The financial news this week got a lot of people nervous. That’s understandable. The last economic downturn was painful. My husband is in the airline industry which was badly affected starting with 9/11. We call it the “lost decade.” For a workforce that is already known for high levels of divorce, the financial strain was just too much. Many marriages did not survive.
We know the impact that divorce has on family members and the pain it especially causes for children. We could give a lot of tips on mitigating the effects of divorce, but we would rather warn of behaviors that lead to it in an effort to avoid it. Finances are a leading cause, so we hope the article we share this week by board member, Jenet Erickson, and two of her colleagues, will provide welcome food for thought.
In other news, we are in the final preparations for Salt Lake City’s hosting of the United Nations Civil Society Conference being held August 26 – 28. We will be presenting two workshops and helped facilitate two more pro-family workshops. We wish you could come to the workshops – attendance is limited. However, the exhibit area is open to non-UN affiliated visitors. Come see us at our exhibit on Family Capital and the SDGs. We are collaborating with International Organization for the Family, Big Ocean Women, and Sustainable Families Group. One of the workshops we helped facilitate is being presented by Them Before Us, a strong voice for the importance of family structure in the lives of children. It’s founder, Katy Faust, will be giving to presentations in both Salt Lake City and Provo. We hope you will attend!
Faithfully for Families,
Tori Black, President
Don’t believe what you hear — money isn’t the leading cause of divorce
United Families International: Dedicated to informing you about the issues and forces impacting the family.
Contributed by Jenet Erickson, Sammi Trujillo and Jeff Dew
We’ve all seen the headline: “Money is the leading cause of divorce.” In fact, it isn’t money itself, but disagreement about it that makes financial conflict the strongest predictor of divorce. Financial disagreements “last longer, are harder to resolve, and are more important to spouses than other types of disagreements.” Indeed, one reason financial issues appear to be so important to marital quality is because they reflect deeper, more serious marital processes and challenges.
The effect of financial deception on marital quality
That reality was highlighted recently in the nationally representative “iFidelity Survey”, which explored the prevalence of financial deception in marriage. Of 946 respondents, 58% said they had financially deceived their spouse at some point. The most typical form of deception was hiding a minor purchase from their spouse (44%), followed by hiding cash (31%) and lying about something financial (28%). More serious forms of deception were much less common but still prevalent. Between 12-15% of respondents said they had hidden a bank account, credit card, loan or major purchase from their spouse.
But whether minor or more serious in nature, the iFidelity study found that any financial deception in marriage was related to marital quality and happiness. While 62% of respondents who did not report any deception from their spouse were likely to be very happy in their marriage, only 36% of respondents who reported that their spouse had financially deceived them were likely to be very happy. They were also much less confident that their marriage would not end in divorce. Only 33% of those who reported financial deception thought divorce was unlikely compared to 62% of those who reported no financial deception.
As expected, more serious forms of deception predicted greater challenges for marital quality. But even those reporting minor forms of deception, such has hiding a minor purchase, were 9% less likely to be very happy in their marriages compared to those whose spouse had not hid a minor purchase.
The symbolic nature of money
The iFidelity findings did not explore why financial deception happens so often in marriage. What research suggests is that money acts as a symbol of meanings much deeper than the money itself, including how we experience core human desires — security, love, esteem, benevolence, trust and autonomy.
Being open with a spouse about spending can feel deeply personal, even core to who we are, because in fact, it is. If conflict ensues, we may think we are arguing about money when we are actually grappling with deeper concerns like trust or autonomy.
How we use money is also strongly shaped by the “meanings of money” we developed in our families growing up. As we share decisions about money with a spouse whose family attached different meanings to money, some conflict is inevitable. But resolving those differences can be difficult because we may not even be able to perceive the root of the conflict – norms we developed as children for how money should be used and experienced.
Pooling money and making financial decisions with a spouse can also be difficult because it exposes aspects of our character — our level of materialism, personal responsibility, work ethic, charity and honesty. Risking the possibility of being questioned or criticized about how we spend money can feel threatening because it may expose our character. The conflict that emerges touches on much more than just the money being discussed.
Shared decision-making about money can also reveal inequality in the decision- making power of spouses. Some spouses may be made to feel they are “receiving an allowance” from the higher earning spouse, while others may feel they are expected to provide without having any real say in how the money is used. Some spouses may be “kept in the dark” about financial realities, while others may choose to “stay in the dark,” creating a “knowledge imbalance” that may feed a power imbalance. Such inequalities expose gaps in the development of qualities all strong marriages depend upon — trust, selflessness, respect, openness.
Money and marriage – developing healthy habits
Even given these challenges, studies show that couples who choose to pool their money experience greater marital quality, including greater satisfaction, feelings of intimacy, and satisfaction with conflict resolution. But it takes work to develop the qualities that ward off deception between spouses, financial or otherwise. Money gives married couples the opportunity to work on developing those essential qualities of transparency, selflessness, trust, respect, patience and honesty every single day. What the iFidelity findings tell us is that the effort is worth it.
This article originally appeared in the Deseret News.