Description
Doing well with money isn’t necessarily about what you recognize. It’s about how you behave. And behavior is hard to teach, even to in point of fact smart people.
Money—making an investment, personal finance, and business decisions—is in most cases 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 lead 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 peculiar incentives are scrambled together.
In
The Psychology of Money, award-winning writer Morgan Housel shares 19 short stories exploring the odd ways people consider money and teaches you how to make better sense of one of life’s most important topics.
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