Upwards of 35% working mothers in urban India abstain from having a second child, a study said on Friday, highlighting the need to give additional time and vitality in dealing with guardians and bringing up children and expanding use as key reasons.
"Considering the worries of present day marriage, work weights and cost of bringing up kids are key reasons why many mothers need to stop after their first tyke and choose not to add to their family," said an irregular study of 1,500 working mothers having a solitary tyke directed by ASSOCHAM's social advancement wing in front of Mother's Day on May 14.
The overview was completed in 10 urban areas - Ahmedabad, Bengaluru, Chennai, Delhi-NCR, Hyderabad, Indore, Jaipur, Kolkata, Lucknow and Mumbai - throughout the previous one month to gage how much time functioning mothers, by and large, go through with their child/girl and their arrangements of having/not having another tyke and the explanation behind the same.
Of more than 500 respondents who would prefer not to have another kid, many said that they “hesitate, realizing that their employment/advancement may get risked on the off chance that they take another maternity take off".

Partiality is another critical reason regarding why numerous respondents said they don't need child to ensure that attention does not get divided, all the more so as sexual orientation is a typical purpose behind favoring one kid over another, said numerous respondents, refering to different reasons in the matter of why they incline toward adhering to the single-kid strategy.
Majority of the individuals who don't need another tyke said their mate did not bolster their choice to stop at one child.
The legislature ought to give certain steady measures/motivating forces, for example, decreasing assessments for families/guardians with a single child, so that single-child policy can be better completed, asserted a considerable lot of the respondents.
Right around 66% of the aggregate respondents - around 65% - said they don't need their youngsters to wind up "desolate oddballs and would rather make their children comprehend the delights of sharing and camaraderie with a kin".