Money Magazine Australia

The hot seat

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What was your first job?

As a teenager I had odd jobs like mowing lawns and cutting bushes. Those sorts of jobs were good in terms of meeting other people and dealing with adults who weren’t your parents and who wanted you to work and complete a job to a standard. I enjoyed that.

It was great training for my career as a writer with the newspaper – editors are like parents and doing it to a standard means it gets published. My first profession­al job was as a research officer at the Geelong Regional Commission, a planning and developmen­t authority that administer­ed Geelong in the early 1980s. I was introduced to the Australian Bureau of Statistics bulletins on population and I was fascinated by these obscure, bizarre documents that measured the movements of the Australian people on a micro level, and I would study them.

What’s the best money advice you’ve received?

The best advice was given to me by my mother. It was by example in a working-class family – Mum controlled the finances, managed the household budget and raised six children on a working man’s wage in country Victoria. Living in a commission house, she did it by writing down every item of expenditur­e. In my early years of running a household that’s what I did. It’s a really good lesson for people starting out.

What’s the best investment decision you’ve made?

To buy a house early, at the age of 24. My wife was teaching and I was still studying, but I was working three jobs, and the big thing at that time (1981) was that everyone in our peer group married at age 21 and 22 and we did not go overseas but bought a house. We were raised by people who had lived through the Great Depression and war.

What’s the worst investment decision you’ve made?

I don’t know that I’ve made a “worst” decision, but I don’t think the self-managed super fund logic works for everyone. What you’re saying is you think that you can deliver a better result than people who are profession­al at this and have a lifetime’s experience of it. I tend to think a good super business is probably safer in a herd unless you are an alpha investor.

What is your favourite thing to splurge on?

Travel. My wife and I travel to Europe every Australian winter (not this year). We have a son in Copenhagen and a daughter in San Francisco, so we come home that way. I’m 63 and I need to be slowing down and I would like to be able to spend more time, particular­ly in the Melbourne winter, travelling, nothing fancy, and just connecting with the kids.

If you had $10,000 to invest where would you invest it?

I would divide it between my children and put it into an account for each of them.

What would you do if you had only $50 left in the bank?

I would make it stretch until I had more money in the bank and use as required: note every cent and rationalis­e every cent.

Do you intend to leave an inheritanc­e?

Yes, but it’s a macabre calculatio­n. I’ll start to give it away to my kids as I see mortality approachin­g. I don’t want to hoard everything and then they get it all. When I look back to my 20s and 30s, that’s when you need support.

When did you first realise the great significan­ce of the work you do?

In 2002 I published a book called The Big Shift and almost immediatel­y I was asked to speak at conference­s and I realised the time and effort to speak and the remunerati­on far outweighed the time and effort put into consulting. It was a better way for the future.

Finish this sentence: money makes…

Life easier. It’s important, but don’t let it govern your life or change your behaviour.

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