My wife and I had a conversation over lunch recently with another couple. They have also been married to each other for a very long time.
As we're all expats here in France, we discussed French culture, the ups and downs of life abroad, the recent elections in France and the upcoming elections in the states. Talk then turned to the fundamentals of a happy, enduring marriage. We covered the Usual Suspects: the initial spark, communication, flexibility, and finally...money.
Surprisingly, we all felt that this was an absolute. Not in the sense of marrying because they had money or the potential to earn money (which is not very Old Money), but in the sense of both people in a marriage having the same ideas about how money is spent and saved, and what it is used for.
In the most basic terms, our considered, experienced opinion was that a Saver can only be happily married for an extended period to another Saver, and a Spender can only be happily married to another Spender.
If one partner in a marriage wants to save and invest money, increase the couple's net worth, and secure their financial future, and the other partner wants to spend money on consumer items and enjoy luxuries in the present, the odds for a happy marriage--or even one that will exist in 5 years--are slim.
Of course, exceptions can be found: the hardworking billionaire who marries the extravagant social climber comes to mind. I've witnessed these relationships. They require an enormous amount of patience (somebody works a lot, and somebody spends a lot, and those two things can wear on both somebody's). They also require an enormous amount of resources: the spending can't have any effect on the financial condition of the couple. If it does, stress and resentment build, and cracks in the marriage appear.
This mismatch also pushes definitive roles on each partner: breadwinner and homebody, most often, and it takes a very aware and highly evolved couple to manage the power dynamic that creeps in when one partner is making most or all of the money. They must both be involved with how the money is spent, saved, invested, and used, and how much debt or non-essential consumption is acceptable. And even the non-earning spouse must have a voice. Many times it's that partner who manages the money, invests it, and grows it.
I don't know many married couples who keep their finances separate and do a monthly split of expenses, like roommates. If a Saver and a Spender opt for this arrangement, inevitably there will come a moment in time in which the Spender has an emergency...and no cash. The Awkward Conversation soon follows: Can you loan me or give me the money? Why should I? You've spent everything you've earned. I thought you loved me. I do, but you should have thought about this possibility before you bought all that stuff that you don't need and can't afford.
Here again, resentment and stress rear their ugly heads.
All of these scenarios are more complicated when children enter the mix. A new car? Or tuition for a private school? A fur coat? Or an educational, eye-opening trip to Europe for the kids?
A marriage between a Saver and a Spender just doesn't work, in my opinion. You must be on the same page with your attitudes toward money if you're going to enjoy a happy, productive relationship. You'll have enough challenges as it is deciding on the amount you're going to save each week, what you're going to invest in, how much you're going to put down on a house, and how you're going to handle the relatives who come asking for a loan or a handout.
If you're young and dating, my advice is to have this conversation early in the courtship. It make shock your love interest. Or it may make you appear to be a serious, thoughtful person.
Either way, there is no future in developing feelings for someone who does not share your financial philosophy or your financial habits. It is a road that ends in heartache, sooner or later.
That sounds harsh, but I'd rather you think me cold now than wonder later why I didn't say anything about this tremendously important part of relationships and marriage.
For more details and insights, you can always read The Old Money Guide To Marriage.
Good luck, young lovers, and married couples, I'd love to hear your thoughts.
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