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Forecasts
& Strategies
Personal Snapshots
April 2001
Rich
Investor, Poor Investor
by Mark Skousen
"The
poor and middle class work for money.... The rich have money
work for them."
—Robert T. Kiyosaki,
author, Rich Dad, Poor Dad
Many
of you may have read the best-seller, Rich Dad,
Poor Dad. The author, Hawaiian-born Robert Kiyosaki, criticizes
his own father, a high school teacher, for pursuing a traditional
low-risk lifestyle. His "poor" dad advises his son to get
a formal education, become a professional, get married and
have kids, buy a nice middle-class home, and invest regularly
in safe mutual funds and blue-chip stocks for long-term financial
security. At one point, he refers to his father as "my socialist
dad."
But
Robert is attracted more to his best friend's dad, a seat-of-the-pants
entrepreneur who runs a series of businesses out of his rundown
home. His adopted "rich" dad takes a riskier approach—forget
about a traditional education and profession. Be a risktaker
and a dealmaker! Drop out of school and start your own business.
His "rich" dad even advises that a house is a liability that
ties up seed capital that could be used in a new business
opportunity. This "rich" dad has no time for leisure or sports;
his passion is all business and making another deal.
Robert
rejects his "poor" dad's conservative approach in favor of
the high-risk adventures of the "rich" dad. He describes the
thrill of victory and the agony of defeat going this route.
Robert invests in income-producing real estate, business ventures
and penny stocks. At one point in his mid-40s, he's broke
and sleeping in his car. But in the end, he reports, it pays
off, and now he's a multi-millionaire and a motivational speaker.
I
admire hardworking, self-made entrepreneurs who honestly provide
a better product and become rich. But it's a big mistake to
recommend this high-risk approach to everyone. Not everyone
is suited to be a swashbuckling adventurer; most in fact are
better off working for others and investing in free enterprise
through the stock market.
Robert
is wrong to criticize his father and his conservative investment
strategies. There are many paths to the top of a mountain.
Read George Clason's Richest Man in Babylon.
I also dislike the arrogance and know-it-all attitude
of the author. Sometimes he comes across as a jerk. It is
simply wrong to suggest that owning a home without a mortgage
is a "liability." Businessmen who always have to make a deal,
who can't relax or enjoy spending time with the family, who
can't go out to dinner without talking business, who don't
enjoy reading, hobbies, or intellectual or spiritual pursuits,
are not to be admired, but pitied. Robert Kiyosaki needs to
read Lin Yutang's The Importance of Living (available
from Laissez Faire Books, 800/326-0996 or click www.lfb.com).
"Those who are too busy can't be wise."
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