Money

There is no “right” way to spend, invest and give money. Here are some of the rules that work for me:

Spending

      • Stay out of debt (spend less than you earn and live within your means)
      • Cash is king
        • Have emergency cash (with you and more at home)
        • Have at least 6 months of expenses in a savings account
      • Before you buy anything:
          • Use what you have => Borrow => Swap => Make => Buy used => Buy new
          • Things create worries. Less stuff = fewer worries (materialism is irrelevant)
          • Spend consciously! Ask yourself:
            • Do I need it? Will I use it?
            • Is it removing a negative in my life? Will it bring me happiness? 
            • Can I afford it? Is it worth it?
            • How will I get rid of it one day?
          • Buy the best you can and keep it for as long as possible (if you buy cheap, you buy twice)
          • You can afford anything, but you can’t afford everything. What do you love spending money on? What if you multiplied your spending on that?
            • Some things I consider worth spending money on:
              • Health and fitness (vision, dental, mattress, office chair, nutrition, sports, etc.)
              • Education (courses, great books (my Library), etc.)
              • Experiences
              • Relationships
              • Making the world a better place (check out Effective Altruism)
              • Things you use for hours every day (laptop, keyboard, etc.)
              • Things that increase your income (work tools, software, etc.)
      • Swap/sell/donate what you don’t use and don’t need
      • Proper maintenance makes your things last longer and costs less than buying new things
      • Insure only against the largest possible losses (disability, home, life (if you have dependents), etc.)

Investing

    • The best investment is into yourself (education, health, etc.)
    • Only invest in things that you understand (do due diligence before you wire your money)
    • Diversify
    • Take advantage of compounding (low fees are important)
    • Set most of your investments on “autopilot” (so contributions happen every month, dividends are reinvested automatically, etc.)
    • There is no free lunch (higher return comes with higher risk)

Giving

    • Give at least 10 % of your income
    • Give effectively and maximise your impact (the best charities can have orders of magnitude larger impact than the worst charities – similarly to for-profit businesses and investments)

Last updated 2023/06