Why in the news?
- The Registrar General of India (RGI) asked States to take steps towards achieving universal registration of births and deaths.
Registrar General of India (RGI)
- Formation: 1961
- Ministry: Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA).
- Functions:
- Conducts the decennial Census of India.
- Collects and compiles vital statistics through CRS and SRS.
- Publishes population projections, fertility/mortality data, migration, literacy, and socio-economic data.
- Supervises state-level Chief Registrars of Births and Deaths.
- Advises government on demography, planning, and policy formulation.
Universal Registration of Birth and Death (URBD)
- Concept: Universal Registration of Birth and Death (URBD) aims at compulsory, digital, and real-time registration of all births and deaths in India.
- Legal Backing: Strengthened under the Registration of Births and Deaths (Amendment) Act, 2023, which came into effect from October 1, 2023.
- Features:
- Compulsory Registration: Every birth and death must be registered within 21 days.
- Digital Database: A national-level database of births and deaths to be maintained by RGI.
- Linkages: Registered data will be linked with: Aadhaar, Voter ID (EPIC), Ration cards, Passport, Driving licence, Property registration, National Population Register (NPR).
- Automatic Updating: Births → automatically update population register, Aadhaar, electoral rolls. Deaths → deletion from electoral roll, ration card, welfare rolls.
- Single Source of Truth: Enables real-time updating of demographic databases.
- Significance:
- Governance Efficiency: Facilitates direct benefit transfers, welfare targeting, and voter list purification.
- Demographic Planning: Provides accurate fertility, mortality, and migration data for health and education planning.
- Fraud Prevention: Helps curb identity fraud, fake beneficiaries, and duplication in welfare schemes.
- Ease of Service Delivery: Citizens won’t need to submit multiple documents for government services- birth/death certificate will suffice.
- Challenges
- Privacy & Data Security: Concerns about centralised Aadhaar-linked demographic databases.
- Implementation Gaps: Urban areas fare better; rural areas often face delays or underreporting.
- Capacity Issues: States need robust IT infrastructure and trained registrars.
- Awareness: Many families still do not register births/deaths promptly.