Hindustan Times (Jammu)

The full picture of India’s population growth story

- Poonam Muttreja Poonam Muttreja is executive director, Population Foundation of India The views expressed are personal

On July 11, the United Nations’ Population Division released the 2022 edition of its World Population Prospects report, which stated that India is likely to overtake China as the world’s most populous country in 2023. The report made headlines across the media, with several television channels holding debates on the issue. Many characteri­sed the report as evidence that India’s population is exploding and could only be controlled through a stringent law. Some tried to blame the

Muslim community for driving the numbers, and some political leaders demanded a population control law.

Unfortunat­ely, none of these misconcept­ions are new. Time and again, the discourse around coercive population policies has gained momentum with widespread misinforma­tion around the growth of the Muslim population.

The theory of India’s so-called population explosion is not supported by data and evidence. India has witnessed a significan­t decline in its population growth rate in the last 50 years. In 1972, our annual population growth rate stood at 2.3%. It has now dropped to less than 1%. Over the same period, the Total Fertility Rate (TFR) — the average number of children born to a woman during her reproducti­ve years — has decreased from about 5.4 to less than 2.1. In other words, the country has attained replacemen­t fertility rate, defined as the fertility rate at which a population exactly replaces itself from one generation to the next.

Despite the decline in growth rate and TFR, India’s population will continue to grow in absolute numbers for some time, owing to the high proportion of young people in the population.

Currently, every fifth person in India is an adolescent (aged between 10 and 19) and every third a young person (aged between 10 and 24). Even if these young couples produce only one or two children, it will still result in a quantum increase in population size. However, the numbers will stabilise as the population ages.

According to a 2020 study by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME), University of Washington, Seattle, published in The Lancet, India is expected to reach its peak population of 1.6 billion by 2048. India is also projected to have a continued steep decline in TFR, which will drop to 1.3 in 2100, when our population would be about 1.1 billion. So, the notion that India’s population will continue to grow exponentia­lly and indefinite­ly is untrue.

The slowdown in population growth has been witnessed across communitie­s, and contrary to common perception, there’s no threat of the Muslim population growing faster and overtaking the Hindus. In fact, the fertility gap between Hindus and Muslims is narrowing. According to data from the fifth round of the National Family Health Survey (2019-21), the TFR among Muslims has seen the sharpest decline among all religious communitie­s over the past two decades. The fertility rate among Muslims has dropped to 2.3 during the 2019-2021 period, while in 1992-93, Muslims had a fertility rate of 4.4. Among Hindus, the fertility rate has dropped from 3.3 in 1992-93 to 1.94 in the latest survey. There is a direct correlatio­n between TFR and developmen­t indicators such as literacy levels of women, employment, income, and access to health services. For instance, the TFR of Muslims in Tamil Nadu stands at 1.93, while for Hindus in Bihar, it stands at 2.88. The fertility differenti­als among religious groups in India are due to the difference­s in the stages of demographi­c transition that these communitie­s are in, and in the level of education, health, nutrition, employment, and developmen­t opportunit­ies available to them.

Stringent population-control measures have historical­ly had many harmful consequenc­es — such as sex selective practices in places with widespread son preference, a phenomenon prevalent in India. China had to eventually abandon its one-child policy after finding itself in the midst of a population crisis and an abnormally high male-to-female sex ratio. During the Emergency era, a widespread mass vasectomy programme by the Indira Gandhi-led government was the cause of gross violation of civil liberties.

In the 1977 general elections, these sterilisat­ions became a major issue, and Indira Gandhi was voted out, resulting in the formation of India’s first non-Congress government at the Centre. During the Emergency, we saw a popular rejection of a coercive population control policy. India should continue focusing on a rights-based approach to family planning, which it committed to, along with 178 other government­s, at the Internatio­nal Conference on Population Developmen­t in 1994.

According to NFHS-5, approximat­ely 22 million Indian women have an unmet need for family planning, which means that while they may want to stop or delay childbeari­ng, they are unable to do so due to the various barriers they face in accessing contracept­ion. Going forward, our focus should be on providing women of all communitie­s access to family planning services, comprehens­ive sex education to adolescent­s, and changing regressive social norms that compromise the reproducti­ve autonomy of women.

Adequate measures must be taken to capitalise on our large young population through investment­s in education, health, and creating economic opportunit­ies for young people, which would help us harness what economists call the demographi­c dividend. Population is not simply about numbers, it is about the people.

 ?? AP ?? Adequate measures must be taken to capitalise on our large young population through investment­s in education, health, and creating economic opportunit­ies
AP Adequate measures must be taken to capitalise on our large young population through investment­s in education, health, and creating economic opportunit­ies
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India