India holds one of the most discussed demographic positions in the world right now. With more than 900 million people projected to be of working age by the mid-2040s, the country has what economists call a demographic dividend, meaning a window in time when the proportion of working-age people relative to dependents reaches its peak. In theory, this window should translate into higher savings, greater investment, and faster economic growth. In practice, the translation has proven far more complicated.This paper examines how India's demographic structure, its skill development programs, and actual economic outcomes are connected, including where the connections break down. Drawing on demographic and human capital theory, government policy documents, and published empirical research, it argues that India's demographic dividend remains only partially realized. The main reason is that skill development programs, despite their scale and ambition, have not consistently produced workers with skills that match what the labor market actually demands. Training quality, industry alignment, and geographic reach are all areas where the current system falls short.The paper also examines the structural barriers that compound this problem: low female labor force participation, the dominance of informal employment, and wide regional disparities in education and training access. Without changes that go beyond enrollment numbers and headline targets, the dividend that India's population structure makes possible will remain more statistical than real.
Kumar et al. (Fri,) studied this question.