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Rich Dad, Poor Dad: What the Rich Teach Their Kids About Money - That the Poor a

2014-03-04 
编辑推荐Robert Kiyosaki reveals how he developed his unique economic perspective from his two father
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Rich Dad, Poor Dad: What the Rich Teach Their Kids About Money - That the Poor and the Middle Class Do Not! [简装]

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Robert Kiyosaki reveals how he developed his unique economic perspective from his two fathers: his real father, who was highly educated but fiscally poor; and the father of his best friend - an eighth-grade drop-out who became a self-made multi-millionaire. The lifelong monetary problems experienced by his "poor dad" pounded home the counterpoint communicated by his "rich dad". Taking that message to heart, Kiyosaki was able to retire at the age of 47. This book lays out his philosophy and aims to open readers eyes by: exploding the myth that you need to earn a high income to be rich; challenging the belief that your house is an asset; showing parents why they can't rely on schools to teach their children about money; defining once and for all an asset versus a liability; and explaining what to teach your children about money for their future financial success.

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Customer Reviews
Best Book to Read First When You Start Investing!, 4 Aug 2004
Reviewer: Donald Mitchell "Founder of The Billionaire Entrepreneurs' Master Mind -- http://billiondollarbusiness.blogspot.com/"

I get hundreds of e-mails a year from new investors who want to know how to get started on a profitable path. I always tell them to begin their reading list with Rich Dad, Poor Dad. Then I tell them to go on to Cash Flow Quadrant. Even if you are an experienced investor, there are important lessons here that you may not yet be following. Take a look!
The title of this book is a little misleading. I thought that this was going to be a survey-based study of millionaire parents versus nonmillionaire parents. My mistake! Actually, the premise is more personal and intersting than that. Mr. Robert Kiyosaki compares the financial and career advice (study hard, get lots of education, go the for secure job) from his poor Ph.D father with the advice the 8th grade drop-out rich father of his friend, Mike, gave him (get your money to work for you, become financially literate, develop your own business and investment opportunities, learn a little of a lot of things, use corporations and tax breaks to reinvest more into cash producing assets, and work at what you enjoy). The story is wonderfully told, and one worth passing along to your children and grandchildren.

For those who don't understand why this is good advice, Sharon Lechter has done a nice job of creating schematics to show how cash flows can grow or dwindle, based on how you allocate your income. This is the simplest effective explanation of the point of cash compounding based on its application for all of a person's spending that I have seen. Although I am good at math, I suspect that people who are not good at math will get the point, as well.

The main difference between this book and the typical investment books is that it provides some tangible sense of why cash flow producing real estate does you more good than owning your own home. With real estate net worth below versus the stock market net worth in the average household and interest rates starting to climb again, we are probably still in a fairly time to be doing some low-cost real estate investing. Every other investment book will be all about stocks and ignore real estate.

Naturally, I fell in love with the book when I realized that the authors shared my philosophy of overcoming 'stalled' thinking. There is an excellent chapter on stalls related to fears of losing money, behaving differently than others, and so forth that most people have about money. The stallbusting advice is sound. In fact, this is probably the best chapter in the book.

Whether you think you need this book or not, read it anyway. You'll probably get a few ideas. For sure, you'll become much more adept at formulating the advice you pass along to younger people. Also, you'll have found a good book to help those you care about become much more financially savvy and effective.

Invest, build your after-tax cash flows, reinvest, and grow rich!

作者简介

作者:(美国)Robert T. Kiyosaki

目录

Tbere Is a Need
LESSONS
Chapter One Rich Dad,Poor Dad
Chapter Two Lesson One-The Rich Dont't Work for Money
Chapter Three Lesson Two-Why Teach Financial Literacy?
Chapter Four Lesson Three-Mind Your Own Business
Chapter Five Lesson Four-The History of Taxes and the Power of Corporations
Chpater Six Lesson Five-The Rich Invent Money
Chpater Seven Lesson Six-Work to Learn-Dont't Work for Money
BEGINNINGS
Chapter Eight Overcoming Obstacles
GETTING STARTED
Chapter Nine Getting Started
Chpater Ten Still Want More?
Epilogue College Education for $7,000

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