Chapter Two - LESSON 2: WHY TEACH FINANCIAL
LITERACY?
It’s not how much money you make.
It’s how much money you keep.
In 1990, Mike took over his father’s empire and is, in fact, doing a better job than his dad
did. We see each other once or twice a year on the golf course. He and his wife are
wealthier than you could imagine. Rich dad’s empire is in great hands, and Mike is now
grooming his son to take his place, as his dad had groomed us.
In 1994, I retired at the age of 47, and my wife Kim was 37. Retirement does not mean not
working. For us, it means that, barring unforeseen cataclysmic changes, we can work or not
work, and our wealth grows automatically, staying ahead of inflation. Our assets are large
enough to grow by themselves. It’s like planting a tree. You water it for years, and then one
day it doesn’t need you anymore. Its roots are implanted deep enough. Then the tree provides
shade for your enjoyment.
Mike chose to run the empire, and I chose to retire.
Whenever I speak to groups of people, they often ask what I would recommend that they do.
“How do I get started?” “Is there a book you would recommend?” “What should I do to
prepare my children?” “What is your secret to success?” “How do I make millions?”
Whenever I hear one of these questions, I’m reminded of the following story:
The Richest Businessmen
In 1923 a group of our greatest leaders and richest businessmen held a meeting at the
Edgewater Beach hotel in Chicago. Among them were Charles Schwab, head of the
largest independent steel company; Samuel Insull, president of the world’s largest
utility; Howard Hopson, head of the largest gas company; Ivar Kreuger, president of
International Match Co., one of the world’s largest companies at that time; Leon
Frazier, president of the Bank of International Settlements; Richard Whitney,
president of the New York Stock Exchange; Arthur Cotton and Jesse Livermore, two
of the biggest stock speculators; and Albert Fall, a member of President Harding’s
cabinet. Twenty-five years later, nine of these titans ended their lives as follows:
Schwab died penniless after living for five years on borrowed money. Insull died
broke in a foreign land, and Kreuger and Cotton also died broke. Hopson went
insane. Whitney and Albert Fall were released from prison, and Fraser and
Livermore committed suicide.
I doubt if anyone can say what really happened to these men. If you look at the date, 1923, it
was just before the 1929 market crash and the Great Depression, which I suspect had a great
impact on these men and their lives. The point is this: Today we live in times of greater and
faster change than these men did. I suspect there will be many booms and busts in the coming
years that will parallel the ups and downs these men faced. I am concerned that too many
people are too focused on money and not on their greatest wealth, their education. If people
are prepared to be flexible, keep an open mind and learn, they will grow richer and richer
despite tough changes. If they think money will solve problems, they will have a rough ride.
Intelligence solves problems and produces money. Money without financial intelligence is
money soon gone.
Most people fail to realize that in life, it’s not how much money you make. It’s how much
money you keep. We’ve all heard stories of lottery winners who are poor, then suddenly
rich, and then poor again.
They win millions, yet are soon back where they started. Or stories of professional athletes,
who at the age of 24 are earning millions, but are sleeping under a bridge 10 years later.
I remember a story of a young basketball player who a year ago had millions. Today, at just
29, he claims his friends, attorney, and accountant took his money, and he was forced to
work at a car wash for minimum wage. He was fired from the car wash because he refused
to take off his championship ring as he was wiping off the cars. His story made national
news and he is appealing his termination, claiming hardship and discrimination. He claims
that the ring is all he has left and if it was stripped away, he’ll crumble.
I know so many people who became instant millionaires. And while I am glad some people
have become richer and richer, I caution them that in the long run, it’s not how much money
you make. It’s how much you keep, and how many generations you keep it.
So when people ask, “Where do I get started?” or “Tell me how to get rich quick,” they
often are greatly disappointed with my answer. I simply say to them what my rich dad said to
me when I was a little kid. “If you want to be rich, you need to be financially literate.”
That idea was drummed into my head every time we were together. As I said, my educated
dad stressed the importance of reading books, while my rich dad stressed the need to master
financial literacy.
If you are going to build the Empire State Building, the first thing you need to do is dig a
deep hole and pour a strong foundation. If you are going to build a home in the suburbs, all
you need to do is pour a six-inch slab of concrete. Most people, in their drive to get rich, are
trying to build an Empire State Building on a six-inch slab.
Our school system, created in the Agrarian Age, still believes in homes with no foundation.
Dirt floors are still the rage. So kids graduate from school with virtually no financial
foundation. One day, sleepless and deep in debt in suburbia, living the American Dream,
they decide that the answer to their financial problems is to find a way to get rich quick.
Construction on the skyscraper begins. It goes up quickly, and soon, instead of the Empire
State Building, we have the Leaning Tower of Suburbia. The sleepless nights return.
As for Mike and me in our adult years, both of our choices were possible because we were
taught to pour a strong financial foundation when we were just kids.
Accounting is possibly the most confusing, boring subject in the world, but if you want to be
rich long-term, it could be the most important subject. For rich dad, the question was how to
take a boring and confusing subject and teach it to kids. The answer he found was to make it
simple by teaching it in pictures.
My rich dad poured a strong financial foundation for Mike and me. Since we were just kids,
he created a simple way to teach us. For years he only drew pictures and used few words.
Mike and I understood the simple drawings, the jargon, the movement of money, and then in
later years, rich dad began adding numbers. Today, Mike has gone on to master much more
complex and sophisticated accounting analysis because he had to in order to run his empire.
I am not as sophisticated because my empire is smaller, yet we come from the same simple
foundation. Over the following pages, I offer to you the same simple line drawings Mike’s
dad created for us. Though basic, those drawings helped guide two little boys in building
great sums of wealth on a solid and deep foundation.
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