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Passive Income Expert: Buying A House Makes You Poorer Than Renting!

2h 14m 55s25,048 mots3,673 segmentsEnglish

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0:00

If your goal is to become financially

0:01

independent at a young age, this is a

0:03

very controversial thing to say, you

0:05

probably don't want to go buy a house

0:07

because people typically buy a house

0:09

they can't possibly afford. The bank

0:11

wants you to do that cuz that's how they

0:13

make the most money. So, you're putting

0:14

your capital into that house and now

0:16

it's not going to be earning thing. It's

0:17

going to be sitting idally. And people

0:19

say, "Well, you know, I can buy this

0:21

house cuz my mortgage is the same as my

0:23

rent." Well, yeah, but your mortgage is

0:26

just the starting point. So, what comes

0:28

to mind if I want to be financially

0:29

wealthy?

0:30

>> Okay, so we've got a lot to go through.

0:32

>> J Collins is a renowned financial expert

0:34

known for his book, The Simple Path to

0:36

Wealth.

0:36

>> He's teaching millions a straightforward

0:38

and realistic avenue for achieving

0:40

wealth

0:40

>> so that anyone can have financial

0:42

security.

0:43

>> What is the simple path to wealth?

0:45

>> So, first of all, avoid debt because you

0:48

can never be financially independent if

0:50

you're carrying around debt. Next, live

0:51

on less than you [music] earn. But the

0:53

problem is the way our culture has

0:54

taught us to think about money is solely

0:56

in terms of what can you buy with it.

0:58

But the more musthaves you have in your

1:01

life, the less likely you are to become

1:03

wealthy. And then the final one, invest

1:05

the surplus. So stocks are the single

1:08

most effective, strongest wealth

1:10

building tool that's ever been created.

1:13

But the biggest push back I get is from

1:15

people who say, "Well, that's great. I

1:16

mean, if you got a big income, 100, 200,

1:18

$300,000 a year, then yeah, the simple

1:20

path to wealth will work for you."

1:22

That's not the truth. For instance, a

1:23

friend of mine and he was making a

1:25

million dollars a year and he was broke

1:26

because people have large incomes are

1:28

much more likely to be drawn into the

1:30

competing with the Joneses, whereas the

1:33

people who make less money probably

1:34

don't have those same social pressures

1:36

and are more readily able to do it. So,

1:38

>> let's talk about investing then. Where

1:39

do you think we should be investing our

1:40

money at this moment of time? Should I

1:42

buy Bitcoin? Do I need a financial

1:44

adviser? So, my advice, and this is a

1:46

little different than the more common

1:48

advice out there, would be

1:51

>> this has always blown my mind a little

1:52

bit. 53% of you that listen to this show

1:55

regularly haven't yet subscribed to the

1:57

show. So, could I ask you for a favor

1:59

before we start? If you like the show

2:00

and you like what we do here and you

2:02

want to support us, the free simple way

2:03

that you can do just that is by hitting

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the subscribe button. And my commitment

2:07

to you is if you do that, then I'll do

2:08

everything in my power, me and my team,

2:10

to make sure that this show is better

2:12

for you every single week. We'll listen

2:13

to your feedback. We'll find the guest

2:15

that you want me to speak to and we'll

2:17

continue to do what we do. Thank you so

2:19

much.

2:21

[music and singing]

2:26

JL Collins,

2:29

you wrote a book, a very iconic book

2:31

that sold millions of copies called The

2:34

Simple Path to Wealth. Why did you write

2:37

this book?

2:38

>> I actually that book was an outgrowth of

2:40

my blog.

2:42

I started the blog to archive

2:44

information I wanted my daughter to have

2:47

available because if you get money

2:49

right, your life is so much better. You

2:52

have so many more options. And the world

2:56

offers so much to people who have the

2:59

resources with which to access it and so

3:02

little for those people who don't have

3:05

the resources to access those things.

3:07

And and if you don't have it, it life is

3:11

just so much harder than it than it

3:13

needs to be.

3:14

>> When you think about the average person

3:16

listening right now, what is what are

3:18

some of the fundamental sort of

3:20

misconceptions or misunderstandings or

3:23

what would you call it? Black spots that

3:24

they have as it relates to money, the

3:26

things they walk around assuming about

3:28

money that are incorrect

3:31

>> that that you were maybe trying to get

3:32

out of your daughter's mind.

3:33

>> Right? So there's a chapter in the book

3:35

called how to think about money. And the

3:39

fundamental way I think the vast

3:42

majority of people think about money

3:44

because this is what our culture has

3:45

taught us. The way our culture has

3:47

taught us to think about money is solely

3:50

in terms of what can you buy with it.

3:53

[snorts] So if you go to the average

3:54

person that lottery for instance is like

3:57

a billion dollars at the moment. So

3:59

people are buying lottery tickets. And

4:01

if you interviewed people standing in

4:03

line to buy lottery tickets and said,

4:04

"Okay, if you win this million dollar,

4:06

what are you going to do with it?" Well,

4:07

what you're typically going to hear is,

4:08

"Well, I'm going to pay off my debts and

4:10

I'm going to pay off my mortgage and I'm

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going to buy my parents a house and I'm

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going to buy myself a Lamborghini. I'm

4:16

going to buy I'm going to buy I'm going

4:17

to buy." That's the way most people

4:20

think about money. And that's certainly

4:23

one of the things that money is very

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good at. It is a means of exchange.

4:27

But the other thing your money can do

4:29

for you is work for you. Your money can

4:32

make you more money. So you can exchange

4:35

your time and effort and labor to earn

4:38

money. And that's what most of us do.

4:42

But you can also divert some of the

4:44

money you earn into investments into

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what I call buying your freedom. And now

4:50

your money is working for you. So

4:52

instead of just thinking about what your

4:53

money can buy, you can start thinking

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about what can your money earn.

4:57

>> You can buy your freedom.

4:59

>> You can buy your freedom, your financial

5:01

freedom.

5:02

>> Why is that an important refraraming of

5:05

the role of money in your view? What

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does that do if I start thinking about

5:09

it through that lens? Well, because as

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long as you are dependent on exchanging

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your effort, time, and labor for money,

5:17

you are beholden to whoever is willing

5:20

to pay you to do that. That's a limit of

5:23

freedom. It's a it's a form of, without

5:27

being too dramatic, a form of slavery.

5:30

If you are always living paycheck to

5:32

paycheck to pay the mortgage or the rent

5:34

or whatever, if on the other hand, work

5:37

is optional, you're a good example. and

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you've been a very successful guy.

5:41

[snorts]

5:42

You're not doing this podcast because

5:44

you need the money. If you were still

5:47

stuck at a job that paid you a wage, you

5:50

wouldn't have the option to do this

5:53

because you'd have to devote all your

5:54

time to that job so you could pay the

5:57

mortgage, so you could pay the rent, so

5:59

you could put food on the table. Money

6:01

buys freedom.

6:02

>> How does one get out of that situation?

6:04

you know, if I I used to work in call

6:06

centers um answering phones and selling

6:08

people things.

6:10

>> How does one in your view realistically

6:13

get from that place where you are kind

6:15

of beholden to the paycheck? And I was

6:17

I'd spend my wage within the first week

6:19

or so of the month and then I'd just

6:21

suffer for the next 3 weeks. In the UK,

6:22

we have like a four week paying cycle. I

6:24

think in the US it's 2 weeks typically,

6:25

but I took a I think a reckless road out

6:27

of that life. The thing that gave me the

6:30

proclivity to take the risk is like some

6:33

kind of insecurity and trauma where like

6:35

I couldn't I didn't have a plan B

6:37

because I wanted to be I wanted to like

6:39

validate myself or something. And so I

6:41

wonder if the the skill or the thing

6:43

that I was given that I'm most thankful

6:44

for is like some kind of chip on my

6:47

shoulder,

6:48

>> some kind of drama.

6:49

>> Yeah. But but on genuinely because I

6:51

think like what would make you take a

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