The Wealth Gap Is Self-Inflicted: Why Most People Lose to Systems They Could Copy
A Practical Guide to Behavioral Wealth, Financial Independence, and Replicable Systems
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Knox W. Barclay
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
The wealth divide isn’t only structural—it’s behavioral. The Wealth Gap Is Self-Inflicted dismantles the myth that success is a secret guarded by elites and reveals how everyday decisions widen or close the distance between scarcity and freedom. It shows that most people copy lifestyle, not leverage; appearance, not process. The result is predictable: envy replaces observation, and consumption replaces compounding.
Across thirty sharp, story-driven chapters, this book exposes the difference between those who imitate image and those who replicate systems. It replaces financial mystery with mechanical truth. Readers discover how automation replaces ambition, how consistency outperforms genius, and why ownership—not employment—marks the real line between survival and sovereignty.
Every chapter contrasts illusions with infrastructure: saving versus deploying, hustle versus process, emotion versus design. You’ll learn how to build wealth mechanisms that act automatically when motivation fades, how to reinvest rather than regress, and how to protect attention—the rarest modern asset—from algorithmic distraction.
This is not motivational fluff or overnight-success fantasy. It’s a manual for behavioral reform. It teaches how to audit personal habits, copy proven financial frameworks, and replace outrage with replication. The message is blunt but freeing: stop admiring, stop arguing, start applying.
When systems replace excuses, the wealth gap narrows naturally. The Wealth Gap Is Self-Inflicted turns financial independence from mystery into machinery—one repeatable decision at a time.