Chapter 10. THE ROAD MORE TRAVELED
Like boring, predictable paths? |
The sure and steady way could be yours. |
The least sensational, but most reliable, road to riches is saving linked to good investment returns. This is very American—the Calvinist catechism, rooted in Judeo-Christian values of virtue. Frugality and industriousness do pay. This road is wide enough for anyone with a paycheck. It has spawned thousands of how-to books over the decades ranging from Suze Orman to The Millionaire Next Door.
The first step is saving. Fact: Some folks just can't—regardless of income. Some make half a million a year and blow it all. Some are naturally frugal. Some folks can improve. Others never will. But saving is a must here.
Step two is getting ok, but not phenomenal, investment returns. The magical power of compound interest assures even the lowliest, part-time garbage collector can do this if he or she saves a few thousand a year. Forbes list? No. But anyone can be a multimillionaire.
Note: A million's not much anymore! A million invested well kicks off about $40,000 a year in cash flow (see why later)—not enough to feel rich. But it isn't a stretch to hit maybe $10 million-plus with an ok job and discipline. This road's not sexy. Frugal isn't known for sexy! But the good news: This road doesn't require degrees—or even high school (but education helps with better-paying jobs). This is the exact reverse of the road less traveled. It is the road more commonly traveled to riches.
INCOME MATTERS ...
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