Padre Rico- Padre Pobre - Robert Toru Kiyosaki.... Jun 2026

El núcleo del libro, y lo que lo hace tan memorable, es la narrativa de los dos padres.

El problema de la clase media, según Kiyosaki, es que confunde pasivos con activos. Creen que su casa es su mayor activo, pero en realidad, mientras viven en ella, pagan impuestos, mantenimiento, intereses y servicios: es un agujero financiero. Padre rico- padre pobre - Robert Toru Kiyosaki....

Rich Dad Poor Dad: What the Rich Teach Their Kids About Money That the Poor and Middle Class Do Not! Author: Robert Toru Kiyosaki Published: 1997 (originally self-published) Genre: Personal finance / Self-help El núcleo del libro, y lo que lo

Una persona sabia no toma el libro como una Biblia financiera, sino como una chispa de inspiración . Sus conceptos sobre activos/pasivos y mentalidad son sólidos; sus consejos específicos (como iniciar una corporación o invertir en bienes raíces sin dinero) requieren asesoramiento profesional local. Rich Dad Poor Dad: What the Rich Teach

Kiyosaki utiliza esta dualidad para contrastar dos mentalidades opuestas. El libro no se trata solo de números en una hoja de cálculo; se trata de .

| Concern | Explanation | |--------|-------------| | | Kiyosaki has never produced verifiable evidence of “Rich Dad.” Journalists (e.g., Nightly Business Report ) found no record of the supposed wealthy father figure. Many now believe he is a composite or fictional device. | | Oversimplification | Labeling a primary residence as a liability ignores equity, tax benefits, and long-term appreciation. Real-world finance is more nuanced. | | Vague Advice | The book tells you what to do (buy assets) but offers little how —no risk assessment, no diversification strategy, no detailed tax or legal guidance. | | Questionable Tactics | Kiyosaki has promoted using credit cards to start businesses, flipping real estate with zero down, and even filed for bankruptcy for one of his companies in 2012 (while preaching financial invincibility). | | Self-Referencing Empire | The book funnels readers into paid seminars, board games ( Cashflow ), and further books—a profitable ecosystem, but critics call it marketing more than mentorship. |