Context
Recently, The Economic Advisory Council to the Prime Minister (EAC-PM) published a study that analyzed the shifts in religious demographics in India, Hindu population share dipped 7.82%, while that of Christians, Muslims, Sikhs has seen a rise in the 65-year period between 1950 and 2015.
Key highlights of the report ‘Share of Religious Minorities: A Cross Country Analysis
The Study focused on only those countries (around 167) that had a majority religion (more than 50 percent share of the total population) for 1950.
- The Share of Religious Minorities report analysis relied on the Religious Characteristics of States Dataset 2017 to track religious composition across countries.
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Economic Advisory Council (EAC-PM):
- PM-EAC is just like PC and NITI, this is also neither constitutional nor statutory body.
- It is an independent body constituted to give advice on economic and related issues to the Government of India, specifically to the Prime Minister.
- Started in the 2000s to give advice on economic issues to the Prime Minister within the context of Economic Planning.
- In 2017-Sep it was reconstituted this Economic Advisory Council
- Composition: Economist Bibek Debroy (as Chairman) & other notable full time and part time members, Total 7 persons.
- Terms of reference of the EAC:
- To analyze any issue, economic or otherwise, referred to it by the Prime Minister and advising him thereon;
- To address issues of macroeconomic importance and presenting views thereon to the Prime Minister. This could be either suo-motu or on reference from the Prime Minister or anyone else;
- To attend to any other task as may be desired by the Prime Minister from time to time.
- NITI aayog provides administrative and secretarial support to PM- EAC
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Global Finding: Between 1950 and 2015,
- Indication of Greater religious heterogeneity: The global average for the share of the majority religious denomination in 1950 was 75%.
- By 2015, this figure had decreased by approximately 22%.
- Countries like India and several OECD nations have also seen declines in their majority religious shares.
- Decline of Roman Catholics in OECD Countries: Data from Of 35 OECD countries studied, 25 were from Europe, and the share of majority religious denominations( Roman Catholics) has decreased by 29 per cent in these countries.
- In contrast, many Muslim-majority countries have seen an increase in the share of their dominant religious groups.
- Changes in Africa: In 1950, animism or native religion was the dominant faith in 24 African countries.
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- However, by 2015, none of these 24 countries retained a majority adherent to these indigenous religions.
- Changes in South Asia: In the South Asian region, there’s a contrasting trend where the majority religious group is increasing in dominance.
- However, minority populations have experienced significant declines in countries like Bangladesh, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bhutan, and Afghanistan.
Finding About India, Between 1950 and 2015,
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- Hindu Population: the Hindu population in India decreased by 7.82%.
- Muslim Population: the Muslim population in India increased by 43.15%, indicating an environment conducive to religious diversity.
- Christian Population : The Christian population in India saw a modest rise from 2.24% to 2.36%, reflecting a 5.38% increase.
- Sikh Population: the Sikh community experienced a rise in its share, increasing from 1.24% to 1.85% , reflecting a 6.58% increase.
- Parsi Population : Contrary to the overall trend, the Parsi population in India witnessed a significant decline of 85%, decreasing from 0.03% in 1950 to 0.004% in 2015.
- Jain Population: The share of Jains declined from 0.45 per cent to 0.36 per cent.
- It said the total fertility rate (TFR) among all religious groups was declining and the
- The highest decrease in TFR from 2005-06 to 2019-21 was observed among Muslims, a 1 percentage point drop in their TFR.
- Hindus saw a 0.7 percentage point drop.
Implications of Report:
- The report implies that demographic shifts in India signal a favorable environment for diversity.
- India’s inclusive policies have fostered diversity, evident in the growing number of minority populations without pinpointing specific causes.
- It underscores the significance of defining and safeguarding minority rights, citing India’s relative success compared to neighboring countries.
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