About the Author
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JEAN CHATZKY, award-winning journalist, bestselling author,
and sought-after motivational speaker, has created a global
platform that is making significant strides in helping millions
of men and women battle an epidemic with devastating impact–debt.
Jean is the financial editor for NBC’s Today show, a contributing
editor for More Magazine, a columnist for the New York Daily
News, and a contributor to The Oprah Winfrey Show. She also hosts
a daily show on the Oprah & Friends channel, exclusively on
Sirius XM Radio.
She is the author of numerous books, including Pay It Down!: From
Debt to Wealth on $10 a Day, a New York Times and BusinessWeek
bestseller. Her previous book, Make Money, Not Excuses, was a
Wall Street Journal and New York Times bestseller.
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Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
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Chapter one
Meet the Neighbors
The New Rich List
Back in the early 1990s, I was—for a short while—a reporter/
researcher for Forbes magazine. During my tenure there, I got a
few plum assignments, including spending one weekend
fact-checking the first interview Michael Milken had granted from
prison and fact-checking another on the businessman who would
eventually become New York’s mayor, Michael Bloomberg. I suppose
I did well enough because I was soon tapped to do a little
legwork on Forbes’s lists of billionaires and richest
celebrities.
The preeminent Forbes rich list, of course, is the Forbes 400:
the list of the country’s four hundred wealthiest Americans. It
has been around since 1982, when just three families made up 13
percent of the list. There were eleven members of the Hunt
family, fourteen Rockefellers, and twenty-eight du Ponts. In
2007, on the list’s twenty-fifth anniversary, these dynastic
numbers had dwindled to almost nothing. There was one Rockefeller
(David Rockefeller, Sr.), one Hunt (Ray Hunt), and no du Ponts.
Fifty people fell off the list completely. Forty-five were
newcomers—nearly half of whom had made their money in hedge funds
and private equity (like Pete Peterson of Blackstone and David
Rubenstein of the Carlyle Group); the others were a mixed bag,
including Frank and Lorenzo Fertitta of the Ultimate Fighting
Championship, a pay-per-view fight fest.
The point, notes Columbia University researcher Wojciech Kopczuk,
is not just that wealth is less concentrated (the share of wealth
in the hands of the top 1 percent of Americans has fallen by half
over the last eighty years). The real point is that it has moved
into a whole new set of hands. Over the past twenty-five years,
as these families have lost their historical positions, a whole
new set of people has gotten rich. Some are entrepreneurs that
have made a splash. Others are high earners on Wall Street, in
corporate America, at law firms or consulting companies. Still
others bought the right stocks (or were handed the right stock
options) at particularly rtune times.
This is an incredibly optimistic sign—and it’s not just coming
from the pages of Forbes. According to the Harrison Group, a
research firm in Connecticut, three-quarters of the wealthy
families in this country—and nearly all of those who qualify as
upper middle class—didn’t start out wealthy. Eighty-three percent
came from the middle class. They’ve accumulated wealth over
fifteen years on average, which means that some of them got there
in significantly less time than that. And here’s a bonus: When
you look at the wealth of the pentamillionaires (the folks with
$5 million or more), only one-tenth of their money came from
passive investments. They made the rest of it themselves. Survey
after survey I pored over while researching this book shows that
a shrinking percentage of today’s wealth came through a bequest.
Research from the Spectrem Group, based in Chicago, found that
only 2 to 4 percent of today’s millionaires became rich that most
old-fashioned way. This means you no longer have to be born into
wealth. Despite the hurdles presentd by the markets in 2008, the
American dream is alive and thriving—and you have the ability to
achieve it.
Where Are Women in This Mix?
The tide for women is turning a bit more slowly—but it is
turning, nonetheless. Remember, there are two ways for people to
become wealthy: They can inherit money or they can earn it. (Some
people might argue that marriage is a third proven way to get
wealthy. I don’t put it on the list because it can also take your
financial life in the site direction. Nine percent of our
survey respondents blamed divorce for a negative turn in their
fortunes; 8 percent blamed marriage itself.)
Interestingly, the fact that the ranks of the wealthy are more
dominated these days by earned wealth rather than inherited
wealth works against women. How? Think about the wealthy American
families of yesteryear, the Rockefellers, Vanderbilts, Hearsts,
and so on. They had children and their children had children
and—on average—those children were likely to be 50 percent male
and 50 percent female. So as the money passed from generation to
generation, it created as many female millionaires as male ones.
When it comes to earning money, however, men still hold the
advantage. Women are making strides. Some 30 to 40 percent of
women outearn their spouses. More women than men are entering
college and graduate-degree programs. Some researchers predict
that the average woman will outearn the average man by the year
2030. But for now, women still lag. In 2007, the number of cents
a woman earned for each dollar a man earned jumped from 77—where
it had been stuck for as long as I can remember—to 81. Progress,
yes, but still not an even playing field.
In terms of wealth and who has it, the number of women inheritors
falling out of the ranks of the über-wealthy is—for now—greater
than the number of women earners climbing into them. As
Columbia’s Kopczuk puts it: “Old wealth is split equally. New
wealth is not. But as time goes on, we expect to see a more equal
split in wealth as well as in income. The tremendous strides
women have made in income already indicates we will.”
How Do You Get There?
This all brings up the questions that are at the heart of this
book: Where do you fit in now? And how do you rise to the top?
I suppose that’s fitting, as this entire book unfolded as the
result of asking—and attempting to answer—one very large
question: Why do some people seem to move relatively easily from
a paycheck-to- paycheck existence into comfort or wealth, while
others get stuck or—worse—fall back?
I set out to answer that question by reading volumes of
research—academic and otherwise—on the subject. Or I should say
subjects: wealth, education, success, entrepreneurship, risk
taking, and the bigger worlds of behavioral finance and positive
psychology, which danced in, out, and around the question I was
trying to frame. Many professors walked me through their work,
explaining their theories and answering my questions.
In the end, though, it wasn’t enough. I wanted specifics of which
behaviors, attitudes, goals, and personality traits mattered
most. I needed to know how these elements combined to make The
Difference. How many of these behaviors, attitudes, goals, and
traits did you need to boost you from one category to another?
What, if anything, held you back?
That was when I joined forces with Merrill Lynch and Harris
Interactive to develop our own survey instrument that would
look—specifically—at these questions. For months, a team of eight
to ten of us met regularly. We used the preexisting research as
the foundation for our a twenty-minute questionnaire. Then we
rewrote those questions, and rewrote them again. Finally, several
months later, we administered the poll to more than five thousand
individuals.
The Research
The study, formally known as the 2008 Merrill Lynch New
Retirement Study, delved specifically into four loosely
constructed categories: nonfinancial behaviors, financial
attitudes and behaviors, goals (both financial and life), and
personality. We asked hundreds of questions about topics
including—but not limited to—the following:
financial attitudes and behaviors: Are you where you want to be
financially? Why or why not? What has been the most important
factor in reaching your financial status? Under what
circumstances were you able to establish financial comfort? How
do you handle your credit cards? Do you or do you not budget? Do
you look up to people with more money than you have? Have you
worked with a financial adviser? How do you feel about stocks?
Bonds? Do you feel entitled to a good standard of living?
goals: What financial goals have been absolutely essential for
you as an adult? Save more? Reduce debt? Which goals have you
been able to accomplish as an adult? Can you envision a day where
you won’t have to work to meet your financial needs? Do you
envision a retirement where you will work part-time? Start your
own business?
personality: Are you satisfied with your family life? Religious
life? Sex life? Financial life? Are you driven to make a lot of
money? Are you hardworking? A multitasker? Grateful? Confident?
Happy? Optimistic? Stubborn? Creative? Street smart? Outgoing?
Competitive? A leader? Ambitious? Popular? A risk taker? Do you
have the ability to overcome a bad situation? Are you passionate
about your work? Do you finish what you start? Can you easily
read other people? Do you feel it is okay to break some rules?
Have you compromised your personal principles to succeed
professionally?
nonfinancial behaviors: How many times have you changed
occupations as an adult? Do you work more than others? From home?
On vacation? How often do you vote? How much television do you
watch? How much time do you spend online? How often do you
exercise? How often do you read books? Newspapers? Do you
participate in extreme sports? Or meditate? How much do you
need? How often do you socialize and with whom—friends, family,
neighbors, colleagues? People you enjoy? People who could advance
your career? Have you made personal sacrifices to climb the
ladder of success? Do you give back to your community? Often? As
often as you can?
It was a huge undertaking. And that was not all. We asked about
political affiliation, left and right handedness, birth order,
and whether participants were the children of parents who read to
them at night. If we had an inkling that something might be
important, we tried to find some way to add it to the soup. And
as you’d expect, some of the issues raised by these questions
turned out to matter a lot, others not so much, some not at all.
We got the results back in early 2008. But anyone who h...
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