Anonymous wrote:The gap between rich and poor persists because poor people keep doing the things that made them poor in the first place. And rich people keep doing the things that made them rich in the first place.
dittoAnonymous wrote:I think most people learn from their parents. My parents were always frugal and good with money. They passed this down. I have done the same.
Anonymous wrote:There is a lot of bragging about net worth here. But income is more important to me. I'd rather have $500k in dependable income than $10 million at risk in the stock market. I'm no where near retirement
Anonymous wrote:Who do you know who’s in substantial debt beyond their mortgage? I get that people don’t talk about it but are you?
Anonymous wrote:Question for OP, when and where do you expect people in this country to leading financial literacy?
Poverty keeps you in survival mode, and if you are born relatively wealthy, you “pick up things” from the people around you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are a consumer society. We consume a lot in this country.
Many of us on this forum who have a lot savings and investments are benefiting from other people doing the spending. Just increase the savings rate by 10% nationally and you will massive changes in the economy
The American economy is built on debt and predation. Once you are stuck in that cycle of debt, it's very hard to get out because structurally you are meant to be kept in that cycle because a lot profit from that.
+1. The system depends on lots of people spending like idiots.
Anonymous wrote:We are a consumer society. We consume a lot in this country.
Many of us on this forum who have a lot savings and investments are benefiting from other people doing the spending. Just increase the savings rate by 10% nationally and you will massive changes in the economy
The American economy is built on debt and predation. Once you are stuck in that cycle of debt, it's very hard to get out because structurally you are meant to be kept in that cycle because a lot profit from that.
A car loan for a 15k used car- yes that’s a need.
Anonymous wrote:I was watching a show and people were calling in regarding their finances.
This one lady in her 60s wants to buy a home, rolled over negative equity from an old car loan into a new one and she doesn't know how much she owes ...wow just wow
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think most people learn from their parents. My parents were always frugal and good with money. They passed this down. I have done the same.
They were also likely gainfully employed and emphasized work. Having money makes it easy to not be in debt.