Devendra
Kothari
Professor,
Population Program Management
Over the last two decades,
which are coterminous with the era of economic reforms, Indian economic growth
has accelerated, making it the second-fastest growing economy in the world. But
it has had highly regressive impact since inter-state disparities, for
instance, has tended to widen even more than before. “Although the rising tide
of growth has lifted all boats, the faster-growing, richer states have steadily
pulled apart from the slower-growing, poorer states”, as argued by the Business Standard columnist, Chandra Mohan [1]. In other words, in the post-reform period the
gap between rich and poor states has increased on many socio-economic indicators[2]. Although this growing divergence has been
observed during earlier periods as well, factors responsible for it are not
fully understood or explained.
The population related variables are very crucial[3],
which are not given due importance in answering
the question: Why should some states grow faster than others? The slowly
growing states are invariably the Four Large North Indian (FLNI) States or so
called ‘BIMARU’ states of Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh,
which are having vey poor demographic indicators[4].
What is holding back their
growth story? These States are growing slowing not because
of poverty or low level of education but mainly due to their galloping population
growth fueled mainly by unwanted or unintended fertility. In last 60 years the
population of India has increased more than three times that is from 360
million in 1951 to 1210 million in 2011, and is set to be 1823 million by 2051,
as per the joint publication of Population Foundation of India and Population
Reference Bureau. Most of this population growth took place or will take place
in the Four Large North Indian States. It changes everything. It appears that two contrasting demographic
"nations" are emerging in India – one, comprising the FLNI States of
Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh accounting for around 37% of
the country's population and having a crude birth rate of 28 births/1000
population, and the other – the "Rest of India", with a crude birth rate of 18 in 2010, which
indicates that 63% of the country's population has already reached the level
required to initiate the process of population stabilization, as targeted by the National Population Policy 2000 (Table 1).
Table 1: Emerging demographic divide
Items
|
Four Large
North Indian States
|
Rest of
Country
|
Total
|
% of total population,
2011
|
37
|
63
|
100
|
% of projected
population, 2051
|
44
|
56
|
100
|
Births/1000
population, 2010
|
28
|
18
|
22
|
Infant deaths/1000
births, 2010
|
57
|
38
|
47
|
% of couple using
contraceptives, 2005-6
|
28
|
51
|
43
|
% of 4+ Order
Births, 2005-06
|
38
|
19
|
27
|
Note:
Calculations are based on SRS, 2010 GoI and NFHS-3, 2007, IIPS, Mumbai.
|
This divide is
more pronounced when we compare the FLNI States with Four Southern Indian (FSI)
States of Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala and Tamil Nadu. India’s
last census in 2011 revealed a sharp demographic divide between poorer FLNI States
and economically advanced FSI States, where there has been a sharp decrease in
the rate of population growth during the last two decades of economic reforms. In 1991, the
FSI States had 23 per cent of India’s population and by 2011, that figure has
declined to 21 per cent. In 2051, the combined population of these States is
projected to be only 16 per cent of the country’s total. On the other hand, the
population of the FLNI States increased from 34% in 1991 to 37% in 2011 and it
will be around 45% in 2051. While
all the FSI States have already reached below the replacement level fertility
of 2.1 children per woman required to initiate the process of population
stabilization, the FLNI States have a long way to go before they achieve this
level. On an average a woman in India produces 2.7 children during her
lifetime; however, there is a wide diversity of fertility levels among States.
It ranges from 1.7 in Andhra Pradesh to 4.0 in Bihar, as per the NFHS-3.
What are the implications of such
scenario? Armed with reams of demographic and other relevant data, Nicholas Eberstadt, a senior political
economist and demographer at the American Enterprise Institute - a Washington,
DC think-tank – argued that India
is bisected by a great north-south fertility divide, in much of the north,
fertility levels remain quite high, at four, five, or more children per woman;
in much of the south India, however, fertility levels are at, or already below,
the replacement level. He concluded: “In effect, this means that two very
different Indias are being born today -- a youthful, rapidly growing northern
India whose future population structure will be akin to that of a traditional
Third World society and a southern India whose population growth will be
slowing, where manpower growth will be coming to an end, and where pronounced
population aging will be taking place”.
Eberstadt firmly believes that this emerging demographic
peculiarity could have major ramifications as India attempts to continue its
high growth rate over the coming decades. It is because India’s engines of
economic growth are mainly its sub-replacement-fertility areas, which include
much of the south with some parts of the west and practically all its major
urban centers: Bangalore, Chennai, Hyderabad, Ahmadabad, and Mumbai. According
to Nicholas Eberstadt, however, “its demographics
mean that the country's future workers will increasingly come from the
high-fertility areas of the north. This reveals a fundamental mismatch: India's
continued economic growth requires workers who are relatively well educated,
but India's mostly rural high-fertility are producing a rising generation with
woefully low levels of schooling.” This
places major constraints on the prospects for sustaining rapid rates of economy.
Thus, according to him: "To oversimplify
immensely the two different Indias, in the north, the baby factories and in the
south, jobs and growth factories”, as shown in Table 2. This is a challenge for
India's development in the decades immediately ahead.
Table
2: FLNI States – “The baby factories”: trends in total
number of births
State
|
Population, 2011
( in Million)
|
Number of
births
(in million)
|
||
1991
|
2011
|
|||
Four Large North Indian States
|
||||
Bihar
|
103.8
|
1.9
|
2.9
|
|
Madhya Pradesh
|
72.6
|
1.7
|
2.0
|
|
Rajasthan
|
68.6
|
1.5
|
1.8
|
|
Uttar Pradesh
|
199.6
|
4.7
|
5.6
|
|
Sub total
|
444.6
|
9.8
|
12.3
|
|
Four Southern Indian States
|
||||
Andhra Pradesh
|
84.7
|
1.7
|
1.5
|
|
Karnataka
|
61.1
|
1.2
|
1.1
|
|
Kerala
|
33.4
|
0.5
|
0.5
|
|
Tamil Nadu
|
72.1
|
1.2
|
1.1
|
|
Sub total
|
251.3
|
4.6
|
4.1
|
|
India
|
1210.2
|
24.9
|
26.7
|
|
Calculated by the author by using SRS and Census
data.
|
Why blame Dr. Eberstadt
for stating the truth? Even our own policy makes think in that way. A leaked US diplomatic
cable has revealed that Home Minister P Chidambaram, in a discussion with
American Ambassador Timothy Roemer, had said that "India could achieve
11-12 per cent (GDP) growth if it were the South and West
only" and noted that "the rest of the country held it back". The
cable dated August 20, 2009, originating from the US Embassy in New Delhi and
released by whistleblower website WikiLeaks, stated that Chidambaram also
commented "in passing, on the vast disparity between his native South and
the rest of the country, with the South being the entrepreneurial and business
hub of the nation."
|
Table 3 Increasing
number of persons per Member of Parliament (MP)
State
|
Number of Members of Parliament in
Loksabha*
|
Number of persons per Member of
Parliament
|
||
1991
|
2011
|
2031
|
||
Four Large North India States
|
||||
Bihar
|
40
|
1.6
|
2.6
|
3.6
|
Madhya
Pradesh
|
29
|
1.7
|
2.5
|
3.3
|
Rajasthan
|
25
|
1.8
|
2.7
|
3.9
|
Uttar
Pradesh
|
80
|
1.6
|
2.5
|
3.6
|
Sub total
|
174
|
1.6
|
2.6
|
3.6
|
Four South Indian States
|
||||
Andhra
Pradesh
|
42
|
1.6
|
2.0
|
2.4
|
Karnataka
|
28
|
1.6
|
2.2
|
2.6
|
Kerala
|
20
|
1.5
|
1.7
|
1.9
|
Tamil
Nadu
|
39
|
1.4
|
1.8
|
1.9
|
Sub
total
|
129
|
1.5
|
1.9
|
2.2
|
India
|
552
|
1.5
|
2.2
|
2.8
|
*Lok Sabha is
composed of 552 representatives of the people chosen by direct election on
the basis of adult suffrage.
|
Demography, therefore, in the next 20 years
or so will pose serious challenges to economic growth, democracy and national
unity by its sheer size. Unless the Centre and FLNI states engineer a common
population stabilization program to lift these economies, the shadow of poverty
and illiteracy as well as poor governance issue will continue to haunt India
and thwart its tryst with destiny. This is a
challenge for India’s development in the decades immediately ahead.
Next four
posts discuss as how to resolve the issue of demography in each of the Four Large
North Indian States.
[2] See, “Seventh India Today State of
Status Report”, India Today, September 17, 2009. According to the Report, FLNI
States have been static for last five years and have been swapping places at
the bottom.
[3] For details, see Kothari, Devendra
and Sudha Tewari. 2009. Slowing Population Growth in India: Challenges,
Opportunities and the Way Forward, MIPD Policy Brief No. 2, Management
Institute of Population and Development, a unit of Parivar Seva Sanstha, New Delhi.
[4] ‘Bimaru’, Hindi
for sick, was first coined by noted demographer, Ashish Bose in mid 1980s as an
acronym for the States of Bihar,
Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh because of their poor reproductive
health indicators like high fertility, high maternal and infant mortality, low
contraceptive prevalence, low female literacy and a poor sex ratio amid poor socio
economic development. The term, however, is a derogatory
one; it's come to mean chronic backwardness and sickness. Such connotation can
only demoralize people in the places it refers to. Why not give the nametag a
timely burial? No doubt, these States are still behind.
[5] See: Devendra Kothari, “Likelihood if
two ‘Nations’ emerging: A dilemma for India”, IIHMR UPDATE, Volume 2(1), Indian
Institute of Health Management Research, Jaipur, 1999.