By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Describe the distribution and density of population in India with state-level variations
  • 2Identify and explain the four phases of population growth in India from 1901 to the present
  • 3Explain why 1921 is called the 'Year of the Great Divide' in India's demographic history
  • 4Interpret census data on literacy rates, sex ratio, and occupational structure across Indian states
  • 5Discuss the implications of India's young population and demographic dividend
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Why this chapter matters
India's population — its distribution, density, growth phases, and composition — is one of the most heavily tested topics in CBSE Class 12 Geography (India book). The 1921 'Year of the Great Divide,' census data on density, sex ratio, literacy, and the four growth phases are board exam staples. India surpassing China in population (April 2023) makes this chapter especially current.

Population — India

"India is second only to China in population. By 2023, it had SURPASSED China."

1. Chapter Overview

India's population: 1.4 billion+. 18% of the world on 2.4% of the land. This chapter covers: SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION (the uneven spread across states), DENSITY (highest in the Northern Plains), GROWTH (phases of India's demographic transition), and COMPOSITION (sex ratio, literacy, occupational structure).


2. Distribution — Where Do Indians Live?

  • Highly populated states: UP (most populous — ~24 crore), Maharashtra, Bihar, West Bengal, Madhya Pradesh. The Indo-Gangetic plain is the MOST DENSELY POPULATED region in India.
  • Sparsely populated states: Arunachal, Sikkim, Mizoram, Ladakh, Andaman & Nicobar. The Himalayas, the Thar Desert — physical constraints limit population.

Why the Northern Plains Are Densely Populated

  1. FERTILE ALLUVIAL SOIL → productive agriculture
  2. FLAT TERRAIN → easy to build, farm, and travel
  3. WATER (Ganga, Yamuna, tributaries) → irrigation
  4. HISTORICAL: cradle of ancient Indian civilisation. Cities and empires grew here for millennia.

3. Density of Population

  • India's average density: 382 persons/km² (Census 2011) — the official CBSE figure. (2023 estimate ~500/km²)
  • HIGHEST density: Bihar (1,106/km²), West Bengal (1,029/km²), Kerala (860/km²) — 2011 Census
  • LOWEST density: Arunachal Pradesh (17/km²), Ladakh (3/km²), Andaman & Nicobar (46/km²) — 2011 Census

Physiological Density (more meaningful)

  • Agricultural density: BIHAR has VERY HIGH agricultural density — too many people dependent on too little productive land (disguised unemployment).

4. Population Growth in India

Four Phases

PhasePeriodCharacteristics
I — Stagnant1901–1921HIGH birth rate. HIGH death rate (famines, epidemics — 1918 flu, plague). Very SLOW growth.
II — Steady Growth1921–1951Death rate began FALLING. Birth rate stayed high. Growth ACCELERATED. (1921 = 'Year of the Great Divide' — after which population never declined.)
III — Rapid Growth1951–1981DEATH rate dropped SHARPLY (better healthcare, sanitation, food). Birth rate REMAINED HIGH. Growth rate EXPLODED (~2.2% per year) — 'population explosion.'
IV — Slowing Growth1981–presentBirth rate FINALLY falling (education, contraception, urbanisation, women's empowerment). Growth rate DECELERATING.

5. Population Composition

Sex Ratio

  • 2011 Census: 940 females / 1,000 males. Kerala (1,084) — highest. Haryana (879) — among the lowest.
  • Son preference. Neglect of girl children. Historically LOW in northern and western states.
  • IMPROVING: NFHS-5 (2019-21) shows sex ratio at birth improving.

Literacy Rate

  • 2011: TOTAL 74%. Male 82%. Female 65%. GAP: 17 percentage points.
  • Highest: Kerala (~94%). Lowest: Bihar (61.8%) — 2011 Census.

Occupational Structure

  • ~49% in PRIMARY sector (agriculture, mining) per Census 2011 — but this produces only ~18% of GDP (LOW productivity per worker)
  • ~25% in SECONDARY. ~30% in TERTIARY.
  • India's challenge: SHIFT workers from agriculture to more productive sectors.

6. Exam Focus

  1. Distribution — most in UP, Indo-Gangetic plain. Sparse in NE, desert, high mountains.
  2. Density — highest in Bihar, West Bengal. Lowest in Arunachal, Ladakh.
  3. Growth phases (I–IV). 'Year of the Great Divide' (1921).
  4. Sex ratio — 940 (2011). Kerala highest, Haryana low. Improving.
  5. Occupational structure — 45% in primary, only 18% of GDP.

7. Conclusion

India's 1.4 billion people — the largest population on Earth — are its greatest RESOURCE and its greatest CHALLENGE. The demographic dividend (a young population) is a ONE-TIME WINDOW. Educate, skill, and employ the youth — or the dividend becomes a CURSE.

'India is not over-populated. It is UNDER-SKILLED. The difference is everything.'

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

India Population — Key Census Facts
CENSUS 2011 (most recent completed census — 2021 census delayed due to COVID-19): Total population: 1,210.85 million (~121 crore). Population density: 382 persons/km² (2011). INDIA'S RANK: 2nd most populous country (2011 census). APRIL 2023: India surpassed China to become world's most populous country (estimated 1.428 billion vs China 1.425 billion). MOST POPULOUS STATE (2011): Uttar Pradesh (~199 million). LEAST POPULOUS STATE: Sikkim (~607,000). HIGHEST DENSITY (2011): Bihar (1,106 persons/km²). LOWEST DENSITY: Arunachal Pradesh (17 persons/km²). SEX RATIO (2011): 940 females per 1,000 males. HIGHEST SEX RATIO: Kerala (1,084). LOWEST SEX RATIO: Haryana (879). OVERALL LITERACY (2011): 74.04% (Male: 82.14%, Female: 65.46%). HIGHEST LITERACY: Kerala (~94%). LOWEST LITERACY: Bihar (~61.8%).
The 2021 census was postponed due to COVID-19 and has not been completed as of 2026. CBSE uses 2011 census data as the authoritative reference for all India population questions. Know these specific numbers — they appear in 1-mark direct questions and as supporting evidence in 5-mark analytical answers.
Four Phases of Population Growth in India
PHASE I — STAGNANT PHASE (1901–1921): Population grew very slowly (~5% over 20 years). HIGH birth rates but ALSO HIGH death rates due to: famines (1899, 1905, 1908, 1918), epidemics (1918 influenza pandemic killed 10–13 million in India), poor healthcare. 1911–1921: Population actually DECLINED slightly. WHY 1921 = 'YEAR OF THE GREAT DIVIDE': The first census after which death rates began to consistently fall while birth rates remained high. Population growth became clearly positive from 1921 onwards. PHASE II — STEADY GROWTH (1921–1951): Death rates falling (better medicine, famine prevention). Birth rates still high. Population grew from 251 million to 361 million (44% increase). British improvements in public health (railways enabling food movement, vaccinations). PHASE III — RAPID GROWTH / POPULATION EXPLOSION (1951–1981): Post-Independence healthcare investment (Five-Year Plans). Death rates fell rapidly (DDT reduced malaria, vaccines widespread). Birth rates remained high. Population grew from 361 million to 683 million — DOUBLED in 30 years. Annual growth rate: ~2.2% in 1971. PHASE IV — DECLINING GROWTH RATE (1981–PRESENT): Birth rates beginning to decline as: urbanisation increases, female literacy rises, family planning programmes gain acceptance, economic development raises opportunity cost of large families. Growth rate fell from ~2.2% (1971) to ~1.64% (2001) to ~1.36% (2011). TFR declined from ~6 (1950) to ~2.0 (2021).
The 1921 'Year of the Great Divide' is the most-tested fact from this chapter. Examiners ask: (1) What is the Year of the Great Divide? (2) Why is 1921 significant? Answer: it marks the beginning of consistent population growth after the stagnant phase — death rates began falling faster than birth rates from this year onwards.
Population Distribution and Density — Regional Patterns
HIGH DENSITY REGIONS (>500/km²): The Ganga-Brahmaputra Plain (UP, Bihar, West Bengal): fertile soil, perennial rivers, long history of settlement, moderate climate. Kerala coast: high agricultural productivity (coconut, rice), good infrastructure. LOW DENSITY REGIONS (<100/km²): Himalayan states: Arunachal Pradesh (17/km²), Himachal Pradesh, J&K — because of extreme terrain and climate. Rajasthan: Thar Desert — water scarcity, harsh climate. Mizoram, Meghalaya: hilly forest terrain. FACTORS FOR HIGH DENSITY: Physical: fertile plains, perennial water, moderate climate. Human: long history of agriculture, good connectivity, economic activities. FACTORS FOR LOW DENSITY: Physical: mountains, deserts, forests, extreme climate. Economic: limited agricultural potential, poor connectivity.
CBSE map questions: know which states are highest/lowest in density, literacy, and sex ratio. These appear as map exercises (mark on India outline map) and short-answer questions. UP = most populous; Sikkim = least. Bihar = highest density; Arunachal = lowest. Kerala = highest literacy AND sex ratio.
Literacy and Occupational Structure — State Comparisons
LITERACY (2011): National average 74%. ABOVE AVERAGE (>80%): Kerala 94%, Mizoram 91.6%, Tripura 87.8%, Himachal Pradesh 83.8%, Goa 88.7%. BELOW AVERAGE (<70%): Bihar 61.8%, Arunachal Pradesh 65.4%, Rajasthan 66.1%. GENDER GAP: Male 82%, Female 65%. Widest gap: Rajasthan, UP. Smallest gap: Kerala. OCCUPATIONAL STRUCTURE (India 2011): Primary (agriculture/forestry/fishing/mining): ~49% of workforce. Secondary (manufacturing/construction): ~24%. Tertiary (services): ~27%. INDIA 2023 (estimated): Primary ~43%, Secondary ~25%, Tertiary ~32%. STATES WITH HIGH AGRI DEPENDENCE: Bihar (~75%), UP (~70%) — low development, low literacy. STATES WITH HIGH TERTIARY: Maharashtra, Karnataka, Kerala — more developed.
The gender gap in literacy maps directly to economic development. Rajasthan's low female literacy (~52.7%, 2011) links to early marriage, son preference, purdah system, and poor girls' school access — which in turn links to low sex ratio, high fertility, and slow development. Kerala inverts all these — high female literacy, best sex ratio, lowest TFR — showing education's transformative effect.
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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Saying 1921 is when India's population growth 'began' or when the census started
India's census started in 1872 (first) and became decennial from 1881. Population was growing before 1921. The 'Year of the Great Divide' means that 1921 is when death rates began to CONSISTENTLY AND RAPIDLY FALL while birth rates stayed high — creating a new, faster trajectory of growth. Before 1921, births and deaths were both high and growth was slow/stagnant. From 1921, a new pattern begins. It doesn't mark the start of population growth; it marks the transition to ACCELERATING growth.
WATCH OUT
Confusing Phase III (population explosion 1951-1981) as caused by rising birth rates
Phase III population explosion was NOT caused by rising birth rates. It was caused by RAPIDLY FALLING DEATH RATES while birth rates REMAINED HIGH (but were not increasing). Post-independence public health campaigns (DDT spraying for malaria, mass vaccination, famine prevention through Public Distribution System) slashed death rates. Birth rates stayed culturally high. The gap between them widened — producing the population explosion. This is classic Stage II/III DTM behaviour.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· year-of-great-divide
Why is 1921 called the 'Year of the Great Divide' in India's population history?
Show solution
THE YEAR OF THE GREAT DIVIDE (1921): The census decade 1911–1921 was the ONLY decade in post-1901 Indian history in which the population actually declined slightly (from 303 million in 1911 to 251 million in 1921 — reflecting the devastating 1918 influenza pandemic which killed 10–13 million Indians, combined with recurring famines and very high death rates). WHY 1921 IS THE TURNING POINT: From 1921 onwards, death rates began to CONSISTENTLY and RAPIDLY FALL because of: (1) Improvements in public health infrastructure by the British administration (vaccinations against plague and cholera). (2) Better famine relief using railways to distribute food. (3) Gradual improvements in medicine. Birth rates REMAINED HIGH (cultural preference for large families, early marriage, no family planning). The GAP between high birth rates and falling death rates began to widen from 1921, producing consistent population growth for the first time. ALL SUBSEQUENT DECADES show population growth (never another decline or near-stagnation). This is why 1921 'divides' India's demographic history: before 1921 = stagnant phase; after 1921 = steady then explosive growth. It marks the beginning of India's Stage II demographic transition.
Q2MEDIUM· state-comparison
Compare the demographic profiles of Kerala and Bihar. What do these differences reveal about development?
Show solution
KERALA vs BIHAR — DEMOGRAPHIC COMPARISON (2011 Census): POPULATION DENSITY: Bihar: 1,106/km² (highest in India). Kerala: 860/km² (also high, but distributed differently). LITERACY: Kerala: ~94% (highest in India; female literacy ~92%). Bihar: 61.8% (lowest in India; female literacy ~53%). SEX RATIO: Kerala: 1,084 females/1,000 males (highest in India). Bihar: 918 (below national average of 940). HUMAN DEVELOPMENT: Kerala would rank ~50th globally on HDI. Bihar would rank ~150th globally. FERTILITY (TFR): Kerala: ~1.7 (BELOW replacement level — population stabilising or slightly declining). Bihar: ~3.0 (above replacement — still growing). WHAT THIS REVEALS: (1) EDUCATION TRANSFORMS DEMOGRAPHICS: Kerala's investment in women's education since the 19th century (princely state of Travancore had strong school networks) has produced: lower fertility (educated women delay marriage, want fewer children), better sex ratio (educated girls are valued), lower infant mortality. (2) INCOME ≠ DEVELOPMENT: Bihar has grown economically in recent years, but its demographic indicators remain poor — showing that GDP growth without targeted social spending doesn't produce human development. (3) GENDER EQUALITY IS FOUNDATIONAL: Kerala's female literacy drives its HDI; Bihar's gender gap in literacy drives its low HDI. (4) REGIONAL VARIATION WITHIN INDIA: India's national HDI averages mask an enormous range — from near-European conditions in Kerala to sub-Saharan conditions in some Bihar districts.
Q3HARD· population-policy
Critically assess India's population policy from independence to the present. What has worked and what hasn't?
Show solution
INDIA'S POPULATION POLICY — EVOLUTION AND ASSESSMENT: (1) EARLY PHASE (1952–1970s): India was the FIRST country in the world to adopt an official Family Planning Programme in 1952. Initial approach: voluntary family planning — providing contraceptives, education. Results: slow impact. Birth rate fell from ~45 (1951) to ~37 (1971). Population doubled from 361 million to 548 million. (2) EMERGENCY PHASE (1975–1977): The Indira Gandhi Emergency government launched FORCED STERILISATION campaigns — primarily vasectomies for men. ~8.3 million sterilisations in 1976-77. MASSIVE BACKLASH: coercive methods, targeting of poor and minorities. Emergency defeat (1977) partly due to public fury over forced sterilisation. This remains India's most controversial population policy moment. (3) POST-EMERGENCY SOFTENING (1977–2000): India shifted to VOLUNTARY, INCENTIVE-BASED family planning. Two-child norm encouraged (not legally enforced at national level). Contraceptive supply improved. Small family norm communication campaigns. (4) NATIONAL POPULATION POLICY 2000: Stated goal: achieve TFR of 2.1 (replacement level) by 2010. Approach: (a) address unmet need for contraception; (b) reduce infant mortality so parents don't need 'insurance' children; (c) improve girl child education — Kerala model at national scale; (d) delay age at marriage for women. RESULTS: India's TFR fell from ~6 (1950) to ~2.0 (2021) — slightly below replacement. SUCCESS FACTORS: Female literacy increase (from ~9% in 1951 to 65%+ in 2011). Urbanisation. Economic development. Expanded family planning services. FAILURES: Uneven progress — UP, Bihar, Jharkhand TFR still >3.0. Coercion concerns resurfaced — some states passed two-child laws disqualifying parents of 3+ children from local body elections. CURRENT STATUS: India's TFR is near replacement level nationally, but demographic momentum (large young population already born) means population will continue growing until ~2060 (projected peak: ~1.7 billion). The challenge has shifted from reducing fertility to managing the quality of a large young population — education, skills, health.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • India 2011 census: 1,210.85 million. Rank 2nd (surpassed China in April 2023 to become 1st).
  • Density 2011: 382/km². Highest: Bihar (1,106/km²). Lowest: Arunachal Pradesh (17/km²).
  • Most populous state: Uttar Pradesh. Least populous: Sikkim.
  • 1921 = Year of the Great Divide. Start of Phase II (steady growth).
  • Phase I (1901-1921): Stagnant. Phase II (1921-1951): Steady. Phase III (1951-1981): Rapid. Phase IV (1981-): Declining rate.
  • Population explosion in Phase III: death rates fell rapidly; birth rates remained high (classic Stage II/III DTM).
  • Sex ratio (2011): 940 overall. Kerala 1,084 (highest). Haryana 879 (lowest).
  • Literacy (2011): 74.04% overall. Male 82.14%, Female 65.46%. Kerala ~94% (highest). Bihar ~62% (lowest).
  • TFR India: ~2.0 (2021) — near replacement level. India's peak population projected: ~1.7 billion by 2060.
  • Demographic dividend window: 2020–2045. Large working-age cohort relative to dependents.

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 5-8 marks

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
Short Answer — Facts/Phases311921 Year of Great Divide; four phases of population growth; define population density; census 2011 key data
Long Answer — Analysis51Factors affecting population distribution; state comparison (Kerala-Bihar); Phase III population explosion causes; India's demographic dividend
Prep strategy
  • Four phases: 1901-1921 (stagnant), 1921-1951 (steady), 1951-1981 (rapid/explosion), 1981-present (declining rate). Know which phase has which growth rate pattern and WHY.
  • 1921 = Year of the Great Divide. Deaths begin falling. Births remain high. Gap creates growth. This is a 1-mark/2-mark direct question.
  • State facts (2011 census): Most populous = UP. Highest density = Bihar. Lowest density = Arunachal. Highest sex ratio = Kerala. Highest literacy = Kerala. Lowest literacy = Bihar. These appear in map exercises and fill-in-the-blanks.

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

India's Population Milestone — Surpassing China in 2023

In April 2023, the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) confirmed that India surpassed China to become the world's most populous country at ~1.428 billion. This milestone has profound implications: India's young median age (~28 years vs China's ~38 years) gives it a demographic advantage for economic growth over the next two decades — the demographic dividend. But India also needs to create ~9 million jobs per year to absorb its young workforce. China, by contrast, faces rapid population ageing and is already declining — a consequence of the One-Child Policy (1980–2015) and now the lowest birth rate in its recorded history. The divergence between India's youthful, growing population and China's ageing, shrinking population will reshape the global economy by 2050.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. For 'factors affecting population distribution' in India: physical factors (climate, terrain, soil, water — explain the Ganga Plain vs Rajasthan/Himalaya contrast). Human factors (historical settlement, economic activities, connectivity). Always give state examples — Bihar vs Arunachal Pradesh.
  2. For 'phases of population growth': a table format works well — Phase | Period | Growth Rate | Birth Rate | Death Rate | Reason. Four rows, fill each column. This shows systematic understanding and earns full marks.

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Study India's NATIONAL FAMILY HEALTH SURVEY (NFHS-5, 2019-21) — the most recent large-scale demographic survey, which shows India's TFR has fallen to 2.0 (below replacement in most states except Bihar, UP, Jharkhand). The NFHS-5 revealed that India's fertility has fallen faster than the 2011 census implied — making the case that India's population peak may come sooner (~2050) and lower (~1.6 billion) than earlier projections. Read the NFHS-5 state factsheets to understand how demographics vary by religion, caste, wealth quintile, and education level
  • Research the DEMOGRAPHIC DIVIDEND success story of EAST ASIAN TIGERS — how South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, and Hong Kong exploited their working-age population bulge in the 1960s-80s to achieve some of history's fastest economic growth. Economists estimate the demographic dividend contributed 25-33% of the East Asian 'miracle.' Compare with what India needs to do differently to replicate this: the critical variables are education quality, female labour force participation, and job creation pace

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

CBSE Class 12 Board (Geography)High
UPSC Prelims and Mains (India, Population, Social Issues)High
CUET (Geography)Medium

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

India's 2021 census was POSTPONED due to the COVID-19 pandemic — first to 2022, then indefinitely. As of 2026, the 2021 census has not been conducted or released. This means CBSE BOARD EXAMS continue to use 2011 CENSUS DATA as the official reference for all India population statistics. Students should use 2011 figures in board answers (density 382/km², sex ratio 940, literacy 74.04%, Bihar highest density, Arunachal lowest, etc.). For current estimates (like India surpassing China in 2023), use UNFPA/UN population estimates — but in board exams, the 2011 census figures are the authoritative source for specific numerical answers.
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Last reviewed on 27 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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