As India marks another World Population Day, the debate around falling fertility rates and population decline is intensifying, with calls for pronatalism becoming louder.
Key Highlights:
Fears about population collapse are growing globally, but often rest on misinterpretation of demographic data.
Fertility is declining, but global population is still expected to peak at 10.3 billion by 2080s (UN WPP 2024).
Projections ≠ Predictions – demographic projections depend on changing assumptions.
Population momentum explains why population can still grow despite below-replacement fertility.
Detailed Insights:
The real fertility crisis is about involuntary childlessness and structural barriers, not voluntary choices.
In India, top reasons for not meeting fertility desires: financial limits (38%), housing (22%), childcare (18%), unemployment (21%).
South Korea’s $200 billion investment in boosting fertility has only recently shown a marginal uptick.
Targeting women for falling fertility is ethically problematic and often counterproductive.
Pronatalist policies often reinforce traditional gender roles, failing to address deeper structural issues.
Lack of reproductive agency — especially for those who want children but can't — is the real demographic concern.
Way Forward:
Shift the focus from population numbers to reproductive rights and support systems.
Strengthen public health, education, employment, and childcare infrastructure to address real fertility challenges.
Abandon coercive and pronatalist rhetoric; promote inclusive, gender-sensitive policies.
Encourage balanced demographic literacy among the public and policymakers.
Key Concepts Involved:
Total Fertility Rate (TFR): Average number of children a woman is expected to have during her reproductive years.
Pronatalism is the belief that having more children is beneficial, often with the idea that a higher birth rate is important for the well-being of a society or nation.
Replacement Level Fertility: TFR of 2.1 needed to maintain a stable population.
Population Momentum: Continued population growth even after achieving below-replacement fertility due to age structure.
Reproductive Agency: The ability of individuals to make autonomous decisions about if and when to have children.