Articles & Questions
Every week I publish a fun new article on a money topic I think you’ll find interesting. I also answer a handful of reader questions. Subscribers to my newsletter get to see everything first — but you can browse some of my past articles & questions on this page.
My Best Articles
Not sure where to start? Below I’ve handpicked a few of my favourites. And if you like what you see, don’t forget to subscribe to my free newsletter to get new issues before anyone else!
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We Thought Our Daughter Had a Learning Disability
I want to say thank you for writing one of the most incredible books for kids. My eight-year-old daughter has a tendency to read the first chapter of a book then get bored.
Hi Scott,
I want to say thank you for writing one of the most incredible books for kids. My eight-year-old daughter has a tendency to read the first chapter of a book then get bored. At first we thought she had a learning disability, until I purchased your book. She was obsessed! Couldn’t put it down and read it twice in three days! She was so into it that she put her headphones on when reading so no one could distract her. She kept reading it even to and from school. So thank you for helping us start one of the most essential conversations with our kids – about finances – and for validating that she doesn’t have a learning disability. I was just making the wrong book selections!
Lina
Hi Lina,
What a little legend!
ou know it’s awesome that kids are reading this book, but what’s even better is that they’re using it to become Barefoot Bosses and teach their parents a thing or two about making money.
Oh, and now that she’s reading, I’ve got another recommendation for her: my kids are loving Nazeem Hussain’s book Hy-Larious Hyena.
Scott.
Barefoot Fight Night
During lockdown my hubby started a small hobby business to ‘keep him busy’. It has now taken over, and not in a good way.
Hi Scott,
During lockdown my hubby started a small hobby business to ‘keep him busy’. It has now taken over, and not in a good way. He runs it with its own account, separate from our family. I didn’t mind this arrangement as, initially, he was saving for a motorbike. Then I discovered he’s been gambling the profits away into crypto. A massive argument ensued. He says he’s ‘investing for the future’ and it’s ‘his’ money. I say he’s misinformed. What say you?
Wendy
Hi Wendy,
I see crypto as being in the same category as betting on the nags, breeding gerbils or buying Pokémon cards. So tell him, “mate if that’s your idea of fun, well, pikachu to you!”
Just gently suggest he only set aside a small amount of money for his fantasy coin fetish … and then get him thinking about directing the bulk of his profits towards something more meaningful.
Like what?
Well, I’d go on a Barefoot Date Night and ask him the following question:
“What do you LOVE to spend money on?”
He might say ‘travel’.
Then you say, “Okay, what’s one experience you’ve always wanted to have travelling?” It might be a cooking class in Italy. It might be the Grand Prix in Monte Carlo.
The key is to get him excited about saving up for a goal, and not defensive (oh, and also to make it feel like it was his idea in the first place).
Scott.
My favorite podcasts and videos
I’m writing this to you from my bed, where I have been holed up for the past three days. No, I don’t have the bat-flu … I have the man flu.
I’m writing this to you from my bed, where I have been holed up for the past three days.
No, I don’t have the bat-flu … I have the man flu.
Unfortunately this slight variation in virus delivers 75% less sympathy from my wife:
“Oh, so you’re still negative? It’s just a sniffle then? Can you still take the boys to Scouts tonight?”
Anyway, I’m so high on Sudafed right now that I have no idea whether any of this is making sense (though my editor would argue that’s never really worried me before).
To help pass the time, I’ve been going through a lot of podcasts and watched a lot of dodgy TV (I’m looking at you, Larry Emdur). Here are my top picks:
The Coming Recession – The Economist
You think the last few years were crazy?
Just wait till you see what 2023 has in store for us.
We’re heading into a global economic slowdown, and central banks are raising interest rates.
That’s like handing a marathon runner two shopping bags full of groceries to carry for the last 5 km.
This year’s hikes have added $900 a month to the average $500,000 mortgage.
And there’s more to come.
The Economist produces long, meaty, rigorously researched articles on the world economy. And, while an annual magazine subscription costs more than my first car, their podcasts are free!
Mirror Mirror (Series 2: Love and Hate) – Channel 10
For Christmas this year my nine-year-old son has asked Santa for a book on quantum physics.
Ho! Ho! Ho!-wever, when my wife leaves the room he puts down the book he’s reading, slyly picks up her phone and starts playing some version of Candy Crush.
It’s like the engineers on the other side of the screen are saying, “Hey kid, don’t bother learning all that hard stuff, just come here and press flashing buttons for hours on end.”
If you want to do hard stuff in 2023, you need to watch Todd Sampson’s Mirror Mirror. It’s a frightening doco on the way that screens are rewiring our brains.
Australia’s Health Revolution – SBS
This show is life changing.
Dr Michael Mosley is a very healthy dude and skinny as a rake, yet for the doco he began following an average Aussie diet.
The result?
In just two weeks his blood sugar levels became pre-diabetic and his blood pressure became worryingly high. Australia is one of the fattest nations on earth, and it’s killing us.
Thankfully, Mosley believes you can reverse type 2 diabetes, and in this series he shows you how to do it. As I sniffled through this three-parter it scared the hell out of me. Health is wealth, and there are a lot of poor people eating very rich foods. Cough! Cough!
Tread Your Own Path!
My Wife Has No Idea What I’ve Done …
I write this with a heavy heart. Three days ago I found out that the investments that my wife and I were making were a scam. We have lost $90,000, our entire house deposit savings. The thing is, she doesn’t know yet. Tough pill to swallow.
Hi Scott
I write this with a heavy heart. Three days ago I found out that the investments that my wife and I were making were a scam. We have lost $90,000, our entire house deposit savings. The thing is, she doesn’t know yet. Tough pill to swallow.
This wasn’t a run-of-the-mill scam like clicking on a link or allowing a hacker access to our banking details – it was a sophisticated scam involving purchasing of ‘shares’ for multiple ‘companies’. What concerns me most is how do I face the shame when telling her? (Yes, she was on board with it at the time, but it was my idea.) During our Barefoot Date Nights, along with other topics, we discuss the shares we’ve ‘purchased’. This is probably my biggest fear – letting her down.
And where to from here? Four years of savings, all gone. Thanks to Barefoot we’ve been debt free, but I’m in such disbelief that our house deposit has vanished. Your words keep replaying through my head: “put it into a high-interest savings account if you plan on using it in the next five years”. Fool me once ...
Steve
Hi Steve
I’m so sorry this has happened to you.
The only thing you can do is to be honest with her. Admit that you screwed up and then quickly ‘assume the brace position’, as they say on the Qantas safety cards.
Then, once the turbulence has passed, I have a practical suggestion for you:
I want you to go on a Barefoot Date Night and ask yourselves the following questions:
– What can we learn from getting scammed?
– How could this be a good thing?
– What are we grateful for?
Look, this scumbag scammer already took your money. Don’t let him steal your most precious assets: your self-esteem and your time. You two got yourself out of debt and built up a deposit in four years. You’re still standing. You have each other. You’ll build back better. You got this.
Scott.
What I’m buying my family for Christmas
Ho! Ho! Ho! Years ago, I cracked the Christmas code: I buy people books.
Ho! Ho! Ho!
Years ago, I cracked the Christmas code: I buy people books.
Giving people a book says, “I think you’re the sort of person who can unglue yourself from your screen and spend a few hours learning something. In other words, I think you’re smart.”
And it’s a smart deal for me too: books cost under $30, they don’t require a separate card (I just scribble a Merry Christmas message on the inside cover), and my local bookstore will even giftwrap them for me. Job done!
Here are the books I’ll be putting in my Santa sack this year:
Never Split the Difference, Chris Voss
So inflation is ripping the backside out of your buckets … everything costs more these days.
Which is exactly why you need to negotiate a hefty pay rise – at least 7% – next year.
If the thought of that negotiation fills you with horror, you need to read Never Split the Difference.
Chris Voss is a former FBI hostage negotiator, and his method doesn’t involve being sleazy or manipulative … in fact it’s just the opposite. Instead, he shows you how to get what you want while still being empathetic, understanding and non-confrontational.
It’s both practical and powerful, and I use these techniques in the trenches every day (with my kids).
4,000 Weeks, Oliver Burkeman
Did you know the average person gets just 4,000 weeks on this planet?
Doesn’t sound like a lot, right?
But it gets worse: you’ve already used up a good chunk of them (I’m about halfway – hopefully).
Heavy, huh?
Yes, it is. And the book’s introduction kicks off cheerfully: “In the long run, we’re all dead.”
Yet that’s what makes this book so interesting: it doesn’t fall for cookie-cutter time management tips, and it takes an axe to the current culture where ‘busy’ has been rebranded as ‘hustle’ and worn like a badge of pride.
Every other time management book I’ve ever read talks about how you can stuff more things into your schedule. This book turns that idea on its head: it smacks you in the face with how little time you have left, and shows you how to really make the most of it.
The Little Book of Common Sense Investing, Jack Bogle
Over the years I must have given away at least fifty copies of this little classic. (Whenever someone tells me they’re going to see a financial planner, I give them a copy.) Jack Bogle was the founder of Vanguard Investments and is regarded as an ‘investment hero’ by none other than Warren Buffett.
What makes this book so powerful is its simplicity: Jack demolishes Wall Street sales spin and teaches the reader everything they need to know about investing – and how to earn above-average returns – in a little book that you can read in an afternoon.
Barefoot Kids (OF COURSE)
Yes, you guessed it, I’ll also be giving a plug to my new book, Barefoot Kids.
I’ve been getting messages from parents and grandparents all around the country that it’s the first book their kids have read cover to cover in a long time. And it makes the perfect stocking-filler – a cheap gift you can actually feel good about buying them.
Tread Your Own Path!
Karen Gets Angry
Just wanted to let you know how hurtful it is to see my name used as a stand-in for a whinger in last week’s column (‘Karen Gets Angry’).
Hi Scott,
Just wanted to let you know how hurtful it is to see my name used as a stand-in for a whinger in last week’s column (‘Karen Gets Angry’). When it’s used by such highly respected people as yourself it just perpetuates it. You wouldn’t believe how many people snigger when I tell them my name. How about you stop stereotyping people?
Karen
Oh, Karen!
I’m sorry for taking such a cheap shot. And I should know better. After all, my family has also been affected by negative name associations: my old man’s name is Donald (as in the guy with the orange hair) and my name is Scott (as in the guy from marketing). This too shall pass, Kazz.
Scott.
We Got This!
I’m sure you must get 20 million of these emails, but I just wanted to say thank you! Barefoot works, your buckets work, and my little four-year-old even has her Jam Jars set up.
Hi Scott!
I’m sure you must get 20 million of these emails, but I just wanted to say thank you! Barefoot works, your buckets work, and my little four-year-old even has her Jam Jars set up. Our little cottage (built in 1914) may not look like much, but it has a beautiful renovation on the back, big sheds, and 2.5 acres with a round yard perfect for our two ponies. When I left an unhappy relationship a few years ago with very little savings, I never dreamt I could not only pay off my debts (including a car) but save enough for a home deposit. Yet here we are, with a SOLD sticker to prove it. I even have enough in my Smile and Splurge accounts to have fun on weekends and plan a holiday. Life is good!
Rhea and Clancy
Hi guys,
Your home is the spitting image of my favourite home in the world: my grandparents’ house in Ouyen. It had three bedrooms … it raised six kids … and it was like Disneyland for me. That place has so many happy memories. Here’s to you making some of your own. You Got This!
Scott.
Christmas Comes Early
I was planning on giving your new Barefoot Kids book to my eight-year-old daughter for Christmas. Unfortunately, she found it while I was at work.
Hi Scott,
I was planning on giving your new Barefoot Kids book to my eight-year-old daughter for Christmas. Unfortunately, she found it while I was at work. When I got home that night I was amazed that she had already read half the book, letter-bombed the neighbourhood with her new ‘cat sitting’ business, set up her jars with your stickers, and started setting up her jobs board. Then she hit me with her pocket money pitch. My Chrissy surprise is blown, but it’s so good she is fully engaged!
Chris
Hey Chris
How proud should you be of your daughter? The way most parents teach their kids about money is trial and error … a lot of boring lectures … and a lot of nagging, in the hope that some of it sticks. Yet your daughter is building her own money ‘muscle memories’, and creating her own experiences … some of which will stay with her for the rest of her life.
Scott.
Dr Seuss Gives Financial Advice
I’ve been seeing so many ads on Facebook from people spruiking ways to pay off your mortgage in 7 to 10 years. Is there some secret I’m not aware of?
G’day Scott,
I’ve been seeing so many ads on Facebook from people spruiking ways to pay off your mortgage in 7 to 10 years. Is there some secret I’m not aware of? We are a young family with two boys and are worried about our repayments when our fixed interest rate ends. It’s been a challenge to save the last year with prices going up and some health challenges on my part. One of our cars has just died too, so we are pretty stressed. Should we take action?
Tenille
Hi Tenille
Last Saturday morning I was with my kids in the Lego store in Melbourne when I got a text from a friend: “Someone is impersonating you on Facebook and running a scam to fleece your readers!”
Alarmed, I immediately called my assistant, and she was like: “Yeah, that happens all the time, it’s like whack-a-mole, Scott.”
Now the ads you’re looking at aren’t a blatant scam, but they may as well be.
Here’s their pitch, which is as old and smelly as my trusty Gray-Nicolls cricket box:
“So you want to get out of debt, right? Well, if you borrow a heap of money (through me) and buy some Gold Coast apartment (also through me, which I get a $50,000 kickback on), then when it (cough, cough) doubles in value, you’ll be able to pay off your home loan in just 7 to 10 years!”
It’s like a freaking Dr Seuss book.
“To get out of debt you’ve got to get into more debt. Debt, Debt, Debt!”
Tenille, focus on the two things that will really move the dial: getting a lower rate, and making extra repayments. Oh, and delete Facebook.
Scott.
Our Son-in-Law is a Nothing Burger
Our 48-year-old daughter was $2,000 away from paying off her house when her husband of 23 years told her that he had used the redraw facility attached to their housing loan to withdraw $150,000 to invest in a cryptocurrency scam!
Hi Scott,
Our 48-year-old daughter was $2,000 away from paying off her house when her husband of 23 years told her that he had used the redraw facility attached to their housing loan to withdraw $150,000 to invest in a cryptocurrency scam! He has now left her with $5 in the bank and two young boys to support. It seems our daughter was too trusting way back (23 years ago) when the home loan was set up. Even though it was in both names, the redraw facility required only his signature.
It has been extremely stressful and embarrassing, and like a snowball as unpaid bills have rolled in. As retirees we now find ourselves with a second family to support. All avenues for help have been fruitless so far. Can you give us any advice? Also, please alert other trusting young wives that they must have two signatures on a redraw facility or they may find themselves in this same devastating situation.
Tania
Hey Tania
It sounds like your son-in-law is an addicted gambler.
The fact that he was caught up in a crypto scam is neither here nor there – it all ends the same way:
The scammer (or betting company) ends up with all the money, the punter is lumped with the losses, and tragically, as is the case with your daughter, there’s often an innocent partner who becomes collateral damage.
So what advice do I have?
She has two choices: work it out, or kick his arse to the curb.
If she chooses to stay with him, I’d suggest she insist he get professional counselling (call Gambler’s Help on 1800 858 858). If she’s not planning on staying with him, I’d get her to speak to a family lawyer and an accountant and set up plans for life as a single parent.
Yet I’ll tell you one thing that’s totally off the table: getting the money back. The horse hasn’t bolted, it’s dead. No amount of flogging your son-in-law will bring it back. At some point they have to put it behind them and move forward financially (together or apart).
Scott
The eight-year-old who built a school
So this is probably going to get me in trouble, but here goes: To the billions of people living in the developing world … we’re all ‘Karens’.
So this is probably going to get me in trouble, but here goes:
To the billions of people living in the developing world … we’re all ‘Karens’.
“Barefoot! How dare you label me a Karen! I DEMAND to speak to your editor!”
(Trust me, he does not care.)
Yet let me introduce you to someone you should speak to: an eight-year-old girl called Amalia.
Amalia lives in Adelaide with her mum and brothers and sisters. She loves fashion, horse riding and doing her pocket money jobs. Yet there’s something amazing about what Amalia has done with the money she put in her Give Bucket:
She built a school.
Seriously. Amalia and her mum, Susan, built a three-storey school that is now home to 120 primary school students. It’s in Kenya, Africa, in a place called Korogocho.
Korogocho is a Swahili word meaning ‘shoulder to shoulder’ … and that’s how people live in Korogocho. There isn’t much electricity, so it gets dark inside. There are no air-conditioners, and lots of people have to share one tap for water.
The kids Amalia’s age play in a creek that’s polluted with rubbish and sewage. “For fun they find old bike tyres and use them as hula hoops”, says Amalia.
Yes, life in Korogocho is tough. Many kids there can’t afford to go to school, and those who do are stuck in classrooms that can have as many as 150 kids!
Amalia and her mum set out to do something for the kids of Korogocho. They are not rich, but they paid for it all themselves from their Give Buckets.
And now that the school is up and running they are paying the wages for six teachers and three helpers. The kids get cooked lunches and the chance to learn dancing and all the important stuff that kids need to learn.
“I’m proud of our school. If we hadn’t built it, none of those kids would have gotten to go to school”, Amalia tells me. “The reason my Give Bucket is so important to me is that my goal in life is ‘to make the world kinder’.”
Amalia is just one of the kids in my new book, Barefoot Kids.
Talking to kids about money can sometimes feel a little icky … kind of consumerist and capitalist.
But let me tell you a secret: the jam jars aren’t really about money at all … they’re about hard work, kindness, and feeling good inside.
When Amalia’s mum asked her, “what do you want to be now?”
She replied, “everything I already am”.
How good is that?
Tread Your Own Path!
Video Killed the Radio Star
I know it is unlikely I will receive a reply but I feel compelled to let you know what an impact you have had on my 11-year-old daughter, Molly.
Hi Scott,
I know it is unlikely I will receive a reply but I feel compelled to let you know what an impact you have had on my 11-year-old daughter, Molly. Yesterday her aunt gifted her your new book. Molly devoured the book in one evening and by this afternoon had started a small business initiative to make dog treats and raise funds for the homeless.
We are fascinated by her enthusiasm and even more impressed by her presentation on investing (which I have shared with you). Thank you for hitting the nail on the head with this generation. I feel relieved to know that your book is teaching such valuable skills.
Mandy
Hi Mandy,
You not only made it to my inbox, you made it all the way to our family dinner table! We have a strict rule at our house: “No screens at dinner”. So when I sat down with an iPad my kids’ eyes nearly fell out of their sockets. Then I pressed play on Molly’s video … and they cheered for her. Seriously, she explained the concept of investing better than some highly paid investment analysts I know! Thanks so much for sharing it with me and the kids. It made our night.
Scott
The Bitcoin Babe
I have been trying to find a partner and get married for a while. Recently, I was matched with a guy on a dating app and we got to talking. He kept saying money is very important to him.
Dear Scott,
I have been trying to find a partner and get married for a while. Recently, I was matched with a guy on a dating app and we got to talking. He kept saying money is very important to him. He said he’d like a partner who is a ‘digital shepherd’ who would carry his phones and laptops and work from anywhere in the world. I’m an engineer, love my job, and don’t want to be a digital shepherd, yet the idea of having a husband got me interested.
He said he’d teach me to trade crypto, so I put $2,000 of my hard-earned money into the FTX Pro app.
After a while I got suspicious and said I’d like to do it either face to face (I have never met him) or stop and get my money back. He got very defensive and threatening, and told me I’d face consequences and he’d stop talking to me. I have reported him to cyber crime, and reported his profile on the dating app. But my money is still trapped in FTX Pro. How can I get it back?
Shyla
Hi Shyla
There is no way my answer is going to be anywhere near as entertaining as your question!
So, in summary, a random dude you met on the internet who told you he was looking for a shepherd … turned out to be a wolf. Don’t beat yourself up: you’re not the first person this has happened to, nor will you be the last!
Oh, and don’t feel bad about losing money to a scammer, either. Sequoia Capital is a legendary American fund manager that employs the smartest people in the world, including the very best graduates from Harvard, Stanford and Yale.
Well, these geniuses invested $US210 million ($A313 million) into the crypto exchange you used, FTX. FTX is run by 30-year-old Sam Bankman-Fried, hailed as the ‘next Warren Buffett’. Sequoia loved the fact that Sam played video games in their investment meetings instead of listening to them.
Well, it turns out Sam was also a wolf. This week his crypto exchange has collapsed, with billions in customer deposits apparently gone.
Who would’ve thought that a 30-year-old living in the Bahamas with a 10-person “drug-fuelled sexual polycule” (tip: don’t google that term on your work computer) would turn out to be a little wolfy?
Sequoia, meanwhile, has written down their $US210 million investment to $0.
I hope I’m wrong, but I suspect you might need to do the same.
Scott.
Taking on the bullies
Today, I’m going to show you how a kid rose up and beat his bullies.
Levi, 10 years old, was about to have the worst day of his life.
Today, I’m going to show you how a kid rose up and beat his bullies.
Levi, 10 years old, was about to have the worst day of his life.
“Come up to the front and read to the class, Levi”, instructed his teacher.
He froze …
You see, Levi has dyslexia, which makes reading really difficult.
He could hear some of the kids in his class starting to laugh. After trying to get a few words out, he slunk back to his chair and put his head down so he couldn’t see the other kids.
After class, a group of boys cornered him:
“Why can’t you read? What’s wrong with you?”
Levi just stared at them.
“You are so dumb!” teased one of the boys, and then everyone burst out laughing.
But the next day in class something weird happened.
His teacher brought in a plastic ruler that had a blue see-through slit in the middle. Levi had never seen anything like it. She called it a ‘reading ruler’, and it worked like a moving highlighter, helping Levi focus on reading one line at a time.
It was the first thing that had ever really helped Levi read. So that night he rushed home and told his mum the good news.
Levi wanted a reading ruler of his very own, so he googled it. There was only one problem: different colours work better for different kids. And Levi couldn’t find the one he needed.
Frustrated, he turned to his mum and said, “I should get some reading rulers made and sell them to other kids who find reading hard like me”.
And so for the next six months Levi would come home from school and work on his business.
After searching online for ages, he tracked down a factory in China that made reading rulers. He ended up ordering 25 samples to start off with, and paid for them himself using his pocket money.
And then he did something he never thought he’d be able to do:
He built his own website (mydyslexiashop.com.au) and started selling them.
And he’s done pretty darned well; he’s now sold $6,000 worth of reading rulers.
Better yet, for every 10 rulers he sells he gives one away. “I give them away to people who don’t have money to buy them, and also to schools. That way kids who may not have enough courage to admit they need them can try them out”, he tells me.
Yet the most epic thing happened a few weeks after his first sale. Without him knowing it, Levi’s mum had emailed his teacher and told him about his success. So the teacher asked Levi to get up in front of the class and tell his classmates about it.
Guess what happened?
No one laughed.
Instead, everyone cheered and told him “That’s amazing!”
There was even a kid in his class who bought one – and so did his teacher!
Levi is a Barefoot Kid.
And he’s just one of 50 kids (aged 5 to 14) who appear in my new book, Barefoot Kids.
There are young kids. Older kids. Indigenous kids. City kids. Country kids.
I want every kid to be able to open up my book, look at the kids inside, and say to themselves:
“That kid’s just like me, I could do that.”
Tread Your Own Path!
You Got Played, Barefoot!
As an Optus and Medibank customer, I must have read thousands of words on the ‘hacks’.
Hi Scott,
As an Optus and Medibank customer, I must have read thousands of words on the ‘hacks’. Thankfully, you cut through all the BS in your open letter to Financial Services Minister Stephen Jones offering a sensible solution. But I think you got played. You do realise that his response to you – “Sounds good. We’ll take a look.” – was a total fob-off!?
Eric
Hi Eric,
I have very low expectations when it comes to politicians … especially when I’m arguing against the financial interests of three multi-billion-dollar credit bureaus that employ expensive lobbyists. Still, if the Minister doesn’t have the cojones to stare down the lobbyists and stand up for the people who elected him, well, I think he’ll be the one who ultimately gets played.
Scott.
How to be unhackable
This is an open letter to the Federal Minister for Financial Services, Stephen Jones.
This is an open letter to the Federal Minister for Financial Services, Stephen Jones.
Minister,
The cyber hacks on Optus and Medibank have justifiably freaked everyone out.
And as you know the 17 million records that have been stolen in the last month are a drop in the ocean compared to the number of data breaches that never make it into the media.
So today I’m writing to you with a simple solution.
It basically involves putting a ‘lock’ on every Australian’s private financial information – plus an ‘alert’ that lets us know anytime someone comes near our personal data.
In this month’s budget the Government put aside $5 million to investigate the hacks. However, setting my idea up won’t cost the Australian people (or the Government) a single cent.
All you’ll need is to muster up some political ticker, Minister.
Let me explain:
A criminal can hack a person’s ID and then apply for credit in their name.
When the bank gets the criminal’s application, their system automatically checks the customer’s credit file.
Importantly, the customer does not get an alert telling them the bank has checked their credit file.
The criminal can use this to their advantage, often clocking up dozens of credit card and personal loan applications as quickly as they can.
So, the most logical solution would be to put a ‘lock and alert’ system on our credit reports. That is, lock every credit file so no one can see it (without the customer’s consent) and send an immediate alert to the customer if someone tries to access it.
But there’s one problem (or three actually).
There are three credit bureaus in Australia (Equifax, Experian and illion) who keep credit files on practically every Australian adult.
They are owned by large investors, and last year they collectively made $521 million in revenue selling our private data to financial institutions, according to IBISWorld.
The problem is, putting a lock on our credit files would put a lock on their profits. They’re not going to let it happen, and they pay highly paid lobbyists to make sure the government doesn’t allow it.
Those lobbyists will tell you, Minister, that “it can’t be done”.
But it can. In fact, in America, the government has already forced credit bureaus to offer it. And in Australia the ‘lock and alert’ technology already exists, via an app called Credit Savvy.
So, my suggestion is that the government (i.e. YOU, Minister) should force the credit bureaus to automatically lock down our credit files and provide us with an alert service. This will block criminals while still allowing legitimate credit inquiries to be made.
The fact is, Minister, these credit bureaus are like Facebook. Our private data is the product they sell, and their customers will pay handsomely for that data. Let’s be honest: the credit bureaus’ only allegiance is to their shareholders.
Yet your allegiance is to the Australian people you have the honour of representing. So, we need you to stare down these billion-dollar companies and stand up for us.
As the Minister for Financial Services, I know your worst nightmare is that one of our banks will get hacked, which some analysts (like Standard & Poor’s) suggest is only a matter of time.
Right now you have the power to protect all Australians with a stroke of a pen.
Will you?
Tread Your Own Path!
P.S. I invited the Minister to respond (in 140 characters or less). Here is his response:
“Sounds good. We’ll take a look. Stephen”.
Thank You for Coming to Lismore
I came to your Beer with Barefoot session last night – and wow – it was packed!
Hey Scott,
I came to your Beer with Barefoot session last night – and wow – it was packed! I was so excited to get to meet you in person and you bought me a beer and signed my book. It’s been almost nine months since we lost our house and we’re still struggling. I left last night with a clear plan and knowing I had help. Thank you for supporting the community of Lismore, it’s the lift we really needed.
Lauren
Hey Lauren
It was lovely to meet you there. And it was a real pleasure to come to Lismore. After meeting so many people like you who shared heartbreaking stories, I’m blown away by what an amazing, resilient community you have.
A big thank you to the Lismore Book Warehouse, and to the publican at the Metropole for putting on such a great event!
Scott.
Barefoot Kid Refuses to Go to Sleep
I gave my 10 year old son your new book this afternoon … and he can’t put it down.
Dear Scott,
I gave my 10 year old son your new book this afternoon … and he can’t put it down. He’s on page 104! He won’t go to sleep until he finishes it! He says it’s amazing! Loves the ‘little tips’ and stories the most.
Perhaps this book will change his life like Barefoot Investor has changed mine.
Thank You!
Sasha
Hey Sasha,
What a little champion!
And your son’s not alone:
We launched the book on Monday … and by Monday night my inbox was full of kids (and their parents) writing emails to me, bragging that they’d already finished the whole book.
That’s only happened to me once before:
The day I launched the original Barefoot Investor book.
But this time it’s even better … because it’s happening with kids.
I’ve said that Barefoot Kids is the best book I’ve ever written, and I believe it.
So I’m putting it out there early: there is something very special about this book.
Thank you for sharing, Sasha. I look forward to hearing about the epic money adventure your son is now on!
Scott.
Vanguard Super?
I came across an article stating that Vanguard is now in the Superannuation business and will be competing against the likes of Australian Super, HostPlus etc. What is your view on this?
Hi Scott
I came across an article stating that Vanguard is now in the Superannuation business and will be competing against the likes of Australian Super, HostPlus etc. What is your view on this?
Andrew
Hi Andrew
Yes, this week Vanguard officially launched their super fund offering.
They’re charging 0.58% per annum, which is one of the lowest in the market for standard default funds with balances under $50,000.
There are cheaper superannuation index funds available.
Yet here’s what’s interesting about this:
First, Vanguard has said they’ll look to lower their fees over time as they grow. I’m inclined to believe them, because that’s what they have a history of doing.
Second, this ain’t your bog-average super fund.
Research from SuperRatings found there is a “high risk at retirement” for many of the current top-returning super funds. That’s because most of our biggest super funds throw everyone – young and old – into a one-size-fits-all investment pot.
Instead, Vanguard’s offering is a life cycle fund that invests your super based on your age. In simple terms, they automatically reduce the amount of riskier assets, like shares, in your portfolio as you get older and closer to retirement. In all, they make 36 of these adjustments up to your 83rd birthday (with no switching fees), which is far and away the most comprehensive of any Australian super offering.
So what do I think?
I think this is great news for every Australian – regardless of whether you switch to Vanguard or not.
The super fund industry trousers an outrageous $30 billion a year in fees – money that could and should be going towards our retirement.
Hopefully now that one of the world’s biggest fund managers – with a relentless focus on lowering costs – has set up shop, they’ll keep everyone on their toes.
For disclosure, I invest in some Vanguard index funds.
Scott.
FOGO the Radio Waves
So they’re building a nice 40-foot NBN tower in our street. I’m not happy. The health risks and environmental risks are huge, plus property prices are also negatively affected as who wants to live near that?
Hey Scott,
So they’re building a nice 40-foot NBN tower in our street. I’m not happy. The health risks and environmental risks are huge, plus property prices are also negatively affected as who wants to live near that? If we were in the suburbs I might expect this, yet we’re not. We bought 10 acres in the Gold Coast hinterland for the healthy lifestyle, and our street is full of families and kids. Never did I expect an NBN tower to pop up. The guy who’s allowing it on his property will be getting paid a pretty penny for it I’m sure. So what can we do? My initial thought is to sell and get away as quickly as possible. Or do we rent it out to someone who’s brave enough to live near this tower?
Sarah
Hi Sarah,
Seriously?
Look, I’m not going to weigh in on the health risks argument (however, next week I know I’ll get at least 150 emails from people who will).
Yet what I am picking up are your personal radio waves, and it’s clear you’re stressed to the max.
It’s kind of like having Clive Palmer move in next door. He’s probably not going to hurt you, yet watching him drag his overstuffed FOGO bin to the curb each Wednesday night isn’t exactly a selling point for your street.
You’ve said that your initial thought is to “sell and get away as quickly as possible”. That’s your gut talking, and here’s a tip from Clive – you should listen to it.
Look, life is too short to live in a place that brings you constant anxiety.
After all, what’s going to kill you is the stress … not the radio waves.
Scott.