September 19, 2024
The most powerful way to think about money | Paula Pant
 #Finance

The most powerful way to think about money | Paula Pant #Finance


– Every choice that you make comes with a trade-off. (cheerful music) Money is an invitation to critical thinking. You can afford anything, but not everything. So if there’s something that you value, whether it’s travel, food, or a house, you can have that thing. You just

can’t have an endless series of ands. You might not be able to have that thing and something else and something else and something else. And that doesn’t just apply to your money. That applies to your time, your focus, your energy, your attention – any limited resource. And life

is the ultimate limited resource. So when you practice being better at managing your money, you practice being better at managing your life. My name is Paula Pant. I am the host of the “Afford Anything Podcast.” I want to help you reach financial independence by making smarter decisions

with your money. (contemplative music) The mistake that I see a lot of people make when they start asking questions about how to manage their money is that oftentimes people will ask a question about a product or a tactic. So for example, they might say, “Should I use this app, or should I

invest in Cryptocurrency?” First-principles thinking is stripping away everything and really getting to the root of something. So if you think about a tree, the tactics and the products

are like the leaves of a tree. That’s the most visible surface so, of course, it’s what people might ask about first. But first, let’s start with the roots of that tree. The roots of that tree are your values. It’s that question of what matters most. And then from those

roots stem that trunk of the tree, which is your philosophy of life, the type of life that you want to lead. And from that philosophy, then your objective or your goals: How does that philosophy of living translate into specific goals? That’s really that tree trunk. From there, you go out

into the branches of the tree, and they represent the strategy. Now that you know your philosophy of living, you know your goals, now you can come up with strategies for how to obtain those goals. And then once you have that strategy in place, then those leaves are the tactics and the products. So

if you’re starting with the question about tactic or product, you’ve got a leaf in your hand, but you don’t have that root system built yet. When personal none;">Finance is framed in the context of delayed gratification so that you can have more money when you’re 75 years old, it’s really hard to get excited about that. But when we reframe that as financial independence and how taking better care of your money leads to this

flourishing of freedom, of opportunity, of choice, that becomes much more enticing. FI is the point at which your potential passive Income – money that comes to you when you’re sleeping, typically through Investments – is enough to cover your

basic bills. And the reason that matters is because then endless options open up for you. You have the freedom to do whatever you want – whether that’s to stay in your current profession, make a midlife career change, become a full-time parent, or travel the world. Whatever choice you

want to make, you’re able to make that without having to sweat about how you’re gonna keep the lights on, how you’re gonna keep the fridge stocked. The pursuit of FI is for everyone, but the first steps that you are going to take will differ depending on where you are in your

journey. There are really only three steps to achieving financial independence: Grow the gap, invest the gap, repeat. Grow the gap means to grow the gap between what you earn and what you spend. And there are only two ways to increase that gap: earn more or spend less or both. If you don’t

make very much, like me when I was in my first job out of college making $21,000 a year, at that stage of life, your goal is to increase your Income. If you’re already making big dollars but you have a spending problem, the low-hanging fruit is to curb that spending problem

and to address the root psychological issues that are leading to that spending problem. Step two is to then invest that gap. My personal feeling is that everyone should aim to save and invest at least 20% of their Income. And when I say save and invest, that includes making

additional payments towards the Debt above and beyond the minimum required, retirement Savings, Investments in an investment account. It includes building up your emergency fund. Start with the goal of saving 20%, and if you’re nowhere close

to that, increase your Savings rate by 1% and do that every month or two. It will take a few years, but you will over time get to that 20% mark. And then step three is repeat. This is a lifetime practice. This is not a quick hit or something that’s going to happen overnight.

Money management happens for life. (contemplative music) There has never been a point in history when the world has not been volatile. A hundred years ago, there was also a pandemic going on, and there was a first World War. A decade later, the Great Depression. After that was World War II. After

that, event after event after event that affected the entire globe. I came to FI because I was scared and anxious about the volatility in my life and the world. My response to that was to become obsessed with saving as much as I could because it allowed me to not be so scared of the future. It felt

psychologically comforting to have these Savings. Change is the nature of the world, the nature of time. And so, if you’re looking out at the big global factors that are happening in the world today and you’re feeling fear, embrace it and use that fear as motivation, as

fuel to make wise decisions about how you spend your money, your time, your effort. That’s how you build a life that’s more intentional. And there’s a lot of joy in that. (cheerful music) – [Narrator] Get smarter faster with CashNews.cos from the world’s biggest

thinkers. (cheerful music) To learn even more from the world’s biggest thinkers, get Big Think Plus for your business. (cheerful music)

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20 thoughts on “The most powerful way to think about money | Paula Pant #Finance

  1. One lesson I've learnt from billionaires is to always put your money to work, and diversifying your investments. I'm planning to invest about $200k of my savings in stocks this year, and I hope I make profits.

  2. Money is like jumping out of an airplane without a parachute.

    So the bad news is that you don't have parachute, but the good news is that you discover there is no ground. And then you're just endlessly falling and you never reach the ground.

    So in a sense, what i'm asking you to do is to jump. And you don't want to jump. You're saying, I'm scared. I'm too scared to jump. And I'm saying, jump. God is telling you, jump, jump into infinite love and it's going to be great. But you're like, what if I kill myself and what if something else happens? I don't know. You just jump into infinite love. Take the leap of faith and you'll discover infinite love. And you're too scared to do it. But then eventually when you do it, then you're just going to discover that there's no ground. You're endlessly falling forever and it's great. But yeah, taking that leap is really difficult. It requires you to face your death. So of course, everybody is too afraid to do it. People are just to scared.

  3. There will be this awareness that we need to rethink how the money system works, we need to get out of a debt-based economy. We cannot allow a small power elite to create money and reap the profit from lending it with interest. This is something that the state needs to take on, and the state needs to be in control of the money system so that only the state benefits and thereby the people benefit. If the state makes money off of money, people do not have to pay so much taxes.

    It needs to be seen that the only institution in society that has a right to make money off of money is the state. The state, of course, cannot go into the many forms of schemes that the capitalists have come up with in order to manipulate the economy because the state has no interest in manipulating the economy. It simply has an interest in creating a money system that allows for the greatest amount of creativity, movability of the money, the greatest ability to finance new businesses. This will promote a growth in the economy, and the more the economy grows, the more it is in the interest of all of the people and also, of course, in the interest of the state. These are very, very dramatic shifts compared to what you have today but they are not so unrealistic that they are so far off. It can come to that point where there is such an awareness of the existence of power elites that they will very quickly be put out of commission by the democratic nations. There will be either a raised awareness of how the power elites work and how anti-democratic it is, or there would be an awareness that if we do not reform the money system, then our economies, our debt-based economies, are going to collapse. The debt has reached such proportions that no country can pay it back and it is, in fact, in no way democratic, in no way in accordance with the democratic ideals, that the population of an entire country are enslaved financially so that for the next many decades a majority of their resources will go to pay back the interest to a small power elite. How is this democracy? How is this freedom? How is this allowable in a democratic nation, in a democratic world?

  4. This video really gives a good briefing to a couple of great financial books such as ( Why the rich are getting richer; by Robert Kiyosaki. & Money, master the game; By Anthony Robbins.

  5. Appreciate your videos! I’m 54 and younger generations should know there’s no shortcut to acquiring wealth, but there are ways to go about it. Fellow millionaires don’t tell the poor/middle class they need the knowledge of finance coaches to help build their wealth. If anyone here needs a good coach, here’s it..

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