Every time a political candidate asks if you’re better off than four years ago, I can’t help but sigh. The implication, regardless of party, is always that you’re worse off and that they are the answer to your problems.
The Democrat says things went downhill under the Republican, and the Republican says the same about the Democrat. Naturally, we’re often inclined to believe these claims from our favored party. Sure, bad things have happened over the past four years—there’s no denying that. Elevated inflation and crime are terrible. Life is full of imperfections and twists of fate.
Yet, as a rational thinker who doesn’t let politics sway them, you know that most people are almost always better off today than they were four years ago. We can start by looking at finances, where progress is often straightforward to measure, and then consider other aspects of life.
Ready to look on the bright side, especially if your political party lost? Because at the end of the day, you are the answer to your problems, nobody else. And you are strong.
You're Richer Four Years Later
On November 1, 2020, the S&P 500 was at 3,509. Four years later, the S&P 500 is at about 5,700. Given that the majority of us are passive index investors, the majority of our public equity investments are up ~65%.
In Q4 2020, the median home price in America was $338,600. Four years later, the median home price is over $420,000. Given that the majority of us also own real estate, we are 24% richer on average. However, if we bought our homes with a mortgage, our returns on our down payments are likely up 70%–110%+.
Now under another Trump presidency, we could see a melt-up in the stock market and other risk assets given taxes will likely not increase and government regulation will decline. But of course, the future is never certain.
You Can't Help But Stay Focused Financially
It is highly unlikely that readers of Financial Samurai or any other personal finance site are poorer four years later. You’ve read posts such as How To Predict A Stock Market Bottom Like Nostradamus right after COVID hit, suggesting the bottom was near and that you should be buying. At the very least, you weren't panic selling.
You read Real Estate Buying Strategies During COVID-19, which might have made you pounce on good deals in 2020. Then you read posts like How to Boost Rental Income Through Remodeling to increase your gains.
There’s no paywall to read any of my articles, so there is no cost to learning and taking action. Meanwhile, if you subscribed to my free weekly newsletter, you’d stay on top of the most important items.
There’s no way you’d start frivolously spending your money on wasteful things when you’re constantly being encouraged to work hard, take calculated risks, and aggressively save for the future.
Now multiply Financial Samurai by 1,000, because that’s at least how many personal finance sites, podcasts, and video channels, there are in America alone to follow.
You're More Knowledgeable Four Years Later
Not only are you richer four years later, your knowledge capital has increased thanks to all the reading, listening, watching, and learning you’ve done. In addition to reading Financial Samurai and other sites multiple times a week—think about all the books you’ve read after 1,460 days!
As an author of two books, with another two coming, I know that each traditionally published book takes at least two years to write and edit. Extreme thought and care go into book publishing. The author is usually an expert in their field, who does even more research to make their book as valuable as possible.
Let’s say you realistically read one book a quarter. That’s 16 books of knowledge you’ve read in four years on various subjects. If you read one book every two months, then that’s 24 books you’ve read in four years. I sure hope you've read Buy This Not That already. I'm confident it will provide you at least 100X more value than its cost.
Once you have the knowledge to do something, your life gets better because you become more confident. When you have confidence, you gain the courage to take action to fix suboptimal situations.
You're Wiser Four Years Later
Wisdom is the ability to make sound decisions and navigate life thoughtfully, drawing on experience, empathy, and insight.
Wisdom comes through experience, both good and bad. During these past four years, you’ve learned how to become a better communicator, better parent, better friend, better son or daughter, and better person. All the conflicts you’ve had over the past four years are learning experiences to help you better deal with future conflicts.
No longer do you waste your time getting into arguments online because you learned about the mob culture on Twitter. Instead of getting into a power struggle with your children by shouting directives, you learn to ask them questions about their behavior to create a calm and empathetic dialogue. Rather than put up with toxic people who lack empathy, you move on because you understand that trying to change people only leads to frustration.
As the great author Maya Angelou once wrote, “When people show you who they are, believe them.”
You're More Skilled Four Years Later
Malcolm Gladwell believes it takes 10,000 hours, or 10 years practicing 20 hours per week, to become an expert. I buy it. After four years, you’re 40% of the way there. Keep on going.
That two-handed backhand you had no idea how to hit when you first started is coming together with more precision. The fear you had recording podcasts no longer exists after your 20th episode. The loss for words rarely happens after practicing a new language every day. Muscle memory makes playing your favorite songs on the guitar automatic.
The more skills you develop, the easier life gets. With each hour of practice, you move closer to autonomy without fear of being ruined by exogenous factors out of your control.
You're More Senior At Work Four Years Later
If the average person works 2,000 hours a year, that’s 8,000 hours of work after four years. Unless you’re an extremely unpleasant person who doesn’t work well with others, chances are high that you’ve gotten a raise and a promotion during this time period.
Although the price of everything from food to college tuition is much higher four years later, your income has likely kept up or outperformed. Meanwhile, your investments have all likely inflated at a faster rate than inflation, giving you real gains.
Seniority certainly brings about more responsibilities and challenges. However, as someone who works partly for status, having an increased amount should make you better off. And if you don’t care about status, then you would have logically found a job that gave you more meaning.
You've Helped More People Four Years Later
Add up all the time you spent volunteering and the money you’ve given to charity. If you’ve got a generous soul, you might be surprised by how much those figures add up. And if you aren’t impressed with the totals, you can always take the initiative to volunteer and give more starting today.
Don’t take how much you’ve helped others for granted. Not only is giving great for society, it’s also great for your soul. It’s impossible not to feel good helping others. As a bonus, thanks to karma, all your giving comes back in spades.
Related: The Stinginess Of Financial Independence
Your Children Are Stronger Four Years Later
If you have adolescent children, four years is a big percentage of their lives. During this time, you will have watched them grow and positively surprise you in ways you didn’t think possible. Four years ago, perhaps they didn't know how to swim, bike, read, throw a ball and do simple math. Now they do. Amazing!
The rebuffs you experienced when coming home from a long day’s work might now turn into screams of joy and endless hugs. The multiple wake-ups at night now only happen once in a while, so you are more rested. No longer are you as worried about your kid not being able to make friends because they found a fellow misfit just like them.
Stronger kids help ease the perpetual anxiety you might feel as a parent. One day, you'll feel both happiness and sadness knowing they can fend for themselves in this beautiful yet often cruel world.
The One Negative Four Years Later
I hope by now you believe me that you’re likely much better off four years later. It’s been an exciting journey full of challenges and growth. Regardless of who is president, it's always good to focus on financial planning. However, there’s one negative about today: we have four fewer years left to live.
We only regret the past four years if we didn’t take any action to improve suboptimal situations. Given none of us are irrational, none of us decided to do nothing and complain that life isn’t fair.
The question is: What will we do these next four years to make ourselves better off in the future?
These are some of my goals:
- Keep writing on Financial Samurai to help people achieve financial freedom sooner.
- Stay healthy enough to be in my children’s lives at least until they turn 25, 18 and 21 years from now.
- Replenish our passive income to cover 110% of our desired living expenses by December 31, 2027.
- Volunteer monthly at my children’s school to develop better relationships with other parents and school employees.
- Publish two more books (2025 and 2028) that will make a positive impact to readers.
- Improve my Mandarin by practicing for 30 minutes every day.
- Increase my investments in artificial intelligence through a diversified venture capital fund.
- Hold onto my rental property portfolio and dollar-cost average into real estate funds to fully participate in the Fed’s multi-year rate cut cycle.
Some of our investments will falter, and some of our initiatives may fail. Yet as long as we’re still breathing, we can keep growing toward a better tomorrow.
When a new set of politicians asks us four years from now if we’re better off, I’m confident most of us will say yes.
Readers, are you better off today than four years ago? Please share your reasons why!
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To achieve financial freedom sooner, join 60,000+ others and sign up for my free weekly newsletter. Everything I write is based off firsthand experience given money is too important to be left up to pontification.
I’m better off now than 4 years ago and plan to be even better off 4 years from now.
“Because at the end of the day, you are the answer to your problems, nobody else. And you are strong.” Well said. People don’t realize that regardless of who is in charge of running the country “magic dust” will not floot from the sky and all your problems solved. That will only happen with structure and the disciplines needed in life. Is life hard and challenging, yes it is. Are there resources in place that all of us have access too, yes . But it is only going to come with hard work. Try focusing on improving each day and at the end reflecting on what you can do better. To quote Charles Munger: “Slug it out one inch at a time day by day, and at the end of the day-if you live long enough-most people get what they deserve.
Reading this article made me think of perhaps a future one for you and the subject matter could be:
Realignment of your portfolio. I saw that some readers were saying that their portfolio(s) were a little stale so might be a great time to pounce on this one and what is meant by an overhaul.
I’ve heard from multiple sources that the best predictor of wealth and net worth is age (I wonder what the true correlation is between those two variables). If so, then it must be true that almost everyone is doing better than four years ago. However, if the question is whether the median household is doing better (i.e. has their income kept pace with inflation) the St. Louis fed chart says no. Real income is down for the median household – $81.2k in 2020 to $80.6k 2024.
Are we looking at the same chart? Maybe not. Please send me your chart. Thanks.
How has your income done since 2020?
“And if you don’t care about status, then you would have logically found a job that gave you more meaning.”
I wish I figured this out long ago. Some of us get stuck in a security trap. Job security is great in times like 2009, but can make you complacent. It can also blunt any hopes for creating something new and different just by keeping you busy while decades pass by. It’s not golden handcuffs, by any means, but restraints just the same.
Yes, it’s hard to change the inertia one’s life. But so long as we are still living, there is still time!
sometimes we are so busy in our own daily battles we forget to look back and reflect, a lot have happened in the last 4yr period and to all the strangers out there, if you’re going thru tough times just see it as growing pains, it only took end of 2023 and this year to make me finally realize a person should go thru detriment in one’s life to truly appreciate the rest
one comment I’d like to make here, yes this is a finance blog and I don’t wanna get political, but the switching of leading political parties is not good for a country, it’s like a big corporate company rotating in new CEOs every few years, but of course this is due to the democratic system which we don’t need to get into… just pointing it out that this does affect us quite a bit
This isn’t a comment about the current election but in general the ability to replace people in power is a positive to me, one that makes the country more dynamic and adapt to the world faster. I would hate to think a president could stay in power for 20-25 years or more.
Can you share some specifics on how a new president has affected your household a lot? Thx
I’d say the presidential limit of 2 terms reduces corruption and that indirectly affects my household. Imagine if the legislature had to suck up to the same president for most of their adult lives for example? It would be a pseudo-tyranny as executive power grows.
If you want a specific example, one that stands out the most is the end of the Carter malaise. I was a kid but remember being scared of a Soviet attack– even if that sounds silly it was real at the time. That changed after the election.
A hypothetical example would be a Bush loss in 2000. A Gore presidency would have stopped the 9/11 attack and the Iraq invasion. Iraq directly affected me and the course of the country and our debt and loss of lives. Gore would have pushed electric cars early and so on. That affects me. Or Gore would not have stopped the 9/11 attack at all, and the Democrats would be decimated by it. Democrats in power then were already seen as weak on the military and foreign policy (rightly or wrongly) and would be blamed. That would lead to Rs controlling tax law and various other issues that affect me.
America is a Republic. Change is the way all people and systems grow.
Boy- If we think like you advocate, then how will “politicians” hold sway over like minded individuals and me?
Good post – thanks :)
I love this! Your message is not just spot on it’s motivating. We are each capable of a lot even if we progress at different speeds, we can get a lot done in four years.
I still have stubborn habits and idiosyncrasies that are hard to shake. But I have learned a lot, helped others a lot, lost weight, matured in some areas, grown wealth, and do feel better off in many ways. Yes I do feel and look older, bah! But that’s inevitable and I’m taking more conscious steps to improve and maintain my health which feels good.
Thanks for spreading positivity, courage, and encouragement!
I’d like to use real dollars in these comparisons. A dollar in 2020 is worth $1.22 today. That puts a dent in the 65% 4-year gain you quoted. Home values can depend a lot on where you live, not the median, and mine has not seen that increase.
Do you feel worse off with a 65% gain with the cost of goods up 22%? How has your income grown in the past four years? Thanks.
If you’re asking me personally, no I haven’t seen an income gain that high but it depends where you are in life. Young employees will see bigger pay percentage gains.
Yes of course a 65% gain in the s&p is great even accounting for inflation but few people have 100% allocation to the s&p. Any cash you held has depreciated significantly.
I would even say people asking this question will compare today to Jan 2020 not to Nov 2020 for obvious reasons. In that case, no, my investments have not done as well as implied.