It
also said that policymakers need to prepare for an increasing number
of elderly people, estimating there will be 239.4 million Indians
over the age of 60 in 2041 against 104.2 million in 2011.
Budget
2019 :
The government on Thursday warned in a study that its population is
going to start to age and it needs to be prepared to merge schools
and raise the retirement age
While
India should be set to benefit from the so-called “demographic
dividend” over the next decade as its working population is set to
increase by about 9.7 million a year between 2021-31, that will
quickly fade as the nation’s fertility rate plunges below
replacement level.
The
conclusions in the study, “India’s Demography at 2040: Planning
Public Good Provision for the 21st Century,” will have major
implications for many companies, particularly those that have been
eyeing consumer demand from India’s young population.
It
said the number of children in the 5-14 age bracket will decline
significantly, leading to the need for school mergers and less focus
on building new ones.
Already
states such as Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Andhra Pradesh and
Madhya Pradesh have fewer than 50 students enrolled in more than 40
percent of their elementary schools, according to the study, which
was included in the government’s annual Economic Survey.
It
also said that policymakers need to prepare for an increasing number
of elderly people, estimating there will be 239.4 million Indians
over the age of 60 in 2041 against 104.2 million in 2011.
“This
will need investments in health care as well as a plan for increasing
the retirement age in a phased manner,” concluded the study, which
was authored by India’s Chief Economic Adviser Krishnamurthy
Subramanian and his team of economists.
The
current retirement age for most government workers in India is 60.
Meanwhile,
the number of Indians aged between 0-19 has already started to
decline and the proportion of the population in that age group is
projected to fall to 25 percent by 2041 from 41 per cent in 2011.
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