Economic abuse in a domestic situation may involve: • Preventing a cohabitant from resource acquisition, such as restricting their ability to find employment, maintain or advance their careers, and acquire assets. • Preventing the victim from obtaining education. • Spend the victim's money without their consent and create debt, or completely spend the victim's savings to limit available resources. • Exploiting economic resources of the victim.
Controlling mechanism Economic abuse is often used as a
controlling mechanism as part of a larger pattern of domestic abuse, which may include
verbal,
emotional,
physical and
sexual abuse. Physical abuse may include threats or attempts to kill the cohabitant. By restricting the victim's access to economic resources, the offender has limited recourses to exit the abusive or violent relationship. The following are ways that abusers may use economic abuse with other forms of domestic violence: • Using physical force, or threat of violence, to get money. • Providing money for sexual activity. • Controlling access to a telephone, vehicle or ability to go shopping; other forms of
isolation. • Threatening to evict the cohabitants from the house without financial support. • Exploiting the victim's economic disadvantage. • Destroying or taking resources from the cohabitants. •
Blaming the victim for an inability to manage money; or instigating other forms of economic abuse, such as destruction of property.
Job-related impacts There are several ways that abusers may impact a victim's economic resources. As mentioned earlier, the abuser may prevent the victim from working or make it very difficult to maintain a job. They may likewise impede their ability to obtain an education. Frequent phone calls, surprise visits and other harassing activities interfere with the cohabitant's work performance. In case of a cohabitant being homosexual, bisexual, transgender, or questioning of their sexuality (
LGBTQ), the abuser may threaten to "out them" with their employer. The
National Coalition Against Domestic Violence in the
United States reports that: • 25–50% of victims of abuse from a partner have lost their job due to domestic violence. • 35–56% of victims of domestic violence are harassed at work by their partners.
Impact of lack of economic resources By denying the victim access to money, such as forbidding the victim from maintaining a bank account, he or she is totally financially dependent upon the abuser for shelter, food, clothing and other necessities. In some cases the abuser may withhold those necessities, also including medicine and personal hygiene products. They may also greatly limit their ability to leave the abusive situation by refusing to pay court-ordered spousal or child support. Abusers may also force their victims to obtain credit and then through negligent activities ruin their credit rating and ability to get credit. This form of abuse is also referred to as coerced debt.
Managing economic abuse There are several ways to manage economic abuse: ensure one has safe access to important personal and financial records, ensure one's research activities are not traceable and, if they believe that they are going to leave the cohabitation, they should prepare ahead of time. In the United Kingdom, the charity Surviving Economic Abuse has resources on de-linking from abusers, debts, banking and housing. == Role in mate crime ==