The National Policy on Older Persons was
announced by the Government of India in 1999. It was a step in pursuance of the
UN General Assembly Resolution 47/5 to observe 1999 as the International Year
of Older Persons and in keeping with the assurances to older persons contained
in the Constitution. The well-being of senior citizens is mandated in the
Constitution of India under Article 41.
According to the law, a "senior citizen" means any
person being a citizen of India, who has attained the age of sixty years or
above. A report released by the United Nations Population Fund and HelpAge
India suggests that India had 90 million elderly persons in 2011, with the
number expected to grow to 173 million by 2026. Of the 90 million seniors, 30
million are living alone, and 90 per cent work for livelihood.
The Union government wants its ministries and
departments and private agencies to adopt 60 as the age at which a person is
classified a senior citizen. This is to address anomalies in extending benefits
to the elderly. The Social Justice and Empowerment Ministry is planning to
bring in an amendment to the Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior
Citizens Act, 2007, to implement this change.
The Act defines senior
citizens as any person who is a citizen of India and has attained the age of
“60 years and above.” The phrase is being manipulated by several
agencies to deny benefits under senior-citizen clauses by adopting different age
limits, a government official said.
The UPA government had in 2013 raised the age for
eligibility to senior citizen benefits to 65, a decision which had come under
much criticism because it eliminated a chunk of the elderly from benefits. The
government has had to face criticism also for not implementing its old age
policy despite announcing it.
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