India's population at crossroads, not a crisis: Population Foundation of India
World Population Day is being observed under the global theme: 'empowering young people to create the families they want in a fair and hopeful world'.
PTI
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Photo: PTI
New
Delhi, 11 July
An NGO, Population Foundation of India, has urged a shift away
from fear-driven debates on overpopulation or fertility decline, calling
instead for policies that centre on dignity, rights, and opportunities,
particularly for women, youth, and the elderly.
The
NGO, in a statement on World Population Day 2025 on Friday, asserted that
India's population challenges are not about numbers but about justice, equity,
and investment in human potential.
"India's
population story is not a crisis, it's a crossroads," Poonam Muttreja,
Executive Director of the Population Foundation of India, said during a
function marking the occasion.
World
Population Day is being observed under the global theme: 'empowering young
people to create the families they want in a fair and hopeful world'.
The
NGO asserted that India's population challenges are not about numbers but about
justice, equity, and investment in human potential.
"We
must stop oscillating between fears of 'overpopulation' and 'population collapse,'
and instead focus on what really matters, gender equality, reproductive
autonomy, and inclusive public investment," she added.
The
foundation's statement focused on three key areas for policymakers.
The
first is realising the gender dividend; family planning must move beyond female
sterilisation to a range of contraceptives, with both men and women sharing
responsibility.
"We
need men to be part of the solution as active participants, not merely as
supporters. It's men's onus to ensure women's safety at home as well as at the
workplace," Muttreja said.
"Family
planning has long been seen as a woman's responsibility, but reproductive
health is a shared responsibility," she added.
The
second is harnessing the demographic dividend, with over 250 million young
people. India has a unique opportunity to drive inclusive growth by investing
in education, skill development, reproductive health, and mental well-being,
especially for adolescent girls.
The
third is to prepare for the silver dividend, noting that by 2050, nearly one in
five Indians will be over 60, the foundation called for immediate investments
in elder care, pensions, healthcare, and age-friendly infrastructure and see
older adults as vital contributors and not as dependents.
India,
now the world's most populous country, reflects the full range of demographic
experiences, from high fertility and unmet reproductive needs in states like
Bihar and Uttar Pradesh to ageing populations and below-replacement fertility
in Kerala and Tamil Nadu, the statement added.
While
India's Total Fertility Rate (TFR) stands at 2.0, more than 24 million married
women still lack access to contraceptives and early marriages and unsafe
abortions further restrict reproductive choices.
The
foundation urged policymakers to abandon fear-based narratives and called for
strengthened care systems and a rights-based approach to the population.
"If
we centre people, especially women, youngsters, and the elderly in our
policies, population trends will not be a crisis, but a path to a more just and
resilient future," the statement concluded.
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