Transforming representation into real change by 2029


Transforming Representation into Real Change by 2029

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Women's Reservation — Legislative History:

Year Milestone
1996 81st Amendment Bill (women's reservation) introduced; lapsed — first of multiple failed attempts
1999, 2002, 2003 Further bills introduced; each lapsed with dissolution of Lok Sabha
2010 108th Amendment Bill passed in Rajya Sabha but never tabled in Lok Sabha; lapsed
Sep 2023 Constitution (128th Amendment) Bill passed in Special Session of both Houses; enacted as 106th Amendment Act
2026 Delimitation/Amendment Bills introduced to facilitate 2029 implementation

Elder Care Policy — Legislative History:

Year Milestone
1999 National Policy on Older Persons (NPOP) — first comprehensive policy framework [S5]
2007 Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act — legal entitlement to maintenance
2011 National Programme for Health Care of the Elderly (NPHCE) launched
2020–21 Atal Vayo Abhyuday Yojana (AVYAY) — umbrella scheme consolidating elderly welfare programmes
2024 NITI Aayog releases Senior Care Reforms in India position paper [S3]

4. Core Static Facts

A. Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam (Women's Reservation)

B. Elder Care — Key Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Social - India's gender-blind elder-care architecture leaves aged women dependent on family networks with no state floor of support. [S4] - Widowhood among elderly women is approximately 50–55% in the 70+ cohort vs. ~15% for men — a structural vulnerability. [S4] - Women outlive men yet accumulate fewer assets, pension entitlements, or formal employment histories — producing old-age feminised poverty. [S3] - The 2029 Parliament, with ~181+ women MPs (one-third of ~543), could shift legislative prioritisation toward care economy and ageing policy. [S1]

Economic - India's care economy is largely invisible — estimated at 20–39% of GDP if unpaid care work were monetised (ILO global estimates). [S3] - NITI Aayog (2024) recommends formalising the senior care sector as a job-generating industry: home care workers, geriatric nurses, social workers. [S3] - Indira Gandhi National Old Age Pension Scheme (IGNOAPS): ₹200–500/month — grossly inadequate against living costs; reform overdue. [S5] - Gendered wealth gap compounds at old age: most Indian women lack property rights in practice due to under-implementation of Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act, 2005.

Legal / Constitutional - Article 41 (DPSP): State shall make provision for the right to public assistance in cases of old age — the constitutional mandate for elder care. [S5] - Article 46 (DPSP): Promotion of interests of weaker sections — applicable to elderly women as doubly marginalised. - 106th Amendment inserts Articles 330A and 332A — new constitutional provisions for women's political reservation with SC/ST sub-quotas. [S1][S2] - Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens (Amendment) Act, 2019: Expanded scope to include "relatives" beyond children; mandates maintenance tribunals in each district. [S5]

Governance / Administrative - Census delay: The 2021 Census has not been conducted as of 2026 — a major bottleneck for original implementation timeline of women's reservation. The 2026 Delimitation Bill attempts a legislative workaround. [S2] - Fragmented implementation: Elder care divided across 3+ ministries (Social Justice, Health, WCD) with no unified coordination mechanism. - Lack of gendered data: No systematic disaggregation of elder care indicators by sex in national surveys — a diagnostic gap. [S4] - India's Long-Term Care (LTC) policy is absent — unlike OECD nations where LTC is a distinct policy pillar. [S3]

Ethical - The article's central argument: Representation without agenda is merely presence — echoing the feminist critique of "descriptive vs. substantive representation." [S6] - Dignity in ageing: Elder care policy must operationalise Constitutional guarantees of dignity (Article 21) for women who age outside formal support systems. - Risk of tokenism: If 2029 women MPs lack a pre-formed policy agenda on care, elder care, and gender, the historic representational shift may not translate into legislative outcomes. [S6]


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam is the popular name for the Constitution (128th Amendment) Act, 2023, enacted as the 106th Constitutional Amendment. [S1]
  2. The Act reserves one-third of seats in Lok Sabha, State Assemblies, and Delhi Assembly — not Rajya Sabha. [S2]
  3. Original implementation trigger: First Census after enactment + delimitation — not directly after election notification. [S2]
  4. The Act inserts Articles 330A (Lok Sabha) and 332A (State Assemblies) into the Constitution. [S2]
  5. One-third of the reserved seats are further sub-reserved for SC and ST women. [S2]
  6. The Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, 2026 proposes removing the census pre-condition to enable 2029 implementation. [S2]
  7. Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act was originally passed in 2007 and amended in 2019 to include "relatives." [S5]
  8. Article 41 (DPSP) — right to public assistance in old age — is the constitutional anchor for elder care policy. [S5]
  9. Atal Vayo Abhyuday Yojana (AVYAY) is the umbrella scheme for elderly welfare under the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment. [S5]
  10. NITI Aayog's Senior Care Reforms in India report was released in February 2024. [S3]
  11. India's elderly population (2021): approximately 138 million, projected to reach 319 million by 2050. [S4]
  12. Women in India spend approximately 7 hours per day in unpaid domestic and care work. [S3]
  13. Female Labour Force Participation in India: ~25–26% vs. male rate of 57.3%. [S3]
  14. The 2010 Women's Reservation Bill passed the Rajya Sabha but was never tabled in the Lok Sabha and subsequently lapsed. [S2]
  15. The National Policy on Older Persons was first adopted in 1999. [S5]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers: - GS-I: Role of women in society; social empowerment; population and associated issues; issues related to women. - GS-II: Parliament and legislatures; constitutional amendments; governance; welfare schemes for vulnerable sections; issues relating to development of women. - GS-IV: Ethics of care; human dignity; role of civil society; public policy and governance.

Specific Syllabus Headings: - GS-II: "Parliament and State Legislatures — structure, functioning, conduct of business"; "Issues relating to development and management of Social Sector/Services relating to Health, Education, Human Resources." - GS-I: "Role of women and women's organization"; "Social empowerment."

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "The Constitution (106th Amendment) Act, 2023 is a landmark in India's democratic journey, but representation without policy agenda risks becoming mere symbolism. Critically examine, with reference to the impending 2029 Parliament." (GS-II, 15 marks)

  2. "India's elder care ecosystem is structurally gender-blind despite constitutional directives under Articles 41 and 21. Assess the gaps and suggest a gendered elder-care policy framework India needs by 2029." (GS-II/GS-I, 15 marks)

  3. "Unpaid care work by women is both an economic and governance challenge. Examine how India's care economy can be formalised to simultaneously improve female labour force participation and elder-care delivery." (GS-I/GS-III, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Panchayati Raj & 73rd/74th Amendments Women's reservation at local body level preceded 2023 Act; implementation lessons applicable
Delimitation Commission and Process Directly gates when 106th Amendment takes effect; 2026 bills change this calculus
National Policy on Older Persons & AVYAY The elder-care policy gap this article highlights; examining current schemes' adequacy
Care Economy & Unpaid Work (ILO frameworks) Economic invisibility of women's caregiving; FLFP linkage
Feminisation of Ageing (demographic transition) Why elderly policy must be gendered; India Ageing Report 2023 context
Maintenance & Welfare of Parents Act 2007/2019 Only statutory protection for elderly; gaps vis-à-vis LTC systems in OECD
Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act, 2005 Property rights for women; key to preventing asset-less old age
Substantive vs. Descriptive Representation (Political Theory) Theoretical frame for the article's central argument

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Amendment number confusion: The Women's Reservation Bill was the 128th Amendment Bill but was enacted as the 106th Constitutional Amendment Act — these are different numbering systems (Bill vs. enacted Amendment). Do not conflate.
  2. Rajya Sabha exclusion: The reservation applies to Lok Sabha and State/UT Legislative Assemblies onlynot Rajya Sabha (which is an indirectly elected house). A common MCQ trap.
  3. Wrong ministry for elderly welfare: The Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment (not WCD, not Health) is the nodal ministry for AVYAY and the Maintenance Act. Health components sit separately under MoHFW.
  4. 2010 Bill status: The 2010 Women's Reservation Bill passed in Rajya Sabha, not Lok Sabha — and still lapsed. Many aspirants reverse this or confuse it with the 2023 Act.
  5. Implementation timeline: Women's reservation does not automatically apply from the next election — original law requires Census + delimitation first. The 2026 Amendment Bill proposes changing this, but as of the article's date (March 2026), the amendment is a Bill, not yet law.

11. Sources