Sustaining India’s low-fertility future
Since most workers spend their lives in informal or semi-formal work, old-age income security remains largely outside formal employment contracts
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Context
The recent (SRS) data reveals India's Total Fertility Rate (TFR) has dropped to 1.9, falling below the replacement level of 2.1. This demographic shift, characterized by a sharp geographic divide where southern states are aging rapidly while northern states remain youthful, presents critical challenges for India's economic, social, and healthcare infrastructure as the nation transitions to an aging society before achieving full industrialization and prosperity.
UPSC Perspectives
Social
This article highlights the core concept of Demographic Transition, moving from a period of high birth and death rates to low birth and death rates. While this shift often yields a Demographic Dividend (a period where the working-age population outweighs dependents), India risks squandering this due to premature aging in specific regions. The stark regional disparity—states like Bihar at a TFR of 2.9 versus Delhi at 1.2—creates asymmetrical challenges. Southern and western states will soon face an aging population, increasing dependency ratios and straining healthcare and pension systems. Conversely, younger northern states possess a large potential workforce but lack sufficient economic opportunities. This necessitates a robust national strategy prioritizing inter-state labor mobility, ensuring migrant workers receive portable social security benefits, and expanding educational and skill-development infrastructure in the younger states to harness their demographic potential effectively before they too transition to aging societies.
Economic
India faces the unique challenge of 'growing old before growing rich,' lacking the strong institutional and fiscal base of developed nations that managed similar demographic shifts. With a per-capita income around $2,800 and a narrow tax base, state governments are fiscally constrained in providing adequate social security. The structural nature of the Indian economy, dominated by informal employment, exacerbates the vulnerability of an aging population. Existing pension schemes like the , based on regular contributions, are largely unsuitable for informal workers with volatile incomes. The provides minimal, non-inflation-indexed support, failing to ensure income security. UPSC questions frequently focus on the challenges of informal labor and the necessity of comprehensive social safety nets. This demographic shift demands a strategic policy response, including the implementation of an inflation-indexed minimum pension floor—a form of public risk-pooling—and expanding the formalization of the workforce to build a sustainable welfare architecture.
Governance
The demographic shift towards an aging population necessitates a fundamental restructuring of India's welfare state, transitioning away from reliance on traditional, informal support structures. Historically, the joint family system and unpaid female care work have absorbed the costs of elder care. However, urbanization, migration, and changing family structures are weakening these informal safety nets. A crucial federal challenge arises concerning inter-state migration. Aging states will increasingly rely on labor from younger states, making portable welfare entitlements essential. A national labor market cannot function effectively if benefits are tied to domicile. Furthermore, governance structures must proactively plan for changing healthcare demands, shifting focus from maternal and child health to geriatric care and the management of non-communicable diseases. The article argues for a 'mission-mode' approach, similar to the successful public health campaigns for institutional deliveries, to embed geriatric care into district health planning and primary care, demonstrating how robust governance can mitigate demographic challenges.