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Robert Kiyosaki

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Robert Kiyosaki
Kiyosaki in 2014.
Kiyosaki in 2014.
BornRobert Toru Kiyosaki
(1947-04-08) April 8, 1947 (age 77)
Hilo, Hawaii, United States
OccupationFounder of the Rich Dad Company and Cashflow Technologies, Inc.
Author of the Rich Dad Poor Dad series of books
Principal Host of the Rich Dad Radio Show
Financial columnist on Yahoo Finance
Former host of Rich Dad TV on PBS
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUnited States Merchant Marine Academy (1969)
SubjectPersonal finance
Business
Investing
Years active(1973–94)
(1997–present)
Notable worksRich Dad, Poor Dad
SpouseKim Kiyosaki (since 1985)
Website
Rich Dad

Robert Toru Kiyosaki (born April 8, 1947) is an American businessman and author. Kiyosaki is the founder of the Rich Dad Company, a private financial education company that provides personal finance and business education to people through books and videos.[3] He is also the creator of the Cashflow board and software games to educate adults and children business and financial concepts.

Kiyosaki is the author of more than 26 books, including the international self-published personal finance blockbuster Rich Dad Poor Dad series of books which has been translated into 51 languages, available in 109 countries and have combined sales of over 27 million copies sold worldwide.[4][5]

Kiyosaki is known for simplifying complex concepts and ideas related to business, investing, finance, and economics. He has garnered an international reputation for his straight talk, irreverence, courage, and views on money and investing that often contradicts conventional financial advice. Kiyosaki believes that the world needs more entrepreneurs to create jobs to spur economic growth and solve pressing world issues.[6] Much of his teachings and views encourage people to become financially educated and to take an active role in investing for their financial future.[7][8][9]

Early life and career

Kiyosaki was born and raised in Hilo, Hawaii. A fourth-generation Japanese American, he is the eldest son of Ralph H. Kiyosaki (1919–1991), an academic and educator and Marjorie O. Kiyosaki (1921–1971), a registered nurse.

Kiyosaki struggled in school, earning very poor grades all throughout his elementary, high school, and college years.[10] His high school teachers told him that he was not smart enough to go to college.[11] He failed English twice in high school and was put in a remedial summer school English class during his junior year.[12] He also failed Japanese, French, and Spanish.[13] After Kiyosaki found success with his Rich Dad Poor Dad series of books, he described it as ironic that his books would reach the New York Time's Bestseller list despite his inability to write.[12] Despite his lackluster academic performance, Kiyosaki's Rich Dad let him in on a secret where he stated that his school grades were important but stressed that his financial statement was his "report card" for the rest of his life once he left school.[12][14] Reflecting on his school days, Kiyosaki states he doesn't use much of what he had learned after the fifth grade and has said that the subjects he had learned in school through his formal education had nothing to do with his financial success.[15]

He attended Hilo High School and graduated in 1965. Upon graduating from high school, Kiyosaki wanted to skip college and was eager to enter the business world but eventually agreed that a formal university education would be of benefit to him. He initially chose to forego college but was overruled by his family as well as persuasion from a persistent high school counselor pointing out alternative educational and career options for him. His father encouraged Kiyosaki to improve his grades to go to a good college and get a good job.[16] Kiyosaki received congressional nominations from Senator Daniel K. Inouye for the U.S. Naval Academy and the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy.[17] Kiyosaki chose to attend the United States Merchant Marine Academy in New York for its emphasis on discipline and leadership, later citing both skills as being important to becoming an entrepreneur. He graduated in the class of 1969 as a deck officer with a Bachelors of Science degree and a commission as a 2nd LT in the U.S. Marine Corps.[18] After graduating from college in New York, Kiyosaki began his career by taking a job with Standard Oil's tanker office as a third mate sailor. His career with Standard Oil was short-lived and Kiyosaki resigned with the organization after 6 months to join the Marine Corps to hone his business and leadership skills.[19] He served in the Marine Corps as a helicopter gunship pilot during the Vietnam War in 1972, where he was awarded the Air Medal.[20] At the age of 25, not knowing what to do as a future career path for the rest of his life, Kiyosaki's father insisted that he'd become a professional such as a doctor, lawyer, or engineer, get a master's degree and a PhD and work in the corporate world, academia or for the government.[21] Kiyosaki's "Rich Dad" thought his "Poor Dad"s advice was "bad" and suggested to him to become financially successful by learning how to become an active entrepreneur and investor.[21]

Kiyosaki enrolled in a 2-year MBA program at the University of Hawaii at Hilo in 1973 at the insistence of his Poor Dad while his Rich Dad thought that the MBA program was a waste of time.[22] Despite Hawaii's emphasis on business and finance, Kiyosaki was unimpressed with the professors as they focused on the theoretical aspects of business; what interested Kiyosaki was the practical aspects of business - how to make money.[23] Kiyosaki later dropped out of the MBA program and attended a 3-day real estate investing course.[22] The course resonated with Kiyosaki's interest on the practical aspects of business in addition to the course's focus on generating income from different streams of revenue from a property investment. Kiyosaki began investing in real estate after attending the course by purchasing a condo that was in foreclosure on the island of Maui.[18][24] He was honorably discharged from the Marine Corps in June 1974. Though Kiyosaki contemplated a career to fly for the airlines, he instead took a job as a sales associate for Xerox to further hone his business skills by selling copy machines in Leesburg, Virginia until June 1978.[18][19]

In 1977, Kiyosaki launched his business career where he entered the retailing industry and started a company called "Rippers".[25] The company brought to market the first nylon and velcro surfer wallets. Kiyosaki and his products were featured in Runner's World, Gentleman's Quarterly, Success Magazine, Newsweek, and Playboy.[26] The company was moderately successful, but eventually went bankrupt, as he wanted to save money on costs and did not intellectually protect the product.[25] Kiyosaki then started a rock and roll retail business that licensed T-shirts, hats, wallets, and bags for heavy metal rock bands such as Mötley Crüe, Judas Priest, and Duran Duran. Many of the products were in national chains like JCPenney, Tower Records, and Spencer Gifts. The company went bankrupt in 1980.[18]

In 1985, Kiyosaki established a business education company teaching entrepreneurship, investing, and social responsibility.[18] In 1994, Kiyosaki sold the education company and through various strategic real estate investments, allowed him to retire at the age of 47.[18][27] In 1997, he began his writing career and launched Cashflow Technologies, Inc., a business and financial education company[28] which owns and operates the Rich Dad and Cashflow brands.[29] The Rich Dad Company is now a multimillion-dollar financial and business education company operating in over 100 countries offering comprehensive real world business and financial education to millions of people all over the world.[27]

Business ventures and investments

Aside from operating the Rich Dad Company, Kiyosaki continues to operate external business ventures and various investments carving his niche as a businessman and parlaying his ventures and investments into a massive business and financial empire since he came out of retirement in 1997. Many of these ventures are concentrated in the information technology (mobile apps and internet), publishing, retail, education, mining, energy, financial market, and real estate industries.[30] Kiyosaki asserts that he makes 2 million USD in cash flow per month tax free from all his businesses and investments.[31] Kiyosaki's estimated wealth is about $80 million USD.[32]

Education

In 1997, Kiyosaki launched The Rich Dad Company, a private business and financial education company which owns and operates the Rich Dad and Cashflow brands.[28][29][33] Kiyosaki started the Rich Dad Company at his kitchen table with his wife Kim. He financed the venture when he raised $250,000 in seed capital from private investors.[34] Kioysaki has since then established a multimillion-dollar financial education empire spanning books, CDs, board and video games, online videos, seminars and motivational speaking engagements.[35] In 2014, the company leveraged the global success of the Rich Dad games with the launch of new and breakthrough offerings in mobile and online gaming as well as Rich Dad's Clutch, a digital learning platform.[36]

Real estate

A large portion of his business empire and wealth is concentrated in real estate investing.[37] Kiyosaki's real estate empire encompasses some several thousand cash flowing apartment complexes, commercial properties, luxury hotel, a boutique hotel, and five courses.[38]

After progressing with smaller real estate investments, Kiyosaki moved into the commercial real estate sector, branching off into semi-large apartment complexes, with a large portion concentrated in Arizona and the Southwestern United States and retired in 1994. During the Arizona housing market slump in the mid 1990s, Kiyosaki began investing aggressively in the real estate market where he was able to purchase a $75,000 house at a bankruptcy court for $20,000 and sold it later for $60,000 with only five hours of work. He later rolled over the profits into his real estate holding company as a form of a promissory note. Kiyosaki was able to do go through six of those "buy, create and sell" bankruptcy court real estate transactions that netted him a windfall profit of $190,000, which was later sheltered into his real estate holding company and converted into a note used for other corporate expenses.[39][40] He also invested in a mini-storage facility that netted him $12,000 monthly cash flow to which he later used the monthly rental proceeds to purchase a Porsche.[41] Eventually, he sold the mini-storage and rolled the profits into another apartment property.[42]

Since coming out of retirement in 1997, Kiyosaki remains involved with the apartment business and owns over 1400 units of apartment houses.[43][44][45] Kiyosaki has been involved with commercial real estate sector such as investing in warehouses, Triple net lease and real estate development ventures around the United States.[46][47] Kiyosaki has a preference for commercial rental property investments over other real estate classifications.[48]

During the subprime mortgage crisis in the late 2000s, Kiyosaki invested heavily having acquired nearly 40% of his 2015 portfolio of distressed properties during the downturn.[24] In 2008, Kiyosaki purchased a 300 unit, $17 million apartment complex in Tulsa, Oklahoma.[49] Many of his commercial real estate holdings include luxury and boutique hotels, golf courses, and large apartment complexes as stated in an interview with The Alex Jones Show in 2010.[50][51] During the same year, Kiyosaki acquired a $46 million Arizona landmark resort with 5 five golf courses that was in foreclosure at a bankruptcy court.[52][53][54] In 2011, he invested in a 2000 unit apartment construction project and earned approximately $250,000 in monthly cash flow.[44][55] In May 2015, he invested in a 1600 unit apartment complex for $80 million USD.[24] In December 2015, Kiyosaki refinanced a $300 million mortgage at 2.5 percent on one of his apartment complex investments.[35][56] In May 2016, Kiyosaki stated he controls over 10,000 apartment units producing over one million dollars in cash flow every month.[57]

Oil wells and natural gas

Kiyosaki has been in the oil business since the late 1990s and got interested in the petroleum industry dating back to his days working at Standard Oil.[58][38] He has stated his reason for investing in oil as petroleum affects so many parts of human society such as plastics, food production, gasoline, airplane tickets, consumer electronics and heating.[59] He owns a number of oil drilling operations and oil wells in Texas, Louisiana, and Oklahoma, but does not invest in oil company stocks such as ExxonMobil or BP.[18][60][61][61][62][63] In 2013, Kiyosaki invested in three new oil wells at a 10 percent stake.[64] In late 2015, Kiyosaki amassed a portfolio of 400 privately controlled oil wells.[65]

Solar company

In a 2010 Rich Dad Insiders video, Kiyosaki stated that he made a substantial investment in a startup solar energy company.[60] He reiterated this solar investment venture on the Alex Jones Show in late 2010 expressing a positive outlook on the solar power industry saying that "solar energy is the future".[51][66]

Financial market

Kiyosaki has been actively involved in financial markets but has asserted that he now rarely invests in the stock market, ref>Kiyosaki, Kim (April 30, 2015). "The Financial Golden Rule". Rich Dad Blogs. Retrieved January 12, 2016.bond market, or other traditional investment markets that involves paper assets.[67] Kiyosaki states that he utilized paper assets in the past primarily for their liquidity, usually for a short-term gain for his money to move in and eventually out of. He has preferred to keep much of his wealth concentrated in privately controlled companies, real estate, and commodities as he has expressed his desire for better control over these investments.[64]

In his book Rich Dad Poor Dad, Kiyosaki mentioned achieving consistent 16% ROI through tax lien certificates.[68][69] Written in a chapter of Rich Dad's Prophecy, Kiyosaki states of having invested in various government tax free bonds such as municipal bonds and municipal mortgage real estate investment trusts offered by real estate development companies paying over 12% tax-free dividend interest.[70]

Kiyosaki has also stated in interviews that he does not invest or play the stock market, much like the fact that he does not invest in oil company stocks opting to prefer technical trading in the financial market. He has been an active options trader where he has traded stock options, Forex currencies, and other derivatives.[44] A portion of his wealth is concentrated in a basket of Asian currencies through ETFs as a hedge against the U.S. dollar. Kiyosaki owns a number of foreign currencies such as the Malaysian ringgit, the Singapore dollar, the Thai baht and the Philippine peso.[38]

Kiyosaki is involved in the commodity market where he invests in gold and silver commodities as well as gold and silver ETF's.[38] He stated this for the reason that he uses commodities as a hedge against uncertain economic forces such as inflation and hyperinflation as well as government's mismanagement via printing of the nation's currency.[69][71] Kiyosaki also states that investing in gold and silver is a hedge is akin to buying an insurance policy against fiat money and corruption in the financial system. Kioysaki also believes that gold and silver will be valuable for at least another 1000 years.[35] Kiyosaki also states that gold is a tangible asset that has held its value throughout history.[59]

During his teenage years, Kiyosaki dabbled with silver and gold coins as a starting investment during the 1960s. Kiyosaki states that he is a "gold bug", meaning that he holds various commodities such as gold and silver to hedge against government misprinting of the US dollar. Kiyosaki invests much of his remaining and excess cash flow into gold and silver to further secure his asset foundation.[72] In a 2013 interview with KITCO news, Kiyosaki advised to allocate 25 percent of one's wealth in precious metals.[73]

Business and financial advice

Kiyosaki's financial and business teachings focus on what he calls "financial education" generating passive income by means of focusing on business and investment opportunities, such as real estate investments, businesses, stocks and commodities, with the ultimate goal of being able to support oneself by such investments alone and thus achieving true financial independence without working for a paycheck through a conventional salaried job. Kiyosaki defines the term "assets" as things that put money in ones pocket and describes an asset can be anything as long as it has value, produces income or appreciates, and has a ready market.[74][75] He states that assets generate cash inflow, such as stock dividends, rental income from properties, or income from businesses, and the term "liabilities" as things that devour cash out of ones pocket, such as one's personal residence, consumer loans, car loans, credit card payments and student loans. Kiyosaki argues that financial leverage is crucial in becoming rich despite risks, repercussions, and pitfalls that come with utilizing leverage to achieve financial independence.[76] Kiyosaki stresses the importance of building up an asset first to fund one's liabilities instead of saving cash or relying on a salary from a traditional job.[35][35]

Originally self-published before being picked up commercially to become a best seller, the central concept of his book, "Rich Dad, Poor Dad" is an anecdotal comparison of his "two fathers." His "poor dad" was his biological father, who was highly educated and became superintendent of the Hawaii State Department of Education but was always struggling financially. Contrasted with this is his "rich dad," who was his best friend's father, a successful businessman who later became "one of the richest men in Hawaii" by investing the income from his businesses into income-producing investments such as real estate and was an 8th grade high school dropout. Its main purpose as a self-help book is to help people rethink their idea of money and their concept of themselves as employees who will gain financial rewards from conformity and education. In an April 2012 Rich Dad blog, Kiyosaki has advised young people in college or graduating from high school to explore the aspects of non-traditional education offered by community college courses on investing hosted by professionals where one can learn important new world skills like computer programming, web design, and more at a fraction of the cost than a traditional education at a four-year university. Additionally, Kiyosaki has also stressed the importance of financial education in addition to one's academic and professional education, financial education acquired by attending seminars, reading books, taking classes on sales, marketing, and advertising and hiring a coach.[77]

Kiyosaki uses the "rich dad, poor dad" comparison to illustrate his view that the majority of people are stuck in what he refers to as "the rat race"–living paycheck to paycheck and spending all of their time working to pay bills and other expenses. In his books, Kiyosaki has recommded hard asset tax-advantaged investment vehicles, such as real estate or businesses, rather than ownership of paper assets such as stocks, bonds, ETFs, and mutual funds.[64] This idea is further developed in his later books and "Rich Dad" became Kiyosaki's personal brand for various publishing ventures. Kiyosaki's business approach stresses the importance of financial literacy through the acquisition of what he calls "assets" as the means to obtaining wealth and to train one's mind to see opportunities is the first step to creating or acquiring assets. He says that life skills are often best learned through experience and that there are important lessons not taught in school. He says that formal education is primarily for those seeking to be employees or self-employed individuals, and that this is an "Industrial Age idea." In order to obtain financial freedom, Kiyosaki stresses the importance of knowing the difference between an asset and a liability and to learn how to create assets that produces income or appreciates, and has a ready market.[78] Furthermore, Kiyosaki also states one must be either a business owner or an investor, or both generating passive income particularly on a monthly basis.[79][80] Kiyosaki has also emphasized that it's not the assets like real estate, stocks, mutual funds, businesses or money that makes one rich but what one know and the information, knowledge, wisdom, and know-how one's financial intelligence that makes a person rich.[81]

Kiyosaki also stresses the importance of entrepreneurship and investing, developing strong financial aptitude and having savvy business skills and shrewd business acumen, and focusing on looking for business opportunities and developing multiple revenue streams instead of looking for a traditional job to achieve great wealth.[21] He states that entrepreneurship has created the most billionaires among the worlds wealthiest people.[35][82] He has stressed in his books that people should create assets that produce cash flow. He has advocated entrepreneurship and real estate investing as a vehicle for building wealth and achieving financial success.[83][84]

Kiyosaki has also advocated the importance of learning to read financial statements as it measures how smart one is financially and learning to read financial statements in order to achieve great wealth and financial independence as he considers one's financial statement your "report card" after one leaves school and joins the workforce.[85][86][87] With regards to business, Kiyosaki states that roughly 80% of the very rich became rich through building a business, stressing the study of the basics of business and entrepreneurship, such as learning how to sell, brand, and market in order to be a rich investor and good business owner, or to know what a business owner knows.[82]

Kiyosaki has also emphasized the importance of investing for cash flow instead of capital appreciation when analyzing and buying investments.[64][88] He has emphasized through his books that saving and investing are not the same concepts and that the traits of a skilled investor is to have cash flowing in into one's pocket. Kiyosaki has stressed the importance of focusing on cash flow when analyzing any business or investment as cash flow is realized when one purchases an investment and hold on to it, and every month, quarter, or year that investment returns money to the investor.[64] Kiyosaki has asserted that an investor should look for cash flow over capital gains or invest for cash flow and capital gains in the best case investment scenario.[89] He has stated every investment whether business, a stock, or a piece of real estate should be looked at from a business perspective and that one should invest as an entrepreneurial partner seeking active control over the investment in percentages of the business to mitigate risk instead of from the point of view as a traditional shareholder.[64] He states that the cash flow investor focuses on long-term trends and is not affected by short-term market fluctuations or aren't as susceptible to market swings. He reasserts himself that rich people put their money to work and make their money from their investments. With regards to capital gains, Kiyosaki has criticized real estate "flippers", calling them "dealers" and not investors as they got caught when the real estate market turned down during the 2000s subprime mortgage crisis as well as being subject to self-employment taxes. When the market reversed and crashed, the properties were no longer worth what the flippers bought them for, and there were no buyers to flip the properties to.[90][91]

Kiyosaki often refers to what he calls "The CASHFLOW Quadrant", a conceptual tool which he developed to categorize the four major ways income is earned in the world of money. Depicted in a diagram, this concept entails four groupings, split with two crossed lines (one vertical and one horizontal). In each of the four groups there is a letter representing a way in which an individual may earn income. The letters are as follows.

  • E: Employee – Working for someone else.
  • S: Self-employed or Small business owner – Where a person owns his own job and is his own boss.[92]
  • B: Business owner – A person who owns a business to make money; typically where the owner's physical presence is not required.
  • I: Investor – Investing money in order to receive a larger income in the future or analyses other businesses as potential investments.

For those on the left side of the divide (E and S), Kiyosaki says that they may never obtain true wealth. Conversely, those on the right side of the divide (B and I) are supposedly following the only road to true wealth. Kiyosaki also classifies the four main "asset" classes as means of gaining wealth:[93][94]

  • Businesses: Businesses that generate monthly cash flow that don't require the owner's physical presence.
  • Real Estate: Real estate such as owning farmland, mobile home parks, warehouses, small family homes, or apartment houses that generate monthly cash flow.
  • Paper Assets: Investments such as stocks, bonds, REITs, ETF's, mutual funds, private equity funds etc.
  • Commodities: Agriculture, livestock, oil and natural gas, industrial metals such copper and tin or precious metals such as gold and silver that are used to hedge government's mismanagement printing of the nation's currency.[59]

Kiyosaki has stated that are three types of education everybody needs to be financially successful in the Information Age.

  • Academic: Scholastic education teaches you skills such as reading, writing, and arithmetic. Though critics of Kiyosaki have criticized him for downplaying academic education, Kiyosaki continuously stresses the importance of this type of education is very important in the modern era.
  • Professional: Education that teaches you the skills to work for money. This type of education can range from licensing, an apprenticeship in a trade or an internship for a professional career such as a masseuse, firefighter, plumber, electrician, doctor, or lawyer. Kiyosaki states that professional education was essential to job security in the Industrial Age and today that it takes much more than professional education to be financially successful.[95]
  • Financial: Education that teaches you how to manage, invest, leverage, and protect the money you have earned and ultimately have money work for you. Kiyosaki states that financial education is essential for financial success in the Information Age. Kiyosaki stresses that financial success and being financially smart is not about how much money you make, but how much money you keep, how hard money works for you, and how many generations you pass your money on to.[95]

Kiyosaki has also referred to the "three types of incomes", the types of income is earned in the world of money. Kiyosaki has continuously emphasized the importance of converting earned income into passive and portfolio income as quickly as possible.[96][97]

  • Earned Income: Income from wages via a traditional job, labor and paycheck, interest on savings, and retirement plans. Kiyosaki states that earned income is the highest taxed income and the income of the poor and middle class. It is also the income that is the hardest to build wealth with.
  • Portfolio Income: Income one gets from your portfolio of investments where it is generally derived from paper assets such as stocks, bonds, and mutual funds. It is the second highest taxed income. It is the most popular type of income because paper assets have high liquidity and are easier to manage and maintain.
  • Passive income: Income one gets continuously on a regular basis without working on the part of the person who's receiving it. Generally derived from businesses, real estate investments, royalties, trademark licenses, stock dividends and distributions. It is the lowest-taxed income, with many tax benefits, and is the easiest income to build wealth with.

In 2015, Kiyosaki introduced a concept associated with three types of wealth. He gave a breakdown of those three wealth categories in his 2015 book Second Chance. Kiyosaki refers to the three types of as primary, secondary and tertiary. Kiyosaki states that primary and secondary wealth are the forms of wealth held by the rich while tertiary wealth are forms of wealth held by the poor and middle class and those who hold tertiary wealth will be wiped out during times of an economic crisis.[98]

  • Primary wealth: Wealth derived from direct ownership of physical resources such as land, livestock, lumber, oil, physical gold and silver, and fish.
  • Secondary wealth: Wealth derived from production which is generated from a company's capacity to produce more primary wealth. Examples of secondary wealth would include a dairy producing farm, gold and silver mines, timber producing forestland, an oil well, a piece of real estate such as a townhouse or apartment building or a fishery.
  • Tertiary wealth: A claim to wealth. Examples of tertiary wealth include an oil company stock, a municipal housing bond, a real estate investment trust, a gold ETF, or a mutual fund.

Kiyosaki also advocates the value of games, particularly Monopoly, as tools for learning basic financial concepts and strategies such as "trade four green houses for one red hotel." Kiyosaki has created several games such as Cashflow 101 and Cashflow 202 to reinforce the financial concepts written in his books.

Kiyosaki regularly expresses his views related to the global economy, investing, business, and personal finance. He has written numerous blog posts, financial columns, and through his Rich Dad Poor Dad series of books outlining his beliefs and views.

Views on education

Kiyosaki has been a harsh critic of the American education system, describing it as a broken and obsolete system as well as the lack of financial education being taught in it. Due to the lack of financial education being taught in schools, Kiyosaki often languished in the classroom and wondered didn't know why he was in school.[43] As a schoolboy, Kiyosaki felt the subjects he learned in school was not applicable in his real life and wondered why he never learned anything about the subject of money, how it worked, and entrepreneurship.[22] [43][16][99] He described schools as places that teach people how to get jobs and become employees rather than entrepreneurs who manage their own investments.[100] He has criticized the American education system for not teaching people basic financial skills needed to prosper in a capitalistic society.[101][102] Kiyosaki further backs up his notion by citing a historical reference of oil industrialist John D. Rockefeller who took over the American education system through establishing the General Education Board in 1903 and utilized it as a system that produced employees.[99] Kiyosaki has said that the rich have a conspiracy to keep people financially ignorant.[43]

Kiyosaki has criticized academic researchers that have an anti-capitalist and anti-money bias as "hardcore communists and socialists".[35][99]

Kiyosaki has been critical of the rising cost of college tuition in addition to the falling income for millennial college graduates.[103] He states that millennials entering college are paying obscene amounts of money for tuition, taking on crippling student loan debt, and finding a weak job market that doesn’t justify the costs.[16] He has called organizations such as Sallie Mae as "racketeers" issuing student loans to students who are unable to declare bankruptcy and clear their loans as both corrupt and criminal.[99] He has advised and cautioned to his readers and followers to educate themselves on the cost of college education and the expected return of the degree.[16] He advises people to view and question college like any other investment and determining the return on investment on whether a college degree is really worth the money.[16] He has described the millennial generation of college and university graduates as an entire generation being crushed by student loans they’ll never repay in an effort to get jobs that don’t exist.[104] He has asserted that a person going to college or university to achieve financial success is a "scam", a "sales pitch" and asserts the dogma that more education and schooling will make a person more financially successful as absolutely untrue.[99][103] Kiyosaki further asserts that more education may leave a person unemployed and economically destitute in the long run citing numerous unemployed college graduates who are not finding a well paid job strong enough amortize their student loan debt. Kiyosaki also cites that American universities have produced an oversupply of overqualified university graduates, particularly holders of liberal arts degrees finding themselves in a weak job market that are either unemployed or working low wage jobs requiring less education as anecdotal and statistical examples.[11][99][103][105] Kiyosaki has advised his readers to consider alternative higher education choices such as by going to a trade or technical school besides the traditional option of going to university.[99]

Kiyosaki has criticized the conventional notion that if one goes to school and gets good grades, one will be successful financially and in life. Kiyosaki asserts that success in education, the world of academics or being successful in school doesn't make one financially successful or rich.[105] He rejects this notion and asserts that good grades in school doesn't necessarily translate to financial success and that only success doing well in school guarantees is success in academia. He has cited many valedictorians that have been successful in school, but were not successful in the real world of business, investing, and in life financially. He has asserted that success in real life is not measured by grades on one's academic report card but by one's financial statement and that a persons financial statement is a persons "report card" for the rest of a persons life.[100][12][106] He alludes to his own father's and his extended family's experience as highly educated and intelligent people who all held PhDs, yet were poor.[35] Kiyosaki further alludes this notion taught by his highly educated father that going to school would give him a better chance at getting a good job and attaining financial success. However, he has questioned this notion where he uses his father, a PhD holder and a university professor as an illustration on how one can remain poor despite being academically successful and highly educated.[107]

Kiyosaki has criticized people for equating general academic disciplines and concentrations taught in colleges and universities such as accounting, economics, finance, marketing, business administration with practical financial education. Kiyosaki cites his tax advisor and accountant, Tom Wheelwright who holds a master's degree in Accounting that he received no practical financial education on how to successfully manage his own personal finances.[108] With the lack of financial education being taught in schools, Kiyosaki has told his readers that school at best teaches people how to balance a checkbook as well as being future clients to Wall Street. Kiyosaki states this since schools lack financial education, schools in turn instead recruit financial planners bankers to save money and put their money in a 401(k) to be future clients rather than teaching them practical financial education for students on how to successfully manage their own financial lives.[109]

Views on Australian real estate

In December 2014, Kiyosaki believed that the Australian real estate was in a property bubble that was about to burst as he considered many foreign investors who are buying anything they can get their hands on. Kiyosaki has since then advised Australian investors to invest in commodities such gold or oil, where prices were falling.[110]

Views on mutual funds

Kiyosaki has criticized mutual funds for lacking financial transparency.[111] He wrote in one column that investors in any mutual fund with a 2.5% annual fee would, over a long time period take over 80% of the risk, surrender 80% of the earnings to the fund, while only earning 20% of the mutual fund profits, if there are any left over.[112] Kiyosaki expanded on his criticism of mutual funds in another column by stating they are for "losers."[113] Despite the fact that most mutual funds actually charged less than 1.1%.[114] He has drawn much criticism for comparing investing in mutual funds to playing the lottery, and for discouraging 401(k) investing, contrary to the advice of most professional financial advisers.[115] In contrast to these statements, Kiyosaki wrote in his book Prophecy that while mutual funds are not great investments, they remain one of the few acceptable investment vehicles available to those who will not educate themselves financially.[116] With regards to mutual funds and most paper assets in general, Kiyosaki ridicules the retirement advice advised by many financial experts of "invest for the long term" and diversification as he considers the advice to be "bad advice" especially with HFT systems used by giant investment houses, with the capital to buy and operate multimillion-dollar computers, that are capable of performing thousands of trades a minute, trading against hapless amateur investors, day trading with the big investment houses are trading in milliseconds often ripping into the pension plan profits held by many pensioner retirees.[117][118][119] He has labelled the advice "invest for the long term" and diversification as a sales pitch. [120] [121][122] Kiyosaki has stated the reason most people continue to choose mutual-fund investing is because of the simple process, which makes it inherently risky. He supports his reason by citing the stock market crash between March 2000 and March 2003, where it was estimated that millions of people lost $7 to $9 trillion in the market crash and the underlying reason is because millions of people mistook a common industry sales pitch for sound financial advice.[123]

Kiyosaki's criticisms are supported by the founder of the mutual fund Vanguard, John C. Bogle. In a Frontline episode titled "401(k)s: The New Retirement Plan, For Better or Worse", Bogle stated that management fees and trading costs gobble up approximately 2.5% of an investor's annual returns and approximately 80% of an investor's long term gains. He says management costs reduce the value of a $1,000 investment over 65 years from approximately $140,000 at 8% compounded annually to a mere $30,000 at 5.5% compounded annually. Bogle's solution is to utilize index funds, which charge as little as 0.09%, to substantially reduce or eliminate management fees.[124]

Personal life

Kiyosaki has 3 younger siblings. He has co-authored one book with his sister Emi called "Rich Brother, Rich Sister". Kiyosaki's mother, a nurse, died suddenly of heart failure in March 1971. His father, a schoolteacher, died of lung cancer in 1991.[citation needed]

Robert is married to Kim Kiyosaki; since 1994, the Kiyosakis have lived in the Scottsdale area in Phoenix, Arizona. The two have no children.[125]

In a Jetset magazine column on October 20, 2015, Kiyosaki endorsed and supported Republican candidate Donald Trump for the 2016 Presidential elections.[126] Though having no interest or involvement in politics, Kiyosaki stated that he foresaw Donald Trump's candidacy back in 2006 as much of his support to Trump resonates through their common ground as friends, educators, investors and entrepreneurs as well as their concern for the growing need for financial education. He also states that Trump is the only candidate who knows how to negotiate tough with China, Middle East, Europe, and Mexico, how to create jobs and make money in addition to having enough influence and desire to convince Congress to lower corporate income-tax rates to repatriate offshore money held by multinational corporations in foreign nations.[127][128][129][130] Kiyosaki has also stated that although he has great respect for Trump as a politician, he has emphasized that it doesn't matter who is in the White House and that it is the financial institutions such as the Federal Reserve and Wall Street which control the U.S. money supply ultimately sets the overall course for U.S. monetary and foreign policy.[131][132][133][134]

Criticism and controversy

Kiyosaki's advice have been criticized for emphasizing anecdotes and containing nothing in the way of concrete advice on how readers should proceed or work.[135] Kiyosaki responds that his material is meant to be a motivational tool to get readers thinking about money rather than a guide to wealth. He also says the books are supposed to be "interesting" to people, which does not involve a lot of technical material.[136]

Kiyosaki has been criticized for being anti-education, advocating people to drop out of school and for downplaying the importance of higher education for playing a role in determining one's financial success.[11][137] He has ridiculed, scorned, and mocked people who are highly educated and academically successful and has said "the best way to get even with A-grade students was to make them employees of mine".[43] He has described people who go to college as "suckers" and PhD holders as people who are "poor, helpless, and desperate", alluding to Kiyosaki's own father, who became poor and unemployed during the last years of his life despite being a highly educated PhD.[43][103][104][138] Kiyosaki has responded that he is "pro-education" in terms of building wealth via financial education and that he is "anti-education" in terms of the lack of financial education being taught in the American school system.[16]

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  • An Unfair Advantage: The Power of Financial Education (2011). ISBN 1-61268-010-0.
  • Midas Touch: Why Some Entrepreneurs Get Rich And Why Most Don't (2011), co-written with Donald J. Trump ISBN 1-61268-095-X.
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  • Second Chance: for Your Money, Your Life and Our World (2015) ISBN 978-1612680460
  • 8 Lessons in Military Leadership for Entrepreneurs: How Military Values and Experience Can Shape Business and Life (2015) ISBN 978-1491583876

Notes

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References

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Bibliography

  • If You Want to Be Rich

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