Across cultures, men control and use economic and financial resources to
instill fear, intimidate and degrade their wives/partners so that women lose their
sense of self and human rights. This form of abuse takes different pathways as it
strips away the moral norms associated with the gender of money. In
middle-income, Anglo-Celtic marriage, the joint banking account symbolises
partnership in marriage, but can also become a medium of coercive control. Among
recent Indian migrants, the culturally accepted male control of money becomes
abusive when money is not used for the wellbeing of all members of the family.
Drawing on ongoing qualitative research into cross-cultural experiences of economic
abuse in Australia, this chapter argues that economic abuse constitutes a
breach of trust which must be investigated within the broad context of the gender
and morality of money. It should be criminalised in order to recognise that its
impact on women and their safety can in some instances be greater than physical
assault.