If Personal Finance Is Easy, Why Isn’t Everybody Rich?
Published on - June 8th, 2007 (Modified on - December 29th, 2007) (by J.D. Roth) Last fall I wrote an article describing how to get out of debt. Debt elimination involves three steps, I said: stop acquiring new debt, establish an emergency fund, and implement a debt snowball. A visitor named ST recently left this comment about the piece:
Seems that this post is about putting “overcoming your faults” over good financial sense. If you cannot equate credit cards with cash, that’s your problem.
If you think the advice here is good financially, it seems that you should go into therapy instead. Go into more debt in order to figure out how to live within your means by dealing with what’s making you act irrationally. A good friend of mine did that: therapy, then got a new job, then went to the bank and got a 6% loan to cover all her debts and paid off all her credit cards, starting with the highest interest (like any one with sense would do).
If, on the other hand, you’re in debt because of extenuating circumstances or college is just too darn expensive, then do what all the books say. Make a budget, consolidate debt, use 0% offers, use the one credit card with a 0 balance as it is cheaper than cash. You’ll get out of debt years faster than with this tripe. Come on, that bit about the “lowest balance,” is just inane. Why not do a balance transfer?
I get comments like this from time-to-time. “This stuff is easy,” some complain. “Why do you people have such a hard time with it?” These people are right — personal finance is easy — but I think they’re missing an important point. While the concepts are easy, their implementations are not.
Human beings are complex creatures. Some of us are highly logical. Some of us are emotional. Most of us fall someplace in between. We rarely make decisions based on optimal paths; more often, we choose what makes us happy in the short term. I’m not saying that this is the right thing to do — it’s just what happens. For those who routinely make financial decisions based on emotion, it can be difficult to turn things around.
Complaining that personal finance is easy and “why doesn’t everyone do what they ought” is like saying that running a marathon is easy so why can’t everybody run one? Most of us understand how to prepare for a marathon — eat right and run a hell of a lot — but few of us have the dedication and mental fortitude to complete one. However, with a little discipline and some hard work, most people can complete a 10k race.
It’s the same with personal finance. It’s easy to say, “To build wealth, you must spend less than you earn”, but it’s another thing to do it, especially over the long term. In some ways, building wealth is more difficult than running a marathon. Training for and completing a marathon takes months. Dedicating yourself to a sensible financial plan is a lifetime process.
If personal finance were really as simple as understanding the math, we would all be rich. But it’s not. And we’re not. That’s why I think any small financial victory is important. That’s why I run this web site, and why I share whatever tips I can find.
I always say “do what works for you”. Some people are able to succeed by paying high-interest debt first. But some people — myself included — have only been able to succeed by trying another approach. The approach may not be best from a mathematical viewpoint, but I believe that any method that actually helps you meet your goals is better than one that doesn’t.
This article is about Psychology
SEARCH FOR RECENT ARTICLES




[...] June 8th: If personal finance is easy, why isn’t everybody rich? [...]
loading....
I think both the person who responded and you have important points. In the short term, it’s best to find something that makes an incremental improvement. If paying off the lowest balance motivates someone to move beyond not paying at all great. The responder is also correct, however, that in the long run, therapy, coaching or personal growth methods might help improve even beyond this. For some people, being unable to delay gratification or do some of the psychological things necessary to take the optimal financial approach represent personality traits that the are fine with. For others, it may be almost an addictive type of issue and coaching or therapy can indeed create a better mindset that is sustainable over the long runn.
So I think it’s a combination of short term improvement and long term personal growth that can make for the best outcome overall.
loading....
I’ve watched family for years. They are so ignorant. I know it isn’t easy, but not even trying to change their behavior? Please.
They do the same crap all the time. Then, they come try to borrow money from me. I make less than a lot of them, and had more children.
Most of the time, I say no, except in extreme emergencies.
loading....
Liz, thankyou.
loading....
Sorry, ST is full of crap. There are societal, policy, and monetary policies in place that encourage people to go into debt rather than be frugal and save.
“Go into more debt in order to figure out how to live within your means by dealing with what’s making you act irrationally.”
This quote is the most stupid thing I have ever heard, right up there with the Community Reinvestment Act. What if you cannot get a new or better job? Therapy indeed.You probably walk by the fellow with the shopping cart or the vet in the wheelchair with a can and say, “Get a job.”
Borrow no money for any reason other than a home or car and avoid that if possible. Sorry, but this credit based, debt driven consumer economy is a crock. We need to return to where we as individuals accumulate capital instead of debts and we are a productive economy financed and expanded by accumulated capital instead of a a consumer economy where bubbles are created by cheap money. There is no better feeling than owing no man a debt. The borrower is the servant of the lender until it is resolved.
At least pay all interest each month so it does not capitalize and pay down the principle. If you cannot do that within your paycheck or your creditors will not negotiate terms so that you can do that, you may need to seek professional debt counseling or legal advice.
Do not feel badly about seeking legal advice, either. If they can bailout the Maserati boys on Wallstreet they can bygod take a hit for you, too, is my opinion.
loading....