How does a man like Floyd Mayweather—arguably the most successful prizefighter of his generation, with career earnings said to exceed $1 billion, find himself dogged by tax liens, lawsuits and whispers of cash flow strain? And yet, that is precisely the narrative emerging: vast wealth tied up in property, but pressure on liquidity; assets in abundance, but cash in short supply.
It is easy to dismiss such accounts as the excesses of celebrity life. But
to do so is to miss the more useful lesson. Strip away the scale the private
jets, the Manhattan duplex, the Las Vegas real estate, and what remains is a
problem that is far more familiar, even mundane.
It is the gap between earning money and understanding it.
That gap is where fortunes are made—and lost.
We tend to frame poverty as an income problem. Raise incomes, the thinking goes, and poverty recedes. There is truth in that, of course. But it is an incomplete truth.
"Because across income levels—from the salaried professional to the trader in Owino you encounter the same pattern: money comes in, but very little stays...
The issue is not just how much is earned. It is what is done with what is
earned.
Money, left unmanaged, has a way of evaporating.
This is why financial literacy is not a luxury. It is not something to be
acquired after one has “made it.” It is, quite simply, the only reliable
insurance against poverty. Not because it guarantees wealth, but because it
reduces the probability of losing it.
The distinction matters.
Consider the difference between income and wealth. Income is a flow—a
salary, a fee, a profit margin. Wealth is a stock—the accumulation of assets
that continue to generate income even when the primary source of earnings slows
or stops. Too often, a rising salary is taken as evidence of rising wealth. It
is not.
Without deliberate allocation, income turns into consumption.
And consumption, however justified, does not compound.
This is where many high earners come unstuck. The trappings of success—houses, cars, lifestyle upgrades arrive early. The discipline of asset building arrives late, if at all. The result is a life that looks prosperous on the surface but is structurally fragile underneath.
A single disruption—a job loss, a business downturn, a delayed payment, exposes
the fragility.
Seen through this lens, the Mayweather story is less an outlier and more an
exaggerated version of a common reality. Assets that cannot easily be converted
into cash. Obligations that demand immediate settlement. The uncomfortable
space in between.
Liquidity, it turns out, matters as much as net worth.
For the ordinary Ugandan, the numbers are smaller but the dynamics are
identical. The teacher who builds a house over 20 years but has no savings to
fall back on. The entrepreneur whose capital is locked up in stock that cannot
move. The professional whose lifestyle expands in line with income, leaving no
room for investment.
Different circumstances, same outcome.
Financial literacy is about three disciplines.
The first is allocation—deciding, in advance, how income will be split between consumption, saving and investment. This is less about theory and more about habit. A standing instruction that channels a portion of income into treasury bonds or a collective investment scheme each month does more for long-term wealth than any sporadic investment inspired by market chatter.many of the assets we celebrate—land held indefinitely, high-end consumption goods are either illiquid or non-productive. They may preserve value. They rarely grow it.
The second is asset selection—understanding what constitutes a productive asset. In Uganda’s context, this increasingly includes government securities offering double-digit yields, dividend-paying equities on the USE, and well-run businesses. These are assets that generate cash flow. They work, quietly and consistently.
By contrast, The third is reinvestment. This is where compounding, often described but
rarely experienced, does its work. Returns, whether in the form of bond coupons
or dividends, must be redeployed. Over time, the effect is transformative.
Modest sums, consistently invested and reinvested, begin to scale in ways that
defy intuition.
Miss one of these disciplines, and the system begins to falter.
What makes the absence of financial literacy particularly dangerous is that
it does not announce itself early. In the initial stages, everything appears to
be working. Income is rising. Consumption is improving. The outward indicators
are positive. It is only later, when obligations accumulate and income becomes
uncertain, that the underlying weakness becomes visible.
By then, adjustment is difficult.
Uganda today is at an interesting inflection point. Financial instruments
that were once the preserve of institutions are increasingly accessible to
individuals. Treasury bonds can be purchased in relatively small denominations.
The stock market, while still shallow, offers entry points. Digital platforms
are lowering transaction costs.
In principle, the architecture for broad-based wealth creation is taking
shape.
But access without understanding is a risk.
Without financial literacy, participation in these markets tends to veer
towards speculation. Investors chase price movements rather than underlying
value. Entry and exit decisions are driven by sentiment rather than analysis.
Losses, when they come, are attributed to the market rather than the method.
In such an environment, the market performs a different function. It transfers wealth—not from the rich to the poor, but from the uninformed to the informed...
Which is why the conversation on financial literacy needs to move from the
margins to the centre. Not as an abstract concept, but as a practical toolkit.
How to allocate income. How to identify productive assets. How to reinvest
returns. How to think about risk.
In the end, the most valuable asset an individual can possess is not a piece
of land or a portfolio of properties. It is the capacity to manage
money—consistently, rationally, over time.
Because incomes fluctuate. Markets move. Opportunities come and go.
But financial literacy endures.
And in a world where the line between comfort and crisis can be thinner than
it appears, it remains the only insurance that reliably holds.