Feature: F.E.S.T.

Women Need to Know Their Worth

Author: Hollis Colquhoun
Published: August 17, 2010 at 4:09 am
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Earning power in a marriage consists of:

1.Income earned through employment.
2.Savings achieved through cutting costs, freeing up income
3.Potential future earnings

Let’s take a brief look at each aspect of your earning power.

1.Income earned through employment. This one is pretty obvious. Earning power is easily calculated if you currently have an income stream from a job or if you receive Social Security benefits. It’s also beneficial to understand your before- and after-tax earnings to effectively set up a budget.

2.Savings achieved through cutting costs, freeing up income.
This is not as apparent, and women need to be able to calculate it. A stay-at-home mom may not have an independent source of income through a full or part-time job, however, that doesn’t mean what she does on a daily basis doesn’t have monetary worth.

A wife and husband have built an economic partnership, and in many cases have raised a family together. Even if she doesn't have a paying job, understand that she still has part ownership of the household income. The husband may be the sole money maker, nevertheless that money isn’t strictly his to control. He wouldn’t be able to take care of the children and manage the household all on his own without creating more expenses, so the wife makes an economic contribution to the marriage by performing tasks that don't cost the household anything.

A stay-at-home-mom creates income, not only by performing tasks he'd have to pay for, but by freeing up money to pay for other expenses or to put into savings. The total household income, even if she doesn't have a job for pay, is an important part of her personal income calculation and worth.

To illustrate this value, below is a list of the tasks she might perform regularly that result in monthly cost savings for the household:

AVERAGE OUTSIDE COST (Monthly)
    Job Example
Transportation         200
Housekeeping          200
Cooking                   400
Laundry                   200
Tutoring                   100
Elder Parent Care    200

Childcare                  500
Event Planning         200

Other
TOTAL(After-tax) $2000

Using these sample figures, in order to have the $2,000 per month to pay someone to do these tasks, a person would have to earn approximately $2,500 per month before taxes. In this case her efforts would result in cost savings equivalent to earning $30,000 per year..

So even if the stay-at-home-mom doesn't have a paying full-time job, she provides real economic value to the household by lowering expenses, and therefore has real personal economic worth in the relationship. She needs to recognize and embrace this value.

Continued on the next page
 
 

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Article Author: Hollis Colquhoun

I have over 20 years of experience in the financial industry and three years ago became an Accredited Financial Counselor for a nonprofit credit counseling agency. From speaking to thousands of women across the country who were in financial trouble …

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