Future population and human capital in heterogeneous India

Within the next decade India is expected to surpass China as the world’s most populous country due to still higher fertility and a younger population. Around 2025 each country will be home to around 1.5 billion people. India is demographically very heterogeneous with some rural illiterate population...

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Published inProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS Vol. 115; no. 33; pp. 8328 - 8333
Main Authors Samir, KC, Wurzer, Marcus, Speringer, Markus, Lutz, Wolfgang
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States National Academy of Sciences 14.08.2018
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Summary:Within the next decade India is expected to surpass China as the world’s most populous country due to still higher fertility and a younger population. Around 2025 each country will be home to around 1.5 billion people. India is demographically very heterogeneous with some rural illiterate populations still having more than four children on average while educated urban women have fewer than 1.5 children and with great differences between states. We show that the population outlook greatly depends on the degree to which this heterogeneity is explicitly incorporated into the population projection model used. The conventional projection model, considering only the age and sex structures of the population at the national level, results in a lower projected population than the same model applied at the level of states because over time the high-fertility states gain more weight, thus applying the higher rates to more people. The opposite outcome results from an explicit consideration of education differentials because over time the proportion of more educated women with lower fertility increases, thus leading to lower predicted growth than in the conventional model. To comprehensively address this issue, we develop a five-dimensional model of India’s population by state, rural/urban place of residence, age, sex, and level of education and show the impacts of different degrees of aggregation. We also provide human capital scenarios for all Indian states that suggest that India will rapidly catch upwith other more developed countries in Asia if the recent pace of education expansion is maintained.
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Contributed by Wolfgang Lutz, June 27, 2018 (sent for review January 31, 2018; reviewed by Josh Goldstein and K. S. James)
Reviewers: J.G., University of California, Berkeley; and K.S.J., Institute for Social and Economic Change.
Author contributions: S.K. and W.L. designed research; S.K., M.W., and M.S. performed research; S.K., M.W., and M.S. analyzed data; and S.K. and W.L. wrote the paper.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1722359115