Thursday, April 16, 2020
The Difference Between Millionaires and Billionaires Comes Down to How They Answer THIS Question
The Difference Between Millionaires and Billionaires Comes Down to How They Answer THIS Question Millionaires and billionaires may both be richer than the average person, but theyâre each in a group of their own. The distinction between the two comes down to how they answer one question, according to Rafael Badziag in his book âThe Billion Dollar Secret: 20 Principles of Billionaire Wealth and Successâ: âWhat do you enjoy more, making money or spending it?â Badziag, an entrepreneur and expert on the psychology of entrepreneurship, spent five years conducting face-to-face interviews with 21 self-made billionaire entrepreneurs around the world (defined as those with a net worth of at least $1 billion) and researching their lives and companies. âThe difference between financially successful people (millionaires) and financially super successful people (billionaires) boils down to the fact that the latter get pleasure making money, but donât enjoy spending it,â he wrote. Billionaire businessmen Michal Solowow â" the wealthiest person in Poland â" and Lirio Parisotto â" the wealthiest person in South America â" both credited their savings habits to their financial success. âYou want to get rich? Thereâs one way to do it: Spend less than you make. If you spend less and you accumulate, you get rich,â billionaire Frank Hasenfratz told Badziag. Frugality begets wealth Spending less than you earn is a classic staple of building wealth. Saving and investing more money than you spend helps spark the power of compound interest, where the interest you earn on your money earns more interest over time. Frugalityâ" a commitment to saving, spending less, and sticking to a budget â" is one of the characteristics most predictive of net worth, according to Sarah Stanley Fallaw, the director of research for theAffluent Market Institute and an author of â The Next Millionaire Next Door: Enduring Strategies for Building Wealth.â âSpending above your means, spending instead of saving for retirement, spending in anticipation of becoming wealthy makes you a slave to the paycheck, even with a stellar level of income,â she wrote. Look at the famously frugal Warren Buffett, who still lives in the modest home in Omaha, Nebraska, that he bought for $276,700 in 1958 (in todayâs dollars). Heâs never upgraded to a smartphone, pays $18 for a haircut, and spends no more than $3.17 on his daily McDonaldâs breakfast â" even though his estimated net worth is $84.6 billion. This article originally appeared on Business Insider.
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