The Millionaire Next Door - podcast episode cover

The Millionaire Next Door

Feb 05, 20261 hr 11 min
--:--
--:--
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Summary

Michael and Peter dissect "The Millionaire Next Door," a popular 1996 book claiming that wealth is built through extreme frugality and self-discipline, not high income or inheritance. They expose the book's dubious research methods, sexist stereotypes, and misrepresentation of actual millionaire demographics. The hosts argue that the book promotes a self-serving ideology for the wealthy, while downplaying systemic advantages and income inequality.

Episode description

Transcript

Intro, Book Overview, and Frugality Myth

The only other thing I'll say about this is that every pro you meet the prosecutors and stuff like me, they introduce themselves, but like they're all Italians from New Jersey. And I was just like this was any other ethnicity. If like every prosecutor was a Indian or something, like JD Vance would be talking about it, you know? Did they have a Jersey Shore accent?

How do you tell that they're Italians? How do you their names were it was like I'm Danny Goomba? I'm Jen this is uh Jenna Pastoroni. This is such an insane way to run a justice system, honestly. There's a moment when we're all standing outside the courtroom, fifty people. Dead silence, except for this one girl who like

was having a full fucking chat with the with a woman next to her who obviously like was less into it. We were right next to the elevator, which was under construction. And she kept saying Is there are they doing construction or is that just like a very loud elevator? And like When I tell you that it was like the most obvious construction noises, it was like fucking jackhammers and men shouting. And she kept.

waffling every two minutes, she's like, Maybe it is construction. You know, maybe it is just a loud elevator. And I think the other lady was a little too polite to be like, moron. What are you fucking talking about? Also, like that Several of the elevators were blocked off with giant signs that said like under I I

Michael I was like, This woman is about to decide whether a murder one case someone's life is in this woman's hands. Like there's a murder fucking murder defendant in there. Alright, we gotta jump we gotta jump in. Alright, uh get us in. No, you you have to start. You have to write. Peter. Michael. What do you know about The Millionaire Next Door? Finally, a book that lionizes the rich.

So the name of the book is The Millionaire Next Door, Colon The Surprising Secrets of America's Wealthy. It's by Thomas J. Stanley, comma PhD. And William D. Danko, comma, PhD. Two guys. Two guys and two importantly, two academics. Yeah. So this book comes out in 1996. It is apparently on the New York Times bestseller list for more than three years. It sells many millions of copies. It's extremely influential. It basically launched

A whole genre of book, this like ordinary millionaire book. Like millionaires are all around us. You can be an ordinary millionaire. I didn't know this until I was reading up on it, but Rich Dad Poor Dad is like a ripoff of this book. Oh. Like it's like a dumber version of this book. It comes out a year after this book.

So within a couple of years, we get the one minute millionaire, the top ten distinctions between millionaires and the middle class, millionaire by thirty, the millionaire maker, the automatic millionaire, the thin green line, the money secrets of the super wealthy.

Secrets of the Millionaire Mind, cracking the millionaire code. In nineteen ninety-nine there's one called Smart Women Finish Rich, which I imagine a guy named Rich carrying around bars and like showing to women. Can we circle back? Is there a way that we can just talk about the one minute millionaire? Because that

Pretty quick. And I feel like maybe worth a read. That's like the four minute abs. You're like, this is even faster. This is three minute abs. This is two minute abs. You can be a millionaire and have three minutes of abs remaining. And then one of the authors of this book Also wrote follow ups called The Millionaire Woman Next Door.

And The Millionaire Mind. The Millionaire Next Door. And then he's like, obviously that was about men. Girls can be millionaires too. So the authors in interviews very explicitly say, like, this isn't a get-rich quick book. We're not giving advice. This is a discussion. Descriptive, basically study of who has a million dollars in net worth. And they also talk about how they've been doing for 20 years, they've been doing focus groups.

Where they kind of dig more deeply into rich people's finances, what are they spending money on? How have they earned their money? We're getting a real portrait of. People with high net worth in America. Aaron Powell This is nineteen ninety six, you said, right? So millionaire had a little more meaning back then. I did the math. A million dollars in nineteen ninety six is almost exactly two million dollars. So any of the figures that they give in the book.

Roughly doubled them. Right. So this is a paragraph from the introduction to like the updated version of the books. This is like an an introduction of the book like ten years after it was published. Prior to writing The Millionaire Next Door, I spent nearly an entire year reviewing my survey data and the transcripts of the interviews conducted between nineteen eighty two and nineteen ninety six.

This extensive research and analysis, I believe, is what makes the millionaire next door a perennial bestseller. For the price of a book, The reader is essentially buying the equivalent of more than one million dollars worth of invaluable research and interpretation. So you're already a frugal millionaire. You're already having good spending habits by buying this. This is like when people are like Would you rather have a million dollars or ten minutes with Jay Z? This is the first sign.

That this book despite being written by academics This is not like that smart of a book. This shows that like if you have a PhD and then you write a best selling book, you get dumber. Yeah. Absolutely. Like it's not just that dumbasses write these books. It makes you stupid. So the introduction to the book they give sort of the origin of it. They've been surveying people in uh rich neighborhoods and middle class neighborhoods across the country for years.

What they find out is basically this idea that when you think of a millionaire, you think of someone who like lives in a big house, they're driving a fancy car, but what they've discovered in their research is basically there's this huge tranche of like modest millionaires, people who like drive a used car, they wear normal clothes, but they're sitting on like a million, two million dollars in wealth. They're trying to draw this distinction between people who earn a million dollars a year

versus people who have a million dollars in net worth. There's a lot of people who have a million dollars in net worth. Who are like teachers and firefighters and kind of ordinary jobs. They talk about dull, normal jobs. But they're they're they're sitting on this like massive nest egg. And then they talk about the kinds of wealthy people that they will be discussing.

Discussing in the book. So here's the end of the introduction. It is seldom luck or inheritance or advanced degrees or even intelligence that enables people to amass fortunes. Wealth is more often the result of a lifestyle of hard work. Perseverance, planning, and most of all, self-discipline. It's because people are self-disciplined. That's how they became millionaires. You're like, do I make the one book joke now or do I make it later or do I save it for later? There's like a myth.

That like rich people don't spend money and that's why they're rich. Yeah. Like that, like a rich person is you with better spending habits. Yes. No, dude. Have you ever seen this? There's a meme that's just like a drawing of two guys and one is like dripping out in like All sorts of shit. And it's like jacket, two thousand dollars, hat, a hundred and fifty dollars, shoes three hundred dollars. And above him it's like

Poor. Right. Then there's a rich guy and he's just wearing a twenty-five dollar shirt and like fifty dollar pants or whatever. And that's the lesson. It's like poor people are poor because they spend all their money. And rich people are rich because they're dressed modest.

Right? And they live in a modest house and they drive a modest car. This, I mean, th this is kind of the spoiler of the episode, Peter, but this book essentially invented that myth. When I was in college I knew a woman whose uh uncle was mega rich like CEO of like a fortune fifty company sort of guy. And also super cheap. Yeah. It was like You know, hanging on to a doll. Yeah.

Frequently when she told these stories, someone would be like, Well, that's how that's how he got rich. So the first part of the book is basically just like a bunch of statistics on who are the millionaires in nineteen ninety six.

Consumer Habits and Wealth Virtues

Three point five percent of households in America are millionaires at this time. Ninety-two percent of millionaires are men, half of them have wives who are like housewives who are not working outside the home. Around one in five of them is retired. of the people who are employed. Two thirds of them are self employed. But then they immediately get to the number one factor that they think explains why people are millionaires.

So they do this throughout the book. They they use specific names for people. So in this section, they talk about a guy named Johnny Lucas, who's one of these humble millionaire types. But it's not clear if this is like a real person or just like a name that they've given this person. So here is this Why are so few people in America affluent? Even most households with six figure annual incomes are not affluent. These people have a different orientation than does Johnny Lucas.

They believe in spending tomorrow's cash today. They are debt prone and are on earn and consume treadmills. To many of them, those who do not display abundant material possessions are not successful. To them, non display oriented people like Johnny Lucas.

Are their inferiors? They're gonna look down on you for being frugal. I'm already annoyed at the well also, what are these guys what are their PhDs in? They're both professors of marketing. I knew it was fake. Thomas Stanley, before this book comes out, he's written a number of books. Called like selling to the affluent, networking with the affluent. So that's why he's doing all this anthropology on rich people. This is like flattering rich people. It's like you're

The people who aren't rich, they're not disciplined like you are. Here's more of this? Johnny Lucas, the affluent business owner, is very punctual. Alright, th this guy this guy's fake. This is No, you can't really tell. But they're clearly presenting all these millionaires as like very virtuous throughout. He is never late for meetings and arrives at work each weekday at six thirty AM. How does he do this? It must be his wrist watch. Could it be that Johnny wears an expensive watch?

Fully one half of the millionaires surveyed never in their lives spent more than two hundred thirty five dollars for a wristwatch. About one in ten never paid more than forty seven dollars. Certainly some millionaires purchase expensive watches. But they're in the minority. Even among millionaires, only twenty five percent of those surveyed paid eleven hundred and twenty five dollars or more. Are you just doing this to bait me?

I could have chosen any kind of excerpt, but he goes on about watches for like a very long time, and I wanted you to read it. Folks, let me tell you about watches, okay? Let me ruin this episode with an extremely long digression about watches. It's an investment. It's really an investment when you think about it. So uh as we're hinting, I'm I like watches. I uh I have a ton of watches. There's no need for you to do this, Peter. You don't need to you don't need to defend yourself.

Well I'm gonna I I need to I need to explain why I know so much about this because I'm I'm about to share information. Okay. I have a ton of watches. Most of them are cheap, some of them are are fancy, but

The thing that you learn very quickly is that no one gives a shit. Oh yeah. Other people don't know, and like the percentage of the population who likes nice watches is super small. So he's presenting this as like, they must be so frugal. But in reality Twenty five percent of these guys paying eleven hundred and change for a watch is actually

Pretty hefty, especially since that's like twenty two hundred now. So a full quarter of millionaires are buying fancy watches for themselves. What's so weird is like this, Peter, is like a third of the book. Like they have a whole chapter on buying cars.

They have a whole chapter on buying clothes. It's like very detailed how much they are spending on these consumer goods. And it's all kind of the same point. They say the typical American millionaire reported that he never spent more than$400 for a suit of clothing. So that's eight hundred dollars in today's money. Yeah, that's like not cheap. Yeah. They say half of them have never spent more than a hundred and forty dollars for a pair of shoes.

But half of them have spent more than two hundred eighty dollars for a pair of shoes. You're hitting these thresholds where it's like, yeah, to spend more than three hundred dollars on a pair of shoes, you need to really want nice shoes. You know what I mean? You need to kinda like shoes like fashion or whatever. Big chunk of these guys don't really care about shoes.

Or watches or whatever. So they get a nice one and they move on. It's also telling that they don't have a chapter about how many are sending their kids to private school. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Like major things that people actually do spend like huge sums of money for. When they're like Fifty percent of these millionaires have never spent more than X on a watch or X on a car. It's like okay, right.

It's not the same guy every time. You might be a car guy and say you spend your money on cars. You might be a watch guy, you spend your money on watches. You might be a shoe guy, you spend your money on shoes. They're not all frugal, they just have different priorities and care about different things. So this is also the section of the book where

You see that they're just laying it on a little too thick, right? You're right about how it's good to be frugal, which is true. I mean, like, yeah, fundamentally at the heart of this book is like. Good advice. If you don't have a ton of money, don't spend a ton of money. Fair enough, whatever. Or like if you're like upper middle classish and you save your money.

You can be a millionaire. Right. That that might have been something that like someone in nineteen ninety six needed to hear. Right. Totally. And like doing the math, compound interest, it's like kind of useful. Right. Yeah. Fair enough. Exactly. Right. But if you're like, I I don't know, this is yeah, it's getting a little too

He shows up promptly at 6 30. What are we talking about? Yeah. Does that make him more money? What do you what's going on? The other thing that he starts doing is in the chapter about buying cars. He's contrasting Dr. So there's Dr. North and Dr. South. One of them has like the good car buying method, and the other has like the bad car buying method. So Dr. North. buys used cars. He's like a very frugal millionaire. He's the good kind, so Here's this.

I'm not sure if these are real guys. Uh Dr. North and Dr. But again, he goes back and forth between like obviously fake names and like maybe logistically real names. I don't know. So In this section he's basically talking about how buying a used car, being like a frugal millionaire, saves you time compared to buying a new car. Doctor North decided that his best choice would be a three year old Mercedes Benz. He telephoned a few dealers and advised them of his interest in the world.

He also examined several advertisements in the classified section of the paper. Finally, he decided on a low mileage model offered by a local dealer. The North method took only a few hours. Contrast this with doctor South Automobile purchasing crusade. A process that took him at least sixty hours.

Like a decently priced, not scammy used car. I mean, I do agree that it's good to to spend three hours as opposed to sixty. Yeah. I mean, I guess. But also people if you're buying a new car, I feel like a lot of like wealthy purchasing habits

are like they just don't want to think about it that much. They go to the dealership, the guy's like, uh 80,000 bucks for a Jaguar. He's like, Yeah, fuck it. I'll get it. This is like the biggest benefit of having money. Yeah. The the idea of never having to think about this shit because you can just you're paying for the convenience.

Of who cares, right? Exactly. But also I this is we're really slobbing on these guys, right? Yeah, I know. It's really bad. I know. This is getting a little weird. And also it's like, why even do this?

It's like you could say, Oh, it it's a hassle to buy a used car, but it's worth the hassle, you know, compounded interest, blah, blah, blah. But instead they're just like lying to your face and being like, Oh, you spend way less time on buying a car if you buy a used one. It's not true. They also say In most of the cases we've examined, prodigious accumulators of wealth love working.

Well a large proportion of underaccumulators of wealth work because they need to support their conspicuous consumption habit. For a book by two academics, it's like what are you talking about? People like oftentimes teachers love their work. and they don't make a ton of money, but they do it because they love it. The idea that like if you're wealthy, you'll love your job.

It's like you don't need to do this. It's not just it's like the virtuous millionaire and like the slovenly the slovenly middle class idiots. Like it's what the fuck is this? It's really like they're they're creating this binary, but they're just like doing it way too much. The the idea that like

Self-discipline leads to money and money is replicated through self-discipline. I just don't think that's right. And this is the only meaningful factor. I mean, that's basically what they're setting up here, right? The the mistakes that you can make financially if you have a high income. If you make $500,000 a year and you burn straight up, just like no reason to have bought that.

Sixty grand a year, you're still so far ahead of someone making one fifty. This is also the weird obsession with things like wristwatches, where if you're very wealthy, the difference between a thousand dollar watch and a five thousand dollar It's not gonna make a meaningful difference to your net worth. It's weird that they focus on like almost exclusively these consumer items. It's so weird to talk about wealth.

The Decamillionaire Anecdote and Income Downplay

like income is like the second thing. Right, right, right. You know what I mean? The other uh this is the other extremely like just laying it on too thick thing. They have an extended anecdote about one of their qualitative interviews with millionaires. The first time we interviewed a group of people worth at least ten million dollars, DECA millionaires, the session turned out differently than we had planned.

To make sure our Decamillionaire respondents felt comfortable during the interview, we rented a posh penthouse on Manhattan's fashionable east side. We also hired two gourmet food designers. They put together a menu of four pattes and three kinds of caviar. To accompany this, the designer suggested a case of high quality nineteen seventy Bordeaux Plus a case of wonderful. nineteen seventy three Cabernet Sauvignon. Armed with what we thought would be the ideal menu,

We enthusiastically awaited the arrival of our Decamillionaire respondents. The first to arrive was someone we nicknamed mister Bud. mister Bud owned several valuable pieces of commercial real estate in the New York metropolitan area. You would have never figured from his outward appearance that he was worth well over ten million dollars. Nevertheless, we wanted to make mister Bud feel that we fully understood the food and drink expectations of America's Decamillionaires.

So after we introduced ourselves, one of us asked, mister Bud, may I pour you a glass of nineteen seventy Bordeaux? mister Bud looked at us with a puzzled expression on his face and then said, I drink scotch and two kinds of beer. Free and Budweiser. We hid our shock as the true meaning of our Dick and Millionaire's message dawned upon us.

During the subsequent two hour interview, the nine Decamillionaire respondents shifted constantly in their chairs. Occasionally they glanced at the buffet, but not one touched the pate or drank our vintage wines. We knew they were hungry. But all they ate were the gourmet crackers.

They hate pate and wine. This is like uh when Kevin in Home Alone Two gets the limo and the pizza. Like what would a baby think that the rich people do? We got three kinds of cats. Like the idea that they would ha be Like they imagined a world where they supplied one type of caviar.

The Deccan millionaires were like, What the fuck is this? Right. I don't eat this type of caviar. I love that they're treating them like zoo animals too. They're like, we have to make them comfortable. Like we have to do a penthouse. And like the it's like the special kind of foods they eat. Also, I like that the guy's like, I drink two kinds of beer.

Free and Budweiser. Okay, the path haze free. Eat that bitch. This whole thing seems really fake and also just kind of unnecessary to the thesis of the book. The fact that Rich people like drive humble cars, live in humble houses. It's not like they're actively hostile.

To the trappings of wealth. If someone put me up and was like, Here are three types of caviar, I wouldn't be like, I'm a fucking I I'm more of a chicken wings guy. Yeah, you'd probably just eat something. It's just like why why lay it on this thick? Right, right. It's like bizarre. So th th this sort of all speaks to

the weird between the lines ideology of this book that the only thing that matters to net worth is frugality, right? Is your spending habits on these things like food and clothes, etc. Throughout the book They keep downplaying the influence of income. So in a chapter on budgeting, they say one of the mistakes people make is people allow their income to define their budget.

They also say it's easier in America to earn a lot than it is to accumulate wealth. But what really matters is how much you're spending, right? And so this is an excerpt from a New York Times article about this book that was came out a couple of years later. Cause this book really does show up everywhere. It shows up in

articles, it shows up in like there's a David Brooks column about it from like a couple of years afterwards. It shows up in academic articles. It's like taken relatively seriously. So many more of us could become millionaires as was amply demonstrated by Thomas Stanley and William Danko in their fascinating book The Millionaire Next Door. They found that inheritances or even extended educations aren't necessary. The main requirement, given time and a decent income,

is thrift. I love given a decent income. Yeah. Right. Well that's the hard part is the given a decent income. Rather than saying some intelligent spending habits can make a well off person kind of rich, which is I think probably true. They're going the other way and saying like

Rich people are rich because of their progress. Exactly. Because of their spending habits. And they also, again, they're laying it on too thick. They say later in the book, we've interviewed many people worth two or three million dollars who have total realized annual household incomes of less than eighty thousand dollars.

So they're also creating a spread where you can have massive net worth at like remarkably low income, right? I'm sorry, but how? They're basically saying like it's virtuous to save fifteen percent of your income and that's like the one thing that matters. But of course

If you make five hundred thousand dollars a year and you only save five percent of your income, you're gonna be a millionaire much faster than like a teacher who saves twenty percent of her income. Like that just is the case. Right. This is such a simple thing to understand, but like let's say you make a hundred and fifty, right?

You probably maybe you save thirty grand a year, right? If you double the income, you're not doubling the savings. You're like quadrupling the savings. Yeah. I don't know if this is to flatter rich people or if it's to like trick the middle class somehow. Yeah, yeah. Maybe it's maybe it's like aspirational, like right? Like

Flawed Methodology and Income Reality

You don't need a better job. You just need to like focus up. It's your fault, basically. Yeah. Anyone can do this, right? Other people other people making fifty thousand dollars a year, they have three million bucks in the bank.

We don't. So I'm sorry, but the the people making 80 grand a year that have three million dollars cannot exist. So I did actually do the math on this because there's all these like retirement calculators online. So first of all, he says$80,000 in realized income. So that's post taxes. And that's nineteen ninety six dollars. So we're talking about a hundred and sixty thousand dollars in twenty twenty five post tax.

Which first of all is just a lot of money. Like that puts you firmly in the top 10% of income earners in the United States, right? But even if you have this high salary starting at age 30, you manage to put away 15% of your income, which is what they recommend in this book, every single year of your life. You will have three million dollars in net worth when you are 78 years old. Right. That's the way you get to three million dollars.

So this is actually kind of a demonstration of how hard it is. To get to three million dollars in net worth. I mean look, maybe you like yeah, if you whatever, if you fucking buy IBM in nineteen seventy one, right? Like whatever. I I don't know. There's a way, but it j I just don't believe it. It's also very funny that throughout the book they almost never talk about income other than to like kind of downplay it.

But they do mention at one point, one single point in the book, they say uh in the survey that they did of of people with high net worth. The household median taxable income is a hundred and thirty one thousand dollars a year. So two hundred and sixty K in twenty twenty five money. That's like a lot. That's a shitload of money and they just like never talk about it again.

Right, right. I really don't think wristwatches are like that important if you're making that much money. Yeah, I think I think if you're making a quarter million now and you're sitting there, like how do I ensure That I have three million dollars when I retire or whatever. Then like this is probably part of the calculus. Yeah. But like If you if you're sitting there right now making ninety grand, like this is not the way that you're going to become a millionaire. It's just not.

There's these kind of sketchy qualitative stories about these focus groups they're doing. There's also the issue of like where are these statistics? coming from, right? Because the entire book is based on this survey of millionaires. And it's actually not a given that this is a population that's easy to study, right? Because by definition, this is only

3.5% of households, right? So if you send out like a general survey to the entire population, you're gonna have so few millionaires that you can't really say anything meaningful about them, right? So you have to find this population. But they're difficult to find, right? Well not if you not if you lure them to your east side penthouse with caviars and pate.

But so finally in Appendix One, they describe how they are finding millionaires. Before you get into this, I'm gonna say what I would do. I would go to the cheapest stores. That's where the millionaires shop. The used car dealership. Where the real beaters are getting sold. Yes. Go to the shittiest clothing store you can find. Right. Then t and just talk to anyone there. Go to the dollar store. Every person in there is a millionaire. So basically they start with neighborhoods.

Which is like, yeah, you look at sort of where are houses worth a lot, you find rich people there, right? But they specifically say that they're not looking at wealthy neighborhoods. They say that they're stratifying them across What what they call the estimated net worth scale. They're looking for neighborhoods where people have a high estimated net worth, not necessarily a high income.

And so in his follow-up book, one of the authors, Thomas Stanley, describes this in more detail. He's talking about working with a researcher. Actually, let me send this to you. So his researcher's name is John. John found that some neighborhoods have high concentrations of people who have substantial investment income and thus would have the millionaire mindset from his national database of two hundred and twenty seven thousand neighborhoods, John selected twenty four hundred eighty seven.

His mathematical model predicted that these would contain high concentrations of people who were actually wealthy as opposed to those who had big homes with big mortgages. But low net worth. So they're they're not looking at like rich neighborhoods. They're basically selecting neighborhoods that will have frugal millionaires, right? That will have people with relatively low incomes, but high net worth.

You're not looking at the wealthiest neighborhoods where the actual wealthiest people in America live. You're looking for this like upper middle tranch that maybe has a million dollars in net worth but not super high incomes. But that's also the conclusion of your entire book. Right. So that the the way that they're selecting neighborhoods. Is like pretty sketchy. They also, the way that they're doing the actual study is they're doing it by mail. Uh, hello. I am

I am here to interview men of means. Do you want to hear what they did, Peter? Mash some caviar into the envelope. They they actually did a version of this. So they say We selected 3,000 heads of household. Each received an eight-page questionnaire, a form letter asking for his participation and guaranteeing the anonymity and confidentiality of the data we collected, and a dollar bill as a token of our appreciation. Oh my god. So they send out a eight-page questionnaire.

Which is just wild. They they say in the book that their response rate was forty five percent. Can't be right. I know my I was like, what the fuck? But then I posted this on Blue Sky to like social science researchers. I was like, does this sound remotely plausible to you? And people said response rates have like cratered across the board since the nineteen nineties. I also feel like again this might control out.

Some of the richer peop like some of the higher income folks. Exactly. The people who are willing to talk about this shit might be your uh your quote unquote humble millionaires, the people who are like more frugal or whatever. But yeah, if you're just like a super high income person and someone's like, Tell me about your money, you're probably like, No. So they're selecting neighborhoods with like frugal millionaires.

The they're only getting a a half and half response rate, which I think would select for frugal millions, and then the questions on this actual questionnaire. They they don't print the entire questionnaire in the book, and there's no peer reviewed studies.

Based on this data, which is fucking wild for two academics, which also just like makes me very skeptical of this entire project. But uh at a couple points, they say what the questions are. So when they're talking about like the predictors of millionaires, They have a list of questions. So one of them is, were your parents very frugal?

Are you frugal? Is your spouse more frugal than you? Okay. Asking are you frugal is fucking wild. It's not great data. Like everyone's gonna say yes. No one thinks that they spend too much money. Frugal is like a virtuous thing. It's like yeah. Are you generous? Are you kind? Everyone's gonna say yes to that. It's not meaningful at all. Yeah, I I feel like you need to see the data on their spending. Which they're not getting it's all self reported, like how much have you spent on a suit? Like

All of that is just asking people. Yeah, and again I d I think that data just kind of sucks because People spend their money in different places, right? Right. It's really hard to tell if someone is generally frugal from that sort of data. So basically the rest of the book.

Ethnicity, Investment, and Budgeting Advice

Is them describing the characteristics of millionaires. So we found all these millionaires, they're in our sample. What distinguishes these people from the rest of the population, right? So the first chapter on this. This sounds like I'm being mean to the book, but this is actually true. The first chapter on what makes millionaires different is their ethnicity. And you'd assume like, okay, with wealth data, you'd be like, okay, black, Asian, Hispanic, like you can find these statistics anywhere.

Yeah. They don't include black people or Hispanics or Asians in this book at all. Yeah, look no, let's get down let's get down to business, folks. Which are the best types of whites? So there's literally this is the list, Peter. These are the ethnicities English, German, Irish, Scottish, Russian, Italian, French, Dutch, Native American, and Hungarian. All I am interested in here.

Is what are Italians doing. Doing like French as a subset here is fucking crazy. Doing Hungarian as a subset here is fucking crazy. are the most likely to be millionaires, according to this data, this extremely non-representative data. I'm gonna knock some out of contention right away. It's not the Hungarians, it's not the Irish, it's not the French. It's not the Russians. Okay. Think we're are we down to Germans, English, and Dutch? Yeah. Those are my top three contenders.

Who's number one? I'm gonna say that the Dutch are number one. Trash. Dutch are number fifth. Fuck. Fuck. You got it way wrong, Peter. I forgot about the Pennsylvania Dutch. Keep in mind this is like a fake survey, which is not really. I I do think that what I just said was probably more accurate than their survey. My vibes about the subspecies of whites are pretty scientific, I have to say. Did it was it the French? It is the Russians.

That makes a lot of sense to me in the sense that uh I do feel like a lot of Rich ass Russians came here after uh in the like eighties and nineties. Oh, that is not what they say. That is not what they say. No. They say that uh Russians are ethnically inclined to start businesses. Hell yeah. They have a quote from a Russian like a a guy who grows up in the Russian community.

Who says Russians, they are the best horse traders. And like obviously it's not the French. They they they're lazing about. Germans make up uh nineteen percent of the population, but only seventeen percent of millionaires. Obviously a pretty big hit to Hitler's theory. I think it's mostly sampling though, because it's all the large ethnic groups. All do bad and small ethnic groups all do well. I think it's just like how big is their sample? Like again, I think this is just like fake ass data.

Because the English do bad too, and there's a shitload of English people in America. English have been here for too long. They're too assimilated. Dude, that's what they say. They literally have a whole section.

about the longer you're in America, the more you acclimate to like the American consumptive lifestyle. But immigrants don't do that. Yeah, immigrants are more likely to start businesses and shit, but that's it's not like some fucking genetic predisposition. It's like if you're first generation

Uh you're more likely to start a business. The weirdest thing too is that they have even though Scottish people are number two in in millionaires. What? But do you know why, Peter? Do you know why? I would love to know. But the theory is it's because

Scottish people are cheapskates. That rocks, dude. They're like they're they're like Scottish people are known for their frugality, which like is a stereotype about Scottish people, but it's also not true. They're basically just like repeating like, oh, because they like never spend money. That's why they're all wealthy in the United States. I love that the only other time we've talked about

Scots on this show was uh J D. Vance's book talking about how the Scot the Scots Irish are like degenerate losers who like can't do anything. But they're also cheapskates. J D. Vance should just hold on and wait for that Scottish DNA. To kick in and for and perhaps then app Appalachia will lift itself out of poverty. So that's the first characteristic of millionaires. They are the correct ethnicities. The other thing about millionaires is that they tend to buy specific stocks.

like hold on to stocks. They're not like day traders. So like that's pretty good advice. Also, who was a day trader back in the 90s? No, how would you even do it? You're like calling a broker with a

Just like you fuck like a degenerate gambler calling a broker and there's like a twenty dollar transaction fee on every single sweating and like loosening your tie. You're just losing five hundred dollars a day on transaction fees. So he says Seventy-nine percent have at least one account with a brokerage company, but they make their own investment decisions.

This is something they say a lot in this book. They the term like mutual fund and like index fund, target date fund, none of these appear in the book. And they're basically saying like you should be spending an inordinate amount of time, like investing in specific things. So here is a little vignette of some of the millionaires we've met. Mr. Willis, a highly productive sales professional, had a Walmart as a client for more than ten years.

All during this time, Walmart was exploding in growth and value. How many shares of Walmart did Mr. Willis ever purchase? Zero. Yes, zero. Even though he had considerable first hand knowledge of his client's success. and an annual six figure income. But he did purchase a foreign luxury car every two years during this time. What a fucking scumbag. He could have been doing insider trading instead of the vehicle. A high income marketing manager, mister Peterson, was employed in the high tech field.

But he never invested a dollar in Microsoft or any other growth company. Never, in spite of having considerable knowledge about many of the firms in the technology industry. The owner of a printing business enjoyed having one of the leading beverage companies in America as a customer. The customer bought millions of dollars worth of printing from him annually, but how much has the printer invested in his customer's equity offerings?

Zero. That's basically the advice. It's like if you're somebody who does like professional services, you should invest in the companies that you work with. who are your clients are not good investments. What if it's bad? It's like such weird advice. Also, like just having a little bit of vision into a company does not give you like advanced stock knowledge. No, it's such this is egregiously bad advice. I've read other reviews of this book that mention like

The idea of having somebody else do this for you was like not as widespread in nineteen ninety six, so you can like kind of give them a little bit of credit on it. ETFs didn't exist, right? There are mutual funds, but there aren't really you didn't have as many options That's why it was very popular at this time to just buy a handful of blue chip companies. Right. Right. But yeah, this is just stupid advice. Yeah. And also my guess is that some of what they're looking at

Is that the richest people will be people who put a ton of money into one company that did well? Yeah. That's just survivorship bias, right? They're like you happen to have invested a ton in Microsoft and you got like

super rich. But there's also people who invested a ton in like Kodak. I remember seeing uh someone say, like, um, you know, the best investors are not investors who diversified the best investors if you look at like the numbers, the Warren Buffett's of the world, are people who made huge bets on a single company. And it's like right. Those the people who are the most successful will be people who took extreme risks and then hit. Yeah. But

That doesn't mean that that's a good strategy. That's you're just that's just survivorship bias. So as well as doing your own investments, they also have two entire chapters about how you must make budgets. You have to spend a ton of time Budgeting every single piece of spending that you do. Everything you spend on like leisure, food, activities. Where is the tax fraud chapter? Is that are we getting to the tax fraud chapter? This is another thing where like

I give them a bit of a pass because this is pre apps. Yeah. Nowadays like your bank just kind of tells you how much you're spending on various things. It's like very easy to track your spending like

The the concept of like balancing your checkbook doesn't really exist anymore because you can like check your app, like what am I spending? But at the time it was pretty easy to lose track of things. Like what did I spend eating out last month? I think again, this is like fairly good advice. Yeah. Yeah. But because this book

So closely links virtue and money, they have this thing where you have to be spending like a ton of time on it. So they say the average person in their survey spends 8.4 hours a month. planning their investments and planning like knowing what their budget is. That's a crazy amount of time. It's so much time. It's like that's like two hours a week. In my mind, every hour I spend budgeting is an hour I'm not podcasting. And that's bad business. They also have a weird section

Weakened Children and Type A Wives

about how you shouldn't give money to your kids. Okay. There's this paragraph. What happens when weakened children become adults? Mm-hmm. They typically la they typically lack initiative. More often than not, they are economic underachievers for but have a high propensity to spend. That's why they need economic subsidies to maintain the standard of living they enjoyed in their parents' home. We will say it again the more dollars adult children receive, the fewer dollars they accumulate.

while those who are given fewer dollars accumulate more. This is a statistically proven relationship. Yet many parents still think that their wealth can automatically transform their children into economically productive adults. They are wrong. Discipline and initiative Can't be purchased like automobiles or clothing off a rack. They have a section in this chapter called The Unemployed Adult Child. Yes, and no offense.

to all of our listeners who fall into this category but uh they're right about this. I mean again it's like good advice. Don't like spoil your kids. Don't like Yeah, whatever. Right. Exactly.

Constantly funneling them so much money that like they don't ever really get a sense of what money is. Right. But also this is not really based on the data that they've collected. This is just like a thing they want to complain about. I would be shocked if there's real data about this because I'll say this. I know a few people who went from this sort of lifestyle to just like

making mid-six figures in finance. Because their dad was in finance. The other tell that this is not based on their data is that they also have an entire chapter about how millionaires marry the right kind of housewife. So true. So here is a little section of this. Ch Chapter five, how to keep your girl in check. Liter this is literally Peter in this chapter. All right.

How did the wife of a millionaire respond when her husband gave her eight million dollars worth of stock in the company he recently took public? According to her husband of thirty one years, she said, I appreciate this. I really do. Then she smiled, never changing her position at the kitchen table, where she continued to cut out twenty five and fifty cents off food coupons from the week supply of newspapers.

Nothing is so important as to interrupt her Saturday morning chores. That's the wife you want. One is like, yeah, if you take a company public, the reason you're rich It's probably not frugality. Uh I think it's that you you did an IPO. Yeah. Second of all, if I did keep separate money with my wife and then I gave her eight million dollars. Mm-hmm. Thanks, I appreciate this. And then went back to what she was doing. The way the life would drain out of me, Michael.

It's like she's doing. Look, I I understand they're they're trying to be like, look, she still does the coupons, which like, yeah, how much she's saving. But that's the thing, they want you to perform

Frugality, right? And like it should be a hassle. I mean, it's part of the thing with the budgeting too. Like you shouldn't have financial advisors that do this for you, right? You're only the good kind of millionaire if you're spending time doing it, right? Even if it's totally useless and pointless, you should be clipping coupons.

Because you're performing frugality. This could be a manosphere TikTok video. Totally. Totally. People are rich because they're cheap. They didn't throw it away on their weak children and their profligate wives. Also do not date a whore. That's why I would So we then get into the two kinds of housewives. There are type A housewives. They say type A's tend to marry high income producing successful men. They tend to take leadership roles in caring for their elderly, sometimes disabled parents.

The gifts and inheritance they tend to receive are, in part, compensation for these efforts. We then have at type B housewives. They say type B housewives, in contrast, are viewed as adult children who need economic outpatient care and even emotional support. They tend to be dependent on others and are unlikely to be leaders in any capacity. And that goes on for like many paragraphs. Yeah, no doubt. No doubt. Like the bad kind of housewife. And unfortunately This is all of our female listeners.

That's I mean, th all of our f all of our listeners are lesbian, so we want a type A and a type B. Those are the power couples. You want one. Oh yeah. You got you need you need one leader housewife who takes care of her parents. And one scumbag lesbian lady.

One j one leap. So the whole the whole time I'm reading this, I'm like, why is this in your book? This is not based on any of the survey data. They haven't asked like what kind of housewife do you have. This is just like they want to complain There's just like a chapter called like the bitch spectrum. It's so funny that like you get to see again like Stretching out what should be a relatively short book into a relatively long book. They're like, okay, well first.

We'll break down the whites by ethnic group and rank them. Second, uh let's divide wives. Wives a good idea. Is real. They say the objective data make it quite clear. In America, the odds are against women earning high incomes, which is true. But then they're like, But discrimination can't explain it all. We think it's because Daughters get more help from their parents.

Yes. And when you're a woman growing up, you see your mother not working, and then you're like, Well, I don't have to work either, and then you basically freeload. Okay. I feel like a lot of men never recover From watching Women get their drinks paid for for a period of time in their early twenties. Yeah, yeah. You're like, this explains

This all fades away by the by the time you're forty. None of this exists anymore or like it in much smaller degrees. But if women could invest the cost of those drinks, they'd all be millionaires now. That's so even compound interest. If if you're smart and you're a woman in your early twenties

Someone buys you a drink, you sell it and then you invest it in stocks. Do you have a share of a target date fund with you instead of a mojito? That's what I'd prefer. But the most important characteristic of millionaires, and this is a thuddingly repetitive book that returns to this like

The Self-Made Myth Versus Reality

is that millionaires are self made. Yes. They they go out of their way to sort of establish this like salt of the earth kind of character of millionaires, right? And a lot of that is because they did hard work to get where they are. So here's this. Who becomes wealthy? Usually the wealthy individual is a businessman who has lived in the same town for all of his adult life.

This person owns a small factory, a chain of stores, or a service company. He is married once and remains married. He lives next door to people with a fraction of his wealth. He is a compulsive saver and investor. and he has made his money on his own. Eighty percent of America's millionaires are first generation rich. They're all business owners, they all took on great risks.

risk to themselves, they have the right wife. They've only been married one time. They have like a type A wife. The kind of lady who barely looks at you when you give her sixteen million dollars in today's money. A good Russian lady. Most of you uh might think that it's okay to marry a German. No. They also go out of their way to say millionaires did not inherit their wealth.

So they have statistic after statistic about how inheritance just isn't an important thing for today's millionaires. So here's this. Have you always thought that most millionaires are born with silver spoons in their mouths? If so, consider the following facts that our research uncovered about American millionaires. Only nineteen percent received any income or wealth of any kind from a trust fund or an estate. Fewer than twenty percent inherited ten percent or more of their wealth.

More than half never received as much as one dollar in inheritance for the Ninety-one percent never received as much as one dollar of the ownership of a family business. So they really laid us on thick. I feel like occasionally you'll find some people on the left are sort of like obsessed with the idea that it's all a full dice roll. Yeah. I will say that like twenty percent of

inheriting their money or not being first generation rich feels like a decent chunk. Like this is not not nobody. This is also a unique situation in that if you look generationally Somebody who's a millionaire in nineteen ninety six and they're in their late fifties, their parents would have grown up in the Great Depression. Right. Interesting. Yeah. The fact that they're more rich than their parents.

It's kind of everybody's more rich than their parents, right? I mean the America just had a huge explosion in living standards and wealth and income over the course of the last hundred years. Literally everyone our age has a story about their parents buying a house and now they're rich. Somehow. I mean they they do mention in this section, again, kind of offhand

that the children of millionaires have a one in five chance of becoming millionaires and the general population has a one in thirty five chance of becoming a millionaire. Right. That's that's like the relevant fact. It's not necessarily Did all rich people

Just get it from their parents or whatever. Right. It's how much of a leg up is it? And so this gets into like a lot of the research that I did. What what this book is doing is actually Expressing an ideology of the new class of wealthy people in America that has now become like the dominant ideology of wealthy people. The first thing we have to talk about is There there really was a shift.

In the demographics and the makeup of the rich around this time. This is an excerpt from a super fascinating book called Uneasy Street by Rachel Sherman. The composition of US elites has changed significantly since Ostrander conducted her research nearly four decades ago. In that period, as in most of the twentieth century, the upper class was exclusive and homogeneous, dominated by old money families such as the Rockefellers and the Astors.

Elite college and professional education were typically closed to all but white men, wealthy women rarely worked for pay. Social status was largely inherited, and the old elite looked down on newcomers. In the past few decades, in contrast, elites in the United States have become more diverse in terms of race, ethnicity, religion, and class of origin. The post war opening of higher education, especially in elite institutions, to people besides elite wasp men was a major catalyst for this shift.

Importantly. not only the composition but the outlook of elites in the United States has changed from a view that accepted inherited status as legitimate to one that stresses meritocratic achievement through hard work and cultural openness to a diverse world. So this is a real change.

The sort of old money elite, of course those people still exist, but they don't dominate the elite the way that they once did. The Great Gatsby was i entirely about How you can be super rich but still not be accepted.

I really don't understand why we have to read that book. Uh I was like I actually remember thinking in high school, like just being confused about this cultural dynamic that it was describing. Well one of the most interesting things I read For this was an article called Family Education and Sources of Wealth Among the Richest Americans, 1982 to 2012, where they looked at the Forbes. 100. Every single member for this entire like 30 year period and just looked at like their sources of wealth.

And you do see this huge shift, right, from like real estate empires to like tech CEOs, right? And uh Piketty talks about the working rich, like people who are CEOs, executives. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. We need to pause. Michael Hobbs read capital in the twenty first century.

A fucking thousand page. I audio booked it. I audio booked it so I missed the chart. Oh my God. That d the fact that you were like reading the slop and you're like, what what does Capital in the twenty first century say about this? But one thing he does talk about is the the this concept of the working writ. Right? Where people not not to say that like oh these people work so hard and they're so good or whatever.

But it's like these are people with jobs, right? You are somebody with a job, right? And that's a huge part of your identity. It's not like salt burn money or something. Exactly. You you are working and ha have income and that's why you're rich. And what you find in this article about the the

The Forbes wealthiest is they say those in the Forbes four hundred today are less likely to have inherited their wealth or to have grown up wealthy. They are more likely to have started their businesses having grown up with some wealth, what we consider to be the equivalent of upper middle class. The Forbes four hundred of today also are those who were able to access education while young and apply their skills to the most scalable industries.

Technology, finance, and mass retail. Podcasting. The percent who grew up wealthy fell from sixty percent to thirty two percent, while the percent that grew up with some money in the family rose by a similar amount. The share that grew up poor remained constant at roughly twenty percent. So getting from the poor to the rich

Is still really fucking hard and has only gotten harder. But getting from the upper to the super upper has gotten a lot easier. There's circulation between the sort of top 10% and the top 0.1%. And that is the circulation that I think feeds this idea. That the rich are hardworking, right? Because if you are Mark Zuckerberg, you did work really hard, you worked really long hours, you launched Facebook, you had this idea, right?

Right. But also he he was the son of like a dentist in Westchester County. Yeah, it's like the the Bezos thing where he was like given three hundred grand by his parents or whatever and it's like, yeah He probably doesn't get ultra rich without the three hundred grand. That said, you can give me three hundred grand. I'm not creating Amazon. Yeah, yeah, yeah, totally. Yeah. Well w what's interesting about the way that they frame this in the book is they very narrowly focus on inheritance.

But inheritance I mean, your parents don't typically die until you're in your forties or fifties, in which case oftentimes your kind of financial fortunes are relatively well established. The much more important form of wealth transfers from rich people to their kids is in getting them into elite colleges. Oftentimes wealthy people are helping their kids with down payments, right, for for homes. Oftentimes they're helping them with sort of startup capital for their businesses.

But I didn't inherit it. I didn't inherit it. What what's interesting about this shift Is not just that it's a shift in sort of quote unquote meritocracy. I mean, on some level these people are self-made, but in other, I think, very meaningful ways, they aren't self-made. They're getting a ton of privilege. But it also created an ideology among the rich that I did this myself.

Elite Self-Perception and Hard Work Narrative

Right. Yeah. In this book, Uneasy Street, it's essentially a series of qualitative interviews with like mega rich people in New York where she's like sits down with them and talks to them about money. And she finds a couple of really interesting characteristics. So the first thing is that rich people explicitly describe themselves as middle class. So here is this.

Helen was a stay-at-home mother who had worked in banking and was married to a lawyer with a household income of over two million dollars and assets I estimate at well over eight million, including two homes. She told me, I feel like we're somewhat in the middle. In the sense that there were so many people with so much money. They have private planes, they have drivers, they have all these things. And so you see

This sense of like, well, there's people who are richer than me. So I don't I don't feel rich, right? Yeah. What you find in other qualitative interviews is they oftentimes refer to their childhoods. To say, like, well, I grew up in a normal home, right? I went to public schools. Oftentimes they did. It's uh it's almost a social identity more than it is a description of their wealth. There's a twenty twenty-five survey that asks

Millionaires, whether or not they're self made and seventy nine percent say they're self made. Okay. idea of themselves as pulling themselves up by the bootstraps. I'm actually kind of impressed with the 21% who were like, no dude. I didn't do shit. I'm a fucking loser, dude. I did I do not deserve this money at all. There's also a survey that

that two thirds of US millionaires don't consider themselves to be wealthy. Yeah. So this is also how you you have these constant articles that are I think rage bait at this point. They're like, you can't even get by in New York on five hundred thousand dollars a year. And that's true folks. That's why I had to move out here. It's also very important to wealthy people to constantly emphasize how hard they work, right? That they're not one of the lazy rich.

They're not just sitting there getting like rent money. Yeah, yeah. Is another excerpt from Uneasy Street. Near the end of the interview I asked if he felt he deserved his lifestyle. I had started asking interviewees this question after I noticed they often seemed to feel conflicted about their advantages.

Paul responded without hesitation, absolutely. Damn right I fucking deserve it. Where I am today I've earned every dime on my own. No one's done it. I mean my in laws have helped, but I've done it. I'm in Teleball. You know it's you know the money's real when it's like, Yeah, sure my in laws helped. Like not even like my parents, right? Sounds like he has a type A wife. He's got one of those type A housewives. Was it helpful?

Uh marrying in to to the Bezos family. He goes on. My job, my career, my current employer, my previous employer, this is all me. No one's helped me. It's been me. So I've earned every fucking dime, absolutely. And then Rachel asked him, And people who have less than you, do you think they deserve less? He responded, Some of them, absolutely. I mean, occupy Wall Street, I mean what have they done? They sat in a park doing nothing, you know?

You haven't done shit. Look, it it's so important to uh be self made in the sense that you marry a rich lady. Yeah. It's underrated. But what's also so interesting to me about how consistent this is throughout the book is that people's advantages are immediately written off.

I worked hard, right? This is the number one thing that people describe. Oftentimes like totally unprompted, like how hard they worked. And oftentimes this is true, right? You don't want to like take it away from somebody. They did work really hard. What we're actually just talking about is how much of it was luck. Right? Yeah. How much of it was outside of your control? Because it might be that it couldn't have happened without a ton of hard work. I think in many cases that is true.

The actual question though is was a ton of hard work? On its own enough. Yeah. And the answer to that is basically unequivocally no in almost every single situation. There's like statistics on this. Yeah. There are a ton of people who work very hard and don't have what you have. So can you explain what that gap is, right? Right. Or can you explain if you're a Mark Zuckerberg or whoever why you, if you think you deserve what you have, deserve

fifty thousand times someone uh who works very hard in a normal job, right? Right. There's like there's like almost a moral question in there, especially especially if you're looking at income in terms of like, well, did we order society in such a way that this is a trade off. Right. Right. This guy gets three million a year.

And our welfare state's a little bit smaller than it might be. Also, speaking of morality, Peter, uh another article I read for this, super fascinating, is called Wealth Elite Moralities, Wealthy Entrepreneurs Moral Boundaries by Anna Cantola and Hannah Kusela. Two Finnish researchers who interviewed rich Finnish dudes. And what they found was that people have this like mythos of hard work, but oftentimes,

They keep that mythos even after they're not really doing the hard work anymore. So here's a fucking brutal series of paragraphs. And this is just this is the Finns. I know they're not even on the list. Overall, the entrepreneurs create symbolic and moral selves as hardworking, risk taking, humble, ordinary blokes who do not show off their wealth. However, their actual lifestyles contradict this moral self.

Especially when describing their current lives, the interviewees share anecdotes of idleness and relaxation. One interviewee, for example, states that everyone should work an hour more each day to save the national economy. But when describing his own life, it is evident that he is not working at all. After selling his company to foreign investors,

he quote, sunbathed for one or two years, unquote, and four or five years later he still is not working. At the interview conducted in June, he said he plans to return to work in October. Quote I don't really work. I was just thinking of putting an automatic reply in my email saying let's get back to the issue on october first. I do some real estate business which is not really that hectic. And then there is investing But I have people to do that, so I don't really work.

This is what the millionaire next door should have been, right? Interviewing these people and be like, mmm, you're actually not working that hard, dude.

Frugality as Performance and Luxury Creep

The only people I wanna hear from are the twenty one percent of millionaires who said they are not self-made. My guess is that those people are kinda cool. But then what what's also interesting about the millionaire next door focusing so much on frugality Is that when you read both Uneasy Street and these qualitative interviews with rich Finnish people, this thing of frugality comes up all the time? This is a huge part of the ideology and the self-conception of people.

As someone who isn't like those other millionaires, rich people will mention out of nowhere all the time, they're like, I don't fly business class. I live in a modest home. I don't wear designer clothes, right? In the uh Finnish interviews, they say another interviewee who kept his sunglasses on throughout the interview regards humility as one of his defining characteristics.

I consider myself a normal bloke. A sense of humility comes from my upbringing, and because of that, even if I was elite, I don't know how to show off. I would I would love to do this. interview as a gag where like I'm I ca I am in like a full fur coat and sunglasses. I would say my d my defining characteristic is how humble I am. This is the mythology of the wealthy now, right? I think it's you see this in like Mark Zuckerberg wearing hoodies. A lot of the aesthetic

Are not about like bright gold and shit, right? Like ostentatious displays of wealth. It's ostentatiously displaying how you're not like the bad kind of rich person. Zuckerberg's a good example because they all yeah, they all have this like uh duality where they are like Sort of an everyman, but then a large part of their life is like completely ridiculous and unattainable. Right. Yeah. Yeah. Zuckerberg.

a hoodie and some casual jeans, but then like has a yacht. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And also three houses or whatever. But like in his self conception that stuff doesn't count, right? What counts is the hoodie

And you're seeing this in a millionaire next door, right? Where it's like people are ignoring that they send their kids to private school for fifty thousand dollars a year and they're like, Oh, my car is three years old. Actually, a little little Zuckerberg anecdote that ties into the the watch stuff. Most normal people

If you if this becomes your h hobby and you're like, I want a luxury watch, then maybe you save up and one day you buy a Rolex, right? One day you buy a Cartier. Right. Mark Zuckerberg got into watches a couple years ago and then just like

Immediately bought like 10 of the rarest watches in the world. Oh, yeah. And there's actually something so weird and artificial about it where it's like, I'm gonna start this hobby and then like he like asks someone, you know, like well what are like the most what are the rarest, most expensive watches.

Because I'm worth so much money and I'm so famous that I can just get them all right now. Yeah, yeah. Like every time you see him in a public appearance, he has a watch worth like three million dollars on his wrist and it's like there's something so fucking fraudulent about it, right? Where Not only is he like not this character that he plays, this like regular dude that he plays

But he actually doesn't even really know what to do anymore. But yeah, what can you do with that amount of money? It's like a infinity symbol. Money makes having a hobby like that almost irrelevant, right? Like

He gets into watches and just buys fifty million dollars worth of of the best watches in the world. And now what? Now what are you gonna do? It's also it's very similar to like normal people when you're like, My New Year's resolution is to start running And then you go on Amazon, you're like, I'm getting running pants.

I'm getting running shoes. You go to like buying binge, even though you haven't actually like started the thing yet. It's the same thing that he's doing, except he's spending like four million dollars instead of like two hundred dollars. There's something there's something I can't quite articulate, but like their conception of themselves is so

Fucked. Yeah. But this is also this to me is so key to like the political ideology, right? Because one thing Rachel Sherman mentions in her book is that m rich people voted for Harris in the last election, right? So th this isn't necessarily a sort of partisanly right wing group, but these are all people who experience any idea of increasing taxes on the wealthy as a personal affront. Right. Because they're like, well, I worked hard for this.

I'm not the bad kind of rich person. I'm not an Aster. I'm not a Carnegie. Yeah, yeah. You can't really get any kind of political consciousness out of these people because they don't understand themselves as rich people, right? They will never admit it. Right. And one thing she mentions in the book too is this this concept of luxury creep. We're kind of like decision by decision, as somebody stays rich for many, many years, it's like they'll fly business once.

Yeah. And they'll be like, oh, I fly business. It's just easier for my neck, you know. And then they'll fly private. Like over time, they just go up the wealth ladder, right? It's like

on one decision like I'll buy a new car this time, but I'm not the kind of person who buys new cars, right? Right. Then of course like the cars become like a Bugatti and then it rolls Royce, blah blah blah. It's like over time they entrench themselves into these buying habits, but she also mentions that they they actually get Stronger in their mindset of themselves as middle class people, partly because they're hanging out with more elites, right? So they are kind of in the middle.

like o of the income band of people that they're spending time with. But there's never a point at which these people start to identify as rich people, right? It's always like a fluke, right? They're like, I'm a middle class person, I'm an interloper here. But that makes it so hard to do any kind of political organizing or like political punishment of these people because they they experience it's such an an attack.

If you try to reduce the amount of wealth that they have, because they don't think they have that much wealth. Right. Because they don't view themselves as having done anything wrong, the idea that it would be better or more moral to take some of their money from them.

never sits right in their brains. Right. It's an injustice. It's like, well, I worked for this money and you're taking it away from me, right? It's a theft. Right. You can't tell me that I've done something wrong to get this. All all I did was work hard. So we then get back to the book.

Taxation Demonization and Victimhood Narrative

We have to talk about his chapters on taxation. Yeah. This is gonna be a little script, Peter, about two IRS workers. So he says, assume for a few moments that you are Mr. Bob Stern, a scholar who works for the IRS. One morning, your manager, Mr. John Young, calls you into his office.

So do you want to be uh the IRS guy or the manager, Peter? I will be the manager. Okay. Bob, I keep reading reports about the growth of the millionaire population. The number of wealthy people keeps rapidly increasing. But our income tax revenue for a lot of these people is not keeping pace. I wish Congress had wake up. What this country needs is a tax on wealth. I know what you mean, but sooner or later we will get'em. Remember, it's inevitable. Death and taxes. Not so fast, Bob.

Look at this case study. Here's a woman, Lucy L who big names. It's funny to not give the full name in casual conversation. Here's a woman, Lucy L, who had seven million dollars just a year before she died. She lived on her pension money. Never in her life sold a share of stock out of her portfolio. Her wealth doubled in just the six years before her seventieth and seventy-sixth birthdays. But what did we get out of it?

In terms of income tax, nearly zip. But the Reaper, he got her right, deaf in taxes. Wrong, Bob. She died last year. And do you know what her net worth was at the time the Reaper finally showed up? Less than two hundred thousand dollars. No estate taxes. Some days I wish I were in another line of work. The enemy is winning. But where did her money go? She gave it to her church, two colleges, and a dozen or more charitable organizations.

She also gave ten thousand dollars to every one of her children, grandchildren, and nieces and nephews. She's real country, loaded with relatives, like a mountain of people. No, like a lot of mountain people. Oh my god. She's real country, loaded with relatives like a lot of mountain people. She's the wrong kind of white. She's the wrong kind of white. That's right. Well she sounds like a pretty nice person to give so much money to a church, colleges, and charities. Bob Bob, shame on you.

Every one of those churches is racist. Bob, shame on you. She and her ilk are the enemy. America needs their wealth to keep our government operating. We need her money to pay off the federal debt. We need to fund all of our social programs. Perhaps she feels that her church, the colleges, and the charities also have needs. Bob

You are so naive. This woman is an amateur. What type of experience does she have with doling out her wealth? We are her government. We should decide where and how wealth is distributed. We are the pros. We have to start taxing wealth before all the millionaires transform themselves Into non-millionaires. So this is insane. This is insane in general, but it's also so insane to include in an allegedly academic book.

about like the features like survey data on like wealthy in America. Fucking marketing PhDs are doing they're doing like an extended bit. I don't think you should legally be allowed to put PhD on the cover of your book if it's a marketing PhD. I love that they're just creating like the IRS as these like demons who are like, this bitch gave money away. We hate her for it. And also it's just like some fucking middle management asshole at the IRS is like, but you see like this weird.

Kind of like radicalization, right? That it's like you have to construct these efforts to tax rich people as amount like totally illegitimate. And only appealing to like the worst kind of people, like Mahaha, she gives money to charity, she's evil. Right, right. Also in the book they say We believe in the next twenty years, the affluent will have to use every option within the law to remain affluent.

It's a segment of our economy that will be under siege by the liberal politician and his friends. The tax man. Yeah. Well look, they got they got that right. The affluent, of course, uh under siege in our country. Since nineteen ninety six, baby, it's been pretty tough for the affluent in America. Like fucking like

Newt Gingrich got his fucking claws into their dick shaped marketing brains. Yeah. And they were like, My God In the next twenty years the entire country's gonna change. Rich people won't be allowed to be rich anymore. The last thing I want to read is

also another part of the ideology that shows up throughout the book about like being a frugal millionaire, right? They're basically creating this identity for yourself as like one of the good kinds of rich people, right? So here is him talking about He has a long thing about like baseball players and celebrities have like all their spending habits are so glorified by the media. So he's talking about whether you would ever have a TV show about someone like Johnny Lucas.

Is a show about the typical American millionaire one the mass TV audience would enjoy? Let's take a look at why not. The camera zooms in on the typical millionaire household of Mr. Johnny Lucas. Like most millionaires, Johnny, fifty-seven, has been married to the same woman for most of his adult life. Mm-hmm. He holds an undergraduate degree from a local college.

He's the owner of a small janitorial contracting firm that has thrived in the last few years. To his neighbors, Johnny and his family appear to be nondescript middle class folk. But Johnny has a net worth of more than two million dollars. How will the TV audience respond to the description of Johnny's wealth and the images of Johnny on the screen?

Viewers will likely be confused because Johnny does not look like the millionaire most people envision. What a house worth a million dollars? Well, I don't know. I don't understand. Second, they may be uncomfortable. Johnny's traditional family values.

And his lifestyle of hard work, discipline, sacrifice, thrift, and sound investment habits might threaten the audience. What happens when you tell the average American adult that he needs to reduce his spending in order to build wealth for the future? He may perceive this as a threat to his way of life. It is likely that only Johnny and his cohorts would tune into such a program.

Why would Johnny watch a program about his own About a guy not buying stuff? He's like, No, we're going to store today. It's just like it's just like a guy at work. What are you talking about? What are you Yeah, of course people are gonna watch that show, it's fucking boring as shit, dude. But it's also I I think the other part of the ideology, right, is this sense of victimhood. Yeah, yeah. You're a millionaire, but no one wants to admit

That the way you got there was with frugality. No one wants to congratulate you. Americans feel threatened by you. Yeah. Not not only are you a special boy, but just hearing about it. Would upset people. And you can argue that like sort of celebrity culture is like a lot of spending stuff, but if you talk about like sort of standard financial advice, it's all about frugality. It's all about like being prudent. Yeah, the idea that like A f a frugal

Rich guy is like offensive to people. What are you talking about? What is that is that based on something? There's later this whole section about how Johnny sometimes parks his like janitorial truck in the driveway. And then his neighbors like try to kick him out of the neighborhood. Yeah. Because they're like, Oh, we hate your values. We hate

We hate that you th at one point they're like, they hate that he sends his kids to college. If I found out that one of my neighbors was working class, that would be disgusting to me. I would say no. No. Start throwing your watches at him. Unless you are

doing some sort of rent seeking on American capital, then I I'm not interested in living near you. If you heard a story if you told um like the average American a story be like, oh this guy only makes eighty thousand dollars a year, but he has a net worth of two million dollars because he lives like a prudent lifestyle

How many of you are gonna be like, fuck that guy? They think he's like a hero. Yeah, you're not under attack for this at all. I mean the fact that this man like doesn't exist is pretty important because like you are you are literally creating a mythical hero. But this is what's so interesting, is I think

That this book between the lines is creating, giving rich people this story about themselves, right? A lot of people read this book and this book showed up in popular media all the time. And it it really created this story of like You're not the bad kind of rich person, right? And and they hate you for being thrifty. Not just that, but like where where is the chapter that's like, yeah, look, some people are just like high income big spenders, right? Like they they seem to collapse

all rich people into this category of like guy with reasonable income who's just very frugal, very smart, very responsible. By the way doesn't cheat on his wife. Like we're talking about they hate you for only being married once. Where does like the scumbag rich guy that we all know fit into this this framework. Right. I mean they basically talk about this and they basically say they're not really rich. Right. Right. If you see somebody driving a Rolls Royce,

He's not rich because he drives a Rolls Royce. Right. Exactly. Right. But of course, wealth inequality, that guy might just earn like ten million dollars a year and the fucking watch doesn't matter, right? It's so it's so interesting that they just Carve those people out of the equation. No, they're frauds. My net worth I pin at twenty five million dollars. But that's mostly brand equity. Uh that's

I that's where I value. That's your IP. That's my estimation, my personal calculation of the Peter brands. The only the only epilogue I will say about the aftermath of this book is that obviously it sold a billion copies, they made a ton of money. Thomas Stanley, one of the authors, went on to write a bunch of these other slot books.

There's an article like following up on the book like ten years later that notes one of the authors of this book, a couple of years after it came out, bought a brand new Mercedes. Hell yeah. In a book that says over and over again, never buy a brand new car. And the other author

Bought a brand new Corvette. So long, suckers. Literally leaving their readership in the dust, just fucking dread just cruising away in the new vet. Let's go, boys. It was a fucking fraud. Well, but there's their self made.

This transcript was generated by Metacast using AI and may contain inaccuracies. Learn more about transcripts.
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android