The Moot Point: Demographic Dividend
The Moot Point: Demographic Dividend
The Moot Point: Demographic Dividend
The Cheatsheet
Demographic Dividend
Industrial countries have largely completed what is
called the "demographic transition"the transition from a
largely rural agrarian society with high fertility and
mortality rates to a predominantly urban industrial society
with low fertility and mortality rates.
At an early stage of this transition, fertility rates fall,
leading to fewer young mouths to feed. During this period,
the labor force temporarily grows more rapidly than the
population dependent on it, freeing up resources for
investment in economic development and family welfare.
Other things being equal, per capita income grows rapidly.
This is referred to as Demographic Dividend.
This dividend period is quite long, lasting five decades
or more, but eventually lower fertility reduces the growth
rate of the labor force, while continuing improvements in
old-age mortality speed growth of the elderly population.
Now, other things being equal, per capita income grows
more slowly and the first dividend turns negative.
Demographic Dividend in India
Job Creation
India needs to create 1 million jobs every month to be
able to provide employment for the population entering
working age group and for those moving out of agriculture.
Further, the job creation has to be specific to the
needs to Indian population. As young people and
agriculturalists enter the workforce, they would need low
and medium skilled jobs. Indias relatively undeveloped
manufacturing sector has to create the jobs for this group.
The employment intensity in service sector is anyways
less as compared to manufacturing sector. The
manufacturing sector has to thus be the driver of job
creation.
Quality of Jobs
About 92% of India's are informal workers. Informal
employment is insecure, poorly paid and has no social
security. There's also a difference between wages of
regular workers and informal or contract workers.
Education
India's literacy rate, according to Census 2011, is
around 74 per cent; the level is well below the world
average literacy rate of 84%. Further, the 2011 census
indicated a 20012011 decadal literacy growth of 9.2%,
which is slower than the growth seen during the previous
decade. There is a wide gender disparity in the literacy rate
in India: effective literacy rates (age 7 and above) in 2011
were 82.14% for men and 65.46% for women.
There are huge concerns with respect to quality of
primary education in schools. ASER 2014 finds that in Std
III, only a fourth of all children can read a Std II text
fluently; 25.3% of Std III children could do a two digit
subtraction.
The situation in higher education is even more
problematic for India's participation in the global
knowledge economy. Firstly, the gross enrolments rate is
below 20%.
The overall quality of the higher education system is
well below global standards. High-tech employers complain
that a large majority of engineering and other graduates
are unemployable. The large high-tech firms such as
IBM, Infosys and Wipro have set up their own in-house
academies to prepare employees for productive work.
The quality of vocational training is weak too. In last
decade, the number of private ITIs increased from 2,000 to
about 10,000 in 2013, but there are concerns about the
quality of its trainees.
Further, Only 16 per cent of Indian firms carry out any in-firm
training themselves, as against 80 per cent of Chinese firms. Most
of the 16 per cent are large firms; most of firms are micro, small and
medium size and do little training that is informal or no training.
Human Development
India ranks 135 on the global Human Development
Index rankings. The ranking is based on a collective index
of life expectancy, education and income standards of
population. India ranks lowest among the BRICS countries
and even lower than few of its neighbors like Sri Lanka.
Social Development
Dramatic social changes occur during the phase of
demographic dividend, such as increasing divorce rates,
postponement of marriage, and single-person households.
GPkaFunda
How much of the demographic dividend we are able to
realize ultimately depends on Indias performance on key
indicators like the number of quality jobs created, the
education levels, the social security net available. Thus, the
task is already cut out for India.
To achieve the outcomes on the ground however, we have
to go beyond the key indicators and look to work on certain
fundamental aspects. The economic fundamentals, the
quality of public service delivery, the governance of the
country are those fundamental aspects, which will
ultimately give us results on those key indicators.
Demographic Dividend
Demographic dividend refers to a period usually 20 to
30 years when fertility rates fall due to significant
reductions in child and infant mortality rates. This occurs
as a result of demographic transition. Falling birth rate
changes age distribution of the country so that fewer
investments are required to meet the needs of the younger
sector of the population. This fall is often accompanied by
an extension in average life expectancy that increases the
portion of the population that is in the working age-group.
This cuts spending on dependents and spurs economic
growth. Some countries that take advantage of the
released resources and use them effectively will receive
greater benefits than others. Those that dont capitalize on
the opportunity may in fact be in a weaker position and
faced with the problem of a youth bulge - a demographic
trend where the proportion of persons aged 15-24 in the
population increases significantly compared to other age
groups - which paired with limited employment
opportunities may contribute to increased poverty,
hunger, malnutrition, poorer health, lower educational
outcomes, child labour, unsupervised and abandoned
children, and rising rates of domestic violence.
A Second Demographic Dividend
Unless the population with a large proportion of older
working age people who face longer periods of retirement
are assured that their needs are taken care by their
families or government, accumulate assets to support
themselves. These assets contribute to increase national
income resulting in second dividend.
While the first dividend produces a transitory bonus, the
second dividend converts into greater assets and
sustainable development.
Four mechanisms for delivering benefits from
demographic dividend
1) Increased labour supply
However magnitude of this benefit is dependent
on the ability of the economy to absorb and
productively employ the extra workers
2) Increase in savings
number of dependents decreases
leads to higher productivity
3) Human capital
decrease in fertility rates result in healthier
women and fewer economic pressure at home
this allows parents to invest more resources per
child, leading to better health and educational
outcomes
4) Increasing domestic demand brought about by the
increasing GDP per capita and the decreasing dependency
ratio
In context with India
It is an advantage for India now because the country is
entering the demographic dividend phase while China is
exiting it, asserts Bikram Sen, a former Indian census
board director.
India is hoping by the time this dividend phase
ends around 2045, it would have achieved a stable and
balanced population.
A 2011 International Monetary Fund Working
Paper found that substantial portion of the growth
experienced by India since the 1980s is attributable to
the countrys age structure and changing
demographics.
Over the next two decades the continuing
demographic dividend in India could add about two
percentage points per annum to Indias per capita GDP
growth.
Challenges faced by India
There are many challeges faced by India which impacts
the demographic dividend.
1) Low sex ratio
In a country with a strong culture of son-
preference, mushrooming of neo-natal clinics has
made it easy for parents to detect the sex of their
unborn child and abort if the child is a girl.
2) Early marriage
contributes to high maternal mortality rates
Taking advantage of the demographic dividend
requires a healthy nation and a balanced population.
The low sex ratio and high maternal mortality pose a
challenge to the role of the youth in development of the
country in the years to come.
3) Infant mortality rates
currently estimated to be around 60/1000 live
births per year
ground reality of vast majority of those who
survive is grim
4) Child labours, sexually abused children and HIV
India has the worlds largest number of sexually
abused children - 53 percent -according to a recent
study released by the government.
Due to the dividend between young and old, many argue that
there is a great potential for economic gains, which has been
termed the "demographic gift".[2] In order for economic growth
to occur the younger population must have access to quality
education, adequate nutrition and health including access to
sexual and reproductive health.
Contents
[hide]
2Statistical Overview
3Examples
o 3.1East Asia
o 3.2Ireland
o 3.3Africa
o 3.4India
o 3.5Middle East
6See also
7References
Recent Education Dividend Theory[edit source]
Africa[edit source]
India[edit source]