If you’re smart, you’ll marry money

‘A man is not a financial plan,’ say these subversive experts, ‘but he can be part of one’

by Anne Kingston on Thursday, June 18, 2009 10:20am - 53 Comments

If you’re smart, you’ll marry moneyAt first glance, the new book Smart Girls Marry Money: How Women Have Been Duped into the Romantic Dream—and How They’re Paying for It by Elizabeth Ford and Daniela Drake appears to be a throwback to a paleolithic era in which women, smart or not, didn’t make their own money. (Its chick-lit hot-pink cover has Cupid’s arrow bisecting the “s” in “Girls,” lest anyone miss the avaricious point.) Indeed, its retrograde title seems calculated to repel actual “smart girls”—women who sail by the “self-help” aisle and who would kneecap anyone who called them “girls.”

But skim more deeply—through the real-life anecdotes and beyond lines like “Mr. Rich can be Mr. Right”—and it’s apparent this isn’t a 21st-century How to Marry a Millionaire. Rather, Ford, a 41-year-old Emmy-winning television producer divorced from Harrison Ford’s son, and Drake, a 44-year-old medical doctor with an M.B.A. from Stanford who has been divorced and is remarried, adopt a satiric tone to deliver a surprisingly subversive self-help manifesto: imagine, if you can, Dorothy Parker writing for Cosmo. Many of their observations have been well-aired, to wit—women have a shelf life in terms of fertility and attractiveness; taking time out to raise children reduces women’s workplace value; women have more difficulty bouncing back from divorce. And even after decades of women graduating from professional schools in greater numbers than men, men remain the power players.

Instead of bitching about these inequities, they counsel women to bring about change strategically. Females have bought into a fairy tale, they observe, in which “having it all” has translated into “doing it all.” They decry the modern notion that marriage be based in romantic love—a heady hormonal cocktail destined to fade. Marriage is an economic trade-off, so women should exploit the currency of youth, they write. “A man is not a financial plan,” they allow, adding: “but he can be part of one.” At times, they push it: “Earnings power is a reflection of his values and character. Big blue eyes? Not so much,” they write, ignoring the fact many high earners are shadier than a cyprus grove. Still, many women buy into it, says Jemima Slade, who runs golddiggers.uk.com, a U.K. website with 6,000 members, most of them women. She’s looking for a rich man herself: “It’s about him being powerful and ambitious and opinionated like me.”

But the book’s message, ultimately, is not to mine for gold but to remove the blinkers and take charge. An entire chapter is devoted to the importance of masturbation in building sexual confidence. They also advise women to get a grip on their finances; because they live longer, they need to save, budget and invest even more aggressively than men.

The idea to write the book evolved after Drake and Ford met at their children’s school. Drake was having difficulty re-entering the workforce despite her impressive CV. “We used to joke: ‘We thought we were the smart ones but the smart ones married money.’” The thesis would have been outrageous to her 10 years ago, Drake admits. “I would have been: ‘Of course I’m going to be making my own money. I don’t have to choose a guy based on money.’ But I never expected a non-linear career path.”

Financial counsellor Gail Vaz-Oxlade, host of the TV show Til Debt Do Us Part, applauds the message. “They’re telling women: ‘Wake up. Anything you exchange your independence for, you need to negotiate a price on.’ ” But she’s skeptical: “Good luck convincing people of that. All of life is based on romantic dreams.” People can overstate their wealth during courtship, she notes, citing a couple she’s working with. “Her expectation of what life would be like after marriage is based on his courtship of her. And his courtship of her was based on knowing she’d never accept him if she knew what he was about.”

Neither Drake nor Ford married for money: “Never, never, never, to my great regret,” Drake laughs. Yet they’ve been called immoral gold diggers by critics, a charge she deflects. “Isn’t the better moral choice to have a friendship where love can evolve and your family are going to be taken care of in case he decides to walk? Or he gets hit by a bus?” She describes her own not-monied husband with affection: “He’s an incredible father and great husband. I’m really, really lucky.” But she’s not starry-eyed. “I’m not checking my texts every second to make sure he texted me. It has evolved into something more stable and luxurious.”

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  • Tracy

    I know people like that – I chose to date the sweet man that made me laugh… didn't last!! My girlfriend however married the rich, older man and is now calling herself the 'domestic diva' flying around the world.

  • John D

    Uh, I have girls at my door all the time too. Yes, lots of girls…

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/Thwim Thwim

      Those new mint cookies are good, aren't they?

    • Girl Next Door

      You really should start answering your door…

  • Lynda

    Marry a man for money and you will earn every penny of it. I would rather be independant and free.

    • pat

      Agree with you 100%

    • christal

      that is so true. Nicely said!

  • Emily

    These women have a different idea about money than most people. One of them is an award-winning television producer who was married into Harrison Ford's family, and the other is a medical doctor with an MBA from Stanford. I don't imagine they can relate to most people's financial troubles. I haven't read the book, but I have trouble seeing them as people who have significant money problems, or who can even understand what that feels like. When they talk about being financially comfortable with their spouse, do they mean that they wish they had married men who could buy them a Mercedes and a beach house in the Hamptons, but had to settle for a Jetta and a shabby cottage? I think most people would be grateful to have the latter.

    • http://canada.com lisa

      Yes, I agree, it`s all relative to what you`re used to isn`t it? One also has to be careful of outward appearances because sometimes those that appear to have money are in debt to their eyeballs, and those that appear modest have a fat bank account.

  • The Greek

    Oh come on people lets forget about all the supposed religious, psycholical "Experts" now ok ,yes everybody has their own informed opinions on these matters. Every individual be it man or woman too who has married,will marry or is married they think for apparently all the right that become sometimes all the wrong reasons. We live in as we know a stereotypical,materialistic world where most everybody is out to beat the Smiths', Jones', Lees', Wangs', Lopes', Ruiz's. we're sometimes not happy with our lives so you fabricate them at times as we go along. We do this because it makes us feel more positive about ourselves inside until we achieve those goals. Some people have actuallly achieved these heights, but still no happinesss.

  • The Greek

    ………Me, I had a high profile paying job 150k plus 50k year end bonuses a year ,job security a beautiful sexy elegant woman I was engaged to & in a blink of an eye lost it all after I was hit by a drunk driver in a coma for 4 months in re-hab for 3 yrs.She left me after the 1st year of my re-hab said she couldn't deal with my current diablilities ( & not being able to have sex 3 times a day 7 days a week anymore). We never had any contact afetr that day. So while continuing my rehab I also went back to school to change my career from a high profile Head Chef to taking on a teaching career in as an ESL & Culinary Teacher, with a significant lower pay grade than before & living in Japan for the next 10 years.

  • The Greek

    ……While there I told myself "No girlfriends, just "sex buddies" & I just had clandestine meetings/dates & casual on going sexual relatiions with hundreds single,attached & married rich women each year while living there. It was surprsing to me how many of the women who were attached & married to rich financially stable men were the typical bored houswife & even the wives with the wealthy husband & also their own careers were the ones who were by their own admission missing all of the passion, affection, attention, & the most reason for having extra-maritial affairswas the lack of SEX in their marriages/realtions .

  • The Greek

    …….While there I told myself "No girlfriends, just "sex buddies" & I just had clandestine meetings/dates & casual on going sexual relatiions with hundreds single,attached & married rich women each year while living there. It was surprsing to me how many of the women who were attached & married to rich financially stable men were the typical bored houswife & even the wives with the wealthy husband & also their own careers were the ones who were by their own admission missing all of the passion, affection, attention, & the most reason for having extra-maritial affairswas the lack of SEX in their marriages/realtions ….

  • the Greek

    It also came to the foreground via my work collegues & friends on how alot of ,single,attached & married men were bored with their wives sexually as the wild crazy intimates times they used to have with their partners had now beCum ( not a spelling mistake I used it that way for a good reaosn) a dull roar in the bedroom & how they too were looking down other avenues to propel their libido once again to those old erotic exotic decadent tumulruous heights which had decline in recent times .So the moral of the story here my children isn't about having the best paying job the most money & having the most toys the Smiths, Jones, Lee's, Wangs, Lopes', Ruiz's don't have. If you can't keep the wild crazy motion in your bedroom of ocean waves or any other wild kinky place going at a "Full Tilt Boogie" you can start ooking for a new model, for you men to drive & you women to ride.So ultimately in my mind SEX is 75% of the relationship those other things is 25% believe me baby & will keep your love & money & all your other materialistic things you cherish alive ……

  • The Greek

    …so forget the ideas that most people have " oh he/she's a gold digger just looking ofr the easy way out of working & earning & pulling his/hers own weight & keep at a real job they had to make application & interview for not a hand me down job from his/hers dad/moms company'. In the end it doesn't really matter if they're all about that who cares, their life will SUCK even with all that money & all those toys, i've been there done that & i've done women like that too

  • mike

    I.m not rich, maybe thats why i'm married. But let me tell you, if I was rich i would go through all my money on hookers and blow.

    • kingpin

      thats what im talkin bout mikey

      • juju

        best answer

  • c.o.

    love your answer…. so true.
    C.O.

  • aamina

    THANKS Bonnie! I love your response!

    why do so many people think that money solves EVERYTHING?

    • Fairbaby

      Money answers alllllll baby.dont forget that.

  • aamina

    Thanks Artemis.
    I disagree with the statement that women "are smart if they marry money" as well.. and it actually kind of disgusts me. I'm a woman, and I would never marry for money. that would make me shallow and a prostitute. i don't have a fairy tale idea of love either, but i would like to be with someone who actually cares about me, who loves me, who i feel comfortable with, who makes me laugh, who understands me, etc.

    i have a good job, i would also expect him to be ambitious as well. i don't care what he does for a living, just as long as he isn't lazy. and that is because i am not lazy, i'm a go-getter. and i need someone who is like me.

    this article is ridiculous.

  • krista

    from my experience…. what you need from your man is someone who cares about making you happy, seeing you happy. A man who does not use the word "I" in every sentence, who does not immediately become the centre of attention in a crowd, who can focus on the needs of others besides himself…. the person who alluded to working together as a team has it right on the money (no pun intended). Sure, money can buy you a housecleaner, someone to wash out the gutters, cut the lawn, etc….which would definately be helpful. But unless your man is outward focused on you and your children…. on truly connecting in an emotional, yes, intimate way in more ways than one…. you will always be left wanting something he can;t give….and so will your kids. Respect and honour…. worth more than money for sure. (on the housecleaner note…. visit his bachelor pad many times to get the true picture of how he lives…and ask yourself if you could live in what you find on the day you surprise him. Definately question him on his ideas about disciplining kids and raising them and watch how he is with kids before he becomes daddy to yours.) Money is nice….Happiness divine.

  • cali

    Money won't make you happy – but a lack of money will make you unhappy. It's as simple as that. c'est la vie.

  • Mr. Modest

    Frankly, some of us do just that. I am a lawyer, and while perhaps not rich, am certainly financially comfortable. But I drive an economical car during because it gets great mileage and can be parked anywhere without worrying about it. Yes, I have seen some ladies look askance at me when they see my car. But for those that are wiling to look beyond that, they get to drive off for a weekend with me on my vintage motorcycle to my fairly impressive beach house and go for cruise on my new boat. Substance, not flash, appeals to me. I prefer to spend money on assets which tend to maintain or increase in value, not new cars and fancy designer clothes that quickly depreciate or go out of style.

  • Mr. Modest

    Not a bad answer. However, I think that almost everybody, whether they have or don't have, always want more. The question is how far is a person willing to go to obtain it. Marrying for riches alone is foolish, as is marrying for romance alone. There needs to be mutual respect and a genuine liking of your partner. Money alone isn't enough. Having said that, probably the only thing better than a happy marriage with a person you love and respect is a happy marriage with a rich person that you love and respect.

  • eee

    i'm a woman with money. i'm smart. i will marry money because i'm smart enough to know what will happen if i don't.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/s_c_f s_c_f

      i don't think it matters who you marry

      • eee

        it does if i know my income is required to raise the children, whos creation would involve me being unable to make money (for a time at least). also, an independently wealthy person has certain qualities (not all but most) that i would like to see in my children. they would also be resourceful and intelligent enough to care for them well should i pass. this as my only reason for partnership of this nature is reproducing, otherwise i will gladly continue being a serial monogamist.

    • Dave

      Either you are VERY self righteous and think everything should be done for you (hmmmm, Maturity issues anyone?) or your completely non self sufficent.

    • Andy

      eee I am worth millions and I understand you completely. I married with someone with equal money. 2+2 became 10 financially. There are many other things to consider but if you have money, I believe you should marry at the same or a similar financial level.

  • Sbela

    i was married to a Man who thought had money,,,alright so he made 160k big deal, but he was busy guiding his little money for as long as we were married and had children, he lost the perspective of how i loved him and adored him…twe ended up getting divorced
    10 years after knowing each other, he finally got it that i loved him and yes he made decent money and i was not there to dig gold or clean him up…but then it is too late.
    So all you Men and Women out there who are married to people who are not equally financially secured, don't miss out loving freely, caring tender and cherishing those little moments just because you think someone married you for Money….you could be wrong and that's when you HEART is prisoned by your own Money.

    • Lee-Anne

      Bravo! Well said! Money is not the goal, it is only a tool to use along the way. So many men get caught up in the pursuit of money and miss out on the great moments all around them.

  • A senior

    A satisfying career…that earns a good salary…is something both men and women look for in a mate………….note I said stisfying ….if your future mate hates his or her job and hates their fellow workers….look out ……………the rest of your married life will be one big drama of change…………..not for the better……soon they wont like you either.

  • Dave

    What about men who have been rejected all their lives and are just doing what makes them happy?? What about men who are shy and just plain and simply don't have the social graces to get a woman to take him seriously in a relationship? For men who have been treated like complete shit by women all their lives…….slam bam is perfectly justifiable.Time to get your head out of the sand girl.

  • dave

    CLEARLY, You cannot accept the fact that Steve definetely has a point!!!! And judging by your pathetically immature response……………..Your a very lonely woman arn't you!!

  • Dave

    You know, I "thought" that women marrying for $$$ was more or less becoming a thing of the past…….BOY WAS I EVER WRONG!!! I've read comments from women on here left and right who say that they'll marry for money and think thats the most important thing, what a joke. I also COMPLETELY DISAGREE with the notion of never marry a man who can't hold a job. Yes I have definetely had problems holding a job over the years (not anymore) but guess what??? I'm 36 single never married AND…am worth $280,000. Now why is that? Hmmm, lets see, because just because your not working automatically means you can't support yourself or others is nothing short of a COMPLETELY INCORRECT stereotype?? Yea I'd say that'd would have something to do with it!!!! And here's another thing ladies—-STUPIDITY NEVER MADE MONEY. SO…..if you marry someone for money because you COULDN"T BE BOTHERED making it yourself, well gee what does that tell him?? Sheer immaturity, self riteousness and a woman who's just plain lazy.

  • Dave

    Continued from first post, I HAVE had women in my life before all 3 who tried to use me for $$$. I have never depended on ANYONE to get to the point of my life where I am now so WHY would I throw that all away for some 'she" who thinks I should have to wine and dine her? Because she'll give me SEX? WELL…….got some bad news…..Gonna take a little more than that ladies. For starters, some maturity and losing the self-riteousness just might score you some points.

    • Sbela

      Hi Dave,
      you had a point there…but i still think Wine and Sex sounds appealing….
      may be not Wine FOR Sex.
      I still believe a man who marries a woman who is there for Money is just a cheap and the girl or A Men who marry a woman for Money…we all know" one can feel when they are used" they choose to ignore and that is there own weekness, and for every weekness there would be a pay!!!!!!
      it is still a trade off for both so they could actually deserves each other …one trades a chance of true love for Mullaz, the other one with money, lives in a dream of "Money can buy me love"
      ooh well.

      • erica

        WOW!! A whole 3 women, that's it? That's the magical # you're spewing all of your crap from. Well Davey ol' boy sounds like you're in for a lonely long haul. Enjoy loser.

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