In case you’re unfamiliar with doctor pay, there are two different tier systems: Resident physicians and attending physicians. Resident physicians are doctors who recently graduated from medical school and are still getting training in their field of choice. They are working as doctors but still actively learning at the same time. Attending physicians are different. They are doctors who have graduated medical school and have a minimum of 3 to 7 years of experience. They have a full state license, tend to be board certified, and make substantially more money. Resident physicians make the median household income ($55,000 to $75,000 per year). Attending physicians an average of $300,000 and beyond. If you’re a resident physician or a young professional who makes the median household income you should still invest money. Here are 4 reasons why:
1. Investing prevents your money from losing value. In case you haven’t heard, inflation is higher than it has been in awhile. Because of inflation, things like cars, homes, gas, and groceries cost more now than they have in the past. If that weren’t enough, the rate in which these prices are rising is putting a strain on our pockets and our lifestyles. We may have to delay buying the home we wanted, forgo that vacation we were planning, or drive our old cars for much longer than we anticipated. Since costs are rising so fast, we can buy fewer things with each dollar, than we could in the past. Unless we intentional about growing our money, it will continue to lose buying power just sitting in a savings account. One of the main reasons to start investing now as a resident, or young professional on an average income, is because it prevents our dollars from losing value. Investing gives our money a chance to grow which brings me to my next point…
2. Investing allows your money to grow much faster. You could stack money in a savings account, but that money will not grow much at all. The minimal increase of 0.25% that many people get by keeping their money in a savings account is not enough to keep pace with inflation and the rising cost of goods. Investing helps combat that because not only does it allow your money to grow, but it allows it to do so much quicker through compound interest. Compound interest is when your money makes more money (called interest) and then that interest stacks onto your original amount and begins to make even more money (added interest). This ability for you to make profits (interest) on top of existing profits (other interest), means that you get even more profit than you thought (compound interest). It is this compound interest that allows your money to grow much faster.
3. Investing gives you the chance to reach your financial goals sooner. Because investing allows your money to grow, it is through investing that you can accumulate a higher net worth sooner than you other wise would. As your net worth increases and the value of your investments rises you will be able to reach your financial goals sooner. For some people, these goals may be to accumulate a certain amount of money for a down payment on a home to use when they become attendings, for others it may be to have the ability to cut back to part time or just work one less day per week. Whatever your financial goals are, investing gives you the opportunity to reach them sooner. As your net worth grows, you start to accumulate wealth and one of the best things money can buy is control over your time. Think about how nice that would be.
4. Investing allows you to invest as you save. This is perhaps one of the biggest perks of investing as a resident or young professional. Investing money through a Roth IRA (that you can open by calling a place like Vanguard or Fidelity) gives you tons of options including the ability to invest as you save. What do I mean by that? You can contribute money to a Roth IRA then choose to invest it however you’d like (preferably in low cost index mutual funds like VTSAX or VIT). With a Roth IRA, you also have the option to take your contributions out of the account at any time. This means you can open a Roth IRA and contribute $500 per month up to the yearly maximum of $6,000 per year. During your time in training and career building this money is growing and gaining compound interest. Once you finish training you can choose to take your contributions out of the account (and use the money for a wedding, fancy vacation, or down payment on a home) but keep the profits you made on that money inside of the account. In other words, you were able to make money on your investments and still save for the big item you planned for. You can also choose not to take out your contributions and instead keep all the money inside of the Roth IRA until you retire. Having the option the take your contributions out of the account at any time allows you the flexibility to use this account as a backup savings account that actually earns interest.
What do you think? If you’re a resident physician or young professional making the median income, will you start investing money this year?