2011 Census of India


































15th Census
of India
General information
Country
 India
Date taken
2010–2011
Total population
1,210,193,422
Percent change
Increase 17.70%[1]
Most populous state
Uttar Pradesh (199,812,341)
Least populous state
Sikkim (610,577)

The 15th Indian Census was conducted in two phases, house listing and population enumeration. House listing phase began on 1 April 2010 and involved collection of information about all buildings. Information for National Population Register was also collected in the first phase, which will be used to issue a 12-digit unique identification number to all registered Indian residents by Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI). The second population enumeration phase was conducted between 9 and 28 February 2011. Census has been conducted in India since 1872 and 2011 marks the first time biometric information was collected. According to the provisional reports released on 31 March 2011, the Indian population increased to 1.21 billion with a decadal growth of 17.64%.[2] Adult literacy rate increased to 74.04% with a decadal growth of 9.21%. The motto of the census was 'Our Census, Our future'.


Spread across 29 states[a] and 7 union territories, the census covered 640 districts, 5,924 sub-districts, 7,935 towns and more than 600,000 villages. A total of 2.7 million officials visited households in 7,935 towns and 600,000 villages, classifying the population according to gender, religion, education and occupation.[3] The cost of the exercise was approximately 2,200 crore (US$310 million)[4] – this comes to less than $0.50 per person, well below the estimated world average of $4.60 per person.[3] Conducted every 10 years, this census faced big challenges considering India's vast area and diversity of cultures and opposition from the manpower involved.


Information on castes was included in the census following demands from several ruling coalition leaders including Lalu Prasad Yadav, Sharad Yadav and Mulayam Singh Yadav supported by opposition parties Bharatiya Janata Party, Akali Dal, Shiv Sena and Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam.[5] Information on caste was last collected during the British Raj in 1931. During the early census, people often exaggerated their caste status to garner social status and it is expected that people downgrade it now in the expectation of gaining government benefits.[6] There was speculation that there would be a caste-based census conducted in 2011, the first time for 80 years (last was in 1931), to find the exact population of the "Other Backward Classes" (OBCs) in India.[7][8][9][10] This was later accepted and the Socio Economic and Caste Census 2011 was conducted whose first findings were revealed on 3 July 2015 by Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley.[11] Mandal Commission report of 1980 quoted OBC population at 52%, though National Sample Survey Organisation (NSSO) survey of 2006 quoted OBC population at 41%[12]


There is only one instance of a caste-count in post-independence India. It was conducted in Kerala in 1968 by the Communist government under E M S Namboodiripad to assess the social and economic backwardness of various lower castes. The census was termed Socio-Economic Survey of 1968 and the results were published in the Gazetteer of Kerala, 1971.[13]




Contents






  • 1 Census


  • 2 Information


    • 2.1 House-listings


    • 2.2 Population enumeration


    • 2.3 National Population Register




  • 3 Census report


  • 4 Population


  • 5 Religious demographics


  • 6 Language demographics


  • 7 Literacy


  • 8 See also


  • 9 Notes


  • 10 References


  • 11 External links





Census


C M Chandramauli was the Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India for the 2011 Indian Census. Census data was collected in 16 languages and the training manual was prepared in 18 languages. In 2011, India and Bangladesh also conducted their first-ever joint census of areas along their border.[14][15] The census was conducted in two phases. The first, the house-listing phase, began on 1 April 2010 and involved collection of data about all the buildings and census houses.[16] Information for the National Population Register was also collected in the first phase. The second, the population enumeration phase, was conducted from 9 – 28 February 2011 all over the country. The eradication of epidemics, the availability of more effective medicines for the treatment of various types of diseases and the improvement in the standard of living were the main reasons for the high decadal growth of population in India.



Information



House-listings


The House-listing schedule contained 35 questions.[17]






Building number
Census house number
Predominant material of floor, wall and roof of the census house
Ascertain use of actual house
Condition of the census house
Household number
Total number of persons in the household
Name of the head of the household
Sex of the head
Caste status (SC or ST or others)
Ownership status of the house
Number of dwelling rooms
Number of married couple the household
Main source of drinking water
Availability of drinking water source
Main source of lighting
Latrine within the premises
Type of latrine facility
Waste water outlet connection
Bathing facility within the premises
Availability of kitchen
Fuel used for cooking
Radio/Transistor
Television
Computer/Laptop
Telephone/Mobile phone
Bicycle
Scooter/Motor cycle/Moped
Car/Jeep/Van
Availing Banking services.


Population enumeration


The Population enumeration schedule contained 30 questions.[18][19]






Name of the person
Relationship to head
Sex
Date of birth and age
Current marital status
Age at marriage
Religion
Scheduled Caste/Scheduled Tribe
Disability
Mother tongue
Other languages known
Literacy status
Status of attendance (Education)
Highest educational level attained
Working any time during last year
Category of economic activity
Occupation Nature of industry
Trade or service
Class of worker
Non economic activity
Seeking or available for work
Travel to place of work
Birthplace
Place of last residence
Reason for migration
Duration of stay in the place of migration
Children surviving
Children ever born
Number of children born alive during last one year


National Population Register


The National Population Register household schedule contained 9 questions.[20]


Name of the person and resident status
Name of the person as should appear in the population register
Relationship to head
gender
Date of birth
Marital status
Educational qualification
Occupation/Activity
Names of father, mother and spouse

Once the information was collected and digitised, fingerprints were taken and photos collected. Unique Identification Authority of India was to issue a 12-digit identification number to all individuals and the first ID was to have been issued in 2011.[21][22][23]



Census report




Decadal growth of Indian population (1901–2011).


Provisional data from the census was released on 31 March 2011 (and was updated on 20 May 2013).[24][25][26][27][28]Transgender population was counted in population census in India for first time in 2011.[29][30] The overall sex ratio of the population is 943 females for every 1,000 males in 2011.[31] The official count of the third gender in India is 490,000[32]













































Population
Total
1,210,854,977
Males
623,724,568
Females
586,469,294

Literacy
Total
74%
Males
82.10%
Females
65.50%

Density of population
per km2
382

Sex ratio
per 1000 males
943 females

Child sex ratio (0–6 age group)
per 1000 males
914


Population


The population of India as per 2011 census was 1,210,193,422.[33] India added 181.5 million to its population since 2001, slightly lower than the population of Brazil. India, with 2.4% of the world's surface area, accounts for 17.5% of its population. Uttar Pradesh is the most populous state with roughly 200 million people. Over half the population resided in the six most populous states of Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra, Bihar, West Bengal, Andhra Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh.[34] Of the 1.21 billion Indians, 833 million (68.84%) live in rural areas while 377 million stay in urban areas.[35][36] 453.6 million people in India are migrants, which is 37.8% of total population.[37][38][39]


India is the homeland of major belief systems such as Hinduism, Buddhism, Sikhism and Jainism, while also being home to several indigenous faiths and tribal religions which have survived the influence of major religions for centuries.


Ever since its inception, the Census of India has been collecting and publishing information about the religious affiliations as expressed by the people of India. In fact, population census has the rare distinction of being the only instrument that collects this diverse and important characteristic of the Indian population.






















































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Population distribution in India by states
Rank

State /
Union Territory (UT)
Type
Population[40]
% of total population[41]
Males
Females

Sex Ratio
[42]
Literacy rate (%)
Rural[43]
Population
Urban[43]
Population
Area[44]
(km²)
Density
(/km²)
Decadal Growth% (2001-2011)
1 Uttar Pradesh State 199,812,341 16.5 104,480,510 95,331,831 930 67.68 155,111,022 44,470,455 240,928 828 20.1%
2 Maharashtra State 112,374,333 9.28 58,243,056 54,131,277 929 82.34 61,545,441 50,827,531 307,713 365 16.0%
3 Bihar State 104,099,452 8.6 54,278,157 49,821,295 918 61.80 92,075,028 11,729,609 94,163 1,102 25.1%
4 West Bengal State 91,276,115 7.54 46,809,027 44,467,088 950 76.26 62,213,676 29,134,060 88,752 1,030 13.9%
5
Andhra Pradesh[a]
State 84,580,777 6.99 42,442,146 42,138,631 993 67.02 56,361,702 28,219,075 275,045 308 11.1%
6 Madhya Pradesh State 72,626,809 6.00 37,612,306 35,014,503 931 69.32 52,537,899 20,059,666 308,245 236 20.3%
7 Tamil Nadu State 72,147,030 5.96 36,137,975 36,009,055 996 80.09 37,189,229 34,949,729 130,058 555 15.6%
8 Rajasthan State 68,548,437 5.66 35,550,997 32,997,440 928 66.11 51,540,236 17,080,776 342,239 201 21.4%
9 Karnataka State 61,095,297 5.05 30,966,657 30,128,640 973 75.36 37,552,529 23,578,175 191,791 319 15.7%
10 Gujarat State 60,439,692 4.99 31,491,260 28,948,432 919 78.03 34,670,817 25,712,811 196,024 308 19.2%
11 Odisha State 41,974,218 3.47 21,212,136 20,762,082 979 72.87 34,951,234 6,996,124 155,707 269 14.0%
12 Kerala State 33,406,061 2.76 16,027,412 17,378,649 1,084 94.00 17,445,506 15,932,171 38,863 859 4.9%
13 Jharkhand State 32,988,134 2.72 16,930,315 16,057,819 948 66.41 25,036,946 7,929,292 79,714 414 22.3%
14 Assam State 31,205,576 2.58 15,939,443 15,266,133 958 72.19 26,780,526 4,388,756 78,438 397 16.9%
15 Punjab State 27,743,338 2.29 14,639,465 13,103,873 895 75.84 17,316,800 10,387,436 50,362 550 13.7%
16 Chhattisgarh State 25,545,198 2.11 12,832,895 12,712,303 991 70.28 19,603,658 5,936,538 135,191 189 22.6%
17 Haryana State 25,351,462 2.09 13,494,734 11,856,728 879 75.55 16,531,493 8,821,588 44,212 573 19.9%
18 Delhi UT 16,787,941 1.39 8,887,326 7,800,615 868 86.21 944,727 12,905,780 1,484 11,297 21%
19 Jammu and Kashmir State 12,541,302 1.04 6,640,662 5,900,640 889 67.16 9,134,820 3,414,106 222,236 56 23.7%
20 Uttarakhand State 10,086,292 0.83 5,137,773 4,948,519 963 79.63 7,025,583 3,091,169 53,483 189 19.2%
21 Himachal Pradesh State 6,864,602 0.57 3,481,873 3,382,729 972 82.80 6,167,805 688,704 55,673 123 12.8%
22 Tripura State 3,673,917 0.30 1,874,376 1,799,541 960 87.22 2,710,051 960,981 10,486 350 14.7%
23 Meghalaya State 2,966,889 0.25 1,491,832 1,475,057 989 74.43 2,368,971 595,036 22,429 132 27.8%
24 Manipur State 2,721,756 0.21 1,290,171 1,280,219 992 79.21 1,899,624 822,132 22,327 122 18.7%
25 Nagaland State 1,978,502 0.16 1,024,649 953,853 931 79.55 1,406,861 573,741 16,579 119 -0.5%
26 Goa State 1,458,545 0.12 739,140 719,405 973 88.70 551,414 906,309 3,702 394 8.2%
27 Arunachal Pradesh State 1,383,727 0.11 713,912 669,815 938 65.38 1,069,165 313,446 83,743 17 25.9%
28 Puducherry UT 1,247,953 0.10 612,511 635,442 1,037 85.85 394,341 850,123 479 2,598 27.7%
29 Mizoram State 1,097,206 0.09 555,339 541,867 976 91.33 529,037 561,997 21,081 52 22.8%
30 Chandigarh UT 1,055,450 0.09 580,663 474,787 818 86.05 29,004 1,025,682 114 9,252 17.1%
31 Sikkim State 610,577 0.05 323,070 287,507 890 81.42 455,962 151,726 7,096 86 12.4%
32 Andaman and Nicobar Islands UT 380,581 0.03 202,871 177,710 876 86.63 244,411 135,533 8,249 46 6.7%
33 Dadra and Nagar Haveli UT 343,709 0.03 193,760 149,949 774 76.24 183,024 159,829 491 698 55.5%
34 Daman and Diu UT 243,247 0.02 150,301 92,946 618 87.10 60,331 182,580 112 2,169 53.5%
35 Lakshadweep UT 64,473 0.01 33,123 31,350 946 91.85 14,121 50,308 32 2,013 6.2%
TOTAL India 35 1,210,854,977 100
623,724,248
586,469,174 943 73.00 833,087,662 377,105,760 3,287,240 382
17.64%


Religious demographics


The religious data on India Census 2011 was released by the Government of India on 25 August 2015.[45][46][47] Hindus are 79.8% (966.3 million),[48] while Muslims are 14.23% (172.2 million) in India.[49][49][50][51] and Christians are 2.30% (28.7 million). According to the 2011 Census of India, there are 57,264 Parsis in India.[52][53] For the first time, a "No religion" category was added in the 2011 census.[54][55] 2.87 million were classified as people belonging to "No Religion" in India in the 2011 census[56][57] 0.24% of India's population of 1.21 billion.[58][59] Given below is the decade-by-decade religious composition of India until the 2011 census.[60][61][62] There are six religions in India that have been awarded "National Minority" status - Muslims, Christians, Sikhs, Jains, Buddhists and Parsis.[63][64] Sunnis, Shias, Bohras, Agakhanis and Ahmadiyyas were identified as sects of Islam in India.[65][66][67] As per 2011 census, six major faiths- Hindus, Muslims, Christians, Sikhs, Buddhists, Jains make up over 99.4% of India's 1.21 billion population, while "other religions, persuasions" (ORP) count is 8.2 million. Among the ORP faiths, six faiths- 4.957 million-strong Sarnaism, 1.026 million-strong Gond, 506,000-strong Sari, Donyi-Polo (302,000) in Arunachal Pradesh, Sanamahism (222,000) in Manipur, Khasi (138,000) in Meghalaya dominate.[68] Maharashtra is having the highest number of atheists in the country with 9,652 such people, followed by Kerala.[69]


Population trends for major religious groups in India (1951–2011)




























































































Religious
group
Population
% 1951
Population
% 1961
Population
% 1971
Population
% 1981
Population
% 1991
Population
% 2001
Population
% 2011[70]
Hinduism
84.1% 83.45% 82.73% 82.30% 81.53% 80.46% 79.80%
Islam
9.8% 10.69% 11.21% 11.75% 12.61% 13.43% 14.23%
Christianity
2.3% 2.44% 2.60% 2.44% 2.32% 2.34% 2.30%
Sikhism
1.79% 1.79% 1.89% 1.92% 1.94% 1.87% 1.72%
Buddhism
0.74% 0.74% 0.70% 0.70% 0.77% 0.77% 0.70%
Jainism
0.46% 0.46% 0.48% 0.47% 0.40% 0.41% 0.37%
Zoroastrianism
0.13% 0.09% 0.09% 0.09% 0.08% 0.06% n/a
Other religions / No religion
0.43% 0.43% 0.41% 0.42% 0.44% 0.72% 0.9%



Language demographics



Hindi is the most widely spoken language in northern parts of India. The Indian census takes the widest possible definition of "Hindi" as a broad variety of "Hindi languages".[71] According to 2011 Census, 43.63% of Indian people have declared Hindi as their native language or mother tongue.[72][73] The language data was released on 26 June 2018.[74] Bhili/Bhilodi was the most spoken unscheduled language with 10.4 million speakers, followed by Gondi with 2.9 million speakers. 96.71% of India's population speaks one of the 22 scheduled languages as their mother tongue in the 2011 census.


The 2011 census report on bilingualism and trilingualism, which provides data on the two languages in order of preference in which a person is proficient other than the mother tongue, was released in September 2018.[75][76][77] The number of bilingual speakers in India is 31.49 crore, which is 26% of the population in 2011.[78]


























































































































First language by number of speakers in India (2011 Census)


Language

First language
speakers
[79]

First language
speakers
as a percentage

of total population



Hindi
52,83,47,193
43.63

Bengali
9,72,37,669
8.30

Marathi
8,30,26,680
7.09

Telugu
8,11,27,740
6.93

Tamil
6,90,26,881
5.89

Gujarati
5,54,92,554
4.74

Urdu
5,07,72,631
4.34

Kannada
4,37,06,512
3.73

Odia
3,75,21,324
3.20

Malayalam
3,48,38,819
2.97

Punjabi
3,31,24,726
2.83

Assamese
1,53,11,351
1.31

Maithili
1,35,83,464
1.16

Santali
73,68,192
0.65

Kashmiri
67,97,587
0.58

Nepali
29,26,168
0.25

Sindhi
27,72,264
0.24

Dogri
25,96,767
0.22

Konkani
22,56,502
0.19

Manipuri
17,61,079
0.15

Bodo
14,82,929
0.13

Sanskrit
24,821
<0.01


Literacy


Any one above age 7 who can read and write in any language with an ability to understand was considered a literate. In censuses before 1991, children below the age 5 were treated as illiterates. The literacy rate taking the entire population into account is termed as "crude literacy rate", and taking the population from age 7 and above into account is termed as "effective literacy rate". Effective literacy rate increased to a total of 74.04% with 82.14% of the males and 65.46% of the females being literate.[80]






























































































S.No.
Census year
Total (%)
Male (%)
Female (%)
1 1901 5.35 9.83 0.60
2 1911 5.92 10.56 1.05
3 1921 7.16 12.21 1.81
4 1931 9.50 15.59 2.93
5 1941 16.10 24.90 7.30
6 1951 16.67 24.95 9.45
7 1961 24.02 34.44 12.95
8 1971 29.45 39.45 18.69
9 1981 36.23 46.89 24.82
10 1991 42.84 52.74 32.17
11 2001 64.83 75.26 53.67
12 2011 74.04 82.14 65.46

  • The table lists the "effective literacy rate" in India from 1901 to 2011.[citation needed]


See also




  • Socio Economic and Caste Census 2011

  • Demographics of India

  • Irreligion in India

  • Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes

  • List of Other Backward Classes




Notes





  1. ^ ab Prior to the creation of Telangana.




References





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  31. ^ "Sex ratio worsens in small families, improves with 3 or more children".


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  61. ^ Aariz Mohammed (1–15 May 2013). "Demographic Dividend and Indian Muslims - i". Milli Gazette. Milli Gazette. Retrieved 15 May 2013.


  62. ^ Aariz Mohammed (1–15 May 2013). "Demographic Dividend and Indian Muslims - i" (PDF). Milli Gazette. Milli Gazette. Retrieved 15 May 2013.


  63. ^ "National minority status for Jains".


  64. ^ Jains become sixth minority community


  65. ^ "Sunnis, Shias, Bohras, Agakhanis and Ahmadiyyas were identified as sects of Islam".


  66. ^ "Protest against inclusion of Ahmediyyas in Muslim census".


  67. ^ "Minority in a minority".


  68. ^ "Fewer minor faiths in India now, finds Census; number of their adherents up".


  69. ^ "God versus Atheism, Bengal vouches for believers".


  70. ^ "Population by religious community - 2011". 2011 Census of India. Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner. Archived from the original on 25 August 2015. Retrieved 25 August 2015.


  71. ^ "Abstract speakers languages India 2011" (PDF).


  72. ^ "What India speaks: South Indian languages are growing, but not as fast as Hindi".


  73. ^ "Surging Hindi, shrinking South Indian languages: Nine charts that explain the 2011 language census".


  74. ^ "Hindi mother tongue of 44% in India, Bangla second most spoken".


  75. ^ "C-17 POPULATION BY BILINGUALISM AND TRILINGUALISM".


  76. ^ "After mother tongue, city more proficient in English".


  77. ^ "C-18 POPULATION BY BILINGUALISM, TRILINGUALISM, AGE AND SEX" (PDF).


  78. ^ "Hindi migrants speaking Marathi rise to 60 lakh".


  79. ^ ORGI. "Census of India: Comparative speaker's strength of Scheduled Languages-1951, 1961, 1971, 1981, 1991 ,2001 and 2011" (PDF).


  80. ^ "Census Provional Population Totals". The Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India. Retrieved 14 February 2013.




External links







  • Official Website

  • Census India 2011 - Population of India

  • Cities having population 1 lakh and above, Census 2011









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