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Marrying for Love
of Money
By: Robert Frank
Published: January 9, 2008
On a recent episode of Dirty Sexy Money, ABCs
soapy drama about the filthy rich, heiress Karen Darling gets
married for the fourth time, to a golf pro. Minutes after
the ceremony, she decides she wants a divorce, leaving the
golfer to wonder about his $3 million guarantee in the pre-nuptial
agreement.
I still get the check, right? he asks.
Of course, Ms. Darling sneers. I made a
vow.
Marrying for money isnt just grist for television plot
lines. With the wealth boom creating unprecedented riches
and greater opportunities for gold-digging by both
genders price-tag partnerships and checkbook breakups
are increasingly making headlines. Even more surprising, according
to a new survey, are the going rates for todays mercenary
unions.
BEAUTY FADES
Celebrities get the most attention, of course, whether its
Kevin Federline, the backup dancer-turned-millionaire ex of
Britney Spears, or Heather Mills, Paul McCartneys estranged
second wife, who is set to receive tens of millions of dollars
when her divorce is final, according to the British press.
Yet even among the workaday (or wannabe) wealthy, marrying
for money has become a popular pursuit. In an infamous personal
ad posted on Craigslist this summer, a twentysomething New
Yorker who described herself as spectacularly beautiful
wrote that she was looking for a man who made at least $500,000
a year. Shed tried dating men earning $250,000, but
that wasnt getting me to Central Park West,
she said. The ad inspired all manner of parodies and follow-ups,
including one by an investment banker, who replied that since
his money would grow over time but her beauty would fade,
the offer didnt make good business sense. She was, he
said, a depreciating asset.
To many New Yorkers, jaded by multimillion-dollar condos
and wall-to-wall wealth, the salary request probably seems
reasonable, maybe even low. Yet nationally, the going rate
is much lower.
According to a survey by Prince & Associates, a Connecticut-based
wealth-research firm, the average price that men
and women demand to marry for money these days is $1.5 million.
The survey polled 1,134 people nationwide with incomes ranging
between $30,000 to $60,000 (squarely in the median range for
nationwide incomes). The survey asked: How willing are
you to marry an average-looking person that you liked, if
they had money?
AGAINST LOVE
Fully two-thirds of women and half of the men said they were
very or extremely willing to marry
for money. The answers varied by age: Women in their 30s were
the most likely to say they would marry for money (74%) while
men in their 20s were the least likely (41%).
Im a little shocked at the numbers, says
Pamela Smock, a sociologist at the University of Michigan
who has studied marriage and money. Its kind of
against the notion of love and soul mates and the main motivations
to marry in our culture.
Still, Ms. Smock has found in her own research that having
money does encourage people to tie the knot. Its
more likely that a couple will marry if they have money, and
if the man is economically stable, she says.
Women arent the only ones with the gold-digging impulse.
In the Prince & Associates study, 61% of men in their
40s said they would marry for money. Ms. Smock says that as
men get older, they become more comfortable with women being
the bread-winners.
The matrimonial price tag varies by gender and age. Asked
how much a potential spouse would need to have to be money-marriage
material, women in their 20s said $2.5 million. The going
rate fell to $1.1 million for women in their 30s, and rose
again to $2.2 million for women in their 40s. Ms. Smock and
Russ Alan Prince, Prince & Associates founder, both
attribute the fluctuation to the assumption that thirty-something
women feel more pressure to get married than women in their
20s, so they are willing to lower the price. By their 40s,
women are more comfortable being independent, so theyre
willing to hold out for more cash.
Men have cheaper requirements. In the Prince survey, their
asking price overall was $1.2 million, with men in their 20s
asking $1 million and men in their 40s asking $1.4 million.
Douglas Freeman, a tax and estates attorney in California
who works with wealthy families, says the mens numbers
are lower because they would feel threatened by women worth
several million dollars. The men arent going to
say they want $10 million, because they wouldnt be comfortable
with a woman whos worth so much more than they are,
he says.
Whatever the case, the prices for both men and women seem
surprisingly low, given the new landscape of wealth. While
$1 million or $2 million may sound like a lot to people making
$30,000, its hardly enough to transform someones
life or make them rich by contemporary billionaire
standards. No one in the survey quoted a price of more than
$3 million.
Of course, when the mercenary marriage proves disappointing,
theres always divorce. Among the women in their twenties
who said they would marry for money, 71% said they expected
to get divorced the highest of any demographic. Only
27% of men in their 40s expected to divorce.
Says Mr. Prince: For these women, its just another
step on their journey to the good life. They want to be paid
what they think theyre worth and then move on.
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