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Last December, Congress passed the largest U.S. tax system overhaul in more than 30 years—a $1.5 trillion tax cut, but America’s middle class will see less than a quarter of the savings under the legislation.
In 2018, middle-income households—those earning $20,000-$100,000—will see a tax cut of about $930 on average. Just about half of American adults live in middle-class households, down from 61% in 1971 according to the Pew Research Center. For a while now, I’ve been predicting that the middle class would disappear and that we would have only two classes of people in the U.S., the poor and the ultra-rich.
The middle class is made up of people who work for a living, earning wages doing carpentry, plumbing, factory work, and all types of services. They live paycheck to paycheck with very little in savings or investing in retirement.
Those earning more than $500,000 a year will get $61 billion in cuts in 2019. This includes income earned by pass-through businesses such as partnerships and S-corporations that pay taxes on individual returns. This is because tax cuts for small businesses will help boost the economy—helping job growth.
This isn’t a story of economic gloom, it’s a financial education that you won’t hear through mainstream media. There are four financial forces that cause most people to work hard and yet struggle financially:
1. Taxes
2. Debt
3. Inflation
4. Retirement
Which one of these four affects you personally?
If he were alive today, my poor dad would have struggled financially even without his bad investments. He most likely would not have been comfortable. Today, the middle class is quickly disappearing. But it’s a different sort of disappearance than people think. As Jim Rickards writes, “The middle-class numbers are not necessarily getting smaller. The problem is that middle class doesn’t mean what it used to mean.” I believe the population is actually dwindling, but this is an important understanding. There is still a population living and breathing in the 40-60% mid range of earnings. But because all the ways my poor dad achieved a level of financial comfort no longer work in today’s economy, that distinction doesn’t entitle you to the security you would have had even twenty years ago.
Today, savers are losers, houses are worth less and less, there are no pensions, and essential goods for life are more and more expensive. Today, inequality is higher than it’s ever been.
How the Rich Get Richer
Here’s the kicker. The rich know how to use these forces to make more money rather than have them steal their wealth.
The rich know how to make investments and run businesses that allow them to pay little to no taxes.
The rich know how to use debt and other people’s money to make investments that provide constant cash flow while paying that debt off.
The rich know how to make investments that hedge against inflation and make them money while others are falling behind.
The rich know how to utilize all these forces to have a secure retirement provided by cash-flowing assets.
The rich can do all of this because they understand how money works and have a high financial IQ.
How So-Called Experts Keep People Poor by Limiting Their Mindset
The problem with conventional advice about money is that it’s not only conventional but also often wrong. In fact, much of the money advice out there is designed to keep you from becoming poor rather than to inspire a mindset to grow rich.
The following advice is most often peddled to the middle class:
1. Live below your means
2. Limit takeaways
3. Cash over credit
4. DIY projects
5. Talk to your family about budgeting
6. Set an example
7. Write it down
Broadly, these can be condensed into three broad categories of bad budgeting advice that are foundational to members of the middle class.
Bad Advice #1: Live in a world of scarcity
The classic mantra to “live below your means” is one of the most destructive things you can teach someone about money. It teaches people to think in terms of scarcity. “You only have so much, so you must be careful not to run out.” It kills drive to create more.
Bad Advice #2: Set Limits
When you live in a world of scarcity, you must find ways to conserve what you have. So, naturally you set limits. Not going out to eat, creating systems to limit spending, and doing everything yourself instead of hiring an expert; all are ways those with a scarcity mindset set limits to “save” money. Unfortunately, they sometimes don’t save money, and even when they do, they feel unfulfilled, stressed, and don’t get to enjoy the things they want to.
Bad Advice #3: Set the wrong example
Ultimately, if you follow the advice of conventional money experts and model this behavior for your family, you’ll continue to raise generations who struggle to make ends meet financially. Worse yet, you’ll teach them to see the world as one of scarcity, limiting their mindset and potential in the process.
What Can You Do?
When I do any sort of interview, whether for a news outlet or a blogger, the first question I usually get asked is about why I wrote Rich Dad Poor Dad. I always answer that it was because I saw the financial crisis of today coming and I wanted to help as many people as possible to get out of the rat race.
The second question is usually about my relationship with Donald Trump. They want to know if I believe that Trump is a great President and will save America. Even though I have great respect for Donald, I don’t think it matters who is in the White House. It is the banks and Wall Street that control our money—and ensures money control your life.
Today, the middle class has exchanged its wealth for handouts. One explanation is that handouts feel securer than self-reliance. This is a fine sentiment until one day you wake up and realize that you’re poor. It’s even more frightening when you realize the government you rely on is …read more
From:: Daily Reckoning