Motley Fool Money - Ramit Sethi on Spending, Renting, and Financial Misconceptions
Episode Date: April 16, 2023Money is often thought of on a transactional or restrictive basis. But, what if it could be a source of joy? Ramit Sethi is a best-selling author and the host of the Netflix series “How to Get Rich....” Alex Friedman caught up with him to discuss: - The source of most financial conflicts in couples - Renting vs. Buying - Building the skill of spending money Host: Alex Friedman Guest: Ramit Sethi Producer: Ricky Mulvey Engineers: Dan Boyd, Kyle Carruthers Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hi everyone, I'm Charlie Cox.
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I'll ask people sometimes on social media.
If you got $10 million tomorrow, what would you do?
You know what one of the most common answers is?
They go, I wouldn't change a thing.
I love my life.
And they kind of expect me to applaud.
You know, applaud me, Mr. Finance guy.
And I actually find that to be extremely lazy, intellectually lazy.
You're telling me with $10 million.
You would not change.
You'd wear the same shirt.
You'd eat at the same Chipotle.
You wouldn't even get guac.
I'm Chris Hill, and that's Rameet Seathy.
bestselling author and host of the Netflix series, How to Get Rich.
Alex Friedman caught up with Sakey to talk about why budgeting doesn't work for most people,
the case for renting instead of buying, and how to spend money without feeling guilty.
No, over the last year or so, you have been running a podcast speaking with couples
talking about their personal struggles with finances and the disagreements they have.
And I'm curious, what do you think are some of the roots of these conflicts and what are some of the signs
that financial disagreements can be resolved or not be resolved?
Well, imagine being in a room and listening to a couple with $12 million in the bank,
and they are arguing over potentially getting divorced because one of the partners is too cheap.
We've never heard this.
The only way we hear this kind of stuff is through the movies,
and I wanted to actually talk to real couples with real numbers from behind closed doors.
and I've spoken to tons and tons of them.
Some people have $800,000 of debt.
Some have millions of dollars of net worth.
And different ages, different sexual orientations,
every type of couple you can imagine.
And you start to see some patterns after a while.
The way that people describe the problem
is different often than the actual problem.
So the most common way people will come to me
as they say, we're not on the same page.
Okay, that sounds reasonable.
but what does that actually mean?
You know, my partner's an overspender,
and they never put the blame at themselves,
but one of them might be an underspender.
The biggest, most common problem that I see
with couples talking about money
is that they lack a rich life vision together.
Think about it.
When most of us think about money,
well, people listening here,
I know you're sitting here looking at investments.
Okay, fine, but remember, you're not normal.
Okay, normal, ordinary people
who don't listen to this podcast,
the way that they think about money is purely on a transactional or restrictive basis.
Transactional means should we go to Target, should we get that dessert, we got to get the tires
fixed.
It's just a series of transactions one after another.
No joy, no vision.
And restrictive is the entire world constantly looks down their nose at us and tells us
no lattes, no jeans, no vacation, no, no, no.
How do you think that makes people feel about money?
It makes most people hate money while at the same time being paradoxically infatuated with it,
looking at their friends at Bora Bora on a Tuesday.
And so when couples come to me, they're arguing over something purely transactional like
he or she spends too much at Target, but really they don't have a vision of what they want to use their money for.
So when you're working with these couples, how do you work to resolve some of those challenges
to really create a shared vision around money?
I always start by asking them, tell me something.
in the last 30 days where you were not on the same financial page.
I want a specific example.
And I do this because it's very easy to talk in platitudes about money.
Well, I like to travel and my partner likes freedom.
I don't care about any of that.
I want a specific example.
For example, one couple said, our car broke down and we have kids and we needed to get it
repaired and my partner did not want to spend the money to get the car repaired.
And frankly, why should you have to check with your partner for something that involved
kids' safety. Shouldn't that be agreed upon already? And so we start there with a very specific
example. I let both partners explain their perspective. And then I will often ask them,
how did you grow up with money? What do you remember your family saying about money? And you'll
hear very classic things. A lot of people say we never talked about money, ever. It was never talked
about. So for every parent listening, if you don't talk about money, your kids end up defenseless in the
world, they end up talking to somebody like me because they had to make up their own meaning of money
and their own habits with money because their parents didn't want to talk about it.
And there's all kinds of class structures involved and stuff like that.
You'll often hear people say, my family said things like, we can't afford that.
And if you hear that repeated a thousand times, then let's say you end up going to college,
you end up making a good income, you end up with $200,000 in your portfolio or $500,000.
those very same people often feel they cannot afford something even when they have millions of dollars in the bank.
So what you learn in that segment is that our past follows us.
And the way that we look at money is not rational.
You're not going to the grocery store and making a pivot table to compare crackers.
It's often what your mom or dad or family said 40 years ago that you unknowingly carry with you.
So those are a couple of the first ways that I get into the conversation with these couples.
What do you think are some of the most damaging things children can hear growing up around money?
We can't afford it.
We don't talk about money in this family.
That's for rich people.
Notice the sneer on my face.
That's for rich people, not people like us, as if rich people are evil.
And so imagine what that does to somebody who then excels in their career, starts to make money.
But the more they win, deep down, the more they feel they are losing.
because they're becoming an a-hole.
So that's very destructive as well.
Probably the most destructive thing of all
is to simply not talk about money.
I remember a couple I spoke to.
The husband had grown up
in a community where there was a clear divide.
He was on the poor side of the tracks,
and then on the other side
were the lawyers and the doctors
with the big houses.
He grew up with a pretty destructive view of money
that they didn't have it,
they didn't talk about it,
And any time he heard anything about money, it was a negative.
It was a fight.
So he grew up thinking money's negative.
Well, guess what?
He grew up, he and his wife did pretty well.
They were making good money.
And one day, his daughter comes home from school with a lunch that the school had provided.
They had given her a basket of food.
And he said, what is this?
And his daughter had, at school, said, we don't have enough food.
We can't afford it.
the school had helpfully given her, you know, some food to take home.
He was furious.
His wife thought it was funny, but he was furious.
Why would you tell people that were poor that we can't afford it?
We have money.
And I asked him, you ever talk to your daughter about money?
He said, no.
I said, why?
And this was the most fascinating answer.
He said, because I want to protect her from it.
Now think about that.
His entire life experience, money is bad.
It's negative.
It's a source of pain.
And so with that belief in mind, he wants to protect his daughter by not talking about it,
shielding her from it because he thinks money is so negative, and therefore his daughter thinks
she's poor.
You see how these are now carried from generation to generation.
And one of the gifts that I want to be able to give these couples and the listeners is to
recognize the stories that you've been told and to design your own story going forward.
To me, that is the genesis of a rich life.
You've clearly had a great deal of success from the book and from your podcast, yet you and your wife choose to rent instead of own.
I know this comes as being counterintuitive to a lot of folks.
It does?
What?
So I'm hoping you can tell us a little bit more about your thinking there, why you choose to rent instead of own.
I love this topic.
I love it so much.
And people get so mad.
And I also love that because in America, real estate is religion.
We are fed a short series of little phrases, and they're repeated to us 20 million times in our childhood, and we start to believe them.
Everybody listening, see if any of these sound familiar.
You're throwing money away on rent.
Funny, no one ever says that you're throwing money away when you go eat at a restaurant.
You're paying your landlord's mortgage.
Funny, nobody ever says that about paying the restaurant owner's mortgage.
What about the equity?
Funny. Nobody ever says, what about the phantom costs?
And so what I want to do and what I encourage people to do is to run the numbers on the biggest purchase of their lives.
That shouldn't be controversial.
But because in America we so deeply believe that real estate is religion, we have simply closed our minds off to actually analyzing the biggest purchase of our lives.
And instead we take it on faith.
Let's be very clear. Sometimes owning a house can be a great financial decision.
Sometimes renting can be a better financial decision.
In my case, I've rented for over 15 years in San Francisco, New York, and L.A., and I've made more money renting than I would have owning.
How?
I'll give you a very specific example.
This is true in high cost of living areas, and it can be true in different areas.
That's why you need to run the numbers.
When I lived in Manhattan, I was renting.
Let's just pretend for easy math that my rent was $3,000 a month.
Okay?
There was a place basically next door.
Same size, same square footage, same number of bedrooms, same view.
To own that place would have cost over $6,200 per month.
Let me say it again.
I was renting for $3,000.
It would have cost over $6,200.
Once you factor in taxes, interest, opportunity cost of a down payment and maintenance.
And so I said, why?
I don't need that.
I'll take the $3,200, I'll invest it, and I'll go to a nice luxury hotel because I love hotels.
I made more renting than I did owning.
So for everybody listening, here's the key message, never feel guilty about renting,
especially now when things are quite unaffordable, especially if you're young,
always run the numbers because you want to understand TCO, total cost of ownership when it comes to owning,
not simply the sticker price.
So, Rameet, I know your new show, How to Get Rich, comes out of,
on Netflix April 18th. What have you learned from the people you've helped on your new shell?
You know, I think the number one thing I learned is compassion because most of us think of money
as just a series of numbers. But when I got the chance to go around the country, go into their
homes, meet their families and their friends, and work with them for a long period of time,
longer than on my podcast, that gives me a chance to really understand why they behave the way
they do with money. You know, you learn a, not everybody grows up with two parents who teach them
about custodial Roth IRA at the age of 14. That's not everybody's circumstance. And so when you meet
people who, let's say have credit card debt, or you meet people who view money differently,
easy come, easy go, a lot of the work that I do on the show is like a detective. Why do you think
this way? And I think it would be really tempting to come in and throw 50 spreadsheets at them and say,
Just do the numbers.
The numbers are a small part of a rich life.
Small.
Sure, we should be cognizant of compound interest and expense ratios.
Of course, we've got to learn the basic language of money.
But everybody listening, I know you've got something irrational in your life.
You know it and I know.
It might be that you spend extra on peanut butter.
It might be that you splurge for nice diapers for your son or daughter.
It could be that you drive a car that's more than functional.
It's just really nice.
And that's okay.
on this show compassion was definitely the number one thing I learned by getting to go deeper with each of the people I worked with.
When you're teaching people about improving their finances, do you see times where you're knowingly going against the economic textbooks because most people are not economists?
Oh yeah. Yes, absolutely. You know, there's simple examples like the snowball technique for paying off debt. You know, sometimes people just hate debt. And so it might make sense to pay off the smaller balance.
versus what would be economically rational with a higher interest rate.
Sometimes I have people, again, they just hate debt.
And they're like, I want to put an extra $1 a month towards my 3.1% interest rate.
And I'm like, are you sure you want to do that?
And they go, I hate debt.
I go, okay, fine.
In the grand scheme, if you want to pay off your debt a little sooner, fine.
Sometimes there are people who go remit.
I ran the numbers.
It's actually more expensive for me to buy a house, and I still want to do it.
because I want my kids to be in this area or I love to decorate.
Whatever.
I go, fine.
If you've run the numbers and you understand the ramifications,
fantastic.
That can be part of your rich life.
So there are times where I can stretch the rules,
where I can bend the rules,
but I want everybody to know the rules.
You've got to know how much you should spend on your fixed cost,
50 to 60%.
That's part of my conscious spending plan.
You've got to know how much you can expect to make
in compound interest,
over the long term. That's also part of my conscious spending plan and everything I talk about.
Most of us don't know these basic numbers, so we don't really know the rules of the game.
And once you know the rules, then we can talk about which ones you want to break.
If you're listening right now, you might be very secure in your finances but still have
trouble spending guilt-free.
For me, why do you think guilt-free spending is so important and what advice do you have for
these types of people?
I love this topic. Very few people are talking about it.
Most of the world is focused on getting people to save any money at all.
And I get that.
But if you're a financial nerd listening here and you run Monte Carlo analyses for fun,
then you might be a little obsessive about money.
And I'm willing to bet because I spoke into tons of people like this,
you're really good at saving money, right?
And everybody teaches how to save money,
but nobody teaches how to spend it.
And so here's what happens.
somebody starts off they start investing in their 20s and they're really good they keep
increasing their savings rate they max out their 401k all that stuff and they're being prudent
there's nothing wrong with that i think it's fantastic and a lot of them tell themselves
one day i'm going to start tapping this portfolio the deacumulation phase all these fancy words we
use but by the time they do it by the time they're retired they get scared they're not used to
not seeing money come in. And also as they get older, not only physically may, you know,
they may not be able to climb Everest, et cetera, they may be taking care of an ill parent,
but also they have never built the skill of spending money. And that's really the point.
Spending money is a skill. And you cannot simply flip the switch when you're 55, 65, 75 years old.
Just like making friends, it's a skill that has to be nurtured throughout life.
And so you'll hear people saying these peculiar phrases,
I don't need to eat at fancy restaurants.
I'm perfectly fine with a domino's pizza.
I go, first of all, Domino's, are you sure?
That's the one you want to choose?
All right, fine.
All right.
But what they're really saying is I have not built the skill
of understanding why somebody would enjoy that.
I'm not saying you have to go to a five-star restaurant.
That's not my point.
Maybe it's not your thing.
But could you go once and at least go with an open mind
and try to understand why other people would enjoy it?
Could you take a friend and treat them?
Maybe you go, I don't need business class flights.
Fine.
But what do you need?
And maybe it's not even about need.
Maybe it's about want.
A lot of people, they often,
I'll ask people sometimes on social media.
If you got $10 million tomorrow, what would you do?
You know what one of the most common answers is?
They go, I wouldn't change a thing.
I love my life.
And they kind of expect me to applaud.
you know applaud me mr finance guy and i actually find that to be extremely lazy intellectually lazy
you're telling me with 10 million dollars you would not change you'd wear the same shirt you'd eat at the
same chipotle you wouldn't even get guac you'd fly the same seat on an air and and they go yeah i don't care
about guacamole i don't care about business class i don't care i don't care i don't care they see it as
a virtue because if you're frugal for too long it becomes your identity and then i say to them you wouldn't
take anybody with you? You wouldn't treat a friend. You wouldn't fly in an old college buddy.
You wouldn't donate a huge amount to the local YMCA or ACLU. They never thought that way.
Because their identity is so overwhelming to them that they are focused on what they don't need,
that they never stop to think about what they do want and how they could serve other people as well.
So frugality is great, but taken too far it can become an affliction. And that's why you need to not
only save, but need to learn the skills of spending money meaningfully as well. So for people that
haven't built up the skill set, what are the first steps usually recommend they take? I go through
an exercise with them. So I ask them, in fact, let's do it right now. So I want to ask you,
Alex, what do you love to spend money on? Not like, but love. Obviously travel. I'm a millennial,
so that doesn't make me too unique. Tell me. Okay, so where do you like to travel? Anywhere I can go
all over the world.
I just had a trip with my girlfriend
to the Dominican Republic.
We went to the Samana Peninsula,
saw migrating home back Wales,
beautiful area.
Before that, we went to Croatia.
So, yeah, we're very lucky.
I love to travel.
First of all, look at that smile.
This is what I love to see.
This is where I start.
I'm not sitting here talking about budgets.
I hate budgets.
I want to understand what you love to spend on.
Okay, that's the first question
for everybody listening.
What do you love to spend money on?
The most common answers
are in order, eating out,
travel, which you hit, health and wellness is number three, and convenience is number four.
These are called money dials.
I call them dials because like a radio dial, you can turn them up, which brings me to my second question.
If you could quadruple the amount you spend on travel, what would it look and feel like for you?
The White Lotus.
Tell me.
Fancyer hotels, you know, first class flights, excursions every day.
local food tours.
Ooh.
My man.
All right.
I like it.
And would you be going solo
or would you be bringing somebody?
I'd be bringing my partner,
maybe my friends.
Nice.
How long would you travel for?
Two to three weeks.
How long was your Dominican Republic trip?
That was about a week.
I feel like after two weeks,
I usually get a little antsy want to get back.
Might be a little different
if you're traveling like White Lotus.
You might feel comfortable, right?
Yeah.
Okay.
Cool.
I like it.
So what I'm hearing from you
is quite a dynamic vision.
it's actually amazing for everybody listening noticed that first you you you just had it off the bat
you were ready to tell me white lotus and i said well that's just a word what does that mean
and you knew hotels excursions even food tours you've clearly thought about that that's amazing
that's rare second you did it uh longer okay that's cool longer and third you talked about who
you would bring with you these are called money dials because you can turn them up and so when i ask
people to create a vision for themselves. I start with what do you love to spend money on.
And the answers are actually usually less sophisticated than yours, Alex. So the most common
answers I like to eat out. And then I go, cool, what would you do if you could quadruple
your spend? And they go, well, I'd probably have to go on a diet because I'd be eating
out four times a week. Ha ha ha ha ha. And I go, oh, God, not this again. But what they are
really doing with that answer is they're thinking linearly. I eat at Chipotle once a week.
If I'm going to quadruple my spend, I would eat four times a week.
But what you did was really cool.
You changed not only the quantity, how long you would go, but you changed the quality.
You would be going to a nicer hotel.
You'd be doing more adventures experiences.
You can do that with food.
You can do that with cars.
You can do that with clothes.
One of my favorite examples was a young woman who loves clothes.
And she was stuck.
You know, she shopped at someplace like Macy.
or H&M, something like that, and she was stuck on linear.
I'm only going to buy four times the amount of clothes.
And I said, what if you turn that dial way up, 2x, 3x, 4x, 10x,
just for the vision part?
And what if you took your mom and you flew to Italy
and you both went shopping and got something made for the two of you,
the two of you would always remember together?
What would that be like?
And that is an example of how you can start to create a vision
for where you want to spend.
spend extravagantly on the things you love as long as you cut costs mercilessly on the things
you don't. I know you've talked a lot about not creating budgets for people that you're working
with. And I know for a lot of our listeners, they may be used a budget in the past. So I'm curious,
why don't you start with creating a budget? Well, everyone used the budget in the past. They use it
for a day and then they give up because they hate it. It's like somebody saying, oh, okay,
remit, you hate flossing. So therefore, you're going to have to flot, well, actually, they do say this.
You have to floss every single day of your life, and then you have to track how long you floss for.
And because we know that you're not actually going to floss, every time you open up that spreadsheet to
track it, you're going to feel bad about yourselves. Anyway, good luck doing this for the rest of your life.
Bye. Does that sound like it would ever work? No. And not surprisingly, nobody actually maintains their
budget. Even the very people who recommend you keep a budget, because I know them. So let's reframe the way that
we treat money. I don't actually want you to be spending 30 minutes a day tracking money. Neither do you.
Okay? This comes from my background in psychology and understanding human behavior and persuasion.
Most people do not want to track money. I know you nerds listening, you love it, but you're not
normal. Most people do not want to track money. All they want is for their money to do what it's
supposed to do and make sure they can go out and eat at a nice restaurant and not worry.
It's really quite simple. So how do you do this?
that. I recommend using my conscious spending plan. You could download it from my website. Four numbers.
That's all you need to track. The first is fixed costs. That is your car, your mortgage or rent,
utilities, the things that are fixed. And I recommend 50 to 60% of take home be spent for that.
Next, your savings. That 5 to 10%, again, we can adjust depending, but it's a ballpark. Investments,
five to 10%. I like low cost, index funds, et cetera. And finally, my favorite one, guilt-free.
spending 20 to 35%. Now imagine the relief where you plug in your numbers. It's one page.
It takes 20 minutes. You can do with a partner. You can do it solo. And suddenly you can benchmark and be like,
oh my God, we're spending way too much on housing. That actually happens to be the number one
expense problem. Number two is auto. People buy these things and they have no idea how much
total cost of ownership is, which is why I insist on running the numbers. But a lot of people actually
discover that they're not saving because they try to save at the end of the month. That's a failing
strategy. And also, a lot of people have no concept of how much they can spend on guilt-free
spending. Once you know your numbers, just the basic ratios, if you want to buy a $200 bottle
of wine and you can afford it, God bless. You want to buy a thousand-dollar cashmere coat,
be my guest. You want to use the money so you can travel for two to three weeks and stay at a
beautiful hotel or you want to tip every time you go up 30%. That's how you do it. But you've got to
understand the rules of the game and that is how I use my conscious spending plan.
As always, people on the program may have interest in the stocks they talk about and the
Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against. So don't buy ourselves stocks based solely
on what you hear. I'm Chris Hill. Thanks for listening. We'll see you tomorrow.
