India’s Total Fertility Rate (TFR) has dropped below the long-term population replacement threshold of 2.1 to 1.9 for the first time, according to the recent Sample Registration System (SRS) Statistical Report published by the Union Ministry of Home Affairs.
This landmark demographic milestone, driven by rising costs of living, expanding access to family planning, and improved female literacy, signals a gradual stabilization of population growth rather than an immediate decline. While policymakers and social think-tanks are assessing the macroeconomic impact, experts warn that the country must quickly adapt to an unequal regional transition, future workforce shrinkage, and a rapidly changing age structure.
A Stark Regional and Economic Divide
The latest data uncovers an intricate domestic picture, demonstrating that India’s demographic transition is moving at multiple speeds across different geographies.
Poorer northern states continue to record the highest birth rates, with Bihar leading the country at 2.9 and Uttar Pradesh following closely at 2.6, both remaining well above the population stabilization mark. Conversely, urban centres and southern states have hit historic lows; Delhi recorded an unprecedentedly low TFR of 1.2, while Tamil Nadu, Kerala, and West Bengal have dropped to 1.3. This shift heavily correlates with declining infant mortality rates, which fell nationally from 30 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2019 to 24 in 2024, altering family expectations. Highlighting this shift, development economist Dipa Sinha noted, “Total fertility rate often drops when more women in society have access to education, contraceptives and more agency in decision-making in households. It also drops when the economy becomes expensive so raising children also becomes expensive.”
From Population Explosion to Ageing Concerns
For decades, India’s primary socio-economic narrative was centered around curbing a projected “population explosion,” a fear that has been fundamentally dismantled by recent trends.
The national fertility decline has been monumental over the past half-century, plummeting from an average of 5.2 children per woman in 1971 to today’s below-replacement reality. Although India recently overtook China to become the world’s most populous nation with 1.45 billion people, “population momentum” from its vast youth base ensures that absolute numbers will continue to grow until around 2055. However, this uneven transition has already triggered political friction regarding fiscal distribution and parliamentary delimitation, as faster-ageing southern states like Kerala—where the elderly population is set to touch 20 per cent—fear losing federal funding and political representation to younger, more populous northern states.
The Logical Indian’s Perspective
At The Logical Indian, we view this demographic milestone not merely as a statistical drop, but as a critical crossroad that demands deep empathy, systemic foresight, and social harmony.
The data tells a story of genuine human advancement: it reflects an expansion of women’s agency, better healthcare access, and a conscious shift towards investing more heavily in the well-being of fewer children. Yet, as our regional demographic divide widens, we must ensure it does not fracture our national unity or penalise states that successfully prioritised public health and education. True progress requires us to bridge these regional gaps through constructive dialogue, building robust healthcare networks that support our ageing citizens with dignity, while ensuring equitable opportunities for our remaining youth. How do you think India should redesign its national policies to balance regional disparities and ensure that both its younger workforce and its senior citizens are adequately cared for?








