Should You Combine Finances? - YouTube

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It’s a big day!
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You just moved in with your boo and you’re totally rocking this living-together thing.
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But then comes the first rent bill and you’re stuck wondering...how do we handle this?
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If you asked your grandparents how they handled finances back in their day, you might
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be met with some weird looks.
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After all, when they moved in together, they were most likely already hitched and it was
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just assumed that they’d immediately combine every aspect of their separate lives.
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The house, the Studebaker, Aunt Mildred’s antique tea set...everything became family
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property.
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Including the bank accounts.
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In 1960, 65% of children grew up in a household where the mother was a homemaker and the father
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was the breadwinner.
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Today, only 22% of children grow up that way.
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From a dramatic rise in women being the breadwinners to falling marriage rates the relational and
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economic landscape has changed dramatically.
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These days, 25% of parents living with a child are unmarried and 35% of unmarried parents
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are cohabitating.
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So the question is: should you consolidate finances, and continue a time-honored tradition?
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Or is maintaining financial autonomy more important?
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When we asked you on Twitter, 79% of you said you combine all or some of your finances with
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your partner.
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And this tracks with national trends.
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But this is changing.
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Millenials that live together are now more likely to keep separate finances than any
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previous generation.
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And it turns out there are some pretty compelling advantages to keeping your finances separate
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as a couple.
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Americans with student loan debt carry an average of over $32,000.
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And the typical American is floating over $6,000 in credit card debts.
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With numbers like these, it’s easy to understand why one partner might feel guilty burdening
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the other with something that was “their problem”.
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Or perhaps you’ve been in or witnessed a financially abusive relationship in the past.
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Separate accounts can help protect you if serious problems arise.
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If you’ve ever known somebody that suffered from a gambling or substance addiction, you
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know first hand the financial devastation that can follow.
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But let’s be real - the main reason people keep separate finances is to maintain their
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independence!
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In modern society, it’s completely normal to enter your 30’s without ever sharing
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your finances with anyone else.
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As your lives begin to merge, it’s understandable
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to feel protective about your autonomy.
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You’ve never had somebody telling you what you can and can’t buy before.
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Why start now?
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And if you don’t have to talk about it, you don’t have to fight about it, right?
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As attractive as it might be go “Lone Wolf”, there are some good reasons the majority of
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couples still combine finances.
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So let’s look at what the “Shared Approach” has going for it.
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When money is shared, you can work efficiently toward big goals like debt reduction.
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Buying a home is easier when you have both of your incomes and credit histories available
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to work with.
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And if you plan on spending retirement together, pooling resources makes a lot of sense.
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Think about it: is one of you gonna spend your golden years in a nice condo and the
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other in the tool shed?
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Probably not.
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Shared finances can also protect you against unexpected pitfalls, like an injury or layoff.
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And if you enter a tight season by choice-- such as taking time off to start a family
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or navigate a career transition - anyone will tell you what a game changer it is for somebody
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to back you up financially.
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Shared cooperation and transparency can also result in a healthier, longer-lasting relationship.
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A 2018 study found that 20% of relationships that don’t share finances end because of
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money problems
compared to only 4% of relationships that do.
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And a series of five university studies found that couples who pool all their money are
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happier in their relationships and less likely to break up.
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And don’t AT us with the correlation/causation argument.
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The researchers specifically noted that this wasn’t merely a correlation but that the
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“results demonstrate that method of account management can.. influence relationship quality.”
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So it’s pretty clear that how you handle money actually affects your relationship.
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There are also hybrid versions of the two.
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Like the “Proportional Earnings Approach” where each partner contributes the same percentage
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of their income into a joint account.
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Or “Bill Parsing”, where each person picks certain bills and expenses to pay for, then
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use Splitwise or Venmo to split large items like rent.
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Back to the big question: which is more important?
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The teamwork or autonomy?
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We here at Two Cents believe you can have BOTH if you work at it!
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For example, we got hitched young, while still in college.
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Truthfully, there wasn’t much to pool, so we went the traditional path by default.
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But over the years, conflicts arose because neither of us had much spending independence.
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We hear this from couples all the time, and it can really start to build resentment over
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the years.
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So our solution was to “have it both ways”: we combined our finances, but we created individual,
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equally-funded envelopes of “fun-money” to spend or save however we saw fit.
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So I get guilt-free thrift store runs.
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And I don’t need permission to trick out my mountain bike.
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Boom!
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Each relationship is unique and there is ultimately no “one size fits all”.
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But if you have decided to share a future together and have healthy levels of trust
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we encourage you to use your finances as a way to work better as partners, while still
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protecting individual freedom and independence.
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And that’s our Two Cents!
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Thanks to our patrons for keeping Two Cents financially healthy.
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Click the link in the description to become a Two Cents patron!
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Do you share finances? Why or why not? Share it with us in the comments.