Why Teachers Consistently Become Millionaires

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  • Опубликовано: 21 июл 2023
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Комментарии • 1,9 тыс.

  • @javaskull88
    @javaskull88 10 месяцев назад +1942

    As an accountant, I agree. Professions like accountancy and teaching and engineering don’t attract people who want excitement or a flashy lifestyle. We’re not impulsive. We value stability. We don’t feel the need to impress others. We’re a little boring and that’s ok. Like the turtle who beats the rabbit in a race, we make slow, steady progress toward our goals.

    • @genxx2724
      @genxx2724 10 месяцев назад +35

      🎯

    • @Apple_3.1415
      @Apple_3.1415 10 месяцев назад +102

      Engineer here! Agreed!
      I still drive the 2013 Kia I got back in college. Definitely not flashy, but it’s paid off and has been well maintained 😅

    • @front331
      @front331 10 месяцев назад +49

      I'm in the process of becoming a teacher and it's intriguing how engineers have that frugal mindset and lifestyle even though they make 5x than us. I think it's because the education we get along the way teaches us discipline but mostly it's because of the math involved. Most people see math as a boring subject where you play around with a bunch of numbers and perform tricks (orders of operations), but math teaches you that methodology they were talking about. It's all algorithmic and procedural just like becoming wealthy and engineers are even better than math teachers at procedures and algorithms.

    • @9libertybell
      @9libertybell 10 месяцев назад +40

      ​@front331 , the engineering field is about solving problems and maximizing the utilization of resources. Major design projects have limited budgets, materials, and construction support availability. Customers don't want to pay a fortune for a wind farm if it can be made for a fraction of the cost.

    • @CP-qh7om
      @CP-qh7om 10 месяцев назад +10

      The other two professions make way more than a teacher. Best practices can be applied to both but they are not equal in the struggle.

  • @philiptaram
    @philiptaram 10 месяцев назад +750

    It's not about how much money you make, it's about where the money goes

    • @jasonleatherwood2172
      @jasonleatherwood2172 10 месяцев назад +21

      To an extent when me and the wife met we made 64000 a year working 60 hours a week driving a hour one way to work now we make 140k drive 15 min to work and work 50 hours or less we literally could barely pay our bills its super easy to drive cheap cars and invest now lol

    • @sabrinnegibson1860
      @sabrinnegibson1860 10 месяцев назад +1

      I'm a teacher and I also earn from investing in the digital market with the guidance of Mrs Elizabeth Ann Larson Brokerage services...

    • @sabrinnegibson1860
      @sabrinnegibson1860 10 месяцев назад +1

      Her trading income stream is mind blowing. l've made over $160,000 in 4 months so far trading with her guidance/advice.

    • @sabrinnegibson1860
      @sabrinnegibson1860 10 месяцев назад

      There's is her line below

    • @sabrinnegibson1860
      @sabrinnegibson1860 10 месяцев назад

      3862

  • @workinonit9562
    @workinonit9562 10 месяцев назад +460

    I worked for a large package delivery company and my husband was a teacher, he is retired for many years. We never made over $80,000 per year. We helped pay for our kids college degrees, helped them out with down payments for their houses, kids had no college debt and kids have no debt other than their house payments. We were very frugal in our marriage and now we are everyday millionaires, totally debt free for 15 years now. I have been retired for 12 years. Live below your means.....

    • @RJ12347
      @RJ12347 10 месяцев назад +8

      Now say thank God for your husband

    • @derekmortensen85
      @derekmortensen85 10 месяцев назад +6

      Great work to the both of you.

    • @multiskilledelectrician1
      @multiskilledelectrician1 9 месяцев назад +2

      Awesome. I love this. You two are amazing.

    • @kgonzalez718
      @kgonzalez718 9 месяцев назад +2

      That’s awesome! What were your investments?

    • @pascoett
      @pascoett 7 месяцев назад +6

      As a teacher in Europe i can add the following: teachers live frugally. My colleagues and i all earn in the 130k’s but none has a fancy car or house. We are dedicated but we both love our jobs but hate the workload at times and certain difficulties. Yet, aside from hard peaks we have a lot of Holidays and free time when routine kicks in. Most of us do meaningful things as a sidekick and I myself earn additional money as a photographer. Us teachers are around smart people usually or that’s what we’re aiming for. I am also not indoctrinating my students, but I know many who do that. I am happy that my country acknowledges my work and my degrees with really good payment.

  • @ji-inroh495
    @ji-inroh495 10 месяцев назад +564

    As a teacher who is in that group, it's the realization that my income was not going to get me there. So, I needed to learn how to save and invest wisely which could get me there.

    • @tonycrabtree3416
      @tonycrabtree3416 10 месяцев назад +1

      no pension?

    • @KatieBellino
      @KatieBellino 10 месяцев назад +19

      ​@@tonycrabtree3416Yes, teachers have a decent pension, but it won't make you a millionaire without other investments.

    • @Excalibur2
      @Excalibur2 10 месяцев назад +6

      @@tonycrabtree3416 often the pension supplied just replaces social security. Nobody is getting rich off of social security either.

    • @TheRealEdStoner
      @TheRealEdStoner 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@Excalibur2 Teaching pensions are a lot more than social Security. Not having to pay Social Security is one of the best benefit of being a teacher

    • @Excalibur2
      @Excalibur2 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@TheRealEdStoner can't speak for all states, but mine they deduct around 10% to go towards the pension. So it costs around 50% more, it should pay 50% more.

  • @janan3382
    @janan3382 10 месяцев назад +770

    I’m an accountant married to an engineer. We’re logical and methodical and follow rules easily. I was completely on track to be a millionaire when I was single. Once we got married, the size of our shovel is unbelievable because we still have the same mindset of when we were each doing this on one income. Looking forward to paying off the mortgage before the end of this year.

    • @JT-ce4bl
      @JT-ce4bl 10 месяцев назад +14

      Well done 👏🏻

    • @bigal5860
      @bigal5860 10 месяцев назад +1

      I don’t know if this is something you might be interested in looking into
      I’m expanding my Health and Wellness Business
      The market is huge and our Company is doing very well.
      I’m looking for 1 or 2 people with a desire to earn additional income from home.
      Does this sound like something you might be interested in looking into?
      If so great if not no big deal or do you know anyone who might be interested?

    • @micclay
      @micclay 10 месяцев назад +15

      My ex was addicted to cocaine and gambling.

    • @Dividendflywheel
      @Dividendflywheel 10 месяцев назад +11

      Stay the course. Don’t get distracted by “shiny objects”, or offers😂. Your 2nd million will come fast than the first. WOW!!! Compounding works.
      Congratulations
      Stay Hungry

    • @mrphatmunkeyspew6969
      @mrphatmunkeyspew6969 10 месяцев назад +2

      Wouldn't it be crazy if your children turned out to be teachers?

  • @paint14872
    @paint14872 10 месяцев назад +33

    I’m a financial advisor and one big thing is that teachers all have a pension and they both simultaneously aren’t sure it will be enough to take care of them so they save well and then when the pension IS enough, they don’t spend any of their investments and they have large nest eggs that just keep growing

  • @rbrucerye
    @rbrucerye 10 месяцев назад +137

    Because teaching at its core is about planning and self-control. You need to have strong skills in both to succeed in the field.

  • @nickmaestro
    @nickmaestro 10 месяцев назад +441

    I’m 35 y.o. and a music teacher at a private Christian school. I started investing at 27 the very second I finished paying off my loans and car. Through max contributions for my Roth IRA and 403b for these past 7 years, the compounding interest will have me well over 1.2 million by age 60. Live below your means, pay off debts and wait until you are married to have children. Those three things will have you living comfortably on a modest salary. I’ve no desire for extravagance.

    • @Dividendflywheel
      @Dividendflywheel 10 месяцев назад +23

      You just described the lesson of Thomas Stanley’s last book “act your wage”. You are exactly what the average millionaire looks like. I have a mental clock counting down when we will hit our 2nd million. -perspectives of a BlueCollar bigrig driver 😊

    • @chocolateangel8743
      @chocolateangel8743 10 месяцев назад +9

      That's nice and all, but why would you want to have to wait until you're 60 before you can really start enjoying life -- especially given the potential for health complications at that age? Since I began watching clips on RUclips, there have been engineering couples that are multi-millionaires by the time they were younger than you are now.

    • @darkshadow955
      @darkshadow955 10 месяцев назад +23

      @@chocolateangel8743then what’s stopping you from being a multimillionaire from tech? Why are you bringing people down

    • @chocolateangel8743
      @chocolateangel8743 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@darkshadow955 Why are you being so emotional when I just asked a question. Oh, there's also the issue of teachers not being able to be life-long educators -- unless they have a spouse that makes significantly more money -- or they have a side hustle that does the same thing. My own mother had to quit being an educator when I was young (because she didn't make enough money). When I was in high school, I also had a business teacher that was a Certified Public Accountant. She quit after a years -- because of how little she made (and some bad-ass kids).

    • @darkshadow955
      @darkshadow955 10 месяцев назад +11

      @@chocolateangel8743 hahaha cool story. You’re the one here typing your life story getting emotional like a child😂😂😂😂🤣

  • @Ammo-Hoarder
    @Ammo-Hoarder 9 месяцев назад +799

    Retirement isn't the end, but a fresh start. Your dedication now will lead to a future of financial security and the freedom to pursue your passions. Kudos to everyone working hard to earn a living while building wealth. My wife and I, both retired at 66 and 64 respectively, have a net worth of over $3 million with no debts. We live frugally and smartly, thanks to our saving and investing lifestyle, which allows us to earn passive income.

    • @IAMBETTERTHANYYOU
      @IAMBETTERTHANYYOU 9 месяцев назад +5

      Congratulations on your early retirement. Really interesting! I am currently in urgent need of investment advice or investment tips. Last year I hesitated and did nothing until the end of the year. However, this year I'm determined to try something new as I'm very open to different investment ideas.

    • @sommersalt88
      @sommersalt88 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@IAMBETTERTHANYYOU Investing indeed requires a good understanding. It's important to have a reliable support system, like a financial consultant, to guide you, especially in asset selection. I work with "JILL MARIE CARROLL", an investment advisor who partners with a licensed wealth management firm. It has been an excellent experience for my finances. She is quite well-known for her services, so you might have heard of her.

    • @MIchaelGuzman737
      @MIchaelGuzman737 9 месяцев назад

      This is exactly how I intend to organize my finances before retiring. Can you recommend the financial advisor who helped you get started?

    • @sommersalt88
      @sommersalt88 9 месяцев назад +6

      Do your due diligence, and be on the lookout for one with strategies to help your portfolio maintain an unwavering and progressive growth. "Jill Marie Carroll" is responsible for my portfolio success, and I believe she has the qualifications & expertise to meet your goals.

    • @MIchaelGuzman737
      @MIchaelGuzman737 9 месяцев назад +1

      I just googled her name and am really impressed with her credentials; I reached out to her through her website as I need all the help I can get.

  • @michaelcorbett4236
    @michaelcorbett4236 10 месяцев назад +29

    "You can't earn your way out of stupidity" is probably the best thing I have ever heard about building wealth. It is just so matter of fact.

    • @Malitubee
      @Malitubee 7 месяцев назад

      Me too, that was deep!

  • @karengoetchius794
    @karengoetchius794 5 месяцев назад +41

    As a teacher (and single Mom of two kids for 11 years) I can relate to this. Live well below your income, save aggressively, work a second job when you can, do not fall into the trap of dressing to impress, buy reliable used cars, etc. Plan for the long term future and watch it grow.

    • @dianabenavides2913
      @dianabenavides2913 3 месяца назад +1

      I am a teacher dont get confuse with my user name its my wifes name.... i as a teacher work and my wife has never had to work ever. But I do tutorials i have my own private music studio and so make extra everytime... we have zero debt and no credit catds and a paid for home as a teacher.

    • @dianabenavides2913
      @dianabenavides2913 3 месяца назад

      Praise Jesus

    • @amwfpaulandjay
      @amwfpaulandjay 2 месяца назад

      That's not true for a doctor though.
      My dad was a gynaecologist at Bamrungrad International Hospitals which is the best hospital in Bangkok, Thailand and the rest of the provinces.
      He earned 200,000 USD/ year. My mum worked as a vice president at CP which is the biggest company in Thailand and still earned less than my dad. My mum though has bought condominiums in cash and has rented them out. Both of them chose to stop working at 42. Now, they are in their 60s and just travel and chill with their lives. All of my dad's friends at Bamrungrad Hospital who are doctors can choose to retire at anytime.
      I am a landlord myself. I bought 5 properties in cash when the market crashed. I am 31. I am a sub-10 Ironman, sub-3 marathon runner, former Muay Thai champion. I don't work in 9-5. I am not an employee. I started reading Rich Dad, Poor Dad when I was 9. I travel to 3-4 countries and train everyday. I haven't drunk nor smoked. Ultimately, it comes down to the discipline and how you use money to generate more money for you.

    • @amwfpaulandjay
      @amwfpaulandjay Месяц назад

      That's not true for a doctor though.
      My dad was a gynaecologist at Bamrungrad International Hospitals which is the best hospital in Bangkok, Thailand and the rest of the provinces.
      He earned 200,000 USD/ year. My mum worked as a vice president at CP which is the biggest company in Thailand and still earned less than my dad. My mum though has bought condominiums in cash and has rented them out. Both of them chose to stop working at 42. Now, they are in their 60s and just travel and chill with their lives. All of my dad's friends at Bamrungrad Hospital who are doctors can choose to retire at anytime.
      I am a landlord myself. I bought 5 properties in cash when the market crashed. I am 31. I am a sub-10 Ironman, sub-3 marathon runner, former Muay Thai champion. I don't work in 9-5. I am not an employee. I started reading Rich Dad, Poor Dad when I was 9. I travel to 3-4 countries and train everyday. I haven't drunk nor smoked. Ultimately, it comes down to the discipline and how you use money to generate more money for you.

  • @gerardmiller3362
    @gerardmiller3362 10 месяцев назад +63

    A MAJOR factor is that there are a lot more teachers than say lawyers, doctors, high level execs, etc. They looked at percentage of millionaires that are teachers, not what percent of teachers become millionaires. Additionally, teaching salaries/benefits have lagged the greater professional market…boomer and genx teachers had much better compensation than someone getting into the field today should expect.

    • @ginowashington8389
      @ginowashington8389 10 месяцев назад +1

      You're right I am curious as to the percentages even though lawyers were also in the top-5 list.

    • @abarbar06
      @abarbar06 10 месяцев назад +12

      Yeah, this is probably an excellent case study of how to lie or make misleading claims with statistics.

    • @TheChromelover
      @TheChromelover 9 месяцев назад

      You made a good point

    • @MrTeachkids
      @MrTeachkids 9 месяцев назад +2

      Where can you access the study. If they did make this error it is shameful. Ramsey can you respond?

    • @cerebralcaustic
      @cerebralcaustic 3 месяца назад +1

      BS, median teacher salary is higher than median HOUSEHOLD income. And teachers work only 190 days per year.

  • @deanmccormick8070
    @deanmccormick8070 10 месяцев назад +153

    I think a big part of teachers' success as a group is that they don't get the pressures to spend beyond their means. No having to impress the co-workers or neighbors.

    • @sandgaijin
      @sandgaijin 7 месяцев назад +6

      And going through college to get their teaching degrees, the “poor college student” is not just a set of words. We (teachers) adapted to living within and below our means that now we make teaching salaries, we still spend like we’re poor college students.

    • @karengoetchius794
      @karengoetchius794 5 месяцев назад +4

      Very true! I don't have the expectation to dress/drive like the families in the wealthy school district I work in.

    • @jakemorj5498
      @jakemorj5498 2 месяца назад

      @@sandgaijinWhat on earth are you talking about. Engineers, doctors, lawyers and so many other occupational groups went through college to get degrees too.

    • @deh5tarr69
      @deh5tarr69 Месяц назад

      If that's the case then that applies to all other professions too 🙄

    • @frankrizzo9291
      @frankrizzo9291 Месяц назад

      My guess is that it is because they marry well. Successful men will specifically look for teachers when looking for a wife.

  • @unlisted333
    @unlisted333 8 месяцев назад +22

    As an Accountant, one thing I’ve learned is the win comes when you create systems to protect you from your weaknesses

    • @Malitubee
      @Malitubee 7 месяцев назад +1

      Oh my god love this !!! Is there any books or any other info you have that can help me with this ?

    • @SuperSupersoda
      @SuperSupersoda 3 месяца назад +2

      As a software engineer by profession, this is basically my entire job: create software solutions that protect people from their own weaknesses. When your job teaches you how to do that at a very high level, it's easy to port that over into your finances. There are goal oriented people and systems oriented people, engineering attracts an obscenely high number of system oriented people. Most people are results/goal oriented; engineers understand that you can't often control the results, but you can always control the process.

    • @InOrlando
      @InOrlando 26 дней назад +1

      @@SuperSupersoda My good friend, a Software Engineer (back-end), is married to an Accountant. They match really well.

    • @SuperSupersoda
      @SuperSupersoda 25 дней назад

      @@InOrlando Makes perfect sense to me, they both see the world fundamentally the same way if they are in those professions and good at what they do.

  • @roseroland1998
    @roseroland1998 9 месяцев назад +656

    Great video. We are all seeking for financial independence and a better way of life. This is not difficult to achieve with savvy investing, a frugal lifestyle, and cautious budgeting. I'm glad I learned early on to work hard for financial independence. As Warren Buffet said, he has seen this happen many times in his life. Not an investor, My husband and i never earned more than a middle class salary. We plan to get retired at 58 with a stock portfolio worth $1.7M. We have never sold so much as one share of stock.

    • @glenbert1396
      @glenbert1396 9 месяцев назад +3

      Most people don't understand the power of compound interest or are just impatient. However, I think it's better for the average person to invest in the S&P 500 and wait, which is reliable, albeit extremely long: many years, or just hire an investment advisor and accelerate wealth accumulation. Most people underestimate the power of the latter.

    • @anthonyrussell5718
      @anthonyrussell5718 9 месяцев назад +3

      That's right, I've been backed by a financial advisor for almost three years now, I started with over a hundred thousand and I'm just $19,000 away from making half a million profits from compounding and dividends.

    • @anthonyrussell5718
      @anthonyrussell5718 9 месяцев назад +4

      There are a lot of independent advisors you might look into. But i work with "LISA ELLEN SHAW" and I have been working together for nearly four years, and she is excellent. You could proceed with her if she satisfies your discretion. I endorse her.

    • @frankrizzo9291
      @frankrizzo9291 Месяц назад

      It's not a great video, they completely side stepped the question. Answered it like a politician does. My guess is because they know by the survey the answer is Yes, teachers are over represented because they marry well.

  • @TLmomofZAHS
    @TLmomofZAHS 10 месяцев назад +89

    I am going into my first year of teaching. And in the midst of all the fear and chaos, I plan on being a darn good one. This is encouraging.

    • @christopherstewart9874
      @christopherstewart9874 9 месяцев назад +2

      Plan also on spending a lot less than you earn and conservatively investing your savings. Over the course of your life, the percentage of your income that you save is much, much more important than the percentage return on your investments. Don't borrow money to buy anything other than a modest house. Live simply. Be frugal. Don't dream of retiring early. Dream of retiring comfortably at 65 or 67. That is the time horizon for your investments - 30 or 40 years. Compound interest works wonders if you just let it work. Taking risks and losing money kills the magic of compound interest.

    • @triciamool8157
      @triciamool8157 8 месяцев назад +3

      I LOVED teaching. you know what is stressful - waiting tables. not having a job. bad managers. Teaching can be very stressful, but that can be circumvented by good planning and good boundaries. Plus you have leverage now, with principals because there's a gap.

    • @tomy.1846
      @tomy.1846 3 месяца назад +2

      Open a 403b as soon as possible! Even if you can only spare $50 a paycheck. As you earn more, increase your contributions! Best of luck, this is my 29th year teaching, it goes by so fast! Hope you can get a good pension. I'm on a solid tier in New York, but the newset (tier 6) needs to be improved.

    • @amwfpaulandjay
      @amwfpaulandjay Месяц назад

      @@christopherstewart9874
      That's not true for a doctor though.
      My dad was a gynaecologist at Bamrungrad International Hospitals which is the best hospital in Bangkok, Thailand and the rest of the provinces.
      He earned 200,000 USD/ year. My mum worked as a vice president at CP which is the biggest company in Thailand and still earned less than my dad. My mum though has bought condominiums in cash and has rented them out. Both of them chose to stop working at 42. Now, they are in their 60s and just travel and chill with their lives. All of my dad's friends at Bamrungrad Hospital who are doctors can choose to retire at anytime.
      I am a landlord myself. I bought 5 properties in cash when the market crashed. I am 31. I am a sub-10 Ironman, sub-3 marathon runner, former Muay Thai champion. I don't work in 9-5. I am not an employee. I started reading Rich Dad, Poor Dad when I was 9. I travel to 3-4 countries and train everyday. I haven't drunk nor smoked. Ultimately, it comes down to the discipline and how you use money to generate more money for you.

  • @patrickbrussels4454
    @patrickbrussels4454 8 месяцев назад +326

    Finance and Business books have been so helpful. I’m 55 and my wife 50 we are both retired with over $3 million in net worth and no debts. Currently living smart and frugal with our money. No longer putting blames on FED for our misfortunes. Saving and investing lifestyle in the stock market made it possible for us this early, even till now we earn weekly

    • @Lemariecooper
      @Lemariecooper 8 месяцев назад +2

      You have done great for yourselves. I understand the fact that tomorrow isn't promised to anyone, but investing today is a hard thing to do for me now because I have no idea of how and where to invest in. I would be happy if you could advise me based on how you went about yours, as I am ready to go the passive income path.

    • @Erikkurilla01
      @Erikkurilla01 8 месяцев назад +2

      That is so amazing, I’m trying to get onto the housing ladder at 40. I wish at 55 I will be testifying to similar success.

    • @patrickbrussels4454
      @patrickbrussels4454 8 месяцев назад

      Credits to STEPHANIE KOPP MEEKS, she saw me through the process. You can glance her name up on the internet and verify her yourself. she has years of financial market experience.

    • @Erikkurilla01
      @Erikkurilla01 8 месяцев назад

      Heard many good recommendations about Stephanie Kopp Meeks by some YT channels, Seminars and other platforms

    • @Lemariecooper
      @Lemariecooper 8 месяцев назад

      Thanks so much I was able to find her page and I already leave her a message.

  • @AnaViolinViola
    @AnaViolinViola 10 месяцев назад +34

    Ken’s comment about teachers living below their means and build their lives around their profession, because they live with a purpose…wow, that was deep and this is exactly how I feel!

  • @curtisbuettner1932
    @curtisbuettner1932 2 месяца назад +5

    This is fascinating. I was a teacher. I think more teachers need to hear this, they can use all the encouragement that they can get.

  • @tiffanyfabbian5951
    @tiffanyfabbian5951 10 месяцев назад +43

    God Bless teachers!!!! They don't receive half the credit they deserve and I'm so dang proud to be the daughter of a dedicated teacher!

  • @Essentialoils4ujess-weagle
    @Essentialoils4ujess-weagle 10 месяцев назад +31

    My dad retired as a diesel mechanic in 2020. And he's currently living off the interest in his investments. He always told me, it's not how much you make it's how much you spend.

    • @wewhoareabouttodiesaluteyo9303
      @wewhoareabouttodiesaluteyo9303 10 месяцев назад +3

      Live in a tent and you will surely be on your way to becoming a millionaire.

    • @Dividendflywheel
      @Dividendflywheel 10 месяцев назад +3

      Your father is a wise man. The world needs more folks like him.

    • @Dividendflywheel
      @Dividendflywheel 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@wewhoareabouttodiesaluteyo9303
      Funny joke 😂. Actually for the average millionaire the equity in a mortgage free home is a significant portion of their net worth. Another consideration is the value of appreciation. Assuming (a modest) 5% per year appreciation in the value of a home from age 30 to 90. This will turn a $200,000 house into $3.7 million. Crunch the numbers yourself.
      Compounding is a powerful formula. Some use it to their advantage. Other are clueless to it’s wealth building effect

  • @JCpNK
    @JCpNK 10 месяцев назад +35

    My mom retired as a teacher and is doing very well. Her and my step dad travel all over the place now

    • @musicman1eanda
      @musicman1eanda 10 месяцев назад +2

      It's our pension that allows that, if you make it 30+ years. My state of Pennsylvania is cutting the pension benefits every few years. My colleagues retiring now are getting benefits that I won't have if I make it 24 more years.

    • @Dividendflywheel
      @Dividendflywheel 10 месяцев назад

      @@musicman1eanda
      Convert as much of your income into your own retirement account
      • it’s called a Roth IRA do not trust ANY state to protect your retirement.
      • the legislatures in my state routinely use the public employee pension fund as a piggybank. Recently used the covid money from Washington to fill the hole they put in the pension
      • call ANY of the big 3 brokerage firms and set up YOUR OWN retirement account (managed by you).
      • Fidelity Charles Schwab or Vanguard doesn’t matter. You must act fast. Set up a tax deferred Roth IRA and a Taxable Brokerage account. You might also be able to add a HSA if you have funds left over
      • Just as Congress has spent social security funds, your state pension funds are under funded. It’s a Ponzi scheme
      • You must take personal responsibility for how you will provide for your own retirement. Those who depend on the generosity or sympathy of strangers very often found themselves lacking basic necessities in their old age.
      • to maintain your lifestyle in retirement you will need to save up 25x your annual expenses. This is an achievable goal for those that start early and stay focused.
      There’s tons of free information online about how to do this. Please be pro-active

  • @Bensalami69
    @Bensalami69 9 месяцев назад +66

    My dad was an elementary school art teacher with a slight visual impairment. He invested in stocks, bought real estate, & played his cards right & now has a great life as a retired man who stopped at age 66 at the height of COVID. There’s a lot of truth to this.

    • @newbluerugby
      @newbluerugby 8 месяцев назад +6

      He also has a pension… for life

  • @MoneyHabits1
    @MoneyHabits1 10 месяцев назад +24

    It's called compounding interest! Most teachers start investing young and it doesn't matter how much you put in, it's the magic of time that takes a little bit of money, and it multiplies it into millions! We can all learn from this!

    • @markbajek2541
      @markbajek2541 3 месяца назад +2

      I bet if you put more money in the first years it would have a chance to compound much faster over time. (it does matter how much you put in , the more the merrier and earlier the better)

  • @stagecoachrobbery
    @stagecoachrobbery 3 месяца назад +7

    I know a number of teachers who are very financially stable. Here are the common themes with all of them that I see.
    1. Consistent money is the best kind of money.
    2. They work extra jobs in the summer.
    3. They invest wisely. Most own rental properties or have other side hustles.
    One thing to understand about teachers is that where they teach has a huge effect on their income levels. Their salary scales some on cost of living, but not a lot. Teaching in a high cost of living area generally means you are drastically underpaid. However, if you are in a low cost of living area in the same state, it can be one of the more lucrative careers in relation to others around you.

    • @InOrlando
      @InOrlando 26 дней назад

      "1. Consistent money is the best kind of money. 3. They invest wisely." these are key, in my opinion. I am a designer, and my employment has always been shaky. I have been laid off four times in my career. I became hyper-aware of my employment reality and began to invest in what I could when I could, but for many years I could not. Like many teachers, I own rental properties and had to hyper-focus on the behaviors that could create the outcomes I wanted because that was all I had. It is less, "Oh, they have to follow the structure and thus are better at it," instead, my situation is highly limited; I better not get too excited and keep it tight.

  • @numitumi8806
    @numitumi8806 10 месяцев назад +64

    Best thing about COVID for me was forced me to think about how I was wasting money on all kinds of lifestyle rubbish choices none of which were necessary. Love living on a restricted budget with discipline.

    • @jimroscovius
      @jimroscovius 10 месяцев назад

      Absolutely!! I taught online anyway, and my wife worked from home for a year. It would have been shorter, but her boss kept pushing this stupid mask policy and she said she wasn't going back to the office until it was done away with. As soon as he took it away, she went back.

  • @madisonandthespirits
    @madisonandthespirits Месяц назад +1

    My parents were both teachers and retired wealthy. They both worked many jobs on the side of teaching. My dad coached sports and was a master electrician on the side. Mom coached sports and tutored on the side. They invested heavily through the years. They travelled every year and vacationed on summers. 🤗

  • @bmoshareholderappleshareho855
    @bmoshareholderappleshareho855 2 месяца назад +2

    I’m a security guard and I’m a millionaire. I also drive a Mercedes Benz. It’s not how much money you make. It’s what you do with your money. All a job does is pay the bills. Wealth comes from successful investing.

  • @PhilipMurray251
    @PhilipMurray251 10 месяцев назад +345

    These are very valuable rules for anybody who wants to get rich. Unfortunately, most people who will watch this video will not really be able to apply the principles. We may not want to admit, but as Warren Buffett once said, investing is like any other profession-- it requires a certain level of expertise. No surprise that some people are losing a lot of money in the bear market, while others are making hundreds of thousands in profit. I just don't know how they do it. I have about $109k now to put in the market.

    • @user-qx7td4oe7c
      @user-qx7td4oe7c 10 месяцев назад +1

      Understanding personal finances and investing will most likely lead to greater financial independence. By being knowledgeable about money and investing, individuals can make informed decisions about how to save, spend, and invest their money. I know someone who made over $350k in this recession influenced market, but to the best of my knowledge, it was through a financial advisor.

    • @Robertgriffinne
      @Robertgriffinne 10 месяцев назад +3

      Starting out with a with a professional that knows the ropes of the choppy but profitable market is the best way to achieve getting a well structured portfolio. That’s why I have been working with Deborah Jean Dykstra‘ and that doesn’t make me daft because in financial dealings one have to be prudent. Most traders enter exit with a quick 10% profit which is not bad in a general opinion but why not aim higher, it doesn’t necessarily mean to be greedy.

    • @PhilipMurray251
      @PhilipMurray251 10 месяцев назад

      @@Robertgriffinne how do i find your financial advisor? i need help to grow my portfolio

    • @Robertgriffinne
      @Robertgriffinne 10 месяцев назад

      @@PhilipMurray251 look her up on the web

    • @Christine-ce4xo
      @Christine-ce4xo 10 месяцев назад

      @@Robertgriffinne great share! copied and pasted her full name on my browser, effortlessly found her site, very professional. indeed she deserves utmost credit

  • @natalieeuley1734
    @natalieeuley1734 3 месяца назад +7

    The world of being a teacher usually means that you know you will have a second job. It's pretty much inevitable especially for the summer. And you have to inherently be creative in order to get to the point of wanting to be a teacher in the first place. So, this adds up to always creatively finding ways to supplement your income and making it work. Things like tutoring or TPT. Helping out at summer camps. Making online courses. Being an instructor at a university. Every teacher I had in school was retired, had a spouse with a really insane job, or they had a while other life outside of school to make things work.

  • @geofschwer1625
    @geofschwer1625 10 месяцев назад +16

    Dave, my wife was a nurse and I was a teacher, and now we're retired with a considerable net worth. We never felt we were scrimping or going without; we simply lived a moderate life and saved around 15% of our yearly income from the day we were married 49 years ago. Today, our goal is to enjoy life, not to fund our children's retirement plan. Even though we didn't exactly follow your Seven Baby Steps, the net effect was the same, and now we're able to travel and support causes we believe in. In short, we have a more productive and enjoyable life now than we ever had while working! Maybe our story will help others to see that financial independence is within reach if they're really serious about it.

  • @epickabelo
    @epickabelo 24 дня назад +2

    Teachers go into teaching knowing that they aren't going to make a lot of money so they learn to be wise with their money. The problem with other professions is that there is an expectation that they can make more money in the future through promotions so they take on a lot of debt hoping that they will be able to afford to pay it back once they get the promotion and that's how the debt spiral begins.

  • @drew8979
    @drew8979 10 месяцев назад +176

    I'm not a teacher but a government employee. The pay is not the best but the benefits are where it's at. You are given multiple tools to be build your wealth and i'm currently buying years in my pension plan while paying off my mortgage and I plan to make my condo into a rental and retire early. Once I hit 20 years I will be locked in and can start collecting a pension at 47 and I will hopefully be doing something more lucrative but that's my plan currently.

    • @savanah1407
      @savanah1407 10 месяцев назад +7

      Yessss! 👏 👏 👏 👏

    • @tonycrabtree3416
      @tonycrabtree3416 10 месяцев назад +16

      exactly, it’s that pension.

    • @jacobo9611
      @jacobo9611 10 месяцев назад +3

      What I would do if a govt employee.. many of them spend and just rely on the pension which is ok, your doin it right

    • @wewhoareabouttodiesaluteyo9303
      @wewhoareabouttodiesaluteyo9303 10 месяцев назад +4

      State government employee, but there are restrictions on pension (depends on the state). I can only take it out if I am 65; however, the contribution is generous, almost like 77% of my income they match. The 401k is not matched and 457B is not either (I still have both).
      I lucked out because this year the state I am in is giving us a 6% raise that they have not given in like 15 years. I also received a probation period completion raise and the county is paying me 13% of my state salary.
      Bad thing is, if a group of lawmakers get put in and end the pension, you will get your money you contributed to it back and will forfeit the match.

    • @jacobo9611
      @jacobo9611 10 месяцев назад +5

      @@wewhoareabouttodiesaluteyo9303 you said it 77% of my income they match. That’s not the same for the rest of us. So when the repubs come in to cut spending, they are viewed as villain, well you probably shouldn’t of got such a great deal to begin with.

  • @FirstHillSeattle
    @FirstHillSeattle 9 месяцев назад +21

    One thing to consider: 90% of public school teachers receive a pension in retirement. Typically you can work for 40 years and retire with your full salary. The percent of the general population that receives a pension benefit now in their job is under 30%. This is just one aspect of overall wealth of course, but it’s a leg up that most don’t have. This means that they might feel more free to be creative with other investment income, because they already have their pension that is guaranteed.

    • @SENSEF
      @SENSEF 2 месяца назад +2

      But do new teachers nowadays receive a pension? This probably WAS true, but the youngins are getting screwed every which way.

    • @FirstHillSeattle
      @FirstHillSeattle 2 месяца назад

      @@SENSEF That’s a great point. Admittedly, I’m not an expert but I did find this in a google search: “Unlike teachers in private schools, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that 89 percent of “primary, secondary, and special education school teachers” employed by state or local governments participate in a defined benefit (DB) pension plan.”

    • @FirstHillSeattle
      @FirstHillSeattle 2 месяца назад

      @@SENSEF That’s a really good point. I had searched online and found a site that said 89% of all public school teachers receive a pension. But to your point, that doesn’t account for the fact that some school districts may be getting rid of those so that percent may be going down.

    • @christinelinden4075
      @christinelinden4075 27 дней назад

      That pension you refer to has been seriously reduced in many states. Most teachers are making much less now than when they retired.

  • @rossmcgreg6r642
    @rossmcgreg6r642 10 месяцев назад +2

    Ramsey study on millionaires proves Dave Ramsey is right!

  • @sc7453
    @sc7453 10 месяцев назад +76

    I’m not a teacher but from age 18 I invested a minimum of 15 percent of my gross income, sometimes much more. I never had more than one loan out at a time (not counting house) and went to community college. By age 54, I was worth over 2 million and never had to work another day if I didn’t feel like it. I didn’t have expensive hobbies, never spent more than a thousand dollars on a vacation, and took less than ten of them over my life. It’s all about committing to a plan, sticking to it, and making sacrifices.

    • @sc7453
      @sc7453 10 месяцев назад +4

      I have to add, I always worked at least 40 hours a week. Sometimes I had more than one job and worked 80 hours a week when I was younger and had the energy

    • @ryebread447
      @ryebread447 10 месяцев назад +10

      Good sacrificing. Did u get to enjoy any of the money to create experiences tho?

    • @sc7453
      @sc7453 10 месяцев назад +13

      @@ryebread447 Sure, I just lived frugally within my means. I have toured the U.S. by motorcycle and have visited almost every state in the country, have done a lot of camping, learned to build engines and hot rods, and play guitar. I do almost all of my own work, so it’s not expensive and buy used vehicles that I wait until I can find a good deal on, etc. Now I am pretty much set for life. Stay away from credit cards whenever you can.

    • @patbehe4674
      @patbehe4674 10 месяцев назад +6

      I spent almost all my money into my late 40's (except retirement plan) and enjoyed life. I did however heed 1 piece of your advice and that was invest 15% of your gross income. Married now, well ahead in life. Not as far as you, but not that far behind. 15% should be mandatory for everyone.

    • @sc7453
      @sc7453 10 месяцев назад +3

      @patbehe4674 Good Job! Luckily I had parents that stressed the importance of saving early and on a plan. One of my early jobs was as a bank teller, which taught me a lot about the value of money. The most important thing I can tell young people is to discipline yourself to save starting with your first job, keep debts to a minimum and stay away from credit cards. They really should teach these things in schools. Sadly they don't

  • @Blitcliffe
    @Blitcliffe 10 месяцев назад +96

    I find myself at a crossroads, uncertain whether to liquidate my $150,000 stock portfolio. I'm seeking advice on the best strategy to capitalize on this current market.

    • @corrySledd
      @corrySledd 10 месяцев назад

      Well the bigger the risk, the bigger the reward and such impeccable decisions are better guided by professionals

    • @sheltonPston
      @sheltonPston 10 месяцев назад +1

      Yes true, I have been in touch with a financial advisor. With an initial starting reserve of $80k, my advisor chooses the entry and exit commands for my portfolio, which has grown to approximately $550k.

    • @AUstinnesc
      @AUstinnesc 10 месяцев назад

      @@sheltonPston I’ve been looking to switch to an advisor for a while now. Any help pointing me to who your advisor is?

    • @sheltonPston
      @sheltonPston 10 месяцев назад +1

      There are a lot of independent advisors you might look into. But i work with Nicole desiree Simon and I have been working together for nearly four years, and she is excellent. You could proceed with her if she satisfies your discretion. I endorse her

    • @AUstinnesc
      @AUstinnesc 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@sheltonPston Thanks for sharing, I just looked her up on the web and I would say she really has an impressive background in investing. I will write her an e-mail shortly.

  • @johns1367
    @johns1367 10 месяцев назад +15

    I am a pastor and my average age income over the past 25 years has been $68,000/year. We will have about 1.2 million in about 9 years. We have been very intentional about telling our money where to go and not allowing our money to tell us where to go.

  • @pa5203
    @pa5203 10 месяцев назад +95

    I respectfully disagree Ken. I was a teacher for several years in 3 different states over the years. I found that most teachers are very unhappy and only got into the career because they chose a path in college that would give them time off in the summer or they wanted to have their kids schedule when they had families. Once they got into teaching and into their 30’s with a family they felt like it was too late to switch careers. Teaching is stressful and comes with a whole host of problems. I was one of the fortunate ones who taught P.E. which was one of the few positions where the stress level was at a minimum. We were one of the few positions where I saw teachers happy with their job. I believe teachers are millionaires because #1 they stuck with it and got their pension and #2 teaching was the secondary income to a spouses high paying job.

    • @reign0ffire88
      @reign0ffire88 10 месяцев назад +10

      100% this statement. 20 years as a physician, 90% of my patients who were public teachers hate their job or kids. Private teachers seemed as a whole to care a lot more.

    • @axelfoley1812
      @axelfoley1812 10 месяцев назад +13

      I was in middle school 15 years ago I remember kids screaming profanities at teachers and with low pay I'm not surprised they dislike in some cases hate their job

    • @cs1992
      @cs1992 10 месяцев назад +8

      Truth. It's a matter of knowing that the benefits are good despite the pay and behavior issues. After investing 5 years into the profession, most teachers realize that they can not transfer their talent to another sector of society without losing so much.

    • @jjordan6066
      @jjordan6066 10 месяцев назад +6

      Yes I thought he was off base with his comments. I think teachers are one of the best careers to stick it out and receive a pension.

    • @fber5591
      @fber5591 10 месяцев назад +6

      Teachers are overpaid. 4 months off every year and done by 3:30 every day. Most teachers who complain suck just suck at time management and would be miserable making 200K a year

  • @CAEO416
    @CAEO416 10 месяцев назад +31

    This is soooo true! I became a service advisor in my mid 20’s when I was hired as a service receptionist in a car dealership. I absolutely loved it. Because I loved it and started therapy at the same time due to childhood trauma, I started saving and investing for the first time in my life. My whole world turned upside down, in a good way. My therapist would occasionally reminded me to protect myself financially, which I did. 27 years later I had to retire at the age of 51 due to an illness. I was only able to do this because of what I did in my 20’s, 30’s and 40’s. I now only have to worry about my health, not my finances.

  • @dking1362
    @dking1362 10 месяцев назад +83

    I love Ken's comments... a balm to my unappreciated teacher's soul. And I believe he is right! I knew I wouldn't ever make lots of money (made 63k in my "best" year.)It helped that money was not the primary focus of my life. Therefore, I intentionally lived a simple lifestyle - not deprived in any way, just without many extras or luxuries. The vast majority of the time, I was content (and shame on me for my jealousy of others who had the extravagant gifts from their husbands or a string of amazing vacations. Had to get off of FB entirely.) At 58, I retired after being a single mom to 3 for 20 years, right at that millionaire mark. My retirement will be like the rest of my life - comfortable, simple, and filled with family, friends, service, and contentment. Thank you, God. I believe accountants and engineers are higher on the list b/c their salaries are significantly higher.

    • @hastycontemplation
      @hastycontemplation 10 месяцев назад +3

      That is interesting to know, hat you were single and achieved it, I was wondering if it mainly applied to married couples.

    • @dking1362
      @dking1362 10 месяцев назад +6

      @@hastycontemplation Right? So hard sometimes to find accurate numbers for single people.

    • @auntbeth448
      @auntbeth448 10 месяцев назад +3

      You’re awesome!
      I also had to get off FB..too much stress and time wasted
      Thx for your commitment to kids

    • @dking1362
      @dking1362 10 месяцев назад

      @@auntbeth448 How sweet of you! I have been incredibly blessed in my life...I just need to "keep my eyes on my own paper", as we teachers like to say! It has truly been a privilege to invest much of my life in children....

    • @ajam3086
      @ajam3086 8 месяцев назад +1

      Nothing beats the contentment of making an impact on the lives of others though

  • @DetraDearmas
    @DetraDearmas 10 месяцев назад +17

    I had a science teacher that worked in Michigan in the late 60’s early 70’s. He told us his high school students that he chose to get paid for the whole year not the school 9 months. He would live off his school pay and work as a dump truck drive in the summer so he could invest in little company called ibm. He brought to our school 2 prototypes of the 1st personal pcs ever to his knowledge. He was investing most of his money in this stock.
    That’s how my teacher got rich.

  • @alonabeck713
    @alonabeck713 10 месяцев назад +74

    From my experience many teachers are married to lawyers, doctors, upper level executives, entrepreneurs, etc. I feel like most couples search for balance and if you have really ambitious person, it makes sense they gravitate toward a caring and selfless partner at home. And vice versa. Then they financially win together. And that’s what Dave’s platform focuses on - winning as a couple. I don’t think it is appropriate to talk about just one partner as becoming a millionaire without the context of the other person. It’s misleading. Many single teachers I know actually struggle with pay.

    • @wewhoareabouttodiesaluteyo9303
      @wewhoareabouttodiesaluteyo9303 10 месяцев назад +2

      Get off the dependency. If you, yourself were a teacher with ZERO relationship prospects, could you survive from graduating to death. Simplify it.

    • @EMo-rx7pm
      @EMo-rx7pm 10 месяцев назад +12

      100% agree. There are a lot more teachers than MDs and lawyers also. My wife is a teacher and she makes 20% of our total household salary. So we are a perfect example.

    • @jimmyglea
      @jimmyglea 10 месяцев назад +5

      My wife is a teacher, I am an accountant and we’re nearly 50. Income for income, we would both be considered millionaires, barely. Combined, we’ll retire nicely…TOGETHER.

    • @wewhoareabouttodiesaluteyo9303
      @wewhoareabouttodiesaluteyo9303 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@jimmyglea Haha..be careful. Divorce rates are high.

    • @jimmyglea
      @jimmyglea 10 месяцев назад +5

      @@wewhoareabouttodiesaluteyo9303 Tell me about it…I’m still paying for my first one, hence the “barely” a millionaire.

  • @greg_216
    @greg_216 2 месяца назад +2

    One thing overlooked about teachers is their ability to leverage the stability of a defined-benefit retirement (a pension). Once that guaranteed retirement income is a sure thing, teachers can continue using personal retirement savings (IRAs, Roth IRAs) to build wealth at high risk/returns at ages when other people have to start dialing back risk/returns.

  • @donswier
    @donswier 10 месяцев назад +35

    Teachers observe early habits from families who delay gratification.
    Impulsive people never get ahead.

    • @Erica-wz8yv
      @Erica-wz8yv 10 месяцев назад

      So true

    • @lovetobe6118
      @lovetobe6118 10 месяцев назад +1

      Sadly my mother who is a teacher is not one of the wise ones when it comes to money. She can't delay gratification. I watch her spend her money when she has it then not have enough to buy food. Today she called me telling me she didn't have enough to buy food... Again. Wasn't it a month ago I told her to not spend any money on toys for my kids? She said it's only $17. But it could have been $17 going toward your emergency fund when you run low on food. She will also spend on dessert and I know that could also go to her food fund. I literally buy ice cream once a year for my husband's birthday because it isn't a necessity.

    • @amwfpaulandjay
      @amwfpaulandjay Месяц назад

      @@lovetobe6118
      That's not true for a doctor though.
      My dad was a gynaecologist at Bamrungrad International Hospitals which is the best hospital in Bangkok, Thailand and the rest of the provinces.
      He earned 200,000 USD/ year. My mum worked as a vice president at CP which is the biggest company in Thailand and still earned less than my dad. My mum though has bought condominiums in cash and has rented them out. Both of them chose to stop working at 42. Now, they are in their 60s and just travel and chill with their lives. All of my dad's friends at Bamrungrad Hospital who are doctors can choose to retire at anytime.
      I am a landlord myself. I bought 5 properties in cash when the market crashed. I am 31. I am a sub-10 Ironman, sub-3 marathon runner, former Muay Thai champion. I don't work in 9-5. I am not an employee. I started reading Rich Dad, Poor Dad when I was 9. I travel to 3-4 countries and train everyday. I haven't drunk nor smoked. Ultimately, it comes down to the discipline and how you use money to generate more money for you.

  • @Idontknowhoiamanymore
    @Idontknowhoiamanymore 10 месяцев назад +18

    I’m a teacher in a classroom and a private instructor. In order to be successful as a teacher you must be patient and see the big picture. You need to look ahead to the future and make a plan. I’m also forced to budget my money for the summer when I make less money. These skills I think will help aid me in my quest to becoming an ‘everyday’ millionaire. If you don’t have the every dollar app you’re doing yourself a big disservice!

  • @HeyaHoyah
    @HeyaHoyah 10 месяцев назад +31

    I’m with Dave. Being a data analyst is the least sexiest job I’ve ever had but because of how repetitive it is, it’s easy and I get about 30 an hour doing it while I watch a movie or listen to podcasts on the side. Plus it’s allowing me to get debt free and almost entirely fund our wedding with cash.

    • @dolly4446
      @dolly4446 9 месяцев назад +4

      30 or MORE working from home watching RUclips or movies and only using books and numbers every so often 😁

  • @kimberlyhuang5846
    @kimberlyhuang5846 10 месяцев назад +9

    I am a teacher in nyc. I am 30 years old and started teaching at 24. I will be a 7th year special education teacher in September. I will be making 95k this year, with pay bumps in January and September. We have a retirement system with a fixed return rate of 7%. We can also put it in diversity funds/stocks, which can net to more than a 7% return. I put in 12% of each check, so by the time I retire I will be projected to have at least a million dollars. Yes, nyc is extremely expensive, but if you invest - you can do it.
    I have my bachelors, masters, and 30 credits above my masters which is why I also make this amount currently.

    • @cerebralcaustic
      @cerebralcaustic 3 месяца назад +1

      That fixed 7% return fund is an annuity. Prolly getting screwed hard on fees. Look into it.

  • @reneeelias9514
    @reneeelias9514 10 месяцев назад +6

    Teachers have great benefit packages too! My girlfriends husband, teacher just retired, age 59. Lived on strict budget during his whole life. I would have gone nuts. But he travels. He has a nice house. A new car he and his wife share. ( i can’t imagine not having my own car) They put 4 kids thru college. 2 of their kids drive the used cars that they used to drive.

  • @deecali
    @deecali 9 месяцев назад +9

    Totally agree. My husband is a teacher and I work in healthcare. Debt free, live in high cost of living state. My husband drives an older car but doesn't care. We are debt free and on BS6. We live on a budget, don't do fancy and totally okay with it. We want to give back and it's not all about being selfish and being flashy.

  • @kevinolshefski8310
    @kevinolshefski8310 3 месяца назад +1

    6th year of teaching. I have two IRAs, one which I started on my own at 31 and One just recently started investing through my school. Along with my pension as well as 7,000 square feet of property that is completely paid for I am doing my best with what I got. average income of 104 to 140 with my two jobs.

  • @FrankS111
    @FrankS111 10 месяцев назад +42

    This is incorrect. My wife is a teacher and we’re both in our early 40s with 3 boys. Im an engineer and can tell you that the reason teachers would be millionaires is because of the union contracts. Teachers may not make much money in terms of salary but they pay next to nothing for health care and they have a full pension. If a teacher can make it to year 10 they will be making close to 100k and have benefits that are next to none.

    • @simonpegg1196
      @simonpegg1196 10 месяцев назад +6

      Correct! As I said in my comment, they have a lot of perks.

    • @jenniferpenland8812
      @jenniferpenland8812 10 месяцев назад +8

      That salary number is not true everywhere, unfortunately.

    • @lesg5270
      @lesg5270 10 месяцев назад +6

      Yep nothing like their pensions!!! Both of my parents were teachers and didn't need to touch their personal retirement plans

    • @nicolcacola
      @nicolcacola 10 месяцев назад +6

      Yep. Unions picket teacher BASE pay but teachers have amazing benefit packages which reduce their cost of living significantly.

    • @alinatamashevich3354
      @alinatamashevich3354 10 месяцев назад +4

      @FrankS, their retirement is close to their salary as well.

  • @fsufan
    @fsufan 10 месяцев назад +9

    i was in sales for 25 years and was a millionaire by 47, retired at 48

    • @ghost307
      @ghost307 10 месяцев назад

      The best way to motivate people is to put them in charge of their own paycheck.

    • @Dividendflywheel
      @Dividendflywheel 10 месяцев назад

      @@ghost307Write a book😂 PLEASE!!! You said so much with so few words.
      Give me 9 more quotes like that. And I will give you 3 options
      1. Write the book
      2. We co-author the book or
      3. I ghost write the book for you😂

    • @SKG1941
      @SKG1941 3 месяца назад +1

      Broke at 42. A millionaire at 52. Retired at 55. Sales Agent,then I bought the company.

  • @330_Crew
    @330_Crew 10 месяцев назад +9

    In my state teachers retire at 55 with 80% of salary for life.
    Depending on district, it’s not uncommon for long tenured teachers to approach $100k salary. So at 55 they will collect $80K a year.
    If you assume they live for 20 years and you calculate the net present value of the series of cash flows, it’s valued well over $1M.
    So just on pension value alone, many teachers are already millionaires.

  • @robertprice9052
    @robertprice9052 2 дня назад

    My a school administrator and in that category. I’m unique because I’m retired military, but I’ve invested since I was 17. My sister is a teacher and also in that category. I think part of it is realizing you’re not in a high paying career field you tend to save a little all along. Teachers also talk about money with one another. I have helped a bunch of new teachers set up investment accounts.

  • @kendrascorner
    @kendrascorner 10 месяцев назад +58

    Teachers knew from the beginning that they were not going to make exorbitant amounts of money. Are okay with a simple lifestyle. And usually have a strong value system which flows into the way they live.

    • @turtleanton6539
      @turtleanton6539 10 месяцев назад +1

      Yes😊

    • @reign0ffire88
      @reign0ffire88 10 месяцев назад +2

      Google your local school teacher salaries. You’ll be shocked. A lot around me are at $75k+

    • @kendrascorner
      @kendrascorner 10 месяцев назад

      @@reign0ffire88 in TN, the school district I was offered my first teaching job paid $32,000 per year starting. I moved to Canada to be with my husband, and starting salary here was $42,000 (Canadian), which translates to roughly $32,000 U.S.
      If you get your Masters or Doctorate, salary can increase, and each year you get a pay increase, but in both of my school districts, with just my bachelor's, I would have only made $60,000 (U.S.$) by the time I retired at 65 years old.
      But I'm glad to hear there are places where teachers are paid fairly.

    • @reign0ffire88
      @reign0ffire88 10 месяцев назад

      @@kendrascorner my wife’s first job in 2007 as a private school teacher was $32k. Today, states such as California, New York, New Jersey public teachers get $100k yr + benefits. Are teachers underpaid? Maybe in a few areas of the country. I’d like to see the best teachers in every district get paid the most.

    • @kendrascorner
      @kendrascorner 10 месяцев назад

      @@reign0ffire88 it's honestly shocking for me to hear that because that certainly hasn't been my experience, nor that of the teachers in my family. But then again, I guess it's due to the area of the country someone teaches in. I agree with you that the best teachers would get paid the most, and while some rough outline of a pay bracket is good, it would be great if excellent teachers could receive bonuses of some sort.

  • @ryankiel4895
    @ryankiel4895 10 месяцев назад +23

    You can support a family and build wealth very slowly on 60k a year but it is TOUGH. Like the video reports, it can be done - I did it for years, and it was no fun. After a couple job changes I make double now. I would not recommend a low income life to anyone. Life is too short to struggle financially. Kudos to our wonderful teachers, nonetheless! You are very brave and deserve all of our respect.

    • @cerebralcaustic
      @cerebralcaustic 3 месяца назад

      Factor in how teachers work only about 190 days per year. They're not underpaid at all.

  • @harrishistoria
    @harrishistoria 3 месяца назад +4

    The job sucks everything out of us. We walk around like exhausted zombies. I don’t have the energy to go anywhere to spend money.

  • @vikieierdam5516
    @vikieierdam5516 2 месяца назад +1

    My husband and I never made more than $80k and he left paid work at 56 and I left freelance writing at 51 and we are millionaires. We may do something else - beyond volunteering with Young Life - but right now, we GET TO volunteer because we were intentional. Thank you, Ramsey!!!

  • @kolbruce441
    @kolbruce441 8 месяцев назад +34

    I just sold a property in Portland and I'm thinking to put the cash in stocks, I know everyone is saying its ripe enough, but Is this a good time to buy stocks? How long until a full recovery? How are other people in the same market raking in over $200k gains with months, I'm really just confused at this point.

    • @stanleyalfred871
      @stanleyalfred871 8 месяцев назад +7

      Yes, a good number of folks are raking in huge 6 figure gains in this downtrend, but such strategies are mostly successfully executed by folks with in depth market knowledge

    • @susangrant2428
      @susangrant2428 8 месяцев назад +3

      Very true. Despite having no prior investing knowledge, I started investing before the pandemic and pulled in a profit of approximately $950k that same year. In reality, all I was doing was getting professional advice.

    • @oliviagardener9587
      @oliviagardener9587 8 месяцев назад +1

      How can I participate in this? I sincerely aspire to establish a secure financlal future and am eager to participate. Who is the driving force behind your success?

    • @susangrant2428
      @susangrant2428 8 месяцев назад +3

      There are a lot of independent advisors you might look into. But i work with Susan Kay Mack and I have been working together for nearly four years, and she is excellent. You could proceed with her if she satisfies your discretion. I endorse her.

    • @joeymichael5359
      @joeymichael5359 8 месяцев назад +1

      Once investing becomes a habit that you can’t imagine stopping, you’re golden. The biggest hill to climb is just getting that habit formed.

  • @AJ-rr1js
    @AJ-rr1js 10 месяцев назад +42

    I really think this depends on the state you live in for starters. The pay drastically changes from state the state, and the teacher profession is drastically changing. I left teaching because I was having to work 2 jobs and was struggling to put money back for the summer, let alone save for retirement. The hours required to be put in was so crazy I barely had time to work a second job, but received zero compensation for it, not even comp time. I watched as teachers in my state went from loving their job and being frugal to being so over worked that they were spending more money trying to find some sense of happiness. The only teachers that could enjoy it were the teachers whose husband's made 6 figures and year and they essentially taught as a hobby (they literally told me this word for word). I left for double the money (kept my same benefits by staying with the state), rarely work over 40 hours, kept my part time job, and also picked up some tutoring clients. I am easily saving for retirement and enjoying life and still working less hours then I was as a teacher. I think it will be interesting to see how this study stacks up in a few years.

    • @chazman4461
      @chazman4461 10 месяцев назад +4

      This is a lot of schools from where I grew up at.

    • @Standingupstrong993
      @Standingupstrong993 10 месяцев назад +3

      Please tell me what job you transitioned to that doubled your pay.

    • @AJ-rr1js
      @AJ-rr1js 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@Standingupstrong993 I went into Data Analytics

    • @dolly4446
      @dolly4446 9 месяцев назад +2

      Now this makes more sense rather than the video 😂😂

    • @jenniferrosenthal7731
      @jenniferrosenthal7731 9 месяцев назад +1

      @aj- what do you do now? I want to get out of education for all of the reasons you stated.

  • @nativeplantgardenclub3424
    @nativeplantgardenclub3424 10 месяцев назад +4

    This is exactly right. It was what worked for me. The systematic plan. It was discipline and we made it work.

  • @denzelpeoples2223
    @denzelpeoples2223 16 дней назад

    I’m a middle school teacher and this is almost unbelievable to me. I’m paycheck to paycheck, live off of one income and currently gross a little over $50,000. I rent a house, don’t have a car payment, and have 3 children, 5 and under. I don’t know how this is possible but I believe it must be.
    Gotta get on some practical principles in order to create a better present and future for myself and my children.

  • @EverettBurger
    @EverettBurger 10 месяцев назад +16

    Teachers also:
    - tend to be introverts. We don't have any social pressure to impress others. Therefore, we keep purchases at a minimum.
    - are happy with routine. This keeps us from impulsive purchases or investments.
    - many continue working during summers. Therefore, we have a low key income stream on top of our regular salary

  • @Sovnarkom
    @Sovnarkom 10 месяцев назад +19

    1. They’re union labor with access to both 401k and pension plans for double rent savings.
    2. They’re off for 3 months in the summer with pay - and can pick up additional work during that extended vacation.

    • @user-lo4wl6wd7f
      @user-lo4wl6wd7f 3 месяца назад +5

      They don't have access to 401k they have access to a 403b.
      They're off three months without pay and without access to unemployment checks

    • @christinelinden4075
      @christinelinden4075 27 дней назад +2

      In certain states, they forfeit their earned Social Security for that pension. The same pension that has been seriously reduced. Many are not able to collect any of their spouse's survivor benefits because they taught school. Sure wouldn't be a teacher again. That "loving what they do" bs is always useful when state's decide not to pay a decent salary.

  • @suen5006
    @suen5006 10 месяцев назад +3

    My parents and much of my family were teachers and all savers. They all lived frugally, never interested in designer things or the latest electronics, and paid cash for cars which they kept forever.

  • @NoRestrictions
    @NoRestrictions Месяц назад

    As a teacher, its true, saving is a part of it

  • @paulryanmiranda1029
    @paulryanmiranda1029 10 месяцев назад

    Hi Dave and team, I'm residing from the Phils and have listened to your show since the start of the pandemic. Wonderful mindset and concepts you and the team are sharing everyday. God Bless you sir

  • @Happey67
    @Happey67 10 месяцев назад +7

    Thank you guys for this and other topics! I am not certified but I live on less than I make. I have a good credit score, I save consistently, I have an extra gig on Saturdays, Friday evenings and in the summer I work that gig which could be 12 14, 16 hours in a day especially on Saturdays. I know God is with me, I do care about those students, I encourage them, they come to me to sign their yearbook and I give to ministries and to my relatives overseas. It gets too much with those relatives but...

  • @dermpath101
    @dermpath101 10 месяцев назад +6

    “You can’t earn your way out of stupidity” 😂

  • @mbiwechijioke4204
    @mbiwechijioke4204 15 дней назад

    This is the way a bridge is built. Very on Point.

  • @robertlulek1634
    @robertlulek1634 3 дня назад

    My son, I taught him all these principles and he already has 80,000 saved he's 21 years old

  • @missgui4400
    @missgui4400 10 месяцев назад +10

    We’re not teachers but we are frugal and we invest aggressively. Our goal is to be a millionaire in 10 years. 🙏🏻

  • @desertfish6239
    @desertfish6239 10 месяцев назад +4

    I retired from teaching last month. I lived beneath my means, paid off debt, and drive a 12-year-old car that runs great. I don't need a lot in life. I would rather take a road trip than accumulate stuff.

  • @toddschoonover5919
    @toddschoonover5919 Месяц назад +1

    FWIW, I've been a teacher in South Florida for more than 10 years and the only teachers I've ever met who were millionaires were millionaires because they were either married to a high-earning spouse, or they inherited money from a family member. Keep in mind that many teachers are pensioned employees, which means that their need for a large lump sum in other retirement accounts is lower than many other professions. Most teachers I've met understand the need to also invest in a separate 457/401k/IRA because the pension is quite meager, but the amount of income left over to invest in those accounts is usually very little. Again, I'm also in South Florida, which is probably among the most expensive places in the country to live.

  • @marybaker8061
    @marybaker8061 10 месяцев назад +17

    ❤❤ as a teacher's hearted, data analyst, I completely agree with this. I'm looking forward to my systems working to get where I want to be. I'm working full time and part time. I am taking college classes, and a community entrepreneur AI website building class. My heart, mind, and spirit are aligned. I'm in it to become one who pushes forth with wisdom of money matters, thanks to you all and my 1000s of hours of budget focusing.
    I'm grateful for all you all do!

  • @sgil9645
    @sgil9645 10 месяцев назад +18

    I retired as a career public school educator last year with a very very nice pension at age 59. I still work teaching college classes and enjoy it very much. As a new teacher, I learned so much from my more experienced colleagues about savings and investing. My wife stayed at home to raise the kids and we saved and stuck to our budget. Add up all the savings and other assets today and we are in the millionaire club.

    • @Dividendflywheel
      @Dividendflywheel 10 месяцев назад +2

      Congratulations
      When I used the words “millionaire club” my friend millionaire mentor chided me he said it’s called “2 comma club”😂. I had to think about it for a minute.
      Enjoy your hard work and sacrifice.
      May I encourage you to mentor younger teachers.
      Iron sharpens iron, so one man sharpens another.
      Cheers

  • @jimmyjackson2361
    @jimmyjackson2361 3 месяца назад +1

    Must agree that Dave is a teacher. He taught me how to get out of debt and stay out of debt. Thanks!

  • @JoelSuggsPGA
    @JoelSuggsPGA 3 месяца назад +1

    Teachers also get 3 months to be kinda' creative in making more money...a nice combination of system and improvisation. A Teacher once told me, "Summer, my part-time job with full-time income."

  • @sillytexasgirl
    @sillytexasgirl 10 месяцев назад +10

    As a teacher myself, it is true that teachers are values-driven, disciplined and humble. Trust me -- we are not in it for the paychecks! Teachers have a tendency to live below their means and invest wisely.

  • @scottgresham6759
    @scottgresham6759 20 дней назад

    Systems and structured approaches, stable business models, meaningful work. Coming from a poor background, my financial position has been going from strength to strength working as a teacher...in Asia.

  • @Spork123able
    @Spork123able 17 дней назад

    Teachers are very well paid and get incredible benefits.

  • @simonpegg1196
    @simonpegg1196 10 месяцев назад +38

    It's quite common for people having a really good income to go broke because of their extravagance.
    Moderate income requires a person to live below their means. Teaching is a profession with a lot of perks - stability, a good amount of down time during vacations, moderate yet solid income, and repetition. It requires discipline in not getting bored and following the same routine over and over again, which also percolates to financial prudence.
    Goes on to show that income and net worth are not necessarily proportional.

    • @ga6589
      @ga6589 10 месяцев назад

      I was an elementary school teacher for 36 years. One thing that I never struggled with was boredom, except maybe during staff meetings. BTW, teachers are leaving the profession in droves. Those "perks" you mention aren't keeping them in the classroom.

    • @andrewcazarez1308
      @andrewcazarez1308 9 месяцев назад +2

      I agree, teachers would rather have a 9-5 job that pays less than have to handle the stress of admin and kids today. You would have to pay teachers 100k to get them back in the classroom, which many states are working on in some way or another.

    • @karenk2409
      @karenk2409 8 месяцев назад

      Almost all the teachers I know had summer jobs to augment their income. Wore practical clothes. Worked too hard to have an expensive night life (ha!) They lived below their means, invested in a 401b, bought modest cars and raised their families in the school system they taught at. The year I paid off my mortgage, I retired.

    • @andrewcazarez1308
      @andrewcazarez1308 8 месяцев назад

      @@karenk2409 that sounds like a good plan lol

  • @Jim_Curtis
    @Jim_Curtis 10 месяцев назад +56

    I wonder if this will remain the case with younger teachers. Their mentality is different than their predecessors.

    • @Evil-Rod-Farva
      @Evil-Rod-Farva 10 месяцев назад +8

      Absolutely not. This data is skewed because generations before married early and invested in one another early.
      Most teachers are women. If they don’t marry and invest in a man early, there will be no teammate to build that army of dollars with you.
      They conveniently gloss over that in this data. Teachers will be the people asking for your tax money to supplement their career choice in the years ahead.

    • @paintingdragons1828
      @paintingdragons1828 10 месяцев назад

      Student here wanting to go into teaching. It's because they're not teaching organization in the teaching programs. Don't know how it is for other schools maybe mine is just crappy but the only practical advice I've gotten on the subject is from my mom who is a 20+ year seasoned teacher. A lot of my classmates feel like they're about to be fed to the wolves.

    • @hornetguy9063
      @hornetguy9063 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@Evil-Rod-Farvayeah, in the 50’s-70’s, a lot of teachers were no nonsense and more traditional type women. Which usually entailed a marriage as well, and that marriage would be to a man that was selected for his value as a husband and father. Most younger teachers I’ve met (< 35) these days are single, and are pretty much banking on teacher retirement to get them through in life.

    • @Excalibur2
      @Excalibur2 10 месяцев назад +1

      young people will always have a different mentality than the old, that's nothing new. Every person in the comments has a different idea too, what's that tell you?

    • @RealAmericanStar
      @RealAmericanStar 10 месяцев назад

      I don't think it will. The few younger teachers that I know go on multiple vacations a year and complain how they're broke. They go on more vacations then the "everyday millionaires" that I know.

  • @Techreux
    @Techreux 10 месяцев назад +1

    Like the comment, "you can't earn your way out of stupidity"! SO true - from personal experience!! Yes, my Mother a teacher of nearly 43 years - and the ultimate in frugality - when she passed away, we made the discovery she had a net worth of more than $1M - almost all in houses she had bought - she was never very flush with cash. Plus, in many teacher households where the spouse also works, there is more usually than enough to cover the bills.. provided you don't do frivolous, careless, or rampant spending.

  • @Hello-vf9ue
    @Hello-vf9ue Месяц назад +1

    As a teacher...I can add to this. I think a lot of people don't know how much teachers make. I think in general we make way more than what people guess...which I think teachers secretly like ( because there keeps being a push for raises). I live in CA...and I would say a lot of teachers average 100k annually. Plus many are married. I would say the majority of teachers are women...so teaching is probably in your top group of well paid jobs for women.

  • @suzboeh633
    @suzboeh633 10 месяцев назад +3

    I was a teacher for 14 years and took retirement at 60 with a small pension and paid for health insurance. I had other retirement investments and savings from the time I worked (before teaching) in another field. All of that allowed me to move to be closer to family. One thing that is not good was (in my state) 403b plans that only included annuity options. Also, my state did not allow much wage growth ( as in zero increases for a number of years). I now live in a state with a much higher wage scale and know lots of teachers who worked starting at age 22 and retired at 52. One thing I am not hearing in this discussion is that many teachers work summer and part time jobs (some in the schools like coaching, tutoring and many outside like music or art instruction, light construction, kids summer program manager). I would say I did not know any teacher who was the sole breadwinner in a household who did not work during the summer or had a second job year round.

  • @bigcahuna42366
    @bigcahuna42366 10 месяцев назад +5

    I'm a teacher too, not by job title but what I do for the company I work for. I'm currently training a lot of new people how to do the job I do, and requires a lot of patience and special methods to help them to find personal and career success.

  • @VakmanCA
    @VakmanCA 3 дня назад +1

    My main question about this study is whether it adjusts for the varying prevalence of different professions within the general population.

  • @liberalsocialist9723
    @liberalsocialist9723 3 месяца назад +1

    For my teacher, he put 800 dollars every month into his 401k with the school matching his payment for 40 years. He also bought his house early flipping burgers for 3 years since houseing was that cheap back than. This is in southern California where the house he bought flipping burgers is now worth over a million dollars.

  • @ghostbird92
    @ghostbird92 10 месяцев назад +6

    A lot of people become doctors because of the prestige and status associated with it. So it's really not too hard to see how they could also spend all their money on things that make them look good to other people. (big house, sports car, designer clothes, luxurious vacations, etc)

  • @bigbillmusic
    @bigbillmusic 10 месяцев назад +17

    Its because they are frugal. Just completed The Millionaire Next Door.

  • @shanelly13
    @shanelly13 19 дней назад

    Thank you for clarifying that there's different types of teachers. It's a gift or trait that one has. I enjoyed the insight from this video.

  • @lindawalsh2732
    @lindawalsh2732 10 месяцев назад +2

    I've been home schooling my kids for 21+ years. Therefore I am a teacher that does not get paid. My husband supports the 6 of us with his technician job. I walk dogs during my free time and with the money we make has paid off all our debt in 2 1/2 years. Our mortgage will be paid off in 2 more months this September. We are also fast approaching a net worth of$2 million. Its definitely a mindset on managing money and not how much you make but what you do with it.

  • @harknowhere
    @harknowhere 10 месяцев назад +8

    Also, getting summers off with pay allows them to think of other ways to decompress and make potential good decisions

    • @loveHislove
      @loveHislove 10 месяцев назад +8

      Teachers get paid during summer only if they have money held back during the regular school year. And contrary to popular belief, we don't get paid for Spring, Thanksgiving, nor Christmas breaks.

    • @harknowhere
      @harknowhere 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@loveHislove I don’t know where you teach but I’ve been teaching in New York for the last 3 years and I get paid for all of the times you mentioned

    • @Shu_Shu718
      @Shu_Shu718 10 месяцев назад +5

      @@harknowhere if you are a teacher, then you should know that you are salary contractual 10 month (180 school days) employee. You are paid a set amount based on your tier/years of teaching. That set salary is divided into 24 checks (12 months) instead of 20 checks (10 months) to make it easier for budgeting & pay bills. Talk to your chapter leader.

  • @jonathancoates5195
    @jonathancoates5195 10 месяцев назад +4

    "They've decided that what they make is enough." That is what makes people different. I have been making this decision and it is transformative.

  • @willco2556
    @willco2556 10 месяцев назад

    What a great conversation. Thank you Mr. Ramsey.

  • @txspacemom765
    @txspacemom765 3 месяца назад

    Hello, teacher here. I don't go for the flashy or to show off to anyone. I live in a 1400 square foot home in a nicer neighborhood. I tutor, which I can charge anywhere from $60 to $90 an hour and the need is there. I stick with my basic needs and budget, every day, every month, every year. Over the summer, I do administrative work, remote, at the beach, because a girl's gotta have some fun! I worked as a classroom teacher for a few years, then moved outside the classroom and have multiple avenues of income. Honestly, I really don't need much stuff to live, and I have my basics covered. Yes, things have gotten expensive, so I adjust as needed. Always adjust your sails. :)

  • @lookingforwhiteprivilege9330
    @lookingforwhiteprivilege9330 10 месяцев назад +5

    As a teacher I’m glad to hear this and hope to join the number. Hope I make the right investing decisions. Finishing up my debts and saving up for the fully funded emergency fund this school year Lord willing.

    • @Dividendflywheel
      @Dividendflywheel 10 месяцев назад

      Follow Dave Ramsey’s plan. Or find a plan that has been tested on millions of “Guinea pigs” (😂 forgive my sarcasm). The #1 strength of the baby steps is that at this point is it has been tested and refined over 30 years.
      The other alternative is to find mentors (average millionaire’s) and ask them to teach you what they did. You probably bump into these people and have no clue they are millionaire’s. That’s the truth about average millionaire’s.
      They don’t advertise the number of zeros in their retirement accounts.
      They don’t announce the number of rental properties they own.
      They definitely don’t act rich. Or drive $100k cars or trucks.
      • 25 years ago I made it my mission to surround myself with these people.
      • there’s a Chinese proverb that says “when the student is ready, the teacher will appear”.
      Prepare yourself and your teacher will appear.
      Warning: this teacher is already wealthy. They will not invite you to invest with them. They will not ask you for money. Their time is very valuable. Listen learn and apply what they tell you. In 99.99% of the time, their philosophy will be similar to what Dave Ramsey is teaching. The methodology might vary, but the underlying philosophy will be the same.
      After all no one has a monopoly on common sense.
      Read many investing books
      The book of Proverbs in the Bible is actually a life and wealth manual.
      • The richest man in Babylon is a 100 years old book. It’s a classic.
      • As a Man thinks by James Allen is another 100 year old book
      • wisdom is more precious than silver. Develop a voracious appetite to learn.
      • don’t look for short cuts
      • becoming an average millionaire is a 3 decade journey.
      • be careful who you listen to. Including this comment 😂

  • @gregderamo5589
    @gregderamo5589 10 месяцев назад +12

    According to Medscape survey data, over half of all doctors (56%) are net worth millionaires. However, about 1 in 250 or so people are physicians, 7% of adults are “teachers”. So there are way more teachers than doctors and I doubt over half of them are millionaires. It’s true that a lot of doctors are bad with money, but having an average income of 250k+ over a 30 year career bodes well for your net worth even with debt and financial mishaps along the way. Are there docs that retire with nothing? Sure, but most of them do OK.

    • @Tank-vi2dv
      @Tank-vi2dv 10 месяцев назад

      Nah

    • @Dividendflywheel
      @Dividendflywheel 10 месяцев назад

      At retirement we should have 25 times our annual expenses. This ensures we can maintain the same standard of living in retirement
      • A teacher making $60k should have a retirement account worth $1.5 million ($60k multiplied by 25) when they retire.
      • Similarly a doctor making $250k should have a retirement account worth $6.25 million ($250k x 25) at retirement
      As an avid listener to the white coat investor podcast. Hosted by an E R doctor, the message I get from him is that a significant number of doctors (his colleagues) are under invested based on their age, income and number of years left to retire.
      I celebrate anyone regardless of profession who can reach the 25x milestone.
      Stay Hungry

    • @Dividendflywheel
      @Dividendflywheel 10 месяцев назад

      @@BentleyPawsJennifer may I suggest you read Andrew Hallam’s book titled millionaire teacher. It will inspire you. He too is middle school teacher
      I have relatives in a similar boat. I stopped discussing anything thing remotely related to finance. This made celebrating wealth milestones a little lonely. But that’s the reality of frugal millionaire’s.
      • start building your own net work of “almost millionaire’s” a term I coined to screen out people who inevitably become jealous

    • @markg999
      @markg999 10 месяцев назад

      ​​@@Dividendflywheelnteresting I'm in 40s no plan to retire and not far from 25 times expenses excluding our house. My personal goal is about 100 times expenses should hit around mid late 50s...might be overkill I guess.

    • @Dividendflywheel
      @Dividendflywheel 10 месяцев назад

      @@markg999 congratulations.
      Stay Hungry. Every multiple of your income that’s in a nest egg gives you options. The bigger the nestegg the bigger the options