India’s slower pace of fertility decline is related, in part, to regional differences in implementing its national family welfare programme and other policies intended to reduce fertility and slow population growth. In Kerala and Tamil Nadu, for example, where state governments emphasised socio-economic development and women’s empowerment, fertility declined earlier and more rapidly, falling below the replacement level two decades before the country as a whole. States that invested less in human development, especially for girls and women, experienced slower reductions in fertility, despite controversial mass sterilisation campaigns and other coercive measures in some locations. Lower human capital investment and slower economic growth in India during the 1970s and 1980s contributed to a more gradual fertility decline than in China and, consequently, to more rapid and persistent population growth. According to the latest United Nations projections, India’s population is expected to reach its peak size around 2064 and then to decline gradually.