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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 4 page review on the work Rich Dad, Poor Dad by Robert T. Kiyosaki. No additional sources cited.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAkydad.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
economic, lesson for the reader. It is a book that addresses how people are wealthy and how others remain, even in middle class, constantly struggling with money issues. The following
paper offers a review/report of the book. Rich Dad, Poor Dad by Kiyosaki As mentioned in the introduction, this work is one that is aimed at illustrating how and
why some people are wealthy and other continuously struggle. He tells this story and his assessment of personal economics through a discussion of his real father, supposedly, who was the
"Poor Dad" and his neighbor who told him about money, the "Rich Dad." His father was a man who was well educated and who was well enough off, but yet
always struggled with money and was ultimately middle class. The neighbor father was very wealthy, had not gone past the eighth grade in school, and knew things about money and
how to work it that the authors father did not know. The premise of the work is based on the following, which comes from his first chapter: "One of the
reasons the rich get richer, the poor get poorer, and the middle class struggles in debt is because the subject of money is taught at home, not in school. Most
of us learn about money from our parents. So what can a poor parent tell their child about money? They simply say Stay in school and study hard. The child
may graduate with excellent grades but with a poor persons financial programming and mind-set. It was learned while the child was young" (Kiyosaki, 2002). He indicates that what the rich
know about money everyone else does not know, that the rich actually end up likely spending less on a daily basis for life than the middle class individual because they
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