Premium

Knowledge Nugget: UNFPA State of World Population Report 2025 – Must-know insights for UPSC

The report underscores that financial constraints remain one of the most significant barriers to reproductive freedom in India. In today’s Knowledge Nugget, learn about the key takeaways from the report and understand the key terms associated with population.

UPSC, UNFPA, State of world population report 2025This imposed guilt is nothing but a new-age tool of gendered oppression, one that creates another hurdle for a woman to cross in her quest for equity.(Representative)

Take a look at the essential concepts, terms, quotes, or phenomena every day and brush up your knowledge. Here’s your knowledge nugget for today.

Knowledge Nugget: State of World Population Report (SOWP) 2025

Subject: Human Geography and Society

short article insert (Relevance: UPSC has asked questions on population, government policies to utlise demographic dividends, and key terms associated with it. Check them in the post-read questions. In this regard, understanding the SOWP Report 2025 is important for your UPSC exam.)

Why in the news?

The 2025 State of World Population (SOWP) Report was released by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA). This year’s report, ‘The real fertility crisis: The pursuit of reproductive agency in a changing world’ has called for a shift from panic over falling fertility to addressing unmet reproductive goals. The report draws on academic research and new data from a UNFPA–YouGov survey spanning 14 countries, including India.

Story continues below this ad

Key Takeaways:

1. According to the report, one in three adult Indians (36%) face unintended pregnancies, while 30% experience unfulfilled desire for having either more or fewer children, and 23% face both. The report challenges global narratives around ‘population explosion’ vs. ‘population collapse’.

2. The SOWP Report 2025 highlights that millions of individuals are unable to achieve their true fertility goals. This is the real crisis, not underpopulation or overpopulation. And, the answer lies in greater reproductive agency – a person’s ability to make free and informed choices about sex, contraception, and starting a family.

3. One in five people globally expect not to have the number of children they desire. The key drivers include the prohibitive cost of parenthood, job insecurity, housing, concerns over the state of the world, and the lack of a suitable partner. A toxic blend of economic precarity and sexism plays a role in many of these issues, the report shows.

4. In the case of India, financial limitations are one of the biggest barriers to reproductive freedom. Nearly four in 10 people say financial limitations are stopping them from having the families they want. Job insecurity (21%), housing constraints (22%), and the lack of reliable childcare (18%) are making parenthood feel out of reach.

UNFPA, state of world population 2025

Story continues below this ad

5. Health barriers like poor general well-being (15%), infertility (13%), and limited access to pregnancy-related care (14%) add further strain. Many are also holding back due to growing anxiety about the future—from climate change to political and social instability.

6. According to the Report, India’s population in 2025 has reached 1.46 billion, with 68 percent of the population in the 15-64 age group.

Why is it called UNFPA?

In 1969, the agency began operating as the United Nations Fund for Population Activities. The same year, the United Nations General Assembly declared, “Parents have the exclusive right to determine freely and responsibly the number and spacing of their children.” In 1987, the name was changed to the United Nations Population Fund, but the original acronym remains the same.

High fertility and low fertility duality case of India

1. Replacement-level fertility is commonly defined as 2.1 births per woman, which is the rate at which a population size remains the same from one generation to the next. India has reached the replacement-level fertility of 2.0, but the report pointed out that many people, especially women, still face significant barriers to making free and informed decisions about their reproductive lives and significant disparities persist across regions and states. These barriers create what the report identifies as India’s “high fertility and low fertility duality.”

UNFPA, state of world population 2025

Story continues below this ad

2. Fertility has fallen below the replacement level (2.1) in 31 states/UTs, but remains high in Bihar (3.0), Meghalaya (2.9), and Uttar Pradesh (2.7). Urban-rural gaps persist, and seven states have yet to reach replacement TFR in rural areas. In Tamil Nadu, Kerala, and Delhi, many couples delay or skip childbirth due to costs and work-life conflict, especially among educated middle-class women. This duality reflects differences in economic opportunities, access to healthcare, education levels, and prevailing gender and social norms.

Issue of Infertility in India

The report highlighted that Infertility remains under-prioritised in India. Infertility needs to be considered for inclusion under the government’s health insurance schemes, as suggested in the report. An estimated 27.5 million Indian couples face infertility, yet public sector services are limited, while private care remains expensive and largely confined to urban centres.

BEYOND THE NUGGET: Understand the key terms related to Population

📍Positive Growth of Population: When the birth rate is more than the death rate between two points of time or when people from other countries migrate permanently to a region, it is called positive growth of population.

📍Negative Growth of Population: When there is a decrease in population between two points of time due to a fall in birth rate below the death rate or people migrate to other countries, it is called negative growth of population.

Story continues below this ad

📍Density of Population: The number of persons per unit area is called the density of population. According to the 2011 Census, India’s population density is 382 persons per square kilometer, and in states, Bihar has the highest density at 1106 persons per square kilometer. In 1951, it was 117 persons/sq km.

What is the demographic dividend?

The falling dependency ratio, which is defined as the portion of population which is composed of dependents (i.e., elderly people who are too old to work, and children who are too young to work) with the portion that is in the working age group, can be a source of economic growth and prosperity. This is referred to as the ‘demographic dividend’, or benefit flowing from the changing age structure.

FYI: The dependency ratio is equal to the population below 15 or above 64, divided by the population in the 15-64 age group. This is usually expressed as a percentage. The working-age population is generally defined as those aged 15-64 years.

📍Period of population explosion: The sudden increase in the population of the country is called a population explosion. In India, the decade of 1951-1981 is referred to as the period of population explosion. During this period, the average annual growth rate was as high as 2.2 percent.

📍Fertility Rate: The fertility rate refers to the number of live births per 1000 women in the child-bearing age group, usually taken to be 15 to 49 years. Total fertility rate (TFR)

Story continues below this ad

📍Total Fertility Rate (TFR): According to the website of OECD, the total fertility rate in a specific year is defined as the total number of children that would be born to each woman if she were to live to the end of her child-bearing years and give birth to children in alignment with the prevailing age-specific fertility rates

Post read question

(1) The total fertility rate in an economy is defined as: (UPSC CSE 2024)

(a) the number of children born per 1000 people in the population in a year.

(b) the number of children born to couple in their lifetime in a given population.

(c) the birth rate minus death rate.

Story continues below this ad

(d) the average number of live births a woman would have by the end of her child-bearing age.

(2) India is regarded as a country with “Demographic Dividend’’. This is due to– (UPSC CSE 2011)

(a) Its high population in the age group below 15 years.

(b) Its high population in the age group of 15-­64 years.

Story continues below this ad

(c) Its high population in the age group above 65 years.

(d) Its high total population.

Answer key
1.  (d)   2.  (b)

(Source: NCERT, ‘Millions unable to realise reproductive goals’: UNFPA State of World Population Report 2025 reveals crisis of fertility aspirations, India becomes world’s most populous nation: What’s behind the population numbers?)

explained live

Register for the Zoom session of Explained live here.

Subscribe to our UPSC newsletter. Stay updated with the latest UPSC articles by joining our Telegram channel – IndianExpress UPSC Hub, and follow us on Instagram and X.

🚨 Click Here to read the UPSC Essentials magazine for May 2025. Share your views and suggestions in the comment box or at manas.srivastava@indianexpress.com🚨

Khushboo Kumari is a Deputy Copy Editor with The Indian Express. She has done her graduation and post-graduation in History from the University of Delhi. At The Indian Express, she writes for the UPSC section. She holds experience in UPSC-related content development. You can contact her via email: khushboo.kumari@indianexpress.com ... Read More

US President Donald Trump on Monday said the United States is “close to signing a trade deal” with India, after announcing new reciprocal tariffs on 14 countries — including Bangladesh, Malaysia, Japan, Cambodia and South Korea — setting rates at 25 to 40 per cent, and warning that rerouting foreign goods or retaliating would attract even higher US tariffs. This comes as Indian negotiators are understood to have offered substantial market access to US products in most sectors, excluding sensitive areas such as dairy and agriculture. The US, in turn, is expected to offer lower tariffs on labour-intensive sectors such as textiles and footwear.

Latest Comment
Post Comment
Read Comments
Advertisement

UPSC Magazine

UPSC Magazine

Read UPSC Magazine

Read UPSC Magazine
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement