The total also includes the
population of the Kalapani, Lipulekh and Limpiyadhura areas worked out for the
first time in 60 years through informal census, according to the bureau. As per
the bureau, there are around 750 people in
the region.
The average population growth rate shown by the last census
in 2011 was 1.35 percent.
“Low growth rate of population indicates that birth rate in
the country has decreased,” said Hem Raj Regmi, deputy director general of the
Central Bureau of Statistics. “Out-migration also appears to be another reason
behind the slowest growth rate in eight decades.”
Official data show that the fertility rate of Nepali women
has been declining over the years.
According to Nepal Demographic Health
Survey 2016, the latest such survey,
“Though the trend of living
in a unitary family is also growing, the main factor behind small family size
is the low fertility rate,” said Rudra Suwal, former deputy director general of
the bureau.
The population growth rate has been in a decreasing trend
since 2011, but
Suwal said that the reason may be due to the participation
of Nepali people in the first world war (1914-1918) and the subsequent Spanish flu pandemic
that began in 1918.
In the last six decades, the country saw over two percent
population growth in the first four decades. The population growth had started
to decrease significantly since the 2011 census, according to the bureau’s
records.
Though out-migration has also been touted as the reason
behind the low population growth over the last one decade, Suwal said he
believes that it is not the primary reason, as there has not been a significant
jump in migrated population from 2011 to 2021.
According to the bureau, as many as 2,169,478 Nepalis were
living abroad most of the time as per the new census. Ten years ago, a total of
1,921,494 people were living abroad most of the time. According to the bureau,
it counts seasonal migrant workers who go to
“The census also showed
that
Among the migrated population, 81.28 percent of people are
male. As per the latest census, though the number of Nepali women abroad is far
lower than the number of men, there has been a rise of 71.09 percent in
migrated Nepali women in 2021 compared to 2011.
According to the preliminary census report, the population
in the Tarai region has increased while there has been a decrease in population
in the hills and the mountain region.
Geography-wise, more than a half of the population lives in
the Tarai.
According to the bureau, 40.27 percent of the population
lives in the hilly region, down from 43.01 percent in 2011, and 6.09 percent of
the population lives in the mountain region, down from 6.73 percent 10 years
ago.
Officials and experts say accessibility and infrastructure
are the main reasons migration to the Tarai region has grown.
“If this trend continues, there will be growing pressure for
infrastructure and facilities in the Tarai region,” said Suwal. “It may lead to
haphazard development in the region as in
Widening imbalance between the population of hilly and
mountain regions and the Tarai plains may invite many other socio-economic
problems, according to officials and analysts.
Hari Roka, a political economist, said that the massive
migration from hills to the Tarai may invite confrontation between the migrant
population and the ‘orginal’ residents of the region.
“We have already seen confrontations between political
groups representing the Madhesi people and the Hill people in the Tarai, such
as the confrontation between Madhesi parties and the Chure Bhawar Rastriya Ekta
Party representing the hilly people,” he said.
“The migration trend to the Tarai will also lead to a loss
of farmlands in the region, which is known as the country’s breadbasket. This
could impact the country’s food security.”
Along with the rise in population, political representation
of the Tarai might increase in the future, which may lead to a decrease in the
number of electoral constituencies in the hilly region and reduce political
representations in the legislative bodies, according to him.
As per Article 286 (12) of
the constitution, electoral constituency delimitation should be reviewed every
20 years.
Election Constituency Delimitation Commission is responsible
for constituency delimitation and the commission shall ‘determine the
constituencies in provinces in accordance with the federal law, having regard
to the population as the main basis and geography as the second basis for
representation, and there shall be at least one election constituency in each
district within the province,’ as per Article 286 (5) of the constitution.
Experts stress the need for government programmes to retain
population in the hilly areas too.
As per the new census, the two provinces that saw the
highest growth of populations are Madhes (by 722,143) and Lumbini (by 624,953)
in the last 10 years.
Madhes now accommodates 20.99 percent of the country’s total
population, closely followed by Bagmati with 20.84 percent of the population.
Gandaki has the lowest population, accommodating 8.49 percent of the country’s
total residents.
According to the preliminary census report, the country’s 66
percent population lives in municipalities while the rest live in rural
municipalities.
“As many municipalities also accommodate large chunks of
rural regions, it does not truly reflect the urban-rural gap in populations,”
said Suwal, the former deputy director general of the bureau.
Regmi, the current deputy director general, said that the
bureau also divided the population based on the existing administrative
structure.
The country has a total of 753 local governments. There are
six metropolitan cities, 11 sub-metropolitan cities, 276 municipalities and 460
rural municipalities across the country.
According to the census,
“In the three Valley districts—
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