A lot of people in here that are insecure about their marriages and can’t handle people that do things differently.
I think you're the most intolerant in this thread.
Everyone's situation is different. Single joint accounts work for some while separate accounts work better for others.
I said that people should do what works for them, so not sure what you're talking about. But, apparently if you split the accounts, you're hiding something or don't communicate. To each their own. I would prefer to prevent a problem instead of solve it once it occurs. Ounce of prevention/pound of cure type of thing. If people don't ever have money arguments, then there would be no reason to do it differently.
uh yeah. This is clearly a "do what works for you" post:
I feel bad for guys that have to check with their wives before they buy what they want, which is apparently several of you here. Have separate money so you can take your balls out of her expensive handbag she bought without asking
I stand by that quote. Doesn't mean I think it applies to all couples with a joint account. If you have to ask to buy something, maybe you should consider separating your money. If both parties can keep it straight without fights or permission, then they should do that. A lot of people can't. Fighting about money/spending is pretty common problem in relationships.
That you think that someone whose wife required them to ask permission to buy things they want using the joint account funds would be okay with separate accounts as an alternative is the stupidest rough ridin' thing posted in this thread.
"Oh I can't buy the things I want, I see. What if I make it slightly harder for you to find out when I do it?"
It doesn't solve anything you colossal shitbrain. If it's a problem, then it remains a problem.
Well, I don't see it that way. I see it a way to budget your combined money fairly where you both get to do what you want. Not about hiding a purchase.
If one person spends too freely in a combined account, it can inhibit the other from getting what they should fairly be able to have. Which leads to arguments and resentment. If one person is willing to concede they don't get what they want at the others expense, or both people can inherently manage to not overstep their bounds, then good for them (no sarcasm).
EDIT - to answer your question about the wife accepting it, this is why I think couples should start out with a split account so their no feeling of resentment if you bring it up later. Just start out that way and never have to deal with spending problems in the relationship.