Just came across something Robert Kiyosaki said that really stuck with me about education and wealth. Most people think getting rich is just about going to school, getting good grades, landing a solid job. But that's actually way off.



Kiyosaki breaks it down into three distinct types of education, and honestly, the framework makes a lot of sense when you think about it. First there's the traditional academic route - the one most of us went through. Math classes, science labs, history lessons. Solid foundation for critical thinking, sure. But here's the thing: it teaches you how to be a good employee, not how to actually build wealth. Your teachers never explained how money works or why financial literacy matters.

Then there's what he calls professional education. This is your college degree, your specialized training, becoming a doctor, lawyer, pilot, whatever. Kiyosaki actually went to Merchant Marine Academy and trained as a pilot in the Navy. The thing about professional education is it can get you a comfortable middle-class lifestyle and decent income. But that's also where people get trapped. You make good money but you're still trading time for dollars. You're not actually rich, you're just a well-paid employee.

The real game changer though? Financial education. This is where Robert Kiyosaki really emphasizes the difference. Understanding assets versus liabilities, how to leverage debt, reading financial statements, tax strategy - that's what actually separates people who accumulate real wealth from those who just earn good salaries. It's about making your money work for you instead of working for money your whole life.

What's interesting is Kiyosaki doesn't say you only need one type. He admits you need all three and that even with solid financial education, you benefit from good lawyers and accountants. But the hierarchy matters. Academic and professional education get you stable, but financial education is what unlocks actual wealth building. Most people skip step three entirely and wonder why they never get ahead. That's the real problem with how we approach education in general.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
Add a comment
Add a comment
No comments
  • Pin