Stop Playing Jenga With Maslow’s Pyramid

Stop Playing Jenga With Maslow’s Pyramid

You’ve probably heard of Abraham Maslow’s hierarchy of needs. Its pyramid shape is a fundamental building block in Sociology 101, and as a result it gets quoted in a ton of articles about people, psychology and how those two things interact when people spend money.

It doesn’t mean it’s an accurate reflection of how people really spend money, however, and that’s a bit of a shame, because the proper version is a lot more stable than most people’s approach.

As a quick refresher, Maslow’s pyramid has five layers that represent different levels of human needs, and he theorised that we could only move up a level once we had satisfied the one we are on: yes, like any basic computer game.

The base is physiological need; eat, wash, sleep and that kind of stuff. Once that’s taken care of, we all need security and safety, and after that, we need a bit of loving, companionship and community. All good so far. No arguments here. Once we’re in that community, though, Maslow said we need to establish our place within it, a level he called esteem or status. We might want to be at the top of the community, or at least command some respect within it and be able to display that. And his last stage is self-actualisation, being all that we can be, beyond concerns about status or what other people think. Got to love that too, right?

And I do. Or at least I would, if it reflected the way people actually behave.

My first big problem with Maslow’s pyramid, and how it reflects the world, is that it doesn’t. With a “put my finger in the air and guess the direction of the wind” kind of estimate, I reckon that more than half our world economy is devoted to the pursuit of status and esteem. It might well be nearer two thirds.

Faster houses, bigger cars, better holidays, smarter clothes, more stuff when I want it, just because I want it, like a new handbag, the latest pair of running shoes, a fancy watch, the most recent phone that’s been launched when your old one works just fine, or whatever it is you buy to make yourself feel better when you’re probably feeling ok, but finally the marketing has worked: the list goes on and on and on and on. Not much of what we’re doing here on the planet is taking care of our physiological needs, is it? Nearly all of us has enough clothes and shoes, and most of us eat nice enough food.

There are people that don’t: sadly, not much of the economy is focused on them.

Instead, most of the money that most people spend is spent on things that improve their status, either in the eyes of others, although quite often only in their own imagination. Whether it is “premiumisation” or “business class” or “luxury goods”, status makes the world go around.

What that means, of course, is that our pyramid is already seriously messed up. If more than half of our building blocks are going into the top half of the diagram, it’s not so much a pyramid as a bit of a “Jenga” nightmare. Let’s hope no one pulls anything out of those bottom layers…

Oh dear. They already did.

One of the elements tucked away inside Maslow’s concept of security and safety, the second layer of the pyramid, is financial security. That should be huge, shouldn’t it? That should be where we spend our time and effort and energy. We are supposed to have completed that before we moved on to loving and community, let alone status!

Instead we’ve got a top-heavy structure, and one of the key foundations has been pulled out. No wonder this game doesn’t go so well for most people. No wonder so many people are susceptible to even the smallest wobble.

Imagine the world really did work in that pyramid way. Establishing real financial security before worrying about status. Not building a dream home before we’ve got a nest egg. Not borrowing to go on holiday before we’ve got a proper emergency fund. Focusing on having enough money, whether through assets or secure income, to no longer have to worry about the future.

If people actually lived like that, Maslow’s hierarchy really would look like a pyramid. You’d build your financial security before worrying about your status, and then status spending would only reflect your real, actual status, not the status you want to display. You could almost then guarantee that it would be a thin layer, because without the posturing it is currently comprised of, and the borrowing that finances it, no one would need to spend too much time there.

Self-actualisation would be a doddle too, because you would be secure enough to think about what you want to do, what you want to be, and how you want to achieve that, not worrying about the unstable mess your spending and consuming has become.

So stop spending on status. Instead, build yourself a Maslow’s pyramid with a big wide financially secure base, and then you’ll see that everyone else’s status spending is as meaningless and doomed as a wobbly Jenga with nothing to support it.

College Isn’t A Fairytale Either

It could be a horror story with no end.

I love this article/podcast, https://80000hours.org/podcast/episodes/bryan-caplan-case-for-and-against-education/ for so many reasons.

I have to admit that I kind of like that “the case against education” is on a website started by Will Macaskill, the youngest philosophy professor at Oxford University, ever.

I love that it reminds me of the great story Derek Sivers tells about Kimo Williams (sivers.org/kimo ) who taught him to question going “the standard pace” at college. Because that was for “chumps”.

More than that, I love that it points out that so much of college is about “signalling” than about learning. Otherwise we could all learn stuff for free, rather than pay to get a certificate. Exams would check that you had learned enough to move on to the next stage of learning, not become a badge of honour to carry around with you for the rest of your life.

Which really paints a picture of why colleges get to charge the crazy fees they charge, keeping out not just poor people but also  the middle class, or forcing them into a lifetime of “student debt” from which they may never emerge. The charges are about being exclusionary. They’re about keeping people out. Not about the education itself – because that could free.

But maybe more than all of those reasons (except maybe for the Will Macaskill one: I’m a fan-godmother), I think the thing that resonated the most for me is that is why universities and schools don’t care about the relevance of what they teach. Because it’s not about learning, it’s about signalling, the usefulness of the curricula isn’t really considered. It’s all about being clever (or rich) enough to get into a good school, and get good grades, than about having actually learned something useful to you or society.

If the focus shifted, we would have been teaching code in schools for decades. We could teach health properly. We could teach fitness in a way that didn’t make it about bullying weak kids and glorifying the bullies.

And we would have been teaching finance. Nothing complicated, just plain vanilla, basic personal finance. We could all know how money moves around, and how we fit into that system, so we could choose how to maximise our efforts, decide our savings, choose our investments, and become independent of external financial needs, and then choose how we want to make the world a better place.

Instead we have people borrowing hundreds of thousands of dollars to do MBAs (or other degrees, but the MBA is the most ironic one), without ever being taught what the real cost of that has been, and how it might hold them back, and has potentially added years to their working life, removed some of their potential to really contribute.

All encouraged by so-called “institutes of learning”.

So, while I love education, and all that it brings, from art to business to civilisation itself (and that is just a, b and c), this is a really timely article, particularly for anyone following a FIREy path to financial independence, that borrowing for college may not be the smartest way to get there, and might just be selling a fairytale fantasy.

Why “Happy Ever After”?

Why “Happy Ever After”? Why on earth not?

If we mean, “Why do we want to be happy ever after?” well, the answer is two-fold. First, because it’s a lot better than being unhappy ever after.

That’s the simple answer.

The second answer was because I realised it was possible to be happy about money ever after.

I can’t promise that you, or I for that matter, will be happy in all ways possible for ever from now on. I can’t guarantee you won’t fall and graze your knee. I can’t promise that a boyfriend won’t let you down. I can’t even promise that sometimes you’ll have to do stuff you don’t like doing. That’s just the way it is, and actually it would be bad to think you could be “happy” all the time. A little bit of hard work and difficulty makes the good times seem better.

But we can take money out of the picture. There is an amount of money that leaves all of us not worrying about money any more, where the income coming off that money is enough to cover all our spending and to grow in line or ahead of inflation. When you have that much money in a portfolio, you should never have to worry about money again.

And then you can focus on the things that make you really happy, and not the things that make you money. That’s why “Happy Ever After”.

If you mean, why am I writing “Happy Ever After” now, it’s because over 20 years of working in finance, I’ve learned that most people in the world don’t know these things. That some of the world’s biggest asset managers operate on these numbers – but don’t bother telling anyone else. It’s because I didn’t know any of it when I started out, and I’ve realised over those years that very, very few other people know it too.

And if you mean, why RIGHT now, it’s because my older daughter is off to university without the first clue about what money is, how to get it, how much she needs, how to save it, invest it… and all the other things she needs to do. I promised to write her a book about rainbow unicorns and fairy godmothers when she was little, and was always too busy working to do it.

While what you’re reading now isn’t what she had in mind, I think it will make her happier for longer than any fairytale.