This document provides an overview of India's National Population Policy from 2000. It discusses the need for a population policy in India given its large population size. It outlines the objectives of the 2000 policy, which include reducing the total fertility rate to replacement level by 2010 and achieving population stabilization by 2045. The policy aims to address issues like access to healthcare, education, and contraception to influence demographic variables and slow population growth. It lists specific goals for 2010 related to reducing infant/maternal mortality, increasing institutional deliveries, and promoting family planning programs.
2. Need for this presentation
India with a population of more than one billion scattered in 29
states and 7 union territories provide a unique ground for
studying population programs management.
There is a paradigm shift in population management from
exclusive contraceptive delivery to concurrent dealing of all
issues in the framework of reproductive health.
The steps initiated under the influence of new philosophy at
country and state level may give certain clues to many other
countries, struggling for betterment of their population
programs.
3.
4.
5.
6. Content
Terminologies
Introduction
Population Policy
Need of national population policy
Five-Year Plans by the Government of India for population control
Objectives of National population policy
Goals of National population policy
Strategic themes of National population policy
Organizational Structure
Motivational & Promotional measures
Progress of milestones of national population policy
7. Terminology
Population rate/ Birth rate- the total number of live births per
1,000 in a population in a year or period.
Crude birth rate - the number of live births per year per 1,000
mid-year population
Mortality rate/Death rate- is a measure of the number
of deaths (in general, or due to a specific cause) in a
particular population, scaled to the size of that population, per
unit of time.
Mortality rate is typically expressed in units of deaths per 1,000
individuals per year
8. ontd…
s
C
s
Crude death rate – the total number of deaths per year
1,000 people.
Perinatal mortality rate – the sum of neonatal deaths a
fetal deaths (stillbirths) per 1,000 births.
Maternal mortality ratio – the number of maternal dea
per 100,000 live births in same time period.
Infant mortality rate – the number of deaths of childre
than 1 year old per 1,000 live births.
Child mortality rate- the number of deaths of children l
than 5 years old per 1,000 live births
Death Rate
pe
r
nd
ths
n le
ess
9.
10. Contd…
Sex-ratio- the number of females per 1000 of males
Total fertility Rate- total number of children born or likely to
be born to a woman in her life time if she were subject to the
prevailing rate of age-specific fertility in the population.
Net reproduction rate (NRR), which measures the number
of daughters a woman would have in her lifetime if she were
subject to prevailing age-specific fertility and mortality rates in
the given year.
11.
12.
13.
14. Demographics of India
Pop
Age
Dep
Me
Pop
ulation 1,281,935,911 (July 2017 est.)
structure 0-14 years: 27.34% (male 186,087,665/female 164,398,204)
15-24 years: 17.9% (male 121,879,786/female 107,583,437)
25-54 years: 41.08% (male 271,744,709/female 254,834,569)
55-64 years: 7.45% (male 47,846,122/female 47,632,532)
65 years and over: 6.24% (male 37,837,801/female
42,091,086) (2017 est.)
endency ratios total dependency ratio: 52.2
youth dependency ratio: 43.6
elderly dependency ratio: 8.6
potential support ratio: 11.7 (2015 est.)
dian age total: 27.9 years
male: 27.2 years
female: 28.6 years (2017 est.)
ulation growth rate 1.17% (2017 est.)
15. Contd…
Birth rate 19 births/1,000 population (2017 est.)
Death rate 7.3 deaths/1,000 population (2017 est.)
16. Contd…
Urbanization urban population: 33.5% of total population (2017)
rate of urbanization: 2.28% annual rate of change (2015-20
est.)
Major cities - population NEW DELHI (capital) 25.703 million; Mumbai 21.043 million;
Kolkata 11.766 million; Bangalore 10.087 million; Chennai 9.62
million; Hyderabad 8.944 million (2015)
Sex ratio at birth: 1.12 male(s)/female
0-14 years: 1.13 male(s)/female
15-24 years: 1.13 male(s)/female
25-54 years: 1.06 male(s)/female
55-64 years: 1.01 male(s)/female
65 years and over: 0.9 male(s)/female
total population: 1.08 male(s)/female (2016 est.)
17. Contd…
Infant mortality rate total: 39.1 deaths/1,000 live births
male: 38 deaths/1,000 live births
female: 40.4 deaths/1,000 live births
(2017 est.)
Life expectancy at birth total population: 68.8 years
male: 67.6 years
female: 70.1 years (2017 est.)
Total fertility rate 2.43 children born/woman (2017 est.)
Contraceptive prevalence rate 53.5% (2015/16)
18. Contd….
Education expenditures 3.8% of GDP (2013)
Maternal mortality rate 174 deaths/100,000 live births (2015
est.)
Children under the age of 5 years
underweight
35.7% (2015)
Health expenditures 4.7% of GDP (2014)
19. Measures formulated by a range of social institutions including
Government which may influence the size, distribution or
composition of human population (Driver & Demeny,1972).
A deliberate effort by a national government to influence the
demographic variables like fertility, mortality and migration
(Organski & Organski,1961)
A set of Coordinated laws aimed at reachingsome
demographicgoal (Biurgeois & Pichat,1974)
Population Policy
20. Need for population policy in India
On 11th May, 2000, India had 1.35 billion (>100 crores) people,
i.e., 16 % of the world’s population on 2.4 percent of the globe’s
land area.
If current trends continue, India may overtake China by 2045, to
become the most populous country in the world.
Global population : ↑3 folds during this century (from 2 to 6
billion)
Population of India : ↑nearly 5 times (from 238 million to 1
billion), during the same period.
Stabilizing population is an essential requirement for promoting
sustainable development with more equitable distribution.
26. Causes of high population growth
A large size of population in the reproductive age group(58%).
Higher fertility due to unmet needs of contraception (20%).
High desire for fertility due to high infant mortality rate (20%) .
Approximately 50 percent of the girls marry below the age of
18 years, resulting in a typical reproductive pattern of “too
early, too frequent, too many.”
Preference for male child.
More children are preferred by poor parents as more workforce.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32. Population Policies of India
Formulated to address the unmet needs for
contraception, health care infrastructure, and health
personnel, and to provide integrated service delivery
for basic reproductive and child health care.
The main objective is to achieve a stable population at
a level consistent with the requirements of sustainable
economic growth, social development, and
environmental protection.
33. Before Independence
Radha Kamal Mukherjee Committee, 1940
In 1940, the Indian National Congress had appointed a committee
on population under the leadership of renowned social scientist
Radha Kamal Mukherjee to come up with suggestions to arrest
increasing population of the country. As a matter of fact, India’s
population started growing rapidly after 1921.
The committee after deliberations suggested that population can
controlled by placing emphasis on self control; creating awareness
about the cheap and safe methods of birth control; opening
birth control clinics; increasing the age of marriage;
discouraging polygamy etc.
34. Contd…
Bhore Committee, 1943
Government of India in 1943 appointed a Health
Survey and Development committee under the
chairmanship of Sir Joseph Bhore. This committee had
suggested ‘deliberate limitation of family’
approach as a way for controlling population, which
cannot be achieved through self control ‘to any
material extent’.
35. After Independence
In 1951, India became the first among the developing
countries to come up with a state sponsored family planning
programme. The Planning Commission which was set up in
1950 was given the task to decide upon the contours of the
family planning programme.
In 1952, a population policy committee was constituted. This
committee had recommended setting up of a Family Planning
Research and Programmes Committee. But the policies framed
in 1951-52 were ad-hoc in nature and was primarily based on
self-control. So it was not successful.
36. Contd…
In 1956, a Central Family Planning Board was
established. This board focussed much on sterilization.
But in 1960s a concrete policy on population control
was not adopted and the government was vacillating
as to what would be the best approach for controlling
the population of the country.
37. Five year plans
First Five Year Plan: India was the first country in the
world to begin a population control programme in 1952. It
emphasized the use of natural devices for family planning.
Second Five Year Plan: Work was done in the direction of
education and research and the clinical approach was
encouraged.
Third Five Year Plan: In 1965, the sterilization technique
for both men and women was adopted under this plan. The
technique of copper- T was also adopted. An independent
department called the Family Planning Department was set
up.
38. Contd…
Fourth Five-Year Plan: All kinds of birth control methods
(conventional and modern) were encouraged.
Fifth Five Year Plan: NPP was announced on 16 April, 1976.
In this policy, the minimum age for marriage determined by
the Sharda Act, 1929 was increased. It increased the age for
boys from 18 to 21 years and for girls from 14 to 18 years.
The number of MPs and MLAs was fixed till the year 2001 on
the basis of the census 1971.
Under this Plan, forced sterilization was permitted which was
later on given up.
In 1977, the Janata Party government changed the name of
Family Planning Department to Family Welfare Department
39. Contd….
In the Sixth, Seventh and Eighth Plans, efforts were
done to control population by determining long-term
demographic aims.
Ninth Five-Year Plan: In 1993, the government had
established an expert group under the chairmanship of M.S.
Swaminathan for formulating national population policy.
The Central Government formulated the 'new national
population policy' in February 2000
Tenth Five-Year Plan: Emphasises on reduction of Infant
and Child mortality rates.
40. Contd…
Eleventh Five Year Plan:- presents a comprehensive
strategy for strengthening the education sector
Twelfth Five-Year Plan:- Government of India has
been decided to achieve a growth rate of 8.2%
41. National Population Policy 1976 &
1977
In 1976, the government of India came up with its first National Population
policy. The policy came up with a number of measures to arrest the
population growth.
Some of the measures are:
Increasing the minimum legal age of marriage for girls and boys to 18 and
21 respectively.
Monetary incentives for birth control.
Improving the literacy levels of females both through the formal and non-
formal channels.
Population was made as a factor for sharing central resources with that of
the states. Linking 8% of the central assistance to the State Plans by
weighing the performance of the states in the family welfare programmes.
42. Contd….
Popularise family welfare programmes by using all forms of media.
Inculcating population education into the formal education system.
NPP-1976 was completely different from the earlier policies.
1976 policy noted that – To wait for education and economic
development to bring out a drop in fertility is not a practical solution.
The very increase in population makes economic development slow and
more difficult to achieve.
During the Emergency period (1975-77), coercion and pressure were
used in implementing the family planning programme.
43. Contd…
The Central assistance of 8 per cent was linked with
the family planning performance.
For the first time the Union government allowed some
states to initiate legislation for compulsory sterilisation.
In 1977, the new government ruled out the use of
force and coercion, and the family planning
programme was renamed as the ‘family welfare
programme’.
44. Demographic achievements of India
before NPP-2000
Reduced Crude Birth Rate from 40.8 (1951) to 26.4(1998,SRS)
Halved the Infant Mortality Rate from 146 per 1000 live births(1951)
to 72 per 1000 live births (1998, SRS);
Quadrupled the Couple Protection Rate from 10.4 percent (1971) to44
percent (1999);
Reduced Crude Death Rate from 25 (1951) to 9.0 (1998,SRS);
Added 25 years to life-expectancy from 37 years to 62years;
Achieved nearly universal awareness of the need for and methodsof
family planning, and ;
Reduced Total Fertility Rate from 6.0 (1951) to 3.3 (1997, SRS)
45. National Population Policy-2000
In February 2000, the government of India came up
with the second National Policy on Population.
For the first time since independence, this document
comprehensively addressed the problem of population
growth in integration with issues such as child survival,
maternal health, women empowerment and
contraception.
46. Objectives of NPP-2000
Temporary objective: The easy supply of birth control
devices was included in it. Besides, the development of
health protection framework and recruitment of health
workers were also made a part of it.
Middle-term objective: the total fertility rate (TFR) had to
bring down to the replacement level of 2.1 by 2010.
Long-term objective: Under it, the Objective of
population stabilization by 2045 is to be achieved.
47. NPP has listed the following
goals for 2010:
Address the unmet needs for basic reproductive and child health
services, supplies, and infrastructure;
Make school education up to age 14 free and compulsory, and reduce
dropouts at the primary and secondary school levels to below 20 per
cent for both boys and girls;
Reduce the infant mortality rate to below 30 per 1,000 live births;
Reduce the maternal mortality ratio to below 100 per 100,000 live
births;
Achieve universal immunization of children against all vaccine
preventable diseases;
48. Contd….
Promote delayed marriage for girls, not earlier than age 18 and
preferably after 20 years of age;
Achieve 80 per cent institutional deliveries and 100 per cent deliveries
by trained persons;
Achieve universal access to information/counseling, and services for
fertility regulation and contraception with a wide basket of choices;
Achieve 100 per cent registration of births, deaths, marriages, and
pregnancy;
Contain the spread of the Acquired Immuno-deficiency Syndrome
(AIDS) and promote greater integration between the management of
reproductive tract infections (RTIs) and sexually transmitted infections
(STIs) and the National AIDS Control Organization;
49. Contd….
Prevent and control communicable diseases;
Integrate Indian Systems of Medicine (ISM) in the provision
of reproductive and child health services, and in reaching
out to households; and
Promote vigorously the small family norm to achieve
replacement levels of TFR.
Bring about convergence in implementation of related
social-sector programmes so that family welfare becomes a
people-centered programme.
50. Strategic Themes
In order to achieve the national socio-demographic goals
for 2010, the following 12 strategies themes have also
been identified-
Decentralized planning and program implementation
Convergence of service delivery at village levels
Empowering women for improved health and nutrition
Child survival and child health
51. Contd….
Meeting the unmet needs for family welfare services
Under served population groups like urban slums,
tribal communities, hill area population, displaced and
migrant populations and adolescents with increased
participation of men in planned parenthood.
Diverse health care providers
Collaboration with and commitments from non
government organizations and the private sector.
52. Contd…
Mainstreaming Indian Systems of Medicine and
Homeopathy
Contraceptive Technology and research on
reproductive and child health
Providing for the older population
Information, Education and Communication
53. Organizational Structure
1.The appointment of a National Commission on
Population to be presided over by the Prime Minister. The
chief ministers of all States and related ministers will be
its members.
2.There will be a State Commission on Population in
every State headed by its chief minister.
3.The new policy will be implemented by the panchayats
and municipalities at the grassroot levels.
54. P
S
mplary
in IM
nt)
r 2.
e cash
ars of
ro
trate
Panchay r exe
perfor tion
& BR.
Balilka S opme
provide R1 o
Maternit rovid
incentiv 9 ye
age, for
A Family
hospita
Couples
involve
motional & Motivational
gies
ats and Zila Parishads will be rewarded and honoured fo
mance in universalising small family norm, achieving reduc
amridhi Yojana (Department of Women and Child Devel
cash incentive of Rs.500 at the birth of the girl child of B
y Benefit Scheme (Department of Rural Development) p
e of Rs. 500 to mothers who have their first child after 1
BR 1 and 2 child only.
Welfare linked Health Insurance plan – Rs. 5000 (for
lisation).
below the poverty line will be rewarded for their active
ment in Family Planning activities.
55. Contd…
A personal accident insurance cover – sterilized spouse.
Creches and child care centers were opened in rural and urban slums.
A wider and affordable choice of contraceptives- at diverse delivery point
Strengthen the facilities of safe abortion.
Products and services – affordable through innovative social marketing
schemes.
Soft loans to local entrepreneurship & encouraged to run ambulance
services.
Ensures mobility of the ANMs.
Increased vocational training schemes for girls, leading to self-
employment will be encouraged.
56. Contd….
Strict enforcement of the Child Marriage Restraint Act,
1976.
Strict enforcement of the Pre-Natal Diagnostic Act, 1994.
Reward for BPL couples for:
For marriage after the legal age of marriage
Register the marriage
First child after the mother reaches the age of 21
Accept the small family norm
Adopt a terminal method after the birth of 2nd child.
57. Legislation
The 42nd Constitutional amendment: Lok Sabha and
Rajya Sabha seats are frozen on the basis of 1971
census were valid up to 2001 that is further extended
till 2026.
79th Amendment Bill of 1992 disqualify a person for
being a member of either house of legislature of a state,
if he/she has more than 2 children.
58. Public support
Strong support of political, community, business,
professional, religious leaders, media, film stars, sports
personalities, and opinion makers has been sought for
small family norms.
59. Funding
National Population Policy expressed that the
programme, projects and schemes promised on the
goals and objectives of the policy 2000 will be
adequately funded.
60. Implementation
Central Government has set up a National Commission
on Population (NCP) on 11 May 2000.
It is presided over by the Prime Minister, with the Chief
Ministers of all States and UTs and the Central Minister,
in-charge of concerned Central Ministries and
Departments, reputed demographers, public health
professionals and non-government organisations as
members.
61. Functions of Commission
(i)To review, monitor and give direction for the implementation of
the NPP with a view to achieve the goals set by it;
(ii)To promote synergy between health, educational,
environmental and developmental programmes so as to hasten
population stabilisation;
(iii)To promote inter-sectoral coordination in planning and
implementation of the programmes through different agencies at
the Centre and in the States; and
(iv)To develop a vigorous people’s programme to support this
national effort.
62. 2 steps
The formation of an Empowered Action Group within the
Ministry of Health and Family Welfare to focus on those
States which are deficient in national socio-demographic
indices.
Establishment of National Population Stabilisation Fund
(NPSF) with a seed money of Rs. 100 crore to provide a
window for channelising funds from national voluntary
sources.
63. Progress in the Milestones of
NPP
Bhore Committee Report in 1946.
Implementation of Family Planning Programme in 1952.
National Population Policy Statement in 1976.
Policy Statement of Family welfare Programme in 1977.
National Health Policy was adopted in 1983,
Committee on Population under the Chairmanship of Shri
Karunakaran was appointed by the National Development
Council in 1991.
64.
65. Conclusion
Need for population stabilization,
Spread of literacy and education, increasing availability of
affordable reproductive and child health services, convergence
of service delivery at village levels, participation of women in
the paid work force, together with a steady, equitable
improvement in family incomes, will facilitate early
achievement of the socio- demographic goals.
Success will be achieved if the Action Plan contained in the
NPP 2000 is pursued as a national movement.
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