Women’s Reservation Act and the Need for Gender-Sensitive Elder Care Policy

Context:
With the Women’s Reservation Act expected to create the most gender-representative Parliament by 2029, there is growing emphasis on addressing elder care challenges faced by ageing women in India.

Key Highlights:

Women’s Reservation and Political Representation
• The Women’s Reservation Act reserves one-third of seats in the Lok Sabha and State Assemblies for women.
• It aims to significantly improve women’s political representation by 2029.

Ageing Population in India
• India currently has over 100 million citizens aged above 60.
• The elderly population is projected to exceed 250 million by 2040.

Health Challenges for Elderly Women
• A 2023 study estimated 8.8 million Indians above 60 suffer from dementia.
• The number is expected to double by 2036.
• Women face higher vulnerability due to longer life expectancy and weaker financial security.

State-Level Initiatives
• In January 2026, Maharashtra launched menopause clinics in 580 government facilities.
• Over 31,000 women accessed services within five weeks, indicating strong demand.

Policy Gaps in Elder Care
• India lacks a comprehensive gender-sensitive elder care policy.
• Existing frameworks focus primarily on poverty and health but not gender-specific vulnerabilities.

Stakeholders
Central and State Governments
Political parties and legislators
Public health institutions
Women’s rights organizations

Relevant Prelims Points:

  • Women’s Reservation Act (2023)
  • Provides 33% reservation for women in Lok Sabha and State Legislative Assemblies.
  • Implementation linked to delimitation and census processes.
  • National Policy for Older Persons (1999)
  • Aims to ensure financial security, healthcare, and welfare of elderly citizens.
  • Promotes family-based care and social security measures.
  • Indira Gandhi National Old Age Pension Scheme (IGNOAPS)
  • Part of the National Social Assistance Programme (NSAP).
  • Provides monthly pensions to elderly persons below the poverty line.
  • Dementia
  • A neurodegenerative condition affecting memory, cognition, and daily functioning.
  • Common forms include Alzheimer’s disease.
  • Demographic Ageing
  • Increase in the proportion of elderly population due to declining fertility and rising life expectancy.

Relevant Mains Points:

  • Gender Dimension of Ageing
  • Women often face lower lifetime earnings, weaker pension coverage, and longer life expectancy.
  • Many elderly women live alone or depend on informal care systems.
  • Socio-Economic Challenges
  • Elderly women face financial insecurity, health issues, and social isolation.
  • Care burdens disproportionately fall on female family members.
  • Policy Gaps
  • Current policies lack gender-disaggregated data and targeted welfare programs.
  • Institutional care systems and community-based support structures remain inadequate.
  • Political Opportunity through Women’s Representation
  • Increased representation can help bring women-centric issues like elder care into legislative priorities.
  • Women legislators may push for inclusive social protection policies.
  • Importance of Data and Budgeting
  • Need for age- and gender-disaggregated data.
  • Transparent budget allocation for elder care services.

Way Forward
• Develop a national gender-sensitive elder care policy.
• Strengthen public healthcare services for ageing women.
• Expand community-based care and social security systems.
• Encourage political representation to translate into policy action.
• Promote research and data collection on ageing and gender.

UPSC Relevance:
GS Paper 2: Governance, Social Justice – elderly welfare and women’s representation
GS Paper 1: Indian Society – ageing population and gender issues
Prelims: Women’s Reservation Act, IGNOAPS, National Policy for Older Persons

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