Doing well with money isn’t necessarily about what . It’s about how you behave. And behavior is hard to teach, even to actually smart people.
Money—making an investment, personal finance, and business decisions—is most often taught as a math-based field, where data and formulas let us know exactly what to do. But in the real world people don’t make financial decisions on a spreadsheet. They cause them to at the dinner table, or in a meeting room, where personal history, your own unique view of the world, ego, pride, marketing, and unusual incentives are scrambled together.
In
The Psychology of Money, award-winning writer Morgan Housel shares 19 short stories exploring the extraordinary ways people consider money and teaches you how to make better sense of one of life’s most important topics.
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