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Source: Reuters
When is the ideal age to have or adopt a first baby? For most
women it is between the ages of 25 to 34 years old.
Slightly more than 75% of women questioned in a joint survey by
ForbesWoman.com and TheBump.com believe it is the perfect time to
become a mother.
Forty-two percent narrowed it down further to 25-29 years old,
and 17% said there was no best age.
Women felt that by their mid-to-late 20s they were more likely to
have established themselves in their career and financially, and
were ready to take on a new role, according to the poll.
A ticking biological clock was a factor for only 21% of
women.
"Women are looking for a good balance." said Jenna Goudreau, of
ForbesWoman.com who worked on the survey.
"The number one factor in coming up with this ideal age bracket
was career and financial security."
The poll included responses from 2,210 women, nearly half of whom
were mothers.
More than 50% of women without children said they planned to
have two children, while slightly more than a third intended to
have three or more.
"One of the things we were trying to do with the study is not only
find the ideal age to become a mom but to become a mom and have a
successful career, as half of the workforce are women now,"
Goudreau explained.
Although many women combined, or planned to combine, motherhood
with a job, 62% believe having children has a negative impact on a
career.
But only 30% of working mothers said it had affected their own
career.
"I did find that women who have their children younger tend not to
earn as much money in their lifetimes," said Goudreau, adding that
the younger women are when they have their first child, the less
invested they tend to be in their career.
Paid maternity leave and flexible working hours were the most
common benefits provided by employers, according to the poll.
Only about three percent of women said their company provided
job shares and less than six percent had on-site child care.
Among the mothers questioned in the poll 68% said they were happy
with the timing of their first child.
The majority had children before their 35th birthday.
About 60% of women who had their first child between 35 to 39
said they wish they had been younger.
For most of the working mothers going back to work after having a
baby was a financial necessity.
Most worked the same amount of hours they did before giving
birth.
Sixty-three percent of working moms said they were following in the
footsteps of their own mothers who had juggled a family and a
career.