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Women's Rights & Issues
Related: About this forumHow the Big Business of Divorce Benefits Men
How the Big Business of Divorce Benefits Men
12/3/2021 by Casey Jahn
For most women, rarely does a 50-50 split provide enough support to bridge the even bigger gap we are required to fill once a marriage is over.
Womens household income fell by an average of 41 percent with divorce, almost twice the size of the decline that men experienced. (Ivan Uriarte / Flickr)
Divorce is a $28 billion a year industry that affects 50 percent of the people involved in marriage. Between 70 and 80 percent of divorces are initiated by women. Among college-educated women, that number jumps to 90 percent. But even though women overwhelmingly are the ones who want divorce, men somehow benefit disproportionately. Why? It is not surprising that the main reasons women want divorce are also contributors to why men benefit. Over 50 percent of households are dual incomeyet women are still responsible for the lions share of domestic duties. This takes an incredible amount of time and energy, for which many men get a pass. Post-divorce, 80 percent of the custodial parents are also women. This means that domestic duties become an even greater burden for the woman, not the man. For him, it means greater freedom.
Women also take on more of the emotional labor in marriage than their male spouses. When a marriage folds, their role as primary emotional support person increases. She must guide herself and her children through the turbulent separation phase and reorganization of her family while also fulfilling both parental roles in the home as single mother. Women are left with less energy for their careers, professional and personal lives outside of the home. The upside to being an independent woman is that we are less willing to put up with a mans unacceptable behavior, abuse, infidelity and ego driven insecurities than past generations. Unfortunately, when a marriage ends, unlike Melinda Gates or Mackenzie Scott, Jeff Bezoss ex-wife, who earned settlement monies in the billions of dollars, most of us are not awarded a billion-dollar settlement that we can fall back upon.
. . . .
Between 70 and 80 percent of divorces are initiated by women. (amanda / Flickr)
Womens household income fell by an average of 41 percent with divorce, almost twice the size of the decline that men experienced, reported the the U.S. Government Accountability Office to the Senate. According to the U.S. census, 20 percent of women fall into poverty after a divorce (compared with 11 percent of men). About 25 percent lose their health insurance (though usually temporarily).
. . . .
Inside a $28 billion dollar business, where women and children suffer disproportionately from its dissolution, why are we not more focused on creating the alternative pathway that experts suggest? It is time to take an alternate route. How about we stop focusing on whose fault it is once its over and start encouraging women to negotiate a marriage contract up front, before she says the words, I do? We are required to sign contracts for every single important fiduciary relationship in our lives. We sign agreements with our cell phone and internet providers, car dealers, financial lenders, insurance companies, landlords, tenants, employers, airlines, schools, gyms, even libraries. Why not for marriage?
What if we executed a Declaration of Roles and Responsibilitiesa binding contract to compel each party to fulfill their roles and responsibilities within the relationship. Answer the questions: Who is going to earn the money? How does each party intend to contribute, both financially and in human labor? Who will raise the kids? Who will work? Where will the couple live? What kind of lifestyle will they have?
. . . .
https://msmagazine.com/2021/12/03/business-women-divorce-benefits-men/
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