"Population control" is just not a set of measures adopted by the state;
it's also an ideology that rejects the sage dictum that "development is the
best contraceptive" and treats humans as cattle - fit to be coerced (even
in the sphere of intimate private matters).

Beyond that, it may also actively disfigure the demographic profile that
impedes productive economic activities - by pushing up the proportion of
those to be cared for vis-a-vis the (potentially) productive hands.

Here's a look into the Chinese experience.

<<A key metric in measuring the rate of population growth is the “total
fertility rate”. The total fertility rate denotes the average number of
children a woman has during her child-bearing years. A total fertility rate
of 2.1 is considered to be ideal, as this means that a woman will bear two
children with her partner, and these two children will take the place of
their parents when they pass on. The additional factor of 0.1 accounts for
children who might not reach adulthood or do not outlive their parents.

In 1980, when the stringent one-child policy was introduced in China, the
total fertility rate was 2.61. In 2019, the total fertility rate in China
had dropped to just 1.69 per woman after three-and-a-half decades of rigid
enforcement of the one-child policy. In 2015, the Chinese State did away
with the one-child policy – Chinese nationals were allowed two children.

In May, China adopted a three-child policy following the failure of the
two-child policy in increasing the total fertility rate. China is now
staring down the abyss of a demographic deficit because of its low total
fertility rate: the younger generation are simply not having enough
children to replace the older generation.

India, meanwhile, is bearing the fruits of a rich demographic dividend. The
United Nations Population Fund defines the demographic dividend as “the
economic growth potential that can result from shifts in a population’s age
structure, mainly when the share of the working-age population (15 years to
64 years) is larger than the non-working-age share of the population (14
years and younger and 65 years and older)”.

According to the Centre’s Economic Survey of 2018-’19, 62.5% of India’s
population is between the ages of 15 years and 59 years and is expected to
peak in 2041. As per the Union government’s projections in the survey,
India’s total fertility rate is likely to touch the ideal replacement level
of fertility of 2.1 this year.

Interestingly, the total fertility rate in Uttar Pradesh has fallen
dramatically from 1999, when it was 4.07, to 2.7 in 2016 – a staggering 30%
decline in just 17 years. A paper in the medical journal Reproductive
Health noted that the use of sterilisation as a means of family planning
was just 18% among women in Uttar Pradesh compared to the national average
of 36%. Sterilisation had not contributed significantly to the drop in
fertility rate. Instead, the paper notes, the fertility decline in Uttar
Pradesh was driven by an increase in the use of contraceptive methods among
married women.

With only one in five women in Uttar Pradesh resorting to sterilisation as
a means of family planning, what is not needed to achieve the total
fertility rate target of 2.1 is coercing citizens into having less than two
children by essentially forcing them to choose between undergoing so-called
voluntary sterilisation or missing out on benefits conferred by the state
for non-compliance.>>

(Excerpted from: <
https://scroll.in/article/1000631/uttar-pradeshs-population-control-plan-is-not-only-unconstitutional-it-may-also-be-disastrous
>.)

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