Let's assume a married couple with no children. When they got married, both individuals made $30,000/year. Five years later, Party A makes $70,000/year and Party B makes $35,000/year. Neither individual has sacrificed themselves for the other. No one decided to be a stay-at-home wife/husband. No one went back to school at the expense of people individuals, etc. Party A was simply more ambitious.
So one of them decides they want a divorce. Does Party B deserve alimony? I'm not talking in terms of the law. The question is in the spirit of "if you were making the law yourself, what would you do in this scenario.
My hangup on Party A paying Party B alimony is that Party A is essentially penalized for being more successful than Party B. It would be one thing if B helped pay for additional schooling for A, and that schooling resulted in additional pay. Or perhaps B decided to be a homemaker. In those cases, B made personal sacrifices that held back B's career for the betterment of A's career.
So one of them decides they want a divorce. Does Party B deserve alimony? I'm not talking in terms of the law. The question is in the spirit of "if you were making the law yourself, what would you do in this scenario.
My hangup on Party A paying Party B alimony is that Party A is essentially penalized for being more successful than Party B. It would be one thing if B helped pay for additional schooling for A, and that schooling resulted in additional pay. Or perhaps B decided to be a homemaker. In those cases, B made personal sacrifices that held back B's career for the betterment of A's career.
