In the words of Robin Bartholick, “If you
make $1 Million a year from a job, you could lose your job any day. If you make
the same $1 Million from owning hostels, or businesses, no one can take that
from you. Having a high income alone does not mean financial independence.”
The concept of Financial Independence is
perhaps wider than what you think. Simply put, Finance has to do with money,
economics, business, investment, banking, sponsorship and funding. Independence
means self-reliance, freedom and autonomy (Encarta Dictionary, 2009).
Therefore, Financial Independence (henceforth referred to as FI) is described
as a state of having sufficient wealth (not income) to live on without having
to work actively for basic necessities (Wikipedia, 2014). The emphasis of FI is
on wealth-creation and not income-generation. Wealth is succinctly defined as
an avenue that generates income without the earner’s labour. Wealth avenues
include ownership of a private business and financial instruments such as
Bonds, Shares, etc that provide a constant source of income without the owners’
active work.
FI focuses on two key concepts which are
Assets and Expenses. Your assets are resources owned by you and which increase
your income and build your wealth. Expenses, on the other hand refer to your
spending on items of necessity (and non-essential items too). While
income-generating assets enhance one’s FI, expenses curtail it. There are
practical steps to attaining FI which focus mainly on increasing your
assets and minimizing or prudently managing your expenses. Rather than
amass income, amass wealth. You are financially independent if you can live
without additional pay from any other source other than from your
wealth-generators.
From Bartholick’s opening statement above, it
is a bitter truth that a highly-paid employee who doesn’t have other
independent wealth-generators such as Shares, private business or Estate
investment that amass wealth for him is only a high income earner. That does
not make him financially independent.
In the work of Joshua Kennon, there are
different approaches to achieving FI. Chief among these approaches is to spend
less than you earn. This sounds logical. To be free from financing your
daily expenses through debt/borrowing, it is only logical to live within your earning
bracket. Incurring a Naira above your earnings means it will be financed
by an external source which makes you indebted and hence you are denied your
FI. It is a different thing to borrow so as to invest the borrowed sum to
generate income. This is no longer borrowing to finance daily living but an
investment which is wealth-generating.
Furthermore, it is said that FI is a slow
process and it takes time. One does not jump to FI. All financial success is
said to start with savings (Kennon). The principle of savings is as old as man.
Joseph as the technical head of Egypt saved for the time of want and he served
as the sole supplier of food to nations. Achieving FI does include increasing
one’s surplus fund which should be channelled towards profitable investment
options that will enhance one’s FI. The habit of saving is also
pivotal to being financially independent. Savings serve as a buffer on which
one can fall back on in future.
Though a bitter pill to swallow, it is the
truth that in the effort to eke out a living, we do jobs we don’t like or which
we even make us lose control over our time. The job dictates where we should be
at 8a.m and which reports must be made available before the close of business.
According to Charles Waller, unless you get to do what you love every morning
when you get out of bed … you are merely a highly paid wage slave. This truth
may be difficult to accept but its rejection does not change it. To enjoy FI,
one needs have control over one’s time. This defines freedom. Such a freedom or
self-reliance is perhaps only guaranteed an Entrepreneur and not an employee,
regardless of whether the latter is a manager – a manager of another man’s
business. So far the job (and not a wealth-generator) pays his bills, his
continued financial strength is tied to a source that isn’t his, and hence, he
lacks FI. Therefore, FI requires entrepreneurship and not company employment.
Rob Colvin emphasised that by solving
society’s problems, you reap huge rewards on which you can live comfortably –
independently! There are societal problems and needs. Generating ideas that are
solutions to people’s needs positions one for FI. Ideas, they say, still rule
the world. If one generates ideas that amass wealth for one, one rules one’s
finances and hence secures FI. “Think and Grow Rich”, an author titled his
book.
For a married person who dreams of FI, he
should also have a spouse that is not a spendthrift or a squanderer. Kennon
opined that it will be counterproductive if one makes efforts to be financially
independent but shares bed with a spendthrift. It cannot work because while one
is thinking of cutting expenses and increasing asset base, the other is
thinking in the opposite direction. Team up with people who are also interested
in being financially independent and by this, you will sharpen your financial
iron with theirs.
Pursuing entrepreneurship or private business
is a major route to attaining FI. Kemisola Omoyiola an Entrepreneur whose
business of distributing finished products (drinks) began in her kitchen with a
single freezer summarized what FI means when she said she is yet to see
anything as fulfilling as being one’s master. To attain ultimate FI, one must
be in control of a wealth-generator as earning income is not same as making
income.
In conclusion, to attain FI, one must
increase one’s assets and cut expenses. Expenses could be cut through modest
living while passive income could be generated through owning assets
giving rise to rental income, dividends from shares, interest on bank fixed
deposits, returns from writing books/magazines, profits from business
ownership, etc.
Vessel Anani Sunday K (VASK)
0802 929 9709