Archives
(PRELIMS Focus)
From Queues to QR Codes: India’s UPI & JAM Revolution
Why in News?
India’s digital payment ecosystem has achieved global leadership. UPI processed 21.70 billion transactions worth ₹28.33 lakh crore in January 2026 alone, capturing 81% of all retail digital transactions in India and 49% of global real-time payment transactions (IMF).
The JAM Trinity: Foundation of Digital Banking
Pillar
Purpose
Jan-Dhan
Zero-balance accounts for financial inclusion
Aadhaar
Digital identity for targeting & authentication
Mobile
Real-time interface for transactions
Impact: Enabled Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) – reduced leakages, built trust, prepared citizens for digital finance
UPI (Unified Payments Interface) – Launched 2016 by NPCI
Key Features:
Virtual Payment Address (no account number/IFSC needed)
Real-time, 24/7, interoperable across banks & apps
Low-cost architecture
Global Recognition:
IMF: World’s largest real-time payment system by volume
India’s ~20 billion monthly transactions
Beyond Convenience: Financial Inclusion
Auto drivers, village mandis, street vendors accept QR payments
UPI Lite (small-value), UPI AutoPay (subscriptions), Credit on UPI
NBFCs & fintechs use UPI infrastructure for loans
Security (RBI, April 1, 2026):
Two-factor authentication mandatory (PIN/biometric/token + OTP)
Global Footprint (Operational/Linked with):
UAE, Singapore, Bhutan, Nepal, Sri Lanka, France, Mauritius, Qatar
Static-Dynamic Linkage
Static (Economy Syllabus):
NPCI – established 2008 under Payment and Settlement Systems Act, 2007
UPI – launched 2016; built on IMPS infrastructure
JAM Trinity – enabler of DBT; reduced subsidy leakages
Dynamic (Current Affairs – 2026):
Two-factor authentication mandate (RBI, April 1, 2026) – reduces fraud
Global expansion – UPI linked with multiple countries
India’s fintech leadership – recognized by IMF and World Bank
Source/Reference:
https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2251058®=3&lang=1
Sagarmala Programme: Port-Led Development
Why in News?
The Sagarmala Programme (launched March 2015) has completed 315 projects worth ₹1.57 lakh crore, with 845 projects worth ₹6.06 lakh crore underway. Sagarmala 2.0 has been proposed with ₹85,482 crore budgetary support to catalyse ₹3.6 lakh crore investment.
What is Sagarmala?
Launched: March 2015 (Ministry of Ports, Shipping and Waterways)
Objective: Port-led development – improve logistics efficiency, reduce transportation costs, promote coastal shipping & inland waterways
Coastline: 11,099 km; 12 major ports + 200+ non-major ports
Maritime trade: 95% by volume, 70% by value
5 Pillars of Sagarmala
Pillar
Focus
Port Modernization & New Ports
Upgrade capacity, mechanization, digital systems
Port Connectivity
Multimodal (road, rail, waterways) hinterland links
Port-led Industrialization
Industrial clusters near ports
Coastal Community Development
Livelihoods, fisheries, tourism, skill development
Coastal Shipping & IWT
Eco-friendly cargo movement alternatives
Institutional Framework
Body
Role
NSAC (National Sagarmala Apex Committee)
Policy guidance & oversight
MSDC (Maritime States Development Council)
Centre-state coordination
SSCs (State Sagarmala Committees)
State-level project identification & monitoring
SMFCL (Sagarmala Finance Corporation Ltd)
India’s first maritime-focused NBFC (restructured from SDCL, June 2025); approved ₹4,300 crore loans (Dec 2025)
Static-Dynamic Linkage
Static (Geography/Economy):
Major ports of India – 12 ports under central government (e.g., Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata, Visakhapatnam, Paradip)
Coastal vs. non-major ports – jurisdiction difference (central vs. state)
Inland waterways – National Waterways Act, 2016 (111 NWs)
Logistics cost – India’s logistics cost ~14% of GDP (global benchmark ~8-10%)
Dynamic (Current Affairs – 2026):
Record cargo handling – 915 MT (FY26)
Sagarmala 2.0 – ₹85,482 crore budget; ₹3.6 lakh crore investment target
SMFCL – first maritime NBFC; entered lending space (Dec 2025)
Employment potential – 1 crore jobs from port-led development
Source/Reference:
https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2251071®=3&lang=1
Womaniya Initiative: Women Entrepreneurs on GeM
Why in News?
The Womaniya Initiative (launched 2019 on GeM) has enabled over 2.1 lakh women MSEs to secure 13.7 lakh orders worth over ₹28,000 crore in FY 2025-26 – a 27.6% growth over last year. Women MSEs now account for 5.6% of GeM’s total order value, surpassing the mandated 3% procurement target.
What is GeM?
Launched: 2016 (Ministry of Commerce & Industry)
Vision: “Minimum Government, Maximum Governance”
Nature: Paperless, cashless, contactless public procurement platform
Buyers: Central/State Ministries, PSUs, Panchayats, Cooperatives
What is Womaniya Initiative?
Launched: 2019 on GeM platform
Objective: Enable women-led MSEs and SHGs to sell directly to Government buyers
Product Categories: Handicrafts, handloom, jute, coir, home décor, office furnishings, grocery, personal hygiene
Supporting Programme: SWAYATT (Startups, Women & Youth Advantage Through e-Transactions) – launched February 2019 to promote inclusive participation on GeM
Key Features
Digital onboarding using Udyam verification
Standardised catalogue listing for easy buyer comparison
Transparent digital bidding, order placement, invoicing, payments
Time-bound payment mechanisms
Training & outreach (onboarding workshops, vernacular training, buyer-seller meets)
Impact (FY 2025-26)
Metric
Figure
Women MSEs registered on GeM
Over 2.1 lakh
Order volume
13.7 lakh orders
Contract value awarded
Over ₹28,000 crore
Growth over previous year
27.6%
Share of GeM’s total order value
5.6% (exceeds 3% mandate)
SHG Context (as of February 2026)
10.05 crore women mobilised into 90.09 lakh SHGs
SHGs are grassroots informal organisations (10-20 members) for savings, mutual help, and income generation
Static-Dynamic Linkage
Static (Economy/Polity):
Public procurement – accounts for ~20-25% of GDP in India
MSME sector – contributes ~30% to GDP, ~45% to exports, employs ~11 crore people
Women’s economic empowerment – linked to SDG 5 (Gender Equality)
GeM – established under Rule 149 of General Financial Rules (GFR), 2017
Dynamic (Current Affairs – 2026):
3% procurement mandate for women MSEs – exceeded (5.6% achieved)
SHG mobilisation – 10.05 crore women (Feb 2026) under DAY-NRLM
Digital inclusion – GeM as a tool for reducing intermediary dependence
Source/Reference:
https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2250664®=3&lang=1
BHASHINI: India's AI-Powered Language Translation Platform
Why in News?
BHASHINI (BHASHa INterface for India) has enabled advanced AI models, including open-sourced Sarvam models, on its platform, strengthening India’s capabilities in building population-scale AI systems. It now operates on India’s first fully vendor and cloud-agnostic AI Sovereign Cloud, ensuring data sovereignty.
What is BHASHINI?
Full Form: BHASHa INterface for India
Under: Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY)
Part of: National Language Translation Mission (NLTM)
Launched under: Digital India Programme
Type: AI-powered language translation platform
Key Features & Statistics
Parameter
Detail
Languages Supported
36 text, 23 voice languages
Total Inferences
Over 6 billion
Daily Inferences
15 million+
Government Websites Powered
500+
Models on Platform
350+ optimized models
NLP Services
20+ (language detection, speaker diarization, keyword spotting)
Source: PIB March 2026
Technical Capabilities
Key Services Offered:
Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR): Speech-to-text conversion
Neural Machine Translation (NMT): Direct Indian language-to-Indian language translation (no Hindi pivot)
Text-to-Speech (TTS): Voice output in multiple languages
OCR: Printed and handwritten document digitization
Shrutlekh: Real-time speech-to-text translation tool
Key Products:
Anuvad: Text-to-text translation
Chitraad: Video translation into 22 languages
Leha: OCR-based document reading
Vaniad: Real-time multilingual voice conversations
Translation Plugin: Instant website conversion to 22 Indian languages
Sovereign AI Infrastructure (Key Development – Feb 2026)
BHASHINI has been migrated to indigenous cloud platforms:
Deployed on: Yotta’s Government Community Cloud and Shakti Cloud
Significance: Language datasets, models, and citizen interactions remain within India’s jurisdiction
Performance: 40% boost, 30% cost reduction
Alignment: IndiaAI Mission objectives
Significance for UPSC
Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI): BHASHINI is India’s language DPI, enabling inclusive digital access across linguistic diversity.
Bridging Digital Divide: Helps overcome language barriers that limit internet adoption in rural and non-English speaking populations.
Vernacular Digital Content: Aligns with India’s push to increase Indian language content on the internet in governance, policy, and public interest domains.
Data Sovereignty: Sovereign AI cloud ensures citizen data remains within India – critical for trust in digital governance.
Static-Dynamic Linkage
Static (Polity/Science & Technology):
Digital India Programme – launched 2014; 9 pillars including e-Governance and Information for All
India Stack – set of APIs for presenceless, paperless, cashless service delivery
Official Languages – Eighth Schedule (22 languages); BHASHINI covers all plus additional dialects
Article 343-351 – constitutional provisions on official language
Dynamic (Current Affairs – 2026):
Sovereign AI Cloud deployment – milestone for India’s AI self-reliance (Feb 2026)
Integration of Sarvam models – open-source AI for public good (March 2026)
Panchayati Raj MoU – grassroots digital inclusion (June 2025)
6 billion inferences – scale of India’s language AI adoption
Source/Reference:
https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2250991®=3&lang=1
Clarion-Clipperton Zone (CCZ): Deep-Sea Mining Hotspot & Environmental Concerns
Why in News?
The Clarion-Clipperton Zone has gained prominence as the most studied area for deep-sea mining of polymetallic nodules. The International Seabed Authority (ISA) continues negotiations on a mining code, while the US has moved unilaterally to issue exploration licenses under domestic law, raising concerns about the “common heritage of mankind” principle.
What is the Clarion-Clipperton Zone?
The CCZ is a vast area of the Pacific Ocean seabed stretching between Hawaii and Mexico, covering approximately 4.5 million square kilometres. It is an environmental management area administered by the International Seabed Authority (ISA).
Parameter
Detail
Location
Pacific Ocean (between Hawaii and Mexico)
Area
~4.5 million sq km
Depth
3,500 – 5,500 metres
Length
~7,240 km (east to west)
Administered by
International Seabed Authority (ISA)
Named after
Clarion Island (Mexico) & Clipperton Island (France)
Why is the CCZ Important?
Polymetallic Nodules:
The seafloor of CCZ is covered with potato-shaped polymetallic nodules containing valuable minerals critical for the energy transition:
Mineral
Use
Manganese
Steel production, batteries
Nickel
EV batteries, stainless steel
Cobalt
EV batteries, aerospace alloys
Copper
Electrical wiring, renewable energy
Resource Estimates (ISA):
Total nodules: Over 21 billion tons
Contains more cobalt and nickel than all known land-based global reserves combined
Deep-Sea Mining in CCZ
Exploration Contracts:
ISA has issued 19 exploration licences within CCZ
The zone has been divided into 16 mining claims (~1 million sq km)
9 conservation areas (160,000 sq km each) set aside for protection
Key Players:
The Metals Company (TMC) – US subsidiary filed first consolidated application for exploration and commercial recovery permit (March 2026)
China, Japan, South Korea, Germany, India – also have exploration contracts in various parts of the Pacific and Indian Oceans
The “Two-Year Rule” & ISA Deadline
A provision in UNCLOS allows any nation to trigger a two-year clock for ISA to finalise mining regulations. If ISA fails, mining is implicitly approved.
Nauru gave notice in July 2021 → Deadline: July 9, 2023 (missed)
ISA continues negotiations on a mining code; as of March 2026, ~40 countries back a moratorium
Environmental Concerns
Unique Deep-Sea Ecosystem:
Xenophyophores (giant protists) – keystone species, highly sensitive to disturbance
Corals, sea cucumbers, dumbo octopuses, worms – many species found nowhere else
2016 study: More than half of species collected in CCZ were new to science
Risks from Mining:
Sediment plumes – can smother benthic communities
Loss of nodules – form over millions of years; their removal permanently alters habitat
Noise & light pollution – effects on deep-sea life unknown
Recovery timelines – measured in decades or longer; sediment from 1978 dredging tests remains unsettled
Global Governance Debate
UNCLOS & Common Heritage Principle:
The international seabed beyond national jurisdiction is declared the “common heritage of mankind” under UNCLOS (1982)
ISA is the sole authority to regulate mining in “The Area” (covers ~54% of world’s oceans)
US Unilateral Action (2025-2026):
US never ratified UNCLOS and is not an ISA member
NOAA revised the Deep Seabed Hard Mineral Resources Act (1980) to create a consolidated licensing process
Critics warn this “sets a dangerous precedent” and destabilises global ocean governance
India’s Interest
India is a contractor with ISA for exploration of polymetallic nodules in the Central Indian Ocean Basin (CIOB)
India has also identified hydrothermal vents and polymetallic sulfides along the Central and Southeast Indian Ridges
India’s deep-sea mining capabilities are being advanced through the National Institute of Oceanography (NIO) and the Ministry of Earth Sciences
Static-Dynamic Linkage
Static (Geography/Environment/Polity):
Ocean divisions: Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) vs. “The Area” (beyond national jurisdiction)
UNCLOS (1982): Part XI – deep seabed mining regime
ISA: Established under UNCLOS; headquarters in Kingston, Jamaica
Deep-sea ecosystems: Benthic zones, abyssal plains, hydrothermal vents
Dynamic (Current Affairs – 2026):
US unilateral licensing – NOAA rule (Jan 2026) and TMC application (March 2026)
ISA mining code negotiations – ongoing; ~40 countries support moratorium
Greenpeace opposition – alleges TMC violated UNCLOS obligations
High Seas Treaty (BBNJ) – entered into force Jan 17, 2026; strengthens marine biodiversity conservation in international waters
Source/Reference:
https://indianexpress.com/
(MAINS Focus)
Viksit Bharat Shiksha Adhisthan (VBSA) Bill: Constitutional Overreach or Cooperative Federalism?
UPSC Mains Subject: GS Paper II – Polity & Governance (Federalism) | GS Paper II – Social Justice (Education)
Sub-topic: Higher Education Regulation; Centre-State Relations; NEP 2020
Introduction
The Viksit Bharat Shiksha Adhisthan (VBSA) Bill seeks to statutorily implement NEP 2020, which was adopted without State consultation. Critics call it a constitutional overreach. Entry 66 of the Union List gives Parliament limited power only for coordination and determination of standards in higher education. Yet the Bill gives Union-controlled councils sole discretionary power over standards, inspections, funding, and closures—undermining federalism and institutional autonomy.
Main Body
Constitutional Concerns
Entry 66, Union List: Parliament’s power limited to coordination and standards—not complete takeover
Concurrent List: Education is a shared responsibility, but Bill centralises power
Autonomy eroded: IITs, IIMs, State universities lose governing body powers
Bureaucratic overreach: No participation of HEIs or academics in decision-making
What the Bill Does Not Do
No enforcement of affirmative action for SCs, STs, and OBCs
No provision for inter-institutional, inter-State, or inter-regional justice
Pushes higher education dependence on loans over public funding
Undermines multicultural character of Indian knowledge in name of “Bhartiya Knowledge”
The Alternative Proposal: Role of State Higher Education Councils (SHECs)
SHECs should be represented on all three councils under the Bill
50% weightage each to SHECs and Union councils in regulation, accreditation, and standards
No institution should be closed without consent of the concerned State government
Standards should be shaped State-wise and sector-wise, not top-down from Delhi
Three Councils: Critique and Alternatives
Regulatory Council (Viniyaman Parishad): Should not have free hand over closures; State consent required
Accreditation Council (Gunvatta Parishad): Technology-driven assessment cannot replace deliberative, process-oriented evaluation
Standards Council (Manak Parishad): Sitting in Delhi cannot define uniform standards for diverse State priorities
Separate Higher Education Grants Council (HEGC)
Disburse funds for integration of teaching, research, and outreach
Provide generous funding to laggard State institutions to bridge historical discrimination
SHECs should be duly funded by HEGC
Evaluation Framework
Shift from output-based (patents, publications) to outcome- and impact-centric evaluation
Focus on learning levels, employability, and social justice outcomes
Conclusion
The VBSA Bill centralises higher education regulation in ways that may violate the Concurrent List status of education and Entry 66 of the Union List. States are the primary financiers of their higher education systems, yet the Bill gives them no role in regulation, accreditation, or standards.
The alternative proposal—50% weightage to State Higher Education Councils, State consent for closures, and a separate funding mechanism for laggard institutions—offers a cooperative federal path forward. The JPC must amend the Bill to balance Centre-State responsibilities.
UPSC Mains Practice Question
The VBSA Bill has been criticised as a constitutional overreach that centralises higher education without adequate State participation. Critically examine the Bill’s provisions in light of Entry 66 of the Union List and the Concurrent List status of education. (250 words, 15 marks)
https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/an-alternativeproposal-onviksit-bharat-shikshaadhisthanbill/article70847787.ece
Sabarimala: Beyond Tradition vs. Modernity
UPSC Mains Subject: GS Paper I – Society (Religion) | GS Paper II – Polity (Fundamental Rights) | GS Paper IV – Ethics
Sub-topic: Religious Freedom; Gender Justice; Constitutional Morality; Pluralism
Introduction
The Sabarimala debate presents a curious spectacle: two groups in black—Ayyappa pilgrims trekking to the hilltop shrine, and lawyers arguing in courtrooms. One seeks divine blessings; the other determines the fate of the deity’s customs. This visual coincidence captures India’s struggle to reconcile ancient sacredness with modern institutions. The question is not simply tradition versus modernity, but whether a pluralistic democracy can honour how people think about their gods while pursuing justice.
Main Body
Beyond the Simple Dichotomy
Not tradition vs. modernity: Millions of women believe in Sabarimala’s customs and voluntarily observe restrictions
Not alien vs. indigenous: The debate involves Indians interpreting their own traditions through constitutional lenses
What our time-traveller might see: Two groups in black—pilgrims and lawyers. One determines the fate of the other’s deity. Is this a zero-sum game or two cultures learning to coexist?
The Past as Canvas for Grievances
Modern Indians grew up believing “religion” was a thing of the past and the past itself was evil
Politics fed this belief—Left and Right alike blamed Brahmins, Muslims, Hindus, Leftists, etc.
New realisation: Political parties are figuring out that the past need not be demonised. Neither the boy-god nor his caretakers need to be brought into every calculus of justice.
Justice and Its Proper Targets
Injustice exists: Women face pain, cruelty, violence. Justice must be sought.
But is Ayyappa the source? Do women face injustice because of Swami Ayyappa, his temple, or a priestly monopoly?
The answer is no. The causes of gender injustice lie elsewhere. Sabarimala customs are not the root of patriarchy.
Coexistence, Not Coercion
In polytheistic societies, the answer has always been coexistence, not coercion into homogeneity
For believers who cannot meet temple customs: other temples or home shrines exist
The warning: Destruction of the ancient in the name of progress or homogeneity is not a “win”
What Modern India Must Respect
If India is truly a democracy, it must honour how people think about their gods
Millions of women believe in the inviolable sacredness of Sabarimala’s customs
Critical introspection needed: For those using Sabarimala as a stepping-stone to another cause, destruction is not the answer
Core Tension: Constitutional rights (Article 15, 25) vs. religious customs; individual rights vs. community practices
Conclusion
The Sabarimala debate is more than tradition versus modernity. It is a struggle to reconcile India’s ancient sacredness with its modern institutions. The answer is not to destroy the ancient in the name of progress, nor to deny justice in the name of tradition. In pluralistic societies, the way has always been coexistence, not coercion. Let us have our rights, and our deities, theirs.
UPSC Mains Practice Question
Critically examine the tensions between constitutional morality and religious customs in the debate over women’s entry into the Sabarimala Temple, reflecting India’s evolving legal and cultural framework. (250 words, 15 marks)
https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/sabarimala-is-more-than-a-battle-between-tradition-and-modernity-10629751/