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By Simon Denyer, Published: October 15
GORAKHPUR, India Pedestrians weave their way through a sea of cars, rickshaws and motorbikes, a desperate scramble for space just making the gridlock worse. The sidewalks are swallowed up by stalls and piles of garbage. The smell of open drains hangs in the air while overhead a web of electric cables crisscrosses the sky.
India is one of the main engines of global population growth, and nowhere is that more apparent than in the crowded northern state of Uttar Pradesh, home to 200 million people. The worlds 7 billionth person will be born on the last day of this month, according to U.N. estimates, and Uttar Pradesh, which added 33 million people to the global population in the last decade, is already staking its claim to be the birthplace of that child.
The world has grown quickly over the last century, adding 1 billion people in just the past 12 years. Though the rate of growth is expected to stabilize around 2050, Indias will continue to climb. In the past decade, the countrys population grew by 17.6 percent, to 1.21 billion, according to provisional census data. Based on current trends, India is set to overtake China as the worlds largest country by 2025, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
Here on the fertile but impoverished plains of the Ganges, the government is struggling to cope Indias infrastructure and environment, its cities and villages, its health-care and education systems are failing to keep pace with ever-growing demands.
But on the narrow streets of the northern Indian city of Gorakhpur, just above eye level, a succession of billboards hints at another side of the population story. Wizard Tutoring, the Achievers Academy and the Epitome Institute for Advanced Learning are just some of the many private colleges that have sprouted here in recent years, offering a dizzying array of courses and qualifications to help people stand out from the crowd.
The billboards give a clue to what could be Indias trump card: Its population is getting younger every year, and the young are hungry for learning. By 2020, the average age of an Indian will be 29, and the country, like East Asian economies in the 1970s, is hoping to reap a demographic dividend from this army of young people as they enter the workforce and bolster the economy.
That is, of course, provided the young people are educated and trained, and if there are jobs for them to go to. Otherwise, frustrations and social problems will only mount.
It will be a dividend if we empower our young. It will be a disaster if we fail to put in place a policy and framework where they can be empowered, said Kapil Sibal, Indias minister of human resource development, who said the country needs to impart job skills to 500 million people over the next decade.
In a country where the official literacy rate of 74 percent may overstate the average level of educational attainment the public education system is a mess and there is a desperate shortage of good teachers the scale of the challenge, Sibal admitted, sometimes keeps him awake at night. It has to be a truly national effort to convert the potential of a demographic disaster into a demographic dividend, he said.
Read More.
Amid population boom, India hopes for ‘demographic dividend’ but fears disaster - The Washington Post
GORAKHPUR, India Pedestrians weave their way through a sea of cars, rickshaws and motorbikes, a desperate scramble for space just making the gridlock worse. The sidewalks are swallowed up by stalls and piles of garbage. The smell of open drains hangs in the air while overhead a web of electric cables crisscrosses the sky.
India is one of the main engines of global population growth, and nowhere is that more apparent than in the crowded northern state of Uttar Pradesh, home to 200 million people. The worlds 7 billionth person will be born on the last day of this month, according to U.N. estimates, and Uttar Pradesh, which added 33 million people to the global population in the last decade, is already staking its claim to be the birthplace of that child.
The world has grown quickly over the last century, adding 1 billion people in just the past 12 years. Though the rate of growth is expected to stabilize around 2050, Indias will continue to climb. In the past decade, the countrys population grew by 17.6 percent, to 1.21 billion, according to provisional census data. Based on current trends, India is set to overtake China as the worlds largest country by 2025, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
Here on the fertile but impoverished plains of the Ganges, the government is struggling to cope Indias infrastructure and environment, its cities and villages, its health-care and education systems are failing to keep pace with ever-growing demands.
But on the narrow streets of the northern Indian city of Gorakhpur, just above eye level, a succession of billboards hints at another side of the population story. Wizard Tutoring, the Achievers Academy and the Epitome Institute for Advanced Learning are just some of the many private colleges that have sprouted here in recent years, offering a dizzying array of courses and qualifications to help people stand out from the crowd.
The billboards give a clue to what could be Indias trump card: Its population is getting younger every year, and the young are hungry for learning. By 2020, the average age of an Indian will be 29, and the country, like East Asian economies in the 1970s, is hoping to reap a demographic dividend from this army of young people as they enter the workforce and bolster the economy.
That is, of course, provided the young people are educated and trained, and if there are jobs for them to go to. Otherwise, frustrations and social problems will only mount.
It will be a dividend if we empower our young. It will be a disaster if we fail to put in place a policy and framework where they can be empowered, said Kapil Sibal, Indias minister of human resource development, who said the country needs to impart job skills to 500 million people over the next decade.
In a country where the official literacy rate of 74 percent may overstate the average level of educational attainment the public education system is a mess and there is a desperate shortage of good teachers the scale of the challenge, Sibal admitted, sometimes keeps him awake at night. It has to be a truly national effort to convert the potential of a demographic disaster into a demographic dividend, he said.
Read More.
Amid population boom, India hopes for ‘demographic dividend’ but fears disaster - The Washington Post