Context
- The article examines the upcoming delimitation exercise after the 2026 Census and its implications for federalism.
- It highlights disparities in population growth across states and proposes incorporating demographic performance into seat allocation.
- Source: Ensuring federalism within delimitation, The Hindu
Constitutional Basis Of Delimitation
- Article 81 Principle: seats allocated to States based on population ensuring uniform population-seat ratio
- Historical Parity: ratios were similar in 1951 and 1971 due to limited population divergence
- Present Divergence: significant variation in State populations due to differential fertility trends
Freeze On Seat Allocation And Timeline
- 84th Constitutional Amendment (2002): froze Lok Sabha and State Assembly seats until post-2026 Census
- Rationale: incentivise States to pursue population stabilisation
- Census Timeline: Census 2026 followed by results in 2028
- Delimitation Commission: to be constituted after Census results
- Electoral Impact: new seat allocation to be reflected in 2029 Lok Sabha elections
Trends In Fertility And Demographic Divergence
- Replacement Level Fertility: TFR of 2.1 considered stabilisation benchmark
- Early Achievers (2005): nine States reached TFR ≤ 2.1 (e.g., Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka)
- Recent Trends (2021): most States achieved replacement fertility except Bihar, U.P., Jharkhand, Meghalaya, Manipur
- Persistent Gap: high-TFR States still about 45% above low-TFR States (NFHS-5, 2019–21)
- Mean TFR Difference: 1.64 (low group) vs 2.38 (high group)
Need For Revisiting Seat Allocation Principles
- Unequal Demographic Performance: States differ significantly in population control outcomes
- Incentive Concern: strict population-based allocation may penalise States with better demographic management
- Policy Question: extent to which demographic performance should influence seat distribution
Demographic Performance (DemPer) Principle
- Concept: incorporate population stabilisation efforts into delimitation criteria
- Finance Commission Analogy: uses population plus demographic performance for fiscal allocation
- Dual Criteria Approach: combine population size with DemPer for seat allocation
Proposed Weightage Framework
- Existing Seats Protection: no change in current 543 Lok Sabha seats
- Application Scope: DemPer applied only to additional seats post-expansion
- Weight Allocation:
- Early Achievement (TFR ≤ 2.1 before 2005): 10% weight
- Rate of TFR Decline (2005–2021): 90% weight
- Outcome: all States gain seats; populous States gain more in absolute terms
Federal Balance And Representation
- Fair Federalism: ensures States with better demographic performance do not lose seat share
- Beyond Raw Numbers: democracy involves fair voice, not just population size
- Political Units Recognition: States treated as meaningful entities in representation
Governance And Political Implications
- Incentive Preservation: rewards good governance in population control
- Regional Harmony: reduces potential north-south or inter-State resentment
- Representation Quality: improves balance between equity and effectiveness
Optimal Size Of Lok Sabha
- Historical Benchmark: 10–11.1 lakh population per seat in 1971
- Current Challenge: population nearly tripled (~1.4 billion)
- Upper Limit Suggestion: Lok Sabha size should not exceed 700 for effective functioning
- Deliberative Capacity: larger House may reduce quality of debate
Reframing The Federal Debate
- Beyond North-South Divide: multiple States across regions contributed to population control
- Inclusive Recognition: States like Punjab, Haryana, Himachal, Goa also early achievers
- Union Stability: fair federal representation critical for national cohesion
Delimitation, Representation, and Federal Balance in India
Delimitation
- Definition: The administrative process of redrawing boundaries of Lok Sabha and State Assembly constituencies to reflect population changes.
- Recent Exercise: The last delimitation (2002–2008) revised constituency boundaries but did not increase the total number of seats.
- Upcoming Exercise: A fresh delimitation is expected after the next Census (scheduled for 2026–2027), making it a politically significant process.
Article 81 and Lok Sabha Composition
- Constitutional Basis: Article 81 defines the composition of the Lok Sabha, including allocation of seats among states.
- Uniformity Principle: Article 81(2) mandates that the ratio between population and seats should be “as far as practicable, the same for all States.”
- Seat Freeze Mechanism:
- Introduced by the 42nd Amendment (1976) and extended by the 84th Amendment (2001).
- Maintains seat allocation based on the 1971 Census.
- Purpose of Freeze: Protects states that successfully implemented population control policies from losing political representation.
Population-Based Representation
- Core Principle: Based on “one person, one vote, one value,” ensuring equal representation for citizens.
- Implication in India: States with larger populations (e.g., Uttar Pradesh) are entitled to more MPs than less populous states (e.g., Kerala).
- Democratic Objective: Ensures fairness in representation by aligning seats with population size.
Demographic Context – Early Achievers
- Definition: States that achieved replacement fertility rate (TFR 2.1) earlier than the national average.
- Key States: Kerala (1988), Tamil Nadu (1993), Andhra Pradesh (2001), Karnataka (2005).
- Current Challenge:
- Facing aging populations.
- Experiencing declining share in national population.
- Political Concern: Risk of losing representation and influence in Parliament relative to high-growth states like Bihar and Uttar Pradesh.
Population per Seat Ratio
- Concept: Average number of citizens represented by one MP.
- Current Disparity:
- High-population states (e.g., Bihar, Rajasthan): ~2.5–3 million per MP.
- Lower-growth states (e.g., Tamil Nadu, Kerala): ~1.8 million per MP.
- Objective of Delimitation: To normalize this ratio across states and reduce representational inequality.
Electoral Equality vs. Federal Equity
- Electoral Equality:
- Emphasizes equal weight to each vote.
- Requires increasing seats for high-population states.
- Federal Equity:
- Argues against penalizing states that achieved demographic control.
- Seeks to preserve balanced inter-state representation.
- Core Tension: Balancing democratic fairness with cooperative federalism.
Regional Imbalance Concerns
- North-South Divide Risk: Population-based delimitation may disproportionately increase representation of northern states.
- Political Consequence: A few populous states could command over 50% of Lok Sabha seats.
- Federal Impact: Potential marginalization of southern and western states in national decision-making.
Fair Federalism – Proposed Middle Path
- Concept: Balancing population-based representation with inter-state equity in the 2026 delimitation.
- Expansion of Lok Sabha: Proposal to increase total seats (e.g., ~888 seats in the new Parliament building) so that no state loses its current representation.
- Performance-Based Weightage: Suggestion to incorporate “Demographic Performance” (similar to Finance Commission criteria) to reward states for effective population control and social development.
- Objective: Ensure both democratic legitimacy and federal balance in representation.
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