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Rich Dad's Advisors®: Rich Kid, Smart Kid
Giving Your Child a Financial Head Start
by 
Robert T. Kiyosaki
Sharon L. Lechter
  
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Subject(s):  Business
Nonfiction
Language(s):  English
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Format Information

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Available copies:  
Library copies:  
File size:   1550 KB
ISBN:   9780759560635
Release date:   Jul 31, 2001

Description

RICH DAD'S RICH KID, SMART KID is written for parents who value education, want to give their child a financial and academic head start in life, and are willing to take an active role to make it happen. In the Information Age, a good education is more important than ever. But the current educational system may not be providing all the information your child needs. This book was designed to fill in the gaps, to help you give your child the same inspiring and practical financial knowledge that Robert Kiyosaki's rich dad gave him. RICH KID, SMART KID will show you how to awaken your child's love of learning using the same methods that Robert's smart dad used to help Robert stay in school, even though he had bad grades and often wanted to drop out. And RICH KID, SMART KID will open doors that you never knew existed, enabling you to pass down the skills and understanding your child will use for the rest of his or her life.

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Rich Dad's Advisors®: Rich Dad, Poor Dad: What the Rich Teach Their Kids About Money--That the Poor and Middle Class Do Not!
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Rich Dad's Advisors®: Guide to Investing: What the Rich Invest In, That the Poor and Middle Class Do Not!
Rich Dad's Advisors®: Guide to Investing: What the Rich Invest In, That the Poor and Middle Class Do Not!
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Rich Dad's Advisors®: Who Took My Money?: Why Slow Investors Lose and Fast Money Wins!
Rich Dad's Advisors®: Who Took My Money?: Why Slow Investors Lose and Fast Money Wins!
Robert T. Kiyosaki

Excerpts

From the book...
Introduction

Why Your Banker Does Not Ask You
for Your Report Card

Education is more important today than at any other time in history. As we leave the Industrial Age behind and enter the Information Age, the value of one's education continues to increase. The question today is, Is the education you or your child receives in school adequate to meet the challenges of this brave new world we enter?

In the Industrial Age you could go to school, graduate, and start your career. You usually did not need additional education to succeed simply because things did not change that fast. In other words, the education you learned in school was all you needed for your lifetime.

As millions of baby boomers get ready to retire today, however, many are faced with the realization that they have not been adequately educated for the new world they face. For the first time in history, many well-educated people are facing the same economic difficulties that the less educated are facing. They repeatedly find themselves having to get additional education and training in order to satisfy their current job requirements.

When Do You Measure the Success of Your Education?

When do you measure the success of your education? Is it the final report card the day you graduate from school, let's say at age twenty-five, or is education's effectiveness measured when you retire, let's say at age sixty-five?

In the Sunday, July 16, 2000, issue of my local paper, the Arizona Republic, an article included the following statistic: "About 700,000 seniors will be cut from their Medicare Choice HMOs according to a survey released earlier this month by the American Association of Health Plans."

The article went on to state that providing health care for senior citizens was too expensive and was not profitable for insurance companies, so senior citizens are being dropped from supplemental health care protection. The health care problem for seniors will only increase, as seventy-five million baby boomers hit that age bracket in the next ten years.

Health Education and Welfare Stats

Based on a study performed by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, of every one hundred people at age sixty-five, one is rich, four are comfortable, five are still working, fifty-six are needing government support or family support, and the rest are dead.

It is not becoming the one rich person that this book is about. It is the fifty-six who still need someone else to support them I am concerned about. I do not want you or your child to wind up in that big statistic.

People often say to me, "I won't need much money when I retire because when I retire, my living expenses go down." While it is true that your living expenses may go down after you retire, there is one thing that often goes up dramatically, and that is health care. And that is why the HMOs (health maintenance organizations) in the previous article are cutting seniors from supplemental medical coverage. Senior citizens are just too expensive to cover. In the next few years it will be clear that health care will literally be a life-and-death issue for millions of older people. Putting it bluntly, if you have money, you may live; and if you don't have money, you may die.

 

Synopsis

From the #1 New York Times bestselling authors of Rich Dad, Poor Dad and CASHFLOW Quadrant, here is the definitive guide for parents everywhere who are eager to educate their children on how to understand, master, and accumulate substantial wealth.

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