Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

65% Of Couples Avoid Talking Money Prior To Getting Hitched, Living Common Law: Poll

The Canadian Press, 04 Aug, 2016 12:22 PM
    TORONTO — A new CIBC survey suggests nearly all couples believe it's important to have a serious joint discussion about finances before getting hitched or moving in together — but only about a third will actually do so.
     
    The study found that 35 per cent of committed partners who plan to marry or live common law within the next two years say they've talked about money in detail, with 40 per cent saying they've only discussed how to manage finances together as a couple "briefly."
     
    Despite those responses, 99 per cent of those surveyed indicated they felt it's very — or at least somewhat — important to discuss how they'll plan their finances as a couple before saying, "I do."
     
    The findings may in part explain why 46 per cent also said their top financial goal within the first two years of living together was to save up for a vacation, despite the fact that two-thirds of the respondents said they would be entering into marriage or a common-law relationship in debt.
     
    Jamie Golombek, managing director of tax and estate planning for CIBC, said in a report about the survey results that financial disagreements are a strong predictor of divorce, particularly among younger couples who are more prone to experience financial stress in their relationships.
     
     
    He pointed to recent U.S. research showing that couples who argue over finances several times a week are 30 per cent more likely to divorce than those who only have money squabbles less than once a month.
     
    Of those surveyed who admitted they haven't talked about money before their wedding day or the move-in date, 83 per cent said they didn't know either how or when to address the topic or said they plan "to play it by ear."
     
    CIBC's online survey was conducted from July 15-21 among 1,047 Canadian adults who are Angus Reid Forum panellists.
     
    The polling industry's professional body, the Marketing Research and Intelligence Association, says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error because they do not randomly sample the population.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Court Date Put Over For Calgary Man Charged With Murders Of Mother, Girl

    Court Date Put Over For Calgary Man Charged With Murders Of Mother, Girl
    Edward Downey, who faces two counts of first-degree murder, did not appear in the courtroom. 

    Court Date Put Over For Calgary Man Charged With Murders Of Mother, Girl

    Owen Parkhouse, P.E.I. Man, Goes Door To Door To Try To Snag Senate Seat

    Owen Parkhouse, P.E.I. Man, Goes Door To Door To Try To Snag Senate Seat
    On a hot August morning, he is going door-to-door, campaigning to become Prince Edward Island's next senator.

    Owen Parkhouse, P.E.I. Man, Goes Door To Door To Try To Snag Senate Seat

    Ontario Police Arrest Alleged 'Prolific Ticket Scammer'; Allege There Are 180 Victims

    Ontario Police Arrest Alleged 'Prolific Ticket Scammer'; Allege There Are 180 Victims
    Peel Region police allege that 36-year-old Shaun Nixon defrauded 180 victims across Canada between August 2015 and July 2016.

    Ontario Police Arrest Alleged 'Prolific Ticket Scammer'; Allege There Are 180 Victims

    Did 'Condo King' Bob Rennie Get Advance Warning Of B.C.'s Foreign Buyer Tax? NDP Demand Probe

    Did 'Condo King' Bob Rennie Get Advance Warning Of B.C.'s Foreign Buyer Tax? NDP Demand Probe
    David Eby has written B.C. Premier Christy Clark asking what information Bob Rennie had before the government passed the 15 per cent property transfer tax on foreign nationals.

    Did 'Condo King' Bob Rennie Get Advance Warning Of B.C.'s Foreign Buyer Tax? NDP Demand Probe

    Judge Quashes B.C. Government's Modest Pay Hike For Provincial Court Judges

    Judge Quashes B.C. Government's Modest Pay Hike For Provincial Court Judges
    B.C. Supreme Court Justice Christopher Grauer has quashed the province's three-year pay hike program of 1.0 per cent, 1.0 per cent and 1.5 per cent for the period between 2014 and 2017.

    Judge Quashes B.C. Government's Modest Pay Hike For Provincial Court Judges

    B.C. Families Of Missing, Murdered Women Urge National Inquiry To Get It Right

    B.C. Families Of Missing, Murdered Women Urge National Inquiry To Get It Right
      Mary Teegee, with the Carrier Sekani Family Services, says inaction over the decades around missing women, especially aboriginal women, is a mark of racism and hasn't been acknowledged until recently.

    B.C. Families Of Missing, Murdered Women Urge National Inquiry To Get It Right