India Today

Eldercare: Demographic downside

The famed 'dividend' is destined to age and India's elderly population will grow dramatically by mid-century. While branded corporate eldercare is thriving, the welfare of senior citizens remains a quiet crisis.

Defying the wind and chill of the Sundarbans delta, a group of about 30 men and women are huddled over a bonfire. They're singing along to old, half-forgotten tunes. There's some clapping, some camaraderie over whiskey glasses. This night out by the Matla river is the highlight of a short holiday for these septuagenarians and octogenarians, residents of Thikana Shimla, the Kolkata old-age home that organises these biannual retreats. It's a welcome distraction from the debilitating effects of ageing, the aches and pains, the impaired hearing, the myopia, even dementia and depression.

For all the talk of India's demographic dividend, its bulging youth population, the country is also greying rapidly. According to a 2016 report by the ministry for statistics and programme implementation, India has 103.9 million elderly, people above age 60, about 8.5 per cent of the population. These numbers are reliant on the 2011 census. The elderly population

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