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Rs 1 lakh salary not needed, even Rs 30,000 earners can easily be rich: CA shares financial advice to build wealth - The Economic Times

Published 17 hours ago3 minute read
Business NewsMagazinesPanacheRs 1 lakh salary not needed, even Rs 30,000 earners can easily be rich: CA shares financial advice to build wealth
Rs 1 lakh salary not needed, even Rs 30,000 earners can easily be rich: CA shares financial advice to build wealth
ET Online

Chartered Accountant Nitin Kaushik challenges the belief that a high salary is essential for wealth. He explains that consistent saving, spending less than you earn, and investing even small amounts regularly can lead to financial freedom over time. According to him, wealth is built quietly through discipline—not through high-risk shortcuts, flashy income, or inheritance.

Simple Financial Habits Trump High Paychecks, Explains CA Nitin Kaushik
Simple Financial Habits Trump High Paychecks, Explains CA Nitin Kaushik
A large paycheck is often equated with financial success, but Chartered Accountant Nitin Kaushik has offered a different perspective that questions this conventional view. According to him, earning Rs 1 lakh or more each month doesn’t automatically translate into lasting wealth. What truly determines financial progress, he says, is not the income level, but the ability to manage and grow whatever income one has.Kaushik explained that people earning Rs 30,000 to Rs 50,000 monthly can still work towards meaningful financial goals if they adopt the right money practices. It's not about how much comes in, but how much stays — and what is done with it.

Instead of focusing on high income alone, Kaushik stressed the importance of spending less than one earns and investing the remaining amount regularly. He encouraged individuals to begin investing even modest sums through tools like SIPs (Systematic Investment Plans). He said that even small contributions, when done consistently over a decade or more, can grow into significant sums due to the power of compounding.

Kaushik emphasized patience, urging people not to seek overnight results. The focus should be on long-term consistency rather than chasing market highs or trying to time investments.
— Finance_Bareek (@Finance_Bareek)

He also warned against common financial traps, particularly the temptation of high-risk options like cryptocurrency trading or frequent stock market speculation. Kaushik noted that many people end up losing more than they gain in their pursuit of quick returns. According to him, real wealth often grows quietly — through methodical steps rather than dramatic wins.

He added that wealth built gradually, without shortcuts or reliance on inheritance, tends to be more stable and enduring.

Kaushik’s message concluded with a reminder that flashy purchases and unpredictable income boosts don’t equate to financial security. Instead, it is the routine habit of saving and investing, month after month, that creates lasting wealth. He underscored the idea that in personal finance, consistency matters far more than charisma or shortcuts.

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