She has a postgraduate degree. She had a job before the marriage, a job she was good at, a job she loved. Her husband's family thought it was better for her to leave it when the first child was born, and her husband agreed, and she agreed too, because everyone told her it was the right thing. That was eleven years ago. She has not earned her own money since. Every rupee she spends has to be asked for. Every grocery bill goes through his approval. Her clothes, her gifts, her small pleasures, her transport, her parents' visits — all of them require her to ask him, and his mood that day determines the answer. He has never taken her card away. He has never locked her out of the house. He simply controls every financial decision in a marriage where she is meant to be an equal partner, and over eleven years, this has slowly become the cage she lives in. She cannot leave. She cannot even afford to threaten to leave. He knows it. She knows it. Neither of them has ever said it out loud.
If you recognise any part of this, please read this article carefully. What she is experiencing has a name. It is called financial abuse, or economic abuse, and the World Health Organization recognises it as one of the most common and most under-discussed forms of intimate partner violence worldwide. At Bharosa, we see women living with financial abuse regularly in our LB Nagar outpatient department. What they are carrying is real, it has serious clinical consequences, and it deserves to be named and addressed — even when nothing else in the marriage looks wrong from the outside.
Financial or economic abuse is a pattern of controlling behaviour involving money and economic resources, used to maintain power over an intimate partner. It can take many forms. Preventing the partner from working. Controlling all household income. Requiring permission for every purchase. Giving an allowance that is too small to allow independence. Hiding financial information. Putting all assets in one person's name. Running up debts in the partner's name without consent. Using threats of financial abandonment to enforce obedience. Using the promise of financial reward to manipulate behaviour. The World Health Organization has formally identified economic abuse as a form of intimate partner violence in its global guidelines on addressing violence against women. The American Psychological Association, the leading body of psychologists in the United States, has documented that financial abuse produces elevated rates of anxiety, depression, helplessness, and sustained psychological distress, and that it is often the primary reason women cannot leave other forms of abuse.
The International Labour Organization, the specialised United Nations agency dealing with labour and workplace issues, has published research on the links between economic dependence and domestic violence, consistently finding that financial autonomy is one of the strongest protective factors against all forms of intimate partner abuse. When financial autonomy is removed, the partner's options are narrowed in ways that the outside world does not usually see. A woman who cannot access her own money cannot leave, cannot seek help, cannot even buy privacy. The cage does not have bars, but it has walls, and the walls are made of rupees she does not control.
Indian cultural norms around marriage often give husbands financial primacy by default. In many households, even when both spouses earn, the husband's income is treated as the main income and the wife's as supplementary. In households where the wife does not earn, financial decisions are assumed to belong to the husband. These norms are not inherently abusive. They become abusive when they are used to control the wife's autonomy, prevent her from accumulating any independent resources, and trap her in a marriage she would otherwise leave. Joint family structures sometimes make this worse — the money is controlled by in-laws or a wider family network, and the wife has to negotiate with multiple people for even the smallest expenses.
Add the cultural pressure against wives returning to paid work once they have left it. The woman who gave up her career to raise children often discovers, years later, that re-entering the workforce is genuinely difficult — skills have aged, contacts have faded, confidence has eroded, and the family often actively discourages the attempt. Her husband, intentionally or not, holds the entire economic power of the marriage. If he chooses to wield it as control, she has very few options. Many of our patients describe the specific loneliness of being highly educated, deeply capable, and yet entirely financially dependent on a man who uses the dependency as a daily instrument of power.
You have to ask permission for every purchase, even small ones. You do not have access to basic information about the household finances. You do not have an account that is yours alone. Your spouse monitors your spending obsessively. You are given an allowance that is not enough for your actual needs. Your spouse has discouraged or prevented you from working. Your spouse has made threats connected to money — to cut you off, to take the children, to leave you destitute. You feel you cannot leave even if you wanted to, because you have no financial means. You have hidden small amounts of money for emergencies. You have developed anxiety connected specifically to financial conversations. You feel a specific kind of shame about your dependence. The shame is not yours. The pattern is not about your worth. It is about the deliberate construction of a situation in which you cannot say no. If several of these are present, this is financial abuse, and it responds to proper support.
At Bharosa, our consultant MD Psychiatrists and clinical psychologists treat the mental health consequences of financial abuse with the seriousness and discretion they require. We recognise that financial abuse is often entangled with other forms of control, and we treat the whole picture. We use trauma-informed approaches to help the patient reduce the anxiety, depression, and helplessness that sustained financial coercion produces. We do not tell anyone to leave or stay. We help her assess her options clearly, protect her mental health while she is figuring out what to do, and connect her with appropriate resources when she is ready.
Confidentiality is absolute. No information leaves the clinic without the patient's explicit consent, regardless of who is paying for the visit. The mental health impact of financial abuse is often the first part of the picture that can be addressed, even when the financial situation itself takes longer to change. Many of our patients tell us that simply having a space in which their situation was believed, named, and treated as serious was the beginning of being able to think clearly about their own future for the first time in years.
Q: Is financial control really abuse if he has never been violent?
A: Yes. Economic abuse is recognised as a form of intimate partner violence.
Q: Will my husband find out I came?
A: No. Confidentiality is protected by law.
Q: Can therapy help if I cannot leave?
A: Yes. Therapy protects your mental health whether you stay or leave.
Q: Does Bharosa accept walk-in visits?
A: Yes, and appointments can also be scheduled confidentially.
Q: Does Bharosa treat this in Hyderabad?
A: Yes. Confidential women's mental health care is available at our LB Nagar facility.
A cage made of money is still a cage. Bharosa helps you find your footing, privately, in Hyderabad. Call +91 95050 58886.

Mental health struggles do not define you, and you don’t have to face them alone. If you notice any early signs of mental health disorders in yourself or a family member, take the first step today.