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Elderly in India

Kartavya Desk Staff

Syllabus: Population and Associated Issues

Source: PIB

Context: A recent PIB release, underscored India’s accelerating demographic transition towards an ageing population, projected to reach 230 million by 2036.

About Elderly in India:

Current Data and Statistics

• India’s elderly population (60+) is expected to rise from 100 million in 2011 to 230 million by 2036, forming 15% of the total population.

• As per LASI 2021, elderly constitute 12% of the population, projected to reach 319 million by 2050.

Sex ratio among elderly: 1,065 females per 1,000 males; 58% of elderly are women, 54% of whom are widows.

Kerala will have the highest elderly share (23% by 2036); Uttar Pradesh will see the fastest growth in elderly numbers.

• The dependency ratio stands at 62 dependents per 100 working-age individuals, highlighting rising socio-economic pressure.

Importance of the Elderly in India:

Social Capital: Elderly hold deep cultural, moral, and familial wisdom, anchoring intergenerational values and traditions.

Economic Contributors: They drive the emerging “silver economy”, creating demand for healthcare, housing, and financial products.

Knowledge Reservoir: Their experience enriches governance, education, and community leadership roles.

Demographic Imperative: Addressing ageing is critical for sustainable development, social cohesion, and healthcare equity.

Moral Obligation: Welfare of elders aligns with Article 41 (Right to work, education, and public assistance) and the Directive Principles of State Policy.

Government Initiatives for the Elderly:

Atal Pension Yojana (APY): Provides guaranteed pension (₹1,000–₹5,000/month) to unorganised workers; 8.27 crore subscribers (2025).

Atal Vayo Abhyuday Yojana (AVYAY): Umbrella programme ensuring social inclusion, care, and empowerment of senior citizens.

Integrated Programme for Senior Citizens (IPSrC): Funds 696 old age homes and mobile medical units nationwide.

Rashtriya Vayoshri Yojana (RVY): Provides assistive devices like hearing aids, wheelchairs, and dentures to poor elderly.

SAGE & SACRED Portals: Promote elderly care start-ups and re-employment opportunities for citizens aged 60+.

National Programme for Health Care of the Elderly (NPHCE): Delivers geriatric healthcare at primary and tertiary levels across 713 districts.

Elderline: Helpline for grievance redressal, counselling, and emergency support.

Indira Gandhi National Old Age Pension Scheme (IGNOAPS): Monthly pension for BPL elderly aged 60+ and 80+.

Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act (2007 & Amendment 2019): Legal obligation on children to maintain elderly parents and ensure a life of dignity.

Challenges Faced by the Elderly:

Health Insecurity: India faces inadequate geriatric care infrastructure, with rising cases of chronic diseases like diabetes and dementia, and limited mental health support or specialised hospitals for the elderly.

Economic Vulnerability: Pension coverage remains narrow, forcing many seniors—especially widowed or rural women—to depend on family or informal work for survival amid rising healthcare and living costs.

Social Isolation: Urban migration and the decline of joint families have eroded traditional caregiving systems, leaving many elderly emotionally neglected and socially disconnected.

Digital Divide: Limited access to smartphones, internet, and digital literacy excludes older adults from telemedicine, online banking, and government welfare platforms.

Infrastructure Gaps: Urban spaces remain unsafe and unfriendly to seniors, with poor accessibility in transport, lack of ramps, handrails, and emergency response systems tailored to their needs.

Way Ahead:

Strengthen Silver Economy: Encourage public–private partnerships for innovation in eldercare technology, insurance models, and retirement homes to convert ageing into an economic opportunity.

Integrated Policy Framework: Promote coordination among ministries of Health, Social Justice, Finance, and Housing to ensure unified implementation of elderly welfare policies.

Expand Geriatric Healthcare: Establish geriatric wards in district hospitals and enhance telemedicine under Ayushman Bharat for affordable and accessible senior healthcare.

Enhance Social Security: Universalise pension schemes and expand formal caregiver training through the National Institute of Social Defence to professionalise elderly care.

Promote Digital Inclusion: Launch nationwide programs for senior citizens to learn e-governance tools, digital payments, and telehealth services, bridging the digital literacy gap.

Community Engagement: Foster intergenerational initiatives like Naitik Patam in schools and communities to cultivate empathy, family bonding, and respect for the elderly.

Conclusion:

India’s ageing population marks both a social responsibility and an economic opportunity. Empowering the elderly through care, inclusion, and dignity will define the nation’s moral and developmental maturity. A future-ready India must treat its seniors not as dependents—but as active partners in the journey to Viksit Bharat 2047.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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