Total Fertility Rate remains constant at 2.0 in 2021: report

In News:

The Sample Registration System (SRS) Report 2021, released by the Registrar General of India (RGI), shows that India’s Total Fertility Rate (TFR) has remained constant at 2.0 — below the replacement level fertility (2.1) — indicating India has effectively achieved population stabilization.


Key Findings:

IndicatorFindings (SRS 2021)
Total Fertility Rate (TFR)2.0 (same as 2020)
Replacement Level2.1
Highest TFRBihar – 3.0
Lowest TFRDelhi & West Bengal – 1.4
Mean age at marriage (females)22.5 years (up from 19.3 years in 1990)
0–14 years age groupDeclined from 41.2% (1971) → 24.8% (2021)
Economically active population (15–59 yrs)Increased from 53.4% → 66.2%
Elderly (60+)Increased from 6% → 9%
States with highest elderly %Kerala (14.4%), Tamil Nadu (12.9%), Himachal Pradesh (12.3%)
States with lowest elderly %Bihar (6.9%), Assam (7.0%), Delhi (7.1%)
Survey Coverage8,842 sample units, ~84 lakh population

Analysis:

 1. Demographic Transition:

  • India has entered Stage 3 (Late Expanding) of the Demographic Transition Model, with low birth and declining death rates.
  • Many southern and western states have reached below-replacement fertility, while parts of northern and eastern India (like Bihar, UP) remain higher.

2. Implications for India:

Economic:

  • Growing working-age population (15–59 years) = Demographic Dividend, but only if supported by jobs, skill development, and gender inclusion.
  • Rising elderly population signals the need for pension reforms, healthcare infrastructure, and social security expansion.

 Social:

  • Increasing mean age of marriage for females indicates better education and empowerment.
  • However, regional disparity persists — Bihar’s high TFR points to lagging social development indicators.

Health & Policy:

  • India moving towards population stabilization, reducing pressure on resources.
  • But “ageing” challenges are emerging — similar to Japan and Europe, in the long run.

 3. Policy Context:

  • National Population Policy (2000) aimed to achieve replacement-level fertility by 2010 — now achieved nationally.
  • The Finance Minister (2024 interim budget) announced a High-Powered Committee on population and demographic challenges, yet to be constituted.
  • Findings highlight the need for state-specific family planning and elder-care strategies.

    Updated - May 11, 2025 11:29 pm | The Hindu