by jmnemonic » Tue 21 Dec 2010, 22:11:09
Protecting wealth. Well, to protect wealth, you first have to decide what wealth actually is, and that's not the same thing to everyone. For example, having grown up in abject poverty, often without heat or adequate nutrition, blah blah blah, I now consider wealth to be: security, shelter, health, food, time, books. If I have enough of those things to last me the rest of my life, then I feel wealthy indeed. But achieving that (as best one can) does mean dealing with the world of 'money' at this point in time (and 'money' is not the same as 'wealth' in my mind, at all, though when things work out you can exchange money for wealth).
So, dealing with the reality that one has to currently deal with this whole global monetary system, myself and my significant other (of 21 years and going strong) have taken the following steps:
1) Eliminated debt, including home and car debt
2) Diversified our 'money' - pension, two IRAs, several savings accounts, some TIPS, some cash (plus ongoing income from both of us)
3) Invested (back in the mid-to-late 90s) in some precious metals and coins, mostly gold (and we're adding an ounce of gold/year to the stack now)
4) Bought a bunch of collectibles (mainly rare signed books and comic books) when people were unloading at firesale prices during the panic of 2008-2009
5) Began accumulating buttloads of food and important staples at today's prices
The coins and gold - maybe trade goods later. Mainly just money-preservation there. (Hope they're still worth something when money isn't though.) The comics and books serve a dual purpose: 1) in normal times books give about a 10% annual return, doubling in value every 7 years, after inflation (and comics are doing fine now too); and 2) in the event that 'the system' goes down and there is no more TV/internet/electricity, well, we'll have a bunch of excellent books to read. Yeah, I'd feel weird actually (re)READING a Foundation Trilogy that's been signed by Asimov, but hey, if it's the end of the world, what the hell.
Not trying to get rich. Just trying to not get poor. Been poor already, and it sucked. (But in the way I measure wealth, I do actually feel rather rich - I'm certainly happy with my life as it is, and appreciate it all the more for knowing that this likely will not - cannot - last.)