Index Of Youngistaan

After searching available databases, economic indices, government publications (such as NITI Aayog or RBI reports), and global financial indices (like MSCI, S&P), there is no officially recognized economic or financial index named "Index of Youngistaan."

However, the term "Youngistaan" is a popular colloquialism and brand name used in India to refer to the country's large youth population. Based on that context, here is a breakdown of what such an "index" could represent.


The Demographic Dividend: The Core of the Index

The most staggering statistic feeding the index of Youngistaan is this: India has over 600 million citizens under the age of 25. In fact, every fifth person under 25 in the world lives in India. index of youngistaan

Why does this matter?

However, a high raw score on this pillar isn't enough. If the jobs aren't there, a demographic dividend turns into a demographic disaster. This is where the rest of the index becomes critical. The Demographic Dividend: The Core of the Index

Method B: Ministry of Youth Affairs & Sports

The Ministry periodically releases the "Youth Development Index (YDI)." This is the closest official equivalent to the "Index of Youngistaan."

The Future of the Index

Looking ahead to 2030, the Index of Youngistaan will likely evolve into a real-time dashboard powered by AI. Imagine a system that scrapes anonymized data from UPI transactions, LinkedIn profiles, and GitHub repositories to gauge the economic health of the youth instantaneously. Labor Force Surge: By 2030, India will have

For now, the "Index of Youngistaan" serves as a crucial map. It tells investors where to build hostels, politicians where to build roads, and educators where to build skills.

3.1 Normalization

Each indicator is normalized on a 0 to 100 scale using min-max: [ \textNormalized = \frac\textActual - \textMin\textMax - \textMin \times 100 ] Where Min/Max can be national targets, historical extremes, or international benchmarks.

5.3 International Bodies

Employment: Aspiring for "New-Age" Jobs

Five years ago, a good job meant a government sarkari position or an MNC call center. Today, the index of Youngistaan measures the Gig Economy Participation Rate.

Nevertheless, youth unemployment remains a dark spot. The periodic labor force survey (PLFS) shows that the unemployment rate for graduates is higher than for illiterates—a frustrating paradox where education doesn't guarantee a wage. Consequently, the index of Youngistaan often has a "quality of employment" modifier that drags the score down.