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The Surprising Secrets of America's Wealthy
by Thomas J. Stanley, William D. Danko, Ph.D.
The Bobbinses are quite different from John J. Ashton, M.D., age fifty-six, who has an
annual income of approximately $560,000. How much is Dr. Ashton worth? Is he wealthy?
According to one definition, he is, since his net worth is $1.1 million. But he is not
wealthy according to our other definition. Given his age and income, he should be worth
more than $3 million.
With his high-consumption lifestyle, how long do you think Dr. Ashton could sustain
himself and his family if he were no longer employed? Perhaps for two, at most three,
years.
HOW TO DETERMINE IF YOU'RE WEALTHY
Whatever your age, whatever your income, how much should you be worth right now? From
years of surveying various high-income/high-net worth people, we have developed several
multivariate-based wealth equations. A simple rule of thumb, however, is more than
adequate in computing one's expected net worth.
Multiply your age times your realized pretax annual household income from all sources
except inheritances. Divide by ten. This, less any inherited wealth, is what your net
worth should be.
For example, if Mr. Anthony O. Duncan is forty-one years old, makes $143,000 a year,
and has investments that return another $12,000, he would multiply $155,000 by forty-one.
That equals $6,355,000. Dividing by ten, his net worth should be $635,500. If Ms. Lucy R.
Frankel is sixty-one and has a total annual realized income of $235,000, her net worth
should be $1,433,500.
Given your age and income, how does your net worth match up? Where do you stand along
the wealth continuum? If you are in the top quartile for wealth accumulation, you are a
PAW, or prodigious accumulator of wealth. If you are in the bottom quartile, you are a
UAW, or under accumulator of wealth. Are you a PAW, a UAW, or just an AAW (average
accumulator of wealth)?
We have developed another simple rule. To be well positioned in the PAW category, you
should be worth twice the level of wealth expected. In other words, Mr. Duncan's net
worth/wealth should be approximately twice the expected value or more for his income/age
cohort, or $635,500 multiplied by two equals $1,271,000. If Mr. Duncan's net worth is
approximately $1.27 million or more, he is a prodigious accumulator of wealth. Conversely,
what if his level of wealth is one-half or less than expected for all those in his
income/age category? Mr. Duncan would be classified as a UAW if his level of wealth were
$317,750 or less (or one-half of $635,500).
PAWS VERSUS UAWS
PAWs are builders of wealth -- that is, they are the best at building net worth
compared to others in their income/age category. PAWs typically have a minimum of four
times the wealth accumulated by UAWs. Contrasting the characteristics of PAWs and UAWs is
one of the most revealing parts of the research we have conducted over the past twenty
years.
A good example of the difference between PAWs and UAWs is revealed in two case studies.
Mr. Miller "Bubba" Richards, age fifty, is the proprietor of a mobile-home
dealership. His total household income last year was $90,200. Mr. Richards's net worth, as
computed via the wealth equation, is expected to be $451,000. But "Bubba" is a
PAW. His actual net worth is $1.1 million.
His counterpart is James H. Ford II. Mr. Ford, age fifty-one, is an attorney. His
income last year was $92,330, slightly more than Mr. Richards's. What is Mr. Ford's actual
net worth? His expected level of wealth? Mr. Ford's actual net worth is $226,511, while
his expected level of wealth (again computed from the wealth equation) is $470,883. Mr.
Ford, by our definition, is an under accumulator of wealth. Mr. Ford spent seven years in
college. How can he possibly have less wealth than a mobile-home dealer? In fact, Mr.
Richards has nearly five times the net worth of Mr. Ford. And remember, both are in the
same income/age cohort. In trying to answer the above question, ask yourself two simpler
questions:
Copyright © 1996 by Thomas J. Stanley and William D. Danko.
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