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Monday, July 13, 2009

Money, Banking, Taxation The Infinite Banking Concept And Becoming Your Own Banker

By Tomas McFie

Could you live ten days without money? Try it and find out what an asset money really is. Assets have a tendency to multiply. The problem is hardly anybody treats their money as an asset.

It has been said that, "The value of an asset increases exponentially while the value of your labor only increases incrementally."

Most people are concerned about the rate of return on their money when they should be concerned about the return of their money. And so they lose the real value of their money by giving it to someone else.

Consider the following:

Where does all your money go when you get a paycheck?

A commercial bank or one that you own?

Who benefits the most by this process? You or the other guy?

The late Adrian Rogers argued that you cannot multiply wealth by dividing it. Ritually, putting your money into a Bank owned by someone else gives someone else control of your money--- not you. This simple process--- the separation of you and your money--- can be very costly. Remember, every time you lose control of your money, you lose money! Once you give the control of your money to others they can assess fees and service charges, use your money to make themselves money, or lose your money and pay you little or nothing for compensation.

Nobody is financially independent until they have mastered the concept as taught in the book Becoming Your Own Banker, by R. Nelson Nash. Nash teaches a concept called Infinite Banking which will teach you how to control and benefit from the financing equation which is as follows:

You give up interest you could have earned by paying cash or you lose money by paying someone else interest when you use their money. You lose money regardless.

When you Become Your Own Banker, you recover the cost of interest you pay out when you borrow from your own banking system and pay yourself back. You are now using your own money as an asset and it will multiply. - 23196

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