India’s Demographic Transition: From Dividend to Ageing Challenge

Syllabus: GS3/ Economy

Context

  • A recent report titled “Unravelling India’s Demographic Future: Population Projections for States and Union Territories, 2021–2051” highlights that India is undergoing a structural demographic transition, which has significant implications for governance, economy, and social sectors.

Key Demographic Trends in India

  • Declining Fertility: India’s Total Fertility Rate (TFR) has declined to near replacement level of 2.1, reflecting a transition towards population stabilisation.
  • Slowing Population Growth: India’s population is projected to increase from about 1.35 billion in 2021 to 1.59 billion by 2051, indicating a steady but slowing growth trajectory.
  • Divergent Regional Trajectories: Southern and western states have reached below-replacement fertility levels, indicating early ageing, while Northern and eastern states continue to have relatively higher fertility rates, sustaining population momentum.
    • This regional imbalance creates challenges in labour distribution, migration, and state-level fiscal planning.

Consequences of India’s Demographic Shift

  • Rise of the Care Economy: Declining family size and the rise of nuclear households are increasing the burden of elderly care on fewer individuals.
    • This necessitates the development of a formal care economy, including geriatric services, assisted living, and home-based care.
  • Urbanisation with New Demands: Rapid urbanisation will increase demand for housing, infrastructure, and employment opportunities.
    • Cities must cater to both a young workforce and an ageing population through inclusive and accessible planning.
  • Shifts in Consumer Demand: Changing age structures will transform consumption patterns from youth-centric to a more diversified demand structure.
    • There will be increased demand for healthcare, insurance, retirement planning, and elderly-friendly services. This creates opportunities for the silver economy.

Key Initiatives to Reap Demographic Dividend

  • Skill India Mission aims to train millions of youth in industry-relevant skills focusing on improving employability and bridging the skill gap.
  • Pradhan Mantri Kaushal Vikas Yojana (PMKVY) provides short-term skill training and certification aligned with industry needs, encouraging recognition of prior learning (RPL).
  • Ayushman Bharat – Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana: It provides health insurance coverage and strengthens primary healthcare through Health and Wellness Centres.
  • Pradhan Mantri Matru Vandana Yojana: It provides maternity benefits to support women’s health and nutrition to Increase female labour force participation is key to fully utilising the demographic dividend.
  • The 2020 Labour Codes, consolidating 29 central labor laws into four codes, aims to improve the ease of doing business, enhance worker protections, and promote formal employment by simplifying compliance and extending social security to gig/platform workers.

Way Ahead

  • Skilling and Education Reform: India must transition from enrolment-based education to outcome-oriented and skill-based learning aligned with industry needs.
    • Emphasis should be placed on digital skills, vocational training, and lifelong learning to enhance employability.
  • Healthcare and Longevity Tech: A healthier population contributes directly to productivity and economic growth and expansion of geriatric care, preventive healthcare, and health-tech innovations is essential to manage aging.
  • Regional demographic disparities must be addressed by promoting labour-intensive industries in states with a younger population. This will reduce migration pressures and ensure balanced regional development.
  • Urban planning must integrate productivity, inclusivity, and sustainability. Development of smaller towns can reduce pressure on mega cities and support balanced growth.

Concluding remarks

  • India’s demographic transition marks a critical juncture where population growth alone can no longer drive economic expansion.
  • The country must proactively shift towards a productivity-led growth model by investing in human capital, technology, and institutional capacity.
  • If managed effectively, ageing can become an opportunity through the silver economy, enabling India to achieve sustainable and inclusive development while avoiding the middle-income trap.

Source: TH

 
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