- This topic has 794 replies, 21 voices, and was last updated 9 years, 11 months ago by CA renter.
-
AuthorPosts
-
October 21, 2014 at 12:34 AM #779112October 21, 2014 at 12:42 AM #779113CA renterParticipant
[quote=scaredyclassic]You taking notes, kev. You’re gonna increase your income by teaming up with a woman who stays at home and calculates how much all the stuff she does for you would go for retail.
Shell get to decide what work needs to be done, can create work or make you do it if she changes her mind. And she can complain endlessly since it’s not valued in the marketplace.
You’re broke cause you don’t have a disgruntled employee at home working 24 7[/quote]
If you were to define what your paid work entailed, would you be labeled a whiner or told that you were “complaining endlessly”? Seems a bit sexist to me when you think that women who detail the work they do are “complaining.”
Do you honestly think that it’s wrong to note that unpaid labor has value, even monetary value? This was only brought up because some other posters were insinuating that unpaid labor had little or no value.
Does your wife complain when she’s working? Do you complain when you have to do housework? Where do you get the notion that SAHPs are disgruntled or complaining endlessly?
October 21, 2014 at 1:08 AM #779115CA renterParticipant[quote=UCGal]Wow – after reading through this entire thread I realize a few things:
– My marriage must be highly unusual… Maybe my husband struts too much or too little, but I don’t care.
– There are a lot of people who don’t recognize the give and take of a partnership. Domestic duties (child rearing, house cleaning, cooking, budgeting) are as important as working for a salary. But working for a salary has value as well. I guess I’m lucky because I never had to put more weight on one or the other – I worked for a salary (until June when I became a slacker on that front) for my entire marriage. I also did domestic labor. But so did my husband. Yes – some of it was divided by gender – he’s better at installing windows, hanging drywall, etc. I don’t mind cleaning the kitchen, running the vacuum. We both cook. We both deal with the kids. (Although he was challenged on the breastfeeding front. LOL).I don’t think my marriage is that rare or unusual. My husband isn’t some whipped guy who just does what I tell him. I’m not some mouse that does everything he tells me to do. We both contribute and it works. Looking around at friends – this isn’t that rare. (And my friends consist of people who have a stay at home parent, and couples that have both parties working for salary, and a few single parents of both genders.)
After reading this thread – I get the idea that my friends and I are truly exceptional – and I know that’s not the case.
So guys – strut your stuff and bloviate. Women, chatter on about how women deserve “me time” more than men. There are plenty of selfish self absorbed people in both genders. Get over yourselves if you’re one of them. If this doesn’t apply, then don’t take offense.[/quote]
Reading back through this thread to see how we got so deep in the woods and realized that I didn’t address this and clarify something in my post about men contributing little more than wage-earning and the uneven distribution of labor. It was related to the comment about women leaving long-term marriages in order to “find themselves” after serving others for decades. These marriages were older marriages, so the gender roles were more defined than in today’s marriages. I did not make it clear that I was referring to older marriages (though the “divorcing after multiple decades” part was in there). It is well known that many men of those days would not participate in domestic chores or child rearing; that was “women’s work.”
As I’ve stated in another post on this thread, men have come a long, long way since those days. They are most definitely participating to a much greater extent in family life and domestic chores than their predecessors and the labor gap is closing. Women are taking on a greater share of the income earning, too.
Each family needs to decide what is best for themselves because each situation is different. People bring different abilities, skills, interests, income-earning potential, etc. to their marriages. And different families have different needs, too. There is no one-size-fits-all way to do this, and nobody should denigrate the work that others do, or the choices that other people make for their own families.
And there is a HUGE difference between finding “me time” and living life as a single person — as though nothing (marriage, kids responsibilities) has changed WRT hobbies, interests, friends, etc. Huge difference. Nobody here ever claimed that women deserve “me time” more than men (nor claim that doing domestic duties was more valuable than paid labor).
October 21, 2014 at 3:28 AM #779114CA renterParticipant[quote=FlyerInHi][quote=CA renter][quote=FlyerInHi]I’m going to be a gold digger. I want to dig deep and get lots of gold.
I’m going to be prospecting for gold. Need to be sure there’s lots of gold, otherwise, I’d be wasting my time.[/quote]What will you provide in return?[/quote]
My amazing studliness. I’m willing to take care of all the household responsibilities, as long as there’s enough gold. Too little gold won’t do. At least 5x more gold than I can prospect on my own.[/quote]
That won’t do. You need a uterus and children, too. And breasts to nurse them with…don’t forget the breasts. π
Seriously, though… Most women would not claim that household responsibilities for just two people is enough to justify having a SAH spouse. It’s the kids that throw everything over the line. The increase in workload feels exponential when you have kids. Laundry alone can take an hour or more each day.
October 21, 2014 at 6:34 AM #779120UCGalParticipantCAR –
I still have trouble understanding how you can impute that the SAME task is worth pay if it’s done by a stay at home parent than if it’s done by a single person or someone who works outside the home. You imply it’s not worth pay if the task is done by someone who works for salary outside the home.Yes – there is more cleaning, laundry, and childcare when there are kids involved. But earlier in this thread you claimed wage equivalency for paying bills, investing, etc… And you’d agree that even people who work for a salary outside the home have *some* cleaning, cooking, laundry to accomplish. And as I said – bills don’t pay themselves.
FWIW – a friend uses a nanny. Her nanny is there for 9 hours a day, 4 days a week. (She works her 5th day from home.) Her nanny does more than just childcare. She cleans/straightens, she runs laundry, she drives the kids to activities, she cooks and feeds the kids breakfast and lunch…. That would probably be a better wage equivalency.
To try to divide it up in separate people who perform services is not reality. People can multitask and do all the time… performing several different job duties in the course of a day. To try and say that it’s a 24/7 job isn’t fair either. As a working parent – you’re still doing home based work (domestic/childcare/etc) when you’re not at work… Trust me – I did it. Weekends were spent doing yard work, housework, laundry. Weeknights were spent cooking/cleanup after, working on homework with the kids, driving kids to activities, coaching teams, etc.
You can convince yourself that a SAHP would take $100k/year plus to replace – but that’s not reality and it is ignoring the reality of working parents who still manage to get a lot of the household/child stuff done after work hours.
October 21, 2014 at 7:29 AM #779121scaredyclassicParticipant[quote=CA renter][quote=scaredyclassic]You taking notes, kev. You’re gonna increase your income by teaming up with a woman who stays at home and calculates how much all the stuff she does for you would go for retail.
Shell get to decide what work needs to be done, can create work or make you do it if she changes her mind. And she can complain endlessly since it’s not valued in the marketplace.
You’re broke cause you don’t have a disgruntled employee at home working 24 7[/quote]
If you were to define what your paid work entailed, would you be labeled a whiner or told that you were “complaining endlessly”? Seems a bit sexist to me when you think that women who detail the work they do are “complaining.”
Do you honestly think that it’s wrong to note that unpaid labor has value, even monetary value? This was only brought up because some other posters were insinuating that unpaid labor had little or no value.
Does your wife complain when she’s working? Do you complain when you have to do housework? Where do you get the notion that SAHPs are disgruntled or complaining endlessly?[/quote]
Society is not better off if our tub is sparkly clean v. It got a quick brushdown.
in general i think regular employees overestimate their value.
yes whiny. if an employee was constantly going off about how they’re not appreciated, id say that’s whiny. appreciation is not really relevant in the workplace except for mgt as a faux money replacement) and valuation of services is not relevant at home. so, whiny.
i dont think anyone said therewas no value to what SAHP does. just that the value is variable and probably way lower than what the doer believes.
laundry one hour? maybe thats the biling rate for landry express. but you put the clothes in. couple minutes. change em. a minute or two take em out.
distribute in buckets.
time aditional depends on tolerance for wrinkliness…
October 21, 2014 at 7:51 AM #779122njtosdParticipant[quote=CA renter][quote=njtosd]I don’t think my husband is getting much value from me. I’m not very domestic – although I like to bake. I work part time, but based on scaredy’s calculus, that probably sets me back because clients get me peeved (so I fall below the “happy 80% of the time” threshold). We just bought and installed shower doors together – but he put in more effort than I did (I don’t have much “hack saw” experience). I keep track of paperwork, insurance, etc.
Would we be calculating this stuff if we were single? And considering it imputed income to ourselves? I don’t think so.[/quote]
If you were single, you wouldn’t be doing it for others. For SAHPs, you’re working for other people, not yourself. There is a LOT more work involved when you’re doing everything for a family vs. just taking care of yourself.[/quote]
First off – I was being a little facetious. We have three kids, and the work is never done. Second – imputed income is usually used in tax considerations. In the real estate sense, there is an argument that if you own a home, you would charge someone else to live there, so you should be imputed to have received rent (taxable income) from yourself. So as a single person, you can choose to do your own laundry (a gain you receive for free – which is not taxed, yet) or pay for it to be done (gvt receives tax revenue on transaction). Should everyone pay taxes on all this imputed income? I would argue no, but it would definitely clarify the value of the services rendered.
October 21, 2014 at 9:01 AM #779124NotCrankyParticipantYou didn’t get in trouble with me for arguing over how much house work is worth. It’s your frequent insistence, perhaps barely weakening now , that
women are better than men and always have been. We have been around on this 3 or 4 times since this blog started and it’s always the same. I find it impossible to think that men are better than women or the other way around…so I don’t whine about it.Men are not “coming around’ finally any more than male rabbits or female kangaroos are.That’s a huge condescending insult. Culture changes more rapidly in humans and probably faster now than ever. We are animals and it is impossible that G-d made one sex better than the other.
Neither you or I had parents who were reasonably good couples cooperating in making functioning home and then supporting each other after, out of loyalty continued love and friendship or any other reasons .They were not mr,. and ms. UCGAL by a long stretch. We had no one show us to be grateful to one another and trust that it’s pretty easy to be o.k. with our partners. Whatever we saw was the opposite. Lots of crippled perception and insecurity from that gets transferred to our world view with the opposite sex /male female relations can come from that. It just fits the definition of how people get long term hurt from dysfunctional families. KEV might be in the same boat but that’s for him to say.
Apologizing for psychoanalyzing you, but I wouldn’t be surprised if some of your energy and bias and stubbornness on this comes from that.
October 21, 2014 at 9:42 AM #779126FlyerInHiGuestI guess I could marry a woman be the mother of my kids, and take care of all the household stuff…
I will do the finances myself.
Let’s say I pay her $100k per year to do that, with annual increases.
Am I free to ignore her? She on the other hand, as the employee, has to be pleasant, agreeable and do exactly what I say.
When I’m done with her services, I could tell her to leave.
October 21, 2014 at 9:57 AM #779127scaredyclassicParticipantProv. 31:10. Who can find a capable wife. Her value far exceeds that of rubies.
I gotta check the Talmud to see if the rabbis discussed exactly how many rubies per hr.
October 21, 2014 at 11:11 AM #779129NotCrankyParticipantCalculating your value vs the mother or father of your chlidren Is sad isn’t it?
Why would anyone do that unless they were thinking that the marriage might break-up?It makes sense to have repect your family’s values about having a stay at home parent and only your family’s values. Inevitably there will be thinking about the economic tradeoffs, but that’s different than sweating it once you have an agreement. If you don’t like how it evolves, or fear where it could lead ,then it is imperative to find a solution and I guarantee it is not the math problem of how much a sahp’s work is worth.
And for godsake , CARenter, please quit calling it “women’s work” . How sexist can you be?
October 21, 2014 at 11:11 AM #779131FlyerInHiGuestThe kids would be mine, not hers since I paid for everything.
If she wants 1/2 ownership of the kids, she would need to pay 1/2 the household expenses out of her $100k salary.
October 21, 2014 at 11:15 AM #779132NotCrankyParticipant[quote=FlyerInHi]The kids would be mine, not hers since I paid for everything.
If she wants 1/2 ownership of the kids, she would need to pay 1/2 the household expenses out of her $100k salary.[/quote]
That’s exactly right….and blows the whole thing apart. It’s called a family unit for a reason. If it were treated like Carenter wants it it would be way worse for any woman not working but married to a man of means.
October 21, 2014 at 11:17 AM #779130bearishgurlParticipantI want to add that it doesn’t cost that much for a parent to take a $30K yr FT job, say 6-14 miles from home if they have “reasonable” child care expenses (<$800 mo). It's still worth it due to being in line for eventual raises/promotions. We will assume the worker doesn’t have a student loan to pay because they are only a HS grad or certificate holder (obtained “free” from ROP) and are a 24-yr old parent. Their spouse or parent pays the rent/mortgage and they drive an older paid-for vehicle but can ride the bus directly to work for $72 month if they have someone else to pick up kid(s) or a relative to keep kid(s) a little longer in the afternoon. No weekly gas fill-ups are necessary:
http://www.sdmts.com/fares.asp#bus
CAR mentioned clothing and lunch for workers being expensive and that may be so for attorneys but is NOT SO for 90% of worker bees. In actually, for women, the lined skirts we regularly drycleaned in yesteryear (weren’t allowed to wear pants to work) have now been replaced by black Dickies, (a little more expensive) Dockers and a cheap ($5-$10) top or shirt (no jacket). The expensive haircut has been replaced by a pony tail or bun. I’ve seen this new “uniform” even in high-rise law offices for at least the last 12 years and law offices tend to have better-dressed employees than other businesses and corporations. Even gubment workers don’t dress very well anymore … at least not the “clerk-helping-the-public” variety (which are 90% of gov worker-bees).
Got a new ~$30K job?? Here’s an economical place where you can buy 5 pairs of pants in dark colors on the cheap. They are clean, permanently pressed, and comfortable for San Diego:
http://www.yelp.com/biz/dickies-and-athletic-chula-vista?osq=Dickies+Outlet
Situated right in front of the TANF office and State EDD (Unemployment Dept), it’s the same place that school uniforms are sold.
Having taken my lunch 99.9% of my workdays for decades, I can attest to how cheap it is to make your lunch at home. I can assure you that there is a frig to keep it in in every workplace and likely a microwave as well. I made my lunches for between .25 and .80 day (that’s “cents”). Yes, there was protein in it, sometimes it was leftovers and I often put it together the night before. 80% of my co-workers took their lunch everyday as well. If you finish your lunch quickly and want to use the rest of your lunch hour for errands, you can do that if you drove to work.
I realize groceries are higher now but you get the drift. It’s MUCH CHEAPER to pack your own lunch than to buy lunch every day and always has been. I worked less than 2.5 miles from the Navy Commissary, which was on the way home. I could shop there once weekly, stand in a 20+ minute line to check out and still be home by 6:30 pm with groceries for the whole family for a week+! Also, you don’t buy $3 – $5 coffees at work or on the way to work. You bring your own travel mug from home with coffee in it and then chip in the monthly coffee fund on your floor to whoever brought in a coffeemaker if your employer does not provide it free (some do).
Except for daycare for kid(s), a worker-parent can take all of their earnings home and work themselves into raises and a better job. It doesn’t matter if they even went to college or not. It’s all relative because a young worker who didn’t spend anything for higher education and their parents’ couldn’t afford to help them can still work FT. It’s just not a $50K – $100K job … at least in their early years. (There’s no guarantee that a college grad will even land a $50K job, anyway.) The workers who opted for a FT job instead of college are gaining valuable work experience while most of their demographic is in college (full or part-time) and thus can’t work FT. BUT … they don’t have student loans and they have at least four more years FT work experience than their college-bound peers.
Who hires these young HS and ROP grads? Retail sales and mgmt, restaurants (incl mgmt), insurance companies, gubment offices, collection agencies, banks, auto dealerships, shipyards, auto service centers, non-profit agencies, construction companies, factories, medical offices, etc.
I see these kids going to work every day to support their own kid(s). The whole argument about it being “too expensive” for an unemployed parent to take a FT job (I’ve read it here and elsewhere on the internet) is wa-a-a-y overblown, imho. The public aid agencies and family court judges don’t see it that way. They feel that EVERY PARENT, regardless of gender, has a personal responsibility to financially support their kids. The “village” is in place to support these young parents’ lower daycare expenses as they start out working FT and their wages are insufficient to pay the full amount.
“Cost shifting” was brought up here that “somebody has to pay for it” in regards to public school and publicly funded daycare agencies, etc and therefore that’s another excuse for a parent not to seek FT employment. The reality is that publicly funded child daycare IS “free” to the people who need it most. Public school IS “free” to all residents. Even if you are a property owner who doesn’t pay more than $8-$9K year in property taxes, if you have more than one kid in public school simultaneously, ONE of your kids is attending for “free.” It’s “free” to you because your kids’ “tuition” is being redistributed to the many thousands of property owners paying property taxes who do not currently use the public schools. If a parent chooses to purchase all of their kids’ textbooks themselves and homeschool (or pay for private school), that is their choice. These parents are voluntarily running up their own household expenses all the while their kids are eligible by law for a “free” public K-12 education. In the case of YMCA and scouting daycare discounts and camperships, these agencies’ donors are paying for an income-qualified child to have the experience. Taxpayers don’t subsidize these programs.
I feel that the arguments about why a parent can’t work FT or work at all to support their kids are smokescreens. I suspect that those making this argument are in one of these 3 situations: a) they simply have enough household income to live on indefinitely and so their contribution to their family’s monthly income is not needed; b) they currently have enough household income to live on for the near, foreseeable future and if additional income should later be needed, they’ll cross that bridge when they get there; and/or c) they ARE making money every month, but it is passive income and doesn’t require them to leave home or placate an employer (i.e. investment mgmt).
[end of rant]
October 21, 2014 at 11:52 AM #779135njtosdParticipant[quote=FlyerInHi]The kids would be mine, not hers since I paid for everything.
If she wants 1/2 ownership of the kids, she would need to pay 1/2 the household expenses out of her $100k salary.[/quote]
You realize you can’t own people, right?
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.