Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Why Most People Stay STUCK at LEVEL 3 MONEY


Lessons in Investing    All Posts by Ankur Warikoo    « Previously


Personal Finance

The 7 Stages of Financial Success

A step-by-step map that most people never see — and why almost every Indian gets stuck at Stage 3 before they even begin to build real wealth.

1
Track Your Money
2
Kill Bad Debt
3
Build Assets
4
Multiple Incomes
5
Buy Your Home
6
Retire Rich
7
Enjoy Freedom

Most people struggle with money their entire lives — not because they don't earn enough, but because nobody ever showed them the map. Financial success isn't about one big investment or one lucky break. It is a journey with seven distinct stages, and each one must be completed before you move to the next. Miss one, and the ones after it start to crumble.

Here is the honest truth: most Indians never make it past Stage 3. Not because the later stages are impossible, but because Stage 3 demands a deep shift in mindset — one that most people are never taught to make. Understanding all seven stages is what separates the people who retire comfortably from the ones who spend their final years depending on their children.

Stage 01

Know Where Your Money Actually Goes

Here is a quick test. Without opening your phone, without checking any app or statement — how much did you spend last month on Zomato, Swiggy, Blinkit, and Zepto combined? Probably you have a rough ballpark. But the accurate number? Almost certainly not.

That is a real problem. You know your salary down to the last decimal point. But where it goes every month? No idea. Think about this from a business perspective: if you ran a company and someone asked the CEO how much was spent on marketing last month, the answer would be exact. Payroll? Exact. Rent? Exact. But when it comes to personal spending, we suddenly lose all accountability.

The first step is simple: download last month's bank statement and categorize every single transaction. Rent, utilities, dining out, ordering in, clothes, entertainment — make whatever categories fit your life. Group them, add them up, and find out how much money went into each bucket. Don't try to change anything yet. Just know the numbers.

Once you know where the money goes, you build a budget. A framework that has proven itself time and again is the 50-30-20 Rule:

50%
Needs
Rent, EMIs, food, bills — things you cannot skip
30%
Wants
That phone, the vacation, those clothes — life is to be lived
20%
Invest
Your future self gets paid first, every single month

Enjoying life today is not wrong. That trip, those clothes, that phone — go ahead. But within your budget. If your salary is ₹25,000 and you want that ₹1.5 lakh phone, set aside ₹7,500 every month for 20 months. Not a day earlier. That discipline is the entire foundation of this journey.

Stage 02

Wipe Out Bad Debt and Build Your Safety Net

There is a common mistake that surprises many people when they first hear it: you should not be investing in SIPs while carrying high-interest debt. Having a maxed-out credit card and a personal loan running while proudly contributing to a mutual fund is not financial discipline — it is a guaranteed way to lose money faster than you make it. Clear the bad loans first.

What makes a loan "bad"? Any loan taken for something you did not genuinely need, or to impress other people. A loan for a fancy phone, a luxury car beyond your means, a lavish wedding, or a vacation — these are bad loans. And not just morally — they are financially devastating. Here is why:

Investment / Loan Type Typical Rate Verdict
Fixed Deposits (FD) 6 - 7% Earn
PPF / EPF 7 - 8% Earn
Debt Mutual Funds / Corporate Bonds 8 - 9% Earn
Gold 10 - 12% Earn
Nifty 50 Mutual Funds 12 - 14% Earn
Small Cap Funds (higher risk) up to 18% Earn
Personal Loans 15 - 16% You PAY
Credit Card Debt ~36% You PAY
Lending Apps (quick cash) 40 - 50% You PAY

Every rupee invested in a mutual fund while paying 36% interest on a credit card is a net loss. The only two loans genuinely worth taking are a home loan and an education loan — both build real value in your life. Everything else, if you follow these seven stages properly, you should never need to borrow for.

"The only two loans worth taking in life are a home loan and an education loan. Everything else — if you've played the game right — you should never need to borrow for."

Within this same stage, you must also build your safety net. Life is unpredictable, and one unexpected event can erase years of careful saving. Your safety net has three essential parts:

+
Health Insurance
One ICU night can cost ₹50,000 or more. Cover yourself and your family.
+
Term Life Insurance
Pure term plan only. Never mix insurance with investment — they are completely different tools.
+
Emergency Fund
3-6 months of essential expenses. Aim for 12 months. Keep in a Liquid Mutual Fund.

Why a Liquid Mutual Fund for your emergency corpus? It gives slightly better returns than an FD, your money arrives in your bank account within 24 hours, and there are no penalties for withdrawing early. Unlike an FD where the rate depends on how long you lock in, a liquid fund accrues returns every single day. Whenever you need the money, you get a fair return for every day it was invested.

Stage 03

Start Building Your First Assets

This is the stage where most Indians stall — and the reason is deeper than money. First, let's be clear about what an asset actually is. An asset puts money into your pocket. A liability takes money out.

Your car? Liability — it depreciates and costs you maintenance every month. The home you live in? Liability — you spend money on it and aren't selling it. A second property you've rented out? Asset. Gold that is appreciating in value? Asset. Shares in the stock market? Asset.

The most accessible asset you can buy — starting with as little as ₹500 — is the Indian stock market. Over any 10-year period in Indian equities, average returns have been 12-13%. Using the Rule of 72: divide 72 by your rate of return to get the approximate years for your money to double. At 13%, that's roughly 5.5 years. Over 20 years, your initial investment grows to about 16 times. With mid and small caps adding some risk, that figure could stretch to 32 times.

Rule of 72 at 13%
5.5 yrs
to double your money
In 20 years
16x
growth at 12-13% average
Avg. SIP tenure in India
2.1 yrs
people pull out far too early
With small caps (more risk)
32x
potential in 20 years

The average SIP tenure in India is just 2.1 years. People invest, wait a year or two, get impatient when markets wobble, and withdraw — right before compounding starts doing its most powerful work. The ones who stay the course are the ones who benefit.

But staying the course requires overcoming a deep-rooted psychological pattern. There are two kinds of money mindsets:

-- Gareebiyet Mindset (Poverty Mindset)
Income arrives.
Expenses come first.
Whatever is left over — if anything — goes to investment. Result: investment is always the first casualty of a bad month.
-> Ameereeyet Mindset (Wealth Mindset)
Income arrives.
Investment (20%) happens immediately.
The remaining 80% runs the household. Result: investment is non-negotiable, no matter what.

The wealth mindset says: if this month's expenses run high because of Diwali or a family event, you skip the expensive impulse purchase — not the SIP. Your future self gets paid first. This is not natural for most people. It takes practice, and it is the single most important reason why most Indians never move past Stage 3.

Stage 04

Build Multiple Streams of Income

Our parents' generation mostly had one income source and it was enough. That world has changed — and three things have driven this shift fundamentally.

  • Single incomes have stagnated. An IT fresher's starting salary was roughly ₹3.5-4 lakh per year about 20 years ago. In many cases, it still is. Inflation, meanwhile, has not been so kind. The cost of living has risen dramatically while salaries in service-based industries remain compressed by a model that pays only what the cost structure allows. One income stream is often not enough anymore.
  • Side income is now genuinely accessible. Freelancing, consulting, tutoring, content creation — you can build income around your existing skills from your laptop at home. The infrastructure for this simply did not exist a generation ago. Today it does.
  • Artificial intelligence has changed the time equation. The biggest barrier to a second income was always time — you only have so many hours. AI tools now allow you to produce more, serve more clients, and complete work faster without burning out. For anyone building a parallel income stream, this is a compounding advantage.

The goal at Stage 4 is not to exhaust yourself working around the clock. It is to build income that doesn't require your constant, full-time presence — and to grow both your earnings and your experience simultaneously.

Stage 05

Buy Your Home — But at the Right Time

Buying a home is the largest single purchase most of us will ever make. The question is not whether to do it — it is when.

Buying in your 20s is a trap that sounds like responsibility but functions like a constraint. Most people in their 20s cannot afford the right house. They will buy something small, in a location they can just barely afford, and within a decade outgrow it as their family grows. More critically — your 20s are years of enormous professional possibility. A job offer in Bangalore, an opportunity abroad, a chance to relocate for the right role — you want to be able to say yes. A home with an EMI becomes a mental handcuff on your choices when you need flexibility most.

By your mid-to-late 30s, the picture is very different:

  • Your income is higher and likely comes from more than one source
  • You've cleared bad debts and have real savings accumulated
  • You know which city and locality suits your life and your family
  • You can afford the down payment (10-20%) without dismantling your portfolio
  • You can comfortably handle the EMI without cutting into your investments

A home at the right time is also a real financial asset in another sense: it serves as collateral. In a genuine emergency, a loan against property is far cheaper and more accessible than a personal loan. Banks trust a physical property in a way they simply don't trust your professional resume. That's just the reality of how credit works.

"Don't rush to buy a home in your 20s. The flexibility you give up is worth more than the perceived security you gain."

Stage 06

Plan Your Retirement with Real Numbers

Most people only think about retirement when it is already close. That's because they never made it past Stage 3, let alone Stage 6. Retirement planning is not complicated — but it requires sitting down with actual numbers. Here is a concrete example of how it works.

Consider a 40-year-old who plans to retire at 60 and needs to fund expenses until age 85. They currently have ₹5 lakh in savings and can invest ₹20,000 per month, increasing that amount by 5% annually. This monthly investment is split across four buckets:

Investment Type Allocation Visual Expected Return
Fixed Deposits 30%
~7%
Large Cap Mutual Funds 50%
~12-13%
Mid Cap Mutual Funds 10%
~14-15%
Small Cap Mutual Funds 10%
~15-18%

The SIP grows by 5% every year — so ₹20,000 this year becomes ₹21,000 next year, and so on. Inflation is assumed at 6%. The monthly need at retirement, in today's money, is ₹50,000. Running this model out over 20 years of disciplined investing produces the following outcome:

Estimated Corpus at Age 60
Rs. 2.7 Crore
Starting with Rs. 5 lakh at age 40 | Rs. 20,000/month SIP growing 5% per year
Mix: 30% FD + 50% Large Cap + 10% Mid Cap + 10% Small Cap | Inflation: 6%

After retirement, the corpus is invested more conservatively — 50% in FD and 50% in large cap mutual funds, balancing the need for stability with some protection against inflation. The monthly withdrawal of ₹50,000 (in today's value) becomes approximately ₹19 lakh per year in nominal terms by age 60, due to two decades of inflation. This drawdown model sustains the corpus until approximately age 80. Reduce the monthly withdrawal to ₹45,000 equivalent, and the money stretches to age 85.

The math is straightforward. Getting through the first five stages to get here — that is the real work.

Stage 07

Live Free — Enjoy Money After You Stop Earning

If you have played the previous six stages well, Stage 7 is the reward. This is the finish line — and it looks like this: you stop earning a salary, and yet your life does not stop. You don't depend on your children, you don't depend on the government, and you don't depend on charity. You stand on your own two feet, financially, through every remaining year of your life.

The beauty of this journey is that it does not require you to sacrifice your present for your future. Along the way, you enjoyed life — the vacations, the gadgets bought on budget, the family milestones properly funded. You invested consistently while living well. And now, in retirement, you draw from what you built.

"Life's most elegant outcome: earn well, live well, invest consistently — and let your money carry you even after you stop working."

People often say this is impossible in today's economy. But consider: our parents built complete lives on incomes of ₹20,000-30,000 a month. They bought homes, educated children, handled medical emergencies, and reached old age with dignity. Not because money was easier then, but because they had discipline that today's generation has largely abandoned in the noise of instant gratification.

This is not wishful thinking. It doesn't require extraordinary income or extraordinary luck. It simply requires awareness — knowing these seven stages exist, knowing where you are on the map, and moving forward with intention. That is all it takes to win at money.

In Summary

  • S1 Track every rupee before you invest a single one. Download last month's bank statement, categorize every transaction, and build a budget using the 50-30-20 rule: 50% needs, 30% wants, 20% investments.
  • S2 Clear bad debt before you start investing. Personal loans (15-16%), credit card debt (36%), and app-based loans (40-50%) destroy returns. Only home loans and education loans are worth taking. Build three safety nets: health insurance, term life insurance, and a liquid mutual fund emergency fund covering 3-12 months of expenses.
  • S3 Shift from "save what's left" to "invest first, live on the rest." The stock market — accessible from ₹500 — doubles money roughly every 5.5 years at 12-13% returns. The compounding effect over 20 years is 16-32x. The obstacle is not knowledge; it is the discipline to stay invested.
  • S4 Build more than one income stream. Single incomes are increasingly insufficient. Freelancing, consulting, and content are all accessible today. AI tools reduce the time required, making a parallel income stream more realistic than ever.
  • S5 Buy your home in your 30s — not your 20s. Wait until your income is stable, your debts are cleared, and you know where you want to plant roots. Early home buying limits flexibility and often leads to buying the wrong home in the wrong place.
  • S6 Plan retirement with actual numbers. A 40-year-old investing ₹20,000 per month across FDs and equity funds, growing the SIP 5% annually, can accumulate approximately ₹2.7 crore by age 60 — enough to fund 20-25 years of retirement withdrawals.
  • S7 Retire with dignity and independence. The goal of all seven stages is this: to live the final chapter of your life on your own terms, financially self-sufficient, dependent on no one. It is achievable. It simply requires awareness and discipline — the same discipline that built entire families on ₹20,000 a month a generation ago.

Citations & References

  • Primary Source: Ankur Warikoo — entrepreneur, financial educator, and author. Content adapted from his video series on personal finance and financial stages of life. Ankur Warikoo is the author of several bestselling books on money, success, and self-development.
  • 50-30-20 Rule: A widely used personal budgeting framework, popularized by U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren in her book "All Your Worth" (2005). Allocates income as 50% needs, 30% wants, 20% savings/investment.
  • Rule of 72: A standard financial approximation formula used to estimate the number of years required to double an investment at a given annual rate of return. Formula: 72 / Annual Rate = Years to Double.
  • Average SIP Tenure in India (~2.1 years): Industry-cited statistic reflecting the median holding period of systematic investment plans among retail investors in India. Widely referenced in financial education contexts as evidence of premature redemption behavior.
  • Interest Rate Benchmarks (India, approximate): FD: 6-7% | PPF/EPF: 7-8% | Debt Mutual Funds: 8-9% | Gold (historical CAGR): 10-12% | Nifty 50 (10-yr CAGR): 12-14% | Personal Loan rates: 15-16%+ | Credit Cards: ~36% p.a. | Instant Loan Apps: 40-50% p.a.
  • Liquid Mutual Funds: Open-ended debt schemes investing in short-term instruments with maturities up to 91 days. SEBI-regulated. Returns typically track the repo rate; withdrawals processed within T+1 business day.
  • Ankur Warikoo — Book Reference: "Beyond the Syllabus" — a book authored by Warikoo specifically for teenagers navigating the transition from school to adulthood.
  • Compounding Illustration: Retirement corpus projection of ~Rs. 2.7 crore is based on the example shared in the source material: age 40 start, Rs. 5L existing corpus, Rs. 20,000/month SIP (escalating 5% p.a.), mixed allocation across FD and equity funds, assuming 6% annual inflation.

Lessons in Investing    All Posts by Ankur Warikoo    « Previously

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Quiz on "Summarizing quantitative data" (Jun 2026)

1:

>>> import numpy as np
>>> l1 = [12.5, 11.5, 11.0, 24.0, 13.0]
>>> mean1 = np.mean(l1)
>>> median1 = np.median(l1)
>>> 
>>> l2 = [12.5, 11.5, 11.0, 13.0]
>>> mean2 = np.mean(l2)
>>> median2 = np.median(l2)
>>> 
>>> mean2 - mean1
-2.4000000000000004
>>> median2 - median1
-0.5
>>> 
>>> print(mean1, median1, mean2, median2)
14.4 12.5 12.0 12.0

2:

import numpy as np

l = [4, 5, 7, 7, 7, 8, 10, 11, 11, 13, 13, 14]

q1 = np.percentile(l, 25)
q3 = np.percentile(l, 75)

print("q1, q3:", q1, q3) # 7.0, 11.5

import numpy as np

l = [4, 5, 7, 7, 7, 8, 10, 11, 11, 13, 13, 14]

# NumPy >= 1.22.0 (using the 'method' parameter)
q3_nearest = np.percentile(l, 75, method='nearest')  # Returns 11
q3_lower   = np.percentile(l, 75, method='lower')    # Returns 11
q3_higher  = np.percentile(l, 75, method='higher')   # Returns 13

print("q3_nearest, q3_lower, q3_higher:")
print(q3_nearest, q3_lower, q3_higher)


# # NumPy < 1.22.0 (using the older 'interpolation' parameter)
# q3_nearest = np.percentile(l, 75, interpolation='nearest')  # Returns 11

print("---  CALCULATION AS PER KHAN ACADEMY ---")

median = np.median(l)
print("Median:", median) # 8.0

lower_half = [x for x in l if x <= median]
upper_half = [x for x in l if x >= median]

q1 = np.median(lower_half)
q3 = np.median(upper_half)
print("Q1:", q1) # 7.0
print("Q3:", q3) # 11.0
Output
q1, q3: 7.0 11.5
q3_nearest, q3_lower, q3_higher:
11 11 13
---  CALCULATION AS PER KHAN ACADEMY ---
Median: 9.0
Q1: 7.0
Q3: 12.0

3:

4:

5:

import numpy as np 

l = [35, 39, 39, 43, 43, 44]

print(np.mean(l)) 

6:

import numpy as np

l = [1, 2, 3, 3, 4, 4, 4, 6]

q1 = np.percentile(l, 25)
q3 = np.percentile(l, 75)

print(q1, q3)

iqr = q3 - q1
print(iqr)


print("--- CALCULATION AS PER KHAN ACADEMY ---")

m = np.median(l)

lower = [x for x in l if x <= m]
upper = [x for x in l if x >= m]

print(lower, upper)
q1 = np.median(lower)
q3 = np.median(upper)
print(q1, q3)

iqr = q3 - q1
print(iqr)

7:

8:

q1 = 2
q3 = 5
iqr = q3 - q1
print(iqr)

l = [1] + [2] * 7 + [3] * 5 + [5] * 3 + [6] * 2 + [7, 9]

print(l)

lower_bound = q1 - 1.5 * iqr
upper_bound = q3 + 1.5 * iqr

print(lower_bound, upper_bound)

outliers = [x for x in l if x < lower_bound or x > upper_bound]
print(outliers)
print(len(outliers))
Tags: Data Analytics,Mathematical Foundations for Data Science,

Monday, June 8, 2026

Don't Teach. Talk.


Index of English Lessons    « Previously

Education • Field Notes • Vol. I

Don't Teach. Talk.

How to reach children who have no language foundation — and why the first word you need to find is not yours, but theirs.

By a classroom volunteer  •  For teachers, NGO workers & anyone who has ever sat across from a child and felt the silence

Imagine walking into a classroom — or a makeshift one under a flyover — and the children stare back at you with big, bright, completely blank eyes. Not blank because they are empty. Blank because they are waiting. They have no idea what a "lesson" is. They have never held a pencil. The word "fruit" means nothing to them. Neither does "red." And you are standing there with a lesson plan that says: Today we learn about apples.

This is not a hypothetical. This is Monday morning for thousands of volunteers and teachers working with children in India's urban slums — children aged 3 to 13 who have grown up without books, without school, and sometimes without a consistent language spoken at home. They are not slow learners. They are not broken. They are simply pre-literate — people who have built their entire understanding of the world through touch, sight, sound, and lived experience, not through words written on paper.

The problem is not with the child. The problem is with the method. We were taught to teach in a way that assumes a child already knows what a "definition" is, what a "category" is, what it means to sit still and listen. When none of those assumptions hold, the entire approach collapses. What do you do then?

The First Mistake: Starting With the Word

Here is how most people teach the word "apple" to a child who doesn't know the language:

"An apple is a fruit. It is red in colour. It is round. It is sweet."

Sounds reasonable. Now consider: what if the child does not know what "fruit" means? What if they have never been taught colour names? What if "round" is a geometric abstraction they have never encountered? You have answered a question using four words the child doesn't understand. You haven't taught them "apple." You have just taught them that learning is confusing.

This is the single biggest mistake in teaching pre-literate children: starting with the word instead of starting with the world. The word is the destination. The child's existing experience is the road you travel to get there.

The Right Starting Point: What Do They Already Know?

Before you explain anything, your job is to excavate. Dig into what the child already knows, feels, and has experienced in relation to the thing you want to teach. This is not assessment. This is conversation.

If you want to teach "apple," begin like this:

In Practice

Hold up a real apple. Let them touch it. Ask: "Have you seen this before? Where?" A child from a slum neighbourhood has almost certainly seen an apple vendor on the street. The moment they say "haaan, gaadi pe hota hai" (yes, on the cart), you have your bridge. Now you are not teaching them about an apple — you are talking about something they already know, and simply giving it a name.

The learning happens in the recognition, not in the definition. The word "apple" sticks because it now has an anchor in the child's memory — the vendor's cart, the smell, the crunch they once heard. You did not pour knowledge into an empty vessel. You helped them label something they already carried.

Talk, Don't Define

There is a critical difference between defining something and talking about something.

A definition is closed. It says: "This is what this is, now remember it." A conversation is open. It says: "Tell me what you think this is, and let's figure it out together." With pre-literate children — especially those who have never been inside a formal classroom — definitions feel like commands. Conversations feel like trust.

Ask more than you tell. Ask: "Does this feel rough or smooth?" Ask: "If you could eat this, what do you think it would taste like?" Ask: "Where have you seen something that looks like this?" These questions do two things simultaneously: they activate the child's existing cognitive map, and they make the child the expert on their own experience. A child who has spent years on the streets of a city knows an enormous amount about the world — vendors, weather, vehicles, animals, food smells, human behaviour. Your job is to connect the language to the knowledge they already have, not to replace their knowledge with yours.

Use the Real, Not the Represented

A hand-drawn apple in a textbook is a representation. An actual apple is a reality. For a child who cannot yet read, there is an enormous gap between the two. Pre-literate learners make connections most powerfully through their senses — what they can touch, smell, taste, hear, and see in their immediate environment.

Bring real objects into the learning space wherever possible. A leaf, a stone, a coin, a piece of cloth, a bucket of water. Do not show pictures of vegetables — bring vegetables. Do not draw a circle and call it the sun — step outside and point at the sky. When working with children in informal or low-resource settings, the richest teaching material is the neighbourhood itself. The vegetable cart. The construction site. The monsoon puddle. The stray dog that every child in the basti already has a name for.

Research in early childhood education consistently shows that pre-literate learners make meaning most naturally through oral language supported by real, physical, tangible objects — not through printed symbols or abstract categories. The classroom wall is a prop. The street outside is the curriculum.

Story Before Grammar

Long before a child can decode a sentence, they can follow a story. This is not a skill that needs to be taught — it is hardwired into how human beings learn. Oral cultures across the world have transmitted complex knowledge — about plants, seasons, relationships, morality, history — entirely through storytelling, for thousands of years. The child sitting in front of you is already part of that tradition.

Instead of teaching the word "rain" by defining it, tell a small story:

"One day, the sky got very dark. The clouds came together — thud, thud, thud — and then... whoosh. Everything got wet. The road. The dog. Everyone ran. Do you know what that was?"

Every child in a slum will know what that was. They have lived it. They will shout the answer before you finish asking. And the word "rain" — spoken in that moment of recognition — will never leave them. Story activates emotion, and emotion anchors memory. This is not a teaching trick. It is how the human brain actually works.

Honour Their Silence and Their Language

Many of the children you will encounter have a rich inner language — Hindi, Bhojpuri, Tamil, Marathi, or a mix of many — but it may not be the language you are trying to teach them. Do not treat their native tongue as an obstacle. Treat it as a resource.

If a child knows the word for something in their home language, that is the strongest possible hook for teaching them the same word in another language. Bilingual scaffolding — saying the word in both languages, letting them translate for you, asking "how do you say this at home?" — is not a concession. It is one of the most evidence-backed strategies in language acquisition for young learners.

Similarly, silence should not be read as emptiness. A child who does not answer may be processing. A child who looks away may be remembering. Give them the time. The quietest children in a classroom are often the ones making the deepest connections.

Celebrate the Small

Progress with pre-literate children looks different from progress in a traditional classroom. A child who learns to hold a pencil correctly has achieved something significant. A child who answers a question out loud for the first time has crossed a threshold that took courage. A child who uses a new word in conversation — even once, even wrongly — is building language from the inside out.

Celebrate it all. Loudly, warmly, without qualification. Children who have grown up being overlooked by systems — schools, governments, social services — have often internalised the idea that they are not worth teaching. Every act of recognition you offer them is not just pedagogical. It is political. It says: you exist, you matter, and what you know is worth building on.

A Summary You Can Carry Into the Classroom Tomorrow

01
Start with what they know. Before introducing any word or concept, find out what the child already understands about it. Their lived experience is your curriculum.
02
Talk, don't define. Ask questions that invite the child to speak. Conversation builds trust; definitions build walls.
03
Use real objects. Bring the actual thing, not a picture of it. The senses are the first classroom.
04
Teach through stories. Narrative carries meaning before grammar can. Tell it first; explain it after.
05
Respect their language. Their mother tongue is not a barrier — it is the bridge. Use it.
06
Celebrate small wins. Holding a pencil, speaking a word, answering a question — each of these is a milestone.

You don't need a whiteboard, a textbook, or a lesson plan to reach a child. You need patience, curiosity, and the willingness to listen before you speak. The children sitting in front of you are not blank slates. They are full of knowledge — raw, unschooled, beautiful knowledge — about the world they have already lived in. Your only job is to find the words for what they already know. Start there.

Written for volunteers, educators, and NGO workers working in informal learning settings • India


Index of English Lessons    « Previously

Sunday, June 7, 2026

These Personal Finance Rules DON'T Work in India


Lessons in Investing    All Posts by Ankur Warikoo    « Previously    Next »


Personal Finance in India

The Western Money Rules
That Break in India

You are not bad at money. The rules were made for someone else's country.

Ankur Warikoo -- ~2,400 words -- Personal Finance
Top 5% That is where you land in India's income distribution if you earn Rs. 50,000 a month. Out of 140 crore people, 95 out of every 100 earn less than you.

So here is the paradox. You open Instagram and every second reel is scolding you. You are not saving enough. You have not started an SIP. Your emergency fund does not exist. Someone is telling you that if you save 25 times your annual income, you can retire at 45 on FIRE income. And your brain just cannot make the math work.

You assume the problem is you. You think you must be the one getting it wrong, because surely all these experts cannot be lying at the same time.

Here is what nobody tells you: most of these rules were invented in the United States. In the 1960s, 70s, and early 2000s. For a country with 1-2% inflation, near-zero home loan rates, and a robust social security net. They were never designed for India. And when you blindly apply them to your life in Bengaluru or Mumbai, they fall apart. Not because you are doing it wrong, but because the rules themselves are wrong for your context.

Let us go through each of these rules, understand where they came from, why they do not work here, and what actually makes sense for India in 2024.

Rule 01

The 4% Rule and FIRE

Origin: USA, 1994

In 1994, an American financial planner named William Bengen wrote a paper asking a simple but powerful question: if a retired person has a lump sum saved up, how much can they withdraw every year so that the money never runs out during their lifetime?

His answer, after running the numbers on US market data, was 4%. If you have Rs. 100 as your retirement corpus and you withdraw 4% per year, your money will outlast you. This became known as the 4% Rule, and it has been repeated everywhere ever since -- including in India -- without anyone stopping to ask whether the underlying conditions still hold.

Why it breaks in India

India's average inflation runs at 6 to 7% per year. Medical inflation specifically runs at 12 to 14%. And here is the brutal part: 62% of all medical expenses in India are paid out of pocket. There is no Medicare. No Social Security. Only 21% of Indian senior citizens have any form of pension. The rest depend on their children or whatever they managed to save.

The Nifty 50 has delivered an average return of about 12.7%, which sounds impressive until you subtract inflation. After adjusting for inflation, the real growth is only 5 to 6%. Compare that to the S&P 500 in the US, which delivered a real growth of about 7% -- because American inflation was so much lower.

M. Pattabiraman, an IIT Madras physics professor who runs a personal finance blog called freefincal, did the Indian version of Bengen's math. His conclusion: if you use a 4% withdrawal rate in India, your probability of not running out of money is only 78%. That means roughly 1 in 5 people who follow this rule will outlive their savings.

The actual safe withdrawal rate for India, according to his research, is closer to 2.5 to 3%.

That one change cascades into a completely different retirement plan. Take a 35-year-old in Pune with annual expenses of Rs. 12 lakhs. If they follow the popular YouTube advice of "save 25 times your annual expenses," their FIRE number looks like Rs. 3 crore. They start a Rs. 50,000 SIP assuming 12% returns, and they estimate it will take 18 years to reach that target.

Now apply the correct Indian withdrawal rate of 3%: they actually need to save 33 times their annual expenses, not 25. That pushes the target to Rs. 3.96 crore. Add medical inflation buffers of Rs. 60 to 90 lakhs on top. Suddenly, the real target is closer to Rs. 4.5 to 5 crore -- and that same SIP now takes 24 years, not 18. Six extra years of working, just from one misapplied rule.

Rule 02

The 50-30-20 Rule

Origin: USA, 2005

Elizabeth Warren introduced this rule in her 2005 book All Your Worth: The Ultimate Lifetime Money Plan. The formula is simple: 50% of your income goes to needs, 30% goes to wants, and 20% goes to savings and investments. The book was a bestseller. By around 2015, the rule had arrived in India and taken root.

To be fair, as a starting framework for someone who has never tracked their spending, 50-30-20 does bring some clarity. But it is fundamentally built on assumptions that do not hold for most Indians earning in the Rs. 30,000 to Rs. 75,000 range.

Picture this

You are 27 years old, working in Bengaluru, earning Rs. 50,000 a month. A one-bedroom flat in HSR Layout, Koramangala, or Indiranagar starts at Rs. 20,000 to Rs. 25,000. You send some money home. You have an education loan running. Add groceries, utilities, Uber, Netflix, and Blinkit. Before you even get to wants, you have spent Rs. 35,000 to Rs. 40,000 just on needs alone.

That is 70 to 80% of your income on needs -- not 50%. And this is Bengaluru. In Mumbai, a single room in Andheri or Powai costs Rs. 30,000 to Rs. 40,000 in rent alone. Someone earning Rs. 75,000 a month can easily spend Rs. 60,000 to Rs. 65,000 just staying alive.

So what should the Indian version look like? Monika Halan, in her book Let's Talk Money, offers a more grounded framework: 60 to 70% on needs is realistic for most Indians, 10 to 15% on wants, and the goal should be 15 to 25% on savings.

The important reframe she offers is this: do not try to hit your savings target from your current salary. Hit it from your increment. Every time you get a raise, resist the urge to immediately upgrade your lifestyle. Instead, route the bulk of the increment into savings or investments. Your lifestyle does not need to grow as fast as your income does. Over time, as your salary rises, you can eventually arrive at a 50-30-20 structure -- but trying to force it at Rs. 50,000 in a metro city is a recipe for guilt and failure, not financial freedom.

Rule 03

Real Estate as a Wealth-Building Asset

Origin: USA, 1997 -- "Rich Dad Poor Dad"

Robert Kiyosaki's Rich Dad Poor Dad, published in 1997, set off a worldwide obsession. The core idea: take a loan to buy real estate, rent it out, use the rental income to cover the EMI, and over time you own a property that paid for itself. Brilliant in theory. And the math actually did work -- in America.

When Kiyosaki wrote the book, home loan interest rates in the US were around 1 to 1.5%. Rental yields -- the annual rent you earn as a percentage of the property's value -- were around 4 to 5%. Simple math: your EMI is small, your rental income is bigger, you are cash-flow positive from day one.

The US Math (1997) The India Math (Today)
Home loan rate: 1 to 1.5% Home loan rate: 8 to 9.5%
Rental yield: 4 to 5% Rental yield: 2 to 3%
Result: Cash-flow positive Result: You fund a 6% gap monthly

In India, you borrow at 8 to 9% and earn rent at 2 to 3%. You are paying 6% out of your pocket every month just to hold the property. Then add property tax, maintenance, broker fees when tenants leave, vacancy periods, and repairs. Yes, the property value may go up -- but when you do the full math, Indian residential real estate on average delivers a net return of 5 to 7%. A fixed deposit can give you similar returns with zero headache and zero capital locked in.

The honest truth about your home: it is not an asset. It is a home. You did not buy it hoping to sell it for profit. Treat it as a liability that costs you money every year, and make peace with that. Do not treat it as the cornerstone of your financial plan.

If you genuinely want real estate exposure in your portfolio, here are two better options for India. First, look at commercial real estate, where rental yields are higher -- around 4 to 6% -- though still below loan rates. Second, and more practically, consider REITs (Real Estate Investment Trusts). These are listed on stock exchanges like regular stocks, but they represent stakes in commercial real estate companies and projects. As their rental income grows, your investment grows. You get real estate returns without locking up crores in a single illiquid asset.

Rule 04

The 12-Month Emergency Fund

Origin: USA, mid-2000s -- Suze Orman

American financial advisor Suze Orman popularised the idea of keeping 12 months of essential expenses saved in cash at all times. If you lose your job or face a major setback, you have a full year of runway. The principle is sound. The numbers, however, are paralyzing for most Indians.

Take the same Rs. 50,000 example. If your essential monthly expenses are Rs. 40,000, then a 12-month emergency fund means you need Rs. 4,80,000 sitting idle in your bank account. If you can save Rs. 10,000 per month and direct every rupee of it toward this goal, you are looking at 48 months -- four years -- just to build this one fund. That is four years where you cannot invest in mutual funds, cannot buy gold, cannot make any progress toward actual wealth-building. The rule, applied literally, becomes a trap.

A more practical Indian approach works in three layers:

01
One month's expenses in your savings account. That is the minimum floor. Rs. 40,000 for someone spending Rs. 40,000 a month. This might come from a bonus, a family loan, or a few months of disciplined saving. Once you have it, stop touching it.
02
An ongoing emergency SIP in a Liquid Mutual Fund. A liquid fund is exactly what its name suggests -- you can redeem it and receive the money in your bank account within 24 hours. Put a small monthly SIP into this fund. It is not for investing to grow wealth; it is for protecting against emergencies. Do not touch it unless there is a genuine emergency, in which case you will pay a small amount of tax on the gains, which is a small price for financial security.
03
A credit card, used wisely. A responsibly used credit card is effectively a 30-day interest-free loan. If an emergency hits and your liquid fund has not yet grown large enough, you can use the credit card for a month's expenses and repay it within the billing cycle. This buys you breathing room without high-interest debt, assuming you pay the full balance on time.

This three-layer system is far more achievable than hoarding 12 months of expenses in a zero-growth savings account.

Rule 05

The 100 Minus X Rule

Origin: USA -- John Bogle, Vanguard

John Bogle, founder of Vanguard and one of the most respected figures in investing history, popularised a simple rule for asset allocation: subtract your age from 100. That percentage goes into stocks. The rest goes into debt (fixed-return instruments). If you are 25 years old, put 75% in equity and 25% in debt. As you age, shift progressively toward safety.

The logic was sound for the US context. American inflation was 1 to 2%, government bonds and fixed deposits paid 4 to 5%, and the stock market returned around 10%. After adjusting for inflation, both debt and equity gave you positive real returns. Debt was safe, equity was growth, and the rule helped you balance between them.

In India, this logic falls apart. Indian inflation averages 6 to 7%. FDs pay around 5 to 5.5%. Provident Fund gives around 7 to 7.5%. After tax, almost no fixed-income instrument in India beats inflation. Which raises an obvious question: why are you putting money there to grow?

Use debt instruments for one purpose only: to protect money you know you will need within 2 to 3 years. If you have a fixed goal -- a wedding, a down payment, your child's school fees -- put that specific sum in a safe debt instrument, because you cannot afford the volatility of the stock market for a near-term commitment.

But for long-term wealth building -- 5, 10, 15, 20 years out -- put as much as you can into equity. The Indian stock market is the only instrument in this country that reliably beats inflation after tax over the long run. Gold has done well too and can be a secondary allocation. Real estate, as discussed, barely keeps up. Debt does not keep up at all. The 100 minus X rule nudges you toward safety that is actually just slow erosion of purchasing power in the Indian context.

Rule 06

The Snowball Method for Loans

Origin: USA -- Dave Ramsey

The Snowball Method says: if you have multiple loans, list them from smallest to largest. Pay off the smallest one first, get the psychological win of closing a loan, feel motivated, and then roll that energy into the next one. The name comes from the idea of a snowball gaining size as it rolls downhill.

In the US, where the different types of loans tend to cluster in a relatively narrow interest rate band, this approach makes emotional sense. The difference between a car loan at 4% and a mortgage at 3.5% is not catastrophic if you choose the wrong order.

In India, the spread between different loan types is enormous:

Home Loan 8 to 9%
Education Loan 9 to 10%
Personal Loan 14 to 16%
Credit Card Debt 35 to 45%
Predatory App Loans 50 to 60%+

If you spend two years paying off your smallest loan at 9% while your credit card debt compounds at 40%, you will be in far worse shape by the time you get to it. The cheap loan can wait. The expensive one cannot.

India needs the Avalanche Method, not the Snowball. List your loans by interest rate, highest to lowest. Attack the most expensive loan first, regardless of its size. Yes, it may take longer to see a loan fully closed. But it saves you the most money in interest, and it prevents the high-rate debt from becoming a catastrophic snowball of its own. Always ask: what is the interest rate? Start there.

What Actually Works in India

The rules above were not invented to mislead anyone. They were invented for a specific country, at a specific time, under specific economic conditions. The mistake is applying them without asking whether those conditions match yours. Here is a quick summary of the India-specific adjustments:

  • 4% Rule / FIRE: Use a safe withdrawal rate of 2.5 to 3% for India. Your FIRE number is closer to 33 times your annual expenses, not 25. Factor in medical inflation separately -- it is nearly double the regular rate.
  • 50-30-20 Rule: In India, 60 to 70% on needs is realistic for metro earners. Focus on routing your salary increments into savings rather than forcing an unreachable ratio from your current income.
  • Real Estate: Your home is not an investment. Rental yields in India cannot cover home loan interest rates. For real estate exposure, consider REITs or commercial real estate instead of residential property.
  • Emergency Fund: Do not try to build 12 months of expenses upfront. Build a 1-month cash buffer in your bank account, run a separate emergency SIP in a liquid mutual fund, and use a credit card responsibly as a short-term bridge.
  • 100 Minus X (Debt vs. Equity): In India, almost no fixed-income product beats inflation after tax. Use debt instruments only to protect money needed within 3 years. For everything else and long-term goals, prioritise equity -- it is the only instrument in India that reliably beats inflation over time.
  • Snowball Loan Repayment: Use the Avalanche Method instead. List loans by interest rate, highest first, and pay those off before the cheaper ones. The interest rate spread between loan types in India is too wide to follow the Snowball approach without significant financial damage.
  • Above all: You are not behind. You are not bad at money. You were handed rules designed for someone else's economy. Now that you know which rules apply and which ones do not, you can build a financial plan that actually works for your life, your city, and your country.

Citations and References

  1. Bengen, William P. (1994). Determining Withdrawal Rates Using Historical Data. Journal of Financial Planning.
  2. Pattabiraman, M. (freefincal.com). Independent research on safe withdrawal rates adjusted for Indian inflation and equity market conditions.
  3. Warren, Elizabeth and Warren Tyagi, Amelia (2005). All Your Worth: The Ultimate Lifetime Money Plan. Free Press.
  4. Halan, Monika (2018). Let's Talk Money: You've Worked Hard for It, Now Make It Work for You. HarperCollins India.
  5. Kiyosaki, Robert T. (1997). Rich Dad Poor Dad. Warner Books.
  6. Bogle, John C. The Little Book of Common Sense Investing. Wiley. (Source of the 100 minus age allocation rule.)
  7. NSE India. Nifty 50 historical returns data. Available at nseindia.com.
  8. National Sample Survey Office (NSSO) and RBI reports on Indian household income distribution, cited for the "top 5% at Rs. 50,000" statistic.
  9. Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI). Annual CPI inflation data for India.
  10. Warikoo, Ankur. Do Epic Shit and associated YouTube content on personal finance for Indian millennials.

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