Gulf News

Concern over shrinking population in Sikkim

The state has India’s lowest fertility rate and wants families to have three children

-

India is set to overtake China as the world’s most populous country this year, but a small state in the South Asian nation’s mountainou­s northeast is worried about its shrinking indigenous communitie­s and urging them to have more babies.

Sikkim, a state with fewer than 700,000 people, has India’s lowest fertility rate and now wants families to have three children, making it the first to do so in a country where authoritie­s, in a bid to fight overpopula­tion, have long pushed parents to stop at two.

“If our indigenous people vanish, their culture will vanish with them too, which will be a big loss for us,” said Shanker Deo Dhakal, secretary to the chief minister of Sikkim, where almost 80 per cent of people are estimated to be indigenous.

Incentives

The border state also recently announced incentives like year-long maternity leave for women, monthlong paternity leave for men, and financial support for those seeking pregnancy through in vitro fertilisat­ion.

Family size came into the spotlight this week when China announced that its population fell last year for the first time in six decades, a historic turn that is expected to mark the start of a long period of decline with major implicatio­ns for its economy and the world.

India’s population growth has averaged 1.2 per cent since 2011, easing from the 1.7 per cent in the 10 years previously, government figures show, and that trend is expected to fall further.

India’s total fertility rate (TFR) — children per woman — fell to 2 in the latest assessment period, for 2019-2021, from 3.4 in 1992-93, according to a government report issued in October. It estimated that the average must be 2.1 for the population to reproduce itself.

Of India’s 36 states and federal territorie­s, only five have a TFR of above 2.1, the highest being in the eastern state of Bihar with a TFR of 3 as of 2019-20. Sikkim, with a TFR of 1.1, is at the risk of seeing its population shrinking.

“Their population will start declining at this rate,” said S.Y. Quraishi, the country’s former chief election commission­er who has written a book titled: The Population Myth: Islam, Family Planning and Politics in India. The population of at least two of Sikkim’s 12 indigenous communitie­s — Bhutia and Limbu — have been declining in recent years, state official Dhakal said, without providing any data.

 ?? ?? The famous MG Marg street in Gangtok. The population of at least two of Sikkim’s 12 indigenous communitie­s — Bhutia and Limbu — have been declining in recent years. ■
The famous MG Marg street in Gangtok. The population of at least two of Sikkim’s 12 indigenous communitie­s — Bhutia and Limbu — have been declining in recent years. ■

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates