Copyright thehindu

Money is not always wise. Let’s pause talking about it for a moment. Are you a college graduate with zero net worth? Haven’t built a business empire yet and don’t own any luxury possessions? Don’t worry. You are still wealthier than a 65-year-old billionaire with a private jet in one crucial sense: TIME. Time billionaire A healthy teen has roughly 60-70 years of life ahead, equating to nearly 3,00,000 to 3,50,000 wakeful hours to learn, experiment, create, and build. He might not have wealth deposited in a bank, but he is time rich with more hours in his life. In contrast, a 65-year-old, who has created immense financial resources and freedom, is not rich enough in terms of wealth of time. Time, and probably health, might not be on his side to pivot, explore new ventures, or recover from shocks or failures. Time is non-renewable. Time is compounding. The more you have, the more power you gain over learning, skill-building, growth, and life choices. Time: invisible currency In his bestselling book Outliers - The Story of Success, Malcolm Gladwell suggested that mastering any skill requires roughly 10,000 hours of deliberate practice. By investing just four hours every day into learning high-value skills, a 20-year-old graduate accumulates roughly 1,460 hours per year. With nearly 40 years left until retirement, he has around 58,400 hours of time ahead. Applying Malcolm Gladwell’s 10,000-hour principle to build real expertise, the young graduate has ample time to master five or six skills. Each skill can become a gateway to new opportunities and career pivots, both during his career and even after retirement. Time, in this sense, is the invisible currency that compounds quietly in the background, while most people focus only on the compounding of money through SIPs, equity or other financial instruments. It is time that compounds into mastery, freedom, and meaningful achievements, if spent wisely. Time-leaking Most people are not truly time-poor, but they are constantly leaking it. Hours quietly vanish into thin air owing to unconscious habits such as binge-watching, doomscrolling, social-networking, checking notifications instantly, or mindless multitasking. Even if you waste one hour a day, it adds up to 365 hours a year and over 40 years, that becomes 14,600 hours, enough time to master at least one or two new skills, write a book, or build a passive income stream, or transform health and fitness. Time, when managed wisely, compounds in multiple ways money cannot. Hence, instead of chasing millions and billions, if you count your hours and use them judiciously, you can create wealth that no bank account could ever hold. Fortunes can be rebuilt from scratch, but lost time is gone forever. Money multiplies, minutes melt. Time: the leveller Often, people say, “I don’t have time”. Unlike money, which is unevenly distributed, time is the ultimate leveller. Every human, rich or poor, young or old, has the same 24 hours in a day. What differs is awareness and how those hours are spent. Time-money paradox Many people are of the opinion that high-paying jobs automatically makes them wealthy. Yet, the reality is often the opposite. Spending long hours in a routine, high-paying role might increase your bank balance, but if considerable time is not invested in learning, building skills, or exploring new opportunities, the true potential of both time and money would be lost. You might earn more, but you would fail to compound your financial intelligence, entrepreneurial ability, or marketable skills, the real skill-sets or assets that could multiply income far faster than a salary ever would. The irony: people trade their finite hours, the precious time, for money, but because the work is often repetitive, mechanical or low-value in terms of learning and long-term growth, they miss the chance to turn each hour into a leveraged asset. Early-career professionals who focus solely on income generation may end up years later with an impressive resume, but limited freedom, knowledge, or alternative income streams, leaving them dependent entirely on their salary and active work for financial security. A time billionaire flips this equation. He treats every hour as an asset, strategically investing it in learning high-value skills, building financial literacy, or launching ventures. His goal is not merely to earn money but to use time efficiently, allowing decades of effort and learning to compound into both wealth and genuine financial freedom. Recognising this paradox empowers you to escape mundane routine jobs and consciously invest your hours where they generate the highest financial leverage. If you treat TIME as your most valuable asset, then every Rupee, every decision, and every opportunity will compound into true wealth. Invest in you, master your hours, then financial freedom will follow naturally. (The writer is an NISM & CRISIL-certified Wealth Manager and certified in NISM’s Research Analyst module)