You don't get rich by spending money you don't have to.
Maybe that's because they also won the $850K lottery.:sneaky:That's b/c those that make 25,000 and under are on food stamps. Have you ever seen someone with EBT cards shop at a grocery store. They eat way better than my family does... sort of.
didn't realize that a household income of over $75k is considered "rich" now a days...
You don't get rich by spending money you don't have to.
All I can say is, if you guys honestly believe someone making $10 per hour is going to end up wealthy by saving and investing their money, I have a bridge I want to sell you in Brooklyn.
If you earn $10 per hour and even if you could somehow manage to save half of your income and put it into an interest bearing account, you would never live long enough to have enough money to be considered wealthy.
Lets take an example.
Husband, wife and 1 kid. Husband works the $10/hour job, 40 hours a week, every week and lives in Illinois, wife stays at home with the kid. In Illinois he would receive $233 (more or less, this number from a quick and dirty online calculator from the state) for food a month, he would also qualify for Medicaid. I'm not sure exactly if he would qualify for reimbursement for AC/Heat.
Income is:
$1600/month from job
$233/month for food from state
$4850/year = $404/month from federal government as a tax credit for having kids and basically no money
Total:
$2237/month
Bare essentials:
$500/month rent
$120/month for utilities on average (got that number from my personal average of gas, electricity, sewer, water, and garbage)
$233/month on food (won't be eating great, but certainly can be done)
$30/month in clothing (bought from Goodwill/Salvation army. Though they would be so poor I'm sure getting donations would be possible. So could be $0/month, but lets just stick with $30/month)
$100/month for misc. child costs
Total: $983/month
Remaining: 2237-853=$1254/month
Pretty much essentials:
$2000 paid for beater car that lasts, for the sake of argument, 3 years before a new beater is needed.
$2000/36 months = $55/month
$100/month in gas
$40/month in insurance
$40/month for maintenance
$10/month for cell phone service (or likely $0/month with something like SafeLink Wireless)
$20/month for DSL internet
Total: $265/month
Remaining: 1254-265=$989
That invest half his income comes to $800/month, that leaves $189 to save each month to build an emergency fund.
Investing that $800/month into good mutual funds long term, will get about that 7% inflation adjusted amount
Check out some dates with
http://www.moneychimp.com/features/market_cagr.htm
If you invest long term (15+ years) there isn't a 15 year period in which you would lose money, with returns in the 5%-15% range usually.
So in short, its doable. Difficult (you would barely have any life at all), and you would be getting government assistance. But you could do it.
Edit: Forgot about the ROTH IRA tax credit which they would qualify for at that income level, which would give another $1000/year as a credit (so $83/month)
Double Edit: $2000/year as they are married on that income, so $166/month extra. That would pay for some fun on the side.
No real health insurance and a kid... ya I'm sure he's saving half of his disposable income. Also if you think 1 kid costs you $100/mo, you're out of your mind.
http://www.babycenter.com/baby-cost-calculator
In post number 17 you said at 5 percent interest it would amount to $587 thousand dollars. I hardly think that amount qualifies someone as being wealthy. Besides that, how can you possibly predict that someone will earn an average of 5 percent in the future?
Several of my friends had quite a large retirement going before the recession. Now I doubt they will be able to retire with half the money they once had.
As far as interest rates go, according to this website http://www.westendbank.com/banking_services/current_rates.html
the current rate of a Roth IRA is 2.8 percent. Obviously the rates are different at different banks, but the rates won't be THAT much different. Now I realize there are different Roth IRA's and different ones pay different rates. There are also different Money Market Funds and of course they also pay at different rates. But judging by this website they aren't doing real well at the moment either. Who knows when, or even if, they will get better?
You are absolutely right, I said save $5 per hour. But if you read the post carefully I also said "if someone could somehow manage to save that much". But regardless, you are right, I did say that.
In post number 17 you said at 5 percent interest it would amount to $587 thousand dollars. I hardly think that amount qualifies someone as being wealthy. Besides that, how can you possibly predict that someone will earn an average of 5 percent in the future?
Several of my friends had quite a large retirement going before the recession. Now I doubt they will be able to retire with half the money they once had.
As far as interest rates go, according to this website http://www.westendbank.com/banking_services/current_rates.html
the current rate of a Roth IRA is 2.8 percent. Obviously the rates are different at different banks, but the rates won't be THAT much different. Now I realize there are different Roth IRA's and different ones pay different rates. There are also different Money Market Funds and of course they also pay at different rates. But judging by this website they aren't doing real well at the moment either. Who knows when, or even if, they will get better?
Anyway, the whole point I was making is that saving money is a good idea, but unless you make quite a bit of money and can save a lot of it and invest it wisely, you will not end up wealthy. So if you plan on being wealthy in this fashion, you would probably do much better if a rich relative dies and leaves you a fortune.
1) Even caid has copaysHealth insurance would be through Medicaid. And baby costs are pretty low if you breast feed, and if the mother stays at home with the child (which she does in my scenario). Using that website, diapers at $72/month, clothing is already accounted for (and is dirt cheap at salvation army, goodwill, or other stores like that. We ain't buying new stuff for the baby, that's for sure). Toys and whatnot can be picked up for free/cheap on craigslist, from family, goodwill/salvation army. So we got medicine and toiletries as the last category, they give $23 and $21/month respectively. So we can bump up the misc. baby stuff to 72+23+21=$116/month. I guess I was $16 off.
Of course, you'd be leaving a very unglamorous life, and to survive like that would take lots of dedication and hard work. But the point is, its doable if you really go crazy.
But of course, as someone already mentioned. If you can work hard enough to make it work on such a tiny budget, you probably will end up making more than $10/hr at a job. But in the land of hypothetical, I think it saving half your income at $10/hr is possible.
1) Even caid has copays
http://www.colorado.gov/cs/Satellite/HCPF/HCPF/1212398230851
2) $2K beater car will run you way more than 2k to keep operational
3) No rainy day fund, unless you want to pay penalties on your IRA.
The point being that this is the super best case hypothetical scenario that essentially doesn't play out in the real life. This is why empirically it's not possible to save half of your income in poverty.
You are absolutely right, I said save $5 per hour. But if you read the post carefully I also said "if someone could somehow manage to save that much". But regardless, you are right, I did say that.
1. That was assuming they invested in a Roth IRA today which has a maximum yearly investment of $5,000. If they save $5 per hour they would have been saving ~$10,700 per year. I did that because Roth IRAs are tax free in every sense of the word (you can deduct it from your taxes and when you do withdraw you aren't taxed on it.) That is nearly $600,000 of tax free money, a large chunk by anyone's standard.In post number 17 you said at 5 percent interest it would amount to $587 thousand dollars. I hardly think that amount qualifies someone as being wealthy. Besides that, how can you possibly predict that someone will earn an average of 5 percent in the future?
How long have they been investing? My parents retirement fund did suffer from the down turn (it set them back about 5 years) but it did not completely wipe them out. Given the money they earned from all the good years, they are still in good shape. They wouldn't be where they are at now had they not invested in the first place. Crap happens, it doesn't happen all the time.Several of my friends had quite a large retirement going before the recession. Now I doubt they will be able to retire with half the money they once had.
Roth IRAs are based off of whatever you want to base them off of. They can be based off of mutial funds, straight stocks, bonds, whatever.As far as interest rates go, according to this website http://www.westendbank.com/banking_services/current_rates.html
the current rate of a Roth IRA is 2.8 percent.
Nobody knows. Be given the past we can be optimistic that it will get better.Obviously the rates are different at different banks, but the rates won't be THAT much different. Now I realize there are different Roth IRA's and different ones pay different rates. There are also different Money Market Funds and of course they also pay at different rates. But judging by this website they aren't doing real well at the moment either. Who knows when, or even if, they will get better?
Bullcrap. Anyone can benefit from investing. Rich people don't invest in the stock market because "They have tons of money, so why not." they invest in the stock market because it is the smartest thing they can do with their money.Anyway, the whole point I was making is that saving money is a good idea, but unless you make quite a bit of money and can save a lot of it and invest it wisely, you will not end up wealthy. So if you plan on being wealthy in this fashion, you would probably do much better if a rich relative dies and leaves you a fortune.
Go look up rich dad, poor dad. It explains some of the things that wealthier parents teach their kids about money.
eeeehhhh, not really. That's one of those "self help get rich quick" books.
The fastest way to get rich is to write a book about the fastest way to get rich.
eeeehhhh, not really. That's one of those "self help get rich quick" books.
The fastest way to get rich is to write a book about the fastest way to get rich.
nah, it's start your own church
Go look up rich dad, poor dad. It explains some of the things that wealthier parents teach their kids about money.
