
Make Guntur poverty-free: Kandula Durgesh
Presiding over a district-level review meeting at the Collectorate, Minister Durgesh called for coordinated efforts to transform Guntur into a poverty-free district.
He directed officials to identify and adopt 'Bangaru Kutumbalu' (model families) under the P4 framework and link them with mentors for support and development. District Collector S Nagalakshmi, ZP Chairperson Kattera Henry Christina, MPs, MLAs, MLCs, and senior officials from key departments attended the meeting. Reviews were conducted on flagship schemes including Thalliki Vandhanam, Swarnandhra 2047, tenant farmer loans, and natural farming.
He instructed officials to expedite crop loans for tenant farmers with CCRC cards and address delays in loan disbursement. He also demanded swift compensation for victims of the December 2024 gas tragedy.
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- Business Standard
Andhra to unveil policy to tackle declining fertility, says CM Naidu
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The Print
7 hours ago
- The Print
Andhra to unveil policy to tackle declining fertility, says CM Naidu
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Economic Times
7 hours ago
- Economic Times
Andhra to unveil policy to tackle declining fertility, says CM Naidu
Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N Chandrababu Naidu has said that the state government will soon unveil a new policy framework to address declining fertility rates and demographic at the Amaravati Summit on World Population Day on Friday, Naidu emphasised that population should be treated as the state's greatest economic strength, not a burden."Population is the nation's strongest economic asset. A robust policy on population growth will be introduced soon," said Naidu, addressing the observed that rising expenses are deterring young couples from having children, while Parliament seats may increase in the future, southern states could see reduced CM recalled his earlier efforts promoting family planning and noted that today's demographic trends call for a shift in focus from control to management of population growth. "Before 2004, as CM, I incentivised family planning. We even brought a law disqualifying those with more than two children from contesting local body elections," said further said that today, there's a need to amend the law to allow those with more than two children to contest, adding that a nation is not just about its land, regions, towns, or borders, it is about its said that while developed nations struggle with aging populations, India's youth advantage remains intact, though not guaranteed unless corrective policies are adopted quickly."Our youth population is shrinking while elderly numbers grow. To avoid a human resource crisis, we must encourage larger families," said Naidu, addressing the launched a survey seeking public input on population policy, declaring, "Your voice is our policy guide," and stressing the importance of aligning welfare with people's expressed concern that while the global population is increasing, birth rates are declining, and the youth population is shrinking while the elderly population is noted that nations like Japan, Hungary, and Singapore now offer cash, tax exemptions and housing benefits to families with more pointed out that the southern state's fertility rate stands at 1.7, well below the replacement rate of 2.1, underscoring the urgency of reversing this trend. Naidu also cited concerns over the fading of joint family systems, rising cost of living, and the changing outlook of youth, saying such factors must shape future family-centric policies. Mentioning his recent visit to Kuppam, he shared an anecdote of a three-generation household as a model for societal stability and economic gender equality, he said TDP governments have historically empowered women by giving from the gas cylinder scheme to property rights and representation in colleges and transport services. Naidu maintained that India's population advantage will hold only until 2047, urging policymakers to treat human capital as a long-term resource and not a short-term liability.