Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Austerity After Denial: How Political Spectacle, Economic Mismanagement and Crisis Narratives Are Reshaping India’s Fragile Economy

 From Demonetisation to War-Time Appeals: The Political Economy of Anxiety, Nationalism and Burden-Shifting in Contemporary India

- Ramphal Kataria

Abstract

India today stands at a dangerous economic crossroads where geopolitical instability, domestic structural weaknesses, policy shocks, and political spectacle intersect. Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s recent appeal asking citizens to conserve fuel, avoid foreign travel, postpone gold purchases, reduce edible oil consumption, adopt work-from-home practices, and embrace austerity reflects not merely a temporary response to the West Asia crisis, but a deeper admission that the Indian economy is under severe stress. The irony, however, lies in the fact that the same government which repeatedly projected India as the world’s fastest-growing and most resilient major economy is now urging ordinary citizens to alter their lifestyles to save foreign exchange reserves and reduce pressure on the economy.

This essay critically analyses the broader political economy of India since 2014, examining how demonetisation, the Covid-19 lockdown, GST implementation, aggressive privatisation, weakening of public sector institutions, rising unemployment, shrinking consumption, and dependence on imports created a fragile economic structure long before the Iran-Israel-US conflict intensified. It further analyses how political narratives, electoral mobilisation, hyper-nationalism, and media management were repeatedly used to conceal economic distress while structural inequalities widened.

The essay argues that the present austerity appeals disproportionately burden workers, farmers, small traders, goldsmiths, informal labourers, and middle-class households, while large corporate defaulters, speculative capital, and elite consumption remain largely insulated. It explores the contradiction between nationalist rhetoric and economic vulnerability, and questions whether civic discipline alone can rescue an economy weakened by policy shocks and institutional erosion.

Introduction: From “Everything Is Fine” to “Please Conserve Fuel”

For nearly a decade, the Indian public was repeatedly told that the economy was stable, resilient, and on the verge of global dominance. The ruling establishment projected an image of unstoppable economic ascent through carefully choreographed political communication, international summits, infrastructure announcements, and the repeated invocation of India becoming a “five trillion-dollar economy.” Economic criticism was frequently dismissed as pessimism, political propaganda, or anti-national negativity.

Yet the sudden shift in tone after the escalation of the Iran-Israel-US conflict has exposed a stark contradiction between political projection and economic reality. Prime Minister Narendra Modi appealed to citizens to conserve petrol and diesel, avoid foreign travel, postpone gold purchases, reduce edible oil consumption, and even revive work-from-home practices to conserve national resources and foreign exchange reserves. Such appeals are not routine economic advisories; they are signals of stress within the economic structure.

The irony is profound. A government that repeatedly insisted there would be little impact of the West Asia conflict on India is now effectively asking citizens to prepare for austerity. The appeals indicate anxiety over rising crude oil prices, pressure on foreign exchange reserves, weakening of the rupee, inflationary pressures, and the possibility of slowing economic growth.

The larger issue, however, is that the present crisis did not emerge overnight because of the West Asia war. The war merely exposed vulnerabilities that had accumulated over years due to policy shocks, shrinking employment opportunities, declining purchasing power, weakening public institutions, rising inequality, and dependence on imports.

“The West Asia crisis did not break the Indian economy. It merely revealed how fragile it had already become.”

The austerity narrative, therefore, must be examined not as an isolated response to a geopolitical crisis, but as the culmination of years of economic strain concealed beneath political spectacle and nationalist messaging.

The Political Timing of Economic Truth

One of the most striking aspects of the present crisis is the timing of the government’s admission. For months, the political discourse remained dominated by elections, rallies, media campaigns, and claims of economic stability. Even while economists warned about rising crude oil prices, weakening consumption, increasing fiscal stress, and vulnerability to global supply-chain disruptions, the ruling establishment maintained that India remained insulated from external shocks.

The government repeatedly assured the public that fuel supplies were secure, inflation was manageable, and the economy was fundamentally strong. Political campaigns proceeded with enormous expenditure and intensity across several states. Public attention remained focused on electoral arithmetic rather than economic vulnerability.

Then, almost immediately after the conclusion of elections, the language changed dramatically. Citizens were suddenly urged to reduce consumption, avoid imports, save foreign exchange, and embrace restraint in daily life. This sequence has naturally raised questions about whether economic realities were deliberately downplayed during the election season to avoid political damage.

Most democratic countries facing severe economic crises openly addressed their citizens through parliament and national communication. Governments in countries such as United Kingdom, Australia, Germany, France, and Japan publicly acknowledged inflationary challenges, energy shortages, and supply-chain disruptions following global geopolitical instability. Emergency economic plans, parliamentary debates, and transparent policy discussions accompanied these acknowledgements.

In India, however, there appears to have been a deliberate attempt to maintain the perception that “all is well” until electoral necessities had passed. The problem with such political management is that economies cannot be indefinitely sustained through narrative control.

Demonetisation: The Beginning of Structural Economic Disruption

Any honest assessment of India’s present economic fragility must begin with demonetisation, arguably the most disruptive economic decision in independent India’s modern history. On 8 November 2016, the Modi government invalidated ₹500 and ₹1000 currency notes overnight, removing nearly 86 percent of the currency in circulation.

The decision was justified as a revolutionary strike against black money, corruption, counterfeit currency, and terrorism financing. Citizens were told that hidden wealth would be destroyed and the economy would emerge cleaner and stronger. Instead, the move paralysed India’s cash-dependent economy.

India’s economic structure in 2016 relied heavily on cash transactions, especially in agriculture, small trade, transport, construction, informal manufacturing, and daily wage labour. Overnight, economic transactions froze. Farmers struggled to purchase seeds and fertilisers. Small traders lost customers. Labourers were denied wages because employers had no valid cash. Long queues outside banks became symbols of economic confusion and social distress.

The informal sector, which employed the overwhelming majority of India’s workforce, suffered devastating consequences. Small manufacturing clusters in textiles, leather, handicrafts, metal works, and local trade experienced collapse-like conditions. Many enterprises that depended on daily cash rotation never recovered.

“Demonetisation promised to destroy black money but ended up destabilising the foundations of India’s cash-driven economy.”

The tragedy of demonetisation was not merely its immediate economic shock, but the long-term erosion of confidence. A functioning economy depends not only on money but on predictability and institutional trust. Demonetisation signalled that economic rules could change overnight through executive announcement.

The government later celebrated the rise in digital transactions as proof of success. Yet this ignored the deeper reality that millions had been pushed into distress without adequate infrastructure, preparedness, or protection. Informal businesses weakened while large corporations with digital capacity expanded their market dominance.

Former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh described demonetisation as “organised loot and legalised plunder,” warning that it would damage India’s GDP and employment generation. Economists such as Amartya Sen and Raghuram Rajan also expressed concern regarding the economic consequences of abrupt monetary disruption.

The most painful reality is that almost the entire invalidated currency eventually returned to the banking system, exposing the hollowness of the black money argument. But by then, millions of livelihoods had already suffered irreversible damage.

GST and the Burden on Small Enterprises

The implementation of the Goods and Services Tax Council was introduced as a transformational tax reform intended to create a unified national market. In theory, rationalisation of indirect taxation was a necessary reform. However, the execution of GST created enormous difficulties, particularly for small and medium enterprises.

Small traders and businesses that had barely survived demonetisation were suddenly confronted with complex filing requirements, frequent changes in tax rules, digital compliance burdens, delayed refunds, and severe working capital pressures. Large corporations adapted relatively quickly due to better financial and technological resources. Small businesses did not possess such capacity.

Traditional industrial clusters across India experienced significant distress. Textile units in Surat, small manufacturers in Ludhiana, handicraft clusters, transport operators, and local traders repeatedly protested against the compliance-heavy structure of GST. For many small entrepreneurs, the reform did not represent simplification; it represented bureaucratic exhaustion.

The combination of demonetisation followed by GST proved economically disastrous for India’s informal and semi-formal sectors. Many enterprises that survived the currency shock collapsed under tax compliance pressures.

The most concerning aspect was that employment generation weakened sharply during this period. India’s economy increasingly became concentrated in the hands of larger organised entities, while smaller local businesses lost competitiveness.

Covid-19 Lockdown: Economic Shutdown and Humanitarian Trauma

If demonetisation destabilised India’s economic structure, the Covid-19 lockdown shattered its social foundations. India imposed one of the strictest lockdowns in the world with only a few hours’ notice in March 2020. Factories closed overnight, transportation stopped, markets shut down, and millions of workers instantly lost employment.

The most haunting images of the pandemic were not of hospitals or government briefings, but of migrant workers walking hundreds of kilometres back to their villages carrying children, luggage, and despair. Daily wage earners suddenly had no income. Construction workers were abandoned at work sites. Street vendors disappeared from city roads. Small businesses collapsed under prolonged closures.

The lockdown disproportionately affected migrant labourers, domestic workers, artisans, transport workers, restaurant employees, retail traders, and countless informal-sector workers who depended on daily income for survival. While large technology corporations expanded during the pandemic, millions of small and medium enterprises shut permanently.

The economic consequences were devastating. Household savings depleted rapidly. Debt increased. Educational inequality widened due to digital exclusion. Malnutrition concerns rose among poor families. The middle class also faced salary cuts, layoffs, medical expenses, and rising insecurity.

The government highlighted welfare schemes and ration distribution, but these measures could not compensate for the destruction of employment and local economic networks.

“The informal worker cannot work from home, cannot hedge inflation, and cannot survive prolonged economic uncertainty.”

Even years later, many small industries have not recovered from the lockdown shock. The economic trauma of Covid remains embedded within India’s labour market and consumption patterns.

NITI Aayog’s Construction Ban Advisory: A Sign of Deep Economic Anxiety

Perhaps the clearest indication of the seriousness of the present crisis emerged from reports that NITI Aayog advised the Union government to suspend major construction and demolition activities across India for two years due to spiralling costs, rising imports, and supply-chain disruptions caused by the West Asia conflict.

The advisory reportedly included deferment of reconstruction projects involving major ministerial complexes such as Nirman Bhavan, Udyog Bhavan, and Shastri Bhavan. Such a recommendation is extraordinary because construction is one of the largest employment-generating sectors in India.

Construction supports millions of workers:
migrant labourers,
masons,
carpenters,
electricians,
plumbers,
transport operators,
cement suppliers,
steel traders,
and informal daily-wage workers.

A large-scale slowdown or suspension in construction activity would create a severe chain reaction across the economy. The real estate sector, infrastructure projects, urban employment, and ancillary industries would all suffer.

The advisory also reveals that the government fears rising import bills for raw materials and worsening foreign exchange pressures. India’s dependence on imported energy and industrial inputs has created structural vulnerability that becomes highly visible during geopolitical crises.

What makes the situation politically striking is that such alarming recommendations emerged despite repeated official claims that the economy remained strong and resilient. If a two-year construction restraint is being seriously discussed, it indicates that policymakers themselves recognise the depth of the economic challenge.

Privatisation and the Shrinking Role of the Public Sector

The post-2014 economic model increasingly promoted privatisation as a central policy direction. Public sector undertakings, long considered instruments of strategic national development, were gradually opened to disinvestment, strategic sale, or private operational control.

Among the most notable developments was the privatisation of Air India, once a national symbol. Similarly, partial disinvestment of Life Insurance Corporation of India reflected the government’s broader strategy of monetising public assets.

Major airports including Mumbai Airport, Ahmedabad Airport, Lucknow Airport, and others increasingly came under private management.

Critics argued that public assets built over decades through taxpayers’ money were being transferred into concentrated corporate hands. Concerns also emerged regarding labour rights, contractualisation, monopoly formation, and the weakening of public accountability.

Supporters of privatisation argued that private participation improves efficiency and reduces fiscal burdens. However, the central question remains unresolved: can a country with massive unemployment and deep regional inequality rely excessively on privatisation while simultaneously shrinking avenues of stable public-sector employment?

The Work-from-Home Appeal and the Reality of India’s Labour Force

One of the most controversial aspects of the Prime Minister’s austerity appeal was the suggestion that people should revive work-from-home practices to save fuel and reduce economic pressure.

The appeal may appear logical from the perspective of urban corporate offices, but it reveals a profound disconnect from the realities of India’s labour market.

India’s workforce is overwhelmingly informal and physically dependent. Factory workers cannot operate machinery from home. Agricultural labourers cannot cultivate fields online. Construction workers cannot build infrastructure through video meetings. Drivers, delivery workers, sanitation workers, street vendors, domestic workers, artisans, and transport labourers depend on physical mobility for survival.

For millions of Indians, “work from home” is not a practical option but an elite urban privilege.

The appeal unintentionally exposed how policymaking increasingly reflects the worldview of upper urban classes rather than the lived realities of workers and informal labour.

The Gold Economy and Livelihood Destruction

The Prime Minister’s appeal to avoid purchasing gold for one or two years was framed as a patriotic effort to conserve foreign exchange reserves. Economically, India’s gold imports certainly place pressure on the current account deficit during periods of rising global uncertainty.

However, reducing the issue merely to foreign exchange management ignores the social and economic ecosystem surrounding the gold industry.

India’s jewellery sector employs nearly fifty lakh workers directly and indirectly. This includes goldsmiths, polishers, artisans, craftsmen, transport workers, retail jewellers, wedding-sector workers, and small family-run businesses across urban and rural India.

A prolonged decline in gold demand would devastate these livelihoods.

Gold in India is not merely a luxury commodity. For millions of families, especially women in rural and semi-urban households, gold functions as a form of social security and cultural savings. Weddings, festivals, and family traditions are deeply connected with jewellery purchases.

“Austerity imposed on the poor while wealth concentration deepens is not patriotism; it is economic displacement of pain.”

The burden of reduced consumption would therefore fall disproportionately on small artisans and workers rather than wealthy investors.

Nationalism as Economic Management

A recurring feature of recent political discourse has been the transformation of economic sacrifice into nationalist duty. Citizens are asked to consume less, travel less, buy less, and endure inflation in the name of patriotism and national resilience.

Economic hardship is reframed as civic morality.

This political method allows structural economic weaknesses to be converted into narratives of collective sacrifice. However, patriotism cannot substitute institutional planning.

If citizens are asked to sacrifice, questions naturally emerge:
Will political extravagance also reduce?
Will expensive government publicity campaigns stop?
Will elite consumption patterns change?
Will large corporate tax defaulters face aggressive recovery?

Without equitable burden-sharing, austerity risks appearing selective and unjust.

Conclusion: Spectacle Can Win Elections, But Not Rescue an Economy

India today faces a crisis far deeper than temporary inflation or oil-price volatility. The present austerity appeals expose accumulated structural weaknesses that have emerged through years of disruptive policy decisions, shrinking employment generation, weakening purchasing power, and increasing economic concentration.

Demonetisation destabilised the informal economy.
GST burdened small businesses.
The Covid lockdown shattered labour networks and MSMEs.
Privatisation concentrated assets and weakened public employment.
Import dependence increased vulnerability.
Geopolitical conflict merely exposed these weaknesses.

Yet instead of transparent democratic discussion, the public was repeatedly told that the economy remained strong and insulated from global crises.

Now ordinary citizens are being asked to bear the burden through reduced consumption and behavioural restraint.

“An economy cannot be sustained by slogans when purchasing power weakens, employment shrinks and inequality deepens.”

The present moment demands honesty rather than spectacle. Parliament must discuss the crisis openly. Economists, labour representatives, farmers, opposition parties, industry bodies, and state governments must participate in preparing a national response.

History shows that nations overcome crises through transparency, institutional trust, equitable burden-sharing, and structural reform — not through denial and symbolic nationalism.

The challenge before India is not merely economic. It is democratic, moral, and civilisational.

References

1. Rajan, Raghuram (2017). I Do What I Do: On Reforms, Rhetoric and Resolve.

2. Singh, Manmohan (2016). Rajya Sabha Speech on Demonetisation.

3. Sen, Amartya and Drèze, Jean (2013). An Uncertain Glory: India and Its Contradictions.

4. Subramanian, Arvind (2018). Of Counsel: The Challenges of the Modi-Jaitley Economy.

5. Basu, Kaushik (2018). The Republic of Beliefs: A New Approach to Law and Economics.

6. International Monetary Fund (2021–2026). World Economic Outlook Reports.

7. World Bank (2021–2026). India Development Update Reports.

8. Reserve Bank of India (2022–2026). Monetary Policy Reports.

9. International Energy Agency (2023–2026). Oil Market Report.

10. Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (2018–2024). Impact Assessment of GST on MSMEs in India.

11. Confederation of Indian Industry (2019–2024). GST and the Indian MSME Sector: Challenges and Structural Constraints.

12. All India Manufacturers Organisation (2019). Effects of Demonetisation and GST on Small and Medium Enterprises in India.

13. International Labour Organization (2020–2022). COVID-19 and the World of Work: India Labour Market Update.

14. Drèze, Jean and Khera, Reetika (2020). “Lockdown and India’s Migrant Crisis.”

15. Stranded Workers Action Network (2020). 21 Days and Counting: COVID-19 Lockdown and Migrant Workers Crisis.

16. Goldman Sachs (2025–2026). India Economic Outlook: Impact of Global Energy Prices on Growth and Inflation.

17. Piketty, Thomas, Chancel, Lucas and Somanchi, Anmol (2022). World Inequality Report: India Supplement.

 

Motherhood Beyond Myth: A Socio Scientific Study of Mother as Woman

 How Biology, Society, Economy, Culture and Power Shape the Experience of Motherhood Across Human Civilizations

-Ramphal Kataria

“A mother is not born holy. She is born human.”

Society often imagines the mother as a sacred figure suspended above ordinary humanity — endlessly patient, selfless, nurturing and emotionally invincible. Literature crowns her with divinity. Religion turns her into sacrifice. Culture expects her to forgive infinitely, endure silently, and love unconditionally.

But beneath every glorified image of motherhood stands a woman made of flesh, fatigue, desire, fear, hormones, memory, deprivation, instinct, wounds, and survival.

The mother is first a woman.

Before she becomes “maa,” “mother,” “ammi,” “mom,” or “amma,” she exists as a human being shaped by class, caste, race, labour, violence, education, economics, emotional history, and social power. Her motherhood does not emerge in isolation. It emerges within circumstances.

The romantic imagination of motherhood often conceals the brutal material realities surrounding women’s lives. A woman raising children in an affluent urban household with institutional support, healthcare, nutrition, domestic help, emotional freedom and financial security cannot be understood in the same way as a migrant laborer carrying bricks with an infant tied to her back, or a beggar mother nursing a child on a railway platform while fighting hunger.

Both are mothers.

But society grants dignity to one while reducing the other to invisibility.

This contradiction lies at the heart of the sociology of motherhood.

Motherhood is neither purely biological nor purely emotional. It is biological, psychological, economic, cultural and political all at once. The maternal role is deeply affected by the position of women within society. Therefore, any serious study of motherhood must begin not with idealized sentiments but with the material and emotional conditions of women.

The question is not whether mothers love.

The real question is:

What conditions allow love to flourish, and what conditions suffocate it?

I. The Biological Foundation: Woman as LifeBearer

Motherhood begins within biology.

The female body carries one of nature’s most extraordinary evolutionary functions — the capacity to conceive, gestate, nourish and protect developing life. Human reproduction imposes immense physiological demands upon women.

Pregnancy transforms the entire biological architecture of the female body:

Hormonal systems fluctuate dramatically.

Nutritional requirements increase.

Sleep, metabolism and immunity change.

Emotional processing alters.

Pain thresholds expand.

The brain itself undergoes neurological adaptation.

Modern neuroscience confirms that pregnancy and caregiving reshape neural circuits associated with empathy, vigilance and attachment.

A landmark study by Hoekzema et al. (2017), published in Nature Neuroscience, demonstrated that pregnancy produces longlasting changes in brain structure, especially in areas associated with social cognition and emotional bonding.

The female body literally reorganizes itself around caregiving.

After childbirth, lactation begins — an act often romanticized poetically but fundamentally biological and physically exhausting. The mother converts her blood nutrients into milk, often while sleepdeprived, nutritionally depleted and emotionally overwhelmed.

Anthropologists argue that human motherhood is among the most demanding forms of parental investment among mammals because human infants are unusually dependent for extraordinarily long periods.

Unlike many species that become functionally independent within months, human children require years of intensive emotional, social and material support.

This prolonged dependency intensified the evolutionary role of mothers.

Yet biology alone cannot explain motherhood.

If maternal instinct were sufficient in itself, all mothers everywhere would experience motherhood identically.

They do not.

II. Is Maternal Instinct Universal?

The idea of an automatic “maternal instinct” has been celebrated across civilizations. Yet psychology, anthropology and sociology complicate this assumption.

Maternal attachment has biological roots, but its expression varies significantly across individuals and societies.

Some women experience overwhelming attachment immediately after childbirth. Others develop bonding gradually. Some struggle emotionally due to depression, trauma, abuse or economic stress.

Studies on postpartum depression reveal that motherhood can coexist with emotional numbness, anxiety, resentment or psychological breakdown.

According to the World Health Organization, approximately 10–20% of women globally experience mental health conditions during pregnancy or after childbirth, particularly depression.

This challenges the myth that maternal love is always automatic, pure and emotionally stable.

Feminist scholar Adrienne Rich, in Of Woman Born (1976), distinguished between:

1. The experience of motherhood

2. The institution of motherhood

The first is intimate and biological.

The second is social and political.

Society imposes ideals upon mothers:

Be nurturing.

Be forgiving.

Sacrifice endlessly.

Suppress individuality.

Prioritize children over self.

Remain emotionally available at all times.

When women fail to match these ideals, society condemns them more harshly than fathers.

Thus maternal instinct is not absent, but it is mediated through mental health, social support, economic stability and cultural expectations.

Motherhood is both instinct and circumstance.

“Nature gives the woman the capacity to nurture life; society decides whether that nurturing will bloom with dignity or collapse under suffering.”

III. Motherhood Across Social Classes

1. The Affluent Mother

An affluent mother occupies a position within society that offers her material advantages which profoundly shape the quality and nature of her motherhood. These advantages are not merely luxuries; they are structural protections that reduce suffering and expand the possibility of emotional engagement with children. Access to quality healthcare ensures safer pregnancies, better prenatal monitoring and lower maternal mortality risks. Nutritious food improves both maternal wellbeing and child development. Financial stability provides safer housing, educational opportunities and freedom from the constant anxiety of survival.

Such a woman often has institutional and domestic support systems around her. She may have paid maternity leave, domestic workers, private childcare services, psychological counselling, and access to advanced educational resources for her children. These conditions create emotional space. She can invest time in conversation, emotional bonding, intellectual stimulation and developmental care because her existence is not entirely consumed by physical survival.

However, affluent motherhood is not free from suffering. Modern urban upperclass motherhood frequently produces a different form of psychological pressure. Sociologists have observed the emergence of what Sharon Hays called “intensive mothering,” where mothers are expected to become hyperinvolved architects of their children’s future success. Such women are pressured to optimize every aspect of childhood — nutrition, schooling, extracurricular activities, emotional regulation, digital exposure and social development.

The affluent mother therefore often lives under the burden of perfectionism. She is expected to remain professionally successful, physically attractive, emotionally composed and endlessly attentive to her children. Failure in any domain generates guilt. Social media intensifies this pressure by creating competitive displays of ideal motherhood.

Thus privilege does not eliminate emotional conflict. But privilege changes the environment within which motherhood is performed. The affluent mother may struggle psychologically, yet her struggle generally unfolds within structures that continue to protect her and her children from the brutal uncertainties faced by poor women.

2. The WorkingClass Mother

The workingclass mother inhabits a social world where motherhood and labour exist in constant collision. Unlike affluent women who may outsource domestic responsibilities, the workingclass mother is often required to carry both economic and caregiving burdens simultaneously. She works in factories, farms, domestic labour, construction sites, shops, offices, service industries or informal sectors while continuing to shoulder responsibility for cooking, cleaning, caregiving and emotional management inside the home.

This dual burden produces chronic exhaustion. Sociologist Arlie Hochschild described this condition as “the second shift,” referring to the unpaid domestic labor women perform after completing paid work outside. For workingclass mothers, rest itself becomes a privilege.

A woman returning from physically exhausting labour frequently continues working late into the night for her family. She prepares meals, supervises children, washes clothes and cares for elderly relatives while suppressing her own fatigue. Over time, this continuous labour affects both mental and physical health.

The emotional life of workingclass motherhood is therefore shaped by scarcity of time and energy rather than scarcity of love. Such mothers may deeply love their children but remain unable to provide the forms of emotional attentiveness idealized by middleclass parenting cultures. A tired mother may appear emotionally distant not because she lacks affection but because labor has consumed her psychological reserves.

At the same time, workingclass motherhood often creates strong cultures of resilience, solidarity and interdependence. In many workingclass communities, siblings care for one another, neighbors participate in collective support and children learn cooperation early. These adaptive strengths emerge from necessity.

Yet society frequently romanticizes this suffering as noble sacrifice. Poverty is portrayed as producing stronger families or greater moral purity. Such romanticization is deeply problematic. Human beings should not be forced into hardship in order to prove emotional strength. The resilience of workingclass mothers should inspire respect, but it should also provoke moral outrage at systems that normalize their exhaustion.

3. The Mother Below the Laboring Class

Below the visible working class exists another category of women whose motherhood unfolds at the edge of human survival. These are homeless mothers, migrant mothers, refugee mothers, displaced women, women in informal economies, abandoned women, beggar mothers and women trapped in cycles of hunger and social invisibility.

For such women, motherhood is inseparable from desperation. Their days are organized not around developmental ideals or emotional enrichment but around immediate biological survival — food, water, shelter and physical safety.

Consider the image of a mother begging on a roadside with an infant in her arms. Society often looks at her with pity or irritation but rarely with sociological understanding. That woman may herself be starving while attempting to produce milk for her child. Chronic malnutrition directly affects lactation, mental health and infant growth. Continuous stress increases cortisol levels and contributes to depression, anxiety and emotional instability.

Research in developmental psychology repeatedly demonstrates that extreme poverty affects maternal responsiveness. A woman struggling daily against hunger and insecurity cannot consistently provide calm emotional caregiving because her nervous system itself remains trapped in survival mode.

Yet society judges poor mothers harshly. Malnourished children, unclean clothing or lack of education are often interpreted as evidence of maternal failure rather than structural deprivation. This moral judgment ignores the absence of resources.

The affluent mother is supported by institutions; the destitute mother is abandoned by them.

Anthropologist Nancy ScheperHughes, in her study Death Without Weeping, examined impoverished Brazilian mothers living under extreme deprivation. Her work revealed how chronic poverty alters emotional responses themselves. Under conditions where infant mortality becomes common, emotional detachment may emerge as a tragic survival mechanism.

Such studies do not prove that poor mothers love less. Rather, they show that suffering reshapes emotional expression.

The motherhood of socially abandoned women therefore reveals one of civilization’s deepest inequalities: society glorifies motherhood symbolically while refusing material dignity to mothers who need it most.

IV. The Rural Mother and the Urban Mother

Rural Motherhood

The rural mother exists within a social environment profoundly shaped by tradition, community structure, agricultural labour and patriarchal expectations. In many rural societies across Asia, Africa and Latin America, motherhood is not simply a personal experience but the primary basis of female social identity. A woman is often considered fully accepted within the social order only after becoming a mother, particularly after bearing sons.

This expectation creates enormous emotional and reproductive pressure. Childlessness may result in stigma, emotional abuse or social exclusion. The rural woman’s value is frequently tied to fertility rather than individuality.

Rural motherhood also involves intense physical labour. Many women continue agricultural work during pregnancy. They carry water, collect firewood, tend livestock, harvest crops and perform domestic work with limited medical support. In developing regions, rural women frequently experience anemia, nutritional deficiencies and inadequate maternal healthcare.

Yet rural motherhood cannot be understood only through deprivation. Rural societies often preserve collective support systems that urban life has weakened. Grandmothers, sisters, neighbors and extended families may participate actively in caregiving. Childrearing becomes socially shared rather than individualized.

However, communal support may coexist with social surveillance. The rural mother is often monitored by family elders and community norms regarding behavior, sexuality, mobility and parenting practices. Her reproductive choices may not truly belong to her.

Thus the rural mother simultaneously experiences support and control. She may never feel emotionally alone, yet she may rarely feel entirely free.

Urban Motherhood

Urban motherhood emerges within a radically different social structure shaped by industrialization, nuclear families, individualism and capitalist work culture. Urban women generally possess greater access to education, healthcare, employment opportunities and reproductive awareness. Smaller family sizes and delayed pregnancies often allow women greater personal choice.

However, urban life produces another kind of emotional strain.

The urban mother frequently raises children in relative isolation. Unlike rural joint family systems, urban nuclear families reduce intergenerational caregiving support. Mothers may spend long hours alone with children while simultaneously balancing employment responsibilities.

Modern urban motherhood is also deeply influenced by digital culture. Social media platforms constantly circulate idealized images of parenting, beauty, discipline and emotional perfection. Mothers compare themselves continuously with carefully curated lifestyles displayed online.

This creates anxiety, guilt and burnout.

Urban mothers are expected to excel simultaneously as professionals, partners and caregivers. The conflict between career ambition and maternal expectation often produces identity fragmentation. A working woman may feel guilty for spending insufficient time with children, while a stayathome mother may feel guilty for sacrificing career aspirations.

Urban children additionally grow within environments shaped by academic competition, technological dependence and reduced communal interaction. Consequently, urban mothers increasingly perform emotional management roles — supervising screen exposure, educational performance and psychological wellbeing.

Thus urban motherhood provides greater autonomy but often less emotional infrastructure. Freedom increases, yet loneliness deepens.

V. Motherhood in Developed and Developing Economies

Developed Economies

Women in developed economies generally benefit from:

Better maternal healthcare

Lower maternal mortality

Institutional childcare

Legal protections

Education

Reproductive rights

Psychological awareness

Yet capitalist individualism creates another paradox.

Motherhood increasingly collides with productivity culture.

Women are expected to:

Excel professionally

Maintain appearance

Parent intensively

Remain emotionally composed

Achieve financial independence

The result is burnout.

Studies in Scandinavian countries show that even in welfare states with advanced gender equality, women still perform disproportionate domestic labour.

Equality in law does not always produce equality in lived experience.

Developing Economies

In developing societies, mothers face compounded structural vulnerabilities:

Malnutrition

Limited healthcare

Child marriage

Maternal mortality

Informal labour exploitation

Lack of sanitation

Economic dependence

Patriarchal restrictions

UNICEF data consistently shows that poverty directly affects maternal and child outcomes.

A woman struggling to secure food, water and shelter cannot experience motherhood in the same psychological space as a socially protected woman.

Here motherhood becomes survival labour.

The mother’s body becomes the battlefield where poverty, patriarchy and policy failures intersect.

“The quality of motherhood cannot be separated from the quality of a woman’s existence.”

VI. Traditional Society versus Free Society

Motherhood in Traditional Societies

Traditional societies often glorify motherhood while simultaneously restricting women.

Motherhood becomes:

Duty

Moral expectation

Religious responsibility

Social identity

Family honor

Women who reject motherhood may face stigma.

Motherhood is treated not as choice but destiny.

Such societies frequently value women primarily through reproductive contribution.

This creates emotional contradictions.

A woman may be worshipped symbolically as “mother” while denied:

Inheritance

Freedom

Decisionmaking power

Sexual autonomy

Education

Thus symbolic reverence may conceal structural subordination.

Motherhood in Liberal Societies

Liberal societies recognize motherhood increasingly as one possible dimension of womanhood rather than its sole purpose.

Women possess greater control over:

Reproductive rights

Career choices

Marriage

Divorce

Family planning

Yet liberal societies also commercialize motherhood.

Motherhood becomes:

Marketed

Psychologized

Individualized

Consumerized

Children become “projects.”

Parenting becomes performance.

The pressure to optimize children emotionally and intellectually creates another form of maternal anxiety.

Freedom reduces coercion but does not eliminate pressure.

VII. Bigoted Societies and Liberal Societies

In bigoted societies — shaped by casteism, racism, religious extremism or patriarchy — motherhood itself becomes politicized.

Women are pressured to reproduce for:

Community survival

Religious identity

Ethnic continuity

Nationalist narratives

Their womb becomes symbolic territory.

History repeatedly demonstrates how women’s reproductive capacities become controlled during communal conflict, slavery, colonization and nationalist politics.

The mother is no longer merely a parent.

She becomes:

A carrier of identity

A reproductive instrument

A cultural battlefield

Liberal societies attempt to individualize motherhood.

However, social prejudice still persists subtly:

Single mothers judged morally

Poor mothers stereotyped

Minority mothers overpoliced

Immigrant mothers marginalized

Thus no society entirely frees motherhood from ideology.

VIII. Are All Mothers the Same?

Biologically, certain maternal tendencies appear across humanity:

Protection of offspring

Emotional bonding

Responsiveness to infant signals

Distress at child suffering

Yet mothers are not identical.

Human beings differ in:

Temperament

Emotional capacity

Trauma history

Mental health

Social conditioning

Economic security

Education

Attachment style

Therefore motherhood varies.

Some mothers are affectionate.
Some are emotionally absent.
Some are violent.
Some are nurturing.
Some sacrifice enormously.
Some abandon.
Some protect heroically.
Some perpetuate trauma.

To deny these differences is not compassion.
It is sentimental dishonesty.

The myth of universal maternal purity often silences children who suffered neglect or abuse.

A critical sociology of motherhood must acknowledge complexity.

Women are human.
Human beings possess both tenderness and cruelty.

Motherhood magnifies neither sainthood nor evil automatically.

It magnifies the conditions under which women live.

IX. Human Mothers and Other Mammals

Comparative biology reveals striking parallels between human mothers and female mammals.

Across mammals:

Females nurse offspring.

Hormones influence bonding.

Maternal protection emerges strongly.

Mothers prioritize infant survival.

Separation produces distress.

Primatology studies by Jane Goodall and Sarah Blaffer Hrdy reveal that maternal behavior among primates involves both affection and adaptive strategy.

Chimpanzee mothers cuddle, groom, protect and teach offspring.

Elephants display collective maternal behavior.

Dolphins assist injured calves.

Yet animal mothers also abandon weak offspring under extreme scarcity.

Nature itself is not purely sentimental.

Human motherhood differs because humans possess:

Language

Social institutions

Morality

Culture

Long childhood dependency

Complex emotional memory

Thus human motherhood is simultaneously biological and symbolic.

Women mother not only through instinct but through social meaning.

“Maternal love is natural, but the conditions required to sustain it are profoundly social.”

X. Psychological Dimensions of Motherhood

Attachment Theory

John Bowlby’s attachment theory demonstrated that early maternal responsiveness influences emotional development.

Secure attachment produces:

Emotional stability

Trust

Social confidence

Insecure attachment may contribute to:

Anxiety

Fear of abandonment

Emotional dysregulation

Yet attachment itself depends on maternal wellbeing.

A psychologically exhausted mother cannot consistently provide emotional responsiveness.

Thus child psychology cannot be separated from maternal psychology.

Maternal Mental Health

Maternal mental health remains deeply neglected globally.

Women experience:

Postpartum depression

Anxiety disorders

Sleep deprivation

Identity crises

Emotional burnout

Domestic violence trauma

Many societies shame mothers who express exhaustion.

A “good mother” is expected to suffer silently.

This silence becomes psychologically destructive.

Studies indicate that maternal stress significantly affects:

Infant brain development

Emotional regulation

Longterm health outcomes

Therefore protecting mothers psychologically is not charity.

It is social investment.

XI. Feminist Perspectives on Motherhood

Feminist scholarship transformed the understanding of motherhood.

Simone de Beauvoir argued that women are socially conditioned into restrictive gender roles.

Adrienne Rich exposed the difference between authentic maternal experience and institutional expectations.

bell hooks emphasized how race and class shape maternal experiences.

Black feminist scholars particularly highlighted how slavery, racism and economic exploitation distorted motherhood historically.

Enslaved women were denied control over their own children.

Similarly, poor women across societies experience state surveillance over motherhood:

Welfare monitoring

Reproductive control

Forced sterilization historically

Moral judgment

Feminism therefore insists:

Motherhood cannot be understood apart from power.

XII. The Invisible Economy of Mothers

One of the greatest contradictions in human civilization is this:

The labour most essential for sustaining society is often unpaid.

Motherhood involves:

Childcare

Emotional labour

Household management

Education

Healthcare support

Socialization

Elder care

Economists describe this as the “care economy.”

Without maternal and caregiving labour, societies collapse.

Yet GDP calculations historically ignored unpaid domestic labor.

Women sustain economies invisibly.

The International Labour Organization repeatedly notes that women perform significantly more unpaid care work globally than men.

Thus motherhood becomes economically exploited under patriarchy and capitalism alike.

The mother produces future citizens, workers and social continuity — often without recognition.

XIII. The Sexualization and Sacralization of Women

Society often divides women into contradictory categories:

Pure mother

Desirable woman

This artificial division creates psychological violence.

A mother is expected to become desexualized after childbirth.

Her identity as woman disappears behind caregiving.

Yet she remains:

Emotional

Sexual

Ambitious

Individual

Desiring

The denial of womanhood inside motherhood produces emotional fragmentation.

A mother is not merely a reproductive function.

She is a complete human being.

XIV. Mothers and Violence

Many mothers raise children under violent conditions:

Domestic abuse

War

Communal conflict

Economic displacement

State violence

Hunger

Studies from conflict zones demonstrate that maternal trauma directly affects children.

Yet mothers frequently become the emotional shield between violence and childhood.

Refugee mothers walking across borders carrying children embody one of humanity’s deepest survival images.

Motherhood under violence becomes resistance itself.

XV. The Myth of Endless Sacrifice

One of the most dangerous social myths is that a good mother must erase herself completely.

Selfdestruction is glorified as maternal virtue.

Women are praised for:

Neglecting health

Suppressing ambition

Enduring abuse

Remaining silent

Sacrificing endlessly

This expectation becomes exploitative.

A mother who preserves her individuality is often judged selfish.

But psychologically healthy motherhood requires balance.

Children benefit not from a broken mother but from an emotionally stable one.

The glorification of suffering traps women inside guilt.

XVI. Motherhood and Policy

Public policy profoundly shapes motherhood.

Countries with:

Maternal healthcare

Paid maternity leave

Childcare systems

Nutrition programs

Equal wages

Education access

produce better maternal and child outcomes.

Thus motherhood is not merely private.

It is political.

When governments neglect women:

Maternal mortality rises.

Malnutrition increases.

Psychological distress expands.

Child development suffers.

A society reveals its moral character through how it treats mothers — especially poor mothers.

XVII. Motherhood in Literature and Culture

Literature across civilizations portrays mothers as:

Sacred

Protective

Suffering

Enduring

Forgiving

Yet literature also reveals contradictions.

From Greek tragedies to modern novels, mothers appear not only nurturing but conflicted, wounded and complex.

The idealized mother often exists more in cultural imagination than reality.

Real mothers:

Become tired.

Feel anger.

Experience regret.

Need affection.

Carry unfinished dreams.

Fear failure.

Humanizing mothers does not reduce their dignity.

It restores it.

“To worship mothers while ignoring women’s suffering is one of civilization’s oldest hypocrisies.”

XVIII. The Child’s Perception of Mother

Children initially perceive mothers as absolute emotional worlds.

The mother becomes:

Safety

Nourishment

Recognition

Attachment

Identity

Over time, adulthood reveals another truth:

The mother herself was struggling.

Many adults discover late that their mothers were:

Traumatised women

Economically trapped women

Lonely women

Uneducated women

Silenced women

Unfulfilled women

This realization deepens empathy.

The mother stops appearing divine and begins appearing profoundly human.

And perhaps that humanity is more moving than perfection.

XIX. The Ethics of Remembering Mothers

Modern culture frequently sentimentalizes mothers after death while neglecting them during life.

Mother’s Day celebrations often reduce motherhood to emotional symbolism.

Flowers, quotes and nostalgia cannot substitute:

Respect

Equality

Healthcare

Emotional recognition

Freedom

Economic dignity

True honour toward mothers requires transformation of women’s conditions.

Otherwise society celebrates motherhood while exploiting mothers.

XX. Toward a New Understanding of Motherhood

A mature understanding of motherhood must reject two extremes:

1. Romantic deification

2. Cynical reductionism

Motherhood is neither pure sainthood nor mere biology.

It is one of the deepest intersections between nature and society.

A mother is:

Biological being

Emotional being

Economic being

Cultural being

Political being

Psychological being

Historical being

To understand motherhood is to understand civilization itself.

Because every society reproduces itself not merely through institutions but through women carrying life under conditions created by that society.

Conclusion

The mother is not a goddess suspended beyond humanity.

She is a woman shaped by blood, labor, instinct, emotion, memory, deprivation, care and circumstance.

Nature grants her the extraordinary biological capacity to nurture life, but society determines whether that nurturing unfolds with dignity or under suffering.

The affluent mother, the rural mother, the labouring mother, the refugee mother, the urban professional mother, the homeless mother and the beggar mother all share the biological burden of motherhood — yet they inhabit radically unequal worlds.

To say “all mothers are same” may sound emotionally comforting, but sociologically it is incomplete.

Mothers differ because women differ.

And women differ because societies distribute:

power unequally,

resources unequally,

freedom unequally,

safety unequally,

dignity unequally.

The maternal instinct exists, but instinct alone cannot overcome hunger, violence, trauma, exploitation or structural inequality.

A psychologically secure and socially respected woman is more capable of expressing nurturing motherhood than a woman crushed beneath deprivation and fear.

Thus the quality of motherhood cannot be separated from the quality of womanhood.

The tragedy of civilization is that it often glorifies mothers symbolically while abandoning women materially.

It worships sacrifice but ignores exhaustion.
It celebrates care but undervalues caregivers.
It praises maternal love while tolerating conditions that destroy women internally.

A truly humane society would not merely celebrate mothers once a year.

It would build conditions where women can mother without losing themselves.

For the deepest truth about motherhood is this:

Before every mother was a mother, there was a woman trying to survive her world.

And the fate of motherhood ultimately depends upon how humanity chooses to treat women.

“The mother’s lap may feel sacred to the child, but the woman carrying that child often walks through a world that has never treated her sacredly at all.”

References 

1. Adrienne Rich — Of Woman Born: Motherhood as Experience and Institution (1976)

2. Simone de Beauvoir — The Second Sex (1949)

3. Sharon Hays — The Cultural Contradictions of Motherhood (1996)

4. Arlie Hochschild — The Second Shift (1989)

5. John Bowlby — Attachment and Loss (1969)

6. Sarah Blaffer Hrdy — Mother Nature: Maternal Instincts and How They Shape the Human Species (1999)

7. bell hooks — Ain’t I a Woman? Black Women and Feminism (1981)

8. Nancy Chodorow — The Reproduction of Mothering (1978)

9. Judith Butler — Gender Trouble (1990)

10. Pierre Bourdieu — Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste (1979)

11. Hoekzema et al. — “Pregnancy leads to long-lasting changes in human brain structure,” Nature Neuroscience (2017)

12. World Health Organization — Maternal Mental Health Reports

13. UNICEF — Reports on Maternal and Child Welfare

14. International Labour Organization — Reports on Unpaid Care Work

15. Jane Goodall — Studies on Chimpanzee Maternal Behaviour

16. Donald Winnicott — “Good Enough Mother” theory

17. Nancy Scheper-Hughes — Death Without Weeping (1992)

18. Elisabeth Badinter — The Myth of Motherhood (1980)

19. Silvia Federici — Caliban and the Witch (2004)

20. Carol Gilligan — In a Different Voice (1982)