Understanding how couples integrate finances:
When it comes to how couples manage money, not everyone jumps to join their accounts.
New research from the University of Georgia looked at demographic and personal factors that revealed what makes couples more or less likely to pool finances.
A survey of more than 600 married or cohabitating individuals found that moving in together was not enough of a reason to combine finances. While some traditional indicators of stability—marriage, more dependents and higher net worth—increased the likelihood of joint accounts, having two sources of income made couples more likely to split finances.
"I just always assumed, based on my family background, that couples always pool their money. If they were married, they just pooled assets and income and made joint decisions," said the study's co-author John Grable, an endowed professor in UGA's College of Family and Consumer Sciences. "That's not always the case, and this study shows we can actually identify groups of people or profiles of individuals and couples where pooling resources is not as common."
The study's authors believe these results can not only help other researchers and financial counselors gain insight into financial integration styles, but they could help couples understand their approach to joint finances.
"Our research does suggest that people have a really hard time talking about money," said co-author, Ph.D. graduate, UGA part-time lecturer and financial planner Michelle Kruger. "So, if they're able to even establish whether they have the same kind of goals and values when it comes to spending money, that probably indicates a level of cohesiveness." Combining resources or keeping accounts separate
The study found that married participants were 4.5 times more likely to have pooled finances, which Grable said is expected.
"Pooling assets in a case where there's not a marital agreement can be really dangerous for the couple and the individual because the law doesn't provide the same protection for unmarried cohabitating couples as it would for a married couple," Grable said.
The impact of net worth, on the other hand, was more surprising.
Individuals identified their household's net worth as positive, zero or negative. Couples with a positive net worth, meaning their combined assets were higher than their combined debts, were more likely to merge finances. Those with a neutral net worth were less likely to combine, and negative net worth did not have a significant impact either way.
"To me, it was interesting that it wasn't driven primarily by income. It wasn't necessarily the level of debt that mattered, but the net worth," Grable said. "And debt could include credit cards, student loans, auto loans, mortgages, those kinds of things."
Researchers also found that a growing household could push couples toward joint accounts. With a one-person increase in household size, the likelihood of a combined account increased by about 20%.
On the other hand, individuals with a bachelor's degree or higher level of education were slightly less likely to combine accounts. And couples with multiple income earners were about 50% less likely to pool finances. If both partners have income, they may choose to manage that income alone, researchers said. A non-working partner, however, could face challenges if they could not access any household income.
[...] While this study provided insight into how couples might approach their finances, there is not a hard and fast rule for what financial integration style sets couples up for success. That has to come from communication and seeking out resources or help when issues arise, researchers said.
"There are so many different ways that couples do this. What's most important is that they find a system that works for them," Kruger said. "But when there is trust and communication, couples can come to a place where they're both happy with how they're managing things."
Journal Reference:
Kruger, Michelle, Grable, John E., Palmer, Lance, et al. Factors Associated with Couples Pooling their Finances, Contemporary Family Therapy (DOI: 10.1007/s10591-023-09666-9)
(Score: 1, Flamebait) by Rosco P. Coltrane on Wednesday May 31, @04:14PM
Joint accounts: Sir fills up the account, Madam empties it
Separate accounts: Sir fills up his account, Madam says no-scratch-no-snatch-tonight, Sir empties his account.