The premise: when growing up, author Robert Kiyosaki had two dads advising him: 1) a Stanford-educated PhD who followed traditional career thinking, was allergic to risk, and was financially illiterate (the Poor Dad, his biological father); 2) a high school dropout who later built a business empire worth many millions and employing thousands (the Rich Dad, his best friend’s father).
The Poor Dad represents the traditional view on work and money - go to school, get a good job and climb the ladder, prize stability over independence, buy a house, and spend money without a clear long-term plan.
The Rich Dad represents what was then a more contrarian view - work for salary if you have to, but aim for financial independence; have your money generate more money; and take calculated risks boldly.
Most people adopt the Poor Dad view of finances and life. Even worse, they let money control their life:
The rich don’t get rich merely by being paid higher salaries (though this is a great help). They get rich by owning things that make them more money.
Wealthy people use their Income to buy Assets that return more Income. Meanwhile, they minimize their spending on Expenses and buying Liabilities, to have more money to buy more Assets.
People who don’t become rich either spend all their income on expenses, or buy liabilities that increase their expenses but don’t add income.
The key to financial independence is having money that makes more money. You want your money to make enough money that you don’t have to work anymore.
The key is to buy things that generate income (assets). You do NOT want to buy things that lose money over time or incur large expenses (liabilities).
This is obvious enough. But the most deceptive investments look like assets, but are actually liabilities.
Real assets are businesses that don’t require your active management; stocks, bonds, and other securities; income-generating real estate; and intellectual property generating royalties.
Think about each dollar as your employee that works 24 hours a day tirelessly to make you more money.
The tradeoff between today’s expenses and future income should be clear. Every dollar you spend today is a dollar that does not work for you again, in perpetuity.
Kiyosaki advises that people set up corporations to deduct expenses without paying taxes. (Shortform note: This is a controversial suggestion because it can easily go wrong if you don’t follow tax guidelines.)
The major thing worth noting here is that corporations let you deduct legitimate business expenses pre-tax, instead of paying from post-tax dollars.
Even if you have Rich Dad goals, you still need to execute your plan. Several common mental obstacles get in the way. We’ll address each one:
Self-doubt
Fear
Laziness
Guilt for Feeling Greedy
Arrogance
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Rich Dad, Poor Dad is one of the best-selling financial books in history, selling over 35 million copies since its publication in 1997.
The book doesn’t teach the tactics of getting rich as much as it does the principles: the mindset and high-level strategies that distinguish the wealthy from the hapless.
Unfortunately, as many critics have commented, much of Rich Dad, Poor Dad is flawed. It’s not clear exactly how and when to apply the principles, and less discerning readers can follow the advice and get into trouble. Here are some caveats to set the advice in context.
Rich Dad, Poor Dad doesn’t engage on tactical details that would help people apply the decisions. Kiyosaki says these are out of scope of the book, and maybe details would alienate the popular reader, but it’s a poor excuse. Examples of useful questions to cover:
Kiyosaki includes pretty outlandish examples of fantastic investment opportunities. These aren’t necessary for understanding the principles (and we omit most of them from this summary), but they are misleading for the more gullible reader. Here they are, for your understanding:
Rich Dad, Poor Dad has some advice that can be interpreted irresponsibly and lead to disaster.
Robert Kiyosaki seems to lean toward the libertarian. He has standard anti-taxation, anti-entitlement, pro-gold-standard party lines.
Again, despite its flaws, the book has useful things to say. So try to focus on the principles we’ve extracted and what you can take away.
Finally, Rich Dad, Poor Dad is...
Growing up in Hawaii in the 1950s, Robert Kiyosaki had two dads:
Robert Kiyosaki got conflicting advice from both dads on how to manage money, career, and financial risk. Ultimately he saw more wisdom and results in Rich Dad’s advice, and followed in the Rich Dad’s path.
While Robert Kiyosaki might really have had two dads, the more important point is that the two dads are a parable for two types of financial thinking.
The traditional view worked better in the 20th century, when strong growth and decades-long employment meant stability was a viable strategy. Nowadays, pensions are rarely guaranteed; job security at a loyal employer is rare; professional education and academic success are no longer guarantees for security.
But the traditional thinking is still common. Rich Dad, Poor Dad aims to shake readers out of their current passive path and taking a proactive strategy to building wealth and working for their best interest. Figure out what to do with money once you earn it, learn how to keep people from taking it from you, and make the money work for you.
Rich Dad, Poor Dad explores differences between the two dads on a few levels:
Rich Dad and Poor Dad look at the world differently. Here are quotes and perspectives taken from throughout Rich Dad, Poor Dad that exemplify their different mindsets and approaches to wealth.
Poor Dad | Rich Dad |
Be employed by a company. Climb up the corporate ladder. | Own the company. Own the corporate ladder. |
Be a smart person. | Hire smart people. |
I can’t afford it. (passive surrender) | How can I afford it? (active engagement) |
The reason we’re not rich is because of you kids. (blaming others for lack of wealth) | The reason I must be rich is because I have you kids. |
Play it safe. Don’t take financial risks. | Risk is good when controlled. Learn to manage risk. |
Our home is our largest investment and our greatest asset. | Our home is a liability and shouldn’t be our largest investment. |
Find a good job. | Create jobs. |
Work for money. | Money works for me. |
Security is most important. | Learning is most important. |
I’ll never be rich, no matter what I do. | No matter how much money I have, I am always a rich man. There’s a difference between being broke and being poor - broke is a temporary state; poor is a permanent mindset. |
Money doesn’t matter. (This is often self-deception to avoid confronting the pain of not having enough money.) | Money is power. Money does matter, whether you like it or not. Learn how money works, and you gain power over it. |
Greed is bad. | Use greed to make your life and other people’s lives better. |
I’ve worked hard, and I’m entitled to benefits. | Be self-reliant. Entitlements are weakening and cause financial dependence. |
The fear of losing is greater than the excitement of winning. Play it safe. (Die a boring person, knowing you didn’t go for it.) | Control your fear. Don’t let it make you a slave to money. |
More money will solve my problems. I’m in debt. How do I make more money? | For most people, lack of financial education is the major problem. If you give people more money without changing their financial strategy, the money will just disappear.
The problem is how to spend the money you do get. Rework the cashflow pattern first before getting more money. </td> </tr> |
I need more money, so I’m going to get a job/get a promotion/go back to school and get a raise/get a second job. | Let’s think carefully. Is a job the best solution to this over the long run? How do I make income beyond just earning a higher salary? |
(To another person)... |
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Spread across a few chapters in Rich Dad, Poor Dad, the author narrates his experience with Rich Dad learning the principles of money and work.
As a 9 year old, Robert Kiyosaki is rejected socially by the rich kids in his public school. He asks his dad, a teacher, how to get rich and make money, but his dad has no satisfactory answer.
He commiserates with his best friend Mike, the only other non-visibly-wealthy kid in the school. They start a misguided idea to melt down metal toothpaste tubes and mint their own nickels. Bemused, Robert’s dad (Poor Dad) suggests they talk to Mike’s dad (Rich Dad), who owns multiple local businesses and seems to be on a good path.
Rich Dad is busy, but meets with them early in the morning between his regular business meetings with his managers. Rich Dad has this dialogue:
They take the deal, which means working for 10 cents an hour in Rich Dad’s convenience store. They know this is an unfair wage.
After laboring for 3 hours over 3 weekends, Robert Kiyosaki gets upset and wants to quit. His friend is amused, since Rich Dad expected he’d want to quit, and wanted to meet afterward.
Before the meeting, Poor Dad advises the author to demand what he deserved - at least 25 cents an hour. If he doesn’t get the raise, Poor Dad counsels, Robert Kiyosaki should quit immediately.
Kiyosaki takes Poor Dad’s advice, and starts the meeting demanding more money, demanding to be treated better, threatening child labor lawsuits, and complaining the Rich Dad hasn’t taught him anything. Rich Dad replies: “Not bad. In less than a month, you sound like most of my employees.”
Rich Dad’s point of the exercise is this:
Rich Dad is pleased and says, “you boys are the first to come to me asking how to make money. Over 150 employees work in my companies, and not a single one has come to me to learn about money. They ask for a job or a bigger paycheck, but never to educate themselves about money. So they’ll spend their lives working for money, but not actually understanding it.”
Rich Dad’s next order is for the author and Mike to go back working, but now with zero pay. When Kiyosaki complains, Rich Dad challenges him: we can go back to our original deal of 10 cents, or you can do what most people do - complain there isn’t enough pay, and go looking for another job. When Kiyosaki is confused, Rich Dad advises him to use his head.
After working for 3 more weeks, both kids are confused by what they’re supposed to be learning. Rich Dad comes by and tells them there’s a lesson to be learned here.
“If you don’t learn this lesson, you’ll end up like other people who work hard, clinging to their pay and constantly looking forward for their vacation days and little raises. Here - I’ll raise your pay to 25 cents an hour. Does that excite you? Do you want to take it?”
Rich Dad keeps raising the stakes - a dollar an hour. $2 an hour. The author’s imagination runs wild at having that much money, but he knows he’s being tested. Each person has a weak and needy part of their soul that can be bought. Each person also has a part of their soul that is strong and can never be bought.
The point of the lesson: most people run endlessly in a loop between fear and greed.
Rich Dad was trying to teach the kids not to give into emotions around money, but rather to delay reactions and think.
Rich Dad leaves with this advice: “The sooner you stop thinking you need a paycheck, the easier your adult life will be. Keep...
With the narrative over, the rest of the book covers Robert Kiyosaki’s major lessons from Rich Dad.
Most people work 40+ hours a week to earn salaries. Many then take their earnings to 1) buy stuff they think will make them happy (but this is short-lived), 2) save the remainder in a conservative way.
While this ensures some degree of stability, it doesn’t make you rich. And working to earn a pension makes you financially dependent - let alone the risk that pensions won’t be funded decades from now, when you need it.
The counter-intuitive lesson here is this: the rich don’t get rich merely by being paid higher salaries (though this is a great help). They get rich so by owning things. No one on the Forbes billionaire list got there purely with a salary.
(As tech investor Sam Altman says, “You get truly rich by owning things that increase rapidly in value. This can be a piece of a business, real estate, natural resource, intellectual property, or other similar things. But somehow or other, you need to own equity in something, instead of just selling your time. Time only scales linearly.”)
When you work for an employer, you get paid only a fraction of the value that you generate for the employer (otherwise, if the business would go bankrupt). Say your salary is $50k a year. Your work may allow your employer to earn $100k in sales that year, yielding a clean profit after deducting your salary.
The key to financial independence is having money that makes more money. You want your money to make enough money that you don’t have to work anymore.
To picture this, here’s a simple financial diagram from Rich Dad, Poor Dad on how cashflow and balance sheet relate to each other:
The top box is an income statement, measuring how much income you get in a period, and how much expenses you pay out.
The bottom diagram is the balance sheet. It shows how much in assets and liabilities you have. Assets are things that make money over time. Liabilities are something that spend money over time. (Shortform note: these are Robert Kiyosaki’s terms and don’t follow typical GAAP accounting.)
We’ll get more into distinguishing assets vs liabilities in the next section, but the main point here is that wealthy people use their Income to buy Assets that return more Income. Meanwhile, they minimize their spending on Expenses and buying Liabilities, to have more money to buy more Assets. Here’s what that looks like:
People who don’t become rich either spend all their income on expenses, or buy liabilities that increase their expenses but don’t add income.
Consider that “money earning money” is your business. Your profession is how you draw a salary. Your business is how, independent of you, your money makes more money.
You might have the goal of financial independence, which is to no longer be dependent on your wages. Ideally, you can live forever off of the extra income your money generates - you make more money doing nothing than you consume.
The basic steps for financial independence are:
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So how do you put your money to work for you? The key is to buy things that generate income (assets). You do NOT want to buy things that lose money over time or incur large expenses (liabilities).
This is obvious enough. But the most deceptive investments look like assets, but are actually liabilities.
In Robert Kiyosaki’s view, the most common mistake is buying a house as a primary residence, and considering it an asset and their primary investment.
His reasoning:
Shortform Explanation
Kiyosaki doesn’t address that people obviously have to live somewhere, and paying rent would also be an expense. And, typically, the monthly mortgage payment is lower than the monthly rent of the home, which is where people often get tripped up.
A proper analysis would compare the long-term outcome of these two options:
the cost of buying a home, including the down payment, annual expenses, and likely appreciation of home value
renting an identical property, increases in rental costs in proportion with home value appreciation, and investment returns of the extra cash from not buying a home (e.g. down payment) over time
But Rich Dad, Poor Dad isn’t great about these tactical details - one of its major failings. Going through the exercise, neither option is a clear home run, depending on your assumptions of how the housing market and stock market change.
So to bring it all together, here’s the best advice we imagine Kiyosaki would give:
As a mindset, don’t consider your home as your natural biggest investment. There are better places to put your money with better returns and more robust diversification.
Buy only the house that you need.
Do not overspend under the delusion that it’s going to be a great investment, or your major investment.
Do not buy to keep up with the Joneses - the money you save can be better employed elsewhere.
If you get a pay raise, don’t upgrade your house if you don’t need to. This is the cause of the vicious cycle putting you in the rat race.
Don’t buy physical goods whenever you get more money, with the expectation they’ll be good investments. This includes bigger houses, fancier cars, house renovations, handbags, jewelry, and golf clubs.
Not only do consumption goods not generate income, they also depreciate incredibly quickly.
Be especially careful when buying the thing just causes you to go further into debt. This is a major way to increase expenses without increasing income, thus digging you into a deeper hole.
Kiyosaki isn’t saying don’t enjoy yourself. You can still buy nice things and live life well. But ideally, afford your luxuries using extra cash flow from your assets. This way you’ll feel like you’ve really earned it. Rich people buy luxuries last.
So what are real assets?
(Shortform caveat: we consider this the worst chapter in the book. He doesn’t explain the advice clearly enough to be useful. The advice doesn’t apply to most people’s situations. And taken incorrectly, it could get you into trouble.
Treat none of this as actual tax advice; seek a tax attorney for real advice, and executing some of this too liberally is illegal.)
In Rich Dad, Poor Dad, Robert Kiyosaki is clearly strongly against taxation, saying things like:
Whatever your philosophical bent on taxation, the practical point is that the rich find ways to minimize their tax burden, sometimes paying a lower % of their income than lower tax brackets.
Robert Kiyosaki’s solution? Form your own corporation. Here are its benefits:
You can pay legitimate business expenses from pre-tax money, rather than post-tax money.
Say you have a business that buys and sells real estate. To travel to see new properties, you can pay for a car. You have business dinners that you can partially expense. You can have board meetings in exotic locations you would have vacationed anyway.
Shortform Explanation
Here’s the financial difference.
Say you earn $100 from salary, and after 40% taxes it’s $60 in your pocket. Your car costs $60, so you end up with $0.
Say your corporation makes $100 in income. Your car is used for business, so the corporation pays $60 for the car. The corporation then has income of $40. After a 40% tax, this ends up being $24. This profit can then be distributed to shareholders as a dividend.
- (In reality, this would be taxed at a 20% corporate rate and 20% personal capital gains rate, but I use 40% to better compare with the pre-tax situation above)
Here’s another way to phrase it: In the company, the $60, if it wasn’t spent on the car, would have been taxed as income. After the 40% tax, this is equivalent to $36. So it basically cost you $36 post-tax to get the car service, rather than $60 pre-tax, leading to a $24/$60 = 40% discount.
Again, be very careful with this. This isn’t a limitless buffet that you can transfer all personal expenses to. Make sure you understand what counts as a legitimate business expense and what creeps across the line to personal expenses.
From the book: “the income-tax rate of the corporation is less than the individual income-tax rates.”
Shortform Explanation
Superficially, this is true: in 2017 and before, corporate income tax used to be a flat 35%, while personal income tax was 39.6% at the highest bracket. In 2018, this became 21% and 37% respectively.
What he ignores, though, is that the corporate income is paid out to shareholders through dividends, which incurs an additional 20% personal capital gains tax.
Therefore the actual tax rate on dividends is now 1 - 0.79 * 0.8 = 36.8%, only slightly better than 37%.
Corporations and trusts can protect assets from creditors. A rich person as an individual may control things but own nothing.
(Shortform caveat: though in certain cases (like fraud or the corporation being essentially the same as the person), a litigant can “pierce the corporate...
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More people have the potential to be happy, but common obstacles get in the way. People who overcome these obstacles get a huge advantage.
Self-doubt or lack of self-confidence hold all of us back, to some degree. Some are affected more than others.
In the real world, more than just intelligence and grades is required. Guts, chutzpah, balls, daring, tenacity, grit are different names for the factor that plays a huge role in success.
When you recognize a great opportunity, you must have the courage to chase it.
(Shortform example: a quote from Charlie Munger: “We read a lot. But that’s not enough: You have to have a temperament to grab ideas and do sensible things. Most people don’t grab the right ideas or don’t know what to do with them.”)
Fear manifests in a lot of ways.
Fear of losing makes you play it safe and avoid opportunities that can have huge upsides and relatively low downsides. Control your fear of losing, money or otherwise. Everyone has fear of losing money, but you have to handle it properly.
School teaches us that mistakes are bad, but this is terrible for real life. Winners aren’t afraid of losing, but losers are. People who avoid failure also avoid success.
Every rich person has lost money. Someone who has never lost money is probably not rich.
Winning requires being unafraid to lose.
Failure will only make you stronger and smarter. Take a loss and make it a win. Use your failure to inspire yourself to become a winner. For winners, losing inspires them. For losers, losing defeats them. Use this sentiment to lower the perceived cost of failing.
Rich Dad says he like Texans, because “when they win, they win big. And when they lose, they lose big, and it’s spectacular. If you’re going to go broke, go big. Don’t admit you went broke over a duplex.” Even though the South lost at the Alamo, they handle failure fondly, shouting, “Remember the Alamo!”
(Shortform caveat: of course, taken to the extreme with an uninformed person, this can cause excessive risk taking and catastrophic losses.)
Don’t be afraid of turbulence or risk. “I’d like to, but I’m due for promotion in three months” is the classic excuse. There is always another carrot dangled ahead of you, and so there’s always a good reason not to do what you really want to do.
Don’t be afraid of rejection. Fear of ostracism prevents people from having nonconsensus opinions. As it relates to finance, it’s in 1) not bucking the consensus traditional way of handling your career and money, 2) keeping up with the Joneses and matching spending. Focus on yourself and your personal goals, regardless of what other people think.
If you fear all of these things, you can still be rich. But it requires a wiser, more conservative path: start young, save money, and use compound wealth to become rich when you’re old.
There will always be at least one reason something won’t work. Fixating on these reasons pessimistically will paralyze you from taking any productive step.
Common meaningless rebuttals:
Use your analysis to find opportunities that critics are blind to. Remember, other people are blind to opportunities because they seek security and safety.
Some people feel developing financial intelligence is too much hassle. Consider, would you rather put in some hard work now and enjoy decades of a better life, or suffer through the rest of life?
Counterintuitively, busy people are often the most lazy. They stay busy as a way of avoiding something they don’t want to face.
Consider someone who works all day and weekends to make ends meet, without confronting bigger problems like how to build wealth or their family’s well-being. They can brush off investment opportunities as, “I’m working hard enough as it is, and my boss wants me to do more work. I don’t have the time.” In reality, they don’t want to push themselves to do the harder thing of figuring out novel, less-obvious solutions to getting more money.
Forcing yourself to think about how to make more money is like exercising at the gym. The more you work your mental money muscles out, the stronger you get.
Corollary: Find areas that people don’t to work in, and there are likely unclaimed opportunities there.
We’ve been raised to think of greed or desire as bad. “Stop thinking about yourself. Why don’t you think about others?”
In reality, self-interest (generally, wanting to make your own life better) drives innovation and value for other people. This is the cornerstone of capitalism.
Condemning greed might be a trained defense, learned helplessness. “I don’t know how to become rich. So I’m just going to try to believe being rich is bad, and there’s valor in not wanting to be rich. Even though secretly I would love to be rich.” It’s easy to imagine parents feeling this, then teaching it to their kids.
“If you want to improve, be content to be thought foolish and stupid.” –Epictetus
Arrogance is ego plus ignorance.
When you’re ignorant in a subject, recognize this, then educate yourself.
**Intelligent people welcome new ideas, since new...
Developing financial intelligence pays off huge returns. If your mind is trained well, you can create enormous wealth in what in the grand scope of things is an instant.
In contrast, an untrained mind can also create poverty that lasts lifetimes.
Robert Kiyosaki believes financial intelligence is made up of four broad areas of expertise:
Taken together, financial intelligence allows you to construct creative ways to solve financial problems, vet the ones that are more likely to work, then have the technical ability to execute them.
Consider that spending money on financial intelligence is like buying yourself life - you may save on years of working because of making the right decisions.
Great opportunities arise in a changing world. (Shortform note: Put technically, markets are less efficient and less at equilibrium when things rapidly change, like through new technology.)
300 years ago, land was the basis of wealth. Then factories and industry became the new basis for wealth. Today, it’s information. And by its nature, information changes more rapidly than land or manufacturing. So it’s even more important to keep learning and adapting, quickly, as it’s ever been.
(Quote from Charlie Munger: “In my whole life, I have known no wise people (over a broad subject matter area) who didn’t read all the time — none, zero. You’d be amazed at how much Warren [Buffett] reads.”)
This doesn’t have to be difficult or intense. Robert Kiyosaki mentions jogging through his neighborhood to spot which houses were listed for sale for longer than others, and making low-ball offers for these houses.
The more you learn and the more experience you get, the more money you make, which gives you more chances to learn even further. The faster you can iterate your knowledge, the faster the returns compound.
Many people with great talent in their trade aren’t rich. They’re specialists and proud of it.
Often, they just need to learn and master one more skill to dramatically boost their income.
Notable examples of underappreciated skills include sales, marketing, communication, negotiating, investing, people management, and financial intelligence.
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Finally, we’ll end with tips on how to get started on your path to building wealth:
Find a deep reason you want to succeed. This is usually a combination of “wants” and “don’t wants.”
Examples: “I don’t want to work all my life. I don’t like being an employee. I hated that my dad missed my football games since he was obsessing about his career. I want to be free to travel the world when I’m young. I want control over my time.”
If you don’t have a strong reason, you won’t make it. It will sound like too much work.
Ask, what would a rich person do in this situation?
Invest in educating yourself.
Don’t seek people for their money. Seek them for their knowledge.
Find someone who has done what you want to do. Take them to lunch.
Don’t listen to frightened people who always advice caution or are pessimistic. They drag you down.
Funnily, rich people have friends who ask them for jobs or a loan, but rarely to ask them how they made money.
Formulas lose their potency as they become more common. Keep reinventing yourself and finding new ways to create value.
As described above, buy your assets first, and pay the bills last. The pressure will force you to creatively think of ways to generate more money.
Importantly, this doesn’t mean don’t pay bills, or to incur greater debt. Don’t get yourself into debt in the first place.
Don’t dip into your savings or investments. Protect your assets when the going gets tough.
They provide valuable information and take time to educate you.
Hire professionals who know what they’re talking about, and have skin in the game. An attorney who personally invests in real estate will be more helpful for your real estate matters.
Don’t short-change your brokers. Why would they want to hang around you if you’re not being fair?
You’ll be comfortable paying them better when you value your time and understand the value of what they give.
Find a way to put in money and get it back, then get free money into the future. Kiyosaki relates this to “Indian giving.”
Example: Buy a cheap house with cash, use rent to pay it off, and the house now generates money forever.
Sophisticated investors ask, “how fast do I get my money back?”
You must resist the temptation to spend any extra money you get. This requires fortitude.
Do NOT borrow money to get the things you want. Focus on creating money.
Learn how they make decisions, and how they got to where they are.
When negotiating, Kiyosaki “acts with the bravado of Trump.”
Heroes who make it look easy convince you to be just like them. “If it’s easy for them, I can do it too.”