Realising the hopes and aspirations of young people: Bangladesh's path to a demographic future of choice and opportunity

The true measure of demographic success is not simply the size of a population. It is whether every young woman and man can make informed decisions about education, employment, marriage and parenthood, and whether society provides the opportunities that allow those choices to become reality

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Photo: Freepik

Every generation inherits a defining responsibility. For Bangladesh, that responsibility is clear: ensuring that today’s young people have the freedom, opportunities and support to shape the future they aspire to.

Around the world, demographic debates often focus on whether populations are growing too quickly or declining too rapidly. Yet UNFPA’s newly launched Demographic Futures Survey, which reached nearly 109,000 young adults aged 18 to 39 across 73 countries, including Bangladesh, tells a different story. 

Young people are not turning away from family life. Most still hope to marry and have children. What prevents them from realising these aspirations are not changing values, but growing structural barriers such as economic insecurity, limited opportunities, unequal gender norms and constrained access to quality healthcare and education.

Bangladesh has made significant progress over the past five decades, transforming its demographic landscape through investments in health, education, employment security, affordable housing, reproductive health services, and social protection and support. 

Today, with approximately 175 million people and more than 115 million of working age, Bangladesh stands at a pivotal moment in its development journey. This demographic window represents one of the country’s greatest opportunities for accelerating inclusive economic growth and achieving the Sustainable Development Goals. But this opportunity will not remain open indefinitely.

The true measure of demographic success is not simply the size of a population. It is whether every young woman and man can make informed decisions about education, employment, marriage and parenthood, and whether society provides the opportunities that allow those choices to become reality.

The Government of Bangladesh has already demonstrated strong leadership by adopting the National Population Policy 2025 and launching the country’s first National Family Planning Strategy 2025–2030. 

These important policy milestones reflect a welcome shift towards a rights-based approach that emphasises human capital development, reproductive choice, gender equality and demographic dividend. 

They provide an excellent foundation upon which Bangladesh can build its next generation of social and economic progress.

However, the true measure of policy success lies in its translation into tangible opportunities. In navigating this path, we must understand the critical distinction between individual freedom and systemic opportunity. A young person’s freedom to choose is only as real as the practical avenues available to act on those choices.

Access to contraceptives and comprehensive family planning information and services is a cornerstone of this effort. According to the Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey (BDHS) 2022, the unmet need for family planning among currently married women stands at 10%, rising to 12.7% among married adolescent girls. 

While this indicator measures those who explicitly wish to space or delay childbearing, the actual constraints on reproductive choice may be even broader. Many young women may lack the information, confidence, or social support to realise that deciding the timing of parenthood is a viable option. 

Furthermore, health system limitations continue to affect the method mix available to women. Currently, only 8% of married women use long-acting or permanent contraceptive methods, while 27% rely on user-dependent and supply-centred short-acting methods, such as pills. Because short-acting methods carry higher risks of method failure or discontinuation, they can lead to unintended pregnancies.

This challenge is reflected in the fact that 24% of adolescent girls aged 15–19 are already mothers or are pregnant with their first child. Ensuring that girls remain in school, delay marriage, and gain access to youth-friendly health services is one of the smartest economic investments a nation can make.

Economic opportunity represents another essential pillar of demographic resilience. Young people cannot be expected to build families or invest confidently in their futures if decent jobs, affordable housing and social protection remain beyond reach. 

Bangladesh’s expanding economy has created significant opportunities, yet many young people continue to face unemployment, underemployment and informal work with limited security. Women, in particular, continue to shoulder a disproportionate share of unpaid care responsibilities, often forcing difficult choices between family aspirations and career development.

Supporting young people’s aspirations therefore requires policies that make both work and family life possible. Investments in quality education, digital skills, entrepreneurship, childcare, social protection and decent employment are investments in demographic resilience.

Climate change adds another layer of complexity. Bangladesh remains one of the countries most vulnerable to climate-related shocks, with young people, especially adolescent girls and women in climate-affected communities, bearing disproportionate consequences. 

Climate-induced displacement, loss of livelihoods and disruption of education often increase risks of child marriage, gender-based violence and reduced access to health services. Building climate-resilient health systems, protecting education and strengthening community resilience are therefore essential to safeguarding the choices and futures of young people.

Ultimately, realising the aspirations of young people requires coordinated action across sectors. Health, education, labour, social protection, gender equality and climate resilience are deeply interconnected. 

Success depends not only on government leadership but also on meaningful partnerships among development partners, civil society, academia, communities, the private sector and, most importantly, young people themselves. They must not only benefit from policies they must help shape them.

Bangladesh has repeatedly demonstrated that ambitious development goals can be achieved through visionary leadership, sound policies and strong partnerships. The country’s demographic transition stands as global evidence of what sustained investment in people can accomplish. The next chapter now calls for a renewed focus on expanding opportunities, protecting rights and ensuring that every young person can contribute fully to national development.

On this World Population Day, UNFPA reaffirms its commitment to support the Government of Bangladesh in navigating demographic shifts effectively and contributing to sustainable development outcomes.

Catherine Breen Kamkong is currently serving as the Representative for UNFPA Bangladesh. 

Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and views of The Business Standard.