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Jun 12, 2026 Daily Prelims CA Quiz

The Current Affairs questions are based on sources like ‘The Hindu’, ‘Indian Express’ and ‘PIB’, which are very important sources for UPSC Prelims Exam. The questions are focused on both the concepts and facts. The topics covered here are generally different from what is being covered under ‘Daily Current Affairs/Daily News Analysis (DNA) and Daily Static Quiz’ to avoid duplication. The questions would be published from Monday to Saturday before 2 PM. One should not spend more than 10 minutes on this initiative. Gear up and Make the Best Use of this initiative. Do remember that, “the difference between Ordinary and EXTRA-Ordinary is PRACTICE!!” Important Note: Don’t forget to post your marks in the comment section. Also, let us know if you enjoyed today’s test 🙂 After completing the 5 questions, click on ‘View Questions’ to check your score, time taken, and solutions. .To take the Test Click Here

Jun 12, 2026 Daily Prelims CA Quiz

The Current Affairs questions are based on sources like ‘The Hindu’, ‘Indian Express’ and ‘PIB’, which are very important sources for UPSC Prelims Exam. The questions are focused on both the concepts and facts. The topics covered here are generally different from what is being covered under ‘Daily Current Affairs/Daily News Analysis (DNA) and Daily Static Quiz’ to avoid duplication. The questions would be published from Monday to Saturday before 2 PM. One should not spend more than 10 minutes on this initiative. Gear up and Make the Best Use of this initiative. Do remember that, “the difference between Ordinary and EXTRA-Ordinary is PRACTICE!!” Important Note: Don’t forget to post your marks in the comment section. Also, let us know if you enjoyed today’s test 🙂 After completing the 5 questions, click on ‘View Questions’ to check your score, time taken, and solutions. .To take the Test Click Here

Jun 12, 2026 IASbaba's Daily Current Affairs

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) C-295 Transport Aircraft: India’s Tactical Airlift Modernisation Subject: Defence / transport geography (military logistics)/ Make in India, India–EU/Spain relations News Context The C-295 aircraft is in news due to the successful maiden test flight of the first “Made-in-India” C-295 assembled at Tata-Airbus Final Assembly Line (FAL) in Vadodara, marking a key milestone in India’s defence manufacturing under Atmanirbhar Bharat and Make in India initiatives.  What is C-295 Aircraft? A new-generation tactical transport aircraft developed by Airbus (Spain)  Designed for light-to-medium military airlift operations  India signed contract for 56 aircraft (2021) to replace Avro fleet  Key Features & Capabilities Operational Roles Troop & cargo transport (up to ~71 personnel)  Medical evacuation (MEDEVAC)  Paratrooping & aerial delivery  Maritime surveillance & special missions  Technical Features Twin turboprop engines (fuel-efficient, low-speed operations)  STOL capability (short take-off & landing)  Can operate from unprepared/runway-short airstrips  Endurance up to ~11–13 hours  Rear ramp door for rapid deployment  India-Specific Programme First 16 aircraft: imported from Spain  Remaining 40: manufactured in India at Vadodara FAL (TASL–Airbus)  First private-sector military aircraft production line in India  Expected localisation up to ~70–85% in later units  UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static + Dynamic Linkage) Static: Concepts of STOL aircraft, turboprop vs jet aircraft, tactical airlift roles  Dynamic: India’s defence indigenisation, private-sector entry in aerospace manufacturing, strategic autonomy  Prelims traps:  Confusion with C-130J Super Hercules / C-17 Globemaster  Misidentifying role (tactical vs strategic airlift)  Confusion over origin (Airbus Spain) vs manufacturing location (India)  Source Links https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/first-made-in-india-c-295-carries-out-maiden-test-flight/article71087451.ece Credit Guarantee Scheme for Microfinance Institutions–2.0 (CGSMFI–2.0) Subject: Banking & Financial Inclusion, NBFC, Government schemes News Context The Government has recently operationalised and extended key provisions of the Credit Guarantee Scheme for Microfinance Institutions–2.0 (CGSMFI–2.0), a ₹20,000 crore targeted credit guarantee initiative aimed at strengthening liquidity in the microfinance sector and ensuring uninterrupted credit flow to small and vulnerable borrowers, especially in rural and semi-urban India.  About CGSMFI–2.0 A credit guarantee framework launched by the Government of India (March 2026)  Implemented through National Credit Guarantee Trustee Company (NCGTC)  Provides guarantee cover to banks/financial institutions lending to NBFC-MFIs and MFIs  Key Features Objective Encourage banks to lend to MFIs by reducing credit risk  Ensure smooth flow of micro-credit to low-income households  Guarantee Coverage (Tiered Structure) 80% for small MFIs  75% for medium MFIs  70% for large MFIs  Financial Limits Total guarantee corpus: ₹20,000 crore  Scheme validity: until limit exhaustion / prescribed deadline  Lending Safeguards Interest cap: EBLR/MCLR + 2% for lending to MFIs  On-lending rate restrictions for borrower protection  Target Beneficiaries Informal sector workers  Women SHGs and micro-entrepreneurs  Rural and urban poor households  UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static + Dynamic Linkage) Static linkage: Concept of credit guarantee schemes (risk-sharing mechanism), role of NBFCs, microfinance model in India  Dynamic linkage: Financial stress in MFI sector, credit tightening cycles, government intervention to sustain rural credit flow  Prelims focus areas:  Purpose of NCGTC  Guarantee coverage percentages  Role of MFIs vs NBFC-MFIs  Difference between direct lending and guarantee-based lending  Source Links https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2271200&reg=48&lang=1 One Station One Product (OSOP) Initiative: Railway-Based Local Economy Platform Subject: Inclusive growth, Government schemes, welfare initiatives, Economic geography News Context The One Station One Product (OSOP) scheme of Indian Railways has recently been highlighted for its rapid expansion across railway stations, strengthening local artisans, SHGs, and small producers. The initiative aligns with “Vocal for Local” and Atmanirbhar Bharat by turning railway stations into marketplaces for indigenous products. About OSOP Initiative Launched by: Ministry of Railways (2022, Union Budget announcement)  Concept: Each railway station showcases and sells a distinct local product of the region  Implemented through: Temporary stalls/retail outlets at stations  Key Features Objective Promote local craftsmanship and indigenous products  Provide direct market access to artisans and producers  Strengthen grassroots entrepreneurship and MSMEs  Operational Model Stalls allotted at stations to local vendors/SHGs  Products reflect regional identity (handicrafts, textiles, food items, etc.)  Focus on eliminating intermediaries  Scale & Impact Operational at 2,000+ railway stations  Over 2,300+ OSOP outlets across India  Benefited 1.3+ lakh artisans and producers  Enhances income through high railway passenger footfall  UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static + Dynamic Linkage) Static linkage: Role of railways as economic infrastructure; concept of local market access and value chains  Dynamic linkage: Government push for self-reliant economy, integration of logistics + retail at public infrastructure  Possible Prelims traps:  Confusing OSOP with ODOP (One District One Product)  Misidentifying implementing agency (Railways vs MSME Ministry)  Objective confusion (promotion of retail vs privatization—incorrect)  Source Links https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2271522&reg=48&lang=1 Shigellosis: Highly Contagious Enteric Bacterial Disease Subject: Health, Public health administration/ Human geography News Context Shigellosis has been in news due to a recent outbreak in Kerala (June 2026), including rising cases among schoolchildren and a reported child mortality. Health authorities have intensified surveillance, hygiene measures, and food safety inspections to contain the spread of this highly contagious bacterial infection.  What is Shigellosis? An acute intestinal infection caused by Shigella bacteria  Also known as bacillary dysentery  Primarily affects the large intestine (colon)  Transmission & Spread Fecal–oral route (most common)  Contaminated food, water, or hands  Person-to-person spread in crowded settings (schools, childcare centres)  Extremely low infectious dose (10–200 bacteria) → highly contagious  Symptoms Sudden onset diarrhea (often bloody/mucus)  Fever, abdominal cramps  Tenesmus (feeling of incomplete evacuation)  Severe cases: dehydration, seizures, complications like hemolytic uremic syndrome  Key Facts (Prelims-Oriented) Causative agent: Shigella spp. (Gram-negative bacteria)  Incubation period: 1–2 days  Duration: 5–7 days (mild cases)  Diagnosis: Stool culture  Treatment: Rehydration + antibiotics (severe cases only)  No vaccine available currently  UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static + Dynamic Linkage) Static linkage: Basics of bacterial classification, enteric infections, waterborne diseases, epidemiology concepts  Dynamic linkage: Outbreak surveillance, antimicrobial resistance concerns, sanitation and school health monitoring  Prelims traps:  Confusing Shigella with Vibrio cholerae (cholera) or E. coli  Misidentifying transmission (NOT airborne)  Assuming vaccine availability (none exists)  Source Links https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/kerala/kerala-reports-34-cases-of-shigellosis-in-june-so-far/article71090342.ece Oilseeds Kisaan Mitra: AI-Driven Digital Advisory for Oilseed Farmers Subject: Agriculture, e-governance, Government scheme, Agricultural geography News Context The Oilseeds Kisaan Mitra initiative has been launched by ICAR to strengthen India’s domestic oilseed production through a WhatsApp-based AI advisory platform. It comes at a time when India is focusing on reducing edible oil import dependency and improving productivity under the National Mission on Edible Oils–Oilseeds (NMEO–OS) framework.  About Oilseeds Kisaan Mitra Developed by: ICAR–Indian Institute of Oilseeds Research (IIOR), Hyderabad  Platform: WhatsApp-based AI chatbot service  Objective: Provide real-time, scientific crop advisory for oilseed farmers  Key Features AI-Based Multilingual Advisory Supports multiple Indian languages  Works through simple WhatsApp interface (no app download needed)  Uses ICAR knowledge base for responses  24×7 Crop Support System Instant guidance on:  Crop selection (groundnut, mustard, soybean, sunflower, sesame, etc.)  Pest & disease management  Irrigation scheduling  Post-harvest practices  Accessibility Free service for farmers  Operable on basic smartphones  Designed for rural digital inclusion  Institutional Support Backed by ICAR institutes and agricultural research networks  Integrates scientific research directly with field-level farming  Significance Strengthens Atmanirbhar Bharat in edible oils sector  Bridges lab-to-farm gap in agricultural extension services  Enhances precision agriculture through AI tools  Supports productivity under National Mission on Edible Oil–Oilseeds (NMEO–OS)  UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static + Dynamic Linkage) Static linkage: Role of agricultural extension services, oilseed crops in India, ICT in agriculture  Dynamic linkage: AI-driven governance, digital agriculture platforms, import substitution in edible oils  Prelims traps:  Confusing with Kisan e-Mitra or other advisory platforms  Misidentifying implementing body (ICAR vs Ministry schemes)  Overlooking that it is WhatsApp-based (not a standalone app)  Source Links https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2271749&reg=48&lang=1 Tajikistan: Strategic Gateway of Central Asia Subject: World Geography / International Relations News Context Tajikistan is in news due to recent India–Tajikistan diplomatic engagement focusing on strategic cooperation, regional security, and development partnerships in Central Asia. It remains important for India’s “Connect Central Asia Policy” and broader Eurasian outreach. Key Facts About Tajikistan Location & Geography Landlocked country in Central Asia, bordered by Afghanistan, China, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan  Dominated by Pamir Mountains (“Roof of the World”)  Important rivers: Amu Darya, Syr Darya (regional influence)  Strategic proximity to Wakhan Corridor (Afghanistan–China narrow link)  Strategic & Geopolitical Importance Member of CSTO (Collective Security Treaty Organization) and SCO (Shanghai Cooperation Organisation)  Acts as a buffer zone between Afghanistan, China, and Central Asia  Historically linked with India via defence and intelligence cooperation (Farkhor Air Base usage)  Economy & Resources Hydropower-rich country (major potential in Rogun Dam project)  Economy dependent on aluminium, cotton, remittances  UPSC-Oriented Analysis Static geography (landlocked mountain state) combines with dynamic geopolitics (Afghanistan stability, China proximity, energy security).  Possible MCQs may focus on borders, mountain systems, organisations (SCO/CSTO), and river basins. Source Links: https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2271366&reg=3&lang=1 (MAINS Focus) Negotiating Federalism in Higher Education GS Paper II – Polity & Governance (Federalism) | GS Paper II – Social Justice (Education) Centre-State Relations; National Education Policy (NEP) 2020; Concurrent List; Regulatory Authority   Introduction Higher education in India has become a key arena reflecting changing federal dynamics. Though education is in the Concurrent List, issues such as regulation, curriculum, language policy, funding, and digital governance have increasingly strengthened the Union’s role, making higher education an important component of India’s evolving federal structure.   Main Body Constitutional Framework: Concurrent List Concurrent List (Entry 25): Education (including higher education) is a concurrent subject – both Union and States have legislative authority. Union Government’s Leverage: Ministry of Education. University Grants Commission (UGC). Various regulatory and accreditation bodies. Central funding mechanisms. The Tension: Constitution gives both levels authority. In practice, Union government possesses substantial leverage over universities and colleges across the country. Access to central funding increasingly dependent on compliance with nationally designed reform agendas. NEP 2020: A Restructuring Attempt Key Reforms Proposed: Four-year undergraduate programmes. Academic Bank of Credits (ABC). Institutional restructuring. Multidisciplinary universities. Internationalisation initiatives (foreign university campuses in India). Federal Implications: These reforms represent an expansion of the influence of the Centre into domains historically preserved for State governments. Contestations across States, particularly Tamil Nadu (three-language formula, UGC circular on third language). Centre-State Tensions in Higher Education Tamil Nadu: Repeatedly opposed various aspects of NEP 2020. Particularly the three-language formula. UGC circular on third language (2026). Vice-Chancellor Appointments: Disputes over appointment of Vice-Chancellors. Powers of Governors in States such as Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Karnataka, and West Bengal. Viksit Bharat Shiksha Adhishthan (VBSA) Bill, 2025: Proposes replacement of existing higher education regulatory bodies (including UGC). Generates apprehensions regarding gradual erosion of State government authority. Instruments of Central Influence Institutions of Eminence (IoE) Initiative: Central funding dependent on compliance with national reform agendas. Anusandhan National Research Foundation (ANRF): Competitive research mechanisms. Central government influence over State universities. Academic Bank of Credits (ABC): Digital governance mechanism. Expands Union government’s capacity to standardise and monitor higher education governance across States. Foreign University Campuses: Regulatory framework determined by Union government. Actual implementation depends on State governments (local administrative clearances, infrastructure support, investment facilitation). State Responses: Strategic Adaptation Not Purely Adversarial: Centre-State relations in higher education are not purely adversarial. Many States (including Opposition-ruled States) have selectively adapted aspects of reforms according to local political contexts. Negotiated Federalism: Emergence of a more negotiated form of federalism characterised by strategic adaptation. Internationalisation: Several States are seeking to position themselves as regional education hubs by facilitating partnerships with overseas institutions. Regional Political Identities: In States with strong regional political identities, these reforms are viewed not just as administrative issues but as constitutional questions concerning the balance of power within the Indian Union. The Core Federal Question What Is at Stake: Distribution of power within the Indian Union. Whether higher education governance will be centralised or shared. What Trajectory Depends On: Not only constitutional provisions or national-level policy frameworks. Also capacity of the Centre and the States to negotiate competing political and developmental priorities within the federal structure.   Conclusion Although education is in the Concurrent List, governance increasingly favours the Union through the Ministry of Education, UGC, and reforms under the NEP 2020. Disputes over language policy, Vice-Chancellor appointments, and the proposed VBSA Bill (2025) reflect concerns about centralisation and State autonomy. At the same time, States have selectively adapted reforms, making higher education a space of negotiated federalism shaped by Centre–State bargaining.   UPSC Mains Practice Question Despite education being a Concurrent List subject, higher education governance is increasingly becoming centralised. Critically examine the federal tensions arising from this trend and assess the responses of States. (250 words, 15 marks)   https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/negotiating-federalism-in-higher-education/article71086364.ece#google_vignette R&D Underspending in India: Systemic and Cultural Causes GS Paper III – Economy (Industrial Policy; Innovation) | GS Paper III – Science & Technology Research & Development (R&D) Investment; Innovation Ecosystem; Private Sector Behaviour   Introduction Indian businesses underinvest in R&D due to a combination of structural and historical factors. Limited manufacturing depth, financialisation, and historically commerce-oriented business practices have reduced incentives for innovation. As a result, India’s R&D intensity remains below the level needed to support its long-term economic and technological ambitions.   Main Body The Captive Market and Its Seductions The Paradox: India’s domestic market is vast. Vastness, paradoxically, can be an impediment to innovation. A large captive market insulates producers from the bracing pressure of export competition. Export Competition as Driver: Export competition has historically been the driving force behind quality improvement and technological upgrading. This is the R&D equivalent of Dutch disease – the same abundance that appears to be an asset quietly erodes competitive muscle. The Result: Companies that can grow for decades by serving a billion-plus consumers without venturing beyond the Subcontinent have little incentive to invest in costly, uncertain frontier innovation. Why develop a better product when the existing one sells readily? The Long Shadow of Colonial Deindustrialisation Historical Reality: Indian commercial communities have historically been trading rather than manufacturing communities. Whatever manufacturing instincts and capabilities existed before colonial rule were systematically suppressed. The Deindustrialisation: The destruction of India’s textile industry was not merely an economic event. It reshaped the orientation of Indian enterprise toward commerce, intermediation, and arbitrage rather than production and innovation. The Exception: The few families that retained or rebuilt a manufacturing identity stand as evidence of what might have been more widespread had history taken a different course. Financialisation Before Its Time What Is Financialisation: A shift in priorities from productive investment to financial return (stock buybacks, dividends, short-term stock price maximisation). The Sequencing Problem: India’s corporate sector underwent financialisation somewhat earlier than its level of industrial development warranted. Germany, Japan, and South Korea financialised only after generating decades of compounding returns on investment in real productive capability. India attempted the transition earlier, with less accumulated capability to draw upon. Empirical Evidence from Developed Markets (Lazonick, HBR 2014 – US S&P 500 companies, 2003-2012): 54% of earnings spent on buybacks. Another 37% spent on dividends. Precious little left for R&D. Executive Stock Option Problem: Options tied to short-term stock performance create incentives to manage earnings rather than invest in projects with distant payoffs. R&D suppresses near-term profits while creating competitive advantage over a horizon of 5-10 years – outlasting both executive’s tenure and compensation vesting period. Gains accrue to successors; costs fall on executive’s own balance sheet. Public vs. Private Companies (Asker, Farre-Mensa, Ljungqvist, 2015): Public companies invest substantially less than comparable private firms facing no quarterly reporting scrutiny. Public companies are significantly more sensitive to short-term stock price movements. Democracy, Uncertainty, and the Discount Rate Structural Uncertainty: Competitive popular democracy in a large developing economy generates genuine uncertainty about the long-term future. Reconciling demands of a vast and diverse electorate, multiple levels of government, hostile neighbourhood, and stakeholders with sharply competing interests makes confident long-run prediction genuinely difficult. Business Response (Rational): The greater the uncertainty about conditions under which long-horizon investment must eventually pay off, the higher the discount rate applied to it. R&D suppresses near-term profitability for returns that may take a decade to materialise – suffers most when discount rates are high. The Tragedy: The result is not irrationality; it is the correct pricing of genuine uncertainty. That it produces underinvestment in the capabilities India most needs is the tragedy of the situation, not its justification. Conclusion Indian firms underinvest in R&D due to interacting structural and institutional factors. Protected domestic markets, colonial-era commercial orientation, and premature financialisation have weakened manufacturing depth and innovation incentives. Global evidence shows similar trends, with firms prioritising buybacks and dividends over long-term R&D due to short-term market pressures and high discount rates. In India, these forces collectively result in rational but insufficient investment in long-horizon technological capabilities critical for growth.   UPSC Mains Practice Question Indian firms consistently underinvest in R&D due to multiple interacting structural and cultural factors. Critically examine these causes and assess the role of financialisation and democratic uncertainty in this pattern. (250 words, 15 marks)   https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/rd-underspending-in-india-has-no-one-cause-its-systemic-as-well-as-cultural-10735416/