That analogy was never made and you know it.
The points that needs to be made is:
1) Some farms can support a family, some cannot and it is wrong to suggest no farm can support a family.
2) Money will not guarantee a happy marriage just like money will not guarantee happiness in general.
3) Lifestyle and personal living expenses are something that needs to be agreed upon and as such there will be quite a variation between families as goals and aspirations vary.
4) It is important to know what it costs to live but with the objective in mind to ensure that the money is being spent in a manner that meets the overall family goals not as a means of coercing the other partner to increase or decrease personal spending.
5) The critical success factor for farms is a strong marriage because a divorce not only breaks up the family but breaks up the farm in many cases. While for many the focus is on production, the real make or break is whether husband and wife can manage to work together as co owners of the farm and in the long term whether the children, if there are children, can take over from Mom and Dad and enjoy a lifestyle that suits them.
6) Off farm employment can offer cash flow advantages but ready availability of off farm work in an area can quickly get capitalized into land prices negating any true competitive advantage while creating extra work load and meaning time away from the family and the farm.
The points that needs to be made is:
1) Some farms can support a family, some cannot and it is wrong to suggest no farm can support a family.
2) Money will not guarantee a happy marriage just like money will not guarantee happiness in general.
3) Lifestyle and personal living expenses are something that needs to be agreed upon and as such there will be quite a variation between families as goals and aspirations vary.
4) It is important to know what it costs to live but with the objective in mind to ensure that the money is being spent in a manner that meets the overall family goals not as a means of coercing the other partner to increase or decrease personal spending.
5) The critical success factor for farms is a strong marriage because a divorce not only breaks up the family but breaks up the farm in many cases. While for many the focus is on production, the real make or break is whether husband and wife can manage to work together as co owners of the farm and in the long term whether the children, if there are children, can take over from Mom and Dad and enjoy a lifestyle that suits them.
6) Off farm employment can offer cash flow advantages but ready availability of off farm work in an area can quickly get capitalized into land prices negating any true competitive advantage while creating extra work load and meaning time away from the family and the farm.
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