Population Composition
"A population is not just a number. It is a mosaic of ages, genders, skills, and cultures."
1. Chapter Overview
Population COMPOSITION goes beyond how MANY people — it examines WHO they ARE: their AGE structure, SEX ratio, LITERACY levels, occupational structure, and URBAN/RURAL distribution. These characteristics DETERMINE a country's development path, policy priorities, and future challenges.
2. Age Structure — The Age-Sex Pyramid
The AGE-SEX PYRAMID is the most powerful visual tool in demography. It shows the DISTRIBUTION of a population by AGE and SEX.
Three Types of Age-Sex Pyramids
| Type | Shape | Characteristics | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| Expanding | BROAD base, rapidly NARROWING to the top (true pyramid) | HIGH birth rate, HIGH death rate. Many children; few elderly. | Niger, Chad, Afghanistan |
| Stationary | BELL-SHAPED. Roughly equal all ages, narrowing only at the top. | Birth rate ≈ Death rate. Stable population. | USA, France |
| Contracting | NARROW base, BROADER middle and top (urn-shaped/ inverted pyramid) | LOW birth rate. Shrinking population. Ageing society. | Japan, Italy, Germany |
Age Groups and Dependency Ratio
- 0–14: Young dependents (consume but don't produce)
- 15–64: WORKING AGE population (producers) — 'THE DEMOGRAPHIC DIVIDEND'
- 65+: Elderly dependents
- Dependency Ratio = [(0-14) + (65+)] / (15-64) × 100. A HIGH ratio = more DEPENDENTS per worker. A LOW ratio = DEMOGRAPHIC DIVIDEND.
3. Sex Ratio
- Number of FEMALES per 1,000 MALES
- Global average: ~1,020 females/1,000 males (females OUTNUMBER males globally — women live longer)
- INDIA: historically LOW sex ratio. 2011 Census: 940 females/1,000 males. Improving — NFHS-5 (2019–21): 1,020 females/1,000 males.
- Causes of LOW sex ratio in parts of the world: son preference, sex-selective practices, higher maternal mortality, neglect of girl children.
4. Literacy Rate
- Percentage of population aged 7+ who can READ and WRITE with understanding
- Global: ~86%. India: 74.04% (Census 2011). Improving.
- Gender gap: globally, female literacy LAGS male literacy. In India: male ~82%, female ~65% (2011).
- Literacy is the FOUNDATION of human capital. It correlates with: lower birth rates, better health, higher incomes, political participation.
5. Occupational Structure
| Sector | What It Includes | Wealthy Countries | Poor Countries |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | Agriculture, mining, fishing, forestry | SMALL (~2-5%) | LARGE (~40-60%) |
| Secondary | Manufacturing, construction | MODERATE (~20-25%) | SMALL-MODERATE |
| Tertiary | Services (banking, IT, healthcare, education, trade) | LARGE (~70-80%) | MODERATE |
As countries DEVELOP, they shift: PRIMARY → SECONDARY → TERTIARY.
6. Exam Focus
- Age-Sex pyramid — 3 types (expanding, stationary, contracting). Which countries.
- Dependency ratio — formula. India's demographic dividend.
- Sex ratio — definition. India's ratio and reasons for low ratio.
- Occupational structure — three sectors. Development = shift from primary to tertiary.
- Literacy — gender gap. Importance for development.
7. Conclusion
A population is not a faceless mass:
- AGE: The pyramid tells the story. Broad base = growing. Narrow base = shrinking.
- SEX: Who is missing? Sex ratio reveals gender discrimination.
- LITERACY: The foundation of everything else.
- OCCUPATION: Three sectors. The SHIFT from field to factory to office IS development.
'Demography is the study of people — not as numbers, but as members of a generation, a gender, a workforce, a society.'
