What Schools Will Never Teach You About Money By Robert T. Kiyosaki
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- Extreme Risk
- 1. Job Security
UNfAiR ADvANTAgE #4
RiSK 117 FAQ Is real estate a good investment? Answer I don’t know. Are you a good real estate investor? FAQ Are stocks a good investment? Answer I don’t know. Are you a good stock investor? FAQ Is a business a good investment? Answer I don’t know. Are you a good entrepreneur? You get my point. Without financial education, you will lose your money, regardless of what you invest in. Extreme Risk On a regular basis I hear, “I just hate risk. I’d rather play it safe. I have enough challenges.” In their avoidance of risk, people lead lives of extreme risk. Chapter Four Unfair Advantage 119 118 Oxymoron The definition of oxymoron is: “Words that contradict each other.” Examples are: jumbo shrimp, government service, painless dentist, honest politician and holy war. In the world of money, the following are also oxymorons: 1. Job Security 2. Saving Money 3. Safe Investments 4. Fair Share 5. Mutual Fund 6. Diversified Portfolio 7. Debt-Free People who seek to avoid risk the most use these oxymorons the most. These oxymorons guide them into a life of extreme risk. Those with financial education know why these words are financial oxymorons. To those without financial education, these oxymorons sound like financial words of wisdom. I will explain: 1. Job Security When I graduated from high school, many of my classmates did not go on to college. They did not have to because there were many high-paying jobs waiting for high school graduates. Many of the thousands of jobs on the pineapple and sugar plantations were high-paying jobs for heavy equipment operators, cannery workers, and clerical workers. Most were unionized jobs with good pay and great benefits. Today, most of those plantations are gone. My classmates either work for McDonald’s or became entrepreneurs in “tropical agriculture,” aka marijuana. Many are doing just fine as outlaw farmers. Obviously, they do not pay much in taxes. To the outside world, they look like poor people collecting welfare, yet they drive late-model pickup trucks paid for in cash. Ironically, due to the current economic crisis and technology, many of my classmates who went on to college are the ones in financial trouble. One of the smartest and prettiest girls in my school, a few years younger than I am, a graduate of an elite small college in New England, is now unemployed and lives in the woods of rural Hawaii, almost a hermit. She is waiting to be old enough to collect Social Security and Medicare. Once President Nixon opened trade with China, jobs flowed overseas as our dollars helped China build new factories. As China built massive factories for low-wage workers, high- priced laborers in the United States were no longer needed. Middle-management positions for college graduates also began to disappear. Not only are low-wage jobs flowing overseas, but technology is also eliminating high-paying jobs. Technology is a growing reason for job security to be an oxymoron. In the 1920s, over 2 million Americans worked for the railroads. Today, railroads operate efficiently with fewer than 300,000 workers. Fewer workers mean increased profits for the owners of the railroads, owners like Warren Buffett, who in 2009 paid $34 billion to buy Burlington Northern Santa Fe railroad. Advances in technology eliminated jobs, and the reduced labor costs translated to profits for the owners. Why did Buffett buy a railroad rather than a hot new technology company? The answer is simple: steady cash flow. Jobs will continue to be lost because American workers are paid 40 times more than the lowest-wage workers in the world. This means jobs are not coming back. Even China, once a low- wage country, is in trouble as Chinese workers want higher wages. As Chinese workers earn more, jobs migrate to even lower-wage countries such as the Philippines, North Korea, Kyrgyzstan, and Indonesia. With breakthroughs in technology, it is the owners of businesses who win and the employees who lose. Even in Silicon Valley, where much of the new technology is created, manufacturing Chapter Four Unfair Advantage 121 120 takes place outside of America. The computer I use to write this book was designed in the United States and manufactured in China. As I am writing this book, I know that in a few months it will be on sale in several different languages in e-book and hard-copy format. After this book is written, my costs drop as income comes in from the asset I created. My business is expanding worldwide with fewer employees than in years past. Technology is a growing unfair advantage for those in the B quadrant and sometimes a disadvantage for those in the E and S quadrants. Those with job security will pay more and more in taxes. With growing national debt, governments will be raising taxes. The quadrants with the least wiggle room in minimizing taxes are employees in the E quadrant and specialists like doctors and lawyers in the S quadrant. In 2010, the government increased tax breaks for those in B and I quadrants but increased taxes on those in the E and S quadrants. Rising unemployment is not just a problem in the United States. It is a problem worldwide, even in China. Prolonged unemployment leads to social unrest, political revolution, and then overthrow of the government. This is why most countries will do almost anything to steal jobs from other countries. Download 5.81 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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