The number of Bharatiya Janata Party members of parliament in the current Lok Sabha above the age of 70 declined to 8.8% – from 14.2% in the 15th Lok Sabha – and MPs aged 25 to 40 increased from 5.8% to 7.8%, according to an IndiaSpend analysis of data released by PRS Legislative Research, an advocacy.

The trend in the opposition Congress is the reverse. The younger lot of MPs declined from 8.1% to 6.7%, and older MPs increased from 11.9% to 20%.

The average age of MPs has increased from 46.5 years during the first Lok Sabha (1952) to 56 years in the 16th Lok Sabha (2014 to present). While the first Lok Sabha had 489 MPs, the current Lok Sabha has 550 MPs.

Source: Press Information Bureau, PRS Legislative Research

The current Lok Sabha is the second oldest house of independent India; the first was the previous Lok Sabha (15th).

Young India Has Most MPs Aged 56-70

The youngest MP in the current House is 28 years old, and the oldest is 88. The median age of MPs is 58 – so, half the MPs are aged 58 and above. In 2011, the median age of India was 24, IndiaSpend reported in September.

Source: PRS Legislative Research

MPs aged 56-70 years have the highest share of seats (44%) in the current Lok Sabha, while the demographic accounts for only 8% of the total population.

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Of India’s population eligible to be elected, a fourth are between 25 and 40 years old, but no more than 10% of MPs are from this age-group. Elderly (71-100) MPs occupy 9.6% of the seats, while their age-group makes up 2.4% of the population.

Source: PRS Legislative Research and Census 2011

Uttar Pradesh and Bihar have younger MPs

India’s most populous state, Uttar Pradesh, has the highest share of seats (70) in the Lok Sabha – 63% of MPs that represent this state of 200 million are below the age of 56. Half the Lok Sabha MPs from Bihar, Odisha, Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu are below 56 – younger than those from the remaining 13 states that have more than 15 seats in the Lok Sabha.

UP and Bihar could have younger MPs as their populations are among India’s youngest, with median ages of 20, against India’s median age of 24.

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Kerala (20 MPs) does not have a single MP aged between 25 and 40; 65% are above the age of 55. Kerala has a comparatively older population, with a median age of 31, which is, however, low compared to ageing countries – such as Japan, which has a median age of 46.9.

MPs aged 41–55 score well

MPs between the ages of 41 and 55, on average, attended 81% of the sessions in the 16th Lok Sabha, and marked the highest attendance. The oldest MPs scored the least, with 76.3%.

Parliamentarians of the age-group 41-55 were the most active in the Lok Sabha, with the highest average of questions, participation in debates and introduction of private member bills. While an MP of the age-group 41-55 asked 168 questions, an MP from the oldest age-group asked only 91 questions.

Source: PRS Legislative Research Get the data

The least active Parliamentarians are between 71 and 88 years old (the oldest); 34% of such MPs have asked less than 10 questions in the House.

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Nationalist Congress Party MP Supriya Sule, 53, asked the most questions: 619.

Does India need younger leaders?

Anandiben Patel, former Chief Minister of Gujarat, cited the BJP tradition of voluntary retirement at the age of 75 as a reason for her retirement.

Babulal Gaur stepped down from Madhya Pradesh cabinet, sticking to the unwritten age limit rule of the BJP.

Many members of legislative assembly were seen rallying behind Uttar Pradesh chief minister Akhilesh Yadav during the clash with his father and Samajwadi Party leader Mulayam Singh Yadav.

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“Netaji [Mulayam Yadav] is ageing and the public understands it will not be possible for him to run the state for a long term,” MLA Mohd Rizwan told the Indian Express.

“Akhilesh is the undisputed leader with a clean image who has set a milestone in development,” MLA Indal Kumar told the Indian Express. “The public is a fan of him, youth are his followers.”

This article first appeared on Indiaspend, a data-driven and public-interest journalism non-profit.