Should financial advice for men and women be different?

by Jay Peroni on August 20, 2009

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Should Men and Women Have Different Financial Strategies?

The reality is most Americans may be underprepared for their financial futures. Taking control of your financial future may be even more important for women than it is for men. Here are four reasons women need to invest and save actively.

1. The earnings gap

Even today, men tend to earn more than women. In 2008 a survey of retirement savings trends conducted by Hewitt Associates, a global human resources consulting firm, found that the women who worked earned an average of $57,000 annually, compared to $84,000 for men. The average male employee in the study therefore had the chance to defer greater amounts of salary into a company retirement plan, while the average salary of the surveyed female employees sometimes wasn’t high enough to trigger a company match.

2. Time out of the workplace

If a woman relies on a company retirement plan to accumulate retirement savings, taking time away from the workplace to care for children (or family members with special needs) can amount to a financial setback. A male employee may contribute to a 401(k) plan year after year for 20 or 30 years or more, and his contribution levels may increase along with his salary. If a woman leaves the workplace for a few years (or more), her retirement nest egg still compounds, but the steady salary deferrals to a 401(k) plan cease. When she retires, she may have less of a nest egg than her male counterpart if she just relies on the company retirement plan as her primary retirement savings vehicle. This is a compelling reason for women to build their own investment portfolios, in addition to participating in employer-sponsored retirement plans.

3. Divorced women may suffer further…

Though I am not an advocate of divorce under most circumstances, it is an unfortunate part of our society. Many women find that a “fair and equal” settlement is not an equitable settlement. When the husband earns much more than the wife, all kinds of decisions ride on the stability of the husband’s salary – the neighborhood the couple or family can afford, what school the kids attend, and so on. When that big salary is gone, the woman faces a reduced lifestyle, and may dip into her savings to maintain financial equilibrium.

More importantly, she may not have the earnings potential her husband has. Things can get particularly tough when the wife is a key employee at a business or professional practice her husband started before the marriage. After a divorce, the husband may retain the business and the bulk of the business assets, regardless of the integral role the wife played in growing and running the company. Will she want to work alongside her ex-husband? Uh-uh. So the stable job she had is a memory, and a career change and a move may be next.

This is why financial planning is so important for many women. Women need strategies after a divorce, help with investment portfolios and financial plan personalized for their new needs and goals. This will better enable them to (re)build wealth.

4. Women outlive men

The Labor Department estimates that almost 90% of women will outlive their husbands and spend a portion of their retirements managing their own finances. A woman who retires alone may face a very long retirement: if you leave work at 62, it may last 20 years or longer, with only about 30% of your income coming from Social Security. (That’s if Social Security is still around.)

The Hewitt Associates study estimated that women’s retirements will average 22 years, compared to 19 years for men. Factoring in projected increases in healthcare costs, it concluded that women need to save 2% more than men annually over 30 years to maintain their standard of living when they retire. If a woman earning $57,000 contributes 4% to her company retirement plan annually over 30 years instead of 2% (that’s $95 more a month), the study estimates that she’ll have an extra $81,000 at her retirement date.

Take control of your finances

The best antidote to worrying about the financial future is trusting God and turning fear over to Him. Next is planning for your future. God cannot bless steps you never take. Investing to build wealth apart from work is a great move. If you want to invest conservatively, you can find strong investment choices with the potential to outpace inflation.

What do you think? With all of the above issues, women can have it much tougher than men. Should men and women have different financial strategies? I look forward to a dialogue with you about saving and investing.

FTC Disclosure of Material Connection: Some of the links in the post above may be affiliate links. This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, we will receive an affiliate commission. Regardless, we only recommend products or services we use personally and/or believe will add value to readers. Read more here.


{ 3 comments… read them below or add one }

LaQuinta August 21, 2009 at 10:12 am

THANK YOU JESUS!!!!!!!!

Reply

Alan August 24, 2009 at 3:18 am

Your article on this blog is fantastic.
Well done! I’m a big fan of your blog and be sure to keep up the great work.
I plan on returning and linking to your site.

Sincerely, Alan H.

Reply

TheresaT September 19, 2009 at 3:28 am

I found this out first hand when my dad died with a boatload of debt and my mother had to go bankrupt. It was devestating to watch this proud woman have to ask for help.

From then on, I decided I would do what it takes to learn to be rich no matter what it takes so I don’t have to suffer like she did.

It’s not all doom and gloom though! With a little work and a whole lot of faith, she’s now financially stable and on her way to becoming her own boss.

This is a great article. WOMEN, read up!

Reply

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