Under the reign of Pt. Jawaharlal Nehru, India was one of the first countries to
implement an official family planning system. India is the second most populous
country in the world after China. The country's population grew from 361 million
in 1951 to 1210 million in 2011. (Around 3.5 times). Under the tenure of Sanjay
Gandhi, the government initiated a sterilising campaign in 1974[2]. The
government attempted coercive sterilisation during the period, and millions of
impoverished men were sterilised. In only one year, 6.2 million individuals were
sterilised.[3]
Then, in 1992, at the time of P. V. Narasimha Rao, the 79th Constitutional
Amendment Bill[4] was brought before the Rajya Sabha, and it also talked to two
child policy. It wasn't discussed as the then health minister, Makhan Lal
Fotedar, resigned[5]. It mentioned two-child norms for all government employees,
MPs, and MLAs.
Since independence, more than 35 private member's bills have been submitted in
parliament for the goal of pollution regulation. Several states still have two
child standards in place today. Candidates with more than two children are not
eligible for government positions in Rajasthan. Two more district judges in
Madhya Pradesh were fired a few years ago for breaking the two-child rule. They
later proceeded to the High Court, where they were restored only because there
was no opportunity to fill in data about the number of children on the previous
form, and the HC ruled that their application should have been cancelled at the
time.
Research question?
- What is the 2-child policy?
- When did the policy came into existence?
- Does India need a Two-Child Policy and is it violative of fundamental rights?
Population Control in India, History
In 1952, India became the first country in the world to make family planning a
state-sponsored programme[6]. By the late 1960s and early 1970s, India's
population control programmes were mainly reliant on sterilisations and
intrauterine devices, with World Bank, UN Population Fund, and Ford Foundation
financing.
The pressure was so great that during the 1960s famine, US President
Lyndon B. Johnson refused to deliver food help until India granted incentives
for sterilising. During the Emergency, the principal purpose of Sanjay Gandhi's
Five-Point Programme[7] was coercive male sterility. Approximately 6.2 million
Indian males were sterilised in a year, "15 times the number of persons
sterilised by the Nazis", according to scientific writer Mara Hvistendahl.
Since then, the focus of population control has shifted to women's bodies.
Female sterilisation increased from 25% to 80% in 1977-78. Since then, the
proportion has remained constant.
Some states have already implemented a two-child policy in various forms, all
with the goal of population control. Individuals having more than two children
are barred from winning elections under the Odisha Zilla Parishad Act 1991[8],
the Telangana Panchayat Raj Act 1994[9], the Andhra Pradesh Panchayati Raj Act
1994[10], the Haryana Panchayati Raj Act 1994[11], and the Gujarat Local
Authorities Act 2005[12]. Those having a third child born after 2001 are barred
from government and judicial service under the Madhya Pradesh Civil Services
(General Condition of Service) Regulations.
Some states have already implemented a two-child policy in various forms, all
with the goal of population control. Individuals having more than two children
are barred from winning elections under the Odisha Zilla Parishad Act 1991, the
Telangana Panchayat Raj Act 1994, the Andhra Pradesh Panchayati Raj Act 1994,
the Haryana Panchayati Raj Act 1994, and the Gujarat Local Authorities Act 2005.
Those having a third child born after 2001 are barred from government and
judicial service under the Madhya Pradesh Civil Services (General Condition of
Service) Regulations.[13]
Incentives And Disincentives in Two-Child Policies
Many socioeconomic characteristics impact reproduction rates, according to data
from numerous Indian states. According to the (National Family Health Survey,
2019-20) NFHS-4, TFR(total fertility rate) among Indian women with 12 or more
years of formal education is 1.7, whereas it is 3.06 for women with no formal
education. Kerala, for example, decreased the state TFR to 1.6 by investing in
girl-child education, job prospects, and a robust healthcare system. [14]
All of the disincentives stated in all two-child programmes entail limiting
broad public access to State-sponsored welfare systems. According to the Hunger
Watch poll done by the Right to Food campaign in October 2020, welfare systems
such as the public distribution system (PDS) failed short during the epidemic.
According to statistics from several Indian states, several socioeconomic
factors influence reproduction rates. TFR among Indian women with 12 or more
years of formal education is 1.7, but it is 3.06 for women with no formal
education, according to the NFHS-4[15]. Kerala, for example, reduced its TFR to
1.6 by investing in girl-child education, career opportunities, and a strong
healthcare system. a warning that when individuals are already in poverty and
debt,
Demographer Srinivas Goli, the Australia-India Institute NGN Research Fellow at
the University of Western Australia, called for greater attention to the TWFR.
"The difference between these two data points has a different story to tell
about the lack of choice and agency of women," he told Article 14[16]. predicted
that implementing the newly planned two-child policy, particularly the
incentives for those undergoing sterilisation, would be difficult.
"For
starters, the fertility rate for people with more than ten years of formal
education is already below two. Because most government employees are expected
to have at least that many years of education, we may infer that the majority of
them are already qualified for the incentives. Is the state equipped to handle
this?" He noted that if half of the almost 15 million below-poverty-line
households in UP apply for these incentives, the fiscal burden would be
enormous.
States implementing the policy
- Rajasthan: Candidates with more than two children are ineligible for government positions. According to the Rajasthan Panchayati Raj Act of 1994, if a person has more than two children, he is ineligible to run for election as a Sarpanch or a member. The previous BJP administration, however, loosened the two-child rule in the event of a crippled child.
- Madhya Pradesh: Since 2001, the state has adhered to the two-child rule. If the third kid was born on or after January 26, 2001, one becomes disqualified for government work under the Madhya Pradesh Civil Services (General Condition of Services) Regulations. The regulation also applies to higher-level judicial positions. The two-child rule was observed by MPs for candidates in local body elections until 2005, when it was repealed by the then-BJP administration after concerns were expressed on the grounds that such a regulation did not apply in assembly and parliamentary elections.
- Telangana and Andhra Pradesh: A person having more than two children is barred from running for office under Section 19 (3), read with Sections 156 (2) and 184 (2) of the Telangana Panchayat Raj Act, 1994. Nonetheless, a person will not be disqualified if he or she had more than two children before May 30, 1994. The same portions of the Andhra Pradesh Panchayat Raj Act, 1994, apply in Andhra Pradesh, where a person with more than two children is barred from running for office.
- Gujarat: The Gujarat Local Authorities Act was revised by the government in 2005. Anybody having more than two children is barred from running for office in panchayats, municipalities, or municipal corporations under the amendment.
- Maharashtra: Anyone with more than two children are barred from running for local body elections under the Maharashtra Zilla Parishads and Panchayat Samitis Act (gram panchayats to municipal corporations). According to the Maharashtra Civil Services (Declaration of Small Family) Regulations, 2005, a person with more than two children is ineligible for a position in the state government. Women who have more than two children are likewise barred from receiving benefits from the Public Distribution System.
- Uttarakhand: The state administration resolved to prohibit anyone with more than two children from running in panchayat elections and enacted a Law in Vidhan-Sabha to that effect. Nevertheless, those planning for village pradhan and gram panchayat ward member elections contested the ruling in the High Court, and the court granted them relief. As a result, the two-child standard was enforced solely to those who ran for zila panchayat and blocks development committee membership.
- Karnataka: Those with more than two children are not barred from running for local government positions under the Karnataka (Gram Swaraj and Panchayat Raj) Act of 1993. The legislation, however, stipulates that a person is unable to contest "if he does not have a sanitary toilet for the use of the members of his household".
- Odisha: Anyone having more than two children are barred from running for office under the Odisha Zilla Parishad Act.
Criticisms
These laws have been challenged almost from the start. Everyone is quick to
point out that India has a thriving technology sector that depends on young
people. There is concern that limiting fertility will result in a shortage of
the educated youth required to continue India's technological revolution.
The one-child policy in China is already known to have issues. The gender
imbalance that results from a strong preference for boys is the worst of all.
Additionally, millions of undocumented children were born to parents who were
already parents of one. When a two-child policy is implemented, these issues may
arise in India. The birth-rate in India is slowing to levels that are
sustainable, which is the most important development. The fertility rate was
still 3.3 children per woman in 2000, which is still a high number. That number
had already decreased to 2.179 kids by 2021. Additionally, in the years
preceding 2019, India's economy grew by 6% annually, which was more than enough
to support modest population growth.
Another criticism levelled at two-child restrictions is that it discriminates
against Muslims. Muslims are more likely to be disqualified from office because
they are more likely to have more than two kids. In India, Muslim fertility
rates are a little higher than Hindu fertility rates, which has led to
irrational worries that Muslims will take over the nation. Some people think
that the RSS wants to restrict families in order to maintain India's current
ratio of Hindus to Muslims[29].
The laws' violation of women's rights is the last criticism levelled at India's
two-child policies. Human rights advocates contend that by encouraging abortion
or infanticide of females, the laws discriminate against women from the moment
of conception. Men who want to run for political office may be enticed by the
two-child policies to divorce their wives and give up their families.
Additionally, two-child policies are frequently unknown to Indian women. There
have been instances where women with numerous children attempted to run for
political office but were rejected due to laws, they were unaware of.
How has the Supreme Court viewed the two-child norm and a policy on population
control?
Entry 20-A of the Concurrent List of the Seventh Schedule, added in 1976 by the
42nd constitutional amendment, allows both the Union and state legislatures to
pass legislation on population control and family planning. This article in the
Seventh Schedule provides the basis for the demands for a population control
law.
There is no official policy limiting the number of children a couple can have.
As a result, the Supreme Court has not had the opportunity to consider such a
policy. Nonetheless, petitions have been filed asking the Union government to
issue a directive requiring the implementation of a population control programme
based on the two-child rule.
The Supreme Court maintained a clause in 1981 that made a third pregnancy a
reason for terminating the employment of an Air India flight attendant. "When
the entire world is confronted with the problem of population explosion, it will
not only be desirable but absolutely essential for every country to see that the
family planning programme is not only whipped up but maintained at sufficient
levels so as to meet the danger of overpopulation, which, if not controlled, may
lead to serious social and economic problems throughout the world," it stated.
The two-child policy in states was first questioned before the Supreme Court in
the 2003 case of
Javed v State of Haryana[30], which featured a challenge to
Section 175(1) of the Constitution.
The Supreme Court, on the other hand, upheld the statute, stating that the
categorization it formed was "grounded on intelligible differentia" and was
based on the goal of restricting population increase. With respect to the
argument on reproductive autonomy under Article 21, the top court said "the
lofty ideals of social and economic justice, the advancement of the nation as a
whole and the philosophy of distributive justice cannot be given a go-by in the
name of undue stress on fundamental rights and individual liberty". Nonetheless,
the two-child rule was eventually repealed in Haryana.
The Supreme Court ruled in 2018 that the birth of a third child immediately
disqualifies a person from running for panchayat elections or serving as a
member or sarpanch. Nevertheless, in March 2018, the Supreme Court refused to
hear a petition requesting that the Government implement harsh population
control measures by making the two-child policy mandatory throughout the
country. The petitioners were directed by the court to approach the government.
A year later, in March 2019, the Supreme Court denied a plea by BJP leader and
attorney Ashwini Upadhyay, seeking a directive to the Election Commission to
impose an extra condition that "political parties should not stand-up candidates
who have more than two children". Nonetheless, Upadhyay's campaign for a
state-wide two-child policy led the Supreme Court to look into the matter. The
Supreme Court requested a response from the Centre on Upadhyay's plea for a
population control law in India in January 2020.
In its response, the Centre stated that it is "unambiguously" opposed to forcing
families to have just a set number of children in order to regulate the
population. In their affidavit submitted in December 2020, the Union government
claimed that the family assistance programme in India offers couples the right
to decide the size of their family without compulsion, rejecting the necessity
for a two-child standard or a particular rule regulating the number of families
in India. It went on to say that India was a signatory to the World Conference
on Population and Development's 1994 Plan of Action (POA)[31], which was
unambiguously against coercion in family planning.
Conclusion
Concluding the research paper, India is greatly at par with China when it comes
to rise of population. SC in case of Ashwini Kumar Upadhyay vs. Ministry of
Health & Family Welfare SLP (C),[32] refused to entertain the pleas made on the
population control bill. "Population is not something that one fine day it
stops," a bench of Justices SK Kaul and AS Oka observed orally.
Further in
arguments, high court alleged the population of India had marched ahead of
China, as about 20 per cent of Indians did not have Aadhaar and, therefore, were
not accounted for, and there were also crores of Rohingyas and Bangladeshis
living illegally in the country. It had claimed the "population explosion is
also the root cause of corruption", Apart from being a factor in terrible crimes
such as rape and domestic violence.
Adding to this, India does need a system to control its growing population. We
have been seeing the population of India growing at a very fast growth rate.
Notes:
-
P. V. Narasimha Rao
Pamulaparthi Venkata Narasimha Rao, popularly known as P. V. Narasimha Rao, was an Indian lawyer, statesman, and politician who served as the 9th prime minister of India from 1991 to 1996.
-
Makhan Lal Fotedar
Makhan Lal Fotedar was an Indian politician who was a senior leader of the Indian National Congress political party.
Born: 5 March 1932, Died: 28 September 2017, Gurugram.
-
Scientific writer Mara Hvistendahl
Mara Hvistendahl is an American writer. Her book Unnatural Selection was a finalist for the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction. She graduated from Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania and Columbia University in New York City. She is a former contributor to Science magazine.
-
Demographer Srinivas Goli
Dr. Goli is an Associate Professor in Demography at the International Institute for Population Sciences.
-
Article 14 - Equality before law
The State shall not deny to any person equality before the law or the equal protection of the laws within the territory of India. Prohibition of discrimination on grounds of religion, race, caste, sex, or place of birth.
End Notes:
- https://en.wikipedia.org
- https://www.bbc.com
- Ibid
- https://www.india.gov.in
- Vohra, P. (2009) Fotedar, the only minister to resign after demolition, Hindustan Times. Available at: https://www.hindustantimes.com/delhi/fotedar-the-only-minister-to-resign-after-demolition/story-O69fBX3ceSdr9SGDyskQRK.html (Accessed: March 9, 2023).
- https://nhm.gov.in
- Ibid
- https://panchayat.odisha.gov.in
- https://www.indiacode.nic.in/bitstream/123456789/8492/1/Act 5 of 2018.pdf
- http://dtcp.ap.gov.in/dtcpweb/act/Panchayathraj Act.pdf
- https://www.panchayat.gov.in/documents/20126/0/The+Haryana+Panchayati++Raj+Act+1994.pdf/6045c87f-2008-4796-fdf4-1ec30d951b00?t=1554877646549
- https://sec.gujarat.gov.in/Images/pdf/18-06-2005-%282%29.pdf
- https://mpmsme.gov.in:8080/mpmsmecms/Uploaded Document/Documents/M. P. Civil Service Rules 1961.pdf
- DASH, S.W.E.T.A. (2021) Behind the BJP's 2-Child Policies, An Anti-Muslim Agenda That Will Endanger All Indian Women, article 14. Available at: https://www.article-14.com/post/behind-the-bjp-s-2-child-policies-an-anti-muslim-agenda-that-will-endanger-all-indian-women--613823097d3c5 (Accessed: March 9, 2023).
- Ibid
- Ibid
- India.com, I. (2014) Rajasthan: Two Child Policy To Be Amended For Govt. Employees, www.india.com. Available at: https://www.india.com/education/rajasthan-two-child-policy-to-be-amended-for-govt-employees-1576192/ (Accessed: March 10, 2023).
- https://rajpanchayat.rajasthan.gov.in/en-us/actsrules/act.aspx
- Tomar, S. (2022) 954 MP govt staff with more than 2 kids served notices, hindustantimes. Available at: https://www.hindustantimes.com/cities/bhopal-news/954-mp-govt-staff-with-more-than-2-kids-served-notices-101648929730652.html (Accessed: March 10, 2023).
- news, E. (ed.) (2019) Two-child policy in Indian states, indianexpress. Available at: https://indianexpress.com/article/india/two-child-policy-in-indian-states-6082879/#:~:text=Telangana and Andhra Pradesh%3A Under,she will not be disqualified. (Accessed: March 10, 2023).
- https://www.indiacode.nic.in/bitstream/123456789/8492/1/Act 5 of 2018.pdf
- Raja, A. (2021) Gujarat's two-child policy: Why 3 civic candidates were disqualified, indianexpress.com. Available at: https://indianexpress.com/article/explained/gujarats-two-child-policy-why-3-civic-candidates-were-disqualified-7181791/ (Accessed: March 10, 2023).
- Kulkarni, S. (2021) Explained: What is Maharashtra's two-child norm for government employees?, Indianexpress. Available at: https://indianexpress.com/article/explained/maharashtra-two-child-norm-for-government-employees-explained-7292173/ (Accessed: March 10, 2023).
- https://lj.maharashtra.gov.in/Site/Upload/Acts/The Maharashtra Zilla Parishads and Panchayat Samitis Act, 1961.pdf
- https://mat.maharashtra.gov.in/Site/Upload/Pdf/O.A. 562 of 2015.pdf
- Rawat, M. (2019) Explained: What is Uttarakhand's 2-child condition, education criteria for panchayat polls, Indiatoday. Available at: https://www.indiatoday.in/fyi/story/what-is-uttarakhand-2-child-condition-education-criteria-for-panchayat-elections-1557153-2019-06-27 (Accessed: March 10, 2023).
- https://karsec.gov.in/CommonHandler.ashx?id=315
- news, E. (ed.) (2019) Two-child policy in Indian states, indianexpress. Available at: https://indianexpress.com/article/india/two-child-policy-in-indian-states-6082879/ (Accessed: March 10, 2023).
- Behind The BJP's 2-Child Policies, An Anti-Muslim Agenda That Will Endanger All Indian Women by, SWETA DASH 08 Sep 2021
- Writ Petition (civil) 302 of 2001
- https://www.unfpa.org/icpd
- No. 27597/2019
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