Knowing India – Demographics – People

Let’s now look into out biggest asset as a country … our people. I will try to keep this concise and relevant … as this topic has the potential to be a pretty long write up.

To start with here is what our population stands at –

Population-India

(July 2012 est.)

What does this mean? To me it’s just a number and unless I put it into perspective it wont make much sense to me. So let’s see how we can make sense of this number … the world population is 7 billion and we are 1.2 billion … China is also around there at 1.3 billion. Taking liberty of a lot of approximation here, we can say that we are 1/6th of the world in terms of population and together with China we make about 1/3rd of the world. Just 2 countries making up 1/3rd of the world where there are about 200 countries is quite an overwhelming statistic. We are the second most populous country in the world, trailing China by a little bit, and considering the population control China has been able to achieve, we are going to surpass China in population by 2030.

Now is this good for India? Not necessarily … if we don’t manage this population growth well, we’ll have a huge and unmanageable resource crunch in our hands in no time, which in turn will lead to crime and eventually an unlivable social environment. But if we manage it right, and educate people and create job opportunities and use this young population to grow the economy, we might just reap the demographic divided which China has been able to do. But that’s really another discussion.

What else do we know about the people in our country?

We are growing at 1.312% per year (Rank 88), adding 20.6 births (Rank 85) and subtracting 7.43 deaths (Rank 116) from our population per 1000 people every year.

30% of our 1.2 billion people now live in cities, increasing the number of people in cities @ 2.4% every year (that’s our rate of urbanization). Here’s a small graph to show how our most populous cities stack up:

Cities

How are we distributed? Here are a few graphs that might explain that …

Ethnic Groups

Religions

Languages

Now that is our cultural history … and with this much diversity, it IS a miracle that we are still one country.

Let’s look at other demographic variations:

Age distribution:

We are overall a young population with a median age of 26.5 years. The following graphs would shed some light on how this age distribution works for the different sexes.

Age StructureMedian Age

Since women in general live longer, there are more women of a higher age and therefore the median age for women is slightly higher than men, which you will see in the following graph which talks of Life expectancy at birth – where Indian ranks 161 with an average citizen expected to live 67.14 years:

Life Expectancy

This leads us directly on to how our sexes are distributed across different age structures. Let’s look at a couple of graphs:

Sex Ratio

The graph above talks about what ratio of male to female do we see at different age structures. (example: At birth there are 1.12 males per female new born.)

Age Structure - MaleFemaleRatio

The graph above talks about how our sexes are distributed across different age groups. As we would have expected, the “65 years and over” brackets have more women than men. This is more or less the same scenario in most developed and developing countries.

When we talk of births and deaths and age structure and sexes, we have to look at some other stats which are equally important:

Fertility rate – There are 2.58 children born per woman in India (Rank 82) … Most developed countries are under 2 children per woman, where as sub-Saharan Africa sees anywhere between 4-7 children per woman. So we can see where in the world we’ll see the biggest population growth in the coming years … how this will affect us is the topic of discussion for another time, but one wonders.

Maternal Mortality Rate: 200 women die per 100,000 live births in India (Rank 54). Although we have reduced this from being in thousands after independence, there’s a long way to go as most developed countries have been able to bring this number down to single digits.

Infant Mortality: This is a major factor influencing fertility rate and hence indirectly population growth. It has been seen with every country that fertility rate has shown a decline as the country was able to improve health care and reduce infant mortality. So where do we stand on this? We have 46.07 children (under 1 year of age) dying per 1000 live births in India (rank 49) and when we look at how it is different between the sexes, another picture comes forward (which we all know and dread to accept) – Infant mortality among males is 44.71 and among females it is 47.59 per 1000 live births. Almost 3 more girl babies than boys for each 1000 live births die before they reach the age of 1 year. Again here we have improved a lot since independence, but there is still a long way to go … as most developed countries have been able to reign this to single digits.

One thing that is closely tied to child health and the above stats is Child nutrition, which is measured by Underweight Children under the age of 5 years. Our rank here is 1 (we are at the peak of this!!!) and that is because we have almost half (43.5%) of our children underweight and hence most probably malnourished. This is a place our country, 5th largest economy, growing at 7-8% per year even during recession should do better. Not enough can be said about how we need to do something about it NOW!

This begs a question … how is the health infrastructure in India. So I have tried to summarize it with the following pieces of data … which are used as prime indicators of health infrastructure of any country. Here they are:

Health Expenditure: 2.4% of GDP (Rank 185) is our health expenditure, and we are among the last few in the ranking of all countries, with only Turkmenistan, Equatorial Guinea, Burma and North Korea trailing us. Most of the developed nations and even many African countries where health is a serious problem spend upwards of 8% of GDP on health. We clearly have our priorities wrong. Even worse, most of us don’t even know there’s a problem this big in our hands. The positive here is, in spite of this callousness, we have managed to curb Infant Mortality, Maternal Mortality etc significantly since independence and increase Life Expectancy too.

Physician Density : 0.599 – that makes half a doctor per 1000 people.

Hospital Beds : 0.9 – about 1 per 1000 people.

To have a complete understanding of people we have to also factor in metrics like Human Development Index, Poverty, Education, Unemployment etc … since right now we are only discussing demographics and it is already a pretty long post, we’ll leave those for another time.

Data Source: CIA Fact Book – India

Disclaimer: As far as I know this is the best resource for an overview and they update this weekly with the most up-to-date information from a universally accepted and authentic source (Usually like United Nations Data Repository or World Bank Data or from the respective nations’ govt or govt agencies). There is a chance some data may have changed or CIA world fact book may have something wrong … in any case I would be highly obliged if anyone who finds an error or discrepancy points it out to me and also points me to their source of information. Feel free to leave such information in your comments.

Knowing India – Demographics – Geography

To start knowing our country let’s start with what we have from nature and of course politics, something that we inherited and not many of us (at least those alive today) had anything to do with this.

We all are familiar with the map of India … but this post is really aimed at putting India in a geographical perspective with respect to the rest of the world. The map might feel “not right”, but lets face it, this is what we have been able to convince the international community as our land. The shaded area is disputed with China and of course we have PoK. I wont get into these issues just yet.

Location:

Southern Asia, bordering the Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal, between Burma and Pakistan. We have a coastline of about 7000 kms and share a total of 14,103 km of land boundaries with multiple countries.

  • Bangladesh 4,053 km,
  • Bhutan 605 km,
  • Burma 1,463 km,
  • China 3,380 km,
  • Nepal 1,690 km,
  • Pakistan 2,912 km

We are the 7th largest country in the world by land area (3,287,263 sq km). But this doesn’t mean anything to me, not sure how much you relate to this … but here is a graph to put this into perspective:

The largest country in the graph being Russia slightly more than 5 times the size of India, we are about 1/3rd the size of USA and 5 times the size of France.

I hope that puts things into perspective a little more.

We are wonderfully shielded from the extreme northern chill by our own Himalayas … and we are the largest peninsula in the world, hence the long coastline. The variety of international borders and the really long (and geographically varied) coastlines make security a real issue for the Indian security forces as it is impossible to secure all of these 21,000 kms of Indian periphery. Considering this I think our security forces are keeping us reasonably safe. Hopefully someday homeland security forces like the police will be equipped and trained enough to secure us within India.

The next post will be a quick tour of our people in numbers and traits.

Data Source: CIA Fact Book – India

Disclaimer: As far as I know this is the best resource for an overview and they update this weekly with the most up-to-date information from a universally accepted and authentic source (Usually like United Nations Data Repository or World Bank Data or from the respective nations’ govt or govt agencies). There is a chance some data may have changed or CIA world fact book may have something wrong … in any case I would be highly obliged if anyone who finds an error or discrepancy points it out to me and also points me to their source of information. Feel free to leave such information in your comments.

How it all started …

After completing my High School in 1996, I was headed for Bangalore to study Computer Science for my graduation and hopefully masters as well. That was the dream … along with many other dreams to make it big in the IT city of India. I had chosen to uproot myself from the family roots in Howrah, a small industrial town near Kolkata, the City of Joy. My parents have been brought up there and lived their entire lives there… well for the most part. Both sets of my grandparents however migrated in their youth/ middle ages from Bangladesh around the time the country got independence. My maternal grandfather was an active freedom fighter who fought alongside Masterda Surya Sen during the Chittagong Armory Raid in 1930 and had done his share of jail time with other freedom fighters in pre-independence India. He was a very strong man at heart and  had impeccable integrity. Post independence he had worked with many political outfits as advisor and later gave up the public life of sorts to concentrate on reading and writing about India and many other socially important issues. He ensured that the family had the right culture and patriotism.

Image

Hence at this time of my voluntary uprooting, he sat me down and gave me this little notebook that was hand-written by him. He said “You are headed for a future of your own, and I hope you will grow into a virtuous human being above all else. To be that, one of the other things you need is to appreciate your roots … your country. It is not enough to love your country and respect the flag and do all the other cliched patriotic rituals. It is imperative that you spend time knowing your country, it is important in order for you to know yourself better. I have gathered some facts for you here and hope you’d enrich this knowledge yourself.”

I flipped through the notebook and saw that it started with some proverbs, from various people. Some economic statistics about India from 1991 like population, GDP, per-capita income etc. Honestly, it didn’t make much sense at that time to me, a flighty teenager more interested in how college is going to be and how the independence from family would feel like in Bangalore. So this little notebook ended up in one corner of my suitcase for the next decade or so … by then I finished college and started working. Life was more or less headed in the right direction (as it always seems to an optimist). In 2004 Dadu passed away at the age of 86 … and still this notebook remained in my suitcase (quite a worthless grandson I sometimes think).

It is extremely important I mention here that my father, a scientist and a teacher by career and a poet, a musician, a writer a photographer and an environmental activist by passion, was another equally important influence on me on the same regard. He used to always look for economic and environmental data and was very encouraged by the availability of data on the internet. He would ask me from time to time to look up research papers on Carbon emissions, plastics, water pollution etc … he himself had written a couple of books on air and water pollution with the help of his friends from the scientific community who he would approach from time to time for research data on the subjects. Sometimes I could get him some data a lot of times I couldn’t find data to his satisfaction. He was a tough customer to satisfy 🙂 … I hated and loved that about him. I would sometimes sit with him and share stuff that I found interesting on the internet and we would discuss opinions on those … and we’d disagree a lot … a lot! But with each debate (argument) I always found out another possible perspective.

In 2005 I met someone I could think of sharing a life with. I realized that this was the person with whom I would love to have a child … and the whole thought process changed. I realized I need to understand my world a lot better and be more informed as the life I now choose to pursue will look at me with a lot of questions and I haven’t really the slightest clue of what the answers could possibly be. That was the moment of truth that brought me to a point in life where I really needed to know who I was. And I remembered Dadu … ( and of course Dad was around to bounce ideas off).

I fished out this notebook from my suitcase and read through it … and suddenly it made so much more sense. I started looking up information about my country, watching speeches, interviews and debates of world affairs … I came across TED … there one of the initial speeches I watched was by Hans Rosling of the http://www.gapminder.org fame. The way he talked about data inspired me and I also came to know that not only Gapminder, but world data miners like IMF, World Bank and USA’s CIA also maintained data and that data was available for public who were interested. I quickly shared it with Dad and he loved it and it made me realize the real passion and perseverance of Dadu, who used to keep track of these data in the days of no internet. He had to write to people and organizations and look up books etc to find the data, him gathering this data for me in the little notebook would have taken 10-20 times more effort that it took me to gather all of the information these organizations had made available online. Hats off to that kind of passion.

Anyways … this is a little background to how I got interested in knowing India, my country, the scientific way … where the quest is to look for the unbiased truth, whether or not I like what I find.

This blog will be an attempt to do the same … look at India through information found from authentic sources and knowing India in the light of verifiable data in the perspective of it’s actual place in the global platform. Spoiler alert … there will be a lot of critical appreciation of our country here … as I think to be patriotic, it is important to first know the country for what it is.