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In the news lately there has been a term bandied about that peaks reader’s interest, but they still don’t quite understand what it means. That term is Female Financial Paradox. The basic idea is that women tend to manage money by saving and budgeting rather than planning and investing to improve their financial lives.

What is the crux of the Female Financial Paradox?

The concept of increasing the value of money by developing financial plans is difficult for many women to implement into their lives because they’ve been socially trained to pinch pennies to stretch the dollar, while it was their husbands’ job to plan how to save for a rainy day or invest in order to make large purchases, such as a new home, or set aside savings for the children’s educations, or improve their retirement years.

Indeed, women now in their 40s were raised to believe that it was the mother’s job to tend to the day-today money management, while it was their father’s job to manage larger financial matters. As a result, these women were not likely to have been encouraged to learn about saving and investing by either parent. Even women in their 30s were raised to believe that their earnings were supplemental income to their spouse’s earnings, while the husbands remained the key breadwinners and financial manager of the household.

Women's view on finances in the 1950s

It worked in the past. Why is it an issue now?

That may be what is going through your mind, “If it worked over the years, why is this a paradoxical issue now?” The Female Financial Paradox matters because more and more women are earning more than their spouses – from earning more college degrees to societal changes that recognize women as good workers and capable of performing well in leadership positions.

Recently, DailyWorth, the leading digital media company for ambitious professional women, did a survey asking questions to 10,000 women about their roles in family financial planning. The information learned from the survey shows the conditions related to this paradox quite clearly:

  • 90% of women identified themselves as the main breadwinner in their households.
  • Only 76% consider themselves the primary retirement planner.
  • 60% admitted that they have below average investing and planning skills.
  • Less than 50% of the women surveyed sought financial resources to learn about financial planning.

Women are earning better income and gaining more status in the business world, yet they still have a short-term, immediate view about money and would rather have someone else manage long-term matters for them.

In order to change the Female Financial Paradox, women must create a paradigm shift regarding their perception of money and how to use it. Rather than focusing on the size of their paychecks and how they can stretch it for today, they need to educate themselves about how to use their earnings for longer-term gains that make that better income worthwhile.

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