Why in news?
India officially recorded over 99% of its estimated births and deaths in 2024, according to the latest data released by the Office of the Registrar General and Census Commissioner.
This marks a significant leap in registration coverage over the past decade, signalling India's movement toward a system where every birth and death can be counted, certified, and used to inform public policy.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- About Civil Registration System (CRS)
- The Journey to Near-Universal Registration
- What Explains the Rapid Improvement?
- Persisting Gaps and Challenges
About Civil Registration System (CRS)
- Data on births, deaths, and stillbirths are recorded under a continuous, compulsory mechanism called the Civil Registration System.
- It serves as a foundational source of India's population data, informing accurate estimation of mortality, fertility, and sex ratio at birth.
- The CRS has been legally operational since 1970 under the Registration of Births and Deaths Act, 1969, amended in 2023.
- Births and deaths must ordinarily be reported within 21 days. In hospitals, the medical officer in charge or an authorised official reports such events; for home-based events, the household head or a prescribed informant is responsible.
The Journey to Near-Universal Registration
- Registration coverage has improved dramatically over the decades:
- Until 2000: Only 56% of births and 48% of deaths were registered.
- By 2014: Coverage rose to around 86.6% (births) and 72.5% (deaths).
- In 2024: Birth registration reached 99.1% and death registration reached 99.4%.
- Death registration, which historically lagged behind birth registration, has now caught up rapidly.
- In 2024, 18 states and Union Territories achieved 100% birth registration, while 21 states and UTs achieved 100% death registration.
- Coverage has historically varied by rural-urban location and across states, though states like Kerala, Arunachal Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh, and Goa achieved universal birth registration as early as the 2000s.
- Significance of Near-Universal Registration
- A complete CRS is one of the most important sources of vital statistics, crucial for:
- Administrative use and assessing the impact of health and social policies
- Understanding trends in fertility, mortality, and population change
- Real-time demographic information, such as during the Covid-19 pandemic, when timely death reporting helped identify high-risk areas
- Tracking seasonal mortality driven by high temperatures and pollution
- Decentralised governance, since district and sub-district level data are far more useful for local programme design than national or state estimates
- Legal identity proof for individuals
- India has traditionally relied on the Census (conducted once every 10 years), the Sample Registration System (SRS), and household surveys for demographic estimates, since these do not provide reliable annual, district-level data.
- A complete CRS fills this critical gap.
What Explains the Rapid Improvement?
- For births:
- Rising institutional deliveries in hospitals, incentivised by post-delivery benefits.
- Birth certificates becoming mandatory for school admission, identity documents, and welfare benefits.
- For deaths:
- Greater access to formal healthcare through expanded health insurance and public health schemes, particularly PM-JAY, which increased coverage among poorer households.
- Death certificates being required for pensions, insurance, inheritance, property transfer, and banking.
- Structural factors:
- Digitisation, aided by the Registration of Births and Deaths (Amendment) Act, 2023, which made birth certificates essential for education, Aadhaar, and voter ID enrolment.
- State-level variations attributed to differences in socioeconomic development, public awareness, institutional delivery, health-system access, and administrative capacity (registration machinery is a state responsibility).
Persisting Gaps and Challenges
- Despite the impressive headline numbers, several concerns remain:
- Regional disparities: Coverage still varies significantly across states.
- Timeliness: Many births and deaths are not registered within the prescribed 21-day period.
- Infant death under-registration: 84.2% of registered infant deaths occurred in urban areas versus only 15.8% in rural areas, despite higher early-age mortality and larger populations in rural India, suggesting significant under-registration of infant deaths in rural regions.
- Data quality: Registering a death is not the same as recording a medically certified cause of death; many deaths still lack reliable medical certification, limiting CRS's usefulness for disease and mortality analysis.
- Measurement circularity: The completeness of death registration is itself estimated using SRS figures, but studies show SRS undercounts both births and deaths, potentially leading to overestimation of actual CRS coverage.
The Way Forward
- Future improvements must focus not just on coverage but on quality, including timely registration, accurate records, and responsible use of digital data.
- India could also consider developing a system for recording internal migration to further strengthen administrative planning.
Conclusion
India's near-universal registration of births and deaths marks a genuine administrative achievement, offering a robust foundation for evidence-based governance. However, addressing regional gaps, improving data quality, and ensuring medically certified death records remain essential to fully realise the CRS's potential for policy planning.