Thursday, September 10, 2015

WHAT THE RICH DON’T WANT YOU TO KNOW ABOUT MONEY


By Ndu-okeke Michael
 Like all typical Nigerian parents will say, “study hard so you can get good grades and a good job afterwards”;  Most of us grew up with the notion that a good job after school is the key to the good life we have always dreamt of.


A lot is being taught during ones schooling days, on our various choices of discipline, and schools often go the extra mile to ensure their graduates are the best among their peers with slight advantages so as to ensure they fare well in the ever combative war zone called the Nigerian Labour Market. But after all this education and preparations, many individuals with excellent degrees and good jobs still struggle financially and are often covered in debt before it is time for the next pay check. Education is of great importance especially in this information age, but does it necessarily guarantee a successful life?  Many school graduates leave their schools with excellent professional and scholastic skills but are mostly financial illiterates with little or no knowledge of how money works apart from just working for it. This is because the topic money is never taught in schools and many educated individuals go into the labour market working for money; not knowing how to make money work for them.

            A large percentage of Nigeria’s’ middle class and lower class citizens engage in what multiple award winning investor, entrepreneur, author and financial educator, Robert T. Kiyosaki called the “rat race”. This term he used to describe people whose expenditure is equal with their income or even more. This he described as, a financial situation caused by a low financial ineptitude due to the individuals low understanding of the science of money or wealth acquisition.  The poor and the middle class often spend their income on liabilities instead of acquiring assets like the rich do. Liabilities can simply be put as things that take money out of your pockets, while assets are the opposite. The difference between the rich and the middle and poor class is the ability to tell the difference between an asset and a liability.     

           The poor and middle class knowingly or unknowingly go about acquiring liabilities which in turn drain their income and invite debts, while the rich put all they can into the acquisition of assets which increases their cash flow instead of expenditure. The poor and middle class live with this illusion that a raise or a promotion, which often comes with an increase in income, would put an end to their financial struggles; but this never really happens because of their often poor financial ineptitude which leads to their inability to differentiate between an asset and a liability. Due to this fact, an increase in income is often followed by an increase in expenditure so that the raise or promotion has no significant change on the person’s financial status. This is what is called the rat race, working so hard just to survive with barely anything to save. The rich folk on the other hand might not be as educated as his peers but has a better financial knowledge which he exploits to get ahead. An increased acquisition of assets results in a situation Robert T Kiyosaki described as “financial freedom” when the individuals’ assets generates a cash flow that adds to the normal income leading to an increased income. Here the rich man’s income supersedes his expenditure by a large margin due to the additional source of income created by his assets. Example of such assets are stocks, bonds eg. FGN bonds, mutual funds, shares, real estate and any type of business that produces steady income.


            In conclusion, we should all endeavour to increase our financial IQ and background regardless of our line of work. You can do this by reading financial educational books mostly written by world renowned investors and entrepreneur eg. the Rich dad series by Robert K Kiyosaki; The warren buffet way by Robert G. Hagstrom, and many other proper books on the art of wealth acquisition-  or make use of the good old internet to research on many available information pertinent to this subject matter . Lol* I hope I did not bore you out with the money talks. Nothing is pleasurable about money. The only pleasurable thing about money is spending it. Making it or managing it properly is the hard part. So brethren, next time you’ve just got paid and you are about to go cop that designers watch you’ve been drooling over, or that new gadget which you know you don’t really need you might like to think twice so you don’t fit into the popular expression that says, “ A fool and his money is one big party”.

                                                                                                          By Ndu-okeke Michael
                                                                                                          Email:iamdaflymyk@yahoo.com

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