@economics.adventu: Most people think the stock market is gambling. But here's the question: If buying a share means owning a small piece of a real business, is it really gambling? When you buy a stock, you're not buying a number on a screen. You're buying ownership in a company. If that company grows, earns profits, and creates value, your investment can grow too. That's why some of the world's wealthiest people became rich through stocks—not by trading every day, but by owning great businesses for a long time. Yet millions of people avoid investing altogether. Some fear losing money. Some think the market is only for the rich. Others simply never learn how it works. Ironically, while many people save money in bank accounts that struggle to beat inflation, others use ownership to build wealth over decades. The stock market can be risky. But not investing carries its own risk too. Here's the controversial question: If the stock market has created more millionaires than almost any other wealth-building tool, should financial education and investing be taught as a compulsory subject in schools?
Economics Adventures
Region: PK
Tuesday 23 June 2026 10:15:39 GMT
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