I agree but I think you forgot about the generational dollar thinker. The ones who think about their families line. I grew up “poor”, my parents struggled to have any money, but we ate food we grew (vegetables and pigs, laying hens, all sorts of poultry, apple trees, sheep, and goats for milk/cheese) I got teased at school for not having the name brand/ the modern style clothes, my family driving an old car, you name it… I was an adult before I really realized how much more “wealth” my parents had than the other kids families. My parents owned land and were struggling through the farm crisis. I never went to daycare, my parents were home teaching me things on the farm. Theirs were working day jobs and paying morgages on their little house in a lot in town. When my father passed when I was 15 he left me 20 acres owned free and clear. When my mom passed when I was 25 she left me a 4 acre acreage( one of two they owned when I was growing up) and another 20 acres. And I was one of 4 kids.
I still live on that that acreage, and I can drive a mile and a half east, and another mile and a half south and every piece of land except for one 2 acre acerage is owned by extended members of my family. From brother, to cousin, to second cousin twice removed, it all has been from my great grandfather who owned 3 square miles of land in the 1890’s and beat it into his kids minds and them to theirs, that they never make more land, money gets spent and losses value everyday you don’t spend it, but every day land gets more precious. That message has held to be true through generations, but after a few generations of multiple kids it gets split into obscurity if it doesn’t continue to grow.