The End of Personal Finance
Decades of advice turn out to be so much garbage.
Years ago, when I wrote a popular financial makeover feature for a major national newspaper, one of our subjects asked if he should be plowing his more than $50,000 in savings into gold. It was 1997 and gold was trading at a little more than $300 an ounce. The financial planner assisting with the piece laughed dismissively, and the question never made it into the final write-up. Well, my bad. As I write, gold is hovering around $900 an ounce.
For more than two decades, as income inequality increased and job security decreased, Americans lapped up personal finance columns, books, and television shows. We thrilled to stock tips and swooned at sensible strategies for using dollar-cost averaging to invest in no-load index funds. Buy and hold, my friends! The annualized gain for the S&P 500 stock index over time is more than 10 percent! You, too, can turn into the millionaire next door. Carpe diem, folks! Seize the financial day!
The advice proffered by the vast majority of analysts, would-be gurus, and television pundits came down to one word: stocks. Some, like CNBC's infamous Jim Cramer, advocated stock-picking strategies. Others encouraged mutual funds. But very few—at least of those that could get publicity via mainstream outlets—doubted the efficacy of the market.
That our personal finances weren't fully ours to seize didn't seem to occur to many of us until recently, when the stock market plunged almost 40 percent in a mere year, housing went into free fall, and the unemployment rate began to climb perilously toward double digits. All these facts suddenly left the personal finance industry facing a conundrum of its own making. The backbone of the self-help complex is the idea that you can do it. You. Singular. But what happens when you lose your job and can't find a new one before your six months of recommended emergency savings runs out? Or a good chunk of your retirement income is in the form of a pension from your former employer—and that employer is named Chrysler? What then?
"Personal finance has come to substitute for the role government should play for people," observes Nan Mooney, author of (Not) Keeping Up with Our Parents. "In the past 20 years the myth of the person succeeding on their own has gotten bigger and bigger. This myth is dangerous. It tells you if you can't balance everything and you are in debt, it is your fault."
Sounds harsh, but if you are laid off and at the end of your resources, what other message can you take away from people like mega-personal finance guru Suze Orman, who continues to argue that people's main problem with money is ... emotional. (Orman also urges people to invest for retirement in the stock market, while admitting the bulk of her savings is in municipal bonds.) Or Jean Chatzky of everywhere from NBC's Today show to Oprah's couch, who helpfully tells people in her latest book, The Difference: How Anyone Can Prosper in Even the Toughest Times, "Overspending is the key reason that people slip from a position of financial security into a paycheck-to-paycheck existence." (Note: Italics original to Chatzky.) Chatzky forgets to mention that studies have demonstrated the problem most likely to land one in bankruptcy court isn't an addiction to designer clothes but, instead, overwhelming health care expenses.
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Have you watched her show?
As a viewer of Suze Orman who does not currently make enough money to invest in stocks or 401K (I am young and work for a non profit) I can not comment on whether or not her views on stocks and bonds are valid or not.
That being said much of her advice makes sense, and it uses basic common sense. She tells people to reduce credit card debt, she tells people not to raid their retirement funds to pay for hyper expensive colleges for their kids, she tells people to buy a house they can afford, she tells people to get a second job if they can not pay their bills etc. This has been her MO since I started watching a few years ago, and all of that advice makes perfect sense.
She has the can you afford it segment, which helps validate my own lifestyle. I really do want a nice new massive tv and it helps ease myself to watch her tell someone who makes more then me that they are a dope for not buying a similar item.
Jim Cramer is a bag of hot gas, but I think your swipe at Suze Orman was not fair considering that you based it off of one thing without looking at how she is encouraging people to be frugal in their lives, which makes a big deal of difference.
What Belongs in the Garbage
Suze Orman and Jim Cramer in the garbage can?
Okay. (See the Guru Watch section of my website www.erictyson.com for the details.)
Personal Finance for Dummies? Not!
As the author of this best-selling book and a former financial counselor, my readers know that I've long advocated holding a diversified portfolio and explained the wealth building potential as well as the dangers of investing in stocks, real estate and small business.
- Eric Tyson
Best-selling author of Personal Finance for Dummies
www.erictyson.com
It's More than "Identifying" Your Money Archetype
Helaine,
I am Vice President of The Money Coaching Institute in Petaluma, CA.
The Institute pioneered the introduction of Money Archetypes over a
decade ago and the Institute's founder, Deborah Price, wrote about it
in her book, Money Magic, originally released as Money Therapy, back
in 2000.
We work with eight distinct Money Archetypes: Innocent, Victim,
Warrior, Martyr, Fool, Creator/Artist, Tyrant, and Magician. Each
exists within us and can be triggered by an event or circumstance.
What's key is knowing which archetype is most active at any point
in our lives and which are operating in the background, as shadows
of ourselves that we push against or deny.
Until a person understands their active and passive archetypes around
all aspects of money: practical, spiritual, and emotional; as well as how
to internally respond to what each archetype needs to hear from us at
the time, they will most likely not experience "financial success", as
they have not yet clearly defined that "place of being" through merely
"identifying" their money archetype. There's a need for understanding
the source, the present impact, and the future implications of how
that archetype influences our way of being in the world, especially
when money is concerned.
I invite you to learn more about the earlier money archetype work
at the Institute's website: www.MoneyCoachingInstitute.com. And
if you would like a copy of Deborah Price's book, Money Magic, please
let me know where to send it.
One last note -- the Journal of Financial Planning interviewed
Deborah about the Institute's work and it's in the current issue
at http://www.fpajournal.org/docs/assets/10Q1.pdf
I look forward to reading your future postings.
Sincerely,
Steven "Shags" Shagrin
Vice President
The Money Coaching Institute
www.MoneyCoachingInstitute.com