Wednesday, April 15, 2020
How to Tell Your Spouse Youre Taking a Pay Cut
How to Tell Your Spouse Youâre Taking a Pay Cut Youâre ready to quit your miserable job and do something that you know will make you happier. But thereâs a catch. Youâll need to take a major pay cut, and you havenât talked to your spouse about it yet. âAssume that itâll be a very anxiety inducing conversation,â says financial psychologist Brad Klontz. âMoney conversations are critically important for the health of a relationship, but theyâre minefields.â To avoid a bruising argument over your lower-paid gig, approach the topic this way: YOU SAY: âIâm stressed out and unfulfilled at work, and Iâm worried Iâve been taking it out on the family. Iâm seriously considering switching careers, and I want your input.â First things first: If youâve been coming home from work cranky every evening, your spouse may have realized long ago that you hate your job. âThis may be a more welcome conversation than you think,â says financial therapist Amanda Clayman. âIf youâre not happy in a job, this may not come out of the blue.â Make sure your spouse understands youâre opening a negotiation, not simply making a declaration that youâre going to quit. This is a decision that affects your whole family, so emphasize that you want to hear your spouseâs thoughts. âYou need a collaborative attitude,â says Maggie Baker, a financial therapist and author of Crazy About Money. âMake your partner feel like theyâre part of the solution.â YOU SAY: âIâve looked at our budget, and Iâve noticed some costs I think we could cut to make up for the shortfall.â Come prepared. Before talking to your spouse, take an honest look at your budget and assess where you (or the family) can afford to cut back. âThe best thing to do is to think through the solution beforehand,â says Klontz. Could you spend less on meals out, for instance? Could your next car be a two-year-old certified preowned vehicle, not a new model? Spell out the sacrifices youâre willing to make, like taking on part-time work or slashing your personal spending. âIf there are ways this can have more of an impact on you, youâll probably get less resistance,â adds Klontz. Related: Six simple steps for building a better budget. YOU SAY: âBefore I leave my job, letâs test out these cutbacks for a few months.â Before you quit, create this stricter budget. Then give your thriftier lifestyle a test drive and see if you can stick to it. âIf you have this discussion well before you change jobs, you can practice a less affluent lifestyle,â says Baker. âBy play acting it in that way, you can see if itâs doable.â YOU SAY: âThis might be a tough adjustment now, but once I switch careers Iâll have a good chance at earning more down the road.â Taking a short-term pay cut for a new job can be a smart long-term financial decision, especially if youâve topped out in what youâre doing. âSometimes itâs good professionally to make less money,â says Neal Frankle, a certified financial planner and author of Why Smart People Lose a Fortune. Thatâs especially true if you have many more earning years ahead of you (and fewer big-ticket financial obligations, like kids in college). âStrategically, the younger you are, the more it could make sense to make less money.â In your new career, you might find it easier to move up the leadership ladder, or perhaps you have the chance to join a startup with high growth potential. Alternatively, look into whether the lower-paying job might have better benefits. If you can argue that your drop in pay will be temporaryâ"or evened out by other factorsâ"make that part of your case for quitting. YOU SAY: âIâm sure no one in the family will mind if Iâm less grouchy around the house.â Play up the positive. Leaving a job that makes you miserable will probably rub off on the rest of your family. You might have more free time to spend with them, or at least you could be more relaxed and happy after you get home from work. Figure out whatâs in it for them, and mention that too. Keep in mind that seeing you happier in your career will probably make your spouse happy too. âIn a healthy relationship, one partnerâs happiness and well-being has value in the family,â says Clayman. âItâs not all about the money.â Read more on money and relationships: 7 Ways to Stop Fighting About Money and Grow Richer, Together Common Problems, Uncommon Solutions: How Seven Couples Have Tackled Their Money Challenges When She Makes More: How to Level the Playing Field
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