India heading for 2 billion population
People and Planet
Posted: 24 Sep 2007
A new
assessment of India's population prospects has concluded that
its numbers will almost certainly be near 1.8 billion by 2050
and could top 2 billion by the end of this century unless
fertility rates decline more rapidly in India's largest and
poorest states.
Commenting on the outcome of a new projection series, the
Washington-based Population Reference Bureau said the
possibility of India becoming the only country ever to have 2
billion people depended on the course of events in each of India
35 states and Union territories.
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Photo © Kai Friese/People & the Planet.
India passed the 1 billion population benchmark in 2000, and
stands at 1.1 billion in 2007. The government has long been
concerned about population growth outpacing economic growth, and
India was the first country to adopt a policy to slow population
growth. Since the policy was first stated in 1952, the country's
total fertility rate (TFR)- which measures the number of
children a women will have in a lifetime - has declined from
about six children per woman to about three, but fertility
levels vary greatly throughout India's vast territory.
The TFR decline has been much greater in its southern states,
which have long had much higher rates of literacy and education
than northern states. The southern states of Kerala and Tamil
Nadu now have TFRs below two children per woman, lower than the
US rate. To reduce the national TFR, fertility decline will have
to occur in other parts of India, a fact well known to the
government and to family planning experts.
The large states of the north, the "Hindi Belt," are key to the
future size of India's population. About 40 per cent of Indians
live in this region. Two northern states, Bihar and Uttar
Pradesh, with about 93 million and 188 million people,
respectively, are already larger than most of the world's
countries. Both states currently have a TFR of about 4.3
children per woman.
Looking ahead
Bihar and Uttar Pradesh will grow much more quickly than Kerala
and the low-fertility states because of their higher fertility.
Their statistical "weight" in India's total population will
increase. To account for the growing share of the high-fertility
states, PRB projected each state individually and derived the
national total from those results.
The state and Union territory populations were projected under
two scenarios. One assumed that states with a current TFR above
"two children" would decrease to 2.1 and then remain constant.
The other assumed the TFR decline would continue until it
reached 1.85 children per woman.
Scenario A, with a
final TFR of 2.1 for higher fertility states, results in a
population that would reach two billion in 2066-2071. By 2101,
four states, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh
would account for almost half of the country¹s population.
Scenario B, with a final TFR of 1.85, does not reach two
billion. Under Scenario B, growth peaks in 2081-2086, after
which it begins a period of population decrease.
This state-based projection series differs from projections that
use national fertility rates and age structures, and PRB
demographer believes it provides a more realistic scenario. The
population projected for Uttar Pradesh ranges from 353 million
to 364 million by 2051, and between 414 million and 480 million
by 2101. The projected 2101 total for India ranges from 1.9
billion to 2.2 billion, depending on the assumptions for each
state.
Will India's population reach 2 billion? It is a real
possibility over the long term if fertility does not decline at
a faster rate in Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, and the other poor states
that make up a growing share of the nation's population.
The Future Population of
India, A Long-range
View was prepared by PRB's senior demographer, Carl Haub, and
PRB's India consultant, Mr. O.P. Sharma, in collaboration with
the Population Foundation of India in New Delhi. The report
includes projected population, total fertility rates, life
expectancies, and broad age groups for India and each state
between 2001 and 2101, under two scenarios.

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