Quality education prevent migration from mountainous districts

Debraj Ghimire said migration from mountainous districts would not be checked until and unless improvement.

सम्बन्धित सामग्री

Tourism vital to boost national economy: CM Karki

Morang, December 8 — Chief Minister of Koshi Province, Hikmat Kumar Karki, said tourism could be an effective medium to ensure economic prosperity in Nepal. Development of tourism shapes the development of country, he argued while inaugurating a tourism project based on trekking. It was amidst a programme organized by the Province Ministry of Tourism, Forest and Environment here today. According to him, the project would be meaningful intervention to not only ensure people access to education, health, employment and infrastructure building but also to end migration. Tourism comes on top for Nepal's development and prosperity,...

Tourism vital to boost national economy: CM Karki

Morang, December 8 — Chief Minister of Koshi Province, Hikmat Kumar Karki, said tourism could be an effective medium to ensure economic prosperity in Nepal. Development of tourism shapes the development of country, he argued while inaugurating a tourism project based on trekking. It was amidst a programme organized by the Province Ministry of Tourism, Forest and Environment here today. According to him, the project would be meaningful intervention to not only ensure people access to education, health, employment and infrastructure building but also to end migration. Tourism comes on top for Nepal's development and prosperity,...

Australia introduces cap on international students

SYDNEY: Australia will introduce a cap on the number of new international students it accepts, as it tries to reduce overall migration to pre-pandemic levels. The nation has one of the biggest international student markets in the world, but the number of new enrolments will be limited to 270,000 for 2025. Each higher education institution […]

Australia tightens student visa rules as migration hits record high

From Saturday, English language requirements for student and graduate visas will be increased, while the government will get the power to suspend education providers from recruiting international students if they repeatedly break rules.

Australia tightens student visa rules as migration hits record high

From Saturday, English language requirements for student and graduate visas will be increased, while the government will get the power to suspend education providers from recruiting international students if they repeatedly break rules.

Quality education prevent migration from mountainous districts

Debraj Ghimire said migration from mountainous districts would not be checked until and unless improvement.

India v China: Is becoming the most populous country a boon or curse?

DEC 21: The Asian giants already have more than 1.4 billion people each, and for over 70 years have accounted for more than a third of the global population. China's population is likely to begin shrinking next year. Last year, 10.6 million people were born, a little more than the number of deaths, thanks to a rapid drop in fertility rate. India's fertility rate has also fallen substantially in recent decades - from 5.7 births per woman in 1950 to two births per woman today - but the rate of decline has been slower. So what does India overtaking China as the most populous country in the world mean? China reduced its population faster than India China reduced its population growth rate by about half from 2% in 1973 to 1.1% in 1983. Demographers say much of this was achieved by riding roughshod over human rights - two separate campaigns promoting just one child and then later marriages, longer gaps between children and fewer of them - in what was a predominantly rural and overwhelmingly uneducated and poor country. India saw rapid population growth - almost 2% annually - for much of the second half of the last century. Over time, death rates fell, life expectancy rose and incomes went up. More people - especially those living in cities - accessed clean drinking water and modern sewerage. "Yet the birth rate remained high," says Tim Dyson, a demographer at the London School of Economics. India launched a family planning programme in 1952 and laid out a national population policy for the first time only in 1976, around the time China was busy reducing its birth rate. But forced sterilisations of millions of poor people in an overzealous family planning programme during the 1975 Emergency - when civil liberties were suspended - led to a social backlash against family planning. "Fertility decline would have been faster for India if the Emergency hadn't happened and if politicians had been more proactive. It also meant that all subsequent governments treaded cautiously when it came to family planning," Prof Dyson says. East Asian countries such as Korea, Malaysia, Taiwan and Thailand, which launched population programmes much later than India, achieved lower fertility levels, cut infant and maternal mortality rates, raised incomes and improved human development earlier than India. Yet India is not undergoing a population explosion India has added more than a billion people since Independence in 1947, and its population is expected to grow for another 40 years. But its population growth rate has been declining for decades now, and the country has defied dire predictions about a "demographic disaster". So India having more people than China is no longer significant in a "concerning" way, say demographers. Rising incomes and improved access to health and education have helped Indian women have fewer children than before, effectively flattening the growth curve. Fertility rates have dipped below replacement levels - two births per woman - in 17 out of 22 states and federally administered territories. (A replacement level is one at which new births are sufficient to maintain a steady population.) The decline in birth rates has been faster in southern India than in the more populous north. "It is a pity that more of India could not have been like south India," says Prof Dyson. "All things being equal, rapid population growth in parts of north India have depressed living standards". However, overtaking China could be significant It could, for example, strengthen India's claim of getting a permanent seat in the UN Security Council, which has five permanent members, including China. India is a founding member of the UN and has always insisted that its claim to a permanent seat is just. "I think you have certain claims on things [by being the country with largest population]," says John Wilmoth, director of the Population Division of the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs. The way India's demography is changing is also significant, according to KS James of the Mumbai-based International Institute for Population Sciences. Despite drawbacks, India deserves some credit for managing a "healthy demographic transition" by using family planning in a democracy which was both poor and largely uneducated, says Mr James. "Most countries did this after they had achieved higher literacy and living standards." More good news. One in five people below 25 years in the world is from India and 47% of Indians are below the age of 25. Two-thirds of Indians were born after India liberalised its economy in the early 1990s. This group of young Indians have some unique characteristics, says Shruti Rajagopalan, an economist, in a new paper. "This generation of young Indians will be the largest consumer and labour source in the knowledge and network goods economy. Indians will be the largest pool of global talent," she says. But there are challenges too India needs to create enough jobs for its young working age population to reap a demographic dividend. But only 40% of of India's working-age population works or wants to work, according to Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE). More women would need jobs as they spend less time in their working age giving birth and looking after children. The picture here is bleaker: only 10% of working-age women were participating in the labour force in October, according to CMIE, compared with 69% in China. Then there's migration. Some 200 million Indians have migrated within the country - between states and districts - and their numbers are bound to grow. Most are workers who leave villages for cities to find work. "Our cities will grow as migration increases because of lack of jobs and low wages in villages. Can they provide migrants a reasonable living standard? Otherwise, we will end up with more slums and disease," says S Irudaya Rajan, a migration expert at Kerala's International Institute of Migration and Development. Demographers say India also needs to stop child marriages, prevent early marriages and properly register births and deaths. A skewed sex ratio at birth - meaning more boys are born than girls - remains a worry. Political rhetoric about "population control" appears to be targeted at Muslims, the country's largest minority when, in reality, "gaps in childbearing between India's religious groups are generally much smaller than they used to be", according to a study from Pew Research Center. And then there's the ageing of India Demographers say the ageing of India receives little attention. In 1947, India's median age was 21. A paltry 5% of people were above the age of 60. Today, the median age is over 28, and more than 10% of Indians are over 60 years. Southern states such as Kerala and Tamil Nadu achieved replacement levels at least 20 years ago. "As the working-age population declines, supporting an older population will become a growing burden on the government's resources," says Rukmini S, author of Whole Numbers and Half Truths: What Data Can and Cannot Tell Us About Modern India. "Family structures will have to be recast and elderly persons living alone will become an increasing source of concern," she says.

Cars vs people in Kathmandu

ity life and the many benefits it represents, including better healthcare, reliable transport and quality education, are the main pull factors for migration. The social networks of cities continue to be one of the principal drivers of economic productivity across the globe. Yet cities can also harm. Air pollution, traffic congestion, over-crowding and noise are some […]

First federal census to assemble data for ward-level development

The 6,742 wards in 753 local units across the country are in dire need of statistics about the people in their respective territories in order to formulate plans and programmes for development works, health and education and social welfare activities. Likewise, the federal government wants an update on the demographic structure in the local units and provinces for the central level planning and budget allocation. Since Nepal has been witnessing a massive migration from hills and mountains to the southern plains in Terai and from villages to cities, policymakers and government need an updated demographic information for planning and budget allocation, especially the grants which are also distributed to the sub-national bodies according to the size of population as well.