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How To Play Monopoly In The Real World: Why the rent of a green house is better than a payroll check.

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A unique financial education handbook that contains a step-by-step guide, in which you will learn the following: How central banks work, how to read financial statements, the difference between assets and liabilities, how to earn passive income, how to use The debt and taxes to make you rich, how to analyze properties step by step, the difference between an investor and a speculator and the habits of the richest people in the world. You will learn a technique to know what investment to make and know the formulas and methods to know how much to pay, how much profit to expect and how to manage the investment. The risks are almost zero if you apply these methods. All concepts are explained with real-world examples and case studies. If you read "Rich Dad,Poor Dad" you may have graduated from school. When you're done reading "How to play monopoly in the real world," you've graduated from the University of Capitalism with honors.

262 pages, Paperback

Published June 1, 2019

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132 people want to read

About the author

Santiago R. T.

11 books17 followers

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Profile Image for Trenton Thompson.
3 reviews
September 13, 2019
PROs: This book was written with a lot of passion. It has very accurate knowledge about how the world really works in regards to the truths about financial literacy, education and what’s really going on behind he scene of wealth. It also has a fairly straightforward set of information around real estate investing that enables someone to take action somewhat immediately.

CONs: i has a lot of trouble reading the book because I’m pretty sure the author doesn’t use English as their first language so a lot of the writing have parts where I didn’t make sense, or I had to re-read it a couple of times to understand what was being said. The grammatical errors are so bad and frequent that the book is almost impossible to read and some parts. I feel like having an English language editor would’ve solved this problem entirely. I’m also hesitant because the author himself has not stated examples where he has applied his own knowledge, or at the very least, given examples of others who have and outlined the numbers behind their success. This book also has a lot of motivation talk, which is fine since it was talked about upfront, but once the author began talking about real estate I would still find moments where he veered off course into a long motivational session when I would’ve preferred he stuck to the topic.
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