Tag Archive: purchases

Should You and Your Spouse Have Separate Accounts?

games Disagreements about how to handle the family finances is often sited as a leading cause of divorce. There seems to be an increasing number who are separating their finances so they don’t separate! This would have been unheard of just a generation or two ago.

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Opposites attract

In many relationships, there is a spender and a saver. Or sometimes you have two spenders who spend differently – one who frequently buys little incidentals that may add up to a lot of money over the course of the year and another one who can’t resist the major purchases.

Is it wrong?

While some people are finding separate accounts the way to go, others think that it’s just wrong. They believe that it’s a bad sign if a couple doesn’t co-mingle their funds.

Does that stem from a time when you had one wage-earner in the home?
Is it a control issue?
Perhaps it has to do with religious beliefs?
Or maybe it’s a trust issue?

We don’t know the answer, but we do know that many couples are making this work.

Why it works

We think keeping separate finances works for a number of reasons. Among them:

  • The saver isn’t frustrated by money being spent on things they think is unwise.

  • The spender doesn’t have to defer gratification so long that they just can’t stand it anymore. 

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How it works

We’ve seen a number of ways to do this. Here are two examples:

The Allocators. These couples begin by allocating who pays for what. It’s a negotiation process. If you choose this system, determine your respective spending priorities. Then, whenever possible, let each spouse pay for those things they feel are most important. Divvy up the basics however you see fit.

Once you’ve figured out who will pay for what, each spouse then gets to spend, save or invest however they want.

The Allowancers
. Okay, we struggled with a name for this group. That’s the best we could do!

Allowancers may maintain a joint account to pay mutual bills like the mortgage or the utility bills. Then they divvy up the excess as allowances.

But don’t forget to take out the trash or you may lose your allowance!

With their allowance, each spouse can save or spend however they want. One spouse may even save to spend … on that next major purchase.

A final thought

You may have heard us say this before, but our thought on this issue is this:

If it works for you and your family, it works.

It doesn’t matter what other people think or even say. What does matter is that you find a system that helps you keep your finances in order. After all, they are a key component to living out your bigg dreams!

How do you and your partner handle your finances? 

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Direct link to The Bigg Success Show audio file:
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Related posts

When A Saver and a Spender Become a Couple

Help – My Spouse Spends Too Much!

(Image in today's post by hisks)

Pay Now, Buy Later

piggy_bank We’ve heard reports that holiday sales were down this year. The good news is that fewer people went into debt to buy presents, preferring to pay with cash instead.

That creates an opportunity.

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icon for podpress  Hear George & Mary-Lynn discuss today's topic on The Bigg Success Show! Click the purple player: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

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So we’re putting a 180 degree spin on the old advertising slogan – buy now, pay later. This year, we moved to buy now, pay now. Let’s just take one more step – pay now, buy later.

Old ideas, new popularity

The old idea of “layaway” was used more this year than it had been for some time. K-Mart even built an ad campaign around it. It’s not as easy for retailers to administer as buy now, pay later programs – like when you use your credit card – but in today’s economy they’re just happy to make any sale.

Another old idea is also seeing newfound interest – the Christmas Club. Your parents may have done it; your grandparents almost certainly did.

The Christmas Clubs of old didn’t pay a lot of interest and they carried restrictive rules about early withdrawal. Good for those not disciplined enough to leave it alone. Not desirable should a true emergency arise.

Create-your-own Christmas Club

But you don’t need a Christmas Club Account to fund next year’s Christmas presents. You can create your own – probably using a Money Market Account or a Money Market Fund.

Assume that you plan to spend $2,000 next year for Christmas presents. Right now, you could find a Money Market Account that pays around 2 percent, according to bankrate.com

If you were to invest $220 every month, starting in January, you would have your $2,000 by the end of September. Get ready to shop in October, with cash in hand!

You won’t earn much interest because rates are so low right now. But look at it this way – you won’t be paying interest on next year’s Christmas presents either!

Your Club Account … not just for Christmas anymore

A Christmas Club Account is just a fund dedicated for a specific purpose. You can extend this concept beyond Christmas. What if you …

  • funded next year’s property taxes in advance? It’s your own escrow account!

  • set money aside to pay your insurance annually so you get a better discount?
  • paid for your next vacation a little bit at a time before you go? Talk about stress relief!

Getting a kicker

You can do this for any, and every, major obligation or opportunity you have. And here’s the kicker …

For major expenses that are several years away, you can set money aside in an account that may pay higher interest.

Generally speaking, the longer you can wait to get your money back, the higher the rate of interest you’ll earn. For example, if you’re funding a car purchase three years away, you may be able to put money in a 3-year CD.

The key is to match your investment time frame to when you will need the money for the obligation or opportunity.

One caveat

Of course, if you have outstanding debt, especially credit card debt, you’ll probably want to pay that off before you start funding other obligations – even if that means postponing, or cutting back, on discretionary expenses like a vacation.

We got used to easy credit – buy now and pay later with interest. We suggest paying now and earning some interest so when you buy later you’re money ahead!

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Thanks so much for reading our post today. Join us next time when we ask three questions that lead to a brighter future. Until then, here’s to your bigg success!

Subscribe to The Bigg Success Show in iTunes. 

Subscribe to the Bigg Success feed.

Direct link to The Bigg Success Show audio file:
http://media.libsyn.com/media/biggsuccess/00296-122908.mp3

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(Image in today's post by kiss kiss bang bang, CC 2.0)

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