Office of the Registrar General of India
Releases SRS Statistical Report 2024
The Office of the Registrar General of India (ORGI)
has released the Sample Registration System (SRS) Statistical Report 2024,
highlighting important demographic trends related to fertility, mortality, sex
ratio, and population dynamics in India.The Sample Registration System is one
of India’s primary mechanisms for collecting data on births and deaths. It
provides reliable demographic statistics that help in understanding population
growth, public health conditions, and social changes across the country. The
system plays a crucial role in policy planning, healthcare programmes, and
population management.
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The Sample Registration
System (SRS) is India’s largest demographic survey system for generating annual
estimates of fertility and mortality indicators at the national and state
levels.
¨
The report indicates that
India’s demographic transition is continuing, with fertility levels remaining
below the replacement rate and gradual improvements in mortality and child
survival indicators.
The findings assume significance for
policy areas such as:
¨
population stabilisation,
¨
ageing population,
¨
healthcare planning,
¨
women and child
development,
¨
and labour-force
dynamics.
Key Findings of the SRS Statistical Report
2024
Decline in Fertility Levels
¨
India’s Total Fertility
Rate (TFR) remained at 1.9, below the replacement-level fertility of 2.1 for
the fifth consecutive year.
¨
The Urban TFR remained
low at 1.5, while rural TFR stayed at replacement level (2.1).
¨
Bihar recorded the
highest TFR in the country at 2.9, followed by Uttar Pradesh (2.6), while Delhi
reported the lowest fertility level at 1.2.
¨
Only six states — Bihar,
Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Jharkhand, and Chhattisgarh —
continue to record fertility levels above the replacement rate.
Trends in Birth and Death Rates
¨
India’s Crude Birth Rate
(CBR) continued its long-term decline, reflecting slowing population growth and
changing demographic patterns.
¨
The national CBR stood at
18.3 per 1,000 population, with rural areas recording a higher CBR (20.2)
compared to urban areas (14.7).
¨
Bihar reported the
highest CBR at 26.8, while Kerala recorded the lowest at 11.1.
¨
The national Crude Death
Rate (CDR) stood at 6.4 per 1,000 population, with rural areas recording a
higher CDR (6.8) compared to urban areas (5.6).
¨
Chhattisgarh reported the
highest CDR at 8.4, while Delhi recorded the lowest at 4.5.
Improvement in Infant and Child Mortality
¨
India’s Infant Mortality
Rate (IMR) declined to 24 infant deaths per 1,000 live births, with rural IMR
(27) remaining significantly higher than urban IMR (17).
¨
Chhattisgarh recorded the
highest IMR at 36, while Kerala reported the lowest IMR at 8.
¨
The Under-Five Mortality
Rate (U5MR) declined to 28 per 1,000 live births, indicating improvements in
maternal and child healthcare outcomes.
Sex Ratio at Birth and Still Birth Rate
¨
India’s Sex Ratio at
Birth (SRB) improved to 918 females per 1,000 males, although several states
continue to exhibit adverse child sex ratios.
¨
The national Still Birth
Rate (SBR) stood at 5 per 1,000 total births, reflecting gradual improvements
in maternal and neonatal healthcare services.
Significance of the Findings
¨
Demographic Transition:
The report reflects India’s ongoing demographic transition from high fertility
and mortality rates toward lower fertility, lower mortality, and higher life
expectancy.
¨
Population Stabilisation:
Sustained sub-replacement fertility indicates that India is gradually
approaching long-term population stabilisation.
¨
Improving Health
Outcomes: Declining IMR and U5MR reflect improvements in maternal healthcare,
institutional deliveries, immunisation, nutrition, and public health
interventions.
¨
Emerging Ageing
Challenge: Continued fertility decline could eventually increase the proportion
of the elderly population, creating future pressures on pensions, healthcare,
and social security systems.
¨
Regional Imbalances:
Significant inter-state variations in fertility, mortality, and sex ratio
indicators highlight uneven socio-economic and healthcare development across
India.
Sample Registration System (SRS)
¨
It is a large-scale
demographic survey conducted every year by the Office of the Registrar General
& Census Commissioner of India (ORGI) in all States/Union Territories.
Background of SRS
¨
The Registration of
Births & Deaths Act, 1969, was enacted to unify civil registration in
India.
¨
Despite making birth and
death registration mandatory, under-reporting persists in some States/UTs.
¨
To address data gaps, the
Sample Registration System (SRS) was launched in 1964–65 on a pilot basis and
on a full scale from 1969–70.
The SRS follows a dual-record system,
involving:
¨ continuous enumeration by local part-time enumerators,
¨ and independent six-monthly retrospective surveys by supervisors.