klamla
Registered User
- Jan 3, 2016
- 484
- 167
Uh... what? How does this matter in terms of raw $?
$10 a day, every day for a week is the same amount of money as $70 on Sunday. It may take a lot more self control and restraint to not blow that $70 immediately, but it doesn't change the amount of money, which is my point.
It's irrelevant when you get the money. The salaried worker at 50k/year for 40 years ends up with the same amount of money in his account as the 200k/year for 10 year AHL player*.
*Again, ignoring tax differences and ignoring the potential for massive compounded investment returns.
I mean, if you want to get technical or use relevant economics/financial theory, it definitely is relevant when you get the money.
Time value of money. A dollar today is worth more than a dollar tomorrow because of inflation/buying capacity. Read up on it if you're interested.
Also, if your argument has such a huge factor taken out of account in order to make it, it kind of hurts your argument overall. Ie. "ignoring potential for massive compounded interests returns."
That in itself would make it very relevant.