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Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Family / Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? (32678 Views)
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Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by Gorgeous58(f): 6:55am On Oct 07, 2014 |
Model 3 I ideal. But we should remember that marriage is about trust, respect and love. |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by walcolm(m): 6:55am On Oct 07, 2014 |
zboyd: @OP, nice post and quite relevant to the world we now live in. the only problem i have with the post is that you have painted 3 different pictures of the wife but only one of the husband....that's putting men in a myopic box and that's unfair to the male gender. there are men who believe in the feminist ideologies and will be more than happy to support and marry a feminist. the problem with feminism in this part of the world is that most women now hide under the ideology to commit murder. they want the freedom and perks feminism brings but they dont want the responsibilities that comes with the power. the proverbial faith is a prime example of a woman who wants the freedom of feminism but doesnt want the responsibility that goes with it the proverbial faith in your post is also a liar if she claims she takes care of the household chores and the needs of two children...no woman can work full time and do that. the househelp paid for by the husband is probably the one doing the chores and caring for the children 80% of the time because she's at work full time like the husband so claiming that as her contribution and excuse for withholding her earnings from the family is a lie the proverbial beatrice deserves to have a say in the affairs of the family if her husband accepts her contribution to the family finances. if she's putting in 100% of her earnings just like her husband is putting in 100% of his earnings into the family purse, then she deserves to have an equitable say in the family decisions 5 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by Daresh(f): 6:57am On Oct 07, 2014 |
There is no such thing as free will. Please stop giving women a bad name. If you want to marry a man that will let you keep your money while he works like a mon-key to keep you in luxury then by all means go ahead. But that man will grow to resent you. You cross your legs while he hustles to pay rent, school fees, buy you car, fuel, gen, maid, clothes, jewelry. What will you be doing with your money then? blueAlphaGirl: 7 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by Aliyubest(m): 7:00am On Oct 07, 2014 |
Bensondrums:Some wives can be a pain in the neck |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by lucianohase(m): 7:00am On Oct 07, 2014 |
MarvellousGod:This the best!! |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by saymalcolm(m): 7:00am On Oct 07, 2014 |
Marriage is partnership but our faith and custom confers the status of head of the home on the man. I don't subcribe to a earning wife keeping her money aside because the man is the "head of the home". No partnership works like that. Maybe in the old days, it did but times have changed. Both parties must do whatever it takes to run the home successfully. Likewise, the husband should never leave all the house chores for the wife because he is the "head of home" or take decisions without consulting her especially when such decision affects her. That is not leadership of love but tyranny. Two heads are always better than one. Even if the wife is not working and a full stay-at-home wife, she must have a say for the husband to consider fairly, achieve a workable compromise before making the final decision. Any couple able to find this balance have a whole lot less to worry about. A woman who refuses to share in the family expenditure is greedy and any man who takes advantage of a wife who shares in the expenditure is a lazy bum. 3 Likes |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by simplyOJ(m): 7:05am On Oct 07, 2014 |
My wife works and keep her salary. I take care as I should as the husband and father of the house. We have gotten to know ourselves to the point that she steps in to make her own contributions by assisting in taken care of some very essential expenses from time time. Marriage is not a competition between the wife and her husband, but rather two loving individuals who have agreed to come together to build a home. The man should understand he is responsible for the upkeep of his home, irrespective of whether his wife is working. He should not enforce it that the wife will have to contribute to the upkeep of the home. He should just focus doing his bit and take his nose off his womans purse, trust me majority of wives that are respected by their husbands need not be told, they know when to come in from time to time. It works for me. The key thing is mutual respect. Especially as it relates to a woman, if she feels loved and respected, trust me, the man can sing Hossana. 7 Likes |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by kazmanbanjoko(m): 7:07am On Oct 07, 2014 |
. 2 Likes 1 Share
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Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by mascot87(m): 7:08am On Oct 07, 2014 |
cococandy: I would like you to explain this better |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by Nobody: 7:09am On Oct 07, 2014 |
Mrbrill:Like what? |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by koxi: 7:09am On Oct 07, 2014 |
MarvellousGod: Ahhh! See women liberation. Dat u contribute to d upkeep of d house doesn't and will never give u an equal standing wit ur husband in d home. Your opinion can be sought on issues, but its never a standard for judgement and/or decision making. You have a say, no doubt. But its a privilege and not a right. Be guided, pls 1 Like |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by okabe(m): 7:13am On Oct 07, 2014 |
Yomieluv:Well said, couldn't agree more wit u. No wise woman wud wait 2 b begged or coaxed in2 helpin out her family financially |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by Nobody: 7:16am On Oct 07, 2014 |
emusmith: Sit in the comfort of ur parents house and type scam and whatever u want. When u face the reality of life u will know how cruel poverty can be. 1 Like |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by MrsGoodness(f): 7:20am On Oct 07, 2014 |
yes |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by Nobody: 7:21am On Oct 07, 2014 |
There is God. |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by ocelot2006(m): 7:22am On Oct 07, 2014 |
As a married man I must say I find it quite laughable when the ladies here talk about partnership in marriage cos honestly there's absolutely non. Sure the wife ought to be the man's most trusted confidant, and he should be open to her opinions, BUT the final household decision is his and his alone to make. That's why he is the head of the family. Anyway, back to the topic. Using myself as an example, both I and my wife work, BUT I take care of ALL the household bills cos it's my duty as a husband. That said, I do tell her to save up for the rainy day. You'll never know when it will come. |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by okabe(m): 7:22am On Oct 07, 2014 |
Let me quickly say, dia is no ryt way, dia is only a way dat works. Wateva works 4 a family, I believ they shud apply dat |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by Nobody: 7:24am On Oct 07, 2014 |
MarvellousGod:mbok wetin b QED? |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by ocelot2006(m): 7:24am On Oct 07, 2014 |
saymalcolm: Point of correction, Marriage is NOT a partnership. |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by tivta(m): 7:25am On Oct 07, 2014 |
Am surprised but happy to see that there are still some nigerian women who believe in 50/50, I pray you all find the men that will cherish and remain faithfull to you. Infact am 50percent such men will never cheat on you cause you are asserts and not liability. To the girl who chooses to save her money, I am 90pecent sure your husband is a serial cheat and probably has family outside(No its not a curse, its a fact). If women want men to remain faithful to them, show your man you are an assert, and he will think more than twice before cheating on you. Unfortunately most reach men will cheat unless their wives are good wealth managers, Eg Bill and mellina gates. 1 Like |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by Nobody: 7:26am On Oct 07, 2014 |
looking4job:Keep waiting! |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by governoragweven: 7:29am On Oct 07, 2014 |
yes women should, but out of willingness not compulsion |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by marshalfire: 7:30am On Oct 07, 2014 |
God created a man and realised that it's unethical and incomplete for a man to be alone without a helper so created a woman through that man.I.e it's still the man inside of a woman .so in any marriage a woman is help (meet) and not help mate.there sud be a compromise BTW d both parties to make a major decision at home if not the marriage Will crashed and both will regret it. |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by Od31(m): 7:30am On Oct 07, 2014 |
Debonair01: This is what it should be. Thanks for sharing this. There should not be a model to marriage, the two have agreed to live same life where they share every thing they have, their bodies, their lives, and whatever they will have. if both are making money, both should see to the building of family in whatever way, financially, spiritually, socially and otherwise. when the children are coming, they both have the responsibility of raising them to be better people in the society. However the God made marriage to be a responsible union. So decisions should be made with regards to the overall well being of every member of the family. 1 Like |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by okabe(m): 7:31am On Oct 07, 2014 |
ocelot2006:Ofcos, at least not in d real sense of dat word. But den again, dats basically how it works. I'm open 4 u 2 tell me wat u tink it is tho |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by YurFatHer: 7:33am On Oct 07, 2014 |
kazmanbanjoko:nope, you did right. |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by 1miccza: 7:33am On Oct 07, 2014 |
bennyrazz: You are the man!!!Bro!! |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by Cyberknight: 7:34am On Oct 07, 2014 |
This is an interesting topic. To me, there should be NO question that a woman earning income MUST contribute it to the family. The sad thing is that most of our traditions were formed in the olden days and the hard, harsh light of modern life should has forced us to re-evaluate many of them anew, but many people do not seem to be doing so. Speaking for myself and my culture, in my part of Igboland, it is traditionally assumed that the man is the overall provider in the sense that in the olden days he had to provide land for the wives and children to farm "smaller" crops like cassava for making garri, etc, while he as the man farmed the "king" of crops, yam, and as such women preferred marrying men who had land to take care of large families and who were "strong" enough as finances were measured in those days (as evidenced by their yam barns). So men with large, well fed families were respected and honoured. Now fast forward to 2014. Wealth no longer comes from the land and from farming, but from remunerated activities by way of salaries or from business by way of profit. So as a married man, my possible wealth is no longer assessed by my farming prowess, I have to provide cash. So the old playing field on which the traditional assumption of men being the sole provider has been hit by the fact that manhood and getting a job or raising capital to start a business are no longer correlated. In those days, a woman could look at a man with a small yam barn and call him a wastrel. Can you call a man in these times who has no job or no access to raise capital to start a business a wastrel? Secondly, take the cost of living. I live in Lagos, and have 2 children. I try to live reasonably well in a decent area (not Lekki Phase 1 level yet, Surulere, Gbagada, Anthony, etc) and have a good car, put my children in reasonably decent and affordable private schools (not Corona o), buy them health insurance, pay for the occasional outings, run and maintain a decent car, etc. At a conservative estimate, I have expenses of a minimum of 3 million naira p.a (not inclusive of hoildays, of which I have not taken any since my first child was born). Breakdown: Annual rent: 800k School fees for 2 children: 280k per term (increases as they get older and go from class to class, but this is waht I'm paying for my 2 children in nursery school) Transport (fueling 2 cars and maintaining them), electricity bills, food for the adults, baby food, diapers for the one still using them etc cost me a minimum of 120k per month (anyone running a family in Lagos is free to make input here). So exclusive of any family outings, trips, money sent to my mother and my inlaws, or any frivolities whatever, I need to be earning a mi nimum of 360k monthly to cater for my family leaving me with no disposable income. Actually however, for me to live reasonably comfortably after making all those payments, I need to have a monthly income of about 450 to 500k to leave me with disposable income. How many people are earning 500k a month? That is a very good salary in Naija today. I know I'm not. I earn about half that after tax and the other outgoings. Therefore i need my wife's salary to be able to cope in today's harsh economic environment. Anybody torturing themselves with outdated traditional notions of "I'm the man, I must provide ALL for my family" is simply on his way to an early grave. Get this - your masculinity is NOT tied up with how much you can earn. 10 Likes |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by synergycom19: 7:34am On Oct 07, 2014 |
The woman may contributes at her own discretion, she shouldn't be forced. My wife works I haven't feel the impact of her salary in the household expenses and I never really cared as long as she doesn't spend my money stupidly, which unfortunately she always do. I pay the house rent, school fees including the uniforms and the books, buy foodstuff were possible, even buy her hollandaise and still gives her money for house keep. However, the issue of woman being equal to the man is not biblical(it's western), what if the man has two/or more wives? Because God never chastised or quarrel with anyone for more than one wife, he even gave David his master's wife |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by Cyberknight: 7:34am On Oct 07, 2014 |
This is an interesting topic. To me, there should be NO question that a woman earning income MUST contribute it to the family. The sad thing is that most of our traditions were formed in the olden days and the hard, harsh light of modern life should has forced us to re-evaluate many of them anew, but many people do not seem to be doing so. Speaking for myself and my culture, in my part of Igboland, it is traditionally assumed that the man is the overall provider in the sense that in the olden days he had to provide land for the wives and children to farm "smaller" crops like cassava for making garri, etc, while he as the man farmed the "king" of crops, yam, and as such women preferred marrying men who had land to take care of large families and who were "strong" enough as finances were measured in those days (as evidenced by their yam barns). So men with large, well fed families were respected and honoured. Now fast forward to 2014. Wealth no longer comes from the land and from farming, but from remunerated activities by way of salaries or from business by way of profit. So as a married man, my possible wealth is no longer assessed by my farming prowess, I have to provide cash. So the old playing field on which the traditional assumption of men being the sole provider has been hit by the fact that manhood and getting a job or raising capital to start a business are no longer correlated. In those days, a woman could look at a man with a small yam barn and call him a wastrel. Can you call a man in these times who has no job or no access to raise capital to start a business a wastrel? Secondly, take the cost of living. I live in Lagos, and have 2 children. I try to live reasonably well in a decent area (not Lekki Phase 1 level yet, Surulere, Gbagada, Anthony, etc) and have a good car, put my children in reasonably decent and affordable private schools (not Corona o), buy them health insurance, pay for the occasional outings, run and maintain a decent car, etc. At a conservative estimate, I have expenses of a minimum of 3 million naira p.a (not inclusive of hoildays, of which I have not taken any since my first child was born). Breakdown: Annual rent: 800k School fees for 2 children: 280k per term (increases as they get older and go from class to class, but this is waht I'm paying for my 2 children in nursery school) Transport (fueling 2 cars and maintaining them), electricity bills, food for the adults, baby food, diapers for the one still using them etc cost me a minimum of 120k per month (anyone running a family in Lagos is free to make input here). So exclusive of any family outings, trips, money sent to my mother and my inlaws, or any frivolities whatever, I need to be earning a mi nimum of 360k monthly to cater for my family leaving me with no disposable income. Actually however, for me to live reasonably comfortably after making all those payments, I need to have a monthly income of about 450 to 500k to leave me with disposable income. How many people are earning 500k a month? That is a very good salary in Naija today. I know I'm not. I earn about half that after tax and the other outgoings. Therefore i need my wife's salary to be able to cope in today's harsh economic environment. Anybody torturing themselves with outdated traditional notions of "I'm the man, I must provide ALL for my family" is simply on his way to an early grave. Get this - your masculinity (or the lack thereof) is NOT tied to how much you can earn. 4 Likes |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by iykedare(m): 7:35am On Oct 07, 2014 |
jumzzy448: Even if stress kills him,? Smh for your kind |
Re: Should Working Wives Share Household Expenses With Their Husbands? by chenypat(f): 7:36am On Oct 07, 2014 |
MarvellousGod:exactly! You spoke my mind. I do not belong in either 3. He truth is every relationship is different. My fiance and I both buy household stuffs, he buys and I buy too and if I see one I really like but don't have enough money for it, he adds his money to mine and we buy it. When it comes to decisions he runs every idea by me and I do same in as much as that thing concerns both of us, we decide together and reach an agreement. It works perfectly for us. In fact, most things that ends up being issues in most relationship is nothing to us cos we always find a way somhow to work thing out. Its boils down to perfect communication and respect. That comes top to us. 2 Likes |
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