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From Jennifer Lawrence to Mark Zuckerberg, 11 billionaires who like to live frugally

Jennifer Lawrence, seen attending the Academy Awards in Hollywood in March 2018, has always been thrifty. Photo: Getty Images/AFP
Jennifer Lawrence, seen attending the Academy Awards in Hollywood in March 2018, has always been thrifty. Photo: Getty Images/AFP

  • Author of ‘The Next Millionaire Next Door’ identifies six ‘wealth factors’ that help you become rich

Many millionaires and billionaires have something in common aside from having a high net worth: they are frugal.

It’s this characteristic that helped them become rich in the first place, according to Sarah Stanley Fallaw, director of research for the Affluent Market Institute. She co-authored The Next Millionaire Next Door: Enduring Strategies for Building Wealth, for which she surveyed a number of millionaires in America.

To identify characteristics that are the most predictive of net worth, Stanley Fallaw conducted two studies that included a group of individuals with a net worth ranging from US$100,000 to US$1 million and a group of high- and ultra-high-net-worth individuals.

I was raised to have value for money, to have respect for money, even though you have a lot of it
Jennifer Lawrence

She found that six behaviours, which she called “wealth factors”, are related to net-worth potential, regardless of age or income. One of those is frugality – a commitment to saving, spending less, and sticking to a budget.

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That is not surprising when you consider the habits of some of the richest people: Warren Buffett is notoriously frugal, and Richard Branson has previously said that displays of wealth embarrass him. The same extends to some A-list celebrities who rake in millions for their movies and TV appearances.

One of those behaviours, frugality, came up several times during the research – many of the millionaires she interviewed stressed the freedom that comes with spending below their means.

Photo: Courtesy of Amazon
Photo: Courtesy of Amazon

“Spending above your means, spending instead of saving for retirement, spending in anticipation of becoming wealthy makes you a slave to the pay cheque, even with a stellar level of income,” she wrote.

Several of the best-known millionaires and billionaires built wealth by living frugally – a habit they continue after becoming rich.

Consider Warren Buffett, who is worth US$82.8 billion and is the third-richest person in the world. Not one for lavish purchases, he spends relatively little money.

Photo: Business Insider
Photo: Business Insider