Abstract

This paper examines recent changes in the life trajectories of Indian women. We use data from four major national population surveys that span the years 1998–2016. We look at several cohorts of women across the states and regions. We compare decisions related to education, marriage, childbearing and participation in the labor force. Though there is considerable diversity across states and regions, as well as religious groups, we find some consistent patterns that emerge everywhere. First, educational attainment and the age at marriage have been steadily increasing. Women who do not complete secondary school are more likely to marry early. Second, caste and religion (rather than education) play a significant role in decisions after marriage, such as the timing of births, the use of contraception and labor force participation. Third, women from disadvantaged communities continue to have very different life trajectories than other social groups. They are more likely to use contraception and participate in the labor force. Lower levels of schooling also appear to exacerbate the disadvantages of social identity. The pace of these changes varies sharply across states as well as regions of the country.

Highlights

  • India is banking its future on its “demographic dividend”–a temporary surge in the ratio of the working-age population to the dependent population caused by a sustained decline in fertility and improvement in child survival, that can potentially increase labor supply, GDP, savings and investment [1,2,3,4]

  • Given that the first three waves of the survey were representative at the state-level, while the fourth round was representative at the district-level and larger than the previous rounds, we focus on state-level estimates to examine aggregate trends over time

  • We have analyzed the data at the macro- as well as the micro-level

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Summary

Introduction

India is banking its future on its “demographic dividend”–a temporary surge in the ratio of the working-age population to the dependent population caused by a sustained decline in fertility and improvement in child survival, that can potentially increase labor supply, GDP, savings and investment [1,2,3,4]. It is noteworthy that β1,SCST and β1,Mulsim, the coefficients for the triple interaction terms represented as Age18to24×SCST×NoSch and Age18to24×Muslim×NoSch respectively, are negative and statistically significant in both rounds of the survey, suggesting that even the most disadvantaged women, are not more likely to be married, or married before the age of 18 than the average woman aged 25 and above.

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