Since my 20’s, many people around me have drilled into me notions like “your $1000 /squirrel/ away will be worth $500 in 10Y (or 20Y), so saving 60% of your income every month is less advantageous than spending 90%”.
(The same people also say that “If you can invest profitably, then it’s a different story”, but we always stopped there because none of us has that skill.)
This is the mainstream view. Well, since my 20’s I have gradually increased my savings rate. I guess it was 2-3k when I was earning s$5k. Now it’s touching s$10k.
Q: Was I unwise and regretful maintaining high saving rate?
— A: On the contrary, I think I am insightful and incredulous, with a healthy dose of skepticism. Luck is a secondary factor.
— A: No. SG government squrrels away some amount in every term, to build up the past reserve. The purchasing power didn’t drop to below half over the years. In fact, I think it has grown.
— A: No. ERE author and MMM each saved up enough and retired early. Apparently, their savings didn’t lose value due to inflation.
MMM has a blog proclaiming — once you save up 30Y worth of living expenses you will be able to retire.
— A: No because I have managed to leverage my savings to invest profitably not in traditional stocks, mutual funds, insurance products but in overseas and local properties.
— A: No because I don’t know where I could have spent more. I can look at my peers’ burn rate breakdown
— A: most important, inflation rate in my personal experience has not been half as high as predicted (by those pundits). My best-effort analysis is 30Y SG inflation: personal xp.