Census in India — A Complete, Structured Overview
What is a Census?
A census is the official, systematic collection of demographic, social, and economic data about a population at a specific point in time. In India, it is conducted by the Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India under the Ministry of Home Affairs and is governed by the Census of India Act, 1948.
The Census of India is not just a headcount—it is the statistical backbone of governance, shaping everything from policy decisions to electoral representation. The Census of India is crucial for national planning and development.
Historical Evolution
Pre-Independence Period
- The first non-synchronous counts began in 1865–67 under British rule.
- First complete synchronous census was held in 1881, under W. C. Plowden.
- Thereafter census is conducted every 10 years (decennial) without interruption—even during wars. information.
Post-Independence Period
- First census of independent India was held in 1951
- It continued every decade in 1961, 1971, 1981, 1991, 2001 and 2011
- The 2021 Census was delayed/postponed primarily due to COVID-19 and other administrative factors. information.
Legal Framework
The census exercise primarily mandates:
- Mandatory participation by every citizen of India.
- Confidentiality of personal data.
- Strict penalties for false information.
Post-Independence Period
- Population Enumeration (size, distribution, density)
- Demographic Profile (age, sex, marital status)
- Socio-economic Data (literacy, occupation, housing)
- Policy Planning (resource allocation, welfare schemes)
- Delimitation of Constituencies
Methodology
The Two-Phase Process
The census process is taken up primarily in a 2 phase process:
- House Listing & Housing Census
- Data on:
- Building type
- Amenities (water, electricity, sanitation)
- Assets
- Data on:
- Population Enumeration
- Individual-level data:
- Name, age, gender
- Education, occupation
- Religion, language, caste (SC/ST only officially counted)
- Individual-level data:
The Census is based on 2 key concepts
- De facto method: Counts people where they are found on census night
- De jure method: Counts people at their usual place of residence
India uses a modified de facto approach
The Census helps in understanding major Indicators like:
- Population size & growth rate
- Sex ratio
- Literacy rate
- Population density
- Urban vs rural distribution
- Workforce participation
Importance of Census in India
- Foundation for economic planning
- Determines Parliamentary & Assembly seat allocation
- Guides education, healthcare, infrastructure policies
- Basis for schemes like PDS, rural development programs
Administrative Structure
- Head: Registrar General & Census Commissioner of India
- Supported by:
- State Directors of Census Operations
- Enumerators (often school teachers/government staff)
Innovations & Modern Developments
- 2011 Census:
- First time biometric National Population Register (NPR) initiated
- Upcoming Census:
- Likely digital/mobile-based data collection
- Self-enumeration option proposed
The major challenges in conducting the census process in India can be primarily attributed to:
- India’s massive population size (~1.4+ billion)
- Its geographic diversity (remote, tribal areas)
- Data accuracy and undercounting
- Migration tracking
- Political sensitivity (caste data debates)
Snapshot of Last Completed Census of 2011
- Total population: 1.21 billion
- Literacy rate: 74.04%
- Sex ratio: 943 females per 1000 males
- Urban population: 31.16%
Difference in Census and Surveys
| Feature | Census | Sample Survey |
| Coverage | Entire population | Selected sample |
| Frequency | 10 years | More frequent |
| Cost | Very high | Lower |
| Accuracy | High (if done properly) | Depends on sampling |
