The primary rationale offered by the political elite in contemporary India is ‘improving’ the ‘living standards’ of Indian people. Population growth needs to be curbed, the mainstream political leadership, across political parties argues, to nurture and bolster India’s ‘demographic dividend’ – the higher economic growth potential, typical of countries (with a significant number of young people) having a working-age population larger in share than the non-working age population. Consider the ethnonationalist apprehensions of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party’s members, suggesting that if India kept adhering to the supposedly misplaced legacy of the 1994 Cairo consensus, prioritised the safeguarding of reproductive rights to necessary population-reduction measures, and, therefore, did not enforce a ‘two-child norm’ with immediate urgency, then ‘women will not be safe and might have to be kept under the veil, like in Pakistan’. Or think about the claim made by a bigwig-led group called the ‘Taxpayers’ Association of Bharat,’ since 2017, suggesting that while the norm-abiding taxpayers follow the small-family norm with acute diligence, the ‘non-entrepreneurial’ individuals receiving subsidised food, clothes and housing are reluctant to adhere to it. Or, for that matter, consider the recent framing of the population problem by the opposition leader, Indian National Congress’s Rahul Gandhi, exclusively in terms of whether people of working age are actually working, being ‘productive’ and, therefore, ‘adding value’ or whether this demographic is doing none of this and, consequently, turning into a ‘liability’.