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by fefifofu
3657 days ago
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This article and the book is exactly what's wrong with personal finance education. There is no special wisdom, clever tricks or golden rules in finance. Chicken soup for the soul won't help. Personal finance should be taught as a math problem. Figure out the cost of the lifestyle you want, and work backwards from there. If your fancy house, car, and dinners out cost $100,000 then you can figure out if your choices make sense... does you career choice match up? does taking on school debt make sense? etc. Or if you are older and made these life choices already and make $50,000, your math problem is a bit different. Does the honda or tesla fit? You can very easily see if credit card interest of 20% will help or hurt you achieve your goals/lifestyle if you do the math. None of this generic "avoid debt" or "house are the best investment" (garbage) advice helps and only confuses the matter. I think the only area that has more confusion and bad advice than personal finance is nutrition. In the letter, grandma says "go for a fixed rate mortgage"... what!? |
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For instance, what I've always done and it has worked very well for me is the following:
1. Maintain constant revenue stream, even if work is part-time or all you have is just an investment paying dividends.
2. Never purchase anything you can't pay for in cash at that moment.
3. Try to save 10% of your income every month - even in low income months.
4. Don't be wasteful and don't blow money on "small crap" you don't need. i.e. junk food, fast food, trinkets, taking unnecessary trips or riding first class, leaving devices/lights on in your house, gym/any memberships or monthly recurring fees you don't absolutely need.
5. Finally, don't purchase things on a whim.
I've tried to live by these rules my whole life, learned them from my Dad, and they've worked very well for me. I spend money, but usually only for high quality things I research into for a long time before purchasing, like a piano, a plot of land, tools, etc.
I have zero knowledge of actual research into personal or home finance so this example is just my gut intuition based on personal experience, so just view it as a biased anecdotal opinion :)