Our
Population Policy
Making it a People's
Movement
THE BJP views India's runaway
population growth with all the concern it deserves. Expected to hit the one
billion mark by the year 2001, India's population is set to overtake that of
China unless the growth rate is checked and then reversed. The danger of a runaway
population growth is there for all to see: A rapidly expanding population means
a slower rate at which development can be effected. While India was one of the
first countries in the world to recognize the need to control the growth of
its population in order to ensure a better distribution of the fruits of development,
successive Union Governments have failed in the implementation of this important
programme. Excesses during the Emergency have given way to complacence and dangerous
negligence. The BJP will put population-related issues, including family planning,
firmly back on the national agenda. The BJP believes that the country's runaway
population growth can be arrested and rolled back through increased awareness,
facilitating access to family planning measures, persuasive Government policies
and rapid development-it is an universally acknowledged fact that "development
is the best contraceptive". But we realize that Government alone cannot fulfill
this gigantic task. The Government's efforts must be supplemented by a vigorous
people's movement. In addition, the BJP proposes to:
- Formulate a National
Population Policy by acting on the reports of the National Development Council
and the Swaminathan Committee. This Policy will seek to bring the population
growth close to stabilization by the year 2010;
- Provide incentives to
those who opt for the "two-child" norm and high incentives to those who embrace
the "single-child" norm;
- Take all measures for
reducing infant mortality rates and improving child health;
- Promote women's education,
employment and empowerment since these can be effective means of population
control as they will allow women a decisive role in regard to their reproductive
health and family planning;
- Introduce disincentives
which will apply to all sections of society in order to discourage large,
unsustainable families;
- Ensure universal access
to family planning information and quality contraceptive facilities by involving
non-government organizations and promote awareness among the people, especially
women, through counseling, educational programmes and widest use of modern
multi-media capabilities;
- Introduce family planning
methods and facilities that will allow women greater freedom of choice without
imperiling their health as well as support research relating to these methods;
- Encourage women to seek
reproductive health services as well as launch a special campaign to educate
local communities about negative practices;
- Offer a special incentive
in the form of a fixed deposit that will mature in 21 years for those couples
who have only a girl child or those who adopt a girl child under a "Dattak
Putri Yojana";
- Make family planning
an integral part of our development policies to ensure widest applicability
of these incentives and disincentives and provide motivation for a small family
norm; and,
- Ensure that the legal
age of marriage is strictly implemented.
|Chapter
1| |Chapter 2| |Chapter 3|
|Chapter 4| |Chapter 5| |Chapter
6| |Chapter 7| |Chapter 8|
|Chapter 9| |Chapter 10| |Chapter
11| |Chapter 12| |Chapter 13|
|Chapter 14| |Chapter 15|
|Chapter 16|
|Chapter 17| |Chapter 18|
|Chapter 19| |BJP's Appeal|
|Freedom Charter|