Andhra Pradesh Proposes Cash and Welfare Incentives to Encourage Larger Families
The Andhra Pradesh government has proposed cash and welfare incentives, including Rs 30,000 for a third child and Rs 40,000 for a fourth, to encourage larger families as its Total Fertility Rate has fallen to about 1.5, below the replacement level of 2.1. The move reflects wider concern over ageing populations and shrinking workforces.
The Andhra Pradesh government has proposed a set of cash and welfare incentives to encourage families to have more children, marking a shift from the family-planning approach that India followed for decades. The state's Total Fertility Rate (TFR) — the average number of children a woman is expected to have in her lifetime — has fallen from about 3 in the 1990s to around 1.5 today, well below the replacement level of 2.1 and below the national average.
Under the proposal, the state has suggested a one-time payment of Rs 30,000 for a third child and Rs 40,000 for a fourth child. The package also includes about Rs 1,000 a month for five years, free education up to the age of 18, provisions for mothers to work from home, longer maternity leave, enhanced funding for an existing scheme that supports school attendance, and additional Anganwadi and childcare support. The state has also said it wants to roughly double women's labour force participation. The government has sought public feedback on the proposal.
The policy reflects a wider demographic concern. The TFR is below the replacement level not just in Andhra Pradesh but across much of urban India, and projections suggest a growing share of elderly people relative to the working-age population in the coming decades. Several countries, including some in Europe and East Asia, are already grappling with low birth rates and ageing populations, and some have introduced incentives to encourage families to have more children. A factor specific to India is that southern states, which have lower fertility, are concerned about losing seats if Lok Sabha constituencies are redrawn on the basis of population.
International experience suggests that one-time cash payments rarely produce large or lasting increases in fertility, partly because the cost of raising a child over 18 years is far higher than such payments. Studies indicate that countries which sustained both higher fertility and higher women's workforce participation generally did so by investing heavily in universal childcare, flexible work, paid parental leave and strong public schooling. The proposal therefore raises questions about cost, the effect on different income groups, and the long-term support needed for child development.
Key Points to Remember
- Total Fertility Rate (TFR) is the average number of children a woman is expected to have; the replacement level is 2.1.
- Andhra Pradesh's TFR has fallen from about 3 in the 1990s to around 1.5 today, below the national average.
- Proposed incentives include Rs 30,000 for a third child, Rs 40,000 for a fourth, monthly support, free education to age 18 and longer maternity leave.
- The policy reflects concern over an ageing population and a shrinking workforce, a worry shared by many countries.
- Global experience suggests one-time cash payments rarely cause large, lasting rises in fertility.
Exam Relevance
Important for UPSC, State PCS and SSC (Social Issues and Demography): TFR, replacement level, demographic transition and state welfare policies are frequently tested.
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