Two thoughts:
Let’s define our Average Joe. I’m going to assume our Joe is not an “Average Earner” but instead intends to pursue a “profession” which will start on a salary of £20,000 at age 21 and finish on a salary of £40,000 at age 68 (State Pension Age for today’s young), for an average lifetime earnings of £30,000. I can think of many arts, sciences or technical university/apprenticeship routes that would enable this level of attainment through persistence. Our Average Joe also doesn’t aspire to the 60% savings rates that I do but does realise its important and so religiously saves 20% of earnings every month leaving plenty of cash for consumption today.
- In life we all behave differently and have different aspirations. As long as harm is not being done to others then this is ok and is what keeps the place interesting. This means that there will be people who have opted out of consumerism and are practising limited frugality such as myself (and many readers) and people who are consuming either through choice or because they are just not aware of the alternatives. That’s ok. There will also be people like myself (and many readers) who have personal finance as a hobby and others who either have no interest in the subject or struggle with too much mathematical complexity. That’s ok also. I sometimes wonder what those of the opposite persuasion must think when they stumble across Retirement Investing Today via Google or other website link. I can’t help but wonder if we might be perceived as a little extreme and also guilty of making personal finance topics unnecessarily complicated. For this post I therefore want to take a step back and not be either extreme or complex to hopefully help many.
- A Million Pounds is a lot of wealth to all but a very few. It is also a very emotive value. Could anybody who was prepared to apply themselves in life, but not be as extreme (maybe they gain happiness from things or want more work/life balance or...) and analytical as we are on this blog ever accrue a million pounds? Let’s try and develop a simple model to demonstrate if an Average Joe could become a Millionaire.
Let’s define our Average Joe. I’m going to assume our Joe is not an “Average Earner” but instead intends to pursue a “profession” which will start on a salary of £20,000 at age 21 and finish on a salary of £40,000 at age 68 (State Pension Age for today’s young), for an average lifetime earnings of £30,000. I can think of many arts, sciences or technical university/apprenticeship routes that would enable this level of attainment through persistence. Our Average Joe also doesn’t aspire to the 60% savings rates that I do but does realise its important and so religiously saves 20% of earnings every month leaving plenty of cash for consumption today.