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  • Hey there everybody. Phil Smy again, with a book review.

  • This week I am looking at a book that recently seems to be gaining, regaining, popularity

  • again. It's a book from 1996.

  • It's called 'The Millionaire Next Door'. This book was written by Thomas Stanley and

  • Bill Danko and was based on a lot of surveys they sent to people who were 'the hidden wealthy'

  • as I like to call them. People who were financially secure or indeed

  • very secure or well off. But weren't visibly so. Some were of course.

  • It was supposedly the widest survey of it's kind of wealth in America.

  • They went through the results and like good little researchers they distilled it down

  • into seven points. That they felt that the majority of these hidden wealth shared in

  • common. Now of course not every millionaire shared

  • the same points but these were the points that they felt were the key indicators that

  • you were going to be, or could be, wealthy or not.

  • So I meant to just give you a quick summary so you could stop watching, but I didn't do

  • that.I'm sorry. So I'm going to do that now. Here are the 7 traits, factors, that Stanley

  • and Danko believed led people to be wealthy. First, they live well below their means.

  • In other words, they don't buy shit that they don't need.

  • That's the number one thing that you can learn from this book.

  • Don't spend money on pointless things. And you'd be surprised how much is pointless.

  • So number 1, they live well below their means. Number two, They allocate their time, energy,

  • and money efficiently, in ways conducive to building wealth. They learn about investing,

  • they invest, and they spend their time doing it. Their hobby is building wealth.

  • Number three. They believe that financial independence is more important than displaying

  • high social status. See point number 1. Don't buy shit you don't need. You don't need to

  • have a McMansion in the suburbs. You don't need to have a flash car. You don't need to

  • have a TV in every room. Gold plated toilet fixtures or whatever it is you're into.

  • You don't need it. You don't need to show other people you're

  • rich. Number four: Their parents did not provide

  • economic outpatient care. In other words, their parents were either assholes, or poor,

  • or both. Or they just said to their kids, you stand on your own two feet. A surprising

  • number of these hidden wealthy did not get any assistance from their family.

  • Number five. Their adult children are economically self-sufficient. In otherwords they are assholes

  • or poor or both. It trickled down. Their parents didn't give them help so they don't give help

  • to their children. And that seems to be the best things to do.

  • Number six. They are proficient in targeting market opportunities. What the hell does that

  • mean? It means, they get their money from people who already have it.

  • So if you're going to be an accountant, be an accountant to wealthy people. If you're

  • going to be a lawyer, be a kind of lawyer that makes money. If you're going to do, as

  • Graeber says, bullshit jobs, make sure you get the money from wealthy people. Or target

  • the higher end. Go somewhere where the profit margin is high. You can be in any sector,

  • and indeed the people in this book are from A-Z for their occupation. In fairness I don't

  • there's someone who's occupation starts with a Z. But they're in every kind of occupation

  • so it's not about which occupation you choose, it's about how you practice that occupation.

  • But number seven is They chose the right occupation. They found something that makes money, but

  • doesn't require status. An interesting thing is that there's not so many doctors on this

  • list. Or dentists. Because doctors and dentists tend to spend their money on status. So they

  • don't have the money in the bank that you probably think they do.

  • So those are the seven points. I'm just going to whip over them again, without

  • any peanut gallery comments from me. 1. They live well below their means.

  • 2. They allocate their time, energy, and money efficiently, in ways conducive to building

  • wealth. 3. They believe that financial independence

  • is more important than displaying high social status.

  • 4. Their parents did not provide economic outpatient care.

  • 5. Their adult children are economically self-sufficient. 6. They are proficient in targeting market

  • opportunities. 7. They chose the right occupation.

  • Those are the seven things. You do those seven things, you keep them in

  • mind, and you too can be wealthy. I honestly believe that.

  • But what I did learn from this book is that this methods works best if you start early.

  • If you think about this in your 20s or maybe, maybe your 30s.

  • So, if you're my age, you're pretty much screwed as far as 'The Millionaire Next Door' process

  • goes. So, as I was reading this book, I was thinking

  • oh that's a good idea, too bad I didn't do that 30 years ago. That's a good idea, too

  • bad I didn't do that 20 years ago. This kind of thing.

  • And I think that, um, if I'm totally honest, it was pretty depressing reading for me.

  • So, yeah, I hope you're young and I hope you just follow these things and you too can be

  • wealthy. Don't chase the easy money. And don't buy the flash car.

  • But they come up with a couple other things I want to chuck in here.

  • They came up with this idea of an accumulation ratio. Or wealth ratio.

  • How much money you should have. And their formula is, you take your age, multiplied

  • by your realized annual pretax income for all sources except inheritance, in other words,

  • you take your age, you multiply that by how much money you make a year, and then you divide

  • it by ten. This is what your net worth should be. So

  • take your age, let's say you're 20. Let's say you make $30,000 a year. So your net worth

  • should be 60 grand. Is that right? Something like that.

  • And if you are under that if you've accumulated less than that you are a UAW. Which is not

  • United Auto Worker. You are an under accumulator of wealth.

  • If you have about that much you are an average accumulator of wealth. AAW.

  • And if you have more than that, double at least, or more, you are a PAW. A Prodigious

  • Accumulator of Wealth. And it's words like that that make you think the book was written

  • a lot earlier than 1996. Prodigious. You uses the word prodigious any more?

  • I would have said SAW. Super accumulator of wealth!

  • But anyway. Also this job talks about a good job being

  • a travel agent, which makes me wonder. This book, one of the downsides of the book

  • apart from the fact that it's depressing if you're old, is that the book is filled with

  • anecdotes. Filled and filled and filled with people with their pseudonyms and all the rest

  • of it. And a lot of them don't hold up over time. And just unnecessary. It felt like padding

  • to me. I think the goal of the book was really to

  • say to people that you can be wealthy. Do these seven things and they're things that

  • are not genetic or hereditary, or based on your circumstance, they are based on action.

  • And if you do these things you too can be wealthy.

  • But other than that, my thing is, I would say don't read the book. I've given you the

  • seven tips. That's all you need. I read it, so you don't have to.

  • You're welcome. General idea is good, it's backed up by data.

  • I totally believe that those 7 things are the key but don't read the book.

  • All right, that's all for now, see you soon. Thanks.

Hey there everybody. Phil Smy again, with a book review.

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隣の大富豪 - 書評 (The Millionaire Next Door - Book Review)

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    Chia-Yin Huang に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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