Who wouldn't want to come to that time when you don't have to work for money?, but you work to learn, because money works for you. This is one of the many lessons that Father Rico, Poor Father of Robert Kiyosaki, contains, the most successful personal finance book of all time. The basic ideas of losing the fear of money, learning about finance and finding ways to achieve financial independence, that is that your assets generate the money you need to live without the need to work, seem frankly good and encourage you to continue learning about it. 

RICH FATHER POOR FATHER

ROBERT KIYOSAKI

By Carlos Rangel (Yoors Blogger)

Under the caption of “What do the rich teach their children that the poor and the middle class don't”, Robert Kiyosaki's well-known and highly sold book of rich father poor father, invites us to learn how to understand money in another way, a rather shocking. I tell you in this summary of Father Rich Poor Father. The book tells the teachings of the author's “2 parents”, the biological teacher who defends the system of studying, working, working more and you will come something, and the father of a friend who instructs him in the art of putting money to work for you. About this basically revolves the book, the duality between working for money or making money work for you.


Kiyosaki explains his speculative practices, buying and selling houses sometimes on the same day, and using money to keep buying more homes. It couldn't be done so cheerfully here because you'd be crackled to taxes. He also talks a lot about taxes and how the poor pay many while the rich hide in societies and other “triquinuelas” to minimize their payment. Here you enter swampy terrain when talking about maximizing the company's expenses including practically personal things, in order to have a lower profit and thus pay less. It is true that it is based on a basic concept, wage earners first pay taxes and then collect, and pay more taxes, while corporations pay taxes (that of corporations) at the end of the year once only on profits; however the use it wants to give it touches on sensitive issues. He talks about some other things but always going around these concepts, always affecting the differences between rich and poor when it comes to having a knowledge of finance.

I wouldn't recommend it to everyone, but trying to get out of the rat race that our society has become, earn more to borrow more and so in loop, is always better than standing still as we are seeing it happens even in the most complex times.

Tell me what you think of this book? would you read it? Let me know below in the comments.

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