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Jun 9, 2026 IASbaba's Daily Current Affairs

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Kaziranga National Park: Emerging Stronghold for Raptors and Storks Subject: Environment & Ecology (Protected Areas, Avian Biodiversity, Ramsar Sites, Wildlife Conservation) Why in News? A recent avifaunal assessment in Kaziranga National Park and Tiger Reserve recorded 30 species of raptors (birds of prey) and six species of storks, reaffirming the park’s importance as a critical habitat for avian biodiversity in northeastern India. The findings highlight Kaziranga’s role beyond being a refuge for the one-horned rhinoceros. About Kaziranga National Park Located in the state of Assam along the floodplains of the Brahmaputra River.  Declared a National Park in 1974.  Recognized as a Kaziranga National Park UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1985.  Also designated as a Tiger Reserve, Important Bird Area (IBA), and a Ramsar Site.  Famous for hosting the world’s largest population of the Indian One-Horned Rhinoceros.  Key Findings of the Survey Recorded 30 species of raptors, indicating a healthy food chain and ecosystem.  Identified six species of storks, including globally significant wetland-dependent birds.  Wetlands, grasslands, and riverine habitats support diverse resident and migratory bird populations.  Presence of apex avian predators reflects strong ecological integrity.  Important Bird Species Found Raptors Pallas’s Fish Eagle (Endangered)  Grey-headed Fish Eagle  Lesser Adjutant  Storks Greater Adjutant (Endangered)  Black-necked Stork  Asian Openbill  UPSC Prelims-Oriented Analysis Kaziranga is a favorite UPSC location-based topic due to its multiple conservation designations.  Important static–dynamic linkage between wetland ecosystems, grassland ecology, and bird conservation.  Potential MCQs may focus on:  Location of Kaziranga and the river associated with it.  UNESCO, Ramsar, and Tiger Reserve status.  Difference between raptors and scavenging birds.  Conservation status of Greater Adjutant and Pallas’s Fish Eagle.  Protected areas of the Brahmaputra floodplain.  Source/Reference: https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/kaziranga-national-park-records-30-raptor-and-six-stork-species/article71069139.ece#google_vignette Right of an Accused to Travel Abroad: Balancing Liberty and Speedy Justice Subject: Polity & Governance (Fundamental Rights, Article 21, Criminal Justice System, Judicial Interpretation) Why in News? The Supreme Court recently held that an accused person’s right to travel abroad cannot be treated as absolute and must be balanced against the victim’s right to a speedy trial and the broader interests of justice. The Court restored a magistrate’s order requiring the accused to obtain prior court permission before travelling overseas.  Constitutional Basis The Right to Travel Abroad has been recognized as part of the Right to Personal Liberty under Article 21 of the Constitution.  The landmark judgment in Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India expanded the scope of Article 21 and recognized foreign travel as a component of personal liberty.  Supreme Court’s Observations An accused does not lose all constitutional rights merely because criminal proceedings are pending.  However, courts must ensure that foreign travel does not:  Delay trial proceedings.  Affect the administration of justice.  Increase the risk of absconding.  The right of victims and society to a speedy trial must also be protected.  Related Legal Concepts Article 21 – Right to Life and Personal Liberty.  Speedy Trial – Recognized as a fundamental right under Article 21 through judicial interpretation.  Passport Act, 1967 – Governs issuance, impounding, and regulation of passports.  Courts may impose conditions such as security deposits, travel itineraries, or limited-duration permissions.  UPSC Prelims-Oriented Analysis Important example of how the Supreme Court balances individual liberty with societal and judicial interests.  Establishes the linkage between:  Right to Travel Abroad (Article 21),  Right to Speedy Trial (Article 21),  Criminal justice administration.  Possible UPSC questions may focus on:  Constitutional status of the right to travel abroad.  Landmark judgments expanding Article 21.  Relationship between personal liberty and reasonable restrictions.  Concept of speedy trial as a fundamental right.  Source/Reference: https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/right-to-travel-abroad-of-accused-must-be-balanced-with-victims-right-to-speedy-trial-supreme-court/article71069272.ece Pyroprocessing: Advanced Technology for Nuclear Fuel Recycling Subject: Science & Technology (Nuclear Energy, Nuclear Fuel Cycle, Spent Fuel Reprocessing, Advanced Reactor Technologies) Why in News? Pyroprocessing has recently gained attention due to discussions on its role in reprocessing spent nuclear fuel and its potential relevance for advanced nuclear energy programmes, including those linked to fast breeder reactors.  What is Pyroprocessing? Pyroprocessing is a high-temperature, dry industrial process used to bring about physical or chemical changes in materials.  Unlike conventional aqueous methods, it uses molten salts and electrochemical techniques rather than liquid solvents.  It is highly energy-intensive and finds applications in cement manufacturing, metallurgy, and the nuclear sector.  Pyroprocessing in the Nuclear Industry How it Works Spent nuclear fuel is chopped into small pieces.  The fuel is placed in a molten salt bath, typically a mixture of lithium chloride (LiCl) and potassium chloride (KCl) at temperatures above 500°C.  An electric current is passed through the bath.  Uranium, plutonium, and other actinides are separated based on their electrochemical properties.  Advantages Reduces the volume of radioactive waste.  Facilitates recycling of valuable nuclear materials.  Considered more suitable for fast breeder reactor (FBR) fuel cycles.  Does not require organic solvents used in the conventional PUREX (Plutonium Uranium Redox Extraction) process.  Relevance for India Supports India’s Three-Stage Nuclear Programme envisioned by Homi Jehangir Bhabha.  Particularly important for Stage II (Fast Breeder Reactors) and the long-term utilization of India’s vast thorium reserves.  Research on advanced fuel-cycle technologies is undertaken at Indira Gandhi Centre for Atomic Research, Tamil Nadu.  UPSC Prelims-Oriented Analysis UPSC frequently asks questions on the nuclear fuel cycle, reprocessing technologies, and India’s thorium-based nuclear strategy.  Key distinctions between pyroprocessing (dry process) and PUREX (wet process) are important.  Possible MCQs may test:  Components of India’s Three-Stage Nuclear Programme.  Role of Fast Breeder Reactors.  Use of molten salts in nuclear fuel reprocessing.  Institutions associated with advanced nuclear research.  Source/Reference: https://www.thehindu.com/sci-tech/science/what-is-pyroprocessing/article71072743.ece Section 301 of the U.S. Trade Act: America’s Powerful Trade Enforcement Tool Subject: Economy / International Trade (Trade Policy, WTO, Bilateral Trade Agreements, Trade Disputes) Why in News? During ongoing negotiations for a proposed India–U.S. trade agreement, India has reportedly sought safeguards against future investigations under Section 301 of the U.S. Trade Act of 1974. The issue has emerged as a key concern because Section 301 allows the United States to unilaterally investigate and impose trade measures against countries deemed to engage in unfair trade practices. What is Section 301? Section 301 is a provision of the U.S. Trade Act, 1974.  It authorizes the Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR) to:  Investigate foreign trade practices.  Determine whether they are discriminatory or unreasonable.  Recommend retaliatory actions such as tariffs or trade restrictions.  Key Features Allows the U.S. to act unilaterally, even before multilateral dispute settlement mechanisms are exhausted.  Targets practices that:  Restrict U.S. market access.  Violate trade agreements.  Harm U.S. commerce or intellectual property rights.  Investigations can result in:  Additional tariffs.  Import restrictions.  Suspension of trade concessions.  Major Examples China (2018–present): Section 301 investigations led to tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars worth of Chinese goods, triggering the U.S.–China trade war.  Digital Services Taxes (DSTs): Investigations were launched against several countries, including India, over taxes imposed on large digital companies.  Section 301 vs WTO Dispute Settlement Section 301 WTO Mechanism Unilateral action by the U.S. Multilateral dispute resolution Conducted by USTR Conducted through WTO panels Can impose immediate trade measures Requires adjudication process Based on U.S. domestic law Based on international trade rules UPSC Prelims-Oriented Analysis Important linkage between domestic trade laws and global trade governance.  UPSC may ask:  Which country uses Section 301?  Difference between WTO dispute settlement and unilateral trade actions.  Role of USTR.  Impact of Section 301 investigations on global trade relations.  The topic is also relevant for understanding tensions between rules-based multilateralism (WTO) and unilateral trade enforcement measures adopted by major economies.  Quick Prelims Facts Law: U.S. Trade Act, 1974.  Implementing Agency: USTR.  Purpose: Address unfair foreign trade practices.  Nature: Unilateral trade enforcement mechanism.  Frequently linked with: China tariffs, digital taxes, market-access disputes, and intellectual property concerns.  Source/Reference: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-06-08/india-seeks-protection-from-future-trade-probes-in-us-deal Bovista colorata: Rare Yellow Puffball Mushroom Found in Arunachal Pradesh Subject: Environment & Ecology / Science & Technology (Fungal Diversity, Biodiversity Conservation, Species Discovery, Eastern Himalayas) Why in News? Researchers have recorded Bovista colorata, a rare species of yellow puffball mushroom, in Longding district of Arunachal Pradesh. This is the first documented record of the species in India, expanding its known geographical distribution and highlighting the rich fungal biodiversity of the Eastern Himalayan region. About Bovista colorata Bovista colorata is a species of puffball mushroom belonging to the family Agaricaceae.  Previously reported mainly from parts of East Asia, including China and Japan.  The recent discovery marks its first confirmed occurrence in India.  Key Characteristics Distinctive yellow to yellowish-brown fruiting body.  Spherical or nearly spherical structure resembling a small ball.  Reproduces through microscopic spores.  When mature, the outer covering ruptures, releasing spores into the atmosphere.  Grows on soil-rich forest floors, especially in moist environments.  Ecological Importance of Fungi Act as decomposers, breaking down dead organic matter.  Play a crucial role in nutrient cycling and soil fertility.  Form mycorrhizal associations with plant roots, enhancing nutrient uptake.  Serve as indicators of ecosystem health and biodiversity.  About Arunachal Pradesh’s Biodiversity Significance Part of the Eastern Himalaya Biodiversity Hotspot.  Characterized by high endemism and rich diversity of flora, fauna, and fungi.  Dense forests and varied altitudinal gradients support numerous undiscovered species.  UPSC Prelims-Oriented Analysis UPSC frequently asks about newly discovered species and biodiversity hotspots.  Important static–dynamic linkage:  Kingdom Fungi and ecological roles of decomposers.  Eastern Himalaya Hotspot and species richness.  Differences between fungi, plants, and lichens.  Potential MCQs may focus on:  Ecological functions of fungi.  Characteristics of puffball mushrooms.  Biodiversity hotspots of India.  Newly discovered or newly recorded species from the Northeast.  Source/Reference: https://assamtribune.com/north-east/rare-yellow-puffball-mushroom-recorded-in-arunachals-longding-district-1612458 Aurora Borealis: Northern Lights Visible Beyond Polar Regions Subject: Science & Technology (Space Science) / Geography (Solar Storms, Space Weather, Earth’s Magnetosphere, Atmospheric Phenomena) Why in News? A powerful solar storm associated with Solar Cycle 25 is expected to make the Aurora Borealis (Northern Lights) visible across unusually low latitudes, including parts of northern India such as Ladakh and high-altitude Himalayan regions under favorable conditions. The event has generated significant scientific interest due to its intensity and rare visibility range. What is Aurora Borealis? Aurora Borealis (Northern Lights) is a natural light display seen primarily in high-latitude regions near the Arctic Circle.  Its southern counterpart is called Aurora Australis (Southern Lights).  Occurs when charged particles emitted by the Sun interact with gases in Earth’s upper atmosphere.  How are Auroras Formed? The Sun releases charged particles through the solar wind.  During solar flares and Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs), the number of particles increases significantly.  Earth’s magnetosphere channels these particles toward the polar regions.  Collisions with atmospheric gases produce colorful light emissions:  Green: Oxygen (most common)  Red: High-altitude oxygen  Blue/Purple: Nitrogen  Key Scientific Concepts Solar Wind: Stream of charged particles emitted by the Sun.  Coronal Mass Ejection (CME): Massive eruption of plasma and magnetic fields from the Sun.  Geomagnetic Storm: Disturbance in Earth’s magnetic field caused by solar activity.  Magnetosphere: Protective magnetic shield surrounding Earth.  Impact of Strong Solar Storms Disruption of satellite communications.  GPS and navigation errors.  Radio communication disturbances.  Potential impact on power grids.  Enhanced auroral visibility at lower latitudes.  UPSC Prelims-Oriented Analysis UPSC frequently asks questions on space weather, solar activity, and atmospheric phenomena.  Important static–dynamic linkage between:  Solar Cycles and Sunspots.  Earth’s magnetic field and auroral formation.  Space weather impacts on communication and navigation systems.  Potential MCQs may test:  Difference between aurora and ozone-related phenomena.  Role of oxygen and nitrogen in auroral colors.  Relationship between CMEs, geomagnetic storms, and auroras.  Locations where auroras are commonly observed.  Source/Reference: https://www.thehindu.com/sci-tech/science/aurora-in-india-2026-solar-storm-to-cause-northern-lights-when-where-how-to-see/article71075700.ece Maharaja Chhatrasal: The Lion of Bundelkhand’s Resistance Subject: History (Medieval India) (Regional Kingdoms, Mughal Empire, Bundelkhand, Maratha Expansion) Why in News? Maharaja Chhatrasal was recently commemorated during the Mahua Festival at the Madhya Pradesh Tribal Museum, where a dance-drama showcased the life and legacy of the legendary Bundela ruler, popularly known as “Bundel Kesari” (Lion of Bundelkhand).  Who was Maharaja Chhatrasal? Born in 1649 to Champat Rai Bundela of the Bundela Rajput clan.  Founded an independent kingdom in Bundelkhand after challenging Mughal authority.  Ruled from 1675 to 1731 and established Panna as an important centre of power.  Struggle Against the Mughals Inspired by the resistance movements against Mughal rule.  Launched his campaign against the Mughals in 1671.  Fought for nearly five decades, gradually liberating large parts of Bundelkhand from Mughal control.  Association with the Marathas Sought assistance from Baji Rao I against Mughal commander Muhammad Khan Bangash in 1728.  In gratitude, he ceded parts of Bundelkhand to the Marathas.  Tradition holds that Mastani, associated with Baji Rao I, was Chhatrasal’s daughter.  Cultural & Religious Contributions Patron of poets such as Kavi Bhushan and Lal Kavi.  Disciple of Mahamati Prannath, founder of the Pranami tradition.  His reign is remembered for administrative efficiency and promotion of regional culture.  UPSC Prelims-Oriented Analysis Important for understanding the decline of Mughal authority and the rise of regional powers in the 17th–18th centuries.  Static linkage with Maratha expansion, Bundelkhand geography, and regional resistance movements.  Potential MCQs may focus on:  Chhatrasal’s kingdom (Panna/Bundelkhand).  His alliance with Baji Rao I.  His role in weakening Mughal influence in Central India.  Cultural and religious movements associated with Bundelkhand.  Source/Reference: https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/bhopal/day-2-of-mahua-festival-pays-tribute-to-bundel-kesari-maharaja-chattrasal/articleshow/131573489.cms (MAINS Focus) Pradhan Mantri Surakshit Matritva Abhiyaan: A Decade of Inclusive Maternal Healthcare GS Paper II – Social Justice (Health) | GS Paper I – Society (Women) Maternal Health; Antenatal Care; High-Risk Pregnancy; Institutional Deliveries; SDG 3   Introduction Launched in 2016, the Pradhan Mantri Surakshit Matritva Abhiyaan (PMSMA) provides free antenatal care and early risk detection for pregnant women. Over the past decade, it has served more than 7.5 crore women and contributed to improved maternal health outcomes, reflected in the decline of India’s Maternal Mortality Ratio from 130 to 87 per lakh live births.   Main Body Why Maternal Health Matters The Importance: Every pregnancy carries hope for the family, community, and nation. Pregnancy involves risks that, if not identified and managed in time, may endanger the lives of both mother and child. Maternal health is a key indicator of the strength and inclusiveness of a country’s healthcare system. Maternal Mortality Ratio (MMR): Defined as the number of maternal deaths per 1 lakh live births during a given period. Maternal death: death during pregnancy or within 42 days of termination due to causes related to or aggravated by pregnancy. Pre-PMSMA Context: Before 2016, maternal mortality remained a major public health challenge. During 2014-16, India’s MMR stood at 130 per lakh live births. SDG target: reduce maternal mortality to below 70 per lakh live births by 2030. National Health Policy, 2017 identified maternal health as a key priority. Key Features of PMSMA Service Delivery: Conducted on the 9th of every month at designated government health facilities. Minimum one comprehensive antenatal checkup by Obstetrician & Gynaecologist or CEmONC-trained doctor during second or third trimester. Service package: clinical examinations, laboratory investigations (blood and urine tests), ultrasonography, medicines, counselling on nutrition, birth planning, and safe pregnancy practices. High-Risk Pregnancy (HRP) Management: Screening for 25 high-risk factors (including HIV, syphilis, severe anaemia, pregnancy-induced hypertension, gestational diabetes, hypothyroidism, tuberculosis, malaria, previous LSCS, bad obstetric history, multiple pregnancy, Hepatitis B, teenage pregnancy, elderly primi, grand multipara, etc.). HRPs linked to nearest First Referral Unit (FRU) for safe delivery. Sticker indicating condition and risk factor added to Mother and Child Protection card for each visit. Private Sector Participation: Doctor Volunteer System: OB-GYN specialists, radiologists, physicians from private sector volunteer on the 9th of every month. Prime Minister called on doctors to dedicate just 12 days a year to this cause (Mann Ki Baat). ‘IPledgeFor9’ Achievers Awards for volunteer contributions. Extended PMSMA (January 2022) Objective: Strengthen follow-up care for high-risk pregnancies. Key Features: Women identified as high-risk receive additional antenatal check-ups, continuous monitoring, and timely medical support throughout pregnancy. Every high-risk pregnancy is individually tracked until safe delivery. Financial incentives for beneficiary and accompanying ASHA worker for up to three additional visits. SMS alerts sent to beneficiary and ASHA worker for HRP registration and follow-up visits. Achievements and Impact Coverage: More than 7.50 crore pregnant women have received antenatal services under PMSMA (in addition to routine ANC checkup services). MMR Reduction: India’s MMR declined from 130 (2014-16) to 87 (2022-24) per lakh live births. Reduction of 43 points over the decade. Demonstrates how focused interventions can save thousands of lives. Complementary Maternal Health Initiatives Janani Suraksha Yojana (JSY): Promotes institutional deliveries. Since 2014-15, benefited more than 11.96 crore women (as of March 2025). Janani Shishu Suraksha Karyakram (JSSK): Provides free healthcare services to pregnant women and newborns. Since 2014-15, more than 18.05 crore beneficiaries. Surakshit Matritva Aashwasan (SUMAN): Strengthens quality maternal healthcare through a network of over 99,290 facilities. Other Initiatives: POSHAN Abhiyaan (maternal nutrition). Pradhan Mantri Matru Vandana Yojana (PMMVY) (maternity benefits). Labour Room Quality Improvement Initiative (LaQshya) (quality of care in labour rooms). Tenth Anniversary Commemoration (June 2026) Ayushman Arogya Shivirs: Quality antenatal care services being provided at 1.8 lakh Ayushman Aarogya Mandirs. Community Awareness: Through Village Health Sanitation and Nutrition Day (VHSND). Jan Arogya Samiti (JAS) and Self-Help Groups (SHGs). Special PMSMA Sessions: At all District Hospitals / Sub-District Hospitals / First Referral Units (FRU) and other designated PMSMA facilities. Looking Ahead: Viksit Bharat@2047 Vision: PMSMA will continue to transform the maternal healthcare landscape. Ensure that every pregnancy is safer and every mother receives the care she deserves. Aim: No woman loses her life while giving life. The Road Ahead: MMR reduction from 130 to 87 demonstrates progress, but SDG target of below 70 remains to be achieved. Continued focus on high-risk pregnancy tracking and follow-up care. Strengthening convergence with other maternal health initiatives. Challenges: SDG target of below 70 per lakh live births not yet achieved (87 currently). Coverage of 7.50 crore women over 10 years is significant but still leaves gaps. Quality of care at designated facilities varies across states. ASHA worker incentives for follow-up visits may not be sufficient for sustained tracking. The Core Reality: PMSMA has transformed antenatal care delivery in India. Early risk detection and timely intervention save lives. The programme has contributed significantly to the 43-point reduction in MMR. However, India still needs to reduce MMR from 87 to below 70 to meet the SDG target by 2030.   Conclusion Over the past decade, PMSMA has strengthened maternal healthcare through free antenatal services, early identification of high-risk pregnancies, and improved follow-up care. Supported by complementary maternal and nutrition schemes, it has contributed to a significant decline in maternal mortality, advancing the goal of safe motherhood and inclusive healthcare.   UPSC Mains Practice Question Examine the role of the Pradhan Mantri Surakshit Matritva Abhiyaan (PMSMA) in improving maternal health outcomes in India. How does it address high-risk pregnancies? (250 words, 15 marks)   https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2270486&reg=3&lang=1 Four Challenges That Demand Attention in India's FTAs GS Paper III – Economy (Trade; Industrial Policy) | GS Paper II – International Relations Free Trade Agreements (FTAs); Trade Deficits; Tariff Asymmetry; Inverted Duty Structure; Make in India   Introduction India’s expanding network of Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) offers greater market access and export opportunities. However, concerns such as rising trade deficits, low utilisation of FTA benefits, inverted duty structures, and the relocation of manufacturing to partner countries highlight the need for careful trade policy design to safeguard domestic industry and employment.   Main Body Challenge One: Rising Trade Deficits The Data: Between 2007-09 (before FTAs took effect) and 2024-25, India’s trade deficit: With ASEAN grew by 381%. With Japan grew by 318%. With South Korea grew by 268%. In comparison, trade deficit with the rest of the world increased by 142%. Over the past three years, average annual trade deficit with ASEAN, Japan, and South Korea: about $62 billion. Newer FTAs: In FY2025, India exported $48.6 billion to UAE, Australia, Mauritius, and EFTA countries. Imported nearly $100 billion. Trade deficit of over $50 billion. As tariff cuts under these agreements deepen, the deficit may increase further. Exception: South Asia: India’s trade surplus expanded from $6.7 billion to $20 billion during the same period. Challenge Two: Low Utilisation of FTA Benefits by Indian Exporters The Tariff Asymmetry: Most of India’s FTA partners are already open economies with low tariffs. Average MFN tariffs: close to zero in Singapore; below 4% in Japan, Australia, Malaysia, and UAE. India’s trade-weighted MFN tariff: about 12.6% (ranging from zero to 150%). Why Indian Exporters Don’t Use FTAs: When MFN tariffs in partner countries are already zero, there is little benefit in exporting under an FTA. Even where MFN tariffs are low (1-3%), savings are too small to justify compliance costs (rules of origin, certification, paperwork). Only an estimated 20-30% of India’s eligible exports take advantage of FTA preferences. Import-Side Utilisation: India’s MFN tariffs remain relatively high, so tariff reductions under FTAs generate substantial savings for foreign exporters. Import-side utilisation rates estimated at 60-70%. The Core Insight: Rising imports and low export-side utilisation are not separate issues. Both stem from the same tariff asymmetry between India and its FTA partners. Challenge Three: Worsening Inverted Duty Structures What Is an Inverted Duty Structure: Duties on raw materials and industrial inputs are higher than those on finished products. Many finished goods now enter India at low or zero duty from FTA partners (ASEAN, Japan, South Korea, UAE, Australia). Indian manufacturers pay high duties on imported inputs (especially from non-FTA countries) while competing against duty-free finished products. Example – Steel and Aluminium: Steel and aluminium attract MFN duties of 7.5-10%. Machinery, industrial equipment, and engineering products made from these materials can enter India duty-free under several FTAs. Indian manufacturers face higher input costs when competing with tariff-free imported machinery. Other Sectors with Similar Distortions: Chemicals, plastics, rubber, and textiles. Duties on inputs such as caustic soda, soda ash, polypropylene, PVC, and SBR raise production costs. Finished products in these sectors can be imported at low or zero duty. The Consequence: Protects producers of basic materials but disadvantages downstream manufacturing. Makes it harder to achieve higher domestic value addition and the goals of Make in India. Challenge Four: Make in ASEAN, Sell in India The Incentive: When raw materials and components attract duties in India, but finished products can be imported duty-free from FTA partners, companies may find it more profitable to locate production abroad and export back to India. FTAs effectively encourage offshore manufacturing at the expense of domestic value addition. ASEAN as Manufacturing Hub: Chinese companies have invested heavily in Vietnam, Thailand, and Indonesia. Some Indian firms have also set up factories and joint ventures there to benefit from lower production costs and duty-free access to India under FTAs. Sectors Affected: Electronics, steel, chemicals, plastics, consumer goods, and engineering products. The Core Problem: When it becomes cheaper to manufacture in an ASEAN country and export duty-free to India than to produce in India, investment and jobs tend to move abroad. FTAs can encourage firms to “Make in ASEAN, Sell in India” rather than “Make in India”. Way Forward: Addressing the Four Challenges For Rising Trade Deficits: Negotiate FTAs more carefully, ensuring that tariff reductions are reciprocated with meaningful market access for Indian exports. Focus on services and digital trade where India has comparative advantage. For Low FTA Utilisation by Exporters: Simplify rules of origin and certification requirements. Provide awareness and handholding support to MSME exporters. Negotiate deeper tariff cuts in partner countries where MFN tariffs are not already zero. For Inverted Duty Structures: Rationalise duties on raw materials and industrial inputs. Align India’s tariff structure with its FTA commitments. Ensure that downstream manufacturing is not disadvantaged. For “Make in ASEAN, Sell in India”: Reduce duties on industrial inputs to make domestic manufacturing competitive. Strengthen domestic supply chains to reduce dependence on imported inputs. Ensure that FTAs support “Make in India” rather than undermining it. The Bottom Line: The government and industry must work together to address these four challenges. FTAs should strengthen India’s manufacturing base instead of encouraging higher imports, overseas production, and loss of industrial capacity.   Conclusion India’s growing FTA network can boost trade and exports, but it also raises concerns over widening trade deficits, low utilisation of FTA benefits, inverted duty structures, and the shifting of manufacturing to partner countries. To ensure FTAs support domestic industry, India must better align input tariffs with its trade commitments and strengthen the competitiveness of local manufacturing.   UPSC Mains Practice Question Examine the key challenges associated with India’s Free Trade Agreements (FTAs). How do tariff asymmetries and inverted duty structures affect domestic manufacturing and the Make in India initiative? (250 words, 15 marks)   https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/india-fta-efta-asean-tariff-mfn-trade-deficit-10729899/  

Jun 9, 2026 IASbaba's Daily Current Affairs

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Digital India BHASHINI Division: Powering India’s Multilingual AI Revolution Subject: Science & Technology / Governance (Artificial Intelligence (AI), Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI), Language Technologies, Digital Inclusion) Why in News? The Digital India BHASHINI Division (DIBD) recently signed an MoU with Kathmandu University’s Centre for Digital Public Infrastructure & Artificial Intelligence (DPI-AI), Nepal, to co-create a “Voice-First” language translation platform and strengthen multilingual AI cooperation between India and Nepal.  What is Digital India BHASHINI Division (DIBD)? Functions under the Digital India Corporation (DIC), Ministry of Electronics & Information Technology (MeitY).  It is India’s flagship initiative for AI-driven multilingual digital inclusion and language technology.  Operates through the National Hub for Language Technology (NHLT).  Enables speech-to-text, text-to-speech, machine translation, transliteration, and multilingual conversational AI services.  Key Features Powers 800+ government websites.  Processes over 15 million AI inferences daily.  Supports 36 Indian text languages, 23 Indian voice languages, and 35 international languages.  Promotes open-source innovation, multilingual AI research, dataset creation, startup support, and academic collaboration.  Recent Developments India–Nepal collaboration for multilingual AI and digital public infrastructure.  Development of Nepali language datasets, speech corpora, and AI-based translation tools.  Expansion of BHASHINI’s open and interoperable language ecosystem across South Asia.  Applications of BHASHINI E-Governance and citizen services.  Banking and financial inclusion.  Railways and public service delivery.  Education, skilling, healthcare, and grievance redressal.  Real-time multilingual communication and translation.  UPSC Prelims-Oriented Analysis BHASHINI represents India’s effort to build language-based Digital Public Infrastructure, similar to how UPI transformed digital payments.  Important static–dynamic linkage with Artificial Intelligence, NLP, Digital India Mission, and inclusive governance.  Potential UPSC questions may focus on the institution behind BHASHINI, its objectives, supported technologies, and its role in bridging linguistic barriers in digital governance.  Also relevant for questions on AI sovereignty, Digital Public Goods, and multilingual technology ecosystems.  Source/Reference: https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2269899&reg=48&lang=1 Sambhar Lake: Ecological Crisis in India’s Largest Inland Saline Wetland Subject: Environment & Ecology (Wetlands, Ramsar Sites, Migratory Birds, Remote Sensing in Conservation) Why in News? A recent study using nearly four decades of satellite data revealed that expanding salt pans, shrinking water levels, and increasing algal blooms are threatening the ecological health of Sambhar Lake in Rajasthan, a critical habitat for migratory flamingos.  About Sambhar Lake Located in Rajasthan, spread across the districts of Jaipur, Ajmer, and Nagaur.  It is India’s largest inland saline (saltwater) wetland and one of the country’s largest salt-producing regions.  Recognized as a Ramsar Site (Wetland of International Importance).  Lies on the Central Asian Flyway, supporting thousands of migratory birds annually.  Key Findings of the Study Analysis covered the period 1984–2023 using remote sensing and machine-learning techniques.  Illegal salt mining and excessive groundwater extraction have reduced water levels significantly.  Algal blooms covered up to 43% of the lake’s natural water surface in 2022.  Salt pans expanded while natural wetland areas declined, altering the lake’s ecology.  Changes threaten food sources and breeding habitats of Greater Flamingo and Lesser Flamingo populations.  Scientific Tools Used Landsat-8 Satellite imagery.  Random Forest Algorithm for land-use classification.  Normalized Difference Water Index (NDWI) for mapping water bodies.  Surface Algal Bloom Index (SABI) for detecting algal growth.  UPSC Prelims-Oriented Analysis Sambhar Lake is an important location for mapping-based questions on Rajasthan wetlands and Ramsar Sites.  Demonstrates the application of remote sensing, GIS, and machine learning in environmental monitoring.  Important static–dynamic linkage between wetland conservation, migratory bird habitats, climate change, and anthropogenic pressures.  UPSC may ask about the characteristics of saline wetlands, causes and impacts of algal blooms, or the significance of the Central Asian Flyway.  Source/Reference: https://researchmatters.in/news/expanding-salt-pans-and-algal-booms-are-threatening-indias-iconic-flamingos-sambhar-lake e-Jagriti Platform: Digital Transformation of Consumer Justice in India Subject: Polity & Governance / Science & Technology (E-Governance, Consumer Protection, Digital Justice Delivery, AI in Governance) Why in News? The e-Jagriti Platform of the Department of Consumer Affairs received the Silver Award at the National Awards for e-Governance (NAeG) 2026 under the category Government Process Re-engineering by Use of Technology for Digital Transformation. The platform was recognized for revolutionizing consumer grievance redressal through technology-driven service delivery.  What is e-Jagriti? An AI-enabled, paperless unified consumer justice platform launched on 1 January 2025 by the Department of Consumer Affairs, Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food & Public Distribution.  Integrates four legacy systems:  OCMS (Online Case Monitoring System)  e-Daakhil  NCDRC CMS  CONFONET  Key Features Online complaint filing and digital document exchange.  Real-time case tracking.  Virtual hearings through video conferencing.  AI chatbot assistance and voice-to-text functionality.  Multilingual support.  Online payment through Bharat Kosh, PayGov, and SBI ePay.  Accessibility features for persons with disabilities.  Major Achievements Registered users: 4.15 lakh+  Consumer cases filed: 2.29 lakh+  Cases disposed: 2.07 lakh+  Disposal rate: 90.75%  More than 3,300 NRI users registered on the platform.  Institutional Linkages Works across District, State, and National Consumer Commissions.  Supports the implementation of the Consumer Protection Act, 2019.  Facilitates digital access to the National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission (NCDRC).  UPSC Prelims-Oriented Analysis Important example of e-Governance and Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) in the justice sector.  Demonstrates the use of Artificial Intelligence, virtual courts, and paperless governance for citizen-centric service delivery.  Possible UPSC questions may focus on:  Consumer dispute redressal mechanisms.  NCDRC and Consumer Protection Act, 2019.  Digital governance initiatives and AI-enabled public service platforms.  Integration of legacy systems into a unified governance architecture.  Source/Reference: https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2269994&reg=48&lang=1 Bascanichthys chepakakiensis: New Snake Eel Discovery from the Bay of Bengal Subject: Environment & Ecology / Science & Technology (Marine Biodiversity, Species Discovery, Taxonomy, Coastal Ecosystems) Why in News? Marine scientists have discovered a new species of snake eel, Bascanichthys chepakakiensis, from the Bay of Bengal off India’s eastern coast. The discovery was made while examining fishery bycatch from commercial trawlers operating near Kakinada, Andhra Pradesh, highlighting the rich but understudied marine biodiversity of Indian waters.  About Bascanichthys chepakakiensis A newly identified species belonging to the family Ophichthidae (Snake Eels).  First specimen was collected from Kakinada Fishing Harbour (Andhra Pradesh); another specimen was later recorded from Odisha’s coast.  The name “chepakakiensis” is derived from Telugu words:  Chepa = Fish  Kaki = Local nickname for Kakinada.  Only the second species of the genus Bascanichthys reported from Indian waters, ending a gap of nearly six decades in discoveries from this genus.  Distinctive Features Long, slender, snake-like body.  Distinct bicoloured appearance with darker dorsal surface and lighter underside.  Shorter snout, unique tooth arrangement, fewer vertebrae, and tiny flap-like pectoral fins.  Identification was confirmed through morphological analysis and mitochondrial COI gene sequencing.  About Snake Eels Belong to the order Anguilliformes and family Ophichthidae.  Mostly inhabit sandy and muddy sea bottoms, burrowing into sediments using their tails.  Found in tropical and temperate marine waters worldwide.  UPSC Prelims-Oriented Analysis Important example of species discovery, a recurring UPSC theme.  Links static concepts of taxonomy, marine ecosystems, and biodiversity conservation with current affairs.  Potential MCQs may test:  Family and habitat of snake eels.  Meaning of bycatch.  Institutions involved in species identification (ZSI, NBFGR).  Location mapping: Kakinada (Andhra Pradesh) and Bay of Bengal.  Source/Reference: https://researchmatters.in/news/rare-new-snake-eel-species-discovered-amongst-fishing-bycatch-coast-kakinada Autoimmune Blistering Diseases (AIBDs): AI-Powered Breakthrough in Rare Skin Disease Diagnosis Subject: Science & Technology / Health (Artificial Intelligence in Healthcare, Autoimmune Disorders, Dermatology, Medical Diagnostics) Why in News? Researchers from Punjabi University, Patiala and PGIMER, Chandigarh have developed an Artificial Intelligence (AI)-based diagnostic tool for identifying Autoimmune Blistering Diseases (AIBDs). The tool was trained using clinically validated patient images and reportedly outperformed dermatologists in classifying different AIBD subtypes, offering significant potential for rural and primary healthcare settings.  What are Autoimmune Blistering Diseases (AIBDs)? A group of rare autoimmune disorders in which the immune system mistakenly attacks proteins responsible for holding skin layers together.  Results in painful blisters and erosions on the skin and mucous membranes.  Chronic in nature but can be managed through immunosuppressive therapies.  Major Types of AIBDs Pemphigus Disorders Autoantibodies attack desmosomes (cell-to-cell adhesion structures).  Causes fragile blisters that rupture easily, often beginning in the mouth.  Pemphigoid Disorders Autoantibodies target the basement membrane zone between skin layers.  Produces relatively tense and deeper blisters.  Diagnosis and AI Innovation Conventional diagnosis relies on:  Direct Immunofluorescence (DIF) – Gold Standard  Indirect Immunofluorescence (IIF)  ELISA (Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay)  These tests are expensive, time-consuming, and mostly available at tertiary-care centres.  Researchers evaluated nearly 240 AI model configurations, enabling faster and more accessible diagnosis.  UPSC Prelims-Oriented Analysis Important example of the application of Artificial Intelligence in public health and medical diagnostics.  Links static concepts of autoimmunity, antibodies, and skin biology with current developments in AI-driven healthcare.  Potential UPSC questions may focus on:  Meaning of autoimmune diseases.  Difference between pemphigus and pemphigoid.  Role of immunofluorescence techniques.  AI applications in healthcare and disease diagnosis.  Source/Reference: https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/chandigarh/punjabi-university-pgimer-develop-ai-tool-for-rare-skin-disease-diagnosis/articleshow/131572701.cms Operation Blue Star (1984): A Defining Internal Security Operation Subject: Modern Indian History / Internal Security (Punjab Insurgency, National Security Operations, Post-Independence India) Why in News? The 42nd anniversary of Operation Blue Star was observed in June 2026. During commemorative events at the Akal Takht, Sikh religious and political leaders discussed its legacy and contemporary issues related to Punjab. The event brought renewed attention to one of the most significant internal security operations in independent India. What was Operation Blue Star? A military operation launched by the Indian Army between 1–8 June 1984.  Ordered by the government led by Indira Gandhi.  Objective: To remove armed militants led by Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale and their supporters from the Golden Temple complex in Amritsar.  The operation was conducted primarily within the Harmandir Sahib (Golden Temple) complex, including the Akal Takht.  Background During the late 1970s and early 1980s, Punjab witnessed growing militancy associated with the demand for Khalistan, a separate Sikh state.  Armed militants had fortified positions inside the Golden Temple complex.  The government viewed the situation as a serious challenge to national security and public order.  Major Consequences Death of Bhindranwale and several militants.  Significant damage to the Akal Takht building.  Widespread resentment among sections of the Sikh community.  Assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi on 31 October 1984 by her Sikh bodyguards.  Subsequent 1984 Anti-Sikh Riots in several parts of India.  UPSC Prelims-Oriented Analysis Important for understanding the intersection of internal security, federalism, and post-independence political history.  Frequently linked with the Punjab militancy period (1980s–1990s) and subsequent counter-insurgency measures.  Potential UPSC questions may focus on:  Timeline and objectives of Operation Blue Star.  Role of the Akal Takht and Golden Temple.  Punjab insurgency and Khalistan movement.  Events leading to and following the operation.  Source/Reference: https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/operation-bluestar-anniversary-akal-takht-chief-flays-aap-govt-in-punjab-over-anti-sacrilege-law/article71069379.ece#google_vignette Insect Eating (Entomophagy): Ancient Practice, Modern Food Solution Subject: Environment & Ecology / Science & Technology (Sustainable Food Systems, Nutrition Security, Human Evolution, Alternative Protein Sources) Why in News? A recent study published in Science Advances examined the historical roots of entomophagy (insect consumption) using ancient DNA and genomic evidence. The research suggests that insect consumption was relatively rare in ancient European populations but more common in tropical regions and among Neanderthals. The findings have renewed interest in insects as a sustainable food source amid concerns over food security and climate change.  What is Entomophagy? Entomophagy refers to the practice of eating insects.  More than 1,600 insect species are known to be edible worldwide.  Common edible insects include:  Crickets  Grasshoppers  Mealworms  Termites  Beetle larvae  Widely consumed across parts of Asia, Africa, Latin America, and Oceania.  Key Findings of the Study Analysis of 745 ancient dental calculus samples (up to 33,000 years old).  Evidence suggests limited insect consumption among ancient northern Eurasian populations.  Neanderthals showed comparatively higher traces of insect DNA.  Human genes involved in digesting chitin (the main component of insect exoskeletons) vary across populations, reflecting long-term dietary adaptation.  Why are Insects Considered Important? Rich in protein, vitamins, minerals, and essential amino acids.  Require less land, water, and feed compared to conventional livestock.  Produce lower greenhouse gas emissions than cattle.  UPSC Prelims-Oriented Analysis Links human evolution, genetics, and sustainable agriculture.  Important static-dynamic connection with nutrition security, climate-resilient food systems, and alternative protein sources.  UPSC may ask about:  Entomophagy and edible insects.  Chitin and chitinase enzymes.  Environmental advantages of insect farming.  FAO’s role in promoting sustainable food systems.  Source/Reference: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c7v9vz1gd76o (MAINS Focus) Empowering the Poor: A Decade of Inclusive Transformation GS Paper II – Governance (Social Justice; Welfare) | GS Paper I – Society (Poverty) Multidimensional Poverty; WASH; Healthcare; Food Security; Financial Inclusion; Tribal Development   Introduction Over the past decade, targeted welfare interventions have significantly reduced multidimensional poverty and expanded access to basic services such as sanitation, drinking water, clean cooking fuel, healthcare, and food security. With improved service delivery and broader coverage, India’s welfare framework has increasingly shifted from entitlement-based provision to saturation-driven inclusion.   Main Body Multidimensional Poverty Reduction Key Metrics: Multidimensional poverty declined from 29.17% (2013-14) to 11.28% (2022-23) – a 17.89 percentage-point reduction. Nearly 25 crore people lifted out of multidimensional poverty. Average inflation declined from 8.1% (2004-2014) to 5.1% (2014-2025) – improved household purchasing power. Drivers: Large-scale expansion of welfare schemes and social protection measures. Financial inclusion, affordable healthcare, food security, housing, livelihood support. Digital governance reforms enabling last-mile delivery. Universal Access to Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (WASH) Jal Jeevan Mission (2019): Fiscal allocations expanded by approximately 488% between 2020-21 and 2026-27 (reaching ₹67,670 crore). Household tap water coverage: 3.23 crore (August 2019) → 15.84 crore (May 2026) – 81.87% of 19.35 crore households. 2.77 lakh villages achieved 100% tap water coverage (Har Ghar Jal). Schools with tap water: 29,711 (2019) → 9.23 lakh (May 2026). Anganwadi Centres with tap water: 15,464 → 9.66 lakh. Swachh Bharat Mission – Urban: Budget outlay increased from ₹62,009 crore (Phase 1, 2014-2021) to ₹1.41 lakh crore (Phase 2, 2021-2026) – 128.3% increase. Door-to-door waste collection: 43% (2014) → 98% (2026). Waste processing: 16% (2014) → 82% (2026). Individual household toilets: 63.74 lakh units completed (108.62% of target). Community/public toilets: 6.36 lakh units (125.46% of target). 4,692 cities declared ODF; 4,314 ODF+; 1,973 ODF++. Swachh Bharat Mission – Grameen: Budget allocations increased from ₹3,929 crore (2014-15) to ₹7,192 crore (2026-27) – 83% increase. Over 12.11 crore individual household toilets constructed. Sanitation coverage: 39% (2014) → 100% (2019). India declared ODF in 2019. Over 5 lakh villages attained ODF Plus (Model) status (March 2026). Solid waste management active in 5.31 lakh villages; liquid/greywater management in 5.50 lakh villages. GOBARdhan: 14 operational biogas plants (FY 2018-19) → over 1,213 (May 2026). Clean Cooking and Energy Access Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (2016): Over 10.57 crore free LPG connections to BPL women households (May 2026). Total LPG connections: 14.52 crore (2014) → 33.39 crore (2026) – 129.9% increase. PM Surya Ghar: Muft Bijli Yojana (2024): Budget allocation: ₹6,250 crore (2024-25) → ₹22,000 crore (2026-27). Benefitted 36.8 lakh households (April 2026). Solar rooftop installations: 6.3 lakh (December 2024) → 30 lakh (April 2026). Universal Village Electrification: SAUBHAGYA (2017): 100% of willing households electrified nationwide by March 2019. Deendayal Upadhyaya Gram Jyoti Yojana (2014): 100% village electrification achieved by 2025. Average daily electricity supply in rural areas: 12.5 hours (FY2014) → 22.6 hours (FY2025). Average daily electricity supply in urban areas: 22.1 hours (FY2014) → 23.4 hours (FY2025). Healthcare and Food Security Ayushman Bharat – PMJAY (2018): Annual health insurance coverage of ₹5 lakh per family for 12.37 crore vulnerable families (bottom 40%). 43.93 crore Ayushman Cards issued (May 2026). Hospitalizations: 29.96 lakh (June 2019) → 12.03 crore (May 2026) – treatment cost ₹1.80 lakh crore. Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission: 88.33 crore ABHA accounts created; 97.81 crore health records linked. 1.85 lakh Ayushman Arogya Mandirs facilitated 540 crore visits. AIIMS operational: 8 (1947-2014) → 15 (2014-2026). Maternal and Child Health: Maternal Mortality Ratio: 130 (2014-16) → 88 (2021-23) per 100,000 live births. First-trimester antenatal care visits: 59% (NFHS-4) → 76.2% (NFHS-6). Mission Indradhanush: immunized 5.46 crore children and 1.32 crore pregnant women. Food Security: PMGKAY (2020): free foodgrains to over 81 crore beneficiaries; extended for five years in January 2024. Fair Price Shops: 5.50 lakh (99.8%) automated for Aadhaar-based distribution. One Nation One Ration Card: over 2.07 billion transactions; nationwide portability. SARTHAK-PDS scheme (May 2026): ₹25,530 crore for technology-driven PDS modernisation. Nutritional Outcomes (NFHS-6 vs NFHS-4): Stunting: 38.4% → 29.3%. Wasting: 21% → 19%. Underweight children: 35.8% → 31.8%. Education Access and Learning Outcomes Samagra Shiksha Abhiyan (2018-19): 4,073 schools upgraded; 1.49 lakh ICT/digital initiatives (smart classrooms). 25,000 schools covered under skill education. Schools with functional female sanitation facilities: 97.3%. Female primary school dropout rate: 4.6% (2013-14) → 0.3% (2024-25). Female secondary school dropout rate: 14.5% (2013-14) → 11.5% (2024-25). Beti Bachao Beti Padhao (2015): Sex ratio: 943 (Census 2011) → 1,020 females per 1,000 males (2021). Secondary school enrolment for girls: 75.51% (2014-15) → 80.2% (2024-25). Kasturba Gandhi Balika Vidyalayas: Sanctioned KGBVs: 3,609 (2014-15) → 5,639 (2024-25). Student enrolment: 3.52 lakh (2014-15) → 7.11 lakh (2024). EWS Reservation (103rd Amendment, 2019): 10% reservation for Economically Weaker Sections in educational institutions and employment. Annual family income limit: ₹8 lakh. Housing and Infrastructure Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana – Urban: Budget allocation: ₹4,175 crore (2015-16) → ₹18,625 crore (2026-27) – 346.1% increase. Houses completed: 8.04 lakh (2005-2014) → 98.10 lakh (2015-2026). 1.25 crore houses sanctioned (outlay ₹8.77 lakh crore). 96% of houses under PMAY-U 2.0 registered in name of a woman. Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana – Gramin: Budget allocation: ₹21 crore (2015-16) → ₹54,917 crore (2026-27) – 2.61 lakh% increase. 3.91 crore houses sanctioned; 3.03 crore completed (May 2026). 75% of beneficiaries are women. Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana: Budget allocation: ₹386 crore (2014-15) → ₹19,000 crore (2026-27). 99.6% of eligible habitations connected with all-weather roads. Road length completed: 3.86 lakh km (2000-2014) → 4.11 lakh km (2014-2026). Bridges completed: 484 → 10,256. Financial Inclusion Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana (2014): Beneficiaries: 17.9 crore (August 2015) → 58.16 crore (May 2026) – 224.9% increase. Total balance: ₹3.02 lakh crore. 13.55 lakh Bank Mitras delivering branchless banking services. Pradhan Mantri MUDRA Yojana (2015): Cumulative loan accounts: 3.49 crore (2016) → over 57 crore (2026). Disbursed loans worth ₹40.07 lakh crore. 49% of loans to SC/ST/OBC entrepreneurs. 66% of loans (38.29 crore accounts) to women entrepreneurs (₹16.88 lakh crore). Livelihoods and Skill Development DAY-NRLM (Rural): Women in SHGs: 2.37 crore → 10 crore. SHGs: 21.31 lakh → 91.75 lakh. Loan disbursement: ₹22,944 crore → ₹1.2 lakh crore. Lakhpati Didi (2023): 3.07 crore rural women achieved annual household income over ₹1 lakh. PM Vishwakarma Yojana (2023): 30 lakh+ artisans registered; 23.97 lakh received skill training. 5.92 lakh artisans sanctioned credit; 16 lakh equipped with modern toolkits. PM SVANidhi (2020): Beneficiaries: 26.37 lakh (Nov 2021) → 75.27 lakh (May 2026). Cumulative loan disbursements: ₹17,710.55 crore. Female beneficiaries: 46%. Skill Development: Deen Dayal Upadhyaya Grameen Kaushalya Yojana: trained 43,038 (2014-15) → 17.71 lakh (2025-26). PMKVY: over 1.64 crore youth trained since inception. eShram portal: 14.40 crore (Dec 2021) → 31.64 crore (May 2026) unorganized worker registrations. Social Security National Pension System (NPS): 1.05 crore (2016-17) → 2.17 crore (2025-26). Atal Pension Yojana (APY): 48.80 lakh (2016-17) → 8.96 crore (2025-26). PM Jeevan Jyoti Bima Yojana: 27.33 crore beneficiaries (May 2026). PM Suraksha Bima Yojana: 57.92 crore beneficiaries (May 2026). PM Shram Yogi Maan-dhan: 52.99 lakh registered (May 2026). Tribal Development PM-JANMAN (2023): 2.66 lakh houses, 1,949 km roads, 750 Mobile Medical Units completed. Eklavya Model Residential Schools: 129 (2014-15) → 499 (May 2026); enrolment 1.54 lakh students.   Conclusion India’s welfare interventions have significantly reduced multidimensional poverty and expanded access to water, sanitation, healthcare, food security, financial inclusion, and rural connectivity. Improved social indicators and broader coverage reflect a shift from entitlement-based welfare to saturation-driven, inclusive development—from Antyodaya to Sarvodaya.   UPSC Mains Practice Question Examine the role of major welfare interventions in reducing multidimensional poverty and promoting inclusive development in India. What challenges remain in achieving universal coverage? (250 words, 15 marks)   https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2270144&reg=3&lang=1 Testing Times: India's GDP Growth Data Reveals Strengths and Strains GS Paper III – Economy (Growth & Development) | GS Paper III – Agriculture GDP Growth; Sectoral Performance; Consumption; Investment; Agriculture Slowdown; Services Dominance   Introduction India’s 2025–26 GDP growth of 7.7% reflects resilience driven by stronger consumption and investment. However, slowing agricultural growth, stagnant manufacturing performance, and global uncertainties raise concerns about sustainability, with growth projected to moderate to 6.6% in 2026–27.   Main Body Headline Growth: 7.7% in 2025-26 Provisional Estimates: GDP growth for 2025-26 pegged at 7.7%. Marginally higher than the 7.6% predicted by the government in February. March (first full month since West Asia crisis) did not see enough impact to affect full year’s growth. The Caveat: Resilience will be dented in the months ahead. Energy supply disruptions from the Iran war will test the entire economy. Bright Spots: Consumption and Investment Private Final Consumption Expenditure (PFCE): Grew faster in 2025-26 than in the previous year. Consumption growth especially welcome given that it had been tepid at 5.8% for the previous two years. Indicates some recovery in household demand. Gross Fixed Capital Formation (GFCF): Grew faster in 2025-26 than in the previous year. Metric of government and private sector investment activity. The Question: How much of the investment growth was driven by the private sector? Even if driven by government spending, it has positive knock-on effects on the rest of the economy. Sectoral Performance: Double-Digit Growth in Manufacturing and Services Manufacturing and Services: Several key sectors (manufacturing and several services) grew by double digits. Over and above a relatively high base. Good signs for an economy heading into severe supply-related headwinds. Rising Dominance of Services: Services share in total GVA: 51.9% (2022-23) → 54.3% (2025-26). Increasing dominance of services in the economy. Causes for Concern: Agriculture Slowdown Agriculture Sector Growth: Slowed to 3% in 2025-26 (from 4.2% in 2024-25). Despite the 2025 monsoon having concluded at 108% of LPA (normal or above-normal). Dire News for 2026-27: IMD has predicted that this year’s monsoon will only be 90% of LPA (below normal). Fertiliser supply constraints will really be felt in the months ahead (West Asia crisis impact). Agriculture Share in GVA: Fell to below 20% (from 22.1% in 2022-23). Agriculture continues to employ the largest share of the population by far. Persistent Concern: Stagnant Manufacturing Share Manufacturing Share in GVA: Remained largely unchanged. Another cause for concern. India is not growing its value-added manufacturing sector fast enough. The Challenge: Without manufacturing growth, job creation for the large workforce leaving agriculture will be insufficient. Services growth alone cannot absorb the low-skilled workforce. The Outlook for 2026-27: Significant Slowdown Expected RBI Projection: Growth will dip to 6.6% in 2026-27. RBI, government, and independent economists are in agreement. Chief Economic Adviser: Saw no need to second-guess this estimate. The Stressors: Below-normal monsoon (90% of LPA). Fertiliser supply constraints. Energy supply disruptions from West Asia crisis. Global slowdown affecting exports. Historical Comparison: Testing Export and Economic Resilience Last Year (2025-26): Tariff-related disruptions tested India’s export resilience. India passed that test (7.7% growth achieved). This Year (2026-27): Energy supply disruptions will test the entire economy. Will test the government’s policy agility.   Conclusion India’s 7.7% GDP growth in 2025–26 was supported by stronger consumption, investment, manufacturing, and services. However, slowing agricultural growth, stagnant manufacturing share, and emerging risks from weaker monsoons, input constraints, and global energy disruptions raise concerns about sustaining growth in the coming years.   UPSC Mains Practice Question India’s recent GDP growth reflects resilience as well as structural weaknesses. Critically examine the key challenges to sustaining growth in 2026–27. (250 words, 15 marks)   https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/editorial/testing-times-on-indias-gdp-growth-data/article71073148.ece  

Jun 9, 2026 IASbaba's Daily Current Affairs

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Jai Prakash Narayan Bird Sanctuary: India’s 100th Ramsar Milestone Subject: Environment & Ecology (Wetland Conservation, Ramsar Convention, Bird Sanctuaries, Biodiversity Hotspots) Why in News? The Jai Prakash Narayan Bird Sanctuary (Surha Tal) in Ballia district of Uttar Pradesh was recently designated as India’s 100th Ramsar Site (Wetland of International Importance). The announcement coincided with World Environment Day (5 June 2026), marking a significant milestone in India’s wetland conservation efforts.  About Jai Prakash Narayan Bird Sanctuary Located in Ballia district, Uttar Pradesh.  Also known as Surha Tal (Surha Lake).  Declared a bird sanctuary by the Uttar Pradesh Government in 1991.  It is a freshwater wetland situated in the middle stretch of the Ganga River Basin.  Formed from an ancient meander of the Ganga River and receives freshwater through three channels.  Ecological Significance Falls along the Central Asian Flyway, a major migratory bird route.  Supports over 310 bird species, including around 125 waterbird species.  Hosts nearly 2 lakh migratory birds during winter.  Habitat for several threatened species such as:  Common Pochard (Aythya ferina) – Vulnerable  Indian River Tern (Sterna aurantia)  Fishing Cat (Prionailurus viverrinus) – Vulnerable  UPSC Prelims-Oriented Analysis Important static–dynamic linkage between wetland conservation, Ramsar Convention, and migratory bird flyways.  India became a contracting party to the Ramsar Convention in 1982.  Uttar Pradesh now has 13 Ramsar Sites, while India has reached the landmark of 100 Ramsar Sites.  Potential UPSC questions may focus on the Central Asian Flyway, Ramsar criteria, location mapping (Ballia–Ganga Basin), and threatened wetland-dependent species.  Source/Reference: https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/uttar-pradesh-bird-sanctuary-designated-as-ramsar-site-100th-such-indian-wetland-101780651488504-amp.html Repo Rate: RBI’s Key Monetary Policy Lever Subject: Indian Economy (Monetary Policy, RBI, Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), Inflation Management) Why in News? The Reserve Bank of India (RBI), in its June 2026 Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting, decided to keep the repo rate unchanged at 5.25% while retaining a neutral policy stance. The decision was taken amid concerns over inflationary pressures arising from geopolitical tensions, rising crude oil prices, and global economic uncertainties.  What is Repo Rate? Repo Rate (Repurchase Rate) is the rate at which the RBI lends short-term funds to commercial banks against government securities.  It is the principal policy rate used by RBI to regulate liquidity, inflation, and economic growth.  Determined by the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) under the provisions of the RBI Act, 1934.  How Does It Work? Increase in Repo Rate Borrowing from RBI becomes costlier.  Banks raise lending rates.  Credit demand declines.  Helps control inflation.  Decrease in Repo Rate Borrowing becomes cheaper.  Loan and EMI rates may fall.  Encourages investment and consumption.  Supports economic growth.  Key Monetary Policy Rates Repo Rate: 5.25%  Standing Deposit Facility (SDF): 5.00%  Marginal Standing Facility (MSF): 5.50%  Bank Rate: 5.50%  UPSC Prelims-Oriented Analysis Repo rate is a frequently tested concept in UPSC Prelims under monetary policy instruments.  Important static–dynamic linkage with inflation targeting, MPC decisions, banking sector liquidity, and economic growth.  Possible MCQs may focus on the relationship between repo rate, inflation, bank lending rates, and RBI’s monetary policy framework.  Source/Reference: https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/real-estate/news/rbi-keeps-repo-rate-unchanged-at-5-25-what-it-means-for-real-estate-sector/articleshow/131546468.cms Foraminifera & Portatrochammina bharatensis: Microscopic Sentinels of Marine Ecosystems Subject: Environment & Ecology / Science & Technology (Marine Biodiversity, Microorganisms, Species Discovery, Bioindicators) Why in News? Scientists from the Agharkar Research Institute (ARI), Pune, have discovered a new species of foraminifera named Portatrochammina bharatensis from the sediments of Jaitapur Creek along Maharashtra’s Konkan Coast. The discovery highlights the rich but underexplored biodiversity of India’s coastal ecosystems.  What are Foraminifera? Foraminifera (or forams) are single-celled marine organisms that have inhabited Earth’s oceans for over 500 million years.  Found in open oceans, coastal waters, and estuaries.  Most species possess shells called tests, made either of calcium carbonate or cemented mineral grains (agglutinated shells).  Use pseudopodia (false feet) for movement and feeding.  About Portatrochammina bharatensis Discovered in Jaitapur Creek, Ratnagiri district, Maharashtra.  Measures only 0.3–0.5 mm and constructs a shell using quartz sand grains.  Genetic analysis using 18S rRNA sequencing confirmed it as a distinct species.  Closely related to P. pacifica and P. antarctica.  Ecological Significance Recycle nutrients and form an important part of marine food chains.  Fossilized shells are widely used in palaeoclimate reconstruction, sea-level studies, dating sedimentary rocks, and petroleum exploration.  UPSC Prelims-Oriented Analysis Important linkage between marine biodiversity, taxonomy, and climate science.  UPSC may ask about characteristics of foraminifera, their ecological role, shell composition, or applications in geology and petroleum exploration.  The discovery reinforces the significance of India’s coastal ecosystems as reservoirs of undiscovered biodiversity.  Source/Reference: https://researchmatters.in/news/scientists-discover-new-microscopic-foraminifera-along-maharashtras-konkan-coast Anusandhan National Research Foundation (ANRF): India’s Apex Research & Innovation Ecosystem Subject: Science & Technology / Governance (Research & Development (R&D), Scientific Institutions, Innovation Ecosystem, Government Initiatives) Why in News? The Union Minister for Science & Technology recently announced that an ANRF-supported digital portal will provide researchers, students, and innovators with training in patent filing, intellectual property support, and research paper writing assistance, strengthening India’s research ecosystem.  What is ANRF? Anusandhan National Research Foundation (ANRF) was established through the Anusandhan National Research Foundation Act, 2023.  Functions under the Department of Science & Technology (DST).  Replaced and subsumed the Science and Engineering Research Board (SERB).  Objectives of ANRF Promote a culture of research, innovation, and entrepreneurship across universities, colleges, research institutions, and R&D laboratories.  Provide high-level strategic direction to scientific research in line with the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020.  Foster collaboration among industry, academia, government departments, and research institutions.  Support interdisciplinary research, emerging technologies, and national-priority projects.  Key Features Target to mobilize ₹50,000 crore during 2023–28 through multiple funding streams.  Governed by a high-level board chaired by the Prime Minister.  Supports competitive peer-reviewed grants, fellowships, centres of excellence, and research infrastructure.  Recent Initiatives MAHA (Mission for Advancement in High-impact Areas): Mission-mode programme for multidisciplinary research in strategic sectors.  Development of SARAL AI, an AI-based platform to simplify research publications into Indian languages and accessible formats.  UPSC Prelims-Oriented Analysis ANRF is the apex research funding and policy body envisioned under NEP 2020, making it highly relevant for UPSC.  Important static–dynamic linkage with India’s efforts to increase Gross Expenditure on R&D (GERD), promote innovation, and strengthen academia-industry collaboration.  Possible MCQs may focus on the ANRF Act, 2023, its relationship with SERB, funding structure, objectives, and flagship initiatives like MAHA and SARAL AI.  Source/Reference: https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2268946&reg=3&lang=1 Nilgiri Tahr: Revival of the Western Ghats’ Endangered Mountain Ungulate Subject: Environment & Ecology (Endemic Species, Wildlife Conservation, Western Ghats Biodiversity, Protected Areas) Why in News? The third synchronized Nilgiri Tahr survey (2026) conducted by the Tamil Nadu Forest Department estimated the population of the species in the State at 1,364 individuals, registering a 4.68% increase over the 2025 estimate of 1,303. The findings highlight the positive impact of conservation efforts under Project Nilgiri Tahr.  About Nilgiri Tahr Scientific Name: Nilgiritragus hylocrius  Largest wild mountain ungulate (hoofed mammal) of southern India.  Endemic to the Western Ghats of Tamil Nadu and Kerala.  Adapted to steep cliffs, montane grasslands, and Shola-Grassland ecosystems.  Herbivorous and an excellent climber.  Conservation Status IUCN Red List: Endangered  Wild Life (Protection) Act, 1972: Schedule I  State Animal of Tamil Nadu.  Key Findings of the 2026 Survey Population: 1,364 individuals.  Increase of 32% since 2024.  Anamalai Hills support about 44.87% of the population.  Nilgiri landscape accounts for about 29.25%.  Survey covered 177 blocks, 126 forest beats, and 43 forest ranges across 14 forest divisions.  The VARUDAI mobile application was used for real-time field data collection.  UPSC Prelims-Oriented Analysis A favourite UPSC theme linking endemic fauna, biodiversity hotspots, and conservation projects.  Important associated locations include Eravikulam National Park (Kerala), which hosts one of the largest populations, and Mukurthi National Park (Tamil Nadu).  Possible MCQs may test its scientific name, IUCN status, habitat, state animal status, and Project Nilgiri Tahr.  Also relevant for questions on Shola ecosystems, Western Ghats endemism, and species recovery programmes.  Source/Reference: https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/tamil-nadu/nilgiri-tahr-population-in-state-increases-to-1364-finds-survey/article71066022.ece Solar Cycles: Decoding the Sun’s 11-Year Rhythm Subject: Science & Technology (Space Science) (Solar Activity, Sunspots, Space Weather, Solar Dynamics) Why in News? Researchers from the Indian Institute of Astrophysics (IIA) used over 100 years of observations from the Kodaikanal Solar Observatory to study how large solar surface structures called supergranulations behave during different phases of the solar cycle. The findings may improve future predictions of solar activity and space weather.  What is a Solar Cycle? A Solar Cycle is an approximately 11-year periodic variation in the Sun’s activity driven by changes in its magnetic field.  It is measured primarily through the number and intensity of sunspots on the Sun’s surface.  At the end of each cycle, the Sun’s magnetic poles reverse, completing a magnetic cycle of about 22 years.  Stages of a Solar Cycle Solar Minimum – Few sunspots; low solar activity.  Solar Maximum – Peak sunspot activity; increased solar flares and coronal mass ejections (CMEs).  Declining Phase – Activity gradually decreases toward the next minimum.  Key Findings of the Study Analysis of 34,000 Ca II K images from 1907 onwards.  Supergranular lane widths and intensities show strong correlation with sunspot numbers.  Different solar latitudes respond differently to solar activity, indicating complex solar magnetic dynamics.  Data covers more than nine solar cycles, making it one of the longest continuous solar datasets in the world.  What are Supergranulations? Large convection cells on the Sun’s surface.  Average size: ~30,000 km.  Lifetime: ~24 hours.  Help transport magnetic flux and influence solar irradiance.  UPSC Prelims-Oriented Analysis Important linkage between solar activity and space weather, which can affect satellites, GPS, radio communication, power grids, and astronauts.  UPSC frequently asks about sunspots, solar flares, CMEs, and observatories.  The Kodaikanal Solar Observatory is significant as it houses one of the world’s longest continuous solar datasets, making it important for both astronomy and climate-related studies.  Source/Reference: https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2269299&reg=3&lang=1 (MAINS Focus) Ease of Doing Business: Strengthening India's Business Framework GS Paper III – Economy (Industrial Policy; Financial Sector) | GS Paper II – Governance Business Reforms; Digital Governance; MSME Support; Tax Compliance; Insolvency Resolution   Introduction India’s business environment has improved through digital governance, regulatory simplification, and ease of compliance. Reforms in business registration, property approvals, taxation, credit access, logistics, and digital public infrastructure have enhanced competitiveness. As a result, India’s rank in the World Bank Doing Business Report improved from 142 (2014) to 63 (2019), while its IMD World Competitiveness Ranking rose from 43 (2021) to 41 (2025).   Main Body Business Entry Reforms Startup India (2016): By March 2026, over 2.23 lakh startups recognised, generating 23.3 lakh direct jobs. ~48% of startups have at least one-woman director or partner. Support measures include Seed Fund, Fund of Funds, investor connect portal, and credit guarantee scheme. SPICe+ Form (2020): Integrated web form offering 11 services from 3 Central Ministries and 3 State Governments. Consolidated 10 essential procedures: Incorporation, DIN Allotment, PAN, TAN, ESIC, EPFO, Profession Tax, Bank Account Opening, GSTIN, Shops & Establishment registration. Reduced procedures, time, and costs associated with starting a business. MCA21 Version 3 (2021-22): AI-driven initiative enhancing transparency in corporate landscape. From 2021 to 2025, approximately 3.84 crore filings made; 3.33 crore approved through Straight Through Process (reduced manual intervention). Udyam Registration Portal (July 2020): Free, paperless, self-declaration-based system for MSMEs. Registrations increased from 10.02 thousand (October 2020) to over 858 thousand (June 5, 2026). Integrated with CBDT and GSTN databases for fully digital, documentation-free registration. Property Registration Reforms Digital India Land Records Modernisation Programme (DILRMP) (2016): Cadastral maps digitized for 97.37% of the country. Citizens in 19 states can download digitally signed, legally valid land records from home. Banks in 406 districts can verify mortgages online. Unique Land Parcel Identification Number (ULPIN): 14-digit alphanumeric code based on geo-coordinates – “Aadhaar for Land”. Assigned to over 36 crore land parcels across 29 States and UTs. Eliminates duplicity, prevents benami transactions. National Generic Document Registration System (NGDRS): “One Nation, One Registration”. Implemented in 17 States/UTs; 88.6% of Sub-Registrar Offices integrated with revenue offices. Enables automatic mutation of land records immediately after registration. Permit Procedure Reforms Labour Codes (November 2025): Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code (OSH), 2020 replaced 13 Central labour laws. Electronic single registration, single return, single all-India licences valid for five years. Threshold of employees to obtain license for factory increased from 10 to 20 (with power) and 20 to 40 (without power). Inspector-cum-Facilitators introduced in place of inspector with randomized web-based inspection system. Environmental Clearance Reforms: Consent to Operate (CTO), once granted, will remain valid until cancelled (removes need for repeated renewals). States can prescribe one-time Consent to Operate fee for 5 to 25 years. Average time for environmental clearance reduced to 64 days in 2025-26 (stipulated timeline 105 days). National Single Window System (NSWS): Integrates approval processes across 32 Central Departments and 34 State Governments. Provides access to over 686 central and 7,498 state approvals. Since 2021, granted over 8,29,750 approvals (November 20, 2025). PARIVESH 2.0: Streamlines Environment clearance (EC), Forest clearance (FC), Wildlife (WL) and Coastal Regulation Zone (CRZ) clearances. Average time for environmental clearance reduced to 64 days (stipulated 105 days). Market Connectivity and Logistics Government e-Marketplace (GeM) (2016): Cumulative Gross Merchandise Value of ₹18.4 lakh crore; crossed ₹5 lakh crore in FY 2025-26. In FY 2025-26, 68% of orders executed by MSEs (47.1% of total GMV). Over 35,705 start-ups on GeM with cumulative orders worth ₹51,494 crore. 2.04 lakh+ women-led MSEs servicing over 42 lakh orders valued at ₹79,231 crore. PM GatiShakti National Master Plan (October 2021): Integrates 58 Central Ministries and all States/UTs with 3199 data layers. Network Planning Group evaluated 352 projects worth ₹16.10 lakh crore; 201 sanctioned, 167 under implementation. Logistics Performance Index (World Bank): India ranked 38th in 2023, improving from 54th position in 2014. Credit Access Reforms Credit Guarantee Scheme (CGTMSE): ₹9.34 lakh crore cumulative guarantees with 1.15 crore cumulative guarantees approved (March 31, 2025). Over ₹3.68 lakh crore sanctioned under ECLGS, out of which ₹2.43 lakh crore for MSMEs. Pradhan Mantri Mudra Yojana (PMMY): As of March 27, 2026, disbursed loans worth ₹40.07 lakh crore with over 57 crore accounts since 2015. 12 crore+ accounts belong to new entrepreneurs. Women: 59.81% of loan accounts, 37.45% of disbursed amount. SC/ST/OBC: 45.52% of loan accounts, 31.77% of disbursed amount. Credit Assessment Model (CAM) (2025): Leverages digital footprints for automated loan appraisal for MSMEs. Over 3.96 lakh MSME loan applications sanctioned (₹52,300 crore) (April 1-December 21, 2025). Tax Compliance Reforms Goods and Services Tax (GST) (2017): Registered taxpayers increased from about 60 lakhs (2017) to over 1.64 crore (April 2026). GSTN handled processing of over ₹107.64 lakh crore payments (as of April 2026). Faceless Assessment (2019): Eliminated physical interface between taxpayer and tax officers. Curbed undesirable practices in tax administration. E-Way Bill: Number generated increased from 15.74 crore (July 2018-March 2019) to 188.27 crore (FY 2025-26). Replaced multiple state-level permits with single electronic document. Digital Public Infrastructure Unified Payments Interface (UPI) (2016): Annual transactions expanded from 2 crore (FY 2016-17) to over 24,162 crore (FY 2025-26) – almost 12,000-fold surge. Transaction value rose from ₹0.07 lakh crore to approximately ₹314 lakh crore – over 4,000-fold increase. IMF acknowledged UPI as world’s largest real-time payment system by transaction volume. cKYC Registry: Centralized repository of customer KYC records. Enables uniform KYC norms and inter-usability of records across sectors. EntityLocker (January 2025): Digital locker for entities providing secure, cloud-based platform for storing, sharing, and verifying digital documents. Entities onboarded increased from 38 thousand (February 2025) to over 40 thousand (December 2025). Trust-Based Governance: Compliance Reduction Jan Vishwas Act, 2023: Decriminalised 183 provisions across 42 Acts. Jan Vishwas Act, 2026 (effective April 7, 2026): Decriminalization of 717 provisions. Amendment of 784 provisions of 79 Central Acts administered by 23 Ministries. Rationalised more than 1000 offences. Regulatory Compliance Burden: More than 47,000 compliances reduced (as of November 2025). 16,108 simplified compliances. 22,287 digitised compliances. 4,458 decriminalised compliances. 4,270 redundant compliances removed. RBI consolidated over 9,000 circulars and guidelines into 238 function-specific Master Directions. Business Reforms Action Plan (BRAP): 7 editions completed; 8th edition rolled out in November 2025. District Business Reform Action Plan (D-BRAP) launched for grassroots reforms. Insolvency Resolution Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), 2016: Consolidated multiple laws into unified, creditor-driven, time-bound mechanism. IBC (Amendment) Act, 2026: prescribed 14-day timeline for adjudicating authorities to accept or reject applications. Restricted withdrawal of cases after specified stage; strengthened creditor participation. Challenges: World Bank discontinued Doing Business Report after 2020 (data irregularities); no comparable global ranking since. State-level implementation varies (BRAP and D-BRAP address this, but uneven). MSME credit access improved but still gap between sanctioned and disbursed. Labour codes (November 2025) still being implemented; full impact yet to be seen. The Core Reality: India has transformed from a compliance-heavy system to a facilitation-driven ecosystem. Digital public infrastructure (UPI, GeM, NSWS, DILRMP) is world-class. Compliance reduction and decriminalisation are moving towards trust-based governance. The focus has shifted from EoDB rankings to actual business facilitation.   Conclusion India’s business ecosystem has been transformed through digital governance, regulatory simplification, and trust-based administration. Reforms in startup promotion, land records, labour laws, approvals, taxation, logistics, and digital payments have improved ease of doing business, reflected in the rise of India’s EoDB rank from 142 (2014) to 63 (2019) and its improving global competitiveness.   UPSC Mains Practice Question Examine the role of digital governance, regulatory simplification, and trust-based administration in improving India’s business environment and global competitiveness. (250 words, 15 marks)   https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2269961&reg=3&lang=1 RBI Holds Rates, Shifts Focus to Foreign Capital GS Paper III – Economy (Monetary Policy; External Sector) | GS Paper II – International Relations Monetary Policy Committee (MPC); Inflation; Growth; Foreign Portfolio Investment (FPI); Exchange Rate   Introduction Amid inflationary pressures, capital outflows, rupee weakness, and uncertain growth, the RBI’s MPC kept the policy rate unchanged at 5.25% and retained a neutral stance. Given global uncertainties, particularly the West Asia conflict, a cautious wait-and-watch approach remains appropriate, supported by measures to attract foreign capital and stabilise the currency.   Main Body The Growth-Inflation Outlook Inflation: Headline retail inflation stood at 3.5% in April. Prices at the pump were raised in May (petrol/diesel by ₹3 per litre). Price pressures being felt across various segments. Second-round effects of higher input costs will soon begin to show. RBI raised inflation forecast for the year to 5.1% (up from 4.6% estimated in April). Food inflation a concern (subnormal monsoon forecast and El Niño). Growth: RBI projected GDP growth at 6.6% for the year (down from earlier estimate of 6.9%). Downside risks to growth persist. The Stagflationary Risk: Inflation edging upwards at a time when growth appears to be slowing down. The Decision: Hold Rates at 5.25% MPC Decision: Repo rate unchanged at 5.25%. Neutral stance continued. Wait-and-watch approach due to continuing uncertainty over West Asia conflict. Rationale: Inflationary pressures building but not yet at alarming levels. Growth momentum unpredictable. Premature tightening could worsen growth slowdown. Supply shocks (energy, fertiliser) are not amenable to rate hikes. Foreign Capital Outflows: The Scale of the Problem Equity Markets (Calendar Year 2026 so far): Foreign investors have taken out $28.6 billion from equity markets. Net FDI (2025-26): Stood at just $7.65 billion (significantly lower than previous years). Rupee Pressure: Capital outflows + elevated crude oil prices + dollar strength = rupee under pressure. The Consequence: Measures urgently needed to attract foreign capital. Measures Announced to Attract Foreign Capital Government Measures: Capital gains tax on FII investments in government bonds: Done away with. Withholding tax on interest income from government bonds: Done away with. RBI Measures: Fully Accessible Route (FAR): Expanded the universe of government securities under this route. Foreign investors can invest in these securities without any limits. Implications for bond yields (increased demand may lower yields). Concessional forex swap facility: To incentivise external commercial borrowings (ECBs). Concessional facility for banks: For bearing hedging cost to raise FCNR (B) deposits. Objective: Attract foreign capital (FPI, ECB, FCNR deposits). Ease pressure on the rupee. Supplement domestic liquidity. Implications of the Measures For Bond Yields: Expanded FAR and removal of capital gains/withholding tax may increase demand for government bonds. Increased demand could lower bond yields (reduces government borrowing cost). For Banks: Concessional forex swap facility incentivises ECBs (banks can raise cheaper foreign currency). Concessional facility for FCNR (B) deposits encourages banks to raise dollar deposits from NRIs. For the Rupee: Increased capital inflows (FPI, ECB, FCNR) will support the rupee. But the impact depends on the magnitude of inflows. For Fiscal Deficit: Lower bond yields (if demand increases) reduce government’s interest burden. But removal of taxes (capital gains, withholding) reduces revenue.   Conclusion Amid rising inflation, capital outflows, rupee pressure, and slowing growth, the RBI kept the repo rate unchanged at 5.25% with a neutral stance. While inflation and growth forecasts were revised unfavourably, measures to attract foreign capital and support the rupee are welcome. Given persistent global uncertainties, agile and cautious economic management remains essential.   UPSC Mains Practice Question Examine the rationale behind the RBI’s decision to maintain the repo rate despite rising inflation and slowing growth. Discuss the significance of recent measures to attract foreign capital. (250 words, 15 marks)   https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/editorials/rbi-does-well-to-hold-rates-shift-focus-to-foreign-capital-10726322/