Introduction:
India is the world’s most populous country and is undergoing a demographic transition characterized by declining fertility, rising life expectancy, and significant regional variations. While these changes present opportunities such as the demographic dividend, they also pose complex socio-economic and developmental challenges.

Major Population-Related Challenges in India

  1. Regional Demographic Imbalances: States are at different stages of demographic transition, leading to uneven population growth.
    Example: Bihar and Uttar Pradesh have higher fertility rates than Kerala and Tamil Nadu.
  2. Employment and Demographic Dividend: A large working-age population can become a liability without adequate employment opportunities.
    Example: Rising youth unemployment despite an expanding labour force.
  3. Rapid Urbanization and Migration: Population growth has intensified pressure on urban infrastructure and basic services.
    Example: Growth of informal settlements in metropolitan cities.
  4. Ageing Population: Increasing life expectancy has led to a growing elderly population requiring healthcare and social security.
    Example: Kerala has one of the highest proportions of elderly persons in India.
  5. Human Development Deficits: Disparities in education, healthcare, nutrition, and gender indicators hinder inclusive development.
    Example: High levels of anaemia and malnutrition among women and children.
  6. Resource and Environmental Stress: Rising population increases demand for land, water, energy, and food, affecting environmental sustainability.
    Example: Groundwater depletion and declining per capita availability of natural resources.

Policy Measures

  1. Invest in Human Capital: Strengthen education, healthcare, nutrition, and skill development to improve workforce productivity.
  2. Generate Employment Opportunities: Promote labour-intensive manufacturing, MSMEs, and the digital economy to harness the demographic dividend.
  3. Address Regional Disparities: Provide targeted investments in health, education, and infrastructure in high-fertility and economically backward states.
  4. Promote Planned Urbanization: Develop affordable housing, public transport, and smart urban infrastructure.
    Example: Smart Cities Mission and PMAY (Urban).
  5. Strengthen Elderly Care: Expand healthcare services, pension coverage, and social security for the ageing population.
  6. Adopt Population Stabilization through Choice: Promote voluntary family planning, women’s education, and reproductive healthcare instead of coercive population control measures.

Conclusion:
India’s demographic transition presents both opportunities and challenges. Harnessing the demographic dividend while addressing regional disparities, ageing, and resource pressures requires a balanced approach centered on human capital development, inclusive growth, and sustainable population policies to achieve the vision of Viksit Bharat 2047.

Legacy Editor Changed status to publish