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Only 31% of Hong Kong mums want second child, charity says, calls for more policy incentives

  • Hong Kong Society for Protection of Children calls for government to expand subsidised daycare services after polling over 1,200 mothers

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Another third of interviewed first-time mothers have said they are unsure whether they want a second child. Photo: Jelly Tse

Only 31 per cent of Hong Kong mothers want to have a second child, a survey from a local charity has found, with the organisation calling for authorities to ramp up incentives to help boost the city’s flagging birth rate.

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The Hong Kong Society for the Protection of Children called on Sunday for the government to expand its subsidised daycare services, especially for those aged below three, to help encourage households to have more children.

The charity also interviewed more than 1,200 first-time mothers aged 18 to 45 between May and June, with only 31 per cent of respondents saying they wanted another child to give the first one a sibling.

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A third of respondents told researchers they had no plans to have another child, while the remainder were undecided.

Among those uninterested in having a second child, the reasons cited included the heavy financial burden, the stress of parenting, crowded living conditions, and the challenges of balancing work and childcare.

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