Geography ยท Chapter 06

๐Ÿ‘ฅ Population & Human Resources

Census data, distribution, literacy, and demographic trends.

๐Ÿ‘ฅ India's People โ€” World's Largest Population

As of 2023, India has overtaken China to become the world's most populous country with ~1.43 billion people. India has 18% of the world's population on just 2.4% of the land.

Key Census data (2011 โ€” last official census):

Population (2011)
1.21 billion
17.5% of world
Sex ratio (2011)
940 females
per 1000 males
Literacy rate
74.04%
Male: 82.1%, Female: 65.5%
Most populous state
Uttar Pradesh
~22 crore (2011)
Least populous state
Sikkim
~6.1 lakh
Highest density
Bihar
1,106/sq km
Lowest density
Arunachal Pradesh
17/sq km
Highest literacy
Kerala
94%
Highest sex ratio
Kerala
1084 females/1000 males
๐Ÿ“Š Population distribution โ€” why uneven?

Population is NOT evenly distributed. Reasons for high density areas:
โ€ข Fertile plains (Ganga, Indus) โ†’ agriculture โ†’ dense settlement (Bihar, UP, WB)
โ€ข Good climate โ€” moderate temperatures and rainfall
โ€ข Industrial areas โ€” jobs attract people (Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai)
โ€ข Coastal areas โ€” trade and fishing

Reasons for low density:
โ€ข Deserts (Rajasthan โ€” Thar), harsh terrain, lack of water
โ€ข High mountains (Himalayan states)
โ€ข Dense forests (Arunachal Pradesh, Meghalaya)

๐Ÿ“ˆ India's demographic transition

India is undergoing a demographic transition:
โ€ข Birth rate has fallen (from ~45/1000 in 1950 to ~18/1000 in 2020)
โ€ข Death rate has fallen faster (from ~30/1000 to ~7/1000)
โ€ข Natural growth rate = birth rate โˆ’ death rate = ~1.1% (still positive but declining)
โ€ข Demographic dividend: 60% of India's population is under 35 โ€” a huge working-age advantage if educated and employed
โ€ข Urbanization increasing โ€” 35% urban (2023), up from 17% (1951)

๐ŸŽฌ

Population Density Map

Animation
POPULATION DENSITY BY REGION โ€” CLICK TO EXPLORE Indo-Gangetic Plain UP, Bihar, WB โ€” very high density Kerala 860/sq km NE India low density Rajasthan 200/sq km Deccan Plateau moderate density DENSITY SCALE Very High (>700/sq km) High (400โ€“700) Moderate (200โ€“400) Low (<200/sq km) India avg: 382/sq km CLICK A REGION India's population distribution is highly unequal โ€” shaped by agriculture, climate, and industry.

The Indo-Gangetic Plain supports the highest density โ€” fertile soil, water, flat land, good climate.

๐Ÿ—บ๏ธ

Population Key Facts โ€” Quick Review

Interactive
Most populous stateUttar Pradesh (~22 cr, 2011)
Least populousSikkim (~6.1 lakh)
Highest densityBihar (1,106/sq km)
Lowest densityArunachal Pradesh (17/sq km)
Highest literacyKerala (94%)
Lowest literacyBihar (63.8%)
Practice (NCERT): What is the sex ratio? Why is it important? What is India's sex ratio?
Sex ratio = number of females per 1,000 males in a population.

India's sex ratio (Census 2011): 940 females per 1,000 males

Importance:
โ€ข Indicates gender equality (or lack thereof) in a society
โ€ข Reflects female infanticide, sex-selective abortion, neglect of girl child
โ€ข Low sex ratio โ†’ fewer women in workforce, education, health
โ€ข Used to assess progress of women's welfare schemes

India's regional variation:
โ€ข Highest: Kerala (1,084), Puducherry (1,037)
โ€ข Lowest: Haryana (879), Delhi (868)

Child sex ratio (0โ€“6 years, 2011): 919 girls per 1,000 boys โ€” even more alarming. Haryana had 834 (worst). India's Beti Bachao Beti Padhao scheme targets this.
Practice (NCERT): What is the difference between population growth and population change?
Population Change = the difference in population size between two points in time. Can be positive (growth) or negative (decline).

Population change = Births โˆ’ Deaths + Net Migration

Population Growth Rate = percentage change per year (or per decade for census)

Types of growth:
1. Natural increase/decrease: due to birth and death rates only
2. Net migration: people moving in (immigrants) minus people moving out (emigrants)
3. Absolute increase: total number added
4. Exponential growth: when growth rate stays positive โ€” population grows like compound interest (India's population grew from 360 million in 1951 to 1.21 billion in 2011 = 3.4x in 60 years)

India's annual growth rate declined from 2.2% (1971โ€“81) to 1.64% (2001โ€“11). Target: achieve replacement level fertility (TFR = 2.1) across all states.
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