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Every citizen of India is agitated by the tremendous problems arising in every sphere of life due to the wildly increasing population, and is looking towards the Government of India to solve the problems, with the hope that the government will immediately implement the “Two Child Policy for All” on this subject. Make strict laws and implement them strictly so that every citizen of the country can live life according to human standards, an environment of peace and security can be established in the country. The irony has been that even after the population has increased almost 4 times since independence, till date no government has looked serious on this very important subject.

There are some issues on which the government is not serious, then it becomes the duty of every citizen of the nation to remind the government and make an honest effort to convince the organized demand of the country in the interest of the nation. And provide financial support to the organization.

There are some issues on which the government is not serious, then it becomes the duty of every citizen of the nation to remind the government and make an honest effort to convince the organized demand of the country in the interest of the nation. And provide financial support to the organization.

Savitri Chowdhary, Founder and National President of Jansankhya Samadhan Foundation (Registered) has been running awareness programs since 15 years. And is demanding “Two Child Policy for All” from the government. So that the demand of the movement can reach every corner of the country along with the government.

Why we need two child policy ?

  • The policy limits couples to having only two children. This is done to improve health care and education for children, as well as more opportunities for women.

  • Parents will be less stressed because they will not have to spend more money on necessities.

  • The policy has led to a decrease in the number of abortions in India.

  • Scarce resources can be effectively shared.

  • Unemployment will be reduced.

Why we need two child policy ?

  • The policy limits couples to having only two children. This is done to improve health care and education for children, as well as more opportunities for women.

  • Parents will be less stressed because they will not have to spend more money on necessities.

  • The policy has led to a decrease in the number of abortions in India.

  • Scarce resources can be effectively shared.

  • Unemployment will be reduced.
Need to control Population

Rising population and environmental degradation

Low income populations are more prone to crime, drug abuse, alcoholism, depression, and violence. The health status of an individual, community, or nation is a product of man’s internal environment and the external natural environment, which can be physical, biological, and social. Rapid population growth in a country like India is threatening the environment through expansion and intensification of agriculture, uncontrolled growth of urbanization and industrialization, and destruction of natural habitats. The present paper is an attempt to study the population change and its impacts on land, forest and water and energy resources. Population pressure contributes to land degradation and soil erosion, thus affecting productive resource base of the economy. The increasing population numbers and growing affluence have resulted in rapid growth of energy production and consumption in India. The environmental effects like ground water and surface water contamination; air pollution and global warming are of growing concern owing to increasing consumption levels. The paper concludes with some policy reflections and emphasizes the potential importance of natural resources.

Need to control Population

Rising population and environmental degradation

Low income populations are more prone to crime, drug abuse, alcoholism, depression, and violence. The health status of an individual, community, or nation is a product of man’s internal environment and the external natural environment, which can be physical, biological, and social. Rapid population growth in a country like India is threatening the environment through expansion and intensification of agriculture, uncontrolled growth of urbanization and industrialization, and destruction of natural habitats. The present paper is an attempt to study the population change and its impacts on land, forest and water and energy resources. Population pressure contributes to land degradation and soil erosion, thus affecting productive resource base of the economy. The increasing population numbers and growing affluence have resulted in rapid growth of energy production and consumption in India. The environmental effects like ground water and surface water contamination; air pollution and global warming are of growing concern owing to increasing consumption levels. The paper concludes with some policy reflections and emphasizes the potential importance of natural resources.

State that adopt two child policy

Assam And Uttar Pradesh

The state of Assam and Uttar Pradesh in India has adopted the two-child policy to control the rampantly increasing population. Despite having a two-child policy amendment in place, India must improve its ongoing steps to make this policy more stringent by factoring in all the challenges. 

Uttar Pradesh State Law Commission has drafted a bill on population control by promoting a two-child policy. While the buzz around the move – criticism and applauds alike — has not subsided yet, Assam and Madhya Pradesh are already looking at introducing similar laws.

The arguments in favour of implementing a two-child policy for government jobs highlight the aim of the National Population Policy to reduce or stabilise India’s population by 2045.

 

Madhya Pradesh, which had in 2005 revoked its two-child policy, is seeing the chorus for population control grow once again. States like Chhattisgarh, Haryana, and Himachal Pradesh have also revoked similar existing policies in the past.

However, there remain a large number of states in India where government jobs and electoral positions are denied to persons having more than two children.

For instance, in Rajasthan, people with more than two kids are not allowed to take up government jobs. Also, as per the Rajasthan Panchayati Raj Act, 1994, persons with more than two children, get disqualified from contesting elections as a member of the panchayat. Exceptions are however made for parents of disabled children.

State that adopt two child policy

Assam And Uttar Pradesh

The state of Assam and Uttar Pradesh in India has adopted the two-child policy to control the rampantly increasing population. Despite having a two-child policy amendment in place, India must improve its ongoing steps to make this policy more stringent by factoring in all the challenges. 

Uttar Pradesh State Law Commission has drafted a bill on population control by promoting a two-child policy. While the buzz around the move – criticism and applauds alike — has not subsided yet, Assam and Madhya Pradesh are already looking at introducing similar laws.

The arguments in favour of implementing a two-child policy for government jobs highlight the aim of the National Population Policy to reduce or stabilise India’s population by 2045.

 

Madhya Pradesh, which had in 2005 revoked its two-child policy, is seeing the chorus for population control grow once again. States like Chhattisgarh, Haryana, and Himachal Pradesh have also revoked similar existing policies in the past.

However, there remain a large number of states in India where government jobs and electoral positions are denied to persons having more than two children.

For instance, in Rajasthan, people with more than two kids are not allowed to take up government jobs. Also, as per the Rajasthan Panchayati Raj Act, 1994, persons with more than two children, get disqualified from contesting elections as a member of the panchayat. Exceptions are however made for parents of disabled children.

Provisions in the Two-Child Policy

Debarment from advantages of welfare projects: Any individual with more than two kids after the regulation comes into force would get debarred from numerous advantages such as welfare schemes.

Barred from fighting elections at the regional level:  Ration card departments would remain limited to four. The individual would get barred from fighting elections to the regional authority or any person of the local self-government.

Becoming non-eligible to apply for state Government employment:  An individual with more than two kids would also become eligible for State government employment.

Barred from getting a raise: People already having full-time jobs will get barred from getting a raise in government jobs and will not get any subsidy.

 

Some Challenges in Adopting a Two-Child Policy in India

01

Counter-Productive Action :- The global experience indicates that any pressure to have a specific number of kids is counter-productive and points to demographic contortions.

02

Inevitable Rise in Unsafe Abortions :- In the predominant patriarchal culture, when individuals can have just two kids, the stress on women to deliver male kids will grow. Thereby leading to dangerous abortions and also skewed sex proportion.

03

Gender Inequality Might Increase :- There is no proof to indicate that such a regulation will assist in reducing the fertility rate. Rather, professionals fear it would lead to raised gender inequality. Any coercive action is likely to exacerbate the prejudice against the girl child..

04

Against Global Duties :- India remains determined to its responsibilities under global law, including the regulations included in the International Conference on Population and Development Programme of Action of 1994.

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