The 2024 Sample Registration System (SRS) Statistical Report, released by the Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner of India, confirms with little ambiguity what we have been anticipating for some years: India is no longer a young, fast-multiplying nation racing toward a demographic windfall. It is a country in the middle of a structural demographic pivot, one that carries serious implications for growth, fiscal policy, and market valuations. The data covers the calendar year 2024 and was published in May 2026.
I had highlighted this trend previously in April 2022 (Gorillas in the Room – 2) and September 2025 (End of demographic dividend approaching fast). The 2024 SRS report is not a reversal of those trends. It is their continuation and, in several respects, their acceleration.
The much-discussed demographic dividend was always a time-limited window. The 2024 SRS data suggests that the window is not merely closing — in the urban and more prosperous half of India, it has already closed.
The headline: TFR below replacement for the fifth consecutive year
India's Total Fertility Rate stood at 1.9 in 2024, unchanged from 2023, and below the replacement threshold of 2.1 for the fifth consecutive year. The stubborn persistence at this level — neither recovering toward replacement nor diving sharply lower — should not be mistaken for stability. It signals that sub-replacement fertility has now become the structural baseline of the Indian demographic story, not a passing episode.
|
1.9 National TFR |
1.5 Urban TFR |
2.1 Rural TFR |
2.9 Bihar (highest) |
1.2 Delhi (lowest) |
The rural–urban gap deserves attention. A rural woman in India still has, on average, one more child over her lifetime than her urban counterpart. Rural TFR is exactly at replacement (2.1) while urban TFR has dropped to 1.5 — a level comparable to several ageing European societies. This matters because India’s economic, fiscal, and political weight is increasingly urban, and the urban population is the one that produces the skilled workforce, pays the bulk of direct taxes, and drives consumption of discretionary goods. An urban TFR of 1.5, sustained over years, implies that the productive urban cohort is not replacing itself.
It is also important to note the demographic inequality implicit in these numbers. Bihar, with a TFR of 2.9, is still growing fast. It is also the state with the highest poverty rate, the lowest per-capita income, and among the weakest human development indicators. The richer and more economically dynamic states — Delhi (1.2), Kerala (1.3), Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Karnataka — are all deeply sub-replacement. This means that India’s future population growth, such as it is, will be concentrated in its most economically backward regions. The 2022 post noted this pattern in NFHS-5 data. The 2024 SRS confirms it is not correcting.
Birth rate and death rate: diverging slowly, not dramatically
The Crude Birth Rate (CBR) declined to 18.3 in 2024 from 18.4 in 2023, continuing a steady multi-year slide (it was 20.0 in 2018). Urban birth rate has dropped sharply to 14.7 while the rural rate, at 20.2, remains considerably higher. Among larger states, Bihar (26.8) and Uttar Pradesh remain at the top end; Kerala (11.1) sits near the bottom.
The Crude Death Rate (CDR) held at 6.4 in 2024 — the same as in 2023. Chhattisgarh continues to have the highest CDR (8.4) and Delhi the lowest (4.5). The post-COVID stickiness in the death rate deserves a note: the overall mortality rate remains above pre-pandemic levels, even as birth rates have fallen further. The gap between births and deaths — the natural growth rate — is therefore narrowing faster than either indicator alone might suggest.
Infant mortality: improving, but the state-wise disparity remains stark
The Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) fell to 24 in 2024, down from 25 in 2023 and 30 in 2019. This represents genuine progress, and the trend is broad-based. Rural IMR is now 27 and urban IMR has dropped to 17. The Under-Five Mortality Rate (U5MR) stands at 28.
However, the state-level
disparity is alarming. Chhattisgarh has an IMR of 36 — meaning one in every 28
infants born in that state does not survive to see their first birthday.
Kerala, at the other end, has brought its IMR down to 8, a figure comparable to
many developed countries. For context: China’s IMR is around 5, Germany’s is 3,
and Bangladesh has brought its own figure down to roughly 24 — broadly matching
India’s national average today despite having a fraction of India’s healthcare
resources.
Sex ratio at birth: a marginal improvement that conceals large state-wise gaps
The Sex Ratio at Birth (SRB) improved marginally to 918 females per 1,000 males for the 2022–24 observation window, up by one point from the prior period. Chhattisgarh leads at 978 and Uttarakhand records the lowest at 872. The rural SRB (914) remains below the urban figure (928).
The persistence of adverse sex ratios at birth in several of India’s wealthier states — Haryana, Uttarakhand, parts of Gujarat and Punjab — continues to be a structural concern. Wealthier households in India have historically used selective practices more than poorer ones, and the data does not yet show a decisive break from that pattern. The aggregate national improvement, while welcome, masks these pockets.
Healthcare access: strong at birth, nearly absent at death
Perhaps the single most striking finding of the 2024 SRS report is the yawning gap between healthcare access at two critical moments: birth and death. A remarkable 95.4% of births in India now receive medical attention at the time of delivery — testament to the success of institutional delivery schemes like the Janani Suraksha Yojana over two decades. But only 40.2% of deaths involved medical care before death. In rural India, that figure drops further: nearly half of all rural deaths (48.9%) occur without any medical attention at all.
What this means:
India has built a formidable system for
protecting lives at their start. It has not built a comparable system for
managing lives near their end. As the population ages — which the fertility and
mortality trends together guarantee — the absence of geriatric care
infrastructure, chronic disease management, and end-of-life medical support
will become an increasingly serious fiscal and humanitarian problem.
The report also records a rise in accidental and self-inflicted deaths. Deaths from motor vehicle accidents now account for 3.2% of all deaths, and deaths by suicide have risen to 2.8%. These are not large numbers in absolute share terms, but the directional trend — rising in both categories — is worth tracking against the backdrop of rapid urbanization, economic stress, and the erosion of traditional social support structures.
What it all adds up to
Taken together, the 2024 SRS data paints a picture that is known to all but believed by only a few. It has therefore still not fully entered the mainstream investment and policy conversation.
The birth rate is declining and will continue to decline. The death rate is sticky, with elderly cohorts growing faster than they are being replaced by younger ones. The TFR has been below replacement for five straight years, and the urban TFR is already at levels that Western Europe achieved only after decades of demographic decline. The window for harvesting a demographic dividend — defined broadly as the period when the working-age population is large relative to dependents — is not merely narrowing. In the urban and more productive half of India, it has already closed.
The implications for the economy and markets, as flagged in the 2022 post, remain unchanged and are if anything sharpening. Wage pressure will increase as the working-age cohort peaks. Consumption patterns will shift toward healthcare, pharmaceuticals, assisted living, and financial products oriented toward retirement and wealth preservation — away from housing, personal mobility, and youth-oriented discretionary goods. The fiscal burden of an ageing population will grow: pension liabilities will expand, healthcare spending will need to rise sharply, and the taxable base will shrink unless female labour force participation improves meaningfully.
The 16 states and union territories already below the replacement rate — including the economically dominant ones — are not going to reverse course in any policy-relevant timeframe. India is not heading toward a demographic crisis in the near term. But it is heading, quietly and with growing momentum, toward a demographic maturity for which neither the government’s fiscal framework nor the market’s long-term valuation assumptions appear adequately prepared.