Just got done listening to an interview with Stephen Pollen, who wrote a book called "Die Broke". Since this board frequently discusses the issues of an economic depression, I thought his ideas were especially relevent.
Die Broke
For those of you without Real Player he basically says:
- Only use credit for major purchases (house, car, etc.)
- Only spend the money you have, save for future purchases
- Don't plan on retiring, it's a backwards idea and it's easier just to save
moderately and plan on working in some form or another well into your
later years
- Don't leave your inheritance to your children when you die and they're
already grown, take care of them when they really need it (0-25 years)
I thought this was great advice, because all he's doing is telling people use some common sense and live within their means. It echoes what people say on this board about just getting off the consumer merri-go-round. I really like how he says, "It may be a bit painful at first, but it will be far more painful in the future if you continue to rely on credit".
Granted that's the whole problem, American culture says to think about the now and spend beyond your means, worry about the consequences later. Most people refuse to endure any pain (i.e. one average TV instead of a TV for each bedroom and a bigscreen in the living room) and just ignore how their credit spending hurts them.
Just amazes how financial advisors will give people this advice and people refuse to listen. Heck, it's the same message the Motley Fool preaches too.
Call me genuinely curious to see what would happen if everybody in this country followed this advice ...I'd love the see the gov't freak when savings rise dramatically and GDP slows to about 1% growth.






