You mentioned that there might be particular marginalized groups that might be more prone to this. I'd be interested in knowing which they are, not just in terms of, perhaps, newcomers or others but also in age. I can certainly tell you that, in many families of my parent's generation, it was very normal that the man controlled the finances.
Are there particular groups that you're seeing, at least anecdotally, in the research you've done so far that are particularly vulnerable to this? Does this impact self-reporting? We know, for instance.... Statistics Canada said that racialized women are less likely to face abuse than white women. We know that is almost certainly a case of a lack of self-reporting.
How would that impact communities in which it may be normalized that women don't handle the money?