiring more tools but not making good use of what you have. Switch to buying used things,a nd spend more time sweating over the things you bought figuring out how to use them effectively. This will probably be an emotionally painful and initially unsatisfying process. Make something with your 3d printer. Be disappointed. Make something marginally better, continue being disappointed. Repeat until one day you unexpectedly feel pleased with the results.
It takes about 3 months to shift behavior patterns, even with the help of something like Adderall, which is totally fine to use.
On the emotional management / discipline front, I’d suggest also exploiting the similarities between personal finances and healthy living. If money is particularly painful for you, try forming simple habits like going on a 10 minute walk each morning, or eating healthy 1 day a week.
Small actions like that will help you prove to yourself that you can make changes, and you can ride that proof emotionally to make bigger changes incrementally over time.
An example would be 1 day a week of not eating out, which becomes a $10 per week saving habit, then moving to 2 days and $20.
Maybe thinking about it the same way is key, thanks.
I think this is called a trust: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trust_law
Also, if you are so inclined, check if you can replace your habit of trawling Amazon for stuff to buy with trawling Amazon looking for stuff to buy in the future. Personally, looking forward to buying the thing is at least 60% of the enjoyment.
Anyway, try seeing a psychotherapist. Someone serious with a degree. Your money problems seem to be at least partially learned, so they can be unlearned.
Partner with someone who is disciplined, such as a potential spouse/partner, a friend, or even a support group of people in the same situation.
I know that recommendations are frowned upon here, but also take a look at Brian Johnson/Optimize. Discipline is one of the things they touch on a lot, and unlike other places, they have advice that actually seems to work.
Her and I have been talking today and I think having her approve purchases could help. I’m nervous about giving up control like that though, and thinking about it more I definitely get pleasure in buying new gadgets. But I need to trust her that she has my best interests in mind (which she does, but it’s hard to convince some part of me deep down of that).
No it isn't. But that is revealing the issue: you tend toward the irrational. In fact,
> How do I stop
By realizing that there is no need for that, rationally. You want to buy new X, but you do not need them: _see the fact_ - they are per se useless and replaceable for their improper purpose of emotional release: to have X is just petty if you want to fix your finance. You can replace the feeling of that X with something free. If there is one stroke of luck of living in these times, is that access to stimula has probably never been so rich in options and free in cost.
> trying to think of things to buy
Think instead of things to enjoy. They are really, mostly free nowadays (even our presence here at Dan's is). Be faster than the other habitual pattern and replace it - if you think of something to buy, realize you are doing it and think of something to enjoy. Replace the thought. You are used to collect items: collect experiences instead. Realize that you can replace items with experiences. For that, one laptop is enough, a basic car etc.
That thought habit is a mental pattern to replace, to replace with something that makes sense - the other does not, as you have to realize and in fact realize.
(And about Amzn, if other people were unable to read this, I would add: Bzos is bald. And you do not seem to have stopped to consider that. If you want to buy from him - who am I to convince you otherwise. But he is bald (you should see that - it should be a thought stopper, a doubt inducer). And possibly the last person in the world who needs your money. With your money you vote: is that what you want to promote? The very fact that you shop there raises the question: how long have you thought about your actions? The single ones, the generic ones. Some people think you are supposed to evaluate your actions before doing them. You take a step back, look at what you do, and what you have done and what you would do, and judge them as good ideas or bad ideas, for what they are. I am sure you know mathematics sufficiently. If I shop from somebody with those traits, I have deliberately deliberated it, it is a conscious choice. Read these paragraph carefully, and understand them. If you want clarifications, we are here.)
I was ordering from amazon 3-5x a week and when they locked us down in mid 2020 I was so disgusted by amazon getting filthy rich while my friends and neighbors were locked at home that I haven't ordered from them since.
You can do this with a trust or annuity. Have you looked into them?
You need to have money removed from your account and into investment accounts automatically before you have a chance to spend it. Money in checking or saving will get spent.
Write everything you spend money on down in a single place before you buy it. If you buy a book and pen to do this they can be your first entry.
Creating an awareness of what you spend money on gives you a chance to ask if you will value the thing as much as your impulses are telling you.
This goes generally, lots of self help people suggest keeping a diary, and reviewing it.
It works much better for me than trying to save at the end of the month for me anyways.
Have you tried therapy?
This isn't financial advice, but what you want is definitely possible with defi and smart contracts. I'm not sure what in the ecosystem has this capability, but there's a good chance you can get a bit of interest too.
Just stay away from USDT if you're planning to have payouts happen over the long term; USDC would be a safer bet.
I could try giving you financial advice, but the problem is that you would not follow it, and we both know it. So instead, I will recommend a few tricks I use to make myself believe that I have less money than I actually have (which reduces the impulse to spend too much).
First, realize that "the money you have" is just a fiction anyway. Suppose you have a $100,000 mortgage, and $10,000 in your bank account. Does it mean you have $10,000 that you are free to spend? No, it actually means you have $90,000 debt. The number $10,000 is so misleading that the less you think about it, the better for you. (You have an option to reduce the fiction by making an advance payment to the mortgage. Perhaps you should do it when the feeling "I have too much money" becomes too strong.)
Perhaps you should get a second bank account, move some money from the first account there, and then forget that the second account exists. Even better, if possible, make it so that only your wife (or both of you together) can move money from the second account. Again, when the feeling "I have too much money" gets too strong, move some money from the first account to the second account, and then forget that you did this. (There should be no card associated with the second bank account.)
I am not American, so I don't know whether this would be a practical advice or a huge inconvenience for you, but don't use cards, always pay cash. With cards, paying is too easy, and the money is too virtual. Do you NOT want to simplify things you want to do less of! Keep between $100 and $500 in your purse, pay cash, and whenever you get below $100, take $400 more from an ATM. If you notice yourself visiting the ATM twice during the same week, you know you are spending too much. More importantly, this way your brain will learn to interpret "how much money do I have" as the amount in your purse, not the amount in your bank account (and definitely not the amount in your second bank account.)
Generally, the best way to get rid of a habit is to replace it with an alternative. "When you feel tempted to do X, do Y instead" is easier than "simply stop doing X". What could be a replacement for your Amazon scrolling? (Alternatively, could you somehow subvert the process, so that you e.g. scroll for awesome things, then you bookmark them in the browser, but you never actually buy them?) Could you read a book or watch a movie instead? Play a computer game (some ancient game, without loot boxes and stuff)? Learn to cook, or build furniture? (If it must be buying, could you add some artificial constraint, such as "I am going to find the most awesome thing below $5, and then I will buy it"?) Or maybe you could spend some time with people who have much less than you... and perhaps buy something genuinely useful for them. (As a side effect, thinking about other people's problems makes you think less about yourself. Think how many homeless people you could feed for that $5,000.)
In fact, Suze Orman and the like are talking exactly to this audience, and their advice is in many cases a lot better than what they are doing now.
Also, being married to a small business owner who knows a lot of other small business owners, there's a "dirty little secret" that this article doesn't mention: most of them never get paid a dime by their own business. They are spending their way through a business loan, or they have family money, or some other source. Yes, there are people who get rich from starting a business, but if popular finance experts told everyone to start their own business, that would be a lot worse advice than what they are saying.
Over fifty percent of generic small businesses survive for more than five years, so it's unlikely that a majority of them are completely subsisting on government loans, investors, or family money.
The most common outcome (for the small businesses that last) is to turn into something that creates just enough revenue to support the owner and a handful of employees. The owner takes a small salary and uses the rest of the cash flow for float or reinvests it into the business.
However, depending on the country, tax laws can be fairly advantageous for small business owners (e.g., higher limits on tax-deferred retirement accounts). There's also the benefit of building net worth in the business, which isn't something that employees benefit from. So, while the owner may not be getting paid all that much, they still benefit in a bunch of other ways.
My wife is a loan officer at a mortgage company. It's a running joke that it's a pain in the ass to qualify small-business owners, because so many of them claim so little actual income on their tax returns, even when they're quite obviously wealthy.
Revenue and profit are conflated but are not the same thing.
Financial advice in general sucks. But when we get into the specifics... such as any say $150k/year programmer or higher, the generic financial advice of 6 months saving + max out 401k plan works.
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The plan for people at average, 50k/year combined income is closer to the go to college and get some skills that will launch your career.
What I do find amusing is our collective inability to talk about things that matter. Ex: the paycheck is the elephant in the room. And even though it is brought up in this post, the paycheck differences between families can lead to grossly different experiences.
They’re mostly bogleheads so are a little risk averse, but for most that’s probably the right move anyway.
The great thing is you can read the subreddits casually for ~3 months and learn everything you need to know to autopilot your financial plan for decades if you go the boglehead route. After that you mostly need to pay attention to major changes in tax law and entitlements.
I still read them all the time but I haven't learned anything new in years.
People reaching 100k/year or so single income should be able to save comfortably. And a lot of programmers are on an appropriate career path to get there in a few years
The median household income in the United States is $79.9K. Assuming that a family of four can live on $50K (including taxes) in - most - locations, which is twice the poverty limit, they can theoretically save $30K a year in a mix of 401K, IRA, and general investment accounts.
This amount, if invested over thirty years with a 7.5% annual return (which is lower than what the S&P has historically returned by a fair amount), would give them a nest-egg of $3M. If they only manage to save half of that amount, they would still have $1.5M by retirement.
Now, this is a very feasible scenario for families in their twenties to late thirties, which is why many of the names mentioned in the article harp on the importance of investing early. It doesn't work nearly as well once you reach that point.
However, the opposite - not saving or investing, and having a large amount of consumer debt - leads to significantly worse outcomes.
What are the advantages of 401k instead of say dumping it into half-VOO half-crypto and making millions one way or another?
Buying VOO buys a share of the profits of the work of many millions of people. It also speculates that other people will continue to want to buy those profits.
Buying a token only speculates that more people will want to buy that particular token. It's much harder to project that people will continue to want it.
It is worth being honest about the false hope these authors are peddling about "becoming wealthy", instead of what they are really advising which is, to become above average / not poor. It is ultimately good advice for most while the crux of the issue is pretending everyone in America is a millionaire waiting to happen.
I would add that much of the sensible advice provided by these types of authors is not taught in public schools as a basic necessity of general education.
Saving $100 per week should be possible for most households today. $100 per week over 40 years with an 8% return is $1.3m.
If you think the market will be slower in the future, or higher inflation, or whatever, use the absurdly conservative 6% and it’ll take 50 years instead of 40.
Add in the possibility of home ownership giving an additional asset to add to the net worth over the investing lifetime, giving an extra few hundred thousand… and in forty years from now, we’re well over $1m in assets, easy.
Getting $100/week might seem daunting, but that’s less than 10% of the median household income — totally within reach of a majority of people with some small changes.
A 8% annualized above-inflation return over the next 40 years is a big ask in today's low-growth world.
https://www.mrmoneymustache.com/2012/04/09/what-if-everyone-...
Take a group of randomly selected non-rich people 1 to N and assume you have a "dart board" of varied strategies and their return in this iteration. Take the normal distribution over time and the outliers at the right end of the bell curve you will find that some will become rich in the proper flux.
You can't all just throw them at the same spot and get an absurd economic yield. It would in the end regress to both a standard distribution and the mean.
Competition mostly diminishes the returns in a given investment faster. The price differentials close through the generation of profit and fulfillment of demand. You are being paid to be a servant of entropy lowering things to their base state. This isn't a bad thing but one specific plan will not last forever.
Resource scarcity is weirdly peripheral to all of it and how you define rich in absolutes vs relative.
But there is a reason why spend less is the best advice for most people: they can't start a business, they have limited scope to increase their earnings significantly, and you can actually become relatively rich if you just spend less.
Personal financial advice really isn't about attempting to become rich, it is about stopping people doing things that make no sense. We aren't talking about becoming Jeff Bezos...that isn't the goal for most people, the aim is to help people retire with dignity. Telling everyone to start their own business is terribly unhelpful because it won't improve anything as most people will fail (this is why personal finance experts exist...because most people think in these unreasonable ways i.e. the only way I can become rich is by taking huge risks...rather than just not buying stupid shit I don't need, ppl reason in very weird ways).
To say this another way, most people do not understand the long-term value of a $1 saved today. Obviously, exactly how you calculate this is a little complicated but if people realised that $1 now was worth $4 or $6 or $8 in 30 years then they would consider what they do today more carefully (and even then, some people are just weird...they will say: I am going to die before then, or I don't care...then they will get to retirement and everything is fucked).
Btw, I used to work in this industry, I have seen people who didn't consider any of this. We had a client who worked all his life in a decent paying job but had little savings, took to drink, wife divorced him, lost his job in his late 60s, got drunk one day, fell down the stairs when he was on his own in his rented house (he lost his house a few months before), died. This all happened within a few months. It will happen. You will get old. You can't control everything in life but something that is relatively easy to control is your spending. I try not to give people specific advice but the number one thing that everyone can do is: control your spending, think about what you need, you can't avoid some expenses but the peace of mind later down the road from small changes is huge.
This kind of thing is unfashionable as hell though because it does put that pressure back onto the individual. Lots of young people today have this attitude of: everything is rigged, telling me to change anything when X person is so wealthy makes you an oppressor, etc. Unsurprisingly, this attitude tends to be linked with taking decisions that are unwise, and abrogating all responsibility for the consequences.
I think for most people the idea that $1 will grow a lot in thirty years just isn't very motivating. I hear that as saying I could either have chipotle today or a fancy dinner in thirty years. okay, but thirty years is a long time and chipotle is still pretty tasty.
personally, I find it much more motivating to frame it explicitly in terms of passive income. every time I spend $20, I am forfeiting $1/year in perpetuity. every time I don't spend $20, I've added $1 to my yearly budget in retirement. instead of delaying material gratification, I am eliminating my need to work.
Those kinds of people can budget to some version of wealth (especially when you consider the median net worth of their peers is most likely only barely a positive number).
To get into "real" money (5+ million dollars in savings?), then you can't budget yourself to riches if you simply do not have the gross income, and time horizon for some amount of compounding interest. The financial advisors in this bracket are usually not telling you what to save vs. spend, but instead more commonly discussing investment diversification strategies, ways to (legally) avoid or defer taxes, etc.
Yeah except the merchants probably marked up their prices 4% to cover card processing fees so really we are just paying more for goods than we otherwise would have with cash and the card company is giving us a tiny kickback.
Let's not pretend credit card kickbacks are free money... The card companies are glutting themselves on merchant fees and we are all paying the price in the form of costlier goods in exchange for a small kickback.
Lastly have you tried paying with cash online? While Bitcoin is a neat idea we are far from yet mass acceptance of any digital currency yet.
Budgeting will let you realize there are essentially infinite ways to spend your money. You have to decide the best way to do that. If you're trying to make money, buying yourself a latte is not the best way to do it. If you're trying to enjoy the money you earned, buying a latte may be the best way (but probably not).
Budgeting helps you better understand the balance between spending and earning. When you start considering the best investment for the dollar you have earned, it makes a difference.
People can spend their money and time however they want of course, but I'm always astounded by the lines at Starbucks whether people standing in line or the drive-through.
I certainly use such places when traveling (though I try to go to local shops) but I've never especially understood the 8am stand in line for 20 minutes ritual.
Seriously, since when did HN decide to sponsor this kind of self-interested clickbait?
The underlying gist of “You’ll NEVER get rich by working for someone else” is that you should look for opportunities to build wealth that’s not tied to hour-by-hour labor. You can do this by owning your own business, or by looking for ways to own equity in valuable assets beyond your regular job.
Of course you can get rich (or at least well off) in A Job. but realistically, that almost invariably means becoming a workplace strategist and doing office politics to make sure you outpace your peers, not just performing a job you like and then checking out to focus on your domestic life.
If you are just a diligent and unselfish team member who never tries to elbow your way in front of others, you are very unlikely to become rich just from your job. Wealth tends to flow towards people who are competitive rather than cooperative.
Apple's employees are managed by him, but both him and the other employees are working for the apple's shareholders.
Owning a small business is a chance at increasing rate of return. That's playing personal finance on hard mode for the average person. If you are risk averse, you'll be much better served focusing on increasing your savings rate and income.
Most personal financial advice is not focused on getting rich, it’s how to improve your financial health.
I'm most familiar with Ramit's work but he's also pretty clear that there's only so far you can go through savings but no upper bound on earnings.
It seems to me a bit like a strawman argument he's making when in fact some (or all) of the other gurus do talk about entrepreneurship and earning more.
1) Most of the personal finance experts he lists aren’t telling you how to get rich. They’re telling you how not to be poor.
2) Most people do need a coach or a mom or whatever to tell them they can’t afford something. Most people don’t even know how to balance a checkbook or calculate the real interest rate of a credit card.
3) Most people don’t know how compounding interest works.
4) There’s no definition of “rich”
5) I know plenty of people making mid-6 to low-7 figure incomes while “working for someone else” and some retired in their late-40s, early 50s
6) Most businesses fail
Plenty to satisfy what? Why would you bring anecdotes to a gun fight?
1. stay in school
2. don't do drugs
3. don't commit crimes
4. learn a skilled trade or go to college. remember to google starting salaries for your major before committing.
Additionally, the article does point out that you may need to reevaluate your career and/or create a side hustle.
It is unclear weather it is "easier" for everyone to do so, or possible. And if not, whether they are better off not trying, and instead saving and budgeting.
Counterpoint: I know many people who have done just that. If you want to define "rich" as hundreds of millions of dollars, sure - start your own business. Otherwise, a few million and retiring before age 50 is a pretty good outcome and I have seen multiple software engineers do that, even before the most recent explosion in compensation.
Also, despite what the article says, I’ve made a ton more money working for the man than I ever made working for myself. I’d probably be considered rich by most Americans’ standards. So it absolutely can happen, though there’s a lot of luck involved. I used to own a business, and while I manages to keep it alive for 5 years, it didn’t make much money. I sold it to a competitor and went to work for the man (not the company I sold it to). I kept getting royalties for a couple years, and by the time that ran out, my stock units were starting to vest, and that’s when things took off. The business helped make the transition smoother and faster, but I’d have made money on my stocks and higher salary either way.
And... many times when I do hear people recommend "start a business", it's "for the tax write-offs". Or at least that's the one bite-size thing some folks internalize. Have seen friends and neighbors get in to "business" - like various MLMs - and talk about "write offs". Naive at best, and dangerous at worst, I'm not surprised more people aren't specifically pointing out "start a business" to mass audiences - I'm not sure most people can do that responsibly. But most people can enroll in a company 401k and save a bit of money for later. The biggest damage they may do is lock up some money until they're 59. "Start a business" without much thought can lead to a lot more problems for folks.
> The title is as relevant today as it was back then. There are few industries that pay themselves so much for doing so little as financial services.
https://www.fool.com/investing/general/2014/02/21/where-are-...
I really don’t think anyone believes they’re going to get rich after reading a personal finance book. The hash reality if even if your expenses were $0 your total salary times x years still wouldn’t make you rich is unavoidable and known to basically everyone. These books are for people who need to get a handle on their spending, pay down their debt, and start gradually accumulating positive net worth.
That person he describes with $50k annual income, little or no savings, and significant credit card debt sure as hell isn’t starting a successful business, especially since they most likely have children and are working hard hours.
He’s dismissive of being “less poor”, but for anyone who has actually been in or witnessed this average scenario, less poor is way the hell closer to rich than not.
The real problem on display here is the capitalist dystopia we live in. Fifty years ago that average person would have been able to support a family, buy a house, and not live under the constant threat of bankruptcy from a surprise medical bill.
But yea, start a business!
50 years ago, 70 years ago, an enormous series of treatments we now have, did not exist.
And even disease treatment options, even knowing how some diseases worked? Nope.
So medical care was less costly, because, there was literally less to be done. And people died at home more often too, as a result.
So naturally medical care was less costly.
And housing, the average family did not have a ginormous, 6000sq foot house. Try 1000 sq foot, 1500 sq foot as a norm.
So sure, less cost.
Same with all these fancy dodads.
Yes, 100% housing is more expensive due to low rate mortgages, and other reasons.
But in non-crazy priced locations, you can still build a small 150k, 250k house with land all in.
Some of it is indeed changing wages vs costs, but some is "more" vs wage.
> Fifty years ago that average person would have been able to support a family, buy a house, and not live under the constant threat of bankruptcy from a surprise medical bill.
I want to circle back to this. I read your comment assuming you are arguing that now things are "more" (cost++) this ideal is now less obtainable or unobtainable.
Do you think that the average person (median wage earner) should be able to support themselves in this way? Should we let go of this ideal as "old fashioned"?
Sure, some mass-market dude with a radio show (I don't know anything Dave Ramsey or Suze Orman beyond their wikipedia pages) is going to have advice that "technically" doesn't make sense or that doesn't apply to some people. A very large number of people are deeply in consumer debt, have secured vehicle debt for more expensive cars than they should really have, and may well have taken the advice to get the biggest mortgage they could for a house in a place that requires that they maintain the whole shebang or go bust.
Telling those people "cut up your credit cards" and "if you don't have the cash, don't buy it" is actually good advice. The "snowball" thing that Ramsey is into is innumerate but may be just the thing for someone struggling to see their way through all their debts. I would no more tell someone with serious struggles with consumer debt that clever use of credit cards could increase their income overall than suggest a killer wine pairing to a recovering alcoholic.
I also don't think that it's a very fair categorisation of Sethi. He's never made any secret of the fact that these days most of his wealth has come from his writing and despite the name of his book, the advice he gives is more "I will teach you to be a financially prudent member of the upper middle class (if you are a well paid professional)" they just couldn't get that on the cover.
The big thing you have to know about Dave Ramsey is he has a biblical approach to debt, not practical. God says debt is bad so it should be avoided.
This leads to some odd advice.
Dave advocates working as much as possible during college to avoid student loans but neglects that, in the aggregate, the more hours a student works the poorer their grades and the less likely they will graduate.
He also advocates stopping 401k contributions until you're out of debt (because he believes debt is evil). That's almost never a great move financially if your employer has a decent 401k match. A better idea is to drop anything above the match until high interest debt is paid off.
His advice is very one sized fits all and he does have a point that many people can't control themselves with debt.
I'm really not a fan of the way he talks to his callers calling them stupid either, especially when he doesn't realize he doesn't really understand his caller's situation. He got super belligerent with a woman who didn't know exactly her husband's pay (who was a servicemember) and basically said she needed a marriage counselor because she didn't have an exact figure. (She said "around $xyz") But it seems he doesn't understand a significant portion comes in the form of several different allowances that are tax free and change based on their current orders, POC, and rank, so it's totally normal to have a non-precise figure off the ttopof your head.
He mostly talks to people that don’t realize the stranglehold debt has on them.
The first step is to acknowledge the problem
I just don't know that people really understand that his view of finance is biblical based rather than empirical based and advice is extremely one sized fits all.
At the same time it is the kick in the ass that already well-to-do-people with too many Lexusus who are deep in debt probably need. People who don't have much income? Not sure what they are going to get from Ramsey other than shame. These people have a cash flow problem, they don't need to called a moron. Like TFA says, this advice is more about maintaining wealth, not creating it.
(Of course, TFA ignores the risks of starting a business, but that's another topic)
For me, the best thing I ever did in my life was take out loans to live while in college so that I could devote 100% of my time to my studies. It's the only way I would be able to graduate, and I'm glad I didn't worship the altar of Dave Ramsey at the time (or even know who he was) because I really didn't need extra stress or guilt, I put enough on myself. Dave just thinks people like me don't exist - people who take out debt reluctantly after cost-benefit analysis, pay it back ASAP, and who are better off for it.
Of course, God says debt is bad, so Ramsey doesn't care if I exist.
You 100% can become a multi millionare as an employee. You can go the SV route and make $300k+ as an engineer or go the traditional route and make $100k working as an engineer remotely in a low cost of living location.
https://www.petekeen.net/automatic-finances
I've been using it for about three years now and, modulo a couple tweaks, it's substantially identical to that write up and requires ~zero manual intervention.
I’ve gotten lucky; the company I work for has done really well. If it hadn’t, sure, I’d have a fraction of my overall wealth.
But I did follow the advice, and it did work for me.
The mods tend to update it regularly in line with changing economic conditions and laws etc.
I read Mr. Money Mustache's blog frequently when I was young; he has an important addition to what many of the mainstream personal finance books address. Being rich is more about freedom and personal happiness than it is having a lot of money. For many people, adjusting to slightly less nice but more affordable things is significantly easier than increasing their income by that same amount. Furthermore, every dollar you adjust to not needing is better than adding income - it compounds even faster because it goes into retirement with you and reduces your target savings amount.
But, going back to the post there are a _lot_ of people in the US and around the world that don't have the income required to have any sort of savings, even after adjusting down their lifestyle. This is a systemic but tractable problem. The solution isn't "get a side hustle" it's "the full time minimum wage should support a reasonable life".
Ugh I saw you getting close and then miss it
Why would you think the solution to the savings problem is minimum wage?
When is the minimum ever good enough? Frustrating how not enough people talk about increasing income way beyond the minimum
Then you get to retire at like 40 with a much higher probability of success.
Especially finance advice given to low-income people is just horrible. Like starting a savings account is a great way to lose all your money to fees when you need to withdraw everything in an emergency.
Even in a high tax state, a single taxpayer with a 49K salary takes home about $40K. So you're telling me that this taxpayer spends $22.4K on food? That's $61 / day! Also, the median net worth in the US is about $120K, but this guy is telling us that 50% of Americans only have $500 in savings? What a load of bullshit!
As I expected from this audience, some of the comments are funny and completely miss the mark of my article. But such is life.
Your conclusion in the article (under "What would I recommend you do?") turns out to be the same thing Ramit Sethi recommends you do (among other points in the article which are in agreement with his writings).
So, you are not calling out Ramit Sethi as much as you think you are.
It also conflates the fundamentals (not having credit card debt, investing in a tax-advantaged retirement fund) with the next step of not trading money for time.
How is someone who can't manage their (small) amount of money going to manage the large amount of money earned from a successful business? They can't.
As a further thought to consider, what are the chances they would be able to start a successful business to begin with?
In other words, "you learn to crawl before you walk".
You can be "rich" by having the freedom to spend your time on what you want, and appreciating the cornucopia of luxuries that make up a typical American middle class life.
You can get there by living (happily!) on a lot less than 100% of what you make, and saving the rest. With some simplifying assumptions about investment returns, the actual dollar amount a person makes doesn't matter; it's just the fraction of their net income that they need to maintain their lifestyle that informs how long until retirement. E.g. if you can save 50% of your income, you can retire in 17 years. https://www.mrmoneymustache.com/2012/01/13/the-shockingly-si...
I feel like some options are being ignored here? You can also acquire more skills and get a higher paying job?
There's no easy way to have more money. If there was, everyone would do it and the value of the money would be inflated away.
The strawman is that it's all about "getting rich". Ramsey (the one I've heard talk the most) is mostly about just getting people to stop digging themselves deeper and deeper into debt where they will have no hope for even the basic stability that you need to build greater wealth upon.
The false dichotomy is that you either need a side hustle business or you need to follow sound day-to-day money management discipline. Following sound money management discipline is what gets you to the point of having some discretionary income to build your own business.