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How Has the 2024 General Elections Highlighted the Problems With the Indian Census?

government
India has not been able to conduct a census in the last decade leading to outdated population data. This has caused significant issues in the 2024 elections and tax allocation. Also, Lok Sabha seat allocations are based on 1971 census data, thereby, underrepresenting northern states in terms of tax distribution.
Representative image of a crowded Indian street. Photo: erin/Flickr CC BY 2.0

The world’s biggest democracy hasn’t had a census in over a decade. The next one could reshape the country’s electoral system — unless leaders delay further.

India’s incumbent Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) have failed to maintain a majority government in this week’s national election count.

The party’s loss of over 60 seats comes at a time when India’s political representation is at a crossroads, caught between outdated population data and anachronistic electoral rules.

The lower house of India’s parliament, the Lok Sabha, is made up of 543 members, each representing a constituency in a state or Union Territory, governed by the central government. The Constitution demands that states be allocated several seats proportional to their population.

In theory, these allocations should be updated after each census. But a raft of amendments has kept the Lok Sabha’s state-wise seat allocations locked to the populations recorded in the 1971 census, more than 50 years ago.

Also read: At a Glance: Uttar Pradesh Results Shatter Many BJP Myths

But India’s population has changed massively in the last half-century. The central government introduced a National Family Planning Programme in the 1950s, aiming to trade population growth for economic development by incentivising families to limit themselves to two children.

Southern states took up these family planning policies enthusiastically. Northern states did not.

Family planning, along with the education of women and better governance, have led to the southern states outperforming the northern ones in terms of human development indicators.

The result in 2024 is an India with many more people in the north:

Some Indian states have grown faster than others in the last half-century, complicating electoral and tax processes. Photo: James Goldie, 360info/ CC BY 4.0

A Lok Sabha that allocated seats based on more recent population estimates would give more representation to the northern states than they currently enjoy. This would mean that better governance is being punished with lower political representation.

Freezing the Lok Sabha seat allocations was a part of these family planning measures. As the Constitution currently stands, there may be no update until a census is completed after 2026.

As the freeze has been reapproved again and again, the demographic changes have built up like debt, making any change more consequential — and more politically fraught.

Also read: A Non-BJP Government Will Be Unstable, But It is Our Only Hope to Save the Constitution

The problems with the old population counts don’t stop at the ballot box. Population projections are used alongside income and other factors to guide the share of tax states receive from the central government.

Southern states have voiced unhappiness with their splits. The Finance Commission formed to shape the splits has added aDemographic Performancecriterion designed to reward states with lower fertility ratios, but it only makes up a small percentage of the tax formula.

On top of all this, the estimates of India’s current population, from 2011, are now very out of date. Some more recent states aren’t represented in the 1971 census at all. The 2021 census was delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic and is currently expected in 2031.

All this adds up to a contest of ideas of how India uses data to monitor and shape the country’s development. Population may not be the only factor that decides who gets represented or supported, but doing nothing could make the problem worse.

This story was published on 360info.org

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