《21世纪的印度:人口、经济、人类发展和环境

OUP Catalogue Pub Date : 2005-01-01 DOI:10.2307/20034259
T. Dyson, R. Cassen, L. Visaria
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引用次数: 64

摘要

《21世纪印度》是第一本全面综合考虑人口与发展的印度发展研究报告。它是建立在2001年人口普查后对50年人口的新预测基础上的。当时印度人口已经超过10亿。25年后,人口将超过14亿,到本世纪中叶几乎肯定会超过15亿。这些预测首次纳入了国家间移徙和艾滋病毒/艾滋病的作用。它们还展示了印度城市的未来,到2026年,印度城市居民将接近5亿。这种人口增长的含义随后在一系列建模和分析工作中被追踪出来。研究发现,在印度一些邦,不断增长的学龄人口使实现普及教育的任务复杂化,而其他邦的学龄人口已经在减少。人口增长也加剧了贫困,加剧了各州社会状况的分化。随着全国人口增长总体放缓,劳动力继续相对较快地增长,给就业带来了困难的后果。但是国民经济的增长可能会被人口中受抚养者占工人比例下降的“人口红利”所加速。这本书对印度的粮食前景相当乐观:这个国家可以继续养活自己。它还可以享受更高水平的能源使用、制造业和现代交通方式,同时经历更少的化学污染。印度的城市可以成为更清洁、更健康的居住地。也许最困难的环境问题,也是与人口增长关系最密切的问题是水。一些州还面临着公共财产资源的严重压力。这本书的最后一章是政策。印度未来的问题很大,但原则上是可控的。然而,这个国家能否真正实现人人享有可持续发展则是另一回事。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Twenty-First Century India: Population, Economy, Human Development, and the Environment
Twenty-First Century India is the first study of India's development giving a fully integrated account of population and development. It is built on new projections of the population for fifty years from the Census of 2001. India's population then had already passed 1 billion. Twenty-five years later it will exceed 1.4 billion, and will almost certainly pass 1.5 billion by mid-century. The projections incorporate for the first time both inter-state migration and the role of HIV/AIDS. They also show India's urban future, with close to half a billion urban inhabitants by the year 2026. The implications of this population growth are then traced out in a range of modelling and analytical work. Growing numbers are found to complicate the task of achieving widespread education in a number of India's states, while other states are already experiencing declines in their school-age population. Demographic growth also contributes to poverty, and increasing divergence in social conditions among the states. As population growth slows in the country overall, the labour force continues to grow relatively fast, with difficult consequences for employment. But national economic growth could be accelerated by the 'demographic bonus' of the declining proportion of dependents to workers in the population. The book is reasonably optimistic about India's food prospects: the country can continue to feed itself. It can also enjoy higher levels of energy use, manufacturing, and modern forms of transport, while experiencing less chemical pollution. India's cities can become cleaner and healthier places to live. Perhaps the most difficult environmental issue, and the one most strongly related to population growth, is water. Some states also face severe pressures on common property resources. A policy chapter concludes the book. India's future problems are large, but in principle manageable. However, whether the country will actually achieve sustainable development for all is another matter.
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