What is Demographic Dividend?

Demographic dividend refers to the economic growth potential that arises when a country's working-age population (15-64 years) is significantly larger than its dependent population (children and elderly). India is currently in the midst of this demographic transition, with approximately 68% of its 1.46 billion population in the working-age bracket as of 2025 — the largest such cohort in the world.

The concept was popularised by demographers David Bloom and David Canning, who argued that a favourable age structure can boost economic growth through higher savings, greater labour supply, and increased productivity — provided the right investments are made in education, health, and employment. India's demographic dividend window is estimated to last until 2055, peaking around 2041 when the working-age share may exceed 65%.

India is projected to have over 1 billion working-age persons by 2030. However, the dividend is not automatic — it can turn into a demographic disaster if the youth bulge faces unemployment, poor skills, and inadequate health outcomes. India's current challenge is converting its population advantage into a productivity dividend through human capital investment.

The experience of East Asian tiger economies (South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore) shows that demographic dividend contributed to one-third of their GDP growth between 1965-1990, but only because it was accompanied by massive investments in education, export-oriented industrialisation, and women's workforce participation. India faces a unique challenge: its demographic transition is highly uneven across states. Southern and western states (Kerala TFR: 1.8, Tamil Nadu: 1.8) have already crossed below replacement fertility and are beginning to age, while northern states (Bihar TFR: 3.0, UP: 2.4 per NFHS-5) still have high youth dependency. This creates a situation where India must simultaneously manage ageing in some states and youth bulges in others — requiring differentiated policy approaches.


Key Features

# Feature Details
1 Working-Age Share (2025) ~68.4% of total population (15-64 age group)
2 Peak Year Expected around 2041; window lasts until ~2055
3 Youth Bulge Median age ~28 years (2025); youngest large economy globally
4 Projected Workforce Over 1 billion working-age persons by 2030
5 Regional Variation Southern states ageing faster; Bihar, UP, MP still in early dividend phase
6 Senior Population 11% of population aged 60+ in 2025; growing rapidly
7 Under-14 Share Less than 25% of population in 2025, declining steadily
8 Dependency Ratio Declining — favourable for economic growth if leveraged
9 TFR (NFHS-5) ~2.0 nationally; below replacement level of 2.1
10 Global Comparison India surpassed China as most populous in 2023; youngest major economy

Current Status / Latest Data

  • India's total population in 2025 stands at approximately 1.46 billion, with a working-age population of roughly 1 billion.
  • The Economic Survey 2024-25 highlighted that India must create 7.85 million non-farm jobs annually to absorb the growing workforce.
  • Skill India Mission has trained over 1.4 crore youth, but the employability gap remains wide — only about 48% of graduates are considered employable (India Skills Report).
  • Southern states like Kerala and Tamil Nadu are already showing signs of population ageing, while Bihar and Uttar Pradesh remain in the early phase of the demographic transition — creating a "demographic divergence" within India.
  • India's senior population (60+) is at 11% and projected to reach 20% by 2050, making the dividend window time-limited.
  • Female labour force participation rate (FLFPR) remains low at ~37% (PLFS 2023-24), significantly underutilising half the demographic dividend.
  • Youth unemployment (15-29 years) stands at approximately 12-13% (PLFS data), highlighting the gap between demographic potential and economic absorption.
  • The National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 aims to improve human capital quality through multidisciplinary education, vocational training from Class 6, and digital learning — critical for converting the dividend into productivity gains.

UPSC Exam Corner

Prelims: Key Facts

  • Demographic dividend window: approximately 2005-2055, peaking ~2041
  • India's median age is ~28 years (2025) vs China's ~39 years and Japan's ~49 years
  • Working-age population is defined as 15-64 years (UN standard) or 15-59 (Indian standard)
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR) has dropped to ~2.0 (NFHS-5), below replacement level of 2.1
  • India surpassed China as the world's most populous country in 2023
  • PLFS (Periodic Labour Force Survey) is the primary source for employment data in India

Mains: Probable Themes

  1. "India's demographic dividend can become a demographic disaster without adequate policy intervention." Discuss
  2. Analyse the regional disparities in demographic transition across Indian states and their policy implications
  3. Evaluate India's preparedness to harness its demographic dividend in terms of education, health, and employment
  4. Compare India's demographic dividend opportunity with the experiences of East Asian economies

Sources: IBEF — India's Demographic Dividend, EY India — Reaping the Demographic Dividend, ORF — From Demographic to Productivity Dividend