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Money Matters: Starting Your Marriage Off on a Strong Financial Footing
((BNN) Engaged individuals take note: Did you know that 43% of
all married couples argue over money issues, making it the major
reason couples fight? If you and your prospective spouse handle
money differently, now is the time to talk, establish
expectations, and draw up a financial plan.
Money is a
very big part of a marriage. Having enough to spend, and to do
the things each wants to do, is important to both parties. When
couples are not able to do that, then other issues pop up in the
relationship. When husband and wife are not on the same page as
far as family finances go, other difficulties inevitably arise.
According to
Cynthia Cooper, Ph.D., co-author of The Marriage Medics,
available at
www.themarriagemedics.net, effective communication often
emerges as the most difficult obstacle to establishing goals and
expectations, and developing a financial plan. Many of us have
been taught during childhood that discussing money is somehow
inappropriate. Newlyweds must understand that it is not only
appropriate but absolutely necessary to managing finances in a
marriage. Just as finances must be planned in a business, they
must also be planned in a marriage. You must communicate in
spite of any difficulty.
For example, how do you get your spouse-to-be to
understand--especially during all the excitement surrounding
your wedding plans--that he or she will need to curb their
spending habits so that you both can begin putting money away?
There’s got to be a viable agreement, though, because most
couples discover that a lack of money, a lack of spending
control, or a lack of fall-back savings eventually causes other
problems in a marriage.. Little things grow into much bigger
things. However, as emphasized by Dr. Cooper, a noted clinical
psychotherapist, future arguments over finances can be avoided
by simply communicating, creating an understanding of
expectations, setting objectives and agreeing on a financial
roadmap.
The Marriage
Medics outlines the following financial plan of attack for
couples of any age:
1. Stop living beyond your means.
2. Treat the household like a business.
3. Create an income-and-expense statement.
4. Create a balance sheet.
5. Create a budget.
6. Figure out how to pay down your debt. Agree on a plan of
action in which you both share equally in cutbacks.
7. Find ways to cut expenses.
8. Go on a debt diet––starting with the little stuff.
9. Have only one credit card for your entire family.
10. Celebrate when you pay off a debt.
There are
many resources for help in creating family budgets and living
within them. For instance, Suze Orman, a financial advisor who
has written several books and hosts an advice show on NBC, is an
excellent source. In sum, newlyweds, or those about to tie the
knot, have an important opportunity to plant the seeds for a
healthy marriage by simply talking with each other, being
realistic about expectations, and making that financial plan.
Money matters!
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