Context:
A recent report highlights India’s demographic transformation marked by slowing population growth, an ageing population, and declining school enrolments, with implications for society and the economy up to 2051.
Key Highlights:
- Population Trends
- India’s population projected to reach 1,590.1 million by 2051 with 0.5% annual growth
- Median age to rise from 28 years (2021) to 40 years (2051) → clear shift towards ageing society
- Education Sector Changes
- Pre-primary population (0–4 years) declining sharply
- Closure of ‘uneconomic schools’ likely
- Government schools ↓ by 90,000 (2014–2024), Private schools ↑ by 43,000
- Workforce Dynamics
- Working-age population to peak at 1,009 million in 2041, then decline
- Indicates nearing end of demographic dividend window
- Ageing Population
- Elderly (60+) to increase from 130.5 million (2021) → 325.3 million (2051)
- Share rises to 20.5% of total population
- Socio-economic Implications
- Pressure on healthcare systems and pensions
- Rising importance of geriatric care and social security
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Demographic Dividend:
- Economic growth potential when working-age population > dependent population
- Median Age:
- Age dividing population into two equal halves
- Silver Economy:
- Economic activities catering to elderly population needs
- India’s Demographic Phases:
- High fertility → declining fertility → ageing phase
- Dependency Ratio:
- Ratio of dependents (young + old) to working population
Relevant Mains Points:
- Opportunities
- Harness remaining demographic dividend (till ~2041)
- Growth of silver economy (healthcare, insurance, services)
- Increasing female workforce participation
- Challenges
- Declining fertility → shrinking labour force
- Rising elderly → fiscal burden (pensions, healthcare)
- Education system restructuring due to falling enrolment
- Regional demographic imbalances
- Governance Issues
- Shift from quantity to quality of human capital
- Need for skilling and reskilling ecosystem
- Weak social security architecture
- Way Forward
- Strengthen healthcare and geriatric infrastructure
- Promote women’s labour force participation
- Invest in education quality & skill development
- Expand pension coverage and insurance systems
- Encourage productive ageing policies
UPSC Relevance:
• GS 1 – Population & Demographic Trends
• GS 2 – Social Justice (elderly care, education access)
• GS 3 – Economy (labour force, growth potential)
