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[personal profile] livingdeb
I'm finally writing about the interesting post on My Money Blog, Relationships and Money: Are You Communist, Socialist, or Capitalist?

You could describe family finances as:
* Communist: all the money goes into one account and decisions are shared
* Socialist: whoever earns more pays a higher percentage of the communal expenses
* Capitalist: each person pays their half and makes their own decisions

This way of looking at it turns things on their heads a bit, which is especially clear when watching an extremely conservative commenter trying to come to terms with the idea that the one obvious best way of dealing with family finances (one big pot) has the name of the worst way to deal with national finances (communism). Heh.

I've always known that families are like little communes that could actually work because you know and care about the other people, so you are less likely to take advantage of them or make stupid decisions that do not address what the people involved actually want. And in fact, the most successful communes have been small and voluntary rather than large national bureaucracies.

My parents started off communist but due to one spouse wanting to start a business and the other spouse not wanting to get ulcers, it has evolved into a much more capitalist system--each person is in charge of certain purchases although some of them are common purchases (one pays for housing; the other pays for utilities and food).

I know people who put most of the money in a one pot (communist) but they also each get an allowance (socialist if the allowances match; capitalist if the one who makes more gets a bigger allowance).

I have capitalist tendencies. These issues do come up even with dating. I prefer for each person to pay for themselves. But I have also been talked into a system that whoever does the asking does the paying (after warning the guy that I would only be asking about cheap things).

I have also enjoyed subsidies for when one person wants the other person to do something that the other person is unwilling (perhaps unable) to pay for. I have been taken to concerts and out to eat in this way and have helped a sibling go on a family vacation and a dance partner go to a dance competition. It's actually okay on both sides, though I feel a little more comfortable as the rich one.

But everyone knows that getting married is different. Two become one. When I imagine a communist set-up, I feel uncomfortable. I'm likely to marry someone richer (whew!), but I have this sense of fairness. I shouldn't benefit from someone else's wealth--I shouldn't get more than I deserve. And I also have this sense of independence. I shouldn't start depending on someone else's wealth--what if it disappears? And I am also selfish. I don't want to work as much as I am able, and I am more motivated to do the right thing when I know that I get all the rewards for that behavior.

This all means I am inclined to try to drag my partner down to my level. (Convince him that he wants to retire early, too, so he can sleep in every day if he wants. Convince him he wants to stay in my small house because when it's paid off it will be awesome that we each will only have to pay $150/month plus maintenance.) That doesn't seem quite right, either.

on 2010-02-07 02:53 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] texpenguin.livejournal.com
It seems to me if you marry the right person, that person will want to share their resources (emotional, financial, physical) freely with you, without any expectation of return favors, because they love and care for you. You will also want to share your resources with them freely. Who says you don't deserve to be taken care of? You work hard, you contribute in lots of different ways, even if not so much financially, and you know you can stand on your own if necessary, but that doesn't mean you have to. Why shouldn't you let someone take care of you if they genuinely want to? Things balance out nicely when each person generally acts in a way that keeps the other's best interests in mind. T certainly brings more to our marriage financially, but I'm not made to feel guilty (and I don't feel guilty) when I spend some of that money on something I want/need. No allowances, no permissions necessary. We do confer on big purchases, but usually because it's a purchase for both of us. Just because I don't contribute much financially, I contribute in lots of other ways, so T doesn't feel taken advantage of. Yes, it sucked when that financial support went away for a while, but we dealt with it.
I used to think a lot more like you--didn't want anyone to give me anything I didn't deserve (gifts, compliments, etc) and it frustrated the h*** out of friends and family who genuinely cared for me. I still fight that tendency with T's family, who like to give gifts that I have no way of reciprocating (even though reciprocation is neither expected or wanted). But I try.

on 2010-02-18 04:13 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] livingdeb.livejournal.com
I have been accused of being overly independent (and stubborn, though also doormattish). I probably have issues.

on 2010-02-18 03:50 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] texpenguin.livejournal.com
LOL! We all have issues--hell, I have volumes! It took me a few years, but I eventually realized it was really nice to have someone who wanted to take care of me and wanting to take care of him in return. I resisted a lot at first, because T's family is pretty well off, and my family, well, just isn't, so I felt like a charity case, but they did finally convince me that they actually really did like my company and wanted me around!

on 2010-02-07 02:54 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] texpenguin.livejournal.com
Wow, somehow, my comment got all out of order, so sorry if it doesn't follow quite right. I think it's decipherable anyway...

on 2010-02-07 05:17 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] llcoolvad.livejournal.com
This is something I have been thinking about lately, and I don't have any answers yet! I had lived alone for so many years that I didn't have a good idea going in about how to deal with this once I was living with someone.

Currently we are in a sort-of socialist structure, as B hasn't found a high-paying job yet. He gives me what he can after paying for his own expenses.

My guess is that once he gets a better paying job we'll do more of a capitalist system, because I feel like you do about paying my own way, etc. I REALLY don't like owing anyone anything, and even if I were married to someone I fear that I will feel the same way.

I wouldn't make a good trophy wife, for any NUMBER of reasons! Damn it.

on 2010-02-18 04:22 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] livingdeb.livejournal.com
Ha! No trophy wife here, either. The closest would be if the guy had some high-paying time-consuming job where I do all the laundry and cooking and stuff to maximize his free time which he would then share with me. (Except then if he retires he probably still expects the free cooking and cleaning to continue.)

One thing about living together unmarried, without the lifetime commitment, most would agree that it's not wise to mix everything up.

And especially in my state, once you're married, legally you share everything but your credit rating (and anything you can keep totally separate--like I could keep my house if he never put a penny into it or spent a minute fixing it up--ha!), so that really does change everything. I also feel that once you're committed, his stuff is your stuff, so it's now safe to get rid of your crappy but serviceable duplicates, so even non-legal things change.

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