Class 12 Geography

Chapter 1 — Population: Distribution, Density, Growth and Composition

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Overview

Summary

Chapter 1 of the Class 12 Geography NCERT textbook (India: People and Economy), "Population: Distribution, Density, Growth and Composition", covers India's 2011 population of 1,210 million — the world's second most populous — its uneven distribution and density, four phases of growth since 1901, and composition by residence, language, religion and occupation.

  • An unevenly spread billion-plusIndia's 1,210 million people in 2011 are spread very unevenly — Uttar Pradesh alone is the most populous state and the top ten states hold about three-quarters of the total. Density averages 382 persons per sq km but swings from 17 in Arunachal to over 11,000 in Delhi.
  • Four phases of growthSince 1901 growth moved through a stagnant phase, a steady phase, a 1951-81 population explosion averaging 2.2% a year, and a post-1981 slowdown as birth rates fell and female literacy rose — with Kerala recording the lowest decadal growth.
  • A diverse compositionAbout 69% of Indians live in rural areas. Four language families span 22 scheduled languages, Indo-Aryan dominant. Hindus form the majority alongside Muslims, Christians and Sikhs, yet under 40% are workers, over half of them in the primary sector.
Essentials

Key points & formulas

  1. 01India's 2011 population was 1,210 million — larger than the combined population of North America, South America, and Australia.
  2. 02Uttar Pradesh is the most populous state; the top ten states (including Maharashtra, Bihar, West Bengal, AP, Tamil Nadu, MP, Rajasthan, Karnataka, Gujarat) hold ~76% of India's total population.
  3. 03Population density in 2011 is 382 persons/sq km, up from 117 in 1951; Delhi has the highest (11,297) and Arunachal Pradesh the lowest (17).
  4. 04Four phases of growth: stagnant 1901–1921 (even negative in 1911–21), steady 1921–1951, population explosion 1951–1981 (avg 2.2% annual), and slowing post-1981 driven by declining birth rates and rising female literacy.
  5. 05Kerala recorded the lowest decadal growth rate (9.4%) in India during 1991–2001.
  6. 0668.8% of India's population lives in rural areas; the country has 640,867 villages, of which 93.2% are inhabited (Census 2011).
  7. 07Four language families: Indo-European/Aryan (73%), Dravidian (20%), Austric (1.38%), and Sino-Tibetan (0.85%); Hindi has the largest speaker share among 22 scheduled languages.
  8. 08Religious composition (2011): Hindus 79.8%, Muslims 14.2%, Christians 2.3%, Sikhs 1.7%; only 39.8% of the population are workers, with primary sector accounting for 54.6% of the workforce.
Questions

Frequently asked questions

01

What was India's total population as per the 2011 Census?

India's population was 1,210 million (1,210,193,422) as per the 2011 Census, making it the second most populous country in the world after China.

02

When was the first complete Census of India conducted?

The first population Census in India was conducted in 1872, but the first complete Census was conducted in 1881. Since then, a Census has been held every 10 years.

03

Which state has the highest and lowest population density in India (2011)?

The National Capital Territory of Delhi has the highest density at 11,297 persons per sq km. Arunachal Pradesh has the lowest at 17 persons per sq km. India's overall density is 382 persons per sq km.

04

What are the four phases of population growth in India?

Phase I (1901–1921): stagnant/stationary — even a negative growth of –0.31% during 1911–1921. Phase II (1921–1951): steady growth as mortality declined. Phase III (1951–1981): population explosion with an average annual growth rate of 2.2%. Phase IV (post-1981 to present): gradual slowdown due to a downward trend in the crude birth rate, increased mean age at marriage, and improved female education.

05

What is the difference between physiological density and agricultural density?

Physiological density = total population ÷ net cultivated area. Agricultural density = total agricultural population ÷ net cultivable area. Agricultural population includes cultivators, agricultural labourers, and their family members.

06

Which state recorded the lowest decadal growth rate in India during 1991–2001?

Kerala registered the lowest growth rate of 9.4% during 1991–2001, the lowest in the country during that period.

07

What percentage of India's population is rural, and how many villages does India have?

About 68.8% of India's total population lives in villages (2011). India has 640,867 villages according to Census 2011, of which 597,608 (93.2%) are inhabited.

08

What are the four major language families of India and their percentage shares?

Indo-European/Aryan — 73%; Dravidian — 20%; Austric (Nishada) — 1.38%; Sino-Tibetan (Kirata) — 0.85%. Hindi has the highest share among the 22 scheduled languages; Sanskrit, Bodo, and Manipuri have the smallest speaker groups.

09

What is the religious composition of India as per 2011 Census?

Hindus: 966.3 million (79.8%), Muslims: 172.2 million (14.2%), Christians: 27.8 million (2.3%), Sikhs: 20.8 million (1.7%), Buddhists: 8.4 million (0.7%), Jains: 4.5 million (0.4%), and other religions/persuasions: 7.9 million (0.7%).

10

What is the occupational composition of India's working population (2011)?

Primary sector (cultivators and agricultural labourers) = 54.6%; tertiary/other workers = 41.6%; secondary/household industry workers = 3.8%. The share of the primary sector declined from 58.2% in 2001 to 54.6% in 2011, indicating a sectoral shift toward non-farm occupations.

11

What is the difference between a Main Worker and a Marginal Worker as per the Census?

A Main Worker is a person who works for at least 183 days (six months) in a year. A Marginal Worker works for less than 183 days in a year. In 2011, only 39.8% of India's total population were workers (both main and marginal).

12

What are the major challenges faced by the adolescent population in India?

Adolescents (age 10–19 years) constitute 20.9% of India's 2011 population. Challenges include lower age at marriage, illiteracy (especially female), school dropouts, low nutrient intake, high maternal mortality among adolescent mothers, HIV/AIDS infections, drug abuse, alcoholism, and juvenile delinquency. The National Youth Policy (NYP-2014) defines youth as persons aged 15–29 years and aims to empower them to achieve their full potential.

13

Why is India's population distribution uneven?

Climate, terrain, and availability of water are the primary physical factors — the North Indian Plains, deltas, and coastal plains are densely populated. Socio-economic factors include early history of human settlement, development of transport networks, irrigation (e.g., Rajasthan), mineral and energy resources (e.g., Jharkhand), industrialisation, and urbanisation. Urban centres like Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, and Bengaluru attract large rural-urban migration.

14

Is this NCERT chapter PDF available free without sign-up?

Yes — you can read and download the Class 12 Geography 'India: People and Economy' Chapter 1 PDF for free on cbseprepmaster.com, with no account or sign-up required.

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