Future Population Pressure and Demand for Key Products (Projections for Rajasthan)
B C Mehta
₹1598₹1795(11% off)
Binding
Hardbound
Language
English
Year
2022
I have often been perturbed by the general attitude towards rapid population growth in India. To the politicians and government officials, the so-called population explosion affords alibi for slow economic growth, accentuating poverty and receeding horizon of the promised dreamland. Hence, along with corruption and black money, it is the most talked about topic in the country. This concern shown by all concerned and unconcerned is reflected in weighty, often intricate and, more often, irrelevant deliberations at seminars and conferences as also in the extensive coverage given, in good or bad taste, by the official media, specially Akashvani and Doordarshan, to family planning programs. However, while talking about it, the community of politicians, officials and academicians seems tci be talking out the problem. No serious attempt is made to understand the undeilying phenomena. The problem has, therefore, been transformed into anexclusively administrative one of fixing and achieving targets of various family regulation methods. This over- simplification of the problem is bound to lead to the failure of public policies. It is seldom realised that this targetological-compaignological and purely administrative approach cannot be a substitute for the required institutional: structural changes in the economy. Similarly, the policy-makers have no idea of the consequences of different aspects of population growth. Therefore, at the state level planning, population factor and its various aspects have not been integrated with planning.
Contents -
1. Introduction
2. Population Projection for Rajasthan
3. Age-Sex Specific Projections of Population in Rajasthan Using Model Life Tables
4. Engel Elasticities for Rajasthan
5. Alternative Growth Scenarios and Household Consumption in Rajasthan in 2001 A.D.
6. Implications of Projected Demand : Output, Employment and Occupational Distribution in 2001
7. Summary and Conclusions
Bibliography
About the Author: B.C. Mehta, formerly Professor of Economics, M.L. Sukhadia University, Udaipur and Emeritus Professor, JNV University, Jodhpur and visiting fellow at University of Pennsylvania, U.S.A. He has published more than 100 research papers in learned journals and twenty books. His books include Regional Population Growth, Structure of Rajasthan`s Economy: An Input-Output Analysis, Agrarian Relations and Rural Exploitation (co-author: Avadh Prashad); Future Population Pressure and demand for Key Products; Researches in the Structure and growth of Rajasthan`s Economy; Rural Poverty in India; Fertility Behaviour of Tribals in India; Efficiency of Agriculture in India, Education in India (co-author: Kranti Kapoor); Elementary Mathematics for Use in Economics (co-author: Madnani); Mathematics for Economists (co-author: Madnani); Mathematical Economics: Microeconomic Models.