NEW DELHI: A parliamentary panel has urged the Centre
to raise the retirement age to 65 years, noting that growing lifespan
was adding to the need for "productive ageing".
The recommendation for increase in retirement age
comes with a reminder that senior citizens would form 12.4% of the total
population in 2026 from 7.5% in 2001.
"The committee feels
that with the increase in life
expectancy and relatively better state of health of people, the
government needs to look at continuity of employment up to 65 years,"
said the report of standing committee of Parliament on social justice
and empowerment tabled on Friday.
It also recommended that government look at greater
post-retirement opportunities for senior citizens and create greater
financial support for the elderly by hiking the old age pension to Rs
1,000 per month from the present Rs 200 for those above 60 years and Rs
500 for those above 80 years.
While suggesting immediate redressal for the ageing
population, the panel sought to train the government’s focus on the
60-plus group by pointing out that its growing numbers would be a
serious challenge in health and social care.
Specifically, it underlined that as per population
projections, the 80-plus bloc, the most-vulnerable group, would see a
sharper rise in numbers.
The urgency of parliamentarians towards senior
citizens comes amid growing global realization that increasing lifespan
is creating a new demographic bloc requiring state intervention.
Seeking government attention, the committee noted
that senior citizens comprised 7.5% of the total population in 2001 but
their share is likely to increase to 12.4% in 2026. Importantly, UN
projections say while India’s population will rise by 55% by 2050, that
of 60-plus would increase by 326% and that of 80-plus would go up by
700%.
Given the rising challenge, the panel headed by
Hemanand Biswal found the government response inadequate, noting that
"issue of rapid population ageing in the country has not received due
attention of the government and the community at large".
The panel said special focus should be on the
octogenarian bloc. "This age group is the most vulnerable and runs the
risk of getting dementia, Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson disease,
depression in their older years," it said, and asked the Centre to
constitute an expert group of relevant government departments to devise
specialized healthcare programme for them.
Source: www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com
1 comments:
sir
the lifespan has been increased due to the medicines. But this type of lifespan is not fit for doing works.
manyam
Post a Comment