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The Production Power Play
The Wealth Secret Rich Dad Taught Me Decades Ago
Dear Reader,
Economics sounds complicated. It's not.
The professors use big words. They draw fancy charts. They want you to think it's magic. It isn't.
The Production Secret: True wealth doesn't come from spending — it comes from producing real value first/
The Keynesian Lie: Mainstream economists want you to believe consumption drives the economy,
The Sound Money Blueprint: The formula for getting rich hasn't changed in centuries — produce value, trade it with sound money, reinvest in your tools.
For decades, one type of investment was reserved for the ultra-wealthy. Then Trump signed Executive Order 14330 - and opened it to everyone. Now you can get into this boom for less than $20. See what changed >>
I came across an article recently. It talked about Say's Law of Markets. It used a Richard Scarry children's book to explain it.
A place called Busytown. Animals doing jobs. Simple stuff.
I stopped cold.
Because Rich Dad taught me this exact lesson when I was nine years old.
He didn't use a children's book. He used real life. He used hard cash. He used the streets of Hawaii.
He called it the first law of money. Produce first. Then you can demand.
If you understand this, you understand how to get rich. If you don't, you stay poor forever.
What Rich Dad Told Me
Rich Dad sat me down early. He didn't waste words.
He said most people have it backwards. They think you earn money by consuming.
By spending. By borrowing. They are wrong.
He said real wealth starts with production. You make something. You grow something. You build something.
Then and only then do you have the power to trade for what you need.
He pointed to the farmers, the builders, the shop owners around us. He said look at them.
They produce first. That production is their power. That is their income. That income is their demand.
He called it sound money thinking.
Say's Law — named after a French economist named Jean-Baptiste Say — says the same thing.
Your ability to produce is your power to demand. Not the other way around.
Rich Dad didn't need a textbook. He lived it every day.
Production is Power
You don't get rich by consuming. You get rich by producing.
Think about Farmer Alfalfa in the Scarry story. He grows food. He feeds his family first. Then he sells the rest.
He trades his production for money. He uses that money to buy a suit, a tractor, presents for his wife.
His production created his income. His income created his demand.
Rich Dad said the same thing to me in different words. He said the poor man works for money.
The rich man makes money work for him.
But before any of that happens, someone has to produce something real.
John Maynard Keynes disagreed. He said consumption drives the economy. He said when people stop buying, the whole thing collapses.
He blamed recessions on a lack of spending.
Rich Dad would have laughed at that.
Economist Steven Horwitz got it right. Say's Law isn't about perfect balance. It's about how the engine starts.
You have to make something before you can buy something. Production is the spark. Everything else follows.
The Magic of Sound Money
Rich Dad was obsessed with sound money. He talked about it constantly.
He said money is a tool. Nothing more. It's the bridge between what you make and what you want.
Without it, you are stuck in barter. You grow carrots. The tailor doesn't want carrots. No suit for you.
Money solves that problem. It lets you trade your production for anything, anywhere, with anyone.
But here is what most people miss. Rich Dad drilled this into me.
Savings matter just as much as earnings.
When the workers in Busytown put their extra money in the bank, it doesn't disappear. The bank loans it out.
Someone else builds a business. Someone buys a house. Someone creates more value. The money keeps moving. The economy keeps growing.
Rich Dad said savers are the engine of civilization. Spenders just ride along.
When you delay consumption and save, you give your power to someone who will use it to produce more.
That is how real wealth compounds.
The Lesson That Never Gets Old
I read that article about Busytown and Say's Law. And I smiled.
Because Rich Dad taught me all of this before I ever set foot in a classroom. He didn't use fancy words. He used simple truths.
Produce value. Trade it fairly. Use sound money. Reinvest in your tools. Save the rest.
The professors want to confuse you. The politicians want to control you. They want you to believe the economy is too complex for ordinary people to understand.
It isn't.
The Busytown animals figured it out. Rich Dad figured it out. You can too.
Stop consuming. Start producing. Save in sound money. Let your savings work for others and come back to you multiplied.
That is the game. Rich Dad taught me the rules. Now you know them too.
Kiyosaki Uncensored
P.S. President Trump is pouring trillions into a new kind of infrastructure. And there's one fund positioned to profit from every dollar that flows through it — the same way McDonald's profited from every car on the highway…
In fact, Trump put up to $25 million of his own money into this fund… and it pays him as much as $250,000 a month.