Street Smarts Quotes
Street Smarts: Adventures on the Road and in the Markets
by
Jim Rogers1,293 ratings, 3.96 average rating, 127 reviews
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Street Smarts Quotes
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“There is nothing better than having to struggle and make your own way.”
― Street Smarts: Adventures on the Road and in the Markets
― Street Smarts: Adventures on the Road and in the Markets
“The Roman censor Appius Claudius the Blind said, “Every man is the architect of his own fortune.”
― Street Smarts: Adventures on the Road and in the Markets
― Street Smarts: Adventures on the Road and in the Markets
“Do not worry about failure, I would tell them. Do not worry about making mistakes in life. It is good to lose money, to go broke at least once, and preferably twice. But if you are going to do it, do it early in your career. It is better to go bust when you are talking about $20,000 than when you are talking about $20 million. Do it early, and it is not the end of the world.”
― Street Smarts: Adventures on the Road and in the Markets
― Street Smarts: Adventures on the Road and in the Markets
“When a country’s economy is in trouble—when it has a balance of trade deficit, for instance, and when its debts are mounting—and when the currency, therefore, is declining in value because everybody can see that the economy is bad, politicians, throughout history, have found a way of making things worse with the imposition of exchange controls. They run to the press and they say, “Listen, all you God-fearing Americans, Germans, Russians, whatever you are, we have a temporary problem in the financial market and it is caused by these evil speculators who are driving down the value of our currency—there is nothing wrong with our currency, we are a strong country with a sound economy, and if it were not for these speculators everything would be OK.” Diverting attention away from the real cause of the problem, which is their own mismanagement of the economy, politicians look to three crowds of people to blame for the regrettable situation. After the speculators come bankers and foreigners. Nobody likes bankers anyway, not even in good times; in bad times, everybody likes them less, because everybody sees them as rich and growing richer off the bad turn of events. Foreigners as a target are equally safe, because foreigners cannot vote. They do not have a say-so in national affairs, and remember, their food smells bad. Politicians will even blame journalists: if reporters did not write about our tanking economy, our economy would not be tanking. So we are going to enact this temporary measure, they say. To stem the scourge of a declining currency, we are going to make it impossible, or at least difficult, for people to take their money out of the country—it will not affect most of you because you do not travel or otherwise spend cash overseas. (See Chapter 9 and the Bernanke delusion.) Then they introduce serious exchange controls. They are always “temporary,” yet they always go on for years and years. Like anything else spawned by the government, once they are in place, a bureaucracy grows up around them. A constituency now arises whose sole purpose is to defend exchange controls and thereby assure their longevity. And they are always disastrous for a country. The free flow of capital stops. Money is trapped inside your country. And the country stops being as competitive as it once was.”
― Street Smarts: Adventures on the Road and in the Markets
― Street Smarts: Adventures on the Road and in the Markets
“money is the lance, not the grail”
― Street Smarts: Adventures on the Road and in the Markets
― Street Smarts: Adventures on the Road and in the Markets
“Years later, a Columbia business school dean, citing a university study, told me that the single most important predictor of a happy life in adulthood was having a paying job as a teenager. All”
― Street Smarts: Adventures on the Road and in the Markets
― Street Smarts: Adventures on the Road and in the Markets
