Prof G Markets - How to Make the Most of Your Money in the New Year — ft. Morgan Housel
Episode Date: December 19, 2024Morgan Housel, New York Times bestselling author of “The Psychology of Money,” joins the show to break down why the holidays are such a stressful time financially – and how we can all navigate i...t. He also discusses how to shift your mindset around money in the new year, make the most of bonuses, and determine what “spending well” really means for you. Order "The Algebra of Wealth," out now Subscribe to No Mercy / No Malice Follow the podcast across socials @profgpod: Instagram Threads X Reddit Follow Scott on Instagram Follow Ed on Instagram and X Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Scott is unfortunately out sick today, or that's what he's telling us, so we're going with it.
And so today we're speaking with Morgan Housel, the New York Times bestselling author of The
Psychology of Money and a partner at The Collaborative Fund.
And we speak with Morgan about financial stress around the holidays and how to create impactful
financial plans for the new year.
This was, I think, an important conversation about the holidays and the stress
that we often feel, or at least that I certainly feel. Morgan is an expert on the psychology
of money and how money affects our brains. So I thought this was a really insightful
conversation and I hope you enjoy it.
Morgan, really great to have you back on Proficy Markets. Thank you very much for joining us.
Good to see you, Ed.
So we wanted to talk with you today because it is the holidays and for many that is a
pretty fun and cheerful time, but it's also a very stressful time largely due to money.
So I just want to start off with this one stat, which is that nine in 10 Americans say
that the holidays are a cause of significant financial stress.
So pretty obvious question.
Why is it such a stressful time financially?
But more importantly, what can we do about it?
So many people think about Thanksgiving and Christmas.
And Thanksgiving, I think, tends to be a happier time for people because it's just good food
and family and friends, and that's it.
There's no gifts, there's no expectations. It's like, let's eat some good food and tell some good stories
and drink some good wine and all have a good time. Christmas becomes, I have to get presents
for everybody and everyone has to get presents for me and I hope I get you the right thing.
I hope you get me the right thing and one of us is bound to be disappointed. That's
always been the case. My mom would always bring up when I was a kid that Christmas was
my worst holiday because I was always disappointed
They got me they they got me nice presents. I had a great childhood, but whatever they got me I wanted something more and I was always it was like the day of the year when I got everything
I got like as you know
Presents galore was my unhappiest day of the year because my expectations were so high
I think as an adult it turns into if I don't get you the right present,
you're not going to like me. Like I have to be really thoughtful about this. And then as your
social circle grows and you have to get presents for 20 people, that's a huge stress. It's a massive
stress. Like not even the cost of it. Of course, that's a big thing. If you're putting on your
credit cards, whatever it might be, but just the social stress of getting it right. That you don't
have that with Halloween. You don't have it with New Year's. Christmas is this one that has like ridiculous amount of social pressure.
And I think there is a lot of evidence that like mental health tends to bottom around
Christmas. It's a tough time for period. A lot of that is because of their families.
Sometimes it can be a reminder of the family that you don't have or broken bonds, whatever
it might be. But I'm sure like finance plays a big role in there. Compare how people feel
about the 4th of July, which is just like, oh, day off,
day off of work and it's sunny and I'm going to go to the beach with my friends.
And Christmas is like a month of financial and emotional trauma for people.
So, I mean, there are two things in there that cause the stress.
You mentioned it's the family aspect, but it's also mainly gifts.
aspect, but it's also mainly gifts. Do you think that America places too much emphasis culturally on giving gifts? Do you think our gifting culture might be a bad thing?
I think it's generally true overall. Like this has nothing to do with Christmas, but it's true
that it is very easy to assume that if your life is not going well and you're unhappy with who you
are, you're unhappy with your career, unhappy with your family, it's very easy to assume that if your life is not going well and you're unhappy with who you are, you're unhappy with your career, unhappy with your family, it's very easy to assume that
if you had more money and if you're spending more money and if you had nicer
things, your life would be better. It's a very easy assumption to make and by
and large for most people it is wrong, most of the time. It's not that money
cannot buy happiness, it can, but it is too easy to assume that if you had more
money all your problems would go away. And particularly for a lot of people
their problems are their health and their relationships, their friendships, their marriages,
the relationships with their kids. Those are the core two, a lot of their problems. And
those are the problems that I think money has plays the lowest role in terms of fixing
and happiness. And so I think that's the assumption that we make is like, if I had nicer stuff,
then people love me more. And if I bought bought you a big present you might love me more.
I think those are those are very easy financial assumptions to make but then you realize that like
the core of what you're getting at is so much more complex than money it's a it's a it's a social
endeavor and my wife and i you know we've been together for almost two decades and many many
years ago we were like we stopped buying each other gifts like we have everything we need and
it's like it doesn't it doesn't make any any, any difference to me. I love you. You love me. And so what my wife started doing,
she does this for several years from my birthday. She does this, she writes me a poem and she's
so absurdly talented at this. It'll be a poem of like something that happened in my
life. Uh, she's so good at it. They're always funny. They always rhyme. And it's something
that like, like a big thing that happened to me that year. That is a million times more
meaningful than to me than if my wife bought me a sweater
or something.
I don't mean nothing to me.
Like this is not my expertise in the slightest, but the thoughtfulness
of that makes me so happy.
And I think at the core of it, it's because she's buying me something
that money cannot buy.
Like she's showing me a level of thoughtfulness and love that you cannot
get with a price tag and a credit card.
Yeah, Scott and I recently had a conversation about gifts.
And our conclusion was that there isn't really like a social or cultural code on who's supposed to get gifts
and also how much money you're supposed to be spending on those gifts.
It sounds like you have established some of your own code
around gifting with your wife.
Are there any other rules or recommendations
on how people can go about gifting during the holidays?
No, I think it's different for everyone.
I think how my wife do it too,
a lot of people would disagree with that.
And they would say that the gifts they get their spouse
brings so much pleasure and joy.
So this is not black and white.
Everybody is different.
I've often noticed too, for a lot of
my friends, some of whom send Christmas presents, but what I absolutely love about them is once in
a while they'll text me and be like, hey, haven't caught up with you in a while. How are you doing?
Let's, let's jump on the phone and just catch up with you. Like if I compare, I have one friend,
I will not name him. Every year he sends me a case of wine for Christmas, which I love and appreciate.
And about once in a quarter, he texts me and says, Hey, how you doing? Let's catch up and talk about life. I appreciate the
wine he sends me, but I love our quarterly phone calls a hundred times more, a hundred times more.
And I think a lot of people fall into that category of like, yes, I appreciate your gifts.
I like your gifts. Your gifts was very thoughtful, but I want, what I actually want is your
friendship. And that's, that's what means the most to me. I think this is especially true when you have a
little bit more money. And you're like, look, when you're a kid and you have nothing, I'm like,
if I want that toy, Christmas is my only shot. That's my only shot at getting it.
As you become an adult and you have your own money, and by and large, for a lot of people
listening to this podcast, they roughly have everything that they need and most of what they
want. That's true for probably the majority of people listening to this.
And then, so you turn the things that money can't buy, like
genuine friendship and whatnot.
And I think if you are counting on Christmas to like accentuate that, it's
going to lead to some disappointment.
What about with your kids?
I'm sure they would not accept a token of friendship for a Christmas gift.
I should try that this year.
See, see, see how that year. See how that goes over.
I think it's normal when you're a kid,
because you don't have your own money.
Look, I myself as an adult, if I want something,
I usually go and get it.
I have to wait till Christmas.
Kids usually have to wait till Christmas,
or their allowance or whatever.
So there is so much more pent up demand
for physical things that kids have.
But I think it's also true that kids are,
it's easier for them to make friendships.
My kids just started at a new school, day two, 48 hours in, they had like five new best
friends. Whereas for me, I'm like, I have to know you for seven years before I let you
into my friendship circle. This is easier for kids to make friendships. So for adults,
I think those genuine friendships, because they're so rare, just so much more meaningful
than it is for a kid that just wants a new toy when i was a kid.
This is not black and white i'm gonna gross exaggerate this but i've i roughly got.
No presence throughout the year and then christmas was a bonanza like not not actually but it was close to that and i feel like my kids get more presence throughout the year and then christmas is like cool it's fun but it's more mediocre than it was. I don't know which one of those is better because as I said earlier Christmas
for me as a kid it was the only it was the one day per year that I got presents it was a bonanza it
was a huge day and according to my mom I was always pissed off I was always disappointed. I think it
was so emotionally overwhelming that I just could not handle what was happening to it whereas I've
I've noticed that my kids actually seem to do better and are
happier during Christmas than I was when I was a kid.
And maybe that's because it's more spaced out and it's not just this emotional,
just dumpster at the end of the year, just being dropped on you.
Yeah.
I think the other interesting thing about this time of year is it's sort of like.
A summary of what has happened in the previous year.
And I think when you're giving gifts, especially with your family,
I feel like for a lot of people,
it's sort of a reflection of like,
this is how we're doing right now.
And I think if you've had a tough 2024,
the holidays seem to sort of exaggerate that.
And on the flip side, if you had a really great year,
it might exaggerate that too.
But for people who have had kind of like a tough year and they're feeling that financial stress, what are some like tools and strategies
that you can employ to deal with that and to come back stronger next year?
I think you're absolutely right. When I was a kid, I've written about this before,
spoke about it, but the first 10 years of my childhood, my parents were extremely poor.
They were students.
We were poverty by any level.
And then my dad became a doctor when I was 12, and then things like very abruptly shifted.
We were not rich by any standards.
He was an ER doctor, but it was a very stark, it happened in one year.
And I remember that year, I think it was 1993 or something like that, where it was like
everything changed.
But when I think it's true, when I look back to my poverty years, let's say that my parents
love me just as much.
I was just as happy.
I had just as much fun with my friends.
The things that actually were core to my identity and feeling love really did not change that
much from my poverty years to my better years. I think if you view money as the panacea to all your problems,
either through your problems or your ability for other people to admire you,
that's the problem. Money can be an incredible tool to live a better life.
Spending money can make you happy.
This is not to say money can't make you happy,
but if you view it as the sole source of
your comfort and your admiration from others,
you are almost certainly going to be disappointed.
How do you make that shift?
I mean, I agree with you rationally.
It's like, yeah, this isn't the source of, you know, this can't be the source of all
of my happiness.
But I feel like it's very hard on a day to day basis to really practice that and to really
embrace that in your daily life. Like it's just money just sort of permeates around everything you do.
So how do you kind of practice that and really employ that in your everyday life?
You are absolutely right that it's easier said than done.
And I think it is true that there are some people who are just much better
naturally at it than others.
If you're the kind of person who has had any kind of financial windfall or if you know somebody who has, I think a
lot of those people would say, were you or that person materially happier, better off
after the windfall? The answer might be yes, because money can make you happier. But did
it feed your soul to the extent that you thought it would? I think that's the answer is probably
no. So I think once it's probably
one of those things that you cannot actually work on until you've experienced yourself or watch
somebody else experience it. And I've noticed this with myself having had a couple good years in my
career that it has pushed me more towards my wife, my kids, my five good friends. It's pushed me more
towards that because I have seen,
yes, I've seen what money can do.
More starkly, I've seen what it cannot do.
And that has made me be like,
oh, you know what's actually gonna make me happy?
Spending time with my kids.
And it's done that in a way that I did not understand
five years ago when I was doing less well in my career.
And I think I'm grateful for that.
So I think that's a roundabout way to answer your question. And I think there's no way to actually put it into practice until
you've experienced it firsthand. A lot of things with money are like that.
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Speaking of windfalls, one thing that I wanted to touch on is that around this time of year,
a lot of people,
probably a lot of people listening to this podcast may be getting bonuses, end of year bonuses.
Just from a psychological perspective, I've always found bonuses very interesting because it's like,
on the one hand, it's sort of framed as a gift. I mean, it is bonus to the base.
Many other people would say that, no, this is just like regular income.
That's, that was sort of factored in from the beginning as it is bonus season.
Right now.
I just love to get your perspective on how you think about bonuses.
And what would be your advice to someone who's receiving a bonus and maybe
doesn't know what to do with that money?
You're right that most people do not think of it as a bonus, like by the
definition of that word, they think of it as deferred compensation.
Like they are owed that money.
It is part of their compensation.
This happened to get all of it in December.
I remember many years ago, speaking with who the guy who was at the time, I
think he was the head of HR at Google.
This was maybe 10 or 15 years ago.
And he said the way that they think about it at Google is people live off
their salary, play with their bonus and retire on their stock.
It's just like a rough framework for how to do it.
And I think that there's actually some wisdom in there that if you are counting on your
bonus to live off of that by definition, it's not a bonus.
That's just part of your deferred salary, but it's probably not.
So many companies, bank or people in finance realize this very starkly when you have a
year and you know, 2008, your pay, your bonus falls 80% or whatever it might be, or maybe it was zero. And if you're counting
on that bonus to live off of that's that's trouble. And so I don't know if I have much
advice other than everything in finance is about expectations. And if you expect your
bonus it's not a bonus and you're almost certainly going to be disappointed someday.
And so any any kind of like non-standard windfall
that I've had in my career, I've invested.
And I think the reason that I invested
is because I know that if I spend this,
it's going to become part of my expectations
that I also need to spend this next month
and the month after and the month after,
and it's not going to be there.
And you can make a ton of money and be disappointed
if you expect all of it.
If the gap between your expectations
and your circumstances breaks,
doesn't matter how much money you make,
you're gonna become disappointed.
And I think it is the most fraught
and the most troublesome when your bonus
becomes your expectation.
So how much of that money do you think,
or how much, just in terms of spending,
I know you're writing a book about this,
should be the money that we play with?
And I love that term you said,
play, you know, bonuses of playing with.
But you said, you know, when you had a big windfall,
you've invested it.
Like how do you think about play money?
What can we just spend on?
To what extent should we be spending on frivolous things?
I will paraphrase Scott Galloway,
who I think has said this many times,
where I'm paraphrasing him,
I don't want to put words in his mouth,
but he's like, once he hit his number, he spent money frivolously and gave a lot of money away. He said it much more
eloquently than that. But I think what's important to that is that he waited until he hit his number.
How I've always thought about it for my whole career is always having this calculation I have
in my head of if I get laid off or if everything collapses from here, how long can I support this
current lifestyle that I have if things get real nasty? That's always been really important to me. And for a lot of people,
that answer is zero. That if they got laid off next month, they'd be in deep shit. And
I think that's like bonus season is a good time to reevaluate that. Because if you are
in that situation, then the answer is how much of your bonus should you play with? The
answer is probably none of it. You should probably save it. That's always been really
important to me because every single one of you, me, you,
everyone listening to this at some point in their career will come across a big unexpected
problem in their career and their health and their marriage and the economy, whatever it
might be. And your ability to endure that is going to be completely based off your ability
to do it financially, at least is completely based off of your ability to defer your previous compensation. And so if you don't have any of that cushion, and that
calculation of if things get bad, how long can I last? If your answer to that question is not good,
then the answer to what you should do with your bonus is probably save it.
Leo Dion Absolutely. And also it seems like building
in that habit is a really important thing. Like just the habit of knowing that every year when I get this amount of money,
I'm just going to put it away and I'm going to put it in the stock market.
It's also true that you can overdose on that mentality. And, you know,
if you talk to a lot of financial advisors,
they will tell you that one of the biggest problems that they face with clients
is you have clients who have saved up a ton of money for retirement. They've done,
they, they won, they won the game.
They saved up millions of dollars for retirement and now they're 70 years old and they cannot spend
it. They can't even spend a very reasonable amount of it because saving money and watching
their net worth go up became core to their identity and they cannot break away from that.
That's a problem too. And so if you can use money as a tool to give yourself independence
and to live a great life and spend money on things that make you happy on you and your
family and friends, but never let it become part of your identity so much that it is controlling
you more than you use it as a tool.
That's the spot you want to get to.
Yeah.
We just did a big episode talking about spending money and we spent maybe an hour trying to
figure out what it means to be a good spender.
What is spending your money well mean to you?
To me, it means that it is always within my control that I am not saying, God,
I want to buy this, but I can't afford it. At that point, money is controlling me.
Or if I say I, I, I, this thing doesn't give me any joy,
but I'm still going to buy it anyways. That is money controlling me too.
The extent that I can be like money is a tool in my life toolbox that I use and I
use it every day and it's a powerful tool. It is a damn
good tool, but it's nothing more than that. It's a tool. It does not control me. I am
perfectly in control of it. If you are a car mechanic, the wrench in your toolbox does not
control you. You use it. It's a very good tool. It helps you use it every day, but the
wrench does not control the work that you do. You are controlling it. And I think if
you can use money to that purpose, and I think it is actually extremely common that money controls
The person controls their identity controls their desires and I think there's actually a lot of very wealthy people
Who are like why do I have this gigantic mansion? Why do I have four of them?
They don't bring me any happiness and in fact they are so they are burdens
They are huge time sucks and cost sucks and I don't even go to this fourth house that I have four of them. They don't bring me any happiness. And in fact, they are, they are burdens. They are huge time sucks and cost sucks.
And I don't even go to this fourth house that I have.
It's because money was controlling you and you didn't know what to do with your
money, but you're like, I guess I should go buy another house or another car or,
or do this.
It doesn't even bring me that much happiness.
So the more that it can truly be like you're in control of it, that's the only
time you're getting actual independence from your money.
Yeah.
It was this very similar conversation we had with Ramit Sethi where it's like, it
feels like so much of the money conversation ultimately gets down to having a very strong
understanding of what it is you actually want. And it's like all of these different distractions,
I think it's the same with the holidays too, where you're getting all of these ads telling you, oh, you got to buy this, you got to buy this.
Like just so many distractions trying to pull you in different directions, trying
to like convince you like this is what you want. But I feel like what you're
kind of describing there is like, if you have a very solid, concrete
understanding of what it is that you want in life, you're a lot more
impenetrable in terms of like money controlling you.
Yeah. I think one way to think about this is if you are, it's, it's,
it's a stupid thought exercise, but if you are on a deserted Island,
maybe with your friends and family, uh, but nobody else, like no,
no one in society can see you. So there's no,
there's no need to show off because nobody's watching you.
What kind of life would you live? What kind of house would you live in? What kind of nobody's watching you. What kind of life would you live?
What kind of house would you live in?
What kind of car would you drive?
What kind of clothes would you wear?
And I think most people in that situation would choose utility over status.
If there's no upside to status, because you know that nobody is watching you,
you would be like, Hey, like rather than a Ferrari, I'd probably want to pick
up truck that's like way more utility than, than status.
And rather than just an absolute monster house, I would want a really nice house with a good
view because that makes me happy.
I don't care what you think about it, it makes me happy.
And so viewing it as utility versus status through the lens of like, what if nobody was
watching?
Because the truth is almost nobody is watching.
Nobody's paying attention to you as much as you are.
Nobody is thinking about you as much as you are.
They are busy thinking about themselves.
So it's actually a great thought exercise because it's close to reality.
Like, how would I live if nobody was watching is a great thought exercise because the truth is,
very few people are watching. We'll be right back. You've always wanted to be part of something bigger than yourself.
You live for experience and lead by example.
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We're back with Profgy Markets.
We're back with Profty Markets. The other big ritual that we all do over the holidays is New Year's resolutions.
I was just doing a little bit of research here.
It turns out the number one most common New Year's resolution in America today is saving
money.
It's more popular than working out and eating healthier and losing weight. So I'd love
to just pivot to New Year's resolutions. Do you think New Year's resolutions are effective? And
do you think, you know, setting a goal of saving money is a good way to actually ultimately save money?
It's hard to go against that. If someone has a resolution to become better financially, how do
you say that's a bad thing?
Of course that's good.
But there's a, the famous quote from Charlie Munger where he said, when
teaching money to people, they either understand it instantly or never.
I think there actually is like a grain of truth to that.
It's kind of a harsh statement, but there's a grand truth to it.
And I say that because if you need January 1st to become better at finance,
it's probably not going to last.
And if you're like, look, it's December
and I can spend frivolously, but come January 1st,
I'm going to start saving.
No, you're not. No, you're not.
And so the people who have good financial habits
don't need goals.
They just practice those systems daily
and it comes naturally to them.
And they're not forced.
I think the more you have to force a good financial behavior,
of course, the less durable it's going to be. And the people who do well are the people who are like,
look, I've been a saver for years and years. And it just comes naturally to me. I enjoy doing it.
I like the benefits that I get from saving. I like the independence and the cushion that I get from
savings. And I don't need an artificial constraint like January 1st to get me to do it. So on one hand, like great, if people are vowing to be better with their finances,
of course that's good.
I also think that in virtually all of those circumstances, it's not going to be durable.
Yeah.
I mean, I feel like the research just shows that new year's resolutions are just very
ineffective, but what are some other more effective ways that we can establish some decent financial habits?
I mean, say, you know, someone wants to make some sort of change or they want to improve in
some aspect. Are there any strategies or tools that they could use to start establishing a better
framework for 2025?
This is not universal advice because some people really are in bad situations outside
of their control. But for a lot of people, if you aspire to save more money in the new year,
that's a symptom of a deeper cause, which is you're not saving enough money. And for a lot of people,
that's because you're spending too much money and you're spending too much money because
you have social aspirations that you can't afford or you think that spending that money
is going to make you happier, whatever it might be. be so for a lot of people like they need to dig a couple layers down deeper and be like.
Why am i bad with money i'm bad with money cuz i spent too much i spent too much because i think my friends will admire me more if i if i had nicer clothes.
Because i think that i would be happier if i had a bigger house.
Those kind of things and it's not that a bigger house won't make you happy but like you you need to dig a couple layers down to do it. I actually think a big nice house can make you happy because it makes it easier
to spend time with your friends and family and that's what's actually making you happy.
So for a lot of financial goals, you just need to dig a couple layers beneath the surface and be
like, well, why do I want that? I want that because there's this hole. Well, why is there a hole?
There's a hole because I feel like I don't have enough good friends.
Okay, well, you need to focus on that.
And the money's not gonna get you there.
That's a different problem.
Have you done this?
Like, I mean, just practically speaking,
would you recommend someone kind of sits down,
instead of sitting down and like writing down,
okay, this year I'm gonna do this, this, this.
Like, is there like a practical thing that we can do
where you maybe take a look at the things in your
life that are important to you or some sort of like concrete way to address what you just said?
I think it sounds so trite, but I think it's so important. Take a good hard look about what is
the days that you've actually been happier. And it's not for everybody, but I think for a lot of
people, and this is true for me, that the happiest days you've had been happier. And it's not for everybody, but I think for a lot of people, and this is true for me,
that the happiest days you've had did not require a lot of money.
I thought about this a couple years ago when we took a really nice family vacation to Maui.
And it was great.
We didn't hold anything back.
It was a wonderful vacation.
And as I was sitting on the beach building sandcastles with my two little kids, I was
like, this is a 10.
This is a 10 out of 10. This is so great right now. But then a couple of weeks after we got home,
I was like playing Legos with my kids on our living room floor. And I was like, look,
if building sandcastles in Maui on a fancy resort in Maui is a 10, playing Legos at home with them
is like a nine or nine and a half. Like it was actually really close because what made me happy in Maui was not the fact
that we spent a shitload of money and stayed at a nice resort.
What made me happy was uninterrupted time with my kids.
And I could actually do that at home without spending as much money.
So actually if you dig down to be like, what actually made me happy about that?
Was it the fact that I spent a lot of money or just spending a lot of money allow me to
do something different in my life that actually if I'm honest about it, did not require spending a lot of money.
It was uninterrupted time.
So for a lot of people, vacations do make them happier, but it's not because
you need to fly across the world to be happier.
It's because what vacations give you is uninterrupted time away from work,
uninterrupted time with your friends and family.
And that's what's making you happy.
Like understanding what the core of the motivation is, is really important.
What are some of like the main things
that you learned about spending?
Cause I know that you're writing this spending book.
What are some of the main learnings
you've taken away from that research?
I think what's so much in finance,
this is true for investing too,
is that we teach it like it's math and it's analytical,
but at its core, it's all social.
And so the key to spending money is not understanding
what purchases are gonna make you happier or less happy. Because look, the book I'm writing is called The Art of Spending Money.
It's not called The Science of Spending Money because everybody is different.
You cannot make formulas here.
By the way, now that you say that, I think we accidentally stole that title for one of
our episode titles.
So, sorry.
That's fine.
Go for it.
No worries.
But look, I think the core to understanding the spending that's going to make you happy
is really digging deep and understanding things like envy and jealousy and social aspiration and those kind of topics.
It's not a science of there's a lot of times you get these really these statements like spend money on experiences, not on things. It's not that that's bad. But I think it's very surface level. Whereas if you dig deeper into like envy and jealousy, you really get to at the core of why
some spending makes you much happier than others.
And so I think understanding the emotional side of it
rather than the surface level,
spending money on this is good and that is bad.
It's almost never that black and white,
but if you can get to the core
of your own personal relationship with envy and jealousy
and social admiration and social aspiration, you get much closer to a good spending habit.
Did you learn things about yourself writing this book?
Because it sounds like it's a very like personal and emotional experience.
I feel like everything I've written in my entire career has been like
trying to understand my own relationship with money, whether that's investing or I feel like
all of it is just a diary entry that I phrased a little
bit differently.
So yeah, as I mentioned earlier, as I made a little bit more money in my career, more
than I realized what money can do to make me happier, I realized very starkly what it
cannot do.
And that was actually a wonderful realization because it pushed me towards more meaningful
pursuits.
I'm happier with my life with a little bit more money than I had five years ago.
But I think one of the main reasons I'm happier is because it made me realize that
what's actually going to make me happy is health, sleep, friendship, marriage, kids.
And so realizing that has been a big eye opener for me personally.
You mentioned jealousy and envy as like two big drivers
of what's sort of like getting us to spend so much.
And I would imagine that the conclusion I'm sure is like,
you know, spending your life being jealous and envious
is just not a very good life lived.
But I would be curious to know if you have found
that there is a way to deal with that at a personal level,
because I'll just tell you from, from like my experience, like
it's a little hard to not feel envious at times.
And I wish I could just kind of be like, stop, it doesn't matter.
Like that guy has a Ferrari.
You don't like, well, who cares?
Like he's probably not even happy or whatever it is, but it's like trying
to extinguish those emotions while I know at a rational level,
they're not adding anything to my life. I do find that it's kind of a hard thing to detach myself
from. So I'd be curious to get your thoughts on like how to deal with that. You're right, Ed,
that it is difficult. And I'd be lying if I said that like I'm susceptible to those, of course,
of course everybody is. What I think they become easier to extinguish
is when you really constantly remind yourself
that I can see your car, I can see your house,
I can see your clothes, I can see your jewelry,
I cannot see your relationship with your spouse,
I cannot see your relationship with your children,
I cannot see your mental health.
And that's what actually makes a difference.
It was really interesting, I live in Seattle,
so Bill and Melinda Gates were like our king and queen and
You'll get people have their different views about him
But my view is always like look the guy worked ridiculously hard became the richest man in the world
Created the most important technology company of a generation and then gave gave virtually all of it away towards like curing malaria and stuff
I was like, look, he's not a perfect person people have have their individual views on him, but like pretty damn good life if you wanted to summarize it. And then three years
ago or so they get divorced and you realize like you look behind the curtain and you're like, look,
there's a big one, but you've looked behind the curtain and you're like, look from the outside,
this look like literally a fairy tale life. But then the curtain is pulled back and you're like,
oh no, actually there was some shit going on there. There are some really bad things happening,
but that was invisible to everybody during all
that time. And the other thing I bring up a lot is the book, the snowball, which is
Warren Buffett's biography, kind of the most elaborate biography on him goes into extreme
detail about things that people have known for a while is that his personal, Warren Buffett's
personal life has not been perfect by any means whatsoever. That's a polite way to put it.
There have been times where it's been, it's been miserable.
And that was really important for me as someone who has looked up to him and admired him for
decades to realize like, look, I can see his investing returns.
I can see his ranking on the Forbes 400 list.
I cannot see his relationship with his children, but inside his head, things like that probably matter
way more than his ranking on the Forbes list. So what is visible tends to be the things that matter
way less than things that are invisible. So the guy in the Ferrari, yes, he's got a cool car.
Yes, I might be envious of that car. There are almost certainly things going on in his life that
I cannot see that if I had a full picture of his life, I'd be like, look, that car is pretty cool, but you're dealing with a lot of shit in your
life that I am too. And therefore, would my life actually be materially better if I had a nicer car?
Probably not, because the other things that move the needle more would be the same.
Do you have a ranking system of your own values in terms of like,
which things are actually important to you?
Cause I feel like that's a big part of this is defining
what it is that you want and what it is that is meaningful
to you and how to spend well and use your money well.
You need to understand, well, okay, at the top I've got,
you know, I don't know, my kids or my wife or my family.
And then like, do you prioritize it in any way?
I don't know.
I don't know if I rank it or prioritize it, but you're, you're right.
The, the, the three things, I don't know what order this would be in are my
wife, my kids, and my personal health.
Like nothing else matters more than those three.
And you can imagine a world where me or, or anybody is very wealthy, uh, has
an incredible career, but they're on their
fifth divorce, their kids don't talk to them, and they weigh 300 pounds and sleep three hours a night.
Is that success? Not in my book in the slightest. I would much rather make $100,000 a year
and have a wife who loves me and kids who admire me and be in good health and have a good conscience
than make a million dollars a year and have none of those things.
And so you can say on one hand that money is very important and money can give you a
better life and money is an incredible tool and it pales in comparison to other things
in your life that are going to be more meaningful.
Just as we start to wrap up here, do you have any advice for people my age-ish, I'm 25,
so I'm a young person,
around money and around spending,
around honestly anything going into 2025.
If you had to advise young, hardworking professionals
who want to make this a good year,
do you have any advice for them?
I don't know if this is advice,
but it's a reflection on when I was 25.
Since I've been 16 and earned my first dollar, I've been a very big saver it came naturally me i was always saving well over half my paycheck no matter where i was.
I think there are sometimes i look back when i was twenty five and didn't have kids and had a lot more freedom than i do now.
That i'm grateful for the savings habits that i had and i also wonder if i I should have loosened up a little bit. A lot of
that is because you Ed are almost certainly going to be making more money at age 40 than you are
today at age 25. So you might be, you know, and so not you in particular, but other 25 year olds
might be working very hard to save a thousand dollars. And when they're 40, a thousand dollars
will come to them by snapping their fingers, you know? And so the life that you're giving up,
both because you are young and you have fewer commitments
at 25, you might be going way out of your way to save an amount of money that in 15
or 20 years will come fairly easy to you.
And so I am grateful for the saving skills that I had at 25.
And sometimes I do wonder if I should have loosened up a little bit because I didn't
know what I know today, which is that once you have kids and more responsibility and your career is
more ingrained, you're not going to be able to have the kind of freedom to go
out and do the kind of things that you could at 25.
A final question for me.
I'm wondering if you have any new year's resolutions for 2025 or at least maybe
some goals of your own that you want to accomplish next year.
I just finished my book.
It'll come, it'll come out next year.
So I, writing a book is, is book is difficult and takes a lot of time,
takes a lot of focus.
And so now that that's behind me,
I think I aim and aspire to sleep better,
which is always a big problem of mine,
to eat better, which is a problem of mine,
and focus on some of those things
that have absolutely nothing to do with money
that are very easy to overlook when you are in the pursuit
of finishing a big work project.
Morgan Housel is a partner at The Collaborative Fund. He's the New York Times bestselling author of those things that have absolutely nothing to do with money that are very easy to overlook when you are in the pursuit of finishing a big work project.
Morgan Housel is a partner at the Collaborative Fund. He's the New York Times bestselling
author of The Psychology of Money and Same as Ever. His books have sold more than 5 million
copies and have been translated into more than 50 languages. Morgan, as we wrap up here,
do you want to just give us like a summary of the art of spending money and what our
listeners might learn from it?
Yeah. I mean, I mentioned a little bit earlier that it is not called the art of spending money and what all listeners might learn from it? Yeah. I mean, I mentioned a little bit earlier that it is not called the science of spending
money. It is called the art of spending money because it's a little bit different for everybody.
So at no point in the book do I say this is how you should spend or this is how you should
not spend. It's actually quite the opposite. It is a psychological look at envy, jealousy,
social aspiration, what actually makes people happy, contentment, those kinds of topics in the typical storytelling fashion that I like to do.
I like to find examples of how other people have done well or done wrong and try to tell
their stories in a very quick, hopefully punchy way, moving on from chapter to chapter.
Awesome.
Thank you so much, Morgan.
This was great.
Thanks, Ed.
This episode was produced by Claire Miller and engineered by Benjamin Spencer.
Our associate producer is Alison Weiss, Mia Silverio is our research lead, Jessica Lang
is our research associate, Drew Burrows is our technical director, and Catherine Dillon
is our executive producer.
Thank you for listening to Prof G Markets from the Vox Media Podcast Network.
If you liked what you heard, give us a follow and join us on Monday for our Ask Me Anything
episode on ProfGMarkets. Kind reunion
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