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A No-Brainer

May 10, 2013 in Finance, United States

Many factors likely influenced Apple’s innovative strategy to avoid taxes by borrowing money.

It is even possible they realized they were not avoiding taxes, only postponing them.

I have noticed that most people look for ways to postpone taxes. They assume they can do this indefinitely.

Therefore, it is reasonable to assume this was Apple’s only goal.

However, based on the mainstream media articles and based on behavior I have witnessed in thirty plus years of preparing taxes, I suspect something else is going on here.

no brainerMarketers, fulfilling agendas, have trained us make unwise financial decisions.

By “unwise,” I mean we make decisions that reduce the amount of money we keep by spending more than is necessary.

Obviously, if someone is being generous, giving to humanity, and serving from a heart of love, this is not “unwise.”

However, if the goal is to acquire assets and reduce expenses, increasing overall expenses in an effort to reduce taxes is unwise.

More than once, a client has walked into my office and announced an unwise financial decision under the guise of receiving the reward of a tax deduction.

He is surprised when the barely affordable ten-thousand dollar expenditure only results in a tax savings of a couple thousand dollars.

My explanations about tax rates usually fall on deaf ears.

A few years later, he repeats the behavior.

He continuously does the opposite of what he claims he is attempting to do.

He has bought into the marketing that says avoid taxes at all costs.

Apple’s strategy may have come from the influence of this type of marketing.

The conversation between the decision makers, brain-washed by such ideas, could have gone like this.

“We need funds to buy back stock. We have it in the accounts of our overseas subsidiaries. Is there any reason we can’t use it?

“Well, you’d have to pay a 35% tax to bring it into the country.”

“Ouch! We can’t do that. Are there other options?”

“Let’s see… If you used the overseas funds as collateral, you could likely borrow the money at a low percentage rate, probably less than 3%.”

“That’s a great idea. Paying 3% interest sure beats paying 35% taxes. Let’s do it.”

No one asked questions about the effects of reducing annual cash flow by more than three hundred million dollars.

No one considered the net cost of borrowing that would total more than two hundred million a year.

No one said the amount of tax on the income earned to pay back the loan would be the same as the tax to bring the funds into the country.

After the fact, someone may have asked questions – in private.

Before those questions could work their way to the surface, someone issued a press release praising the strategy.

The marketers saw this as an opportunity to fulfill their agenda.

“Apple, haven of the geniuses and supercool company of the past three decades, was practicing innovative tax strategies.”

It was perfect.

The marketers proclaimed the wisdom of avoiding taxes, figuring that if someone realized the strategy didn’t avoid taxes, it only postponed them, they could still portray this as a wise decision.

They lauded the wisdom of paying interest on borrowed money as another great way to avoid paying taxes. They pointed out the 308-million interest payment and praised it as a 100-million tax reduction.

Then, because double meanings and humor are great marketing tools, they got a senior vice president of Moody’s to say this decision was a “no-brainer.”

I couldn’t have said it better myself.

The Cost of Avoiding Taxes

May 9, 2013 in Finance, United States

One of the agendas of mainstream media is to get Americans to make poor financial decisions in an attempt to avoid taxes.

They shine up these decisions and make them look very attractive.

Awareness requires us to look under the façade.

A month ago, I wrote about Craig, my client with the one hundred and twenty thousand dollar tax bill.

It was part of my series about how tax breaks are part of an agenda to get taxpayers to do something they otherwise would not do.

I pointed out that Craig’s business and financial success was directly tied to his ability to accept and pay taxes.

I mentioned that avoiding taxes is often one of the excuses I hear for people not making wise financial decisions. American taxpayers take on mortgages, purchase health insurance, contribute to charities, and participate in retirement accounts because all of those behaviors come with tax breaks.

They do this even when it is not in their best interest to do so.

Even though Craig understands that avoiding taxes isn’t the primary goal of business, he still looks for ways to reduce his tax bill.

After all, he is a businessperson.

Apple logo shineTherefore, I wasn’t surprised when he sent me a link to this article a few days ago.

Apple’s debt strategy saves $9.2B in taxes (plus $100m a year in interest deductions)

Craig has offshore connections and he wanted me to be aware of how Apple used their offshore assets to save domestic taxes.

I read the article and cringed.

It was typical advertising: Praise the benefits. Don’t mention the harm.

Apple wanted to use its offshore cash to buy back stock. However, the cost of bringing offshore money into the United States is a 35% tax.

Therefore, rather than use the offshore cash, they borrowed money for the stock purchase.

Since the interest on the loan was less than the tax on importing the cash, the article praised Apple’s financial creativity.

As a tax strategy for one year, it was a good idea.

There was lots of shine.

However, when we get past the shine, there are significant financial ramifications.

For example, the money to make the non-tax-deductible payments on the loan will come out of profit.

The tax on that profit will be 35%.

Therefore, this strategy doesn’t produce tax savings.

It produces tax postponement.

Long-term, Apple will pay the same amount in taxes.

The consequences don’t stop there.

The decision to borrow the money reduced Apple’s annual cash flow by hundreds of millions of dollars.

According to the article, the loan will carry more than three hundred million dollars in annual interest. Even though this is a deductible expense, Apple doesn’t receive dollar for dollar benefit.

They will pay the lender three hundred million and only save one hundred million in taxes.

That’s a two hundred million dollar drain on cash flow the first year – it will be less in subsequent years as the loan balance decreases – and I haven’t included the amount of the principal repayment in my calculation.

If Apple remains profitable, and it must to repay the loan, the IRS will still receive one hundred percent of its revenue.

In addition, the lender will receive hundreds of millions of dollars in taxable interest income.

There is no tax savings.

Apple’s expenses increase.

Mainstream media shines it up as a great decision.

This is how the agenda works.

To be continued…

Fear-Based Marketing

May 7, 2013 in Finance, United States

Deciphering the agenda of those that control government and media is relatively easy.

We observe a series of events and watch the results.

If this series repeats, producing the same results, it is likely part of the current agenda – what some call a “conspiracy.”

In truth, it is marketing in action through the manipulation of information delivered as “news.”

Let’s look closer.

Government is business.

Those who control government and media are in business.

The most profitable businesses focus on conflict.

The ScreamAny marketer will tell you that greed and fear are the greatest motivators to get people to buy.

In general, consumers demonstrate their greed by searching for the cheapest price possible. However, low prices are not profitable.

Therefore, marketers focus on fear by marketing protection.

That protection may be insurance, legal protection, medical care, or any other kind of defensive product, including firearms and military power.

Consumers will pay exorbitant prices, even to the point of going into significant debt, for these products.

This is the result of fear-based marketing.

It is effective for accomplishing agendas.

Fear of another person or society or government or race is a central part of our world’s culture. Marketers have successfully delivered that message.

Now, the biggest marketing challenge is keeping consumers focused on the enemy du jour.

This is a challenge because, as the general public becomes familiar with an enemy, we become less afraid of them. We realize they are us.

Therefore, marketers must create new enemies and recreate old ones through generating new fears.

I pointed out yesterday that one of the byproducts of the Boston bombing was to change America’s focus from North Korea to Muslims.

In the days following the double blast in Beantown, North Korea’s missiles were still in launch position. They were still a threat.

However, the news in Boston pushed North Korea out of the headlines.

It renewed our focus on Islamic terrorists – even while the North Korean threat was still there.

In fact, according to the story linked here, North Korea’s missiles remained in launch position – and ignored – until yesterday.

Now, as the Boston story wanes, marketers must shine their spotlight on someone else.

Maybe North Korea will come back to the stage. Maybe they put away the missiles so they could dramatically bring them out again.

Or, maybe someone else will appear.

Israel auditioned for the role over the weekend.

The agenda is to keep a perceived conflict fresh in our minds.

If one story fades, freshen it or freshen another one.

The marketers must keep the conflict going.

They must carefully communicate each event to support this agenda.

This provides job security for those in the various defense industries.

And, it serves as a distraction to what is simmering underneath the surface.

I’ll write about that nearly boiling caldron in tomorrow’s article.

Peaceful is NOT Passive

April 17, 2013 in Finance, Spirituality

Peaceful active streamMy comments at the end of yesterday’s article may be misunderstood as passive.

They are not.

Instead, they provide a framework for how to respond to challenging circumstances.

Hopefully, an example from a recent email exchange will help you understand.

Matt, I’ve followed your series about taxes with interest, because it’s a subject with which I’ve struggled for a bit, to say the least. I don’t disagree with your conclusion in the last installment, and I have a question about it.

It seems to me that if the federal taxes most people pay were legitimately based, your conclusions are valid. (I’ll assume for the moment that state-based taxes are so based, just for purposes of discussion.) My studies of federal tax law have revealed to me that we may have been misled for a long, long time about the legal basis for most people’s paying of taxes. That is, there are credible challenges to both the meaning and application of the so-called “tax laws.” Also, we may have been likewise misled about where those paid taxes actually go. I’ve read over the years that a very high percentage of paid taxes, if not 100%, goes to the payment of interest on the debt generated by, among other things, the Federal Reserve “system” — i.e., the paid taxes enrich foreign bankers, among others, and simply regenerate and perpetuate the debt-driven financial system that seems to have enslaved people in the United States, if not all over the world. My question is: If these assertions about the federal tax system are correct and you take them into account (pun intended), are your conclusions still the same?

Thanks Matt.

Here is my response:

Thanks for the email, the kind comments, and the question. I must admit that the issue troubled me even as I came to my conclusions.

After a couple of days of consideration, my conclusions are still the same.

Here is why:

My conclusions are based on observations about those who experience abundance. Abundance requires an inner attitude of allowance; what some would call non-resistance. Within the examples I wrote about, this includes non-resistance to paying taxes.

I completely agree with your premise regarding taxes. I have said similar things in previous articles.

However, there is another element to our tax system that requires consideration. Those who are not part of the elite support the tax system because they hope the system will support them through socialistic programs. This emotional support contributes as much lifeblood to our system as the elite’s manipulation.

It seems that the peaceful response is to determine how to use the Law of Abundance to create substantial resources that allows one to experience a chosen lifestyle and still pay taxes. From my perspective, this is a more viable response for a long-term solution than protesting taxes because it allows individuals to take responsibility for their own destiny rather than playing the role of victim by blaming others.

This requires considerable effort and skill. My observation is that it is worth the effort. :-)

It is in the final two paragraphs of my email that we see why my philosophy is not a passive one.

It is peaceful.

It is active, even proactive.

It is not passive.

The peaceful response requires awareness.

It requires allowance.

It requires acceptance.

The understanding that comes from practicing these traits develops a pure energy; one that is not lessened by attacking and defending.

It is strengthened by receiving and enhancing.

I see it in the response to what happened in Boston on Monday.

I’ll explain what I mean in tomorrow’s writing.

Peacefully Responding to Paying Taxes

April 12, 2013 in Finance, Spirituality

“I have a question for you.”

The voice on the other end of the phone call was Jose, the young man with the forty-thousand dollar tax bill.

artistic tax“After doing my taxes, do you think I should pay off my house?”

“What’s the balance?”

“About a hundred sixty thousand.”

“Do you have that much cash?”

“No problem.”

“Do you need the money to fund your business?”

“You’ve seen my bank balance. I have enough to pay off my house and keep the business funded.”

Based on the work I had recently done for Jose, I agreed with his assessment.

“You’re the tax guy, and tax guys say mortgage interest helps my taxes. What do you think?”

“Well, you paid six thousand dollars in mortgage interest. That saved you about two thousand dollars in taxes.”

“So, it isn’t that good of a deal?”

“You’re a businessman. This isn’t a magic trick. You paid six thousand in interest to reduce your tax bill by two thousand. It’s pretty obvious to me. We are programmed in our country to think that mortgage interest is a great tax deal. You’ve only been here a few years so you’re not programmed and you’re just looking at the numbers.”

“The numbers say mortgage interest isn’t a good deal. I’m paying off my house.”

“That’s what I would do if I were you.”

“Thanks for your time.”

As Jose hung up the phone, I thought about how his attitude about money was simple, logical, and free.

He recognized that reducing taxes was important.

However, it was secondary to reducing overall expenses.

He was grateful to pay taxes because, to him, it meant freedom.

Therefore, taxes were not to be avoided at all costs, especially if avoiding taxes was more expensive than paying them.

My interaction with Jose brought a sense of conclusion to my search for the peaceful response to taxes.

I unknowingly started this search almost three weeks ago while writing about the banking crisis in Cyprus.

As I considered the risks involved with doing business with banks and other financial institutions, I noticed that tax breaks are often used as carrots to get us to do something we otherwise would not do.

As I investigated tax deductions, I realized they are used to encourage poor decisions in the areas of education, religion, medicine, investments, and wealth building.

Then, I noticed the attitude of wealthy clients when they pay taxes.

I realized their lack of resistance to paying taxes was a key to their abundance.

I came to understand that paying taxes is one way of demonstrating the concept of unity.

Furthermore, paying taxes is congruent with the definition of ownership that says we pay for the privilege of caring for and releasing the “possessions” in our lives, as opposed to becoming attached to them and attempting to control them.

My experiences and new understandings over the past few weeks have demonstrated that the tax system has flaws. It is used and manipulated for the benefit of the few.

However, with awareness and wisdom, it may still be used, even in its imperfection, to work towards a peaceful society.

I’m sure I’ll return to this topic in future articles.

For now, there is something looming in the Far East and on America’s western horizon that needs to be addressed.

I’ll write about the threat from North Korea tomorrow.

Native Myths Hidden Within Modern Tax Laws

April 11, 2013 in Finance, Spirituality

In my writing about ownership, I’ve noticed a pattern.

I’ve been hesitant to write about it because, quite frankly, taxes are government theft.

They are immoral, even illegal.

On the surface, it appears that America’s willingness to pay taxes has more to do with the fear of the IRS than with understanding the spiritual principle I have written about over the past couple of days.

However, when I consider what I know about the spiritual word, I realize we may be more willing to pay taxes than we admit.

  • I know that we always do what we want.
  • I know that the Law of Attraction is how everything arrives in our lives.
  • I know that we create our own realities.

If I apply this to our current tax system, I see something unexpected.

I see unity.

Manhattan PurchaseIt starts with the idea (the myth?) that native cultures share resources. They don’t believe it is possible to own land, water, and air.

When we express this idea in our current vocabulary, we say these shared resources are “publicly owned.”

Proponents of private ownership claim that shared resources are abused resources. A person or corporation who doesn’t own the property leaves messes for others.

The iconic moment of such abuse takes us back to a Sunday afternoon in 1969 when a Cleveland waterway caught fire.

And, while private ownership laws establish a legal responsibility for the mess, the mess is often still there.

Government has responded by passing laws that force private property owners to clean their messes for the benefit of the community.

As I said, we see the idea of unity.

One must do what is best for the whole.

When we look at taxes, we see a similar philosophy.

It is a philosophy that says, “We will take the money, put it into a common purse, and use those resources to benefit the community.”

Obviously, the way this is practiced in the U.S. is full of problems.

  • Government employees and administrators manipulate the system to keep their jobs and maintain their departments.
  • Those who understand the system manipulate it to avoid work and live off taxpayer support. Paradoxically, they expend more effort doing this than doing something productive.
  • The greatest percent of an individual’s money is spent on taxes.

Even with all of the problems, we still see the overriding principle of unity.

Those who understand this don’t fight the system.

They work within it to improve their lives and the lives of those they touch.

They understand that arguing the merits of public ownership or private ownership isn’t the issue.

The issue is how someone sees ownership.

Is it seen as a method of control and attachment or is it seen as a method of care and release?

The problems result when ownership, public or private, is seen as control and attachment,

Over the past few days, I have come to understand that ownership is really about the care and release we see in the native ideology myth.

In the United States, this native ideology has been “updated” with ownership laws and funded by taxes.

In other words, we have collectively evolved back towards unity.

At best, it is an imperfect system.

However, we do not make it better by fighting it.

We make it better by working within it to do the best we can do. My clients, Craig and Jose, demonstrated this to me recently.

I’ll give more examples of this process tomorrow.

It Is What It Is

April 10, 2013 in Finance, Spirituality

I’m not saying tax laws are just.

I’m not saying they are fair.

In fact, there is a philosophy that says taxes are nothing more than government sponsored theft.

The argument goes like this.

Anytime someone takes something from someone unwillingly, it is a crime. We call these crimes kidnapping, rape, murder, and theft, unless government is doing the taking.

When government commits these acts, the terms change to war, national security, and taxes.

What I am saying is that there is an underlying principle that says we are all one. Therefore, ownership is about paying to take care of something so it remains available to be shared with others.

And, even though taxation is an unjust and possibly illegal form of doing this, I have observed that those who don’t have an issue with paying taxes are the ones who live the more abundant lives.

To many people, this observation seems counterintuitive.

This doesn’t make it any less true.

It is what it isI wrote yesterday about my client, Craig, who had the tax bill of almost one hundred and twenty thousand dollars.

He said the large tax bill was an indication of his success.

He didn’t complain about it.

He said, “It is what it is.”

Later in the day, I delivered taxes to Jose (not his real name).

Jose had crossed the Mexican border several years ago to live in the United States.

The sadness in his eyes likely hides horrors experienced in Juarez.

His response to his forty thousand dollar tax bill confirmed this.

“That’s not too bad. It’s a small price for living in a country where I can be free to build a business, make money, and enjoy life.”

“I apologize that I couldn’t reduce it more.”

“You did fine. It is what it is.”

My mind raced as I concluded the meeting with Jose.

His response was identical to Craig’s.

These two young men, who had experienced remarkable success and were willingly paying a larger than average tax bill, shared a common philosophy.

This shared philosophy, as demonstrated by their identical responses, was a sign.

Divinity was giving me a clue.

“It is what it is” is the third person version of “I am that I am,” the description commonly used for God in certain religious texts.

Subconsciously, perhaps consciously, each had equated taxes with Divinity.

I squirmed at the thought and was reminded that Jesus said, “give to Caesar what is Caesar and to God what is God’s.”

I realized this likely wasn’t a command as much as it was good advice.

It was Jesus’ way of teaching generosity.

It was Jesus’ way of confirming that the world is abundant.

It was Jesus’ way of saying that ownership is about taking care of something so it remains available to be shared with others.

I considered this and attempted to understand taxes from this new perspective.

I will write about my thought process tomorrow.

Non-Attachment and Abundance

April 9, 2013 in Finance, Spirituality

Pay taxes“Between your state and federal tax returns, the total amount owed is just under one hundred and twenty thousand dollars.”

My client and I had discussed this amount for several months. We had done everything we could do to reduce it.

However, the tax code is written so that certain credits and deductions disappear as an individual’s income increases.

Therefore, even though my client qualified for several significant credits, his income was too much for him to benefit from them this year.

Craig (not his real name) held his breath and closed his eyes.

We were sharing lunch in a restaurant so I knew that any outburst would be restrained.

When he opened his eyes, they were teary.

“It is what it is.”

As we shared our meal, I learned that the tears in Craig eyes were not there because of the pain of paying more in taxes than most of my clients earn in a year.

They were there because he had practiced certain financial principles, what some would call spiritual principles, and he had reaped the benefits of those principles.

The large tax liability was an indication of his business and financial success.

His ability to accept and willingly pay the amount due was a demonstration of Craig’s practice of non-attachment, the key to abundance that I identified in yesterday’s writing.

Non-attachment allows an individual to experience wealth because most people are afraid of losing what they have.

Therefore, instead of experiencing wealth, they focus on protecting what they have. They become savers.

Mentally, this puts energy into old activities instead of new ones. This stifles creativity as, instead of growing forward, they protect the past.

Spiritually, this creates a bottleneck for energy as they reduce generosity to have “something for a rainy day.”

Emotionally, this generates distrust as they think someone will take what they have.

They are afraid to lose so they are afraid to obtain.

With non-attachment, it is possible to release the past with the full knowledge that, just as nature is lavish in demonstrating its beauty to us, the universe is lavish in demonstrating its abundance to us.

This spiritual insight is significant.

It completely changes our traditional viewpoint of ownership.

In fact, with this perspective, ownership laws are not necessary.

A society only requires these laws when it attaches to things and attempts to control them.

When a society sees ownership as responsibility, when it sees ownership as the power to release something it has cared for, private property laws are unnecessary.

Of course, the laws exist.

And, they seem unfair and unjust.

I know how hard Craig worked.

I know the risks he took.

I know he earned every dollar.

Why should he willingly allow himself to be looted by government authorities?

The reason is simple.

His willingness to prepare for and pay those taxes demonstrates non-attachment.

The principle is an essential practice of Buddhism.

According to Paul’s writings, it was demonstrated by Jesus.

We see it demonstrated in nature.

It is the key attitude necessary for one to experience abundance.

The Myth of Ownership

April 8, 2013 in Finance, Spirituality

Mastering financial principles is a practical method of mastering spiritual ones.

In fact, I believe the two areas are intrinsically linked.

I’m not the only one.

Jesus taught this too. He said that managing “unrighteous mammon” is the key to comprehending truth.

Today, I start a series of articles that link financial principles to spiritual ones.

I start with a concept that I introduced in yesterday’s article when I said we may not own anything. We only pay for the privilege of taking care of it.

Bird release from cageThis understanding is a key to experiencing abundance because abundance requires an attitude of non-attachment and non-attachment is only possible with an accurate perspective of ownership.

Let’s look closer at this idea.

I noted yesterday that the Native Americans who “sold” Manhattan to the Dutch did not believe land could be possessed.

It could only be shared.

This is still a belief in some cultures.

In spite of this, most of society believes otherwise.

We purchase land, build houses, stake our homesteads, and establish our privacy.

Often, these transactions involve mortgages, real estate contracts, and other debt instruments.

This builds an economy, funds workers, and provides security.

It is an elaborate game that individuals play with public land.

It only takes a war, a change in government, or a similar crisis for individuals to realize that all land belongs to the public.

Property owners acknowledge and agree with this idea at least once a year when they initiate payment of their property tax.

A little research through the history of America tells us that battles were often fought on “private” property.

Land was overrun, houses were used as generals’ headquarters, and food was confiscated by soldiers. It quickly transitioned from private to public.

More recently, according to the article linked here, Germany used real estate tax in the form of compulsory mortgages to raise revenue after World War II.

Americans naively believe this will not happen in the U.S. because the Constitution protects life, liberty, and property.

Theoretically, it establishes and protects principles of private property ownership.

However, these principles generally only apply between individuals.

They become moot as soon as government begins to enact and enforce tax laws because, if something can be taxed, it doesn’t belong completely to the “owner.”

As I said, the purchase price is what is paid in to gain the privilege of taking care of it.

Part of taking care of it includes paying the appropriate taxes.

If someone can’t do this, government takes back the property and sells it to someone who can.

This concept of government ownership and public control as demonstrated through tax enforcement doesn’t stop with real property.

Police officers may confiscate vehicles when pursuing criminals – the annual registration fees we pay give them permission to do so.

Birth certificates give government officials access to controlling individuals.

Taxes on earnings, sales, and savings strip ownership rights on those transactions.

If government makes the taxes high enough, it can prevent certain transactions from taking place.

If government makes property taxes high enough, it can make them unaffordable and provide a legal strategy for seizing the underlying property.

This financial reality seems unfair and top heavy.

However, it also reminds us of a spiritual truth.

Ownership, as we think of it, is a myth.

If we think we own something, we seek to control it and we attach to it.

Ownership is not about control and attachment.

Truthfully, it is about care and release.

Within this perspective, true abundance is possible.

To be continued…

Buyer’s Remorse

April 7, 2013 in Finance, Spirituality

Buyer's remorseThe struggle with purchasing decisions isn’t unusual.

If you don’t believe me, just watch the return line at your local Wal-Mart.

Our society has even coined a term for the emotional twinge we feel after making a purchase.

We call it “buyer’s remorse.”

Questions flood our mind.

  • Did I get ripped off?
  • Did I pay too much?
  • Will this do what I want it to do?
  • Will my friends like it?
  • Should I have saved that money?
  • Can I make this expense tax deductible?

The couple in yesterday’s article was, in some part, attempting to avoid those negative emotions by trying to answer at least some of those questions prior to making a major purchase.

This raises the question, “In a world with so much abundance, why do we struggle with ownership decisions?”

One possibility is that ownership isn’t a one-way street.

Said another way, what we own, owns us.

A spiritual truth holds another possibility.

We are all one.

At the most fundamental level, every being, object, and substance is made of the same ingredients.

If that is the case, it is virtually impossible to own anything.

This question reminds me of the myth that describes how Manhattan was purchased from the local natives for the equivalent of twenty-four dollars.

White Europeans, who practiced land ownership, attempted to purchase land from the Native Americans.

The concept of land ownership was foreign to the natives and communication was difficult because of language differences. Therefore, the common theory is that, while the white man thought they were buying the land, the natives were only agreeing to share it.

It is within this idea that we may identify our society’s lack of comfort with purchasing decisions.

In truth, we cannot own anything.

Some spiritual practitioners take this to an extreme.

They eschew anything to do with money.

They avoid learning about building physical wealth.

They miss many spiritual lessons.

Yes, I said spiritual.

While ownership may not seem spiritually practical, this perspective changes when we recognize we only pay to gain stewardship of an item.

The purchase price is how we earn the privilege of taking care of something for a period of time.

And, those of us who pursue a spiritual practice are not compromised when we seek to master these financial techniques.

In fact, mastering financial principles is a practical way of mastering spiritual ones.

I’ll explain what I mean in tomorrow’s writing.