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2007-02-22 20:17:33 · 13 answers · asked by santoshsai1 1 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

13 answers

The population control measures are going on. The poplulation growth rate of has come down from 1.9% in the mid of 1993 to 1.38% in the year 2006. This rate is espected to recede to a greater extent by another decade.

The Birht rates are as follows:
197634.4/1000
198632.6/1000
199627.5/1000
200025.8/1000
200722.01/1000 (Est.)

I believe the picture is improving. Progress has its own pace. The U.S.A. took more than 200 years to develop into a strong and completely developed nation as today (British America borke of with It's colonial sister in the year 1776). India has just gone through 60 years. have patience...

:-)

2007-02-23 06:43:36 · answer #1 · answered by plato's ghost 5 · 0 0

I don't think there's any solutions in over population. Whether we like it or not population will continue to grow, we can only slow it down but still it will go up. People will continue to procreate.

Much we can do, is to make the over population works for the betterment of the nation. The bigger the population the larger the manpower. If the government knows how to utilized their manpower they can benefit from it, as well as the people.

2007-02-22 20:34:30 · answer #2 · answered by bookworm 1 · 0 0

education about birth control. Availability of birth control. And people need to be made aware of the severity of the problem, and what it entails. They need to realize that by bringing too many people into the world, everyone suffers. There are not enough resources for too many people.

The most important thing as it applies specifically to India is that people need to be willing to reform their traditions about boys and girls and their roles. Girls ought to be allowed to carry out the religious rites for their parents that are usually done by boys. This way, one will not keep on trying to have more and more children until a boy is born.

2007-02-22 20:25:34 · answer #3 · answered by Heron By The Sea 7 · 0 0

increasing the literacy fee of the country. Stats tutor that the fertility fee is lowest in states with intense literacy fee like Kerala. maximum knowledgeable center class human beings at present have the two a million or 2 toddlers. The decrease earnings communities tend to have extra toddlers.convalescing the educational equipment is the only answer.

2016-10-16 07:36:16 · answer #4 · answered by pape 4 · 0 0

Why do they need population control? I think the earth is a big planet, there is room for everyone.

2007-02-22 20:23:51 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

"Census of India-2001 Report: The total population of India as at 0:00 hours on 1st March 2001 stood at 1,027,015,247 persons. With this, India became only the second country in the world after China to cross the one billion mark. The population of the country rose by 21.34 % between 1991 - 2001. The sex ratio (i.e., number of females per thousand males) of population was 933, rising from 927 as at the 1991 Census. Total literacy rate was returned as 65.38%."

"At district level the North East district in Union territory Delhi has the highest population density in the country with 29395 persons per square kilometer."

"The population clock in the Union Health Ministry, Nirman Bhavan, New Delhi, now ticks at the rate of 31 persons per minute. The clock shows that about 44,640 babies are born in India everyday. "

"In the last several decades, fertility control policies in India have failed to promote a sustainable solution to the problem of overpopulation. What factors have caused these efforts to fall short? "

"Currently the sex ratio is 960 women for every 1,000 men - a statistic that the UN says reflects the lower status of women in India, who are more likely to be deprived of food, education and health services. "

"The prominence of female sterilization indicates another flaw in the India population control strategies. By targeting women instead of men, the government inadvertently opts for the more hazardous means of birth control. "

"Population in itself is NOT the problem. Lack of basic education and poor economic conditions are. You cannot solve the population problem by clinics. Your assumption that people have no access to family planning methods is only partly true and in any case is not the root of the problem. Population has remained a problem because EDUCATION continues to be a problem. "

"The fast rate of growth of population has affected the quality of life of the people. The time has come when future citizens while in educational institutions should understand various issues related to the population problem."

"In some places there is no drinking water. People started migrating to cities where they can get some water and work. People will start fighting for food, water and place to live."

"The birth rate in India (31 per thousand people) is greater than that of China (20 per thousand people). If this trend continues, India will beat up China by 2025.A.D."

Fortunately, in recent years, it appears that many Indians are aware of the negative effects of the traditional policies and are striving for a change in the system. Taking heed of the recommendations put forth in the 1994 UN Conference on Population and Development, India has shifted attention away from the strict promotion of contraceptive measures and is working on the development of women’s economic, educational and social welfare which will give women more control over their own bodies and indirectly curb population growth.



In 1994, India put forth a “New Population Plan” (NPP), hoping that by the year 2010, the average total fertility rate will fall from the early 90’s figure of 3.4 to around the replacement rate of 2.1.[6] In order to achieve this goal, the NPP will make strides in improving reproductive health: it will allow universal access to contraceptives and promote greater education on contraception, train more people to safely aid in the birth of children, require a formal registration of all marriages and births, maintain and enforce the minimum age of marriage at 18, and strive to provide primary education for more citizens.[7]



Other movements toward progress include the 2000 freezing of the population-proportional quota of representation for each state in the Lok Sabha. This means if a state effectively reduces its population it will not lose votes in the national government. Also, loans such as the $57 million from the World Bank affiliate, the International Development Association in 1989[8], have gone to rural and urban areas to successfully aid in the improvement of reproductive health and increasing the awareness of and access to temporary contraceptives.

2007-02-22 20:27:13 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

direct solution is awareness among the people that what are its consequences . but how it is possible to aware everybody. when people are not aware how should be the leader.leaders should be good to promote these kind of programmes .how it is possible that all the leaders should be good it is a different question.

2007-02-22 20:58:51 · answer #7 · answered by KrishanRam(Jitendra k) 3 · 0 0

a big ol' whopping MARRIAGE TAX.

Think of it as a dowry that goes to uncle gandhi
(american humor...we call our government uncle sam)

since most indians won't have sex before marriage for cultural and religious reasons, fewer will have sex if they can't affford it...but then again, you'd have more of a prostitution problem.

2007-02-22 20:23:51 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Strict Rules.
Marriage not before 21.
Additional tax, fees, charges, fine etc. if one has more than one child.
Incentives if only one child.
More incentive if only one girl child.
Incentive for family planing.

2007-02-22 20:30:47 · answer #9 · answered by LAKSHMI 1 · 0 0

get rid of karma suthra.

2007-02-22 20:22:58 · answer #10 · answered by thomas 1 · 1 0

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