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Financial Fidelity |
by Michelle Singletary | ||||||||||||||
| Common cents and the cost of lying to your mate | |||||||||||||||
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Scott Farrell comments:
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Look at one readers plight. She wrote:
Honestly, as I told this reader, a good man wouldnt lie to his wife. Nor would a good woman lie to her husband. A woman often hides her money from her husband just in case he turns out to be a philanderer, spendthrift or financial control freak. There are experts who advise women, especially stay-at-home moms, to keep a separate stash of cash. They even provide tips on how to carry out the deception. Here are just a few:
Almost anything goes to protect your money. Women are told not to feel guilty about hiding money so they can shop without having to justify purchases, or invest without their husbands knowledge, or raise cash for a rainy day. After all, its about time that women who are increasingly earning more than their husbands and bringing more assets into a marriage learn to conceal their true financial situation the way some men do. I hear it all the time. Women should strive to maintain as much financial independence as they can. Experts advise women to keep separate accounts and sign up for credit cards in their own name just in case they get divorced. Fail to do so, they warn, and you may have trouble getting credit after the marriage ends. I know many women who harbor fears that their husbands will have affairs and clean out their bank accounts. It would be foolish not to protect your financial interests at a time when so many marriages end in divorce. But that fear, however realistic it may turn out to be, does not justify dishonesty. Its possible to have financial independence without being deceitful. A marriage in which someone is hiding assets or skimming money from the joint bank account is a sorry marriage. In extreme situations if a woman is being abused either physically or emotionally she may need to squirrel away money to get out of a horrible or life-threatening relationship. But that is the extreme. If you have enough faith in your man to marry him and trust him with your life, you need to trust him with your money. More important, if you are going to have children with him and trust him with their lives, you should trust him enough to divulge everything about your finances, even assets you want to keep separate from your community property. But trust doesnt mean turning over complete control to the degree that you are clueless about the family finances. As Ronald Regan said when negotiating with the Soviets: Trust, but verify. Black Dresses and White Lies Have you ever hidden a shopping bag full of clothes in the trunk of the car or in the back of the closet to keep your honey from finding out how much money you spent at the mall? Do you intercept credit card statements so your spouse wont yell at you for overspending? If you answered yes to one or both of these questions, you have plenty of company. In one survey of 1,000 married couples conducted by Readers Digest, 48 percent of wives and 49 percent of husbands said they kept how much they paid for something from their spouses. Interestingly, couples with higher incomes lied more about what they spent. Whats going on here? If youre lying to your husband about purchases, shame on you. And if youre lording over the family finances, making your husband feel like hes your child waiting for his weekly allowance, shame on you, too. One way to stop the lies is to create a fair and equitable system in which each partner has his or her own pocket money. That doesnt mean setting up separate accounts. Just allocate a certain amount that you each can spend without any judgment. Consider this money your personal allowance. You cant and shouldnt be judged on how you use it. You might ask yourself, How harmful is it to keep quiet about what I spent on a pair of shoes or a stereo system? You might feel entitled to spend the money you make the way you want. But keeping secrets and failing to communicate about your spending is a symptom of a big problem in your partnership. Your sneaky spending is sabotaging your familys financial goals, and lying about how much you spend is no trivial matter. Keeping secrets ruins relationships.
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©2007 Michelle Singletary
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