Saturday, February 12, 2011

Money matters

I've been reading with interest this Slate series by Jessica Grose about how couples manage their finances. She describes three different types of couples, whom she dubs "Common Potters" (completely merged finances), "Sometimes Sharers" (some joint money, some separate), and "Independent Operators" (completely separate).

JW and I are dedicated Common Potters. We got married young enough that neither of us had any significant assets individually, but even if we did I'm pretty sure we would have merged finances without a second thought. The way we see it, once you're married, there's no more "mine" and "yours". Everything is ours, and every financial decision we make affects our entire family whether it's buying a new house together or one of us spending $3 on a cup of coffee instead of putting it into savings. This means that neither of us cares about disparities in our incomes -- since everything is family money, every bit helps no matter who's earning it. The shared approach works well for us because we have similar, fairly conservative, spending habits, and can trust each other to spend and save appropriately. Right now we have plenty of money. We've had times when we've barely scraped by. But we each adjust our discretionary spending accordingly and make saving a priority. We're also each more likely to scrutinize our own spending habits than each other's, and cut back if we feel it's needed. As a result, we don't spend lots of time talking about money. We check in with each other occasionally about our long-term goals and strategy, and each month when our main credit card bill arrives we briefly discuss our spending for the month and whether we should be doing anything different.

I can understand why others choose different approaches, particularly if they have different spending habits, conflicting priorities, or some history that makes them want to maintain more independence. What surprised me when reading Grose's series was how complicated the other methods seem to be. I always thought that the alternative to shared finances would be to either have a joint account for joint purchases and individual accounts with some agreed-upon amount of money deposited each month, or to have separate accounts and agree on some fair method of splitting shared costs. As it turns out, there are myriad ways of arranging your finances as a couple.

The most surprising part, for me, was the complexity of deciding which are shared costs and which are individual costs. I always thought it would be obvious that things like housing and utilities would be shared, and everything else would be pretty much separate. According to the series, though, couples with separate or semi-separate finances go through regular negotiations about whether things like haircuts and maternity clothes should come out of the shared budget or the individual budgets. It would drive me crazy to constantly be negotiating about our finances in that level of detail. I feel like I'd have less independence, when the point is to have more. (Of course, you could make it simpler by skipping the negotiating and deciding in advance that by default, most expenses will be individual and only certain predefined expenses will be shared, or most expenses will be shared and only truly discretionary expenses will be individual.)

I also, for some reason, assumed that in a "Sometimes Sharer" situation, each person would get an equal amount for their "allowance", but it seems most people contribute a fixed percentage of their income to the shared pot and keep the rest for their individual account. It seems weird to me to build an income disparity into your relationship. But I can see how it would work for couples who want to maintain their financial independence, especially if they're older and more established in their spending and saving habits.

There were some unsurprising conclusions in the series -- for instance, the longer couples have been together, the more likely they are to share some finances (the author points out that few senior citizens would insist that their life partner repay them for money contributed to the partner's angioplasty bill), and couples with kids are more likely to both share some finances and to be more successful long-term if they share finances.

10 comments:

  1. I was totally fascinated by that article, too. Mr. D. and I weren't terribly young when we got married (or, at least, he wasn't), but we never even contemplated keeping separate finances. I think we got a joint checking account even before the wedding. Maybe we are Common Sharers because that's the way everyone in our families is, but it just also seems so silly to divide up your finances like that. None of it is his or mine, it's all ours. (Though Mr. D. does have a habit of saving money for big purchases out of his weekly spending budget. I tell him it's not necessary -- we can budget for that together -- but I think he likes that feeling of accomplishment.)

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  2. I loved the series, because we were common sharers from the start (before we married) and that is just the way it is. I never considered the alternative!

    We call our method the MAD (Mutually Assured Destruction) method of finances, because we are both prone to impulse buys and for years we had a "rule" that if one person did something outrageous, the other person could, too. This kept us from making catastrophic impulse buys. If it worked for the US/USSR, why not us?

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  3. Like EH me and my hubbie have been commons sharers since well before we were married, it really never occurred to me to do anything else, and when I heard what other friends did I was genuinely surprised. Seems so complicated and stressful.

    After ten years of being together we've had many periods where one person makes substantially more than the other- sometimes because one or more of us has been in school. When we were first together we had a long distance relationship and it just didn't make sense for us not to be able to see each other because one person couldn't afford a plane ticket- so we started sharing right from the start, and whoever was better off at a given time supported the other one. Now that we are married and have a kid anything different would seem to be impossible.

    I guess it is easier because we don't spend a ton on ourselves- the few things we do buy that are just for one or the other of us tend to be for Christmas or Birthday presents.

    The way I see it, one of us earning more than the other doesn't mean they deserve to get to spend more- its just is the way things happen to be at that moment in time. We both have public interest careers and don't chose our jobs based on how much we can earn but on what we think is best. I think knowing that we'll always share everything no matter what each chooses to do makes that easier.

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  4. Since only one or the other of us has ever earned at a time, we've had no choice but to be common potters, too! My aunt and uncle are in their late 60s and have never mingled finances - to the ridiculous degree that they don't even share a gallon of milk or cheese or ANY FOOD IN THEIR FRIDGE. He has his side, she has hers. It is insane, but I guess they like it that way. To each his own!

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  5. Common potters all the way. We each have a savings account that we contribute a small equal amount to each month. Ostensibly, its for purchases we make for each other or splurge items for ourselves. Reality? Whoever has the higher savings account at any time bails out the checking account when a huge unexpected expense (like car repairs) comes up.

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  6. I think I wrote about this at one point, but we're common potters too. The only exception is some money that hubs inherited from grandparents. He made me sign a prenup that I wouldn't touch that money.

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  7. I've been reading that series as well. My husband and I consider ourselves "common potters", but because he started school shortly after we got married we kept our own accounts so that he could pay his tuition, etc.

    I'm the only one working so I pay for everything out of my account. When I was in law school (before we got married) I paid him next to nothing for rent and he paid for everthing. Then when I started working (again before we were married) I paid for everything in order to "even" everything up from the past.

    I think when we move back it will go back to him paying for everything until I find a job. I don't think we'll ever go to just one account until I pay off my student loans.

    I thought it was a really interesting series. I agree that what some people do with their money just seems so overly complicated. I wouldn't want to spend so much time thinking about it.

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  8. We have a joint checking account for operating expenses, but then hubby has a separate checking account solely for the purpose of paying the mortgage and student loans. Oddly enough, we have separate savings accounts. His is the product of a bundled deal with the separate checking account, and he barely uses it. Mine is a funnier tale. I went to Bank of America to make both my checking and savings account joint after marriage. And the teller WOULDN'T LET ME. She goes, "Girrrrlllll, that's not a good idea. Giiirrrrl, no. BAD idea. Don't do it, girrrllll" And I smiled, thanked her for her (meddling and paternalistic) advice, but said, please convert them both. When I got home, it turns out hubby's debit card links to the checking account, but the savings stayed in my name only! Couldn't be bothered to change it. So our savings accounts are kind of bizarre. But it's not like we've used them much since emptying them to buy the house!

    It works really well for us that we're on exactly the same trajectory. We've worked the same number of years at jobs with precisely the same salary. We track all our accounts and spending using financial software that we both access. We share our credit cards. We share our financial account passwords. We also share spending tendencies, in that we're conservative, and we deliberate big purchases together. All in all, I like the system, even if it looks a little wonky on paper!

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  9. I'm surprised that everybody here shares either everything or almost everything! A couple of people mentioned keeping separate accounts for student loan payments -- if anybody is still reading this thread, I'm curious, what's the rationale behind this? Is there some advantage to having your student loan payments come out of an account that only belongs to you?

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  10. CM -- my sister did that before she had kids. She got a master's degree and I guess she felt that her education was a strictly "her" expense. But then she became a SAHM, so her husband began making those payments. But I don't think there was any tax advantage or anything to her arrangement before.

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