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Contents
What is the News?
The Economic Advisory Council to the Prime Minister (EAC-PM) has released the Quality of Life for Elderly Index.
About Quality of Life for Elderly Index:
- Created by: Institute for Competitiveness at the request of EAC-PM.
- Purpose: The report identifies the regional patterns of ageing across the Indian States and assesses the overall ageing situation in India. It also presents a deeper insight into how well India is doing to support the well-being of its ageing population.
Pillars and Sub Pillars of the index:
- Four Pillars: Financial Well-being, Social Well-being, Health System and Income Security
- Eight Sub-Pillars: Economic Empowerment, Educational Attainment & Employment, Social Status, Physical Security, Basic Health, Psychological Well being, Social Security and Enabling Environment.
Key Findings of the Index:
Elderly Population:
- India is currently enjoying the demographic dividend. But the age group above the age of 65 will become the fastest-growing age group by 2050.
- The share of elders, as a percentage of the total population in the country, is expected to increase from around 7.5% in 2001 to almost 12.5% by 2026, and surpass 19.5% by 2050.
- Further, there will be a significantly higher proportion of women than men in the higher age cohort due to higher life expectancy.
State-wise assessment:
- Rajasthan is the top scorer in the aged states’ category, defined as states with an elderly population of more than 5 million.
- Himachal Pradesh leads in the Relatively-Aged States section (below 5 million population).
- Mizoram leads in the North Eastern States category and Chandigarh among all UTs.
Pillar-wise Performance:
- The Health System pillar observes the highest national average, 66.97 at an all-India level, followed by 62.34 in Social Well-being.
- Financial Well-being observes a score of 44.7. It is at a lower stage due to the low performance of 21 States across the Education Attainment & Employment pillar, which showcases scope for improvement.
- States have performed particularly worse in the Income Security pillar because over half of the States have a score below the national average in Income Security, which is the lowest across all pillars.
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