THE CENSUS
Outline:
1. What
a census is, and what information it collects.
2. The
usefulness of the census to the government.
3. How
a census is taken.
4. Objections
made by some to the census.
A census is an official numbering
of the inhabitants of a country at a certain time, made by government order. In
England a census is made every ten years. The main object of a census is to
give the government of a country accurate information as to the number of the
inhabitants. But at the same time much additional information is collected, so
the government may know the number of men, women and children, their ages,
occupations and nationality, the number of those married, and of the deaf, the
blind, the dumb, and the imbecile. In some countries, too, the number of the
adherents of each form of religion is ascertained.
The census is obviously very
useful, for it provides the government with a mass of information, which is of
great use, not only for the purposes of taxation, but also for legislation on
social questions. As it is carried out every ten years, the authorities can
watch the increase or decrease of the population, and the growth of large town
centers or the gradual depopulation of rural areas.
The taking of the census requires
an elaborate organization and an army of workers. For, first, question-papers
are prepared, and these are distributed to all householders in every town and
village in the country. Each householder is bound by law to fill in all the
particulars required about his family, truthfully and accurately. Then, on a
certain fixed day, all these papers are collected by special officers, who have
to see that they are correctly filled up. The collation and analysis of the
facts and figures thus collected will then take the Census Department months of
hard work.
There are really no reasonable
objections to the census. But when it was first introduced into India, ignorant
and superstitious people were very suspicious of it; and all sorts of wild and
absurd talks got about as to the government’s object in wanting all this
information. Nowadays, however, those objections have died down. Some people,
however, still object to the census, saying it asks a lot of inquisitive
questions about their private affairs. Sensible people, however, realize that
the information a census gives is really necessary to the governing powers, and
answer the questions put willingly and truthfully.
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