Eh. If you get ahold of a bucket of true geniuses, best thing you can do is not even give them goals and just feed them until Nobel prize/Manhattan Project level work surfaces. As you go down the scale, crisper and crisper goals are needed. This isn't an absolute either; I've been both the smartest man in the room, bogged down by scrum poker and similar inanities, on the one hand, and (elsewhere) someone with a vague understanding of the work needing some supervision to even add value to the team.
They're just saving lumberjacks money by not having to own their own trucks. They can just load their chainsaws in an Uber XL. Boom! Another industry disruption! /s
Takes about 15 years of consistent saving and investing. Then all of a sudden you're wealthy. But as you're saving and investing you still don't have a wild standard of living.
Household income of 100,000 (higher than typical) gives 15K per year, or 1250 a month. 8% interest gets you to $376,000 after 14 years. No where near millionaire status. And this is assuming a tax differed investment path such as 401(k), and you still owe taxes out of that when you withdraw (assume 20% for fed/state, if you don't draw it out all at once, gives you around $300k).
Of course, add another decade and you are at millionaire status. Or don't contribute any additional funds, and wait 12 years, and you hit millionaire.
Yeah the numbers there don't add up as their savings plan changes once people pay off their mortgage, have a rainy day fund and have the kids education fund ready.They tell people to max out savings at that point. So it's starts out at 15% but ends up being much higher.
Based on the numbers for average account balances and stuff, it seems like retirement is a luxury for the current generations. Evens the social support systems are being underfunded, which is likely to lead to inflation or economic downturn as the taxes increase to cover them.
Even as someone who is better off than others my age, it seems like retirement will be a long way off and tight. I was interested and looked up how I stacked up and it turns out I'm around top 25% for income by age and about top 1% (that's alarming) for savings. If it's shakey for me, how is anyone else going to make it? Property values and taxes aew sky high. So is medical care. Other stuff like groceries or parts/labor for home repair are rising.