
The Psychology of Money
Timeless Lessons on Wealth, Greed, and Happiness
by Morgan Housel
Editorial review
Housel writes some of the cleanest financial prose alive. His central claim — that doing well with money has more to do with behavior than with intelligence — is both correct and quietly subversive in an industry that makes its money on the opposite assumption.
AI-generated summary
Across 20 short, self-contained chapters, Morgan Housel uses stories — historical, personal, and contemporary — to illustrate behavioral patterns that drive long-term financial outcomes more than technical knowledge does.
Key takeaways
- 1
Doing well with money has little to do with how smart you are and a lot to do with how you behave.
- 2
Compounding works on time more than on returns.
- 3
'Enough' is a useful concept; without it, more is never sufficient.
- 4
Reasonable beats rational — the plan you can stick to outperforms the optimal one you abandon.
The right reader
Anyone who has ever made or thought about a financial decision. Especially good as a first money book.
What it touches
How it reads
Calm, plainspoken, wise.
Reading difficulty: Accessible
