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MINORITY WEALTH GAP

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6 Reasons Why the ​Poor Stay Poor ​and Middle Class ​Doesn’t Become ​Wealthy
By G. Brian Davis, ​GOBANKINGRATES – ​April 20, 2024

FULL TEXT OF 04/20/24 GOBANKINGRATES ​ARTICLE

Social mobility and wealth inequality make for ​easy political bullet points to bash “the other ​side.” But buying into the sound bites won’t make ​you any richer.

To hear people on the left, the poor have no ​agency, no control whatsoever over their own ​lives. To hear people on the right, anyone can pull ​themselves up by their bootstraps and increase ​their net worth if they work hard.

One narrative removes all personal power from ​the individual, and the other removes all ​acknowledgment that we’re shaped by our ​communities. Both lack any sense of nuance.

We all know that people can change. We’ve ​seen it happen by witnessing people evolve both ​personally and financially. So why don’t more ​people push beyond the socioeconomic class of ​their birth?

 
Financial ​Literacy: ​Lessons We ​Learn ​Outside of ​School

1. We Learn Financial Habits Privately (Not in School)


It’s hard to get rich if you don’t know much about money. ​Surprising no one, financial literacy shares a strong ​correlation with wealth. Yet, teaching personal finance or ​investing in schools isn’t prioritized. Instead, each of us must ​learn them at home, or worse, on our own in adulthood.


2. We Adopt the Views and Habits of Our ​Communities


If you grow up surrounded by attorneys, investment bankers or ​entrepreneurs, you’ll likely consider those career paths first. You ​may also get some help along the way with tuition, test ​preparation and introductions to people who can help with your ​career. But even if you don’t, you’ll grow up with a clear view of ​these career paths. You’ll know every step it takes to get exactly ​where you want to go.

Your role models probably work long hours and value ​education. Your parents probably press you to get good grades in ​school, learn foreign languages and travel for exposure to other ​cultures.

If you grow up surrounded by high-school dropouts, some of ​whom work low-wage jobs, others of whom collect Social ​Security or disability benefits, what views and habits will you ​absorb? They probably won’t be the ones that lend themselves to ​financial success. You may even develop a disdain for education.

 
The Barriers to Higher ​Education: Cultural, ​Financial, and ​Knowledge Gaps

3. Higher Education Equals Higher Earnings


Again, it comes as no surprise that education is highly correlated with ​wealth. In fact, the Social Security Administration puts the average ​lifetime earnings of men with advanced degrees $1.5 million higher than ​those with high school diplomas. But growing up in a poor community, ​you’ll face several challenges in attaining higher education. The first is ​cultural: you’re simply less likely to want to go the distance if no one in ​your community has pursued it. You’ll also face financial challenges in ​pursuing your education. Your parent(s) might ask you to chip in ​financially once you reach your teenage years, making it harder to stay in ​high school and earn strong grades. And that says nothing of the cost of ​college or even applying to them. Finally, you face a knowledge gap: if no ​one in your family has gone to college, they can’t guide you through the ​application process or the process of applying for financial aid. Not to ​mention, you won’t have someone close to you to advise you about ​scheduling classes, dealing with professors and paying back student ​loans.


The Power of Continuous ​Learning: Why Wealthy ​Individuals Never Stop ​Growing

4. Ongoing Education Is Lacking


Higher earners know the value of ongoing education. They ​never stop learning. At the high end of the ladder, the wealthy ​invest enormous sums to join high-performance peer groups that ​constantly challenge them to keep growing. They embrace ​accountability partners, executive coaching, masterminds and ​endless personal development. They never stop learning, ​because they know that the more you learn, the more you’ll ​learn. It takes time and money to invest in yourself this way. The ​poor and middle classes either don’t have enough of either or ​don’t prioritize the investment even when they could make it.

 
The Wealth Gap: How Continuous Learning and ​Homeownership Set the Rich Apart

5. Homeownership Is Out of ​Reach


The average homeowner has a net worth 40 ​times higher ($396,200) than that of the average ​renter ($10,400), according to Federal Reserve ​data.

However, it takes tens of thousands of dollars ​to buy a home, between the down payment, ​closing costs and cash reserves. That puts ​homeownership out of reach for many lower-​income Americans — and with it, a major avenue ​to building wealth.


6. Investing and Leveraging Aren’t ​Practiced


Some of the reasons above are practical or financial. Others revolve ​more around cultural views and habits.

Robert Kiyosaki wasn’t wrong when he explained that the rich put their ​money to work for them while the poor and middle classes work for ​money. You can argue for your own limitations and come up with ​perfectly “reasonable” reasons why you (or someone else) can’t afford to ​do likewise. You wouldn’t be wrong per se, but you also won’t get rich.

Years ago when my business partner was a low-wage single mom with ​four young children, she house hacked by subleasing the master bedroom ​in her rented home. She moved a bed into a hall closet for herself, and her ​sublessee covered most of her home’s rent. That enabled her to save ​money to eventually buy a home, which she again partially rented out to ​cover her housing payment.

She scored free housing because she learned how to leverage other ​people’s money. She didn’t spend the money she saved — she funneled it ​into more income-producing assets and investments, growing even more ​income. Later, she learned how to put other people’s time to work ​building her business.

And, of course, she’s the exception. She rose to wealth because she ​learned how to play the game more like the wealthy.

 
Achieving ​Economic ​Mobility

As you climb further up the socioeconomic ladder, the ​rules of the game change. In fact, the game itself changes.


In poverty, it’s hard not to constantly play defense. You ​don’t think about the big picture. You just want to make sure ​you can put food on the table this month.

With greater security, the middle classes start playing a ​broader game. They aim to buy a home. They might ​contribute to retirement accounts and start taking ​advantage of compounding returns.

But they don’t know how to use backdoor Roth contributions ​to maximize tax-advantaged accounts for example, and let their ​investments compound tax-free. Or how to use leverage on real ​estate to earn “infinite returns” with no money tied up in the ​investment. Or how to build diversified, recession-resilient ​portfolios with dozens of streams of passive income.

As a final thought, consider that in the four decades from ​1979 to 2019, vast numbers of Americans climbed up the ​ladder from poverty. In 1979, 48% of Americans qualified as ​either poor or lower-middle class. By 2019, only 29% did, ​while the upper-middle class grew from just 13% of the ​population to 37%.

We don’t see these broader trends in our headlines ​because a few outlier billionaires get all the press. But ​economic mobility in the US has improved over the last few ​decades, even if it doesn’t make for a pithy political rallying ​cry.

 

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