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Money and love: how to make it work

Written and accurate as at: Nov 26, 2020 Current Stats & Facts

Are you and your partner financially compatible? A marriage between a saver and a spender comes with its problems, but nothing true love can’t overcome – right?

According to the Australian Institute of Family Studies (AIFS), household finances are among the main reasons couples argue.

When Anna met Tony, they planned a life together. They rented an apartment and Anna cashed in her $35,000 investment portfolio to fund their wedding and honeymoon.

Savings-focused Anna was now keen to save for a house. Conversely, Tony loved spending and was content to continue renting. Despite their differences, they opened a joint savings account, and using MoneySmart’s compound interest calculator; Anna worked out the following:

 
Initial deposit $1,000
Fortnightly contribution $500
Interest rate 2.65%
Total after 5 years $70,563 


They decided that Anna would pay the utilities bills and Tony would pay the rent. Anna engaged a financial adviser who created a budget to keep them on track. Additionally, the adviser suggested couples’ health insurance and combined car insurance policies to save extra dollars.

Anna stuck to their budget, saving each fortnight while meeting her obligations. Tony, prioritising differently, continued his spending lifestyle.

Five years later, they had only Anna’s savings and an eviction notice for unpaid rent. They were constantly arguing, but when Tony suggested they should have used Anna’s original investment as a deposit instead of paying for the wedding, it was all over.

Anna was shocked to discover the money she’d saved was jointly Tony’s and that she was partly responsible for the outstanding rent as the lease was in both names.

It’s a frequent scenario causing Binding Financial Agreements (prenups) to become common in Australia. The Family Court of Australia reports that prenups can be made at any time providing both parties are signatories.

Would a prenup have helped Anna?

As soon as the marital cracks appeared, Anna could have initiated a prenup to protect herself, as long as Tony agreed.

To avoid financial disagreements, MoneySmart suggests that couples discuss four important points:

  1. Current situation: Review each other’s income/expenses and assets/liabilities.
  2. Goals: Will you buy a house, start a family? Agree in advance then discuss budgeting strategies to pay off existing debt and begin saving.
  3. Spending/saving: Understanding one another's financial attitude makes it easier to find common ground. Be prepared to compromise.
  4. Financial control: Will one handle the household finances, or will you do it jointly? Both must be happy with the decision and keep communication open.

After the divorce, Anna worked with her adviser to start afresh. She took out income protection insurance in case she was unable to work, made a Will, and instructed her super fund to set up a binding nomination, naming her niece as her beneficiary.

Marriage incompatibility is not limited to young couples. The ‘silver-splitter’ phenomenon of older divorces is increasing, and Australia Bureau of Statistics figures demonstrate that in 2018 the median divorce age was 45.9 years for males and 43.2 years for females, both slightly up from 2017.

You’re never too young, or too old, to protect yourself. And these days, as we’re all living longer, a little forward-planning can only be a good thing. It might not sound romantic, but discussing your finances and getting professional financial advice early in a relationship, could save a lot of heartache later on.

 
 

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