"Hacienda privada." . . "Finanzas." . . . . "Inversiones." . . "Finanzas personales." . . . . . "Robert T. Kiyosaki relates the story of his two paternal role models: his father, a well educated but fiscally poor man; and his best friend's father, an eighth-grade dropout who became a self-made multimillionaire. The contrast between them gave him a unique economic perspective, enabling him to learn secrets that allowed him to retire at 47. He addresses the myth that earning a high income is necessary to be rich, challenges the belief that a house is an asset, and explains what kids need to know about money for their future financial success." . . . . . "Papá rico, papá pobre lo que enseñan los ricos a sus hijos sobre el dinero-- que los pobres y la clase media no hacen!" . . . . "While growing up [the author] had two paternal role models: one, his father, a well educated but fiscally poor man; and two, his best friend's father, an eighth-grade dropout who became a self-made multimillionaire. The lifelong monetary problems experienced by his \"poor dad\" pounded home the counterpoint communicated by his \"rich dad,\" and [the author] developed a unique economic perspective. In [this book], he lays out his philosophy behind his relationship with money, sharing the secrets that allowed him to retire at 47. Among them, he addresses the myth that earning a high income is necessary to be rich, challenges the belief that a house is an asset, and explains what kids need to know about money for their future financial success.-http://www.warnerbooks.com." . . "Audiobooks" . "Papa rico papa pobre lo que enseąn los ricos a sus hijos sobre el dinero--Łque los pobres y la clase media no hacen!" . . . . "Robert T. Kiyosaki relates the story of his two paternal role models: his father, a well educated but fiscally poor man; and his best friend's father, an eighth-grade dropout who became a self-made multimillionaire. The contrast between them gave him a unique economic perspective, enabling him to learn secrets that allowed him to retire at 47. He addresses the myth that earning a high income is necessary to be rich, challenges the belief that a house is an asset, and explains what kids need to know about money for their future financial success." . . "Papa Rico Papa Pobre Lo Que Ensenan Los Ricos a Sus Hijos Sobre El Dinero --?Que Los Pobres Y LA Clase Media No Hacen! [sound recording]" . . "Papá rico, papá pobre [lo que enseñan los ricos a sus hijos sobre el dinero-- que los pobres y la clase media no hacen!]" . . . . . . "Money = Dinero." . .