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Lifetime Earnings, Lifetime Spending

The average NBA basketball player will make 25 million dollars over their playing career.

This comes from a playing career of ~5 years and an average salary of ~USD 5 million a year. Unlike timeless superstars like Jordan, Kobe or LeBron, most basketball players — or athletes for that matter — don’t actually play at the highest level for long.

Still, 25 million is pretty good. Sports writers call this “lifetime earnings.” I used to think it was a sports thing, though I’ve since learned that lifetime earnings is a concept in economics.

Recently, while doing my tax returns, I was reminded how small amounts of monthly expenses can lead to a large yearly amount. Maybe it’s some form of recency bias: you might feel pain spending money on a weekly basis, but you probably don’t realize how big the amount gets every year.

It made me think of an experiment: what if I looked back at my entire history of earnings and expenses? What would the story of my lifetime earnings and spending tell me?

Here’s what I discovered and the lessons I learned:

Calculating Lifetime Earnings and Spending

Estimating your lifetime earnings should be pretty easy, especially if you’ve kept track of your income over the years.

For me, it was looking through all the budgeting sheets I’ve created over my 16-year career. Another more-accurate way: go through your yearly income tax statements.

Lifetime spending was harder.

Depending on how detailed you wanna be, you could spend months looking through bank statements. But as I was doing this, I reminded myself I wasn’t looking for exact amounts. No prizes for 100% accuracy. Rather, just estimates on how I’ve spent my money over the years.

I’ve always used a percentage-based budget. Hence, my source of truth was again my monthly budgeting sheets.

Monthly budget sheet — 2022

Surprising Things From My Data

Lifetime Earnings: RM x,xxx,xxx

(Note: RM 1 = USD 0.23)

Lifetime Spending

Instead of giving you detailed numbers, I thought showing a pie chart would be better.

Here’s how I’ve spent money over my entire career:

Lifetime Assets

Lifetime earnings and spending tell you one part of the story.

For the other, I compared my findings to my personal balance sheet. Did I accumulate good assets over my career?

Here’s what I found:

I’m not financially independent yet, but I’m on a good path. I’m happy. Some of the most boring pieces of advice — live below your means, keep your ego in check, don’t focus on getting rich fast — are a lot more wise than I could have ever imagined.

Some closing thoughts:

Lifetime Lessons Learned

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Let me know in the comments if you want some of the lifetime earnings / lifetime spending / monthly budgeting templates I use.

Another way: Work with a licensed financial adviser to get a holistic view.

For my Malaysian friends, feel free to refer to my article: My Experience With a Licensed Financial Planner in Malaysia (includes details on fees plus a FREE consultation session with Wealth Vantage Advisory).

Pic from Pixabay

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