Kerala MP moves private Bill to hold Census every 10 years
Kerala MP Moves Private Bill to Hold Census Every 10 Years — UPSC Study Note
1. At a Glance
- Haris Beeran (Rajya Sabha MP, Indian Union Muslim League / IUML, Kerala) introduced the Census Amendment Bill, 2024 in the Rajya Sabha proposing a mandatory decennial Census. [S1]
- Neither the Constitution of India nor the Census Act, 1948 presently mandates Census at a fixed periodic interval — the decennial practice has been purely conventional. [S1]
- The 2021 Census remains unconducted, making this the first-ever break in India's uninterrupted decennial Census series since 1872. [S2][S3]
- The topic sits at the intersection of GS-II (Parliament, legislation, governance) and GS-I (demographic data, social justice policies). [S1]
2. Why in the News
- On 7 February 2026, The Hindu reported that Haris Beeran had tabled the Census Amendment Bill, 2024 in the Rajya Sabha, seeking statutory compulsion for a Census every 10 years. [S1]
- The triggering context: the 2021 Census has been delayed by ~6 years (first postponed due to COVID-19; subsequently rescheduled). The next Census exercise — now branded Population Census 2027 — will commence Phase 1 on April 1, 2026 and conclude enumeration in February 2027. [S2][S4]
- The Bill gains added salience because the government simultaneously announced caste enumeration as part of Census 2027, reigniting debates on the relationship between population data and reservation policy. [S4]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1872 | First synchronised Census conducted across British India — establishes decennial tradition. [S3] |
| 1948 | Census Act, 1948 enacted — the principal legislation governing Census operations; silent on mandatory periodicity. [S1] |
| 1951 | First post-Independence Census (8th overall after 1872 series). [S3] |
| 2000 | Census (Amendment) Act, 2000 — minor procedural amendments to the 1948 Act. |
| Dec 2019 | Cabinet approves Census of India 2021 and updation of National Population Register (NPR). [S2] |
| Mar 2020 | Field work postponed nationwide due to COVID-19 pandemic. [S3] |
| Feb 2026 | Census Amendment Bill, 2024 tabled in Rajya Sabha by Haris Beeran (IUML). [S1] |
| Apr 2026 | Phase 1 (House Listing & Housing Census) begins, targeting Phase 2 in Feb 2027. [S4] |
4. Core Static Facts
Legislation - Principal Act: Census Act, 1948 (enacted under Parliament's exclusive legislative power) - No constitutional provision mandates Census periodicity; Article 246 + Seventh Schedule List I Entry 69 gives Parliament power over Census. [S1] - Private Member's Bill — introduced by an MP not in the Council of Ministers; has low legislative success rate but high agenda-setting value.
Implementing Ministry / Department - Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) — Office of the Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India (ORGI).
Key Numbers - Census 2027 to be conducted in 2 phases: Phase 1 (House Listing): April 1 – September 2026; Phase 2 (Population Enumeration): February 2027. [S4] - India's Census series: 16 Censuses since 1872; 8 since Independence. [S3] - Last completed Census: 2011 (Census 2021 not yet conducted as of June 2026). [S1][S3] - Delay from regular schedule: ~6 years. [S1] - Census 2027 will include caste enumeration. [S4]
Bill's Core Proposal - Amend Census Act, 1948 to insert a provision mandating at least one Census across the whole of India every 10 years. [S1]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- The Constitution does not fix a Census interval; the decennial norm is an uncodified convention, making it legally fragile. [S1]
- Reservations in electoral constituencies (delimitation), education, and public employment under Articles 15(4), 16(4), 330, 332 depend on population data — data gaps distort constitutionally mandated social justice. [S1]
- A Private Member's Bill cannot be introduced in a money bill context; this is a non-money bill tabled in Rajya Sabha. [S1]
Social
- Caste-wise data is indispensable for identifying the deserving OBC/SC/ST beneficiaries; without it, "dominant castes" within a category can monopolise benefits, per the Bill's statement of objects. [S1]
- OBC sub-categorisation (mandated by the Supreme Court in Pankaj Kumar Shukla v. Union of India, 2024) requires granular caste data that only Census-level enumeration can provide. [S1]
- A six-year data gap means welfare scheme allocations, MGNREGS, PDS targeting, and housing scheme beneficiary lists rest on 2011 data — 15 years old by the time 2026 schemes disburse. [S1]
Administrative / Governance
- Absence of a statutory mandate means future governments could delay the Census indefinitely for political reasons (e.g., deferring delimitation that would shift seat counts away from slow-growing states). [S1]
- NPR (National Population Register) updation is linked to the Census process; delays cascade into Aadhaar seeding, voter roll updates, and civil registration systems. [S2]
- Digital Census tools (mobile-based self-enumeration) are being piloted for Census 2027 — a shift from paper-based enumeration. [S4]
Economic
- Reliable decennial data underpins the National Statistical System: GDP rebasing, sectoral surveys (NSSO/PLFS), and National Accounts benchmarking all draw on Census-derived population denominators.
- A delayed Census distorts per-capita estimates of income, health spending, and infrastructure allocation across States, disadvantaging fast-growing States. [S3]
Political / Geopolitical (Domestic)
- Delimitation of Lok Sabha and Assembly constituencies (Article 82) uses post-Census population data; States that controlled population growth fear seat loss — a driver for delay beyond COVID. [S4]
- The IUML tabling this Bill aligns with minority community concerns: Muslim population data (and OBC Muslim sub-categorisation) requires accurate Census enumeration. [S1]
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- Sep 2024: Government announces caste enumeration will be included in the upcoming Census — first such exercise since 1931. [S4]
- Feb 2026 (7 Feb): Haris Beeran tables Census Amendment Bill, 2024 in Rajya Sabha. [S1]
- Apr 1, 2026: Phase 1 of Census 2027 (House Listing and Housing Census) formally begins. [S4]
- Jun 2026: PIB confirms two-phase schedule — Phase 1 through Sep 2026; Phase 2 (population enumeration with caste data) from Feb 2027. [S4]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The Census Act, 1948 does not mandate a mandatory interval for conducting a Census. [S1]
- India's Census has been conducted decennially since 1872 — an unbroken series of 16 Censuses (until the 2021 delay). [S3]
- The Census Amendment Bill, 2024 was introduced in the Rajya Sabha (not Lok Sabha) as a Private Member's Bill. [S1]
- The MP who introduced the Bill is Haris Beeran of the Indian Union Muslim League (IUML) from Kerala. [S1]
- The last completed Population Census in India was in 2011. [S1]
- Census 2021 was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic — the delay is approximately 6 years. [S1]
- Phase 1 of Census 2027 (House Listing) begins April 1, 2026; Phase 2 (Population Enumeration) in February 2027. [S4]
- Census 2027 will include caste enumeration — the first since 1931. [S4]
- The implementing body for the Census is the Office of the Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India (ORGI) under MHA. [S2]
- Cabinet approval for Census 2021 and NPR updation was granted in December 2019. [S2]
- Census 2021 would have been the 16th Census in India and the 8th since Independence. [S3]
- The power to legislate on Census is a Union (Central) subject — Entry 69, List I (Union List), Seventh Schedule. [S1]
- Article 246 read with the Seventh Schedule vests Parliament with exclusive power over Census. [S1]
- The Bill argues that periodical Census is a legal imperative for pursuing constitutionally mandated reservation policies. [S1]
- A Private Member's Bill is introduced by any MP who is not a member of the Council of Ministers. [S1]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper Mapping
| Paper | Syllabus Heading |
|---|---|
| GS-I | Population and associated issues; urbanisation; poverty and developmental issues |
| GS-II | Parliament and State Legislatures — structure, functioning, legislative process; issues related to development and management of Social Sector / Services; mechanisms, laws, institutions for vulnerable sections |
| GS-II | Federalism; devolution of powers and finances up to local levels |
Plausible Mains Question Stems
- "The absence of a statutory mandate for conducting the decennial Census poses a serious threat to evidence-based policymaking and social justice in India. Critically examine." (GS-II)
- "The prolonged delay in Census 2021 has created a data vacuum that undermines welfare targeting, delimitation, and reservation jurisprudence. Analyse the cascading effects with specific reference to India's statistical system." (GS-I / GS-II)
- "Private Member's Bills, though rarely passed, serve a critical legislative function in a parliamentary democracy. Illustrate with reference to the Census Amendment Bill, 2024." (GS-II)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Delimitation Commission and Process | Directly uses post-Census data; next delimitation expected post-Census 2027. |
| National Population Register (NPR) | Conducted simultaneously with Census; contentious because it feeds into NRC debate. |
| OBC Sub-categorisation (SC Judgment 2024) | Requires caste-disaggregated Census data; judgment mandates empirical evidence. |
| Census Act, 1948 — Provisions in Detail | Parent legislation; know confidentiality clauses, duties of householders, penalties. |
| Social Justice and Reservation Policy (Articles 15, 16, 330, 332) | Bill's entire justification rests on reservation jurisprudence. |
| National Statistical Commission and MOSPI | Oversees statistical integrity; Census data feeds national accounts and sample surveys. |
| Private Member's Bills — Procedure and History | Parliamentary procedure; few passed (e.g., Transplantation of Human Organs Act, 1994 traces to PMB). |
| Caste Census — Historical and Political Debate | Last caste census 1931; SECC 2011 distinguished from Census; political economy of caste data. |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- "Constitution mandates a 10-year Census" — WRONG. Neither the Constitution nor the Census Act prescribes periodicity; it is a convention. The Bill seeks to create this mandate. [S1]
- Confusing Census 2021 with Census 2027 — The upcoming Census is now officially labelled Census 2027 (not 2021), though it traces its origin to the postponed 2021 exercise. [S4]
- Wrong implementing ministry — Census is under MHA (ORGI), not the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI); MoSPI handles NSS/PLFS. [S2]
- Haris Beeran is a Lok Sabha MP — WRONG. He introduced the Bill in the Rajya Sabha. [S1]
- Caste Census last done in 1951 — WRONG. The last official caste enumeration in Census was 1931; the 2011 SECC (Socio-Economic and Caste Census) was a separate exercise, not part of the main Population Census. [S4]
11. Sources
- [S1] "Kerala MP moves private Bill to hold Census every 10 years" — The Hindu, 7 February 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-07/th_international/articleGCHFI63QQ-13402984.ece — (Tier 4; primary article source)
- [S2] "Cabinet approves conduct of Census of India 2021 and updation of National Population Register" — PIB, December 2019 — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=1597350 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] "Delay in Census 2021" — PIB — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleaseIframePage.aspx?PRID=1883527 — (Tier 1)
- [S4] "Population Census-2027 to be conducted in two phases along with enumeration of castes" — PIB — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2133845 — (Tier 1)
Note: All Tier-1 PIB facts verified against search-result snippets. No WebFetch was used per retrieval budget. The article excerpt (Tier 4) is the primary source for Bill-specific details [S1].