PIB Summaries 02 April 2026

  1. Census 2027 – Digital Demographic Transformation
  2. Connectivity and Development in North East Region (NER) – Act East Catalyst


  • Census 2027 Phase-I (Houselisting & Housing Census) launched on 1 April 2026, initiating world’s largest demographic exercise with first-ever digital data capture.
  • Introduction of Self-Enumeration facility; ~55,000 households participated on Day 1, signalling early digital adoption.
  • High-level participation (President, PM, HM) aimed at enhancing citizen engagement and trust in digital governance processes.

Relevance

  • GS I (Society): Population dynamics, migration, caste, gender ratio, urbanisation.
  • GS II (Polity & Governance): Evidence-based policymaking, welfare targeting, delimitation, fiscal federalism.

Practice Question

Q1.Digital Census 2027 represents a shift from periodic enumeration to real-time governance infrastructure.Critically examine. (15M)

  • Census is a decennial exercise conducted under the Census Act, 1948 by Registrar General of India (Ministry of Home Affairs).
  • First Census: 1872 (non-synchronous); first complete synchronous Census in 1881.
  • Last Census conducted in 2011; 2021 Census deferred due to COVID-19 disruptions.
  • Conducted in two phases:
    • Houselisting & Housing Census (HLO)
    • Population Enumeration (PE)
  • Provides basis for delimitation, fiscal transfers, welfare targeting, and socio-economic planning.
  • Enables granular household-level data for targeted delivery of schemes like PMAY, SBM, Jal Jeevan Mission.
  • Digital enumeration reduces time lag in data processing, improving real-time governance capabilities.
  • Strengthens cooperative federalism through disaggregated state-level demographic planning inputs.
  • Enhances transparency and accountability via standardized digital data collection mechanisms.
  • Provides baseline for labour force estimates, dependency ratios, and consumption patterns.
  • Critical for urban planning, infrastructure allocation, and industrial location strategies.
  • Influences Finance Commission transfers through population and demographic indicators.
  • Supports private sector decisions via market size estimation and demographic dividend mapping.
  • Captures data on literacy, gender ratio, migration, caste, and vulnerable sections for inclusive policy design.
  • Facilitates targeted interventions for SC/ST, minorities, elderly, urban poor, and migrants.
  • Helps identify regional disparities in housing, sanitation, and access to basic services.
  • Digital participation may highlight social inequalities in access to technology and internet penetration.
  • First Census using end-to-end digital tools, mobile applications, and self-enumeration portals.
  • Ensures data security via encryption and multi-factor authentication systems.
  • Opens scope for AI-driven analytics and predictive governance frameworks.
  • Raises concerns on data privacy, consent architecture, and cybersecurity vulnerabilities.
  • India hosts ~17.8% of global population, making Census 2027 the largest statistical exercise globally.
  • Census 2011 covered 121 crore people and ~24 crore households; scale significantly expanded in 2027.
  • 33 questions notified for HLO phase capturing housing conditions, amenities, and asset ownership.
  • Data protected under Section 15, Census Act—strict confidentiality, not admissible as legal evidence.
  • Digital divide: Rural, elderly, and marginalized groups face barriers in self-enumeration access.
  • Data privacy concerns: Lack of fully operationalized data protection ecosystem raises trust issues.
  • Time lag impact: 15+ year gap since last Census affects reliability of planning indicators.
  • Capacity constraints: Enumerator training and digital readiness uneven across regions.
  • Accuracy risks: Self-reported digital entries may introduce inconsistencies and reporting bias.
  • Inclusive Digital Participation : Expand digital literacy and assisted enumeration centres to bridge rural–urban and socio-economic gaps.
  • Strengthening Data Protection Framework : Align Census processes with Digital Personal Data Protection architecture ensuring privacy, consent, and accountability.
  • Capacity Building & Training : Intensive training of enumerators in digital tools, cybersecurity awareness, and verification protocols.
  • Data Integration for Governance : Integrate Census outputs with administrative databases cautiously to enhance targeting and reduce duplication.
  • Leveraging Advanced Analytics : Use AI, GIS mapping, and big data tools for predictive planning and efficient resource allocation.
  • Census conducted under Census Act, 1948; not a constitutional mandate.
  • Conducted by Registrar General & Census Commissioner of India.
  • Data is confidential and not admissible in courts.
  • Two phases: HLO and Population Enumeration.
  • Census 2027: first digital census with self-enumeration feature.


  • Government highlighted infrastructure expansion in NER under Act East Policy, showing tangible gains in connectivity, trade integration, and regional development.
  • Data reveals ₹6.11 lakh crore expenditure (2014–25) under 10% Gross Budgetary Support (GBS) mechanism.
  • Focus on multi-modal connectivity + sustainability lens in ecologically sensitive North East region.

Relevance

  • GS II (Governance): Regional development, cooperative federalism, institutional mechanisms (MDoNER, NEC).
  • GS III (Economy): Infrastructure-led growth, logistics efficiency, trade corridors.

Practice Question

Q1.Connectivity is the primary driver of economic transformation in the North East Region.
Analyse in the context of Act East Policy. (15M)

  • North Eastern Region includes 8 states, strategically located between South Asia and Southeast Asia.
  • Act East Policy (2014) upgraded from Look East Policy; aims at economic integration with Indo-Pacific.
  • NER is central to Indias land bridge to ASEAN, sharing borders with China, Myanmar, Bangladesh, Bhutan.
  • Ministry of Development of North Eastern Region (MDoNER) and North Eastern Council (NEC) coordinate development.
  • Whole-of-Government approach via mandatory 10% GBS ensures dedicated funding across ministries.
  • Promotes cooperative federalism with state-specific infrastructure and socio-economic planning.
  • Focus on participatory governance—community involvement in infrastructure and sustainability projects.
  • Institutional mechanisms like NEC and DoNER Ministry ensure coordinated regional development.
Road Connectivity
  • National Highways expanded from 10,905 km (2014) → 16,207 km (2025), improving intra- and inter-state mobility.
  • 46,296 km rural roads (PMGSY) constructed, enhancing last-mile connectivity and rural integration.
Railway Connectivity
  • Railway allocation increased from ₹2,122 crore/year (2009–14) → 10,440 crore (2025-26).
  • Strategic lines (Jiribam–Imphal, Agartala–Akhaura) enhance border trade and defence logistics.
Air Connectivity
  • UDAN Scheme operationalised 90 routes; airports like Pasighat, Tezu, Pakyong integrated into national network.
  • Enhances tourism, emergency services, and business mobility in remote terrains.
Telecom Connectivity
  • 6355 Gram Panchayats broadband-enabled; 3718 mobile towers covering 5366 villages.
  • Strengthens Digital India penetration, enabling e-governance and digital economy participation.
Inland Waterways
  • National Waterways increased from 1 to 20, with ₹1,040 crore investment.
  • Facilitates low-cost, sustainable logistics and cross-border trade (especially via Brahmaputra-Barak systems).
Power Connectivity
  • Hydropower projects (e.g., Subansiri 2000 MW, Dibang 2880 MW) boost energy security and industrial growth.
  • Transmission strengthening projects (~₹15,800+ crore) improve grid reliability and regional integration.
  • Connectivity reduces logistics cost, integrating NER into national and global value chains.
  • Boosts border trade, export growth, and logistics hubs aligned with ASEAN markets.
  • Enhances tourism, agro-processing, and MSME growth, leveraging region’s natural resources.
  • Promotes employment generation through infrastructure-led multiplier effects.
  • Improved connectivity enhances access to healthcare, education, and markets in remote tribal regions.
  • Reduces regional disparities and isolation, fostering national integration.
  • Supports inclusive growth by linking marginalized communities to development processes.
  • Strengthens people-to-people connectivity with Southeast Asia, enhancing cultural exchanges.
  • NER is ecologically fragile (Eastern Himalayas, biodiversity hotspot) requiring balanced development.
  • Adoption of sustainability lens—afforestation, watershed management, eco-restoration initiatives.
  • Focus on climate-resilient infrastructure under NEC’s Focused Development Component (FDC).
  • Risk of hydropower-induced ecological disruption and displacement remains critical concern.
  • Enhanced connectivity improves border infrastructure and defence mobility along China and Myanmar borders.
  • Counters insurgency and isolation-driven instability by integrating remote areas.
  • Strengthens India’s role in Indo-Pacific geopolitics and ASEAN engagement.
  • Facilitates cross-border trade routes, reducing illegal trade and enhancing surveillance.
  • ₹6.11 lakh crore expenditure vs ₹6.02 lakh crore allocation (2014–25) under 10% GBS.
  • NH length increased by ~48% in a decade.
  • Inland waterways increased 20-fold (1 → 20).
  • Telecom expansion: 6355 GPs broadband-ready, 3718 towers installed.
  • Difficult terrain and high project costs delay infrastructure completion.
  • Ecological fragility—deforestation, landslides, biodiversity loss due to infrastructure expansion.
  • Insurgency and law & order issues in some pockets hinder project execution.
  • Limited private investment due to market size and connectivity gaps.
  • Cross-border projects face geopolitical sensitivities and coordination challenges.
  • Integrated Multi-Modal Connectivity : Develop seamless road–rail–waterways–air networks to maximise logistics efficiency and regional integration.
  • Sustainable Infrastructure Development: Mandate environmental impact assessments and climate-resilient designs for all major projects.
  • Boosting Regional Economy : Establish border trade hubs, SEZs, and logistics parks aligned with ASEAN supply chains.
  • Strengthening Institutional Capacity : Enhance coordination between MDoNER, NEC, and state governments for timely project implementation.
  • Promoting Inclusive Growth : Ensure community participation, livelihood support, and rehabilitation frameworks in infrastructure projects.
  • Act East Policy launched in 2014, replacing Look East Policy.
  • 10% GBS mechanism mandates ministries to allocate funds for NER development.
  • UDAN is a market-driven scheme for regional air connectivity.
  • NER has 20 National Waterways (significant recent expansion).

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