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Hello Monday with Jessi Hempel

Jasmine Rashid on Financial Activism and Building Wealth with Purpose

Hello Monday with Jessi Hempel

LinkedIn

Careers, Business

4.81.1K Ratings

🗓️ 10 November 2025

⏱️ 30 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Most of us were taught to “play the game” when it comes to money; work hard, follow the rules, and financial stability will follow. But what happens when the game itself was never built for most of us to win? Jasmine Rashid calls herself a financial activist. She’s an impact investor, writer, and advocate who believes that reclaiming power in our financial systems starts with everyday people—not policymakers or billionaires, but those of us who spend, save, and invest every day. Her new book, The Financial Activist Playbook: Eight Strategies for Everyday People to Reclaim Wealth and Collective Wellbeing, is part invitation, part instruction manual for building a fairer economy from the ground up. In this episode of Hello Monday, Jessi Hempel talks with Jasmine about how to put people back into the economy. Together, they explore how financial activism can help us move from scarcity to abundance, and from isolation to collective power. Jessi and Jasmine discuss: Why both finance and activism feel intimidating—and how to reclaim both How to build community wealth instead of just personal wealth Why talking about money is an act of empowerment How scarcity mindsets and cultural taboos keep us disconnected The role of mutual aid and community care in a just economy Why “enough” is one of the most radical financial goals we can set How expanding our definition of capital can change everything The power of collective action to build a fairer financial future Continue the conversation with us at Hello Monday Office Hours! Join us Wednesday at 3 PM ET on the LinkedIn News page.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Both finance and activism can often feel like topics that are way over there.

0:05.0

They're really easy to quote-unquote get wrong.

0:07.0

But fundamentally, activism is really just the coordination and organization of people towards a common social good or goal.

0:15.0

And finance is just the movement of large amounts of money.

0:24.6

From the news team at LinkedIn, I'm Jesse Hempel and this is Hello Monday.

0:27.8

It's our show about the changing nature of work.

0:34.6

And if I'm honest, the thing that changes most about work from moment to moment is that the system that it exists within feels like it is cracking.

0:38.3

I know you feel this too.

0:41.3

The economy encourages us to be resilient, efficient, and yet wages are stagnating,

0:48.3

inequality is growing, and the kind of financial stability that my parents expected feels so out of reach for so many of the people that I know.

0:59.0

You know, we are taught to work hard and play the game so things will be all right.

1:05.0

But if I'm honest with myself, I don't really think that this game was ever designed for us to win.

1:11.6

So what do we do?

1:12.6

Do we try to reform the system?

1:15.6

Do we break the system entirely and start again?

1:18.6

And maybe most important, how much power do we have as individuals to create a system that feels just and fair, inhumane.

1:29.0

We have an incredible guest for you today,

1:31.1

and she believes that there is an answer here,

1:34.0

and it lies in community.

1:35.7

Not waiting for someone or someone's in power to make new rules for us,

1:40.4

but in fact coming together to shape a different, fairer future, one that prizes human dignity

1:47.2

instead of capital. Jasmine Rashid calls herself a financial activist. And I'll admit that the

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