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Posted in Q&A, The Basics
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02/15 2010

Want to get rich? Read these books

Dear Liz: I’m doing all the right things: accumulating an emergency fund, contributing to retirement funds and paying down the mortgage. I currently save about $12,000 of my $90,000 annual salary. Beyond this, how do I take the right steps to large wealth accumulation, as in $3 million to $5 million?

Answer: You’re already on your way. If you bump up your retirement contributions by at least the rate of inflation each year and earn an 8% average annual return over time, you should hit $3 million in about 35 years.

If you want to accumulate your fortune faster, you should save more, achieve a better-than-average investment return, or both.

If you’re serious about accumulating wealth, get a copy of “The Millionaire Next Door” by Thomas J. Stanley and William D. Danko. The authors outline how people really get rich in the U.S.: by living well below their means and making saving and investing a priority. Many of them also have their own businesses. The risk of failure for small businesses is high, but those who succeed keep more of the upside than those who work for someone else.

Stanley and Danko repeatedly make the point that the millionaires they studied were more interested in building wealth than in displaying high-status trappings. They tend not to drive fancy cars, wear expensive watches or spend a fortune on clothes. In his most recent book, “Stop Acting Rich,” Stanley makes the point that millionaires also tend to spend modestly on homes: Few have more than one, and most choose houses and neighborhoods that are easily affordable, rather than a strain on their finances.

These books can provide you a road map for your own path to wealth and provide inspiration for the journey.

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