The Iced Coffee Hour / YouTube
Moneywise and Yahoo Finance LLC may earn commission or revenue through links in the content below.
America’s baby boomers are often seen as the lucky ones — the generation that bought homes before prices soared, rode decades of stock market growth and built their careers in a less cutthroat job market than what many face today. But according to “Rich Dad, Poor Dad” author Robert Kiyosaki, those golden years may not be so golden after all.
In a recent appearance on The Iced Coffee Hour podcast, Kiyosaki issued a blunt warning: America’s boomers will face a wave of homelessness — and he’s placing the blame squarely on one institution (1).
“The reason we have homelessness today is because we have a Federal Reserve bank — it’s a criminal organization,” he said. “Look how homelessness is exploding. People can’t afford homes.”
Kiyosaki argued that by printing fiat currency, the Federal Reserve fuels price increases that make everyday life harder for ordinary Americans.
“When you print fake money, which this stuff is, you make life harder on people,” he said, holding up two U.S. dollar bills.
He went on to explain that money printing disproportionately benefits asset owners at the expense of the poor and middle class.
“So if you own a house and you print money, you feel, oh, the price of my house went up. But the average person sees the price of chicken and eggs and yogurt goes up and — and inflation wipes them out.”
After news broke that the Department of Justice had opened a criminal investigation into the Federal Reserve’s $2.5 billion headquarters renovation, he posted on X: “Yay: it’s about time (2).”
Calling Powell a “criminal counterfeiter,” Kiyosaki argued that the Federal Reserve’s policies are “Marxist” because it’s a centralized bank.
“The creation of the Fed in 1913 and brought with it the 16th Amendment …. a.k.a. Income tax,” he claimed on an X post on Jan. 12.
“Up until the creation of the Fed, America was a tax free nation. America was founded on a tax revolt known as the Boston Tea Party in 1773. Then came the Fed in 1913,” he added.