Posts Tagged ‘Re-entering the Workforce’

Handling Money at the End of Your Marriage

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

There are five financial issues that can take down a marriage – reduced circumstances, financial mistakes, caring for parents, caring for kids, and uncertainty – according to Ron Leiber, “Your Money” columnist of the New York Times.  These are truly issues that affect every marriage at some point, and I thought that they warranted a little more coverage.

Reduced Circumstances: Although some people may be disappointed over the reduction in lifestyle thanks to a layoff or change of interest rate, consider how dividing up a household doesn’t reduce costs.  Getting divorced will now mean that, however you and your spouse are dividing assets and responsibilities, you’re supporting two households on the same income that used to support one.  Even if you have a peaceful and inexpensive divorce, it definitely does not improve reduced resources.

It might be that problem is that you were unhappy and unfulfilled in the marriage, but you stayed because of the money.  Sometimes it’s easier to Spackle over problems with money than to address them.  You might be thinking “I want to leave this marriage” and then balked at the tumult of taking the kids out of private school, foregoing that trip to Hawaii each year, and downsizing your car.  If reduced circumstances have already stripped those things away, maybe you’ve just cleared the path to divorce.

In that case, more financial security created the problem by being a motivator for staying in an unhappy marriage, and losing those ties helped reveal the real issues.

Your Mistakes:  The mistake is really that you didn’t have the difficult conversations early. I can’t tell you the number of people who come in who have railed through their home equity line of credit because they didn’t have the heart to tell their spouse to stop shopping at Fred Segal.  But the discussion doesn’t revolve around the details.  It needs to be a dialogue that you are both engaged in.  “I want to share with you the home equity line of credit statement (or charge cards, etc).  I am concerned that we are over spending.  What do you think we should do?”  Have the conversation as a series of “I” statements (as opposed to “you should”) and a question to open up the discussion.

The other big fight we see is “We agreed you would go back to work after the kids went to school and then you never did.”

To turn the conversation around, the approach is similar to the discussion above:  “I am concerned that you’re not looking for a job when we agreed you’d go back to work when the kids were in school full time. What’s holding you back?”  If it’s that the spouse has changed his/her mind, then involve him or her in the budgeting process.  The loss of a second income will have an impact on the family.  How can each partner take responsibility for that?

Too many people just let it ride, and four years later end up in our office feeling like they’ve been let down by the spouse who didn’t go back to work or curb spending. They realized too late that the real problem was that both people weren’t involved in making an active decision.

Your Children:  While they may have started out as a surprise, their turning 18 and applying to college is not.  Have the conversations about college early and often.  And not just with your spouse, with the semi-adult children, too.  A drastic change in circumstances is something an 18 year old is able to understand.  But “we blew our wad on your siblings and didn’t plan for you” is sure to land him on a therapist’s couch.

Read more tips on dealing with finances in your relationship here: http://estestherapy.com/relationshiptips/2008/04/30/financial-stressors-keeping-your-relationship-strong-in-a-recession/, and to find out more about sharing college costs with your ex, go here: http://www.kiplinger.com/columns/drt/archive/2004/dt040826.html.

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Getting back on the Chain Gang

Monday, June 1st, 2009

If you have been thinking about re-entering the work force, you will want to do so as soon as possible. Brush up your resume, update your wardrobe, and research job prospects. If you have been thinking about changing careers, make those moves before you discuss a divorce with your spouse. A court is less likely to upset your plans if you have already started. For some fantastic post-divorce career resources, check out http://www.divorce360.com/college-and-career-after-divorce-360.aspx.

For example, assume that you have been thinking about getting divorced but need to finish your college degree. You enroll in school and finish two semesters, but have two semesters left to complete. The chances that a Judge will order your spouse to pay the remaining tuition are much better than your prospects of obtaining future tuition monies from your spouse for a college in which you have not yet enrolled. A clear plan can make all the difference

Some people, especially those who’ve been out of the job market for several years, experience a sense of panic and concern regarding the financial future when they realize that they will need to be responsible for their own household. If you have not worked for several years, you may think about going back to your previous field. On the other hand, this is your chance to change careers if you’re interested in doing something new, or if you find your old skills are hopelessly outdated. Be creative in your thoughts regarding your career future. Low paying jobs are going to be just as easy to obtain in six months or a year from now as they are today. Don’t rush into a decision you’ll regret later.  Rather than assuming you will need to go back to work in a bank, retail sales, or another career which you left many years ago, begin to think about some of the activities that you have developed over the course of the marriage.

Make sure you also understand what your cost of living will be after the divorce and that you look for a job that will allow you to make ends meet. For a great article on rebuilding you finances after divorce, see http://ezinearticles.com/?Rebuilding-Your-Finances-After-Divorce&id=77410.

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Work it Out

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

You can never start planning for the future too soon, and when it comes to your career this is especially true. Now is the time to make those plans for your future financial responsibilities.

 

Unless you are independently wealthy, or you already have a salary that’s enough to support yourself and/or your family, you need to get your career plans in order. You can’t risk being unable to support yourself adequately. Sometimes, people refuse to pay support amounts set by a judge despite court orders, and sometimes they aren’t ordered to make support payments at all. You need to be prepared for all of these scenarios. Divorces can be startling in their expense; keeping up two families is not one plus a little, it is two of everything or double what you need now.If education is an issue because you don’t have a high school diploma, didn’t finish college, need to update your skills, or you have let a professional license lapse, now is the time to get busy. For information on obtaining or finishing a degree, see www.educationdegreesource.com.

 

After the divorce starts in earnest, it will be much harder to begin.

Ideally, if you’ve been out of the job market for awhile, you will receive enough money from your spouse to ease your transition back into your career. This happens very rarely in practice. Either the family doesn’t have enough money, your spouse disappears or doesn’t pay, or your education or career move takes much longer than expected.

Several years ago, lifetime alimony awards for housewives were commonplace. Not so anymore. Women are expected to work, even if they cannot support themselves fully. Several states have abolished alimony entirely. And, with changing sex roles, it is not that unusual for men to put their careers on hold for children and other responsibilities. Nowadays, some men are awarded alimony, as well as child support, when they are awarded custody of children.

 

Lifetime alimony orders were also common in the past. Perhaps a housewife’s husband had an affair with his secretary, and that is the reason the marriage broke down. Twenty years ago, that would have meant a huge alimony order. Not so anymore. Alimony is now based on the spouse’s ability to pay, as well as the needs of the recipient.

In addition, the economic reality for most families is that maintaining two households will necessitate two incomes, even if one is small than the other. There simply isn’t enough money to go around, no matter how deserving the prospective recipient. 

Don’t gamble on alimony. Find your ideal career and make the subject moot.

Excerpted from Your Divorce Advisor: A Lawyer and a Psychologist Guide You Through the Legal and Emotional Landscape of Divorce (Simon & Schuster/Fireside 2001). For more information: http://www.yourdivorceadvisor.com.  

 

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