The Book Brief Project
Most books about money teach you how to earn more, save more, or invest more. This one does something stranger. In The Art of Spending Money, Morgan Housel argues that money is valuable not because of what it buys, but because of what it allows you to stop worrying about. What begins as a book about spending quickly becomes a meditation on envy, status, freedom, expectations, and the hidden emotional costs attached to wealth. In this episode of The Book Brief Project, we explore Housel's central ideas, from social debt and conspicuous consumption to the surprising connection between modern financial psychology and ideas that were already being discussed more than two centuries ago by Adam Smith. But we also examine a deeper question at the heart of the book: If spending money is truly an art, can anyone teach it? This is not a summary. It's a critical reading of one of the most discussed financial thinkers of the modern era. Book: The Art of Spending Money Author: Morgan Housel The Book Brief Project — Books, taken seriously.
51 Folgen
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