Stop Chasing Salaries: The Secret to Building Real Wealth
Elijah TobsBy Elijah Tobs
Finance
May 25, 2026 • 2:09 AM
2m2 min read
Verified
The Core Insight
Lamide Elizabeth, founder of 'Building Wealth Without Borders,' shares her journey from a low-income upbringing in Hackney to becoming a successful property and international investor. The core argument is that true wealth is not defined by a high salary or lifestyle, but by the ownership of income-generating assets. The discussion highlights the necessity of shifting from an 'earner' mindset to an 'owner' mindset, the power of intergenerational living as a wealth hack, and the importance of taking calculated risks to achieve personal freedom.
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As the founder and primary investigative voice at Kodawire, Elijah Tobs brings over 15 years of experience in dissecting complex geopolitical and financial systems. His work is centered on the ethical governance of emerging technologies, the shifting architectures of global finance, and the future of pedagogy in a digital-first world. A staunch advocate for high-fidelity journalism, he established Kodawire to be a sanctuary for deep-dive intelligence. Moving away from the ephemeral nature of modern headlines, Kodawire delivers permanent, verified insights that challenge the status quo and empower the global reader.
The Wealth Illusion: Why Your Salary Isn't Making You Rich
What You Need to Know
Income vs. Assets: A high salary is a funding vehicle, not wealth itself. True wealth is defined by the assets you own, not the paycheck you earn.
The "Housing Hack": Minimizing your largest expense, housing, is the fastest way to accelerate capital accumulation for your first investment.
The Power of Agency: Wealth building requires an internal locus of control; stop waiting for permission and start the transaction process.
Distribution is Key: Use social media as a marketing arm for a high-ticket business rather than relying on volatile ad revenue or brand deals.
In the modern economy, we are conditioned to equate a high salary with financial success. We see the "old money" aesthetic, the tailored suits, the luxury travel, the high-rise office views, and we assume that the person behind the desk has "made it." But as I have observed through years of market analysis and financial strategy, this is a dangerous illusion. A salary is merely a tool, a funding vehicle. If you are trading your time for money, you are operating under a ceiling that will never allow for true financial independence. For those looking to break this cycle, understanding the psychological barriers keeping you broke is the first step toward real change.
Analyzing the mechanics of wealth beyond the paycheck. (Credit: Jon Tyson via Unsplash)
Wealth is not a number in a bank account; it is the possession of options. It is the freedom to choose your geography, your schedule, and your daily environment. When you rely solely on a paycheck, you are one layoff or one market shift away from losing that freedom. Real wealth is built when you transition from being an employee to an asset owner, investing in property, businesses, and equity that generate value while you sleep. You can learn more about this shift in our guide on why cash flow beats cash accumulation.
From Hackney to LSE: The Power of Internal Locus of Control
The journey to wealth often begins with a psychological shift. Consider the trajectory of those who break out of low-income environments. It is rarely about luck; it is about the "internal locus of control", the belief that you are the primary architect of your life. When you grow up in a system that doesn't provide a roadmap, you have two choices: accept the status quo or build your own path. As noted by Harvard Business Review, developing a strong sense of agency is a primary predictor of long-term career and financial success.
Taking responsibility for your trajectory means doing the uncomfortable work. It means cold-calling institutions, researching scholarships, and navigating elite environments where you may feel like an outsider. This sense of agency is what separates those who climb the corporate ladder from those who use the ladder to build a foundation for something else. If you are starting from scratch, consider the strategic path to financial wholeness to guide your early decisions.
Behind the Scenes & Transparency Log
I have spent years analyzing the mechanics of wealth accumulation, moving beyond the surface-level advice found in mainstream finance. My research process involves vetting the strategies of self-made investors, cross-referencing their claims against historical market data, and stripping away the "influencer" noise to find the core principles that actually move the needle. I do not rely on hearsay; I look at the structural decisions, the tax-efficient moves, the asset allocation, and the business models, that create long-term security. For more on these structural principles, see the Investopedia guide on asset allocation.
To enter the property market or start a business, you need a triad of resources: Time, Money, and Knowledge. If you are short on capital, you must be long on knowledge and time. The most effective "wealth hack" for those starting from scratch is the aggressive reduction of living costs. By living at home or choosing low-cost housing, you can save a significant percentage of your income. This isn't about deprivation; it's about capital allocation. Every pound not spent on rent is a pound that can be deployed into an asset that appreciates. You can find a detailed millionaire’s blueprint for saving on a low salary to help you get started.
Aggressive capital allocation is the foundation of wealth. (Credit: Jens Peter Olesen via Unsplash)
The Contrarian's Corner
Most people believe that "passive income" is the goal. I disagree. The goal is asset ownership. Passive income is a byproduct of owning assets, but the focus should be on the acquisition and growth of those assets. If you focus on "passive income" without the underlying asset, you are chasing a mirage. You must be willing to do the active, difficult work of building the business or managing the property before you can ever enjoy the "passive" benefits.
Risk Mitigation in Global Markets
Investing is not without peril. International investing, while offering diversification, introduces currency risk and regulatory complexity. Property markets in Dubai or South Africa operate under different legal frameworks than the UK. Before moving capital across borders, you must understand the tax implications and the liquidity of those assets. Never invest in a market you haven't researched or visited, and always account for the "hidden" costs of maintenance, management, and potential economic downturns. The International Monetary Fund provides excellent resources on understanding global economic risks.
The Femin Fortune Five
True strategic clarity comes from defining your non-negotiables. My framework prioritizes: 1. Business over property, 2. Wealth over impact, 3. Security over growth, 4. Asset-rich over time-rich, and 5. Comfort at 35 over 100M at 60. By anchoring your decisions in these five pillars, you avoid the common trap of chasing vanity metrics that do not contribute to your long-term autonomy.
Interactive Decision-Making Tool
If you are currently deciding your next move, use this simple framework:
If you have high income but no assets: Stop lifestyle inflation immediately. Redirect 50%+ of your income into an index fund or property down payment.
If you have time but no money: Focus on skill acquisition and building a distribution network (social media/content) that can eventually sell a high-ticket service.
If you have both: Diversify into international assets to protect your capital from local currency devaluation.
My Personal Toolkit
To manage this effectively, I rely on a few core categories of tools:
Asset Tracking Software: Tools that allow you to view your net worth across different currencies and asset classes in real-time.
Global Banking Platforms: Multi-currency accounts that allow you to hold and transfer funds internationally without excessive conversion fees.
Transaction Management: Dedicated legal and tax advisory services in each jurisdiction where you hold assets to ensure compliance and efficiency.
Engagement Conclusion
We have discussed the shift from earning to owning, but the application is entirely up to you. If you had to choose between building a business that provides long-term security or chasing a high-growth opportunity that carries significant risk, which path aligns more with your definition of freedom? I will be in the comments for the next 24 hours to discuss your thoughts.
A salary is a funding vehicle, not wealth itself. It is earned by trading time for money, which creates a ceiling on your income and leaves you vulnerable to layoffs or market shifts.
It is the psychological belief that you are the primary architect of your life, taking responsibility for your trajectory rather than waiting for external permission or luck.
The most effective method is the aggressive reduction of living costs to maximize capital allocation, allowing you to deploy funds into appreciating assets like property or businesses.
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Editorial Team • Question of the Day
"Does your current career serve as a funding vehicle for your assets, or are you still trading your time for a salary with no exit strategy?"