Sources : LegalZoom, Average Cost of Divorce in the U.S. (2024)
Martindale-Nolo Research, How Much Does a Divorce Cost? (2024)
American Bar Association
U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey
Federal Reserve, Survey of Consumer Finances (2022)
CDC/NCHS, National Vital Statistics Reports
NYU Stern, Damodaran Online — Annual Returns on Stock, T.Bonds and T.Bills: 1928–2024
Dimensional Fund Advisors — U.S. equity long-run return data
Tools : Gemini, Claude
CLPond on
The idea that divorce is sponsored by the same government that sometimes requires a year to finalize the paperwork is amusing. People had to fight for the government to even allow divorce and in many countries people are still fighting for that right.
Hilldawg4president on
Wow, doing anything with money instead of investing it seems like bad investment strategy! Amazing insight!
YeahIGotNuthin on
*”My divorce set me back about ten years, financially.”* – my divorce attorney
*”Expensive, but worth it.”* – my ex-wife, probably
zolbear on
A Resident Alien quote comes to mind.
derpydoodaa on
What’s happening here? Is the cost all front loaded in year 1 and simply removed from the asset total? Or is it assuming annual ongoing divorce costs?
Either way makes sense that less money invested = less growth.
Leave A Reply
Du musst angemeldet sein, um einen Kommentar abzugeben.
6 Kommentare
Sources : LegalZoom, Average Cost of Divorce in the U.S. (2024)
Martindale-Nolo Research, How Much Does a Divorce Cost? (2024)
American Bar Association
U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey
Federal Reserve, Survey of Consumer Finances (2022)
CDC/NCHS, National Vital Statistics Reports
NYU Stern, Damodaran Online — Annual Returns on Stock, T.Bonds and T.Bills: 1928–2024
Dimensional Fund Advisors — U.S. equity long-run return data
Tools : Gemini, Claude
The idea that divorce is sponsored by the same government that sometimes requires a year to finalize the paperwork is amusing. People had to fight for the government to even allow divorce and in many countries people are still fighting for that right.
Wow, doing anything with money instead of investing it seems like bad investment strategy! Amazing insight!
*”My divorce set me back about ten years, financially.”* – my divorce attorney
*”Expensive, but worth it.”* – my ex-wife, probably
A Resident Alien quote comes to mind.
What’s happening here? Is the cost all front loaded in year 1 and simply removed from the asset total? Or is it assuming annual ongoing divorce costs?
Either way makes sense that less money invested = less growth.