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Just been thinking about something Ramit Sethi keeps hammering on — most people are doing their savings completely wrong. Like, they're actually losing money by being "safe" with it.
Here's the thing. Everyone knows Ramit from his Netflix show and his book about getting rich. And his main point is pretty simple but kind of brutal: letting your savings sit in a checking account isn't protecting you, it's slowly killing your wealth. Inflation eats away at cash just sitting there, and most people don't realize how much they're actually losing over time.
Why don't people invest then? It makes sense on paper, right? But the reality is messier. A lot of folks are living paycheck to paycheck, dealing with debt, worried about job security. Not everyone has access to workplace retirement accounts that make investing automatic. And when you're stressed about groceries, thinking about the stock market feels like a luxury problem.
Then there's the fear factor. People don't trust the stock market. They'd rather keep cash where they can see it, even though that's basically a losing game against inflation. Sure, having an emergency fund is important — like 3 to 6 months of expenses. But beyond that? Your money needs to work for you.
So what's the actual move? Ramit recommends skipping the hot stock picks and trendy plays. Instead, go for target date funds or index funds. Target date funds are kind of genius because you just pick your retirement year and the fund automatically gets more conservative as you get closer. Less thinking required.
Index funds are solid too. You're basically buying a whole portfolio — like the S&P 500 — so if one company tanks, you've got dozens of others balancing it out. Plus the fees are way lower than actively managed funds, which means more of your money actually stays with you.
The real talk? You don't even have to jump straight into stocks. Start with high-yield savings accounts or CDs if that feels less risky. The point is moving your money somewhere it actually grows instead of just sitting there. That's how the savings gap between people who build wealth and people who don't actually happens. It's not about being aggressive — it's about being intentional with where your money lives.