Uneven Demographic Transition and Fiscal Challenges in Indian States

Context:

An RBI report highlights sharp regional differences in India’s demographic transition, raising concerns regarding fiscal management, social security systems, federal equity, and long-term development strategy.

Key Highlights:

  • Ageing vs Youthful States
  • Kerala projected to have 22% elderly population by 2036.
  • Tamil Nadu projected to cross 20% elderly population by 2036.
  • Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Jharkhand to continue witnessing growth in working-age population beyond 2031.
  • RBI Recommendations
  • Ageing States β†’ Rationalize subsidies, strengthen social security.
  • Youthful States β†’ Invest in human capital, education, and skill development.
  • Federal Concerns
  • Southern States face a double disadvantage:
    • Reduced central tax devolution due to population-based formula.
    • Possible reduction in parliamentary representation after delimitation.
  • Emerging Structural Risks
  • Automation, AI-driven manufacturing, may reduce scope for labor-intensive growth.
  • Risk of β€œageing before becoming wealthy” in less developed states.
  • Gendered Dimension of Ageing
  • Women live longer but often lack:
    • Formal employment history
    • Pension coverage
    • Financial assets
  • Collapse of Informal Safety Nets
  • Migration and nuclear families weakening traditional elderly support systems.

Relevant Prelims Points:

  • Demographic Transition Theory:
    • Stage-wise shift from high birth/death rates to low birth/death rates.
  • Replacement Fertility Rate:
    • Around 2.1 births per woman to maintain stable population.
  • Ageing State:
    • When elderly (60+) exceed significant share (~20%+).
  • Finance Commission Formula:
    • Population (1971/2011), area, income distance, forest cover, etc.
  • Delimitation:
    • Redrawing of parliamentary constituencies based on census.
  • Social Pension Schemes:
    • Indira Gandhi National Old Age Pension Scheme (IGNOAPS).

Relevant Mains Points:

GS Paper 1 – Indian Society

  • Regional demographic divergence affecting social cohesion and migration trends.
  • Feminization of ageing β†’ Need gender-sensitive pension and care policies.

GS Paper 2 – Polity & Governance

  • Population-based devolution vs performance-based equity debate.
  • Delimitation may alter political power balance between North and South.
  • Need for intergovernmental fiscal coordination.

GS Paper 3 – Economy

  • Demographic dividend window closing unevenly.
  • Youthful States must:
    • Improve employability
    • Boost skill development
    • Create jobs in green energy, care economy, services sector.
  • Ageing States require:
    • Expanded public geriatric care infrastructure.
    • Broader social pension coverage.
    • Long-term fiscal planning to prevent pension shocks.

Policy Imperatives

  • New industrial policy aligned with automation realities.
  • Investment in healthcare and pension systems in youthful States before ageing accelerates.

Way Forward:

  • Reform Finance Commission criteria balancing equity and efficiency.
  • Expand universal and contributory pension systems.
  • Promote labour mobility with social security portability.
  • Strengthen healthcare infrastructure for ageing population.
  • Invest in skilling aligned with Industry 4.0.

UPSC Relevance:

β€’ Demographic Dividend vs Ageing
β€’ Fiscal Federalism & Delimitation Debate
β€’ Social Security & Welfare Reforms
β€’ Gender Dimensions of Development

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