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UPSC Quiz – 2026 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 25th March 2026

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

DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 25th March 2026

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Force Majeure: Legal Shield in Extraordinary Circumstances Subject: Polity & Governance / Economy / International Relations Background: QatarEnergy recently declared force majeure on LNG contracts due to production disruptions caused by the US-Israel war on Iran, highlighting how geopolitical conflicts trigger contractual escape clauses with global economic consequences.   Definition & Nature Force Majeure: A contractual clause that exempts parties from liability when unforeseen, extraordinary events beyond human control prevent contract performance. French Origin: Term means “superior force” in French; derived from civil law systems. Not Self-Operating: Must be expressly invoked; cannot be presumed. Key Features Events Covered: Natural disasters (earthquakes, floods), war, terrorism, strikes, government actions, pandemics. Unlike Frustration: Force majeure is contractual; frustration (under Indian Contract Act, Section 56) is a common law doctrine where contract becomes impossible to perform. Effect: Suspends or terminates obligations without liability for damages. Recent Application Trigger: US-Israel war on Iran (Feb 28 onwards) disrupted Qatar’s LNG production. Impact: Qatar shares North Field (South Pars) with Iran; conflict affects extraction. Strategic Implication: Qatar is among world’s top LNG exporters; force majeure impacts major importers including India. Institutional Framework Indian Contract Act, 1872: No explicit “force majeure” provision; governed by Section 56 (doctrine of frustration). Judicial Precedent: Satyabrata Ghose v. Mugneeram (1954)—SC distinguished force majeure from frustration.   Significance for UPSC Prelims Force majeure is a recurring theme in UPSC Prelims across multiple domains: Polity: Section 56 of Indian Contract Act, 1872—frequently tested in law-related questions. Economy: COVID-19 saw widespread invocation; linked to MSME contracts and supply chain disruptions. International Relations: Energy security implications—India’s LNG imports from Qatar (approx. 40% of imports). PYQ Linkage: Previous questions on “Doctrine of Frustration,” “Contingent Contracts,” and “Energy Security of India” align directly. Conclusion Force majeure transforms geopolitical shocks into legal and economic realities. For Prelims, mastering its distinction from frustration, contractual mechanics, and current applications like Qatar LNG is essential for integrated questions spanning law, economy, and IR.   Source: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/24/qatarenergy-declares-force-majeure-on-some-lng-contracts Strategic Petroleum Reserves (SPRs): India's Energy Shock Absorber Subject: Economy / Energy Security / Geography Background: Amid ongoing West Asian conflict disrupting oil supplies through the Strait of Hormuz, India’s strategic petroleum reserves are currently at 64% capacity, raising concerns about energy security for the world’s third-largest oil importer.   Definition & Framework SPR: Emergency crude oil stockpiles for supply disruptions. Nodal Agency: Indian Strategic Petroleum Reserve Ltd. (ISPRL) under Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas. Storage: Underground rock caverns. Existing Facilities (Phase-I) Location State Capacity (MMT) Visakhapatnam Andhra Pradesh 1.33 Mangaluru Karnataka 1.50 Padur Karnataka 2.50 Total   5.33 MMT Current Status (March 2026) Stored: 3.372 MMT (64%) Strategic cover: 9.5 days at full capacity; current cover: ~6 days Total national cover (including commercial): 74 days IEA benchmark: 90 days   Expansion (Phase-II) Location Capacity Status Chandikhol, Odisha 4.0 MMT Stalled (land pending) Padur (expansion) 2.5 MMT Awarded; completion Aug 2030 Vulnerabilities Import dependence: 88% crude oil Chokepoint: Strait of Hormuz (85-95% LPG, 30% gas) Diversification: Crude sourced from 41 countries   Significance for UPSC Prelims PYQ Relevance: Energy security, IEA, Strait of Hormuz, CAG audits on delays, PPP models (Phase-II commercial-cum-strategic). Static Linkages: Geography of chokepoints, location of SPRs, ISPRL structure.   Conclusion India’s SPR expansion faces critical delays, exposing its energy security gap. Expediting Phase-II and maintaining IEA-recommended 90-day cover is imperative given import dependence and geopolitical volatility.   Source: https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/india-strategic-petroleum-reserve-how-much-petrol-stock-does-india-have-india-crude-oil-reserves-indias-strategic-crude-oil-reserves-2-3rd-full-11258389 Women's Quota Implementation: Seat Expansion Blueprint Subject: Polity & Governance / Social Justice Background: The government proposes increasing Lok Sabha seats to 816 (from 543) based on Census 2011—delinking from the ongoing Census—to implement the women’s reservation Act by the 2029 elections.   The Proposal Lok Sabha Seats: Increase from 543 to 816 (50% rise) Women’s Reservation: Approx. 273 seats (1/3rd of 816) reserved for women Vidhan Sabha: Similarly increased by 50% in each state Timeline: Implementation targeted for 2029 general elections Key Modifications Delimitation Base: Census 2011 (not the ongoing Census) State Proportions: Existing seat share among states remains unchanged—addressing southern states’ concerns SC/ST Sub-quota: Women’s reservation within SC/ST seats also proposed Caste Enumeration: Outcome of ongoing caste census not factored into delimitation   Institutional Process Step Details Amendment Needed Women’s Reservation Act (106th Amendment) + Delimitation Commission Act Delimitation Commission Likely by June 2026 based on 2011 Census Parliamentary Mechanism Extended session or special session for amendments Controversial Aspects Lottery System: Proposed for selecting which seats are reserved in each state Rotation: Whether reserved seats will be fixed or rotational—not discussed Opposition Stance: Congress, TMC, AAP, DMK, Left stayed away from talks; demanded detailed report   Significance for UPSC Prelims Constitutional Linkages: 106th Amendment Act (2023): Women’s reservation in Lok Sabha and state legislatures—implementation linked to delimitation after Census Delimitation: Article 82, 170—redrawing of constituencies based on Census Census: Constitutional basis under Article 246; delimitation freeze till 2026 PYQ Relevance: Delimitation, women’s reservation, Census provisions frequently tested Southern states’ concerns over population-based seat reallocation (demographic fears) Static Facts: Current Lok Sabha strength: 543 Current women’s representation: ~14% (below quota requirement) Conclusion The proposal to expand seats using Census 2011 while maintaining state proportions offers a pragmatic path to implement women’s quota by 2029, balancing regional concerns and bypassing Census delays—but requires constitutional amendments and political consensus.   Source: https://indianexpress.com/article/political-pulse/womens-quota-lok-sabha-seats-census-2011-816-in-lok-sabha-273-for-women-10596777/?ref=politics_pg Galactic Cosmic Rays: High-Energy Messengers from Space Subject: Science & Technology / Geography (Atmosphere) Background: Galactic cosmic rays (GCRs)—high-energy particles constantly bombarding Earth—are not rays but charged particles from distant cosmic events. Their discovery in 1912 revealed an invisible, ever-present phenomenon with applications from archaeology to space travel.   Definition & Composition Not Rays: Actually charged particles – primarily protons (hydrogen nuclei), plus helium nuclei, electrons, and heavier atomic nuclei stripped of electrons. Speed: Travel at nearly speed of light. Flux: ~1 particle passes through the palm of your hand every second. Discovery (1912) Scientist: Victor Hess (Austrian physicist) Method: Hydrogen balloon ascent to 5,300 meters with electroscope Finding: Radiation increased with altitude (opposite of expected); source was extraterrestrial, not from Earth’s crust or Sun Nobel Prize: 1936 Sources Type Origin Lower-energy Supernova remnants (magnetic fields accelerate particles like “cosmic pinball”) Ultra-high-energy Active galactic nuclei, gamma-ray bursts, supermassive black holes (sources remain mysterious) Key Characteristic Charged Nature: Bent by magnetic fields; cannot be traced back to source directly Applications & Effects Muon Tomography: Used to scan Great Pyramid of Giza (2017)—revealed hidden void Astronauts: See light flashes as particles pass through retinas (ISS phenomenon) Atmospheric Interaction: Trigger cascades of secondary particles reaching Earth’s surface   Significance for UPSC Prelims Science & Tech Linkages: Particle Physics: Protons, nuclei, cosmic radiation Atmospheric Science: Interaction with Earth’s atmosphere, secondary particles (muons) Space Technology: Radiation hazards for astronauts, spacecraft shielding Geography Linkages: Earth’s magnetic field as shield against charged particles Atmospheric layers and radiation penetration PYQ Relevance: Cosmic rays, atmospheric phenomena, and space radiation have appeared in Prelims (e.g., muons, aurora, magnetosphere) Discovery stories (Hess, balloon experiment) align with history of science questions Conclusion Galactic cosmic rays are a constant, invisible reminder that we are immersed in the cosmos. From Nobel-winning balloon experiments to pyramid-scanning muons, understanding these particles bridges fundamental physics with practical applications in archaeology, space exploration, and radiation science.   Source: https://indianexpress.com/article/technology/science/galactic-cosmic-rays-invisible-rain-that-never-stops-falling-10599077/ Global Corruption Index 2025: India’s Governance Stagnation Subject: Governance / Social Justice / Indian Economy Background: The Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) 2025 reveals a global decline in corruption perception, with the average score falling to 42. India’s stagnant score amidst its economic rise highlights a governance-performance paradox critical for policy analysis.   Key Facts What is CPI? An index ranking countries by perceived levels of public sector corruption, drawn from 13 independent data sources. Score ranges from 0 (highly corrupt) to 100 (very clean). Global Trends: Global Average: Dropped to 42/100 (first decline in over a decade). 122 of 182 countries scored below 50. Only 5 countries now score above 80 (down from 12 a decade ago). India’s Performance: Score: 39/100. Rank: 91 out of 182. Trend: Stagnated between 38-41 over the past decade (was 38 in 2014). Comparative Data: China: 42 Neighbors: Sri Lanka (close to India); Bangladesh & Pakistan (score lower). Context: Trails several upper-middle-income democracies and East Asian nations. Economic Cost of Corruption: Global estimate: Costs 5% of global GDP (~$2.6 trillion) annually. India estimate: Costs roughly 0.5% of GDP directly, with total losses (including indirect effects) estimated between 1%–1.5% of GDP. Compliance Burden: Indian entrepreneurs face 26,134 imprisonment provisions in business regulations. A pharma startup faces 998 compliances (49% with criminal liability). Positive Trends: Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI): DBT reduced leakages. RBI Digital Payments Index (DPI): Rose to 516.76 (Sept 2025) from 493.22 (March 2025). GST: Increased formalization and traceability.   Significance for UPSC Prelims This topic is vital for Prelims due to its intersection of Governance (Corruption), Economy (GDP loss, Ease of Doing Business), and International Relations (Global Rankings). It mirrors PYQ trends focusing on Transparency International, FRBM (fiscal impact), and Social Justice themes. The data on digital payments (RBI-DPI) and compliance burdens (criminalization of business laws) are static facts with dynamic current linkages. Conclusion India’s economic ascent contrasts with its governance stagnation reflected in the CPI. While digital infrastructure shows promise, sustained institutional reforms in transparency and regulatory simplification are imperative to align governance credibility with the nation’s developmental ambitions. Source: https://epaper.thehindu.com/ccidist-ws/th/th_delhi/issues/177231/OPS/GSUFOT154.1.png?cropFromPage=true (MAINS Focus) SC Status and Religious Conversion: Constitutional Interpretation vs. Social Reality UPSC Mains Subject: GS Paper II – Polity & Governance (Constitutional Provisions, Social Justice) | GS Paper I – Society Sub-topic: Structure of Constitutional Provisions; Mechanisms for Protection of Vulnerable Sections; Caste System   Introduction The Supreme Court ruled that conversion outside Hinduism, Buddhism, or Sikhism ends Scheduled Caste status, denying related protections. The judgment revives tensions between religious freedom, affirmative action, and caste discrimination beyond religion.   Constitutional & Legal Framework: The Origin of the Bar The exclusion of non-Hindus from SC status has a specific legal genealogy: Provision Key Feature Constitution (Scheduled Castes) Order, 1950 Originally listed SCs only among Hindus. Based on the understanding that caste is a feature of Hindu social structure. Article 341 Empowers the President to specify SCs. Parliament alone can modify the list. 1956 Amendment Added Sikhs to the SC list—recognized that caste discrimination persisted among Sikh converts. 1990 Amendment Added Buddhists—acknowledged that Dalit converts to Buddhism continued to face social ostracism. Clause 3 of the 1950 Order Mandates that “no person who professes a religion different from Hinduism shall be deemed to be a member of a Scheduled Caste.” The Court termed this bar “categorical and absolute.” The current judgment reaffirms that Christians and Muslims—despite evidence of caste-based discrimination within their communities—remain outside the SC net.   Key Judicial Findings & Rationale The Bench of Justices Mishra and Manmohan held: Immediate Loss of Status: Conversion results in automatic loss of SC status, regardless of birth. No exception is admitted. Theological Rationale: “Christianity, by its very theological foundation, does not recognise or incorporate the institution of caste.” The High Court’s view—that caste system is not recognized in Christianity—was affirmed. Re-conversion Requires Proof: A person reconverting to Hinduism, Sikhism, or Buddhism must cumulatively establish: (a) proof of original caste; (b) bona fide renunciation of the new religion; (c) acceptance and assimilation by the original caste community; and (d) adoption of customs, rituals, and practices of that caste. Scheduled Tribes: The judgment noted that the Constitution (Scheduled Tribes) Order, 1950, does not contain a similar religious bar, acknowledging the distinct social dynamics of tribal communities.   Significance & Implications Social Justice Dimension: Paradox of Discrimination: Caste-based discrimination is empirically documented among Indian Christians and Muslims. Denying SC status to converts ignores social reality—discrimination persists even after conversion. Atrocities Act Protection: The judgment bars Christian and Muslim Dalits from invoking the 1989 Act for protection against caste-based violence, creating a protection gap for vulnerable communities. Constitutional Tensions: Article 15(2) vs. Religious Bar: Article 15(2) prohibits discrimination on grounds of caste in public places. The judgment creates a situation where caste identity exists for discrimination but not for protection. Article 25 (Freedom of Religion): The ruling may have a chilling effect on religious choice, as converts risk losing affirmative action benefits and legal protection. Legislative vs. Judicial Role: The Court emphasized that modification of the SC list is Parliament’s exclusive domain under Article 341. Judicial restraint prevents the Court from expanding the list to include Christians or Muslims. The ball now lies in Parliament’s court to address the exclusion through constitutional amendment.   Challenges & Critique Dimension Issue Social Ignores empirical evidence of caste hierarchies within Christian and Muslim communities in India. Caste operates as a social reality, not merely a theological doctrine. Legal Creates a two-tier system: caste exists for oppression but not for protection or affirmative action. Ethical Poses a dilemma for Dalit converts—choose between religious freedom and constitutional protections. Implementation The stringent re-conversion proof requirement may be difficult to satisfy, especially for communities that converted generations ago.   Way Forward Legislative Intervention: Parliament must consider extending SC status to Dalit Christians and Dalit Muslims through constitutional amendment under Article 341, as recommended by the Ranganath Misra Commission (2007) and reiterated by the National Commission for Minorities. Evidence-Based Policy: Any amendment should be grounded in empirical data on caste discrimination within minority communities to withstand judicial scrutiny. Protection Gap: Pending legislative action, the Court could interpret the 1989 Act’s protections to apply to caste-based atrocities regardless of religious identity, distinguishing between affirmative action (linked to the 1950 Order) and criminal protection (linked to social reality). Balancing Approach: The state must reconcile competing constitutional goals—preserving affirmative action for historically disadvantaged groups while ensuring that religious freedom does not become a tool to perpetuate discrimination.   Conclusion The Supreme Court of India reaffirmed the bar on SC status for converts under the Constitution (Scheduled Castes) Order, 1950, highlighting a gap between law and social reality. While the Court stayed within interpretation, Parliament must decide whether caste-based benefits and protections should follow individuals across religions or remain tied to an outdated framework—shaping India’s commitment to social justice and religious freedom.   UPSC Mains Practice Question “The Supreme Court’s recent judgment on SC status for religious converts highlights the tension between constitutional text and social reality.” Critically examine the legal framework governing Scheduled Caste status for religious minorities. What are the implications of this judgment for social justice and religious freedom in India? (250 words, 15 marks)   Source: https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/supreme-court-concludes-only-hindus-sikhs-buddhists-can-claim-scheduled-caste-status/article70778524.ece The Gulf’s Enduring Predicament: Managing an Unstable Regional Order UPSC Mains Subject: GS Paper II – International Relations (Bilateral Relations, Regional Groupings) | GS Paper III – Security Sub-topic: India’s Foreign Policy; Regional Security Dynamics; Energy Security   Introduction The Gulf faces a structural imbalance, with Iran’s size and cohesion outweighing fragmented Arab states. Temporary de-escalations offer little stability. Enduring insecurity forces reliance on external powers, especially the US, leaving regional stability vulnerable to shifting priorities in Washington.   Historical Context: The Legacy of External Balancing Era Key Dynamics British Hegemony (19th–mid 20th century) Great Britain constrained Iranian ambition from the Indian Subcontinent, protecting weaker Gulf states while maintaining working relations with Tehran. 1971: Britain’s Withdrawal The decline of British power, withdrawal from east of Suez, and independence granted to Gulf kingdoms marked the demise of the old regional order. 1979: Islamic Revolution The monarchy’s fall intensified Iranian assertiveness, replacing Persian nationalism with Shia revolutionary ideology while retaining hegemonic ambitions. The Shah had already demonstrated Iran’s hegemonic instincts—seizing Abu Musa and the Tuns islands (1971), claiming Bahrain, deploying troops to Oman’s Dhofar, and building the region’s most powerful military. The Islamic Republic inherited and intensified this assertiveness, shifting from partnership with Washington to opposition against it. Structural Asymmetry: The Root of Insecurity Factor Iran Gulf Arabs (GCC) Population 90 million 27 million Political Structure Unified state Fragmented kingdoms Strategic Ambition Enduring hegemonic aspiration Defensive posture External Dependence Self-reliant Dependent on US security umbrella This asymmetry makes autonomous regional balance impossible. The GCC (est. 1981) was created to pool resources against Iran but has been hobbled by internal divisions—exemplified by the paradox of turning to Saddam Hussein’s Iraq to contain revolutionary Iran.   Failed Counterbalancing Strategies Strategy Outcome Iraq as Counterweight Eight years of Iran-Iraq War kept Iran at bay but at great cost; the same army invaded Kuwait in 1990, turning on its patrons. Direct US Military Presence American intervention expelled Iraq from Kuwait (1991) but replaced Iraqi protection with permanent US bases on Arabian Peninsula. Support for Radical Sunni Forces Backfired spectacularly on 9/11; blowback from supporting extremism against Shia threat. 2003 Iraq Invasion Fateful US decision to destroy Iraqi state handed Tehran geopolitical windfall—Shia allies now rule Baghdad; land route from Tehran to Beirut became physical reality. The cumulative effect: Iranian proxy forces now stretch across the region, and Gulf Arabs face an Iranian sphere of influence from the Zagros mountains to the Mediterranean.   Contemporary Dynamics: The Israel Rapprochement The rise of Iranian power has driven a quiet rapprochement between Israel and Gulf Arabs, adding a new strategic wrinkle. Shared threat perception has created unprecedented alignment, though it further complicates regional fault lines.   Competing Demands: An Irreconcilable Agenda US/Gulf/Israel Demands Iranian Demands Dismantle Iran’s missile and nuclear capabilities Right to develop nuclear and missile technologies Relinquish proxy forces; stop meddling in Arab affairs Guarantees against future US military action Internationalization of Strait of Hormuz Removal of US bases from Arab states   Compensation for wartime damages   Veto over governance of Hormuz The gulf between these positions underscores why a “complete and total resolution” remains unattainable.   India’s Stakes & Policy Implications Strategic Interests: Energy Security: Gulf supplies over 50% of India’s crude oil imports; Strait of Hormuz is a critical chokepoint Diaspora: Nearly 9 million Indians live in Gulf countries, a vital source of remittances Counterterrorism & Security: Stability in Gulf is essential for India’s western flank   Policy Challenges: India maintains traditional equidistance between Iran and GCC states Balancing ties with Iran (Chabahar port, connectivity to Central Asia) with deep economic and security partnership with GCC and the US Limited capacity to replace US as security guarantor—no other power (Russia, China, Europe) can fill this role   Way Forward for India: Strategic Autonomy: Continue balancing relationships without being drawn into regional rivalries Energy Diversification: Reduce dependence on Gulf through renewable expansion, strategic petroleum reserves, and diversified import sources Multilateral Engagement: Leverage platforms like I2U2 (India-Israel-UAE-US) and West Asia Quad to build diplomatic presence without military entanglement Crisis Preparedness: Strengthen contingency plans for evacuation of Indian nationals and energy supply disruptions   Conclusion: Management, Not Resolution The Gulf’s predicament is structural—Iran is too strong to be ignored but not strong enough to dominate; Gulf Arabs cannot balance without the US; no power can replace Washington. This cycle cannot be solved, only managed.  For India, the imperative is strategic patience, diversified interests, and a clear-eyed understanding of its own limitations in a region where it has vital stakes but limited leverage.   UPSC Mains Practice Question “The Gulf region’s geopolitical predicament is structural, not circumstantial—it cannot be solved, only managed.” Critically examine the roots of this enduring instability and analyze its implications for India’s energy security and foreign policy. (250 words, 15 marks) Source: https://epaper.indianexpress.com/4132651/Delhi/March-25-2026#page/12/1

DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 24th March 2026

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) World TB Day 2026: India’s End TB Quest and the Prelims Perspective Why in News? World TB Day is observed annually on March 24 to raise public awareness about the devastating health, social, and economic consequences of tuberculosis (TB) and to step up efforts to end the global TB epidemic.  For 2026, the focus remains on accelerating the momentum to meet the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 3.3 and the End TB Strategy targets, with a critical lens on post-pandemic recovery and the emergence of drug-resistant strains. UPSC Syllabus Coverage Subject: General Studies I (Social Issues – Health), General Studies II (Governance – Policies & Schemes), General Studies III (Science & Tech – Diseases) Micro-topic: Issues relating to Health; Government policies and interventions for development in health sector; Communicable Diseases.   Core Theme: From Elimination to Eradication The core theme revolves around shifting the strategy from merely controlling TB to eliminating it as a public health problem. India, which bears the highest global burden of TB, is leveraging its National Tuberculosis Elimination Programme (NTEP) (formerly RNTCP) to achieve the target of eliminating TB by 2025, five years ahead of the global SDG target of 2030.   Key Details & Facts Causative Agent: Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Initiatives: Ni-kshay Poshan Yojana: Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) for nutritional support to patients. Ni-kshay Mitra Initiative: Part of the Pradhan Mantri TB Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan, encouraging community/NGO/CSR support to adopt TB patients. TB Mukt Panchayat Initiative: Decentralizing the fight to the grassroots. Vaccine: BCG (Bacillus Calmette-Guérin). Reports: Global TB Report (WHO); India TB Report (MoHFW). Prelims Keywords Organizations: WHO, Stop TB Partnership, Central TB Division (CTD). Concepts: Drug-Resistant TB (MDR-TB, XDR-TB), NTEP, Nikshay Portal (case notification), Universal Drug Susceptibility Testing (UDST).   UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage) Static Link: Understanding the difference between Latent TB Infection (asymptomatic) and Active TB Disease; the socio-economic determinants of health (poverty, malnutrition) as primary drivers of the disease. Dynamic Link: The interplay of Ayushman Bharat – Health and Wellness Centres (HWCs) in decentralizing TB screening; the challenge of Co-morbidities (TB-Diabetes, TB-COVID-19); the critical role of vaccine development (looking beyond BCG) in achieving long-term goals. Possible Prelims Angle: MCQs on the year of target elimination (2025 vs 2030), matching schemes with their objectives (Ni-kshay Poshan vs Ni-kshay Mitra), the causative agent, and WHO’s ‘End TB Strategy’ pillars.   Source/Reference: https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/the-evolving-diagnostic-landscape-for-tuberculosis/article70776514.ece Delimitation Based on 2011 Census to Fast-Track Women’s Quota Why in News? The government proposes amending the delimitation framework to use 2011 Census data instead of the first Census after 2026, aiming to implement the Women’s Reservation Act, 2023 before the 2029 Lok Sabha elections. Lok Sabha seats may increase from 543 to 816, with 273 seats (33%) reserved for women. UPSC Syllabus: GS II – Parliament, Delimitation, Constitutional Amendments   Core Theme The move seeks to override the existing freeze on delimitation (based on 1971 Census, extended to 2026 by the 84th Amendment) to enable timely implementation of women’s quota. However, southern states fear losing representation due to their successful population control policies.   Key Facts Aspect Detail Constitutional Basis Article 82 (delimitation after Census); 84th Amendment (2001) froze seats until 2026 106th Amendment (2023) 33% reservation for women in Lok Sabha & Assemblies; implementation linked to delimitation Proposed Change Delimitation based on 2011 Census; expansion of Assemblies as well Major Concern Southern states (Tamil Nadu, Kerala, etc.) fear reduced representation vis-à-vis populous northern states   Prelims Keywords Amendments: 42nd, 84th, 87th, 106th (Women’s Reservation) Articles: 82, 330A, 332A Concept: Delimitation freeze, proportional representation   UPSC Angles Static: Delimitation process; difference between seat allocation and boundary redrawing; special majority amendment requiring state ratification if representation affected. Dynamic: Tension between population-based representation and federal equity; bypassing delayed 2021 Census; political consensus needed for 2/3rd majority.   Possible Prelims MCQ: The 106th Amendment’s implementation depends on – (a) next general election (b) Census & delimitation (c) state ratification (d) presidential notification.   Source: The Hindu  Rupee Depreciation Pressured by Geopolitics, Oil, and FII Outflows: A Prelims Perspective Why in News? The Indian rupee depreciated by 20 paise to 93.73 against the U.S. dollar in early trade on March 24, 2026, touching near-record lows. The decline was driven by a strengthening greenback, persistent foreign institutional investor (FII) outflows, and renewed volatility in global crude oil prices amid escalating geopolitical tensions involving the U.S. and Iran over the Strait of Hormuz. UPSC Syllabus Coverage Subject: General Studies III – Indian Economy Micro-topic: Indian Economy and issues relating to mobilization of resources; effects of global economic developments on India; Exchange rate management.   Core Theme: Triple Pressure on the Rupee The rupee is facing simultaneous headwinds from three critical variables: external sector vulnerability (high oil import dependence), capital account volatility (FII outflows), and global geopolitical uncertainty (West Asia tensions impacting supply routes). Despite intermittent intervention by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), the currency remains under pressure.   Key Details & Important Facts Factor Status/Impact Exchange Rate Opened at 93.66, slipped to 93.73 (down 20 paise) Record Low Touched 93.98 on previous day, with some trades above 94.00 Dollar Index Up 0.42% at 99.36 (greenback strengthening) Crude Oil (Brent) Trading at $103.9 per barrel (significant volatility) FII Outflows Net sellers of ₹10,414.23 crore on March 23, 2026 Domestic Equities Sensex up 1.14%, Nifty up 1.04% (cushioned losses) RBI Intervention Reportedly active around 93.95–93.98 levels   Geopolitical Context: Iran-U.S. Tensions U.S. President Trump announced five-day extension of deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Strait of Hormuz is a critical chokepoint through which approximately 20% of global oil supply passes. Iran’s denial of U.S. claims created uncertainty, initially pushing oil prices higher before partial correction.   Prelims Keywords Concepts: Rupee depreciation, FII outflows, dollar index, current account deficit (CAD), RBI intervention, managed float exchange rate system. Locations: Strait of Hormuz, Persian Gulf. Organizations: RBI, Finrex Treasury Advisors. UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static–Dynamic Linkages) Static Link Dynamic Link (Current Context) Mechanism of managed floating exchange rate system in India RBI’s intervention at 93.95–94.00 levels reflects active management to prevent excessive volatility Factors affecting exchange rate: import demand, capital flows, interest rate differentials High crude oil prices worsen Current Account Deficit (CAD); FII outflows reflect risk-off sentiment amid global uncertainty Strait of Hormuz – strategic importance in energy security Geopolitical premium in oil prices directly impacts India’s trade deficit and inflationary pressures Relationship between oil prices and rupee: negative correlation Every $10/barrel rise in oil prices increases CAD by approximately 0.4–0.5% of GDP   Possible Prelims Angles MCQ on exchange rate system: India follows (a) fixed (b) managed float (c) free float (d) currency board. MCQ on strategic chokepoints: Which strait is critical for global oil supply? (a) Malacca (b) Hormuz (c) Bab-el-Mandeb (d) Bering. MCQ on FIIs: FII outflows impact which component of Balance of Payments? (a) Current Account (b) Capital Account (c) Official Reserves Account (d) Trade Balance. MCQ on RBI intervention: RBI sells dollars in forex market to (a) depreciate rupee (b) appreciate rupee (c) stabilize inflation (d) increase money supply.   Source/Reference: https://www.thehindu.com/business/markets/rupee-falls-20-paise-to-9373-against-us-dollar-in-early-trade/article70778474.ece Superconductivity Breakthrough: Pressure Quenching Extends Temperature Record Why in News? Scientists have used a novel pressure-quenching protocol (PQP) to raise the ambient-pressure superconductivity temperature of a copper oxide (Hg1223) to -122°C, breaking a 33-year-old record. The study was published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. UPSC Syllabus: GS III – Science & Technology; Physics (basic concepts)   Core Theme Superconductors conduct electricity with zero resistance. Achieving this at room temperature and ambient pressure is a long-sought goal. The new technique preserves high-pressure superconducting states even after pressure is released, enabling practical applications.   Key Facts Aspect Detail Material Hg1223 (copper oxide / cuprate) Previous Record (1993) -140°C at ambient pressure New Achievement -122°C at ambient pressure (18°C higher) Technique Pressure-quenching protocol (PQP): compress → cool → rapidly release pressure Pressure Applied Up to 30 GPa (gigapascals); quenched from ~19 GPa Bulk Superconductivity ~78% of volume, not filamentary Stability Stable for 3 days in liquid nitrogen; partially reverses at room temperature Significance & Applications Lossless power transmission – eliminates energy waste in grids Efficient MRI machines, motors, maglev trains Cheaper renewable energy infrastructure Uses liquid nitrogen (cheaper coolant) instead of expensive liquid helium   Prelims Keywords Concepts: Zero resistance, Meissner effect, critical temperature (Tc), ambient pressure vs. high-pressure superconductivity Technique: Pressure quenching, diamond anvil cell Materials: Cuprates (Hg1223), YBCO (yttrium barium copper oxide) Institutions: University of Houston, Argonne National Laboratory   UPSC Angles Static: Difference between conductors, semiconductors, and superconductors; Meissner effect as hallmark of superconductivity; types of superconductors (Type I & II). Dynamic: India’s National Supercomputing Mission; applications in quantum computing and energy infrastructure; contrast with controversial LK-99 and Ranga Dias episodes (reproducibility crisis).   Possible Prelims MCQ: The Meissner effect is associated with – (a) photoelectric effect (b) superconductivity (c) thermionic emission (d) Compton effect.   Source: The Hindu  India-Iran Cultural Links: From Avestan and Sanskrit to Rumi and Sufism Why in News? Amid ongoing geopolitical tensions in West Asia, a reflection on the deep civilizational ties between India and Iran highlights centuries of shared linguistic, philosophical, and artistic heritage that transcend modern political boundaries. UPSC Syllabus: GS I – Indian Culture (salient aspects of Art Forms, Literature, and Architecture); GS I – History (ancient and medieval periods)   Core Theme India and Iran share a continuous cultural exchange dating back to prehistoric times, manifesting in common linguistic roots (Sanskrit and Avestan), shared philosophical concepts, and profound Persian influence on Indian medieval literature, music, architecture, and governance.   Key Historical & Cultural Links Period/Era Key Connections Prehistoric Migration along Persian coast; genetic mixing; shared agricultural origins Ancient (c. 1500 BCE) Indo-Iranian language family; Sanskrit & Avestan similarities (Asura/Ahura, rta/Asha, Gatha) Medieval Persian as lingua franca; Sufism & Bhakti movement synergy; Rumi’s influence Sultanates to 18th Century Persian administrative language; literary giants (Ferdowsi, Hafez); architectural and musical fusion   Linguistic & Philosophical Parallels Avestan (Iranian) Sanskrit (Indic) Meaning Ahura Asura Divine being / lord Asha Rta Cosmic order / truth Gatha Gatha Sung / recited verse Haptanghaiti Gatha-Saptashati Seven-stanza text   Persian Legacy in India Language: Persian was the lingua franca for centuries; loanwords include roj, sadak, darawaza, kagaz, sarkar. Literature: Raja Rammohan Roy’s first book was in Persian; British replaced Persian with English (1837). Music: Amir Khusrau (13th century) fused Persian and Indian traditions, shaping Hindustani classical music. Sufism: Rumi’s philosophy deeply influenced Bhakti literature and challenged social hierarchies.   Prelims Keywords Languages: Proto-Indo-European, Indo-Iranian, Avestan, Old Persian, Pahlavi, Sanskrit, Prakrits Texts: Avesta, Gathas, Vedas, Mahabharata, Gatha-Saptashati Personalities: Zoroaster, Al-Biruni, Rumi, Amir Khusrau, Ferdowsi, Tagore Concepts: Asha (truth), rta (cosmic order), Bhakti movement, Sufism   UPSC Angles Static: Indo-European language family tree; Zoroastrianism and its influence; Persian as court language under Delhi Sultanate and Mughals; difference between Avestan and modern Persian. Dynamic: Cultural diplomacy between India and Iran; India’s connectivity projects (Chabahar Port) and the civilizational underpinnings; contemporary relevance of shared heritage amid geopolitical shifts. Possible Prelims MCQ: The term ‘Gatha’ in Indian tradition refers to – (a) a form of classical dance (b) metrical verse (c) a temple architecture style (d) a philosophical school. Source: https://indianexpress.com/article/research/from-avestan-and-persian-to-rumi-and-sufism-the-many-links-between-india-and-iran-10593485/ (MAINS Focus) From ‘Jan Bhagidari’ to ‘TB-Mukt Bharat’: A Paradigm of Proactive Public Health Governance UPSC Mains Subject: GS Paper II – Social Justice (Health) | GS Paper I – Society Sub-topic: Government Policies & Interventions in Health; Issues Relating to Social Sector Development Introduction India’s commitment to eliminating Tuberculosis (TB) by 2025—five years ahead of the SDG target—represents a significant public health ambition. The recent 100-day ‘TB Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan’ and the documented 21% reduction in TB incidence (nearly double the global rate) signal a strategic shift.  This approach moves beyond passive clinical care to a proactive model combining scientific innovation, systemic integration, and ‘Jan Bhagidari’ (people’s participation), embodying the constitutional vision of health as a foundation for national development.   Background & Conceptual Shift: From Control to Elimination India’s TB strategy has evolved from the clinic-based Revised National TB Control Programme (RNTCP, 1997) to the current National TB Elimination Programme (NTEP, 2020). The paradigm now rests on three pillars: Science & Technology: AI-enabled handheld X-ray units and molecular testing deployed via mobile ‘Nishkaya Vahans’ enable proactive screening in high-risk communities. Systems Integration: Collaboration with 25 central ministries and Panchayati Raj Institutions mainstreams TB elimination into broader development planning. Jan Bhagidari: Recovered patients as ‘TB Vjetas’ and over 2 lakh ‘My Bharat’ volunteers provide psychosocial support, addressing stigma and ensuring treatment adherence.   Significance & Rationale Economic: TB affects the productive age group (15-54 years). The WHO estimates India loses billions annually due to TB-related morbidity. Reduction is critical for human capital development. Social Justice: TB disproportionately impacts marginalized groups—migrant workers, urban poor, tribal communities. Proactive screening of asymptomatic vulnerable populations targets health inequities, aligning with Article 21 (right to life) and distributive justice. Governance Model: The strategy exemplifies Cooperative Federalism and Collaborative Governance, demonstrating how a health goal can strengthen the primary healthcare ecosystem.   Key Challenges & Critical Analysis Dimension Challenges Social Stigma remains a barrier. TB is driven by malnutrition and overcrowding; success depends on convergence with schemes like POSHAN Abhiyaan and housing missions. Administrative Rapid urbanization creates challenges—transient migrants, unregulated private sector. Differentiated urban health strategies are needed. Systemic Private sector data integration into the Nikshay platform remains incomplete. Drug-resistant TB (DR-TB) requires sustained focus beyond diagnosis.   Strengths of the Current Approach: Evidence-based adaptation: The National TB Prevalence Survey revealed half of patients are asymptomatic, prompting the shift to proactive screening—a landmark policy pivot. ‘Made in India’ focus: Indigenous diagnostics and drugs ensure supply chain resilience and align with ‘Atmanirbhar Bharat’. Community ownership: Leveraging youth and recovered patients builds sustainable social capital, addressing workforce limitations.   Way Forward: Institutionalizing the Momentum Strengthen Private Sector Interface: Mandate TB notification in private healthcare. Use the Nikshay platform for unified, real-time patient tracking to ensure complete surveillance. Address Social Determinants: Converge TB efforts with PM-GKAY (food security) and PM-JAY (health insurance) to create holistic support, as recommended by NITI Aayog’s health action plan. Institutionalize Volunteer Framework: Integrate TB Vjetas and My Bharat volunteers into the public health system with honorariums and clear roles, transitioning from a campaign to a sustained framework. Ethical Safeguards: Ensure AI-driven screening adheres to data privacy protocols, maintaining patient dignity without coercive practices. Conclusion India’s TB elimination journey demonstrates that public health goals are achievable through a fusion of political will, scientific innovation, and community participation.  By institutionalizing Jan Bhagidari and addressing underlying social determinants, the ‘TB-Mukt Bharat’ campaign can leave a lasting legacy—not merely the elimination of a disease, but the creation of a more resilient, equitable, and community-owned health system aligned with India’s constitutional ideals.   UPSC Mains Practice Question “India’s strategy to eliminate Tuberculosis marks a paradigm shift from a clinical approach to a community-led, technology-enabled model.” Critically examine this statement. What are the key challenges in sustaining this momentum, and how can a whole-of-society approach be effectively institutionalized? (250 words, 15 marks)   Source: https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/science-and-the-power-of-jan-bhagidari-can-lead-to-a-tb-free-india-10597338/?ref=top_opinion Economic Slowdown & Structural Fragility: A Reality Check on India’s Growth Fundamentals UPSC Mains Subject: GS Paper III – Indian Economy (Mobilization of Resources, Growth, Employment) Sub-topic: Growth & Development; Industrial Policy; Energy Security Introduction Recent economic data presents a discomfiting picture, challenging the narrative of robust macroeconomic resilience. The Index of Eight Core Industries hit a three-month low in February 2026, with crude oil contracting for six consecutive months and natural gas for twenty.  Simultaneously, revised GDP data reveals a smaller economy with shrinking contributions from private consumption, capital formation, and trade. This confluence—domestic structural weakness compounded by external shocks like the West Asian conflict—necessitates a realistic reassessment of India’s economic fundamentals and policy preparedness.   Background & Diagnostic Reality: Core Sector Distress The core industries (weight: 40.27% in IIP) are leading indicators of industrial health. Recent trends reveal deep structural issues: Indicator Trend Implication Crude Oil Contracted 6 months; 20 of last 24 months Domestic production stagnation; rising import dependence Natural Gas Contracted 20 consecutive months Affects fertilizer, power, and industrial sectors Core Index 3-month low (Feb 2026), growth halved from January Broad-based industrial slowdown beyond base effects The revised GDP series further compounds concerns: Shrinking Economy: The economy is smaller than previously estimated Falling Demand: Share of private consumption, capital formation, and exports in GDP has declined Inventory Glut: Share of ‘change in stocks’ nearly doubled—production without commensurate sales signals subdued demand, presaging future output cuts   Significance & Policy Critique: Energy Security & Strategic Blindness Energy Import Dependence: India imports over 85% of its crude oil and 50% of natural gas. The West Asian conflict—predictable since mid-2025—exposed strategic unpreparedness. Missed Opportunity: Domestic production contracted partly due to cheap imports. Instead of building reserves during the window of stability, policy complacency prevailed. The belated push for domestic production now comes amid $100+/barrel oil and supply curtailments. LPG Security Gap: The Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (2016) expanded LPG access but was not accompanied by a parallel strategy to secure long-term supplies and strategic reserves. This represents a classic case of policy asymmetry—success in demand-side expansion without commensurate supply-side resilience.   Economic Implications: Current Account Deficit (CAD): Elevated oil prices worsen CAD, exerting pressure on the rupee Fiscal Space: Fuel subsidies, if reintroduced, constrain fiscal headroom for capital expenditure Inflation: Pass-through of higher energy costs fuels imported inflation, disproportionately impacting the poor   Challenges: Structural & Cyclical Converge Structural Bottlenecks: Stagnant domestic hydrocarbon production reflects policy, regulatory, and investment challenges in exploration and licensing (e.g., under the Hydrocarbon Exploration and Licensing Policy). Demand-Side Weakness: Declining share of private consumption and investment signals a deeper demand recession. High inventory accumulation indicates that supply-side capacity is not matched by purchasing power. Global Uncertainty: Trade disruptions, elevated oil prices, and rating agency downgrades (growth outlook ~6.5%) compound domestic fragilities.   Critical Analysis: Reassessing ‘Resilience’ The narrative of strong macroeconomic fundamentals requires nuanced scrutiny: Strengths Acknowledged: India’s foreign exchange reserves, formal sector digitization, and infrastructure push provide some cushion. Weaknesses Exposed: Over-reliance on imported energy without adequate strategic reserves, fiscal rigidity, and subdued private investment reveal vulnerabilities. The Economic Survey’s emphasis on caution against global spillovers stands validated, yet policy action on domestic production has been reactive rather than proactive.   Way Forward: Towards Realistic Reassessment Energy Security 2.0: Move beyond import dependence narratives. Operationalize strategic petroleum reserves (SPR) more aggressively. Diversify import sources beyond West Asia (e.g., Russia, South America). Revitalize domestic exploration through production-linked incentives and streamlined clearances. Supply-Demand Symmetry: Link demand-side schemes (like Ujjwala) with supply-side security audits. Establish a National Energy Security Council to anticipate geopolitical risks and coordinate production, imports, and reserves. Reviving Demand: The ‘change in stocks’ phenomenon signals weak consumption. Policy must prioritize rural demand recovery (via MGNREGS, direct benefit transfers) and private investment (via credit flow, regulatory stability) to align production with consumption. Fiscal Prudence: Maintain fiscal discipline while allowing automatic stabilizers to operate. Targeted subsidies, rather than broad-based ones, can cushion vulnerable populations without derailing consolidation.   Conclusion India’s economic fundamentals demand a realistic reassessment beyond celebratory narratives. The convergence of core sector contraction, downward GDP revisions, and external shocks reveals structural fragilities masked by short-term resilience. Strengthening energy security, reviving domestic demand, and institutionalizing strategic foresight are imperative.  A pragmatic recalibration—not mere optimism—will determine whether India navigates this turbulence to achieve its long-term growth aspirations.   UPSC Mains Practice Question “The recent slowdown in core industries and downward revision of GDP data expose structural fragilities in India’s growth model.” Critically examine the interlinkages between energy security, domestic demand, and macroeconomic stability in this context. Suggest a policy framework for building genuine economic resilience. (250 words, 15 marks)   Source: https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/editorial/grim-future-on-the-economy-discomfiting-data/article70775757.ece

DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 23rd March 2026

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Agri-Photovoltaics (AgriPV): Dual-Use Solar for India’s Farm Subject: Economy, Environment & Ecology, Science & Technology Micro-Topics: Government Schemes (PM-KUSUM), Renewable Energy, Land Use, Agriculture, Climate Change Mitigation News Context / Background: The article discusses Agri-Photovoltaics (AgriPV) as a solution to India’s competing land demands for solar energy and agriculture.  With the 2026-27 Budget nearly doubling the outlay for PM-KUSUM to ₹5,000 crore, the government is emphasizing solar expansion centred on farmers. AgriPV is emerging as a scalable model to integrate solar power generation with farming on the same land. Core Theme: AgriPV offers a dual-use land model that addresses India’s energy transition goals without compromising food security. It enables farmers to generate solar power while continuing agriculture, enhancing income, water efficiency, and rural livelihoods. The technology is being piloted across India, with policy momentum building under PM-KUSUM. Key Details and Facts: Definition: AgriPV integrates solar panels with crop cultivation on the same land. Panels are elevated or spaced to allow farming operations below. Design Types: Elevated systems, row-based systems, vertical systems (bifacial panels), and greenhouse-integrated systems. Crop Selection: Shade-tolerant crops (tomato, onion, turmeric, ginger, leafy vegetables) perform well under panels; sun-loving crops (ragi, jowar, grapes) grow in between rows. Benefits: Reduces evapotranspiration (water conservation), protects crops from extreme weather, lowers diesel dependence, powers cold storage, and provides additional income via electricity sale. Relevant Keywords for Prelims: Scheme: PM-KUSUM (Pradhan Mantri Kisan Urja Suraksha evam Utthaan Mahabhiyan) Concepts: Agri-Photovoltaics (AgriPV), Net-Zero Emissions (2070), Solar Capacity Target (300 GW by 2030), Viability Gap Funding (VGF)   UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage): Static Linkage: Basics of solar energy types (grid-connected, off-grid), agro-climatic zones of India, and crop physiology (C3/C4 plants, shade tolerance). Dynamic Linkage: PM-KUSUM scheme objectives and recent budgetary allocation; India’s renewable energy targets under Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs); land-use conflict between renewable energy and agriculture; potential inclusion under a proposed National Agri-photovoltaics Mission. Prelims Angle: Questions may test scheme-specific facts (PM-KUSUM components), correct pairing of crops with agriPV suitability, understanding of technical designs, and environmental co-benefits like reduced evapotranspiration.   Source / Reference Link: The Hindu Minor Planet Centre (MPC): Guardian of Solar System Objects Subject: Science & Technology, Geography Micro-Topics: Space Technology, Solar System, International Institutions, Near-Earth Objects (NEOs), Planetary Defense News Context / Background: The Minor Planet Centre (MPC) recently announced the discovery of 15 new moons—four around Jupiter and eleven around Saturn. This news highlights the MPC’s crucial role as the world’s central repository for data on small bodies in the solar system, including asteroids, comets, and outer planet moons. Core Theme: The MPC serves as the global clearinghouse for data on minor planets and small solar system bodies. Its verification and tracking functions are essential for maintaining accurate celestial catalogs, enabling planetary defense against NEOs, and facilitating international scientific collaboration on discoveries like new moons around Jupiter and Saturn.   Key Details and Important Facts: New Discoveries: Four new Jovian moons (discovered by Scott Sheppard & David Tholen, US); eleven new Saturnian moons (team led by Edward Ashton, Taiwan). MPC Location & Parent Body: Located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA; operates at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory under the International Astronomical Union (IAU). Primary Functions: Receives and verifies discovery data; calculates orbits; assigns official designations. Monitors Near-Earth Objects (NEOs) for potential planetary threats. Publishes electronic circulars to coordinate global astronomical observations. Support: Works with NASA’s Planetary Defense Coordination Office to maintain NEO databases. Relevant Keywords for Prelims: Institution: Minor Planet Centre (MPC), International Astronomical Union (IAU), Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, NASA Planetary Defense Coordination Office Concepts: Near-Earth Objects (NEOs), Small Bodies (asteroids, comets), Outer Planets (Jupiter, Saturn), Moons (natural satellites)   UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage): Static Linkage: Basics of the solar system—gas giants (Jupiter, Saturn) and their satellite systems; classification of celestial bodies (planet, dwarf planet, asteroid, comet); difference between NEOs and Potentially Hazardous Objects (PHOs). Dynamic Linkage: India’s participation in global astronomical collaborations; relevance of NEO monitoring for space security; India’s own planetary defense capabilities and missions like Aditya-L1 (solar observation) and future asteroid missions. Prelims Angle: Questions may test the parent organization of MPC (IAU), its location, its specific functions (orbit calculation vs. naming), or factual recall of new moon discoveries. Understanding the role of NASA’s Planetary Defense Coordination Office in conjunction with MPC is also relevant.   Source / Reference Link: The Hindu  US Trade Act of 1974: Section 301, Section 122, and WTO Implications Subject: International Relations, Economy Micro-Topics: WTO Dispute Settlement Mechanism, International Trade Agreements, US-India Trade Relations, Unilateral Trade Measures News Context / Background: Following a US Supreme Court ruling against President Trump’s reciprocal tariffs, the US administration invoked Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 to impose a 10% temporary surcharge on imports (Feb 24–July 24, 2026), citing a balance of payment (BOP) crisis—a claim challenged by 24 US states.  Additionally, Section 301 proceedings were initiated against multiple countries, including India, alleging structural excess capacity and forced labor issues.   Core Theme: The article highlights the erosion of multilateral trade rules as the US employs unilateral trade measures under its domestic laws (Sections 122 and 301) despite WTO obligations. It underscores the systemic challenge posed to the WTO’s dispute resolution mechanism, the vulnerability of developing countries like India, and the need for coalition-building to uphold rules-based international trade. Key Details and Facts: Section 122: Allows temporary import surcharges (up to 15% for 150 days) during a BOP crisis; currently challenged for lack of legal basis. Section 301: Authorizes US Trade Representative to investigate and impose unilateral tariffs on countries with practices deemed unjustifiable or discriminatory against US commerce. WTO Context: A 1999 WTO panel ruled that Section 301’s unilateral nature was problematic but deferred based on US assurance of WTO conformity. The US later blocked the WTO Appellate Body, rendering dispute settlement non-functional. 2020 WTO Ruling: A panel held that 2017 US Section 301 tariffs on China violated WTO commitments; US appealed to a non-existent Appellate Body. Relevant Keywords for Prelims: Acts/Laws: US Trade Act of 1974 (Section 122, Section 301) Institutions: WTO, WTO Appellate Body, US Court of International Trade, Congressional Research Service (CRS) Concepts: Balance of Payment (BOP) crisis, Unilateral tariffs, Dispute Settlement Mechanism (DSM), Reciprocal trade agreements   UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage): Static Linkage: WTO structure—Dispute Settlement Body (DSB), Appellate Body; principles of non-discrimination (MFN, National Treatment); GATT Article XII (BOP exceptions); distinction between tariffs and non-tariff barriers. Dynamic Linkage: India’s current trade negotiations with the US; implications for Indian exports (steel, pharmaceuticals, textiles) under Section 301 proceedings; relevance for India’s stance on WTO reform; the Appellate Body crisis as a recurring Prelims theme. Prelims Angle: Questions may test understanding of Section 301 vs. Section 122, the role of WTO panels, the significance of the Appellate Body deadlock, and India’s participation in trade disputes. Factual recall of key WTO rulings involving the US is also relevant.   Source / Reference Link: The Hindu NSEIX Global Access: Gateway to US Stocks via GIFT City Subject: Economy Micro-Topics: Capital Markets, IFSC (GIFT City), Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS) News Context: NSEIX Global Access platform enables Indian residents to directly buy US stocks (NYSE, Nasdaq) with digital onboarding, operating from GIFT City under IFSCA regulation.   Core Theme: NSEIX-GA represents a major financial innovation enabling seamless retail participation in global equities. By leveraging GIFT City’s IFSC framework, it offers regulatory clarity, digital onboarding, fractional investing, and simplified tax treatment. The platform aligns with India’s vision of positioning GIFT City as a global financial hub while democratizing access to international investment opportunities. Key Facts: Regulator: International Financial Services Centres Authority (IFSCA) – unified regulator for GIFT City. Features: Fractional investing; T+1 settlement; no separate demand account; Digilocker-based KYC. Taxation: Capital gains taxable in India (India-US treaty); 25% US withholding tax on dividends (claimable as credit). LRS Limit: $2.50 lakh/financial year; TCS exemption up to ₹10 lakh. Relevant Keywords: NSEIX, IFSCA, GIFT City, Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS), Fractional investing, T+1 settlement, India-US Tax Treaty. Static-Dynamic Linkage: Static: GIFT City as India’s first IFSC; IFSCA (2019); LRS limits; TCS provisions. Dynamic: India’s push for GIFT City as global financial hub; retail investor access to international markets. Prelims Angles: Facts about IFSCA (parent act, year), GIFT City location (Gandhinagar), LRS limit, TCS threshold, and regulatory distinction between IFSCA and SEBI. Source: The Hindu Shaheed Diwas (Martyr’s Day): Remembering Bhagat Singh, Rajguru, and Sukhdev Subject: Modern Indian History, Indian National Movement Micro-Topic: The Revolutionary Movement; Key Personalities and their Ideologies; Important Dates and Events.   Background: On March 23, 2026, the Prime Minister of India paid tributes to freedom fighters Bhagat Singh, Shivaram Rajguru, and Sukhdev Thapar on the occasion of Shaheed Diwas (Martyr’s Day). This day commemorates their execution by the British colonial government in 1931.  Key Details and Facts: Bhagat Singh, Rajguru, and Sukhdev were hanged on March 23, 1931, in Lahore Central Jail for their involvement in the Lahore Conspiracy Case, specifically for the assassination of British police officer J.P. Saunders to avenge the death of Lala Lajpat Rai. The Objective: Their actions were aimed at galvanizing the revolutionary movement against colonial rule, seeking complete independence. Ideological Stance: They were associated with the Hindustan Socialist Republican Association (HSRA) and were influenced by socialist and anarchist ideas, contrasting with the Gandhian philosophy of non-violence. Relevant for Prelims: Organizations: Hindustan Socialist Republican Association (HSRA), Naujawan Bharat Sabha Concepts: Revolutionary Nationalism, Lahore Conspiracy Case, Central Assembly Hall Bombing (1929) Key Figures: Lala Lajpat Rai, Chandrashekhar Azad, Jatin Das (who died during a hunger strike) Locations: Lahore, Ferozepur (Bhagat Singh’s birthplace) UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage): Static: Lahore Conspiracy Case (1931) – J.P. Saunders assassination. HSRA, Naujawan Bharat Sabha. Revolutionary ideology vs. Gandhian non-violence. Dynamic: HSRA’s shift to socialism. Possible Prelims Angles for MCQs: With reference to the revolutionary activities in the 1920s-30s, consider the following pairs (freedom fighter – associated organization). Which is correctly matched? The Lahore Conspiracy Case is directly associated with the assassination of which British police officer, which was in retaliation for the death of Lala Lajpat Rai? On which date is Shaheed Diwas observed to commemorate the martyrdom of Bhagat Singh, Rajguru, and Sukhdev? Source / Reference Link: PIB (MAINS Focus) Digital Exile: The Tension Between IT Act Safeguards and Executive Overreach Subject: GS Paper II – Polity & Governance Sub-topic: Fundamental Rights (Article 19); Government Policies & Interventions   Introduction The recent blocking of activist and journalist accounts marks a peak in India’s digital censorship trend (URL blocks rose from 470 in 2014 to 9,800 in 2021). While Shreya Singhal (2015) upheld Section 69A of the IT Act due to its procedural safeguards, the government’s expansive use of confidentiality clauses and mass account suspensions—termed “digital exile”—raises concerns about the erosion of free speech under Article 19(1)(a). Background & Constitutional Framework Article 19(1)(a): Guarantees free speech, subject to reasonable restrictions under Article 19(2) (sovereignty, security, public order). IT Act, 2000 (Section 69A): Allows blocking of information for public interest, requiring reasoned orders and judicial review. IT (Blocking) Rules, 2009: Rule 16: Mandates confidentiality of proceedings. Review Committee: Composed entirely of executive members, it has never overturned a blocking order. Key Issues & Challenges Dilution of Safeguards: The government uses Rule 16 to withhold blocking orders from affected parties, denying the right to be heard (audi alteram partem) and undermining judicial review. Disproportionate Action: Blocking entire accounts (digital exile) rather than specific URLs violates the doctrine of proportionality, effectively removing citizens from the digital public square. Expansive Interpretation: The 2023 blocking of the BBC documentary expanded “public order” beyond the narrow definition set in Ram Manohar Lohia (1966). Judicial Setback: The Karnataka High Court’s dismissal of Twitter’s plea and imposition of a fine emboldened unilateral state action. Proposed Decentralization: Plans to empower multiple ministries for blocking could create arbitrary censorship without specialized oversight. Critical Analysis Weaknesses: The executive-dominated review committee lacks independence; confidentiality clauses are misused as a shield against accountability; mass censorship during the 2020-21 farmers’ protest revealed a pattern of reactive governance. Strengths (Counter-view): The government cites sovereign authority and the need for swift action against hate speech or threats to territorial integrity. Way Forward Independent Review: Reform the review committee to include judicial or civil society members, ensuring genuine checks. Proportionality Guidelines: Codify a graded response—URL takedown, temporary suspension, then account blocking—ensuring the least restrictive measure. Judicial Oversight: Limit Rule 16’s confidentiality to exceptional cases of immediate sovereignty threats, not routine use. Legislative Clarity: Align the definition of “public order” with judicial precedents to curb executive discretion. Conclusion Balancing national security with constitutional freedoms requires more than procedural formalities. Without independent oversight and strict adherence to proportionality, digital governance risks sliding into arbitrary censorship. Restoring safeguards is essential to uphold the liberal democratic ethos of free speech.   UPSC Mains Practice Question Examine the tension between the procedural safeguards under Section 69A of the IT Act, 2000, and the recent practice of digital censorship in India. Suggest reforms to ensure that restrictions on free speech remain reasonable and proportionate. (150 words, 10 marks)   Source: https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/editorial/digital-exile-on-digital-censorship/article70772588.ece Double Engine’ vs. Constitutional Spirit: Safeguarding Cooperative Federalism Subject: GS Paper II – Polity & Governance Sub-topic: Federal Structure; Centre-State Relations; Role of Governors and Finance Commission   Introduction The “double-engine sarkar” slogan, while seemingly a harmless metaphor for Centre-State coordination, carries a deeper constitutional implication: that development flows preferentially to States aligned with the ruling party at the Centre.  This notion challenges India’s federal compact, which envisions States as equal partners, not beneficiaries of political goodwill. Constitutional Foundation of Fiscal Federalism Article 280 (Finance Commission): Provides for rule-based fiscal transfers based on objective criteria (income gap, population, fiscal capacity), insulating States from political discrimination. Divisible Pool: Union taxes are shared with all States; however, the increasing reliance on cesses and surcharges (outside the divisible pool) has reduced States’ share, weakening their fiscal autonomy. Southern States’ Grievance: Use of recent population data in allocation formulas penalizes States that successfully controlled population growth, raising concerns about horizontal equity. Federal Friction Beyond Finance Gubernatorial Delays: Prolonged withholding of assent to Bills in opposition-ruled States (Tamil Nadu, Kerala) undermines legislative sovereignty. SC Rulings: In State of Punjab vs Principal Secretary (2023) and State of Tamil Nadu vs Governor (2025), the Court held that gubernatorial inaction is constitutionally impermissible. Delhi Impasse: Persistent disputes between the elected government and the Lieutenant-Governor illustrated how federal machinery can be weaponized against political opponents. Critical Analysis: Erosion of Federal Spirit Pattern: Fiscal centralization, selective gubernatorial delays, and legislative obstructions collectively form a pattern where governance becomes contingent on political alignment—a subtle erosion of federalism, distinct from the overt misuse of Article 356 curbed in S.R. Bommai (1994). Structural Weakness: The Finance Commission’s recommendations are advisory; the Union’s discretion over cesses and the absence of binding timelines for Governors create avenues for executive overreach. Way Forward: Institutional Reforms Fiscal: Make Finance Commission recommendations binding; bring cesses and surcharges into the divisible pool to restore States’ fiscal autonomy. Gubernatorial: Prescribe a fixed statutory timeline (e.g., 3 months) for assent to Bills, failing which assent would be deemed granted. Cooperative Forums: Revitalize the Inter-State Council (Article 263) as a genuine deliberative body, not a ceremonial one. Judicial Vigilance: Continue the trend set in S.R. Bommai and recent gubernatorial cases to protect States from political retaliation. Conclusion The “double-engine” metaphor, when operationalized as political conditionality, corrodes the constitutional promise of equal citizenship. India’s federal democracy must be powered by rules and institutions that ensure fairness, not by political alignment. Upholding this balance is essential for the spirit of cooperative federalism.   UPSC Mains Practice Question “The ‘double-engine sarkar’ slogan, while politically appealing, masks a deeper constitutional dilemma.” Critically examine this statement in the context of recent trends in fiscal federalism and gubernatorial conduct in India. Suggest institutional reforms to strengthen cooperative federalism. (150 words, 10 marks)   Source: https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/double-engine-cute-slogan-a-serious-federal-question/article70773045.ece

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2026 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 20th March 2026

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

DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 20th March 2026

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Bharat Audyogik Vikas Yojna Category: Government Schemes Context: Recently, the union Cabinet has approved the Bharat Audyogik Vikas Yojna (BHAVYA). About Bharat Audyogik Vikas Yojna (BHAVYA): Nodal Ministry: It is governed by the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT) under the Ministry of Commerce and Industry. Implementation Agency: The National Industrial Corridor Development Corporation (NICDC) anchors the scheme under the broader National Industrial Corridor Development Programme (NICDP). Total Outlay: The Union Cabinet has allocated Rs. 33,660 crores for the scheme’s execution. Target: The primary goal is to establish 100 plug-and-play industrial parks across all States and Union Territories. Primary Goal: It aims to accelerate the transition of industries from “intent to production” by removing entry barriers like land acquisition and procedural delays Financial Support: The Centre provides up to ₹1 crore per acre for core, value-added, and social infrastructure. External Connectivity: Up to 25% of the project cost is provided for external infrastructure like highway, rail, and port connectivity. Park Scale: Industrial parks will range from 100 to 1,000 acres in size. Infrastructure Scope: Core: Internal roads, drainage, underground utilities, and ICT systems. Value-Added: Ready-built factory sheds, testing labs, and warehousing. Social: Worker housing and essential support amenities. “No-Dig” Environment: It features integrated underground utility corridors to ensure uninterrupted operations and future-ready sustainability. Challenge Mode Selection: Projects are selected through a competitive “Challenge Mode” to incentivize state-level reforms and investment readiness. PM Gati Shakti Alignment: The parks are integrated with the PM GatiShakti National Master Plan for seamless multimodal logistics. Partnership Model: The scheme is implemented through collaboration between the Centre, States, and the private sector. Geographic Flexibility: While the standard minimum size is 100 acres, it is reduced to 25 acres for North-eastern and hilly regions. Ease of Doing Business: It employs single-window clearance systems and pre-approved land to streamline industrial setup. Source: PIB Stockholm Water Prize Category: Miscellaneous Context: Recently, Kaveh Madani has been named the 2026 recipient of the Stockholm Water Prize. About Stockholm Water Prize: Establishment: The prize was established in 1991 by the Stockholm Water Foundation. Other names: It is widely regarded as the “Nobel Prize of Water”. Objective: It honours individuals and organizations for extraordinary water-related achievements that contribute to the conservation and protection of water resources. Organizing Body: It is awarded by the Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI) in cooperation with the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. Award Ceremony: The announcement occurs on World Water Day (March 22), and the ceremony is held during World Water Week in Stockholm every August. Prize Value: Laureates receive a cash award of SEK 1 million and a specially designed Orrefors crystal sculpture. Scope: Recognition spans multiple disciplines, including science, engineering, policy, and environmental advocacy. Recent winners: 2026: Kaveh Madani (Iran), recognized for linking water science with policy and diplomacy. He is the youngest recipient (age 44) and the first UN official to be honoured. 2025: Gunter Bloschl (Austria), for his pioneering research on flood risks and climate change impacts. 2024: Taikan Oki (Japan), for contributions to studying global water balance and virtual water flows. Indian winners: Rajendra Singh (2015): Known as the “Waterman of India,” he was honored for reviving traditional rainwater harvesting techniques (Johads) in Rajasthan through his NGO, Tarun Bharat Sangh. Dr. Bindeshwar Pathak (2009): Founder of Sulabh International, recognized for his massive impact on sanitation and human rights. Centre for Science and Environment (2005): The New Delhi-based NGO (led by Sunita Narain) was awarded for community-based sustainable resource management. Madhav Atmaram Chitale (1993): Honoured for his work in water conservation and public education programs. Source: Down To Earth Autonomous District Council Category: Polity and Governance Context: Recently, the Meghalaya State Government has extended the term of the Garo Hills Autonomous District Council (GHADC) for a period of six months. About Autonomous District Council: Constitutional Basis: ADCs are established under Article 244(2) and Article 275(1) of the Indian Constitution. State Coverage: They are operational in four states: Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, and Mizoram. Members: Each ADC typically consists of 30 members. 26 members are directly elected on the basis of adult franchise. 4 members are nominated by the Governor. Tenure: Elected members serve a term of five years, while nominated members hold office at the Governor’s pleasure. Bodoland Exception: The Bodoland Territorial Council (BTC) in Assam is an exception, with 46 members (40 elected, 6 nominated). Legislative Power: ADCs can make laws on specific subjects like land management, management of non-reserved forests, water channels, agriculture, village councils, and social customs (marriage, divorce, inheritance). Governor’s Assent: All laws made by the ADCs require the assent of the Governor to become effective. Judicial Authority: They can constitute Village Councils or Courts to trial suits and cases between tribal parties. They cannot, however, decide cases involving offences punishable by death or imprisonment for 5+ years. Executive Control: ADCs manage local services such as primary schools, dispensaries, markets, ferries, fisheries, and roads. Financial Autonomy: They have the power to levy taxes, fees, and tolls on land, buildings, professions, and vehicles, and receive grants-in-aid from the Consolidated Fund of India. Boundary Management: The Governor has the power to organize or reorganize autonomous districts—including increasing, decreasing, or defining their boundaries and changing their names. Autonomous Regions: If there are different tribes in one autonomous district, the Governor can divide the district into several autonomous regions. Application of Rules: Acts of Parliament or State Legislatures do not automatically apply to these areas. The Governor (for Assam) or the President (for others) can specify if and how such laws apply. Total Councils: There are currently 10 ADCs in the Northeast (3 in Assam, 3 in Meghalaya, 3 in Mizoram, and 1 in Tripura). Difference with Fifth Schedule: Unlike the Fifth Schedule (where the Union has more executive authority), the Sixth Schedule provides significantly greater legislative and judicial autonomy to the tribal areas. Source: News on AIR Indian Wolf Category: Environment and Ecology Context: Recently, an Indian wolf named Geeta at Pilikula Biological Park gave birth to seven pups. About Indian Wolf: Taxonomy: The Indian Wolf (Canis lupus pallipes), often referred to as the Peninsular Wolf, is a genetically distinct lineage of the grey wolf. Genetically Basal: Within the grey wolf family, the Indian plains wolf is considered genetically basal to almost all other extant grey wolves, except for the even older Himalayan wolf. Size: It is smaller and leaner than the European or Himalayan wolf, representing an adaptation to hot, arid landscapes. Coat Adaptation: Unlike its northern counterparts, it lacks a thick undercoat and possesses shorter fur, which helps it survive high temperatures. Pack Dynamics: They live in relatively small packs, typically consisting of 6–8 individuals. Vocalisation: They are known to be less vocal and rarely howl compared to other grey wolf subspecies. Nocturnal Hunter: They are primarily nocturnal, hunting from dusk to dawn to avoid daytime heat. Ecological Niche: They are the apex predators of grasslands, scrublands, and semi-arid agro-ecosystems, which are often misclassified as “wastelands” in policy. Core Range: They are found across multiple Indian states, with major populations concentrated in Rajasthan, Gujarat, Maharashtra, and Karnataka. Outside Protected Areas: Notably, nearly 87% of their range lies outside the protected area network, forcing them to coexist in human-dominated landscapes. Legal Protection: Thery are listed under Schedule I of the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972, granting it the highest level of legal protection in India. International Status: They are classified as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List and listed in Appendix I of CITES. Major Threats: The species faces severe pressure from habitat fragmentation due to industrial projects, hybridisation with feral dogs, and retaliatory killings by pastoralists. Source: The Hindu IOS SAGAR Category: Defence and Security Context: Recently, the second edition of Indian Ocean Ship (IOS) SAGAR commenced. About IOS SAGAR: Full Form: It stands for Indian Ocean Ship SAGAR. Vision Alignment: The mission is an operational pillar of SAGAR (Security and Growth for All in the Region) vision and the broader MAHASAGAR framework. Primary Objective: It aims to consolidate India’s role as the ‘Preferred Security Partner’ and ‘First Responder’ in the Indian Ocean Region through collaborative training and joint sailing. Launch Date: The maiden edition was flagged off on April 5, 2025, from the Karwar Naval Base in Karnataka. Geopolitical Signal: Launched on National Maritime Day (April 5), it commemorates the 1919 sailing of the first Indian merchant ship, SS Loyalty. The launch coincided with the inauguration of facilities under Project Seabird, boosting the sustenance of naval assets on the West Coast. Chairmanship Context: The second edition (March 2026) aligns with India assuming the chair of the Indian Ocean Naval Symposium (IONS). Participating Nations: The initiative involves personnel from various friendly foreign countries (FFCs), including Comoros, Kenya, Madagascar, Maldives, Mauritius, Mozambique, Seychelles, Sri Lanka, and Tanzania. Lead Vessel: The INS Sunayna, a Saryu-class Offshore Patrol Vessel (OPV), served as the primary platform for the maiden mission. Unique Engagement: It allows naval personnel from friendly foreign countries (FFCs) to train and sail together alongside Indian Navy personnel on an Indian vessel. Training Focus: The curriculum includes firefighting, damage control, VBSS (Visit, Board, Search, and Seizure), bridge operations, and engine room management. Strategic Surveillance: The mission includes joint surveillance of Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZs) of participating partner nations. Interoperability: It aims to build a shared understanding of maritime challenges and standardise operational procedures among regional navies. Collaborative Security: It transitions regional maritime policy from individual surveillance to a collective security architecture. Aatmanirbhar Bharat: Over 90% of the equipment and material for the infrastructure supporting the mission are sourced indigenously. Source: PIB (MAINS Focus) NavIC in Distress: Charting a Robust Path for India's Strategic Space Assets UPSC Mains Subject: GS III – Science & Technology (Space Technology, Indigenization), GS III – Security (Strategic Infrastructure)   Introduction The NavIC (Navigation with Indian Constellation) system, India’s answer to the U.S. GPS, is facing an operational crisis. With only three of its 11 satellites currently capable of providing Position, Navigation, and Timing (PNT) services—against a minimum requirement of four—the constellation is unable to fulfil its strategic purpose.  This degradation, compounded by atomic clock failures, launch delays, and the absence of a dedicated institutional framework, threatens India’s self-reliance in a domain critical for both defence and civilian applications.   NavIC at a Glance: Current Status Parameter Details Genesis Post-Kargil War (1999) realisation; U.S. denied GPS data during conflict. Operational Need Minimum 4 PNT-capable satellites required for accurate positioning. Current Status Only 3 operational satellites (as of March 13, after IRNSS-1F clock failure). Total Launched 11 satellites since 2013. Satellite Life Designed for 10 years; IRNSS-1F failed 3 days post-completion of design life. (Source: ISRO updates)   Key Issues Plaguing NavIC Technical Failures: The Atomic Clock Crisis Foreign Dependency: First-generation satellites used rubidium atomic clocks from Swiss company SpectraTime. Chronic Failure: Multiple clocks failed prematurely, degrading constellation faster than replenishment. Indigenous Solution: ISRO now uses indigenous rubidium atomic clocks (developed by ISRO-Space Applications Centre), first flown on NVS-01 (May 2023). Mitigation: Future satellites to carry 5 clocks (instead of 3) for redundancy. Launch and Orbital Challenges NVS-02 Failure: Latest second-generation satellite left in wrong orbit—abortive launch. Poor Launch Rate: Constellation degrading faster than ISRO can replenish due to: PSLV technical issues. Diversion of resources to Gaganyaan (human spaceflight), earth observation satellites, and R&D for new rockets. Hand-holding space start-ups yet to achieve operational maturity. Institutional and Policy Gaps Issue Implication No National Space Law ISRO acts as both designer and operator of NavIC—overextended mandate. No Dedicated PNT Directorate Unlike GPS (U.S. GPS Directorate) or Galileo (EUSPA), India lacks a dedicated body for constellation management. Budgetary Constraints Single budget must cover PNT constellation, human spaceflight, earth observation, and R&D. Commercialisation vs. Strategy NewSpace India Ltd. (NSIL) handles commercialisation, but strategic control remains diffused.   Critical Analysis: Why NavIC Matters Dimension Significance Strategic (Defence) Sovereign PNT essential for military operations (missile guidance, troop movement, surveillance). Kargil 1999 is the enduring memory. Economic (Civilian) Encouraging electronics manufacturers to support L1 band for better GPS interoperability; critical for smartphones, vehicle tracking, fleet management. Technological (Self-Reliance) Indigenous atomic clocks are a major step toward Atmanirbhar Bharat in critical technology. Regional (Geopolitics) Reduces dependency on foreign systems (GPS, Galileo, GLONASS) which can be denied during conflicts.   Way Forward: A Strategic Roadmap for NavIC Immediate Measures (0-2 Years) Expedite Second-Generation Launches: The 2026 target for three satellites is inadequate; must be accelerated. Redundancy in Design: Equip all future satellites with 5 atomic clocks (already proposed). Mission Mode for NVS-02 Recovery: Attempt orbital correction or fast-track replacement. Institutional Reforms (Medium-Term) Reform Action Expected Outcome National Space Law Enact comprehensive space legislation delineating ISRO’s R&D role vs. operational roles. Clear mandate; reduces overextension. Dedicated PNT Directorate Create an Indian counterpart to U.S. GPS Directorate or EU’s EUSPA. Focused management, faster decision-making. Enhanced Budgetary Allocation Separate budget heads for strategic constellations vs. civilian/commercial programmes. Prevents resource diversion. Technological Roadmap Indigenisation: Continue refining indigenous atomic clocks; aim for 100% import substitution. Interoperability: Ensure L1 band integration with civilian devices while maintaining encrypted restricted services for defence. Backup Constellation: Explore feasibility of a small, dedicated backup fleet for emergency redundancy. International Cooperation Leverage SCO/BRICS: Explore cooperation with GLONASS (Russia) and BeiDou (China) for mutual PNT assurance during crises—cautiously, given security sensitivities.   Global Best Practices: Lessons for India System Key Feature Lesson for India GPS (U.S.) Dedicated GPS Directorate; continuous modernisation; multi-band civilian/military signals. Need dedicated agency and regular tech upgrades. Galileo (EU) EUSPA manages operations; strong public-private partnership. Clear separation of policy, operations, and commercialisation. BeiDou (China) Rapid replenishment; integrated with Belt and Road Initiative. Strategic linking of PNT with economic diplomacy.   Conclusion NavIC is not just a technological project; it is a symbol of India’s quest for strategic autonomy. The current crisis—ageing satellites, clock failures, and institutional overstretch—demands urgent attention. By enacting a national space law, creating a dedicated PNT directorate, and accelerating indigenous technology development, India can secure its place among the handful of nations with a fully sovereign navigation system. The stakes are too high for delay.   UPSC Mains Practice Question “India’s NavIC constellation is facing an operational crisis due to technical failures, launch delays, and institutional gaps.” Critically examine the challenges confronting India’s indigenous navigation system and suggest a comprehensive strategy to ensure its long-term viability and strategic relevance. (250 words) Source: https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/editorial/losing-the-way-on-isro-and-issues-with-its-navic-constellation/article70758366.ece New GDP Series 2022-23: Methodological Refinements and the Road Ahead UPSC Mains Subject: GS III – Indian Economy (National Income Accounting, Growth, Statistics)   Introduction The Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) has released a new GDP series with base year 2022-23, addressing the long-standing demand for a more accurate and realistic picture of the Indian economy.  Replacing the outdated 2011-12 base, this revision aligns India’s national accounts with contemporary economic structures, captures the post-pandemic economic dynamics, and incorporates significant methodological refinements. For FY 2024-25, India’s GDP at current prices is estimated at ₹318.07 lakh crore, with the tertiary sector dominating at 52.9% of GVA.   New GDP Series at a Glance (2022-23 Base) Indicator 2022-23 2023-24 2024-25 (FRE) Key Observation GDP at Current Prices (₹ lakh cr) 261.18 289.84 318.07 3-4% lower than old series—more realistic. Real GDP Growth (%) — 9.2% (est.) 6.5% (est.) Captures post-pandemic rebound. Sectoral Share in GVA (2024-25) Primary: 21.4% Secondary: 25.8% Tertiary: 52.9% Services remain growth engine. Manufacturing Growth (Real GVA) — 12.7% 9.3% Strong performance under PLI impetus. PFCE Share in GDP ~56% ~56% ~56% Private consumption remains stable. (Source: MoSPI Press Note, Feb 2026)   Major Methodological Refinements Earlier Limitation (2011-12 Base) New Refinement (2022-23 Base) Impact Multi-activity enterprises’ entire GVA assigned to major activity. GVA apportioned across activities using MGT-7/7A revenue share data. More accurate sectoral allocation. Scaling-up factor for non-filing companies based on simple proxies. Industry x size-class blown-up factor using paid-up capital. Better representation of corporate sector. LLPs excluded from corporate sector coverage. Comprehensive coverage of LLPs using MCA data. Wider formal sector capture. Household sector GVA extrapolated from base year indicators. GVAPW (ASUSE) × Workers (PLFS) method for annual estimates. Current-year estimates, not extrapolation. Single deflation method. Expanded double deflation and volume extrapolation. Aligns with UN SNA 2008 guidelines. PFCE derived from indirect sources. Direct use of HCES 2022-23 data for low-elasticity items. More accurate consumption estimates.   Critical Analysis: Strengths and Persistent Challenges Strengths of the New Series Contemporary Base: 2022-23 captures post-COVID economic structure, digitalisation, and formalisation (GST regime). Data Integration: MCA MGT-7 data, GSTN, and ASUSE now feed directly into estimates. International Best Practices: Double deflation brings India closer to UN System of National Accounts (SNA) 2008 standards. Granularity: State-level estimates (GSDP) will improve with better allocation methods. Persistent Challenges Challenge Dimension Implication GSDP Allocation Corporate GVA allocated to states using ASI truncated frame (67,649 factories vs. 1.35 lakh companies). Distorts state-wise manufacturing shares; affects fiscal devolution. ASUSE Volatility GVAPW estimates fluctuate sharply across years (e.g., rubber products: ₹1.63L in 2021-22 → ₹2.55L in 2022-23 → ₹2.02L in 2023-24). Unreliable household sector estimates for specific industries/states. Bihar Manufacturing Example GVAPW: ₹89,638 (2021-22) → ₹1.17L (2022-23) → ₹1.00L (2023-24). Policy decisions based on such data may be misdirected. Informal Sector Capture Despite ASUSE, significant informal activity remains undercounted. GDP may still understate true economic size.   Way Forward: Recommendations for Further Improvement Strengthening the ASI Frame for GSDP Integrate MCA & GST Data: Use MCA-registered companies and GST returns to expand ASI sampling frame beyond registered factories. Sample Survey of Active Companies: Design a dedicated survey to derive state-wise GVA shares directly from companies, supplementing ASI. Refining ASUSE Methodology Issue Solution Expected Outcome Annual GVAPW volatility Introduce rotating panel design (like PLFS) with 75% sample overlap between years. Smoother, more reliable year-on-year estimates. Industry-level fluctuations Use 3-year moving average (already recommended) but with panel data for accuracy. Stabilises estimates without losing current-year dynamics. Institutional Reforms National Statistical Commission (NSC) Oversight: Ensure independent review of methodology and survey designs. State Statistical Strengthening: Build capacity of State Directorates of Economics and Statistics for better GSDP compilation. Timely Data Release: Align ASUSE and PLFS timelines with national accounts preparation cycle. Technology Integration AI/ML for Data Validation: Use machine learning to detect outliers in corporate and household data. Dashboard for GSDP: Create a real-time dashboard for states to track their GVA contributions using GST and MCA data.   Global Best Practices Country Practice Lesson for India USA (BEA) Uses quinquennial economic censuses with annual surveys; robust supply-use tables. Strengthen economic census as benchmark. China (NBS) Integrates big data (e-commerce, mobile payments) into national accounts. Leverage India’s digital payment data (UPI) for consumption estimates. Eurostat Mandates rotating panel design for household surveys. Adopt for ASUSE to reduce volatility.   Conclusion The new GDP series with 2022-23 base marks a significant leap toward capturing the true size and structure of the Indian economy. By integrating MCA data, expanding double deflation, and directly using household consumption surveys, it aligns with global best practices. However, challenges in GSDP allocation and ASUSE volatility remain. A focused effort to update the ASI frame, introduce panel surveys, and leverage technology will further enhance the credibility and utility of India’s national accounts—essential for evidence-based policymaking.   UPSC Mains Practice Question Critically examine methodological improvements in India’s new GDP series (base 2022–23), highlighting issues in state-level allocation and household sector estimation, and suggest measures to improve accuracy and reliability of national accounts. (250 words)   Source: https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/new-gdp-series-charting-the-path-ahead/article70762604.ece

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2026 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 19th March 2026

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

DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 19th March 2026

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Prambanan Temple Category: History and Culture Context: India and Indonesia have partnered for the restoration of the Prambanan Temple complex in the Special Region of Yogyakarta in southern Java. About Prambanan Temple: Location: It is located in Central Java, Indonesia, near Yogyakarta. Designation: It was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1991. Construction: It was built in the 9th century CE (around 850 CE) during the reign of the Sanjaya Dynasty of the Mataram Kingdom. Architectural Purpose: Its construction was likely a political and religious response to the nearby Buddhist Borobudur temple, marking the return of Hindu Sanjaya rule in Java. Deity: It is dedicated to the Trimurti—the three forms of the Supreme God in Hinduism: Brahma (the Creator), Vishnu (the Preserver), and Shiva (the Destroyer/Transformer). Vahana Temples: Opposite the three main shrines are three smaller temples dedicated to the deities’ vehicles (vahanas): Nandi (Shiva’s bull), Garuda (Vishnu’s eagle), and Hamsa (Brahma’s swan). Garbhagriha Statues: The main Shiva temple houses four chambers containing statues of Shiva, Ganesha (Western chamber), Agastya (Southern chamber), and Durga Mahisasuramardini (Northern chamber). Shiva-grha: According to the Shivagrha inscription (856 CE), the temple’s original name was Shiva-grha (House of Shiva) or Shiva-laya (Realm of Shiva). Architectural Style: it is characterized by tall, pointed spires typical of Hindu architecture, it reflects a blend of indigenous Javanese traditions and South Indian Pallava-style influences. Vertical Significance: The central Shiva temple stands 47 metres tall, symbolising Mount Meru, the cosmic center of the universe in Hindu mythology. Scale of Complex: Originally, the compound consisted of 240 structures, including the 8 main temples and 224 Perwara (ancillary) shrines arranged in concentric rows. Concentric Layout: The temple plan follows a Mandala layout, a sacred geometric configuration representing the Hindu universe. Ramayana Reliefs: The inner walls of the balustrades are adorned with extensive bas-reliefs depicting the epic Ramayana. Visitors follow these scenes by performing pradakshina (circumambulation). Technique: The temple was constructed using andesite stone with an interlocking (dry stone) method without the use of cement. Abandonment & Rediscovery: It was abandoned in the 10th century due to volcanic eruptions (Mount Merapi) or political shifts. It was formally “rediscovered” in 1811 by Colin Mackenzie, a surveyor for Sir Thomas Stamford Raffles. Cultural Diplomacy: In recent years, the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) has been involved in restoration efforts, highlighting India’s soft power and deep-rooted cultural ties with Southeast Asia. Source: The Print Exercise Sea Dragon Category: Defence and Security Context: The Indian Navy along with multiple partner nations is participating in Exercise Sea Dragon 2026, a United States Navy-led multinational anti-submarine warfare drill. About Exercise Sea Dragon: Nature of Exercise: It is a United States Navy-led multinational, high-end maritime exercise specifically designed for Anti-Submarine Warfare (ASW) training. Frequency: It is conducted annually. Location: The exercise is typically hosted by the U.S. Navy’s 7th Fleet at Andersen Air Force Base in Guam, a U.S. island territory in the Western Pacific. Primary Objective: It aims to enhance the interoperability and tactical proficiency of participating nations in detecting, tracking, and neutralizing underwater threats. Participating Nations (2026): The most recent participants include the United States, India, Australia, Japan, and New Zealand. Historical Evolution: It began in 2019 as a bilateral exercise between the U.S. and Australia before expanding to include other regional partners. India’s Participation: The Indian Navy officially joined the exercise in 2021, reflecting its deepening security ties with Indo-Pacific allies. India deploys its P-8I Poseidon long-range maritime patrol and reconnaissance aircraft, which is a critical asset for its ASW capabilities. Focus on Aircraft: The exercise primarily tests the capabilities of Maritime Patrol and Reconnaissance Aircraft (MPRA) from different nations working in coordination. “Dragon Belt” Award: A unique competitive element where participating nations are graded on their ASW execution; the highest-scoring team is awarded the coveted Dragon Belt. Strategic Context: It is seen as a response to traditional and non-traditional maritime challenges in the Indo-Pacific, particularly the growing presence of Chinese submarines. Interoperability: A major goal is to standardize communication protocols and data links between nations using near-identical platforms like the P-8 aircraft. Training Components: It includes both classroom-based tactical discussions and hundreds of hours of in-flight training, culminating in tracking a live U.S. Navy submarine. Geopolitical Significance: It reinforces the commitment of participating nations (including Quad members) to a “Free and Open Indo-Pacific”. Collaborative Framework: It is part of a broader series of cooperative defence activities aimed at maintaining stability in strategic waterways like the Strait of Malacca and the wider Pacific. Source: The Hindu Businessline Hindon River Category: Geography Context: A recent survey of the Hindon river has raised serious concerns about water quality at several locations, rendering the water “uninhabitable” for most aquatic life. About Hindon River: Origin: The river originates from the Shakumbhari Devi Range in the Upper Shivalik Hills (lower Himalayas) in the Saharanpur district of Uttar Pradesh. Mouth of the river: It is a significant tributary of the Yamuna River, merging with it at Noida (Gautam Buddh Nagar district). Nature of Flow: It is an entirely monsoon-fed (rain-fed) river, with its water levels rising significantly during the rainy season. Course: The river flows for approximately 400 kilometres exclusively through the state of Uttar Pradesh. It passes through Saharanpur, Muzaffarnagar, Shamli, Meerut, Baghpat, Ghaziabad, and Gautam Buddh Nagar. Basin Size: The river has an approximate catchment area of 7,083 square kilometres, situated between the Ganga and Yamuna rivers. Key Tributaries: Its main tributaries include the Kali (West) River, Krishni River, and Dhamola River. Historical Significance: Traces of the Harappan Civilization (Indus Valley Civilization) have been found on its banks, notably at the site of Alamgirpur. Modern History: The river was a site of skirmishes during the 1857 Uprising (Indian Mutiny), including the Battle of Badli-ki-Serai. Hindon Air Force Base: One of the largest air bases of the Indian Air Force in Asia is located on its banks in Ghaziabad. “Dead River” Status: In 2015, the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) declared it a “dead river” because its dissolved oxygen (DO) levels were zero in many stretches, making it unfit for aquatic life. Water Quality Classification: It has been categorised under Category ‘E’ by the Uttar Pradesh Pollution Control Board (UPPCB), meaning it is suitable only for irrigation, industrial cooling, and controlled waste disposal. Pollution Sources: Major pollutants include untreated sewage from urban areas and industrial effluents from sugar mills, pulp and paper industries, and tanneries. NGT Intervention: The National Green Tribunal (NGT) has repeatedly intervened with orders to stop the discharge of untreated waste into the river and its tributaries. Rejuvenation Projects: Efforts include a planned 1.6 km riverfront development in Ghaziabad, modelled after Lucknow’s Gomti Riverfront, and participatory cleaning approaches by civil society. Source: The Times of India MXene Category: Science and Technology Context: Recently, IIT Guwahati developed a MXene-based catalyst that can both produce hydrogen efficiently from water and act as a photocatalyst for desalination. About MXene: Discovery: It was first discovered in 2011 by researchers at Drexel University, with Titanium Carbide, being the first and most widely studied member. Parent Material: MXenes are typically derived from MAX phases, which are bulk 3D layered ternary carbides or nitrides. Nomenclature: The name “MXene” is derived by removing “A” (usually Al, Si, or Ga) from the MAX phase and adding the suffix “-ene”. Synthesis Process: It is primarily produced through top-down selective etching, where the ‘A’ layer is chemically removed using strong acids like Hydrofluoric Acid (HF) or safer alternatives like lithium fluoride/hydrochloric acid. Unique Properties: They uniquely combine the metallic conductivity of transition metal carbides with the hydrophilic (water-loving) nature of their hydroxyl or oxygen-terminated surfaces. Comparison with Graphene: While both are 2D materials, MXenes are hydrophilic and more easily processed in aqueous solutions, unlike graphene which is naturally hydrophobic and requires functionalisation. Energy Storage: They are highly valued for supercapacitors and Li-ion batteries due to high volumetric capacitance and the ability to allow rapid ion intercalation between their layers. Water Treatment: They are used in desalination and wastewater treatment because their layered structure can act as a precise molecular sieve, filtering out ions and organic pollutants. Electromagnetic Interference (EMI) Shielding: Their high conductivity and 2D structure make them exceptionally effective at shielding electronic devices from radiation and interference. Space Applications: Researchers have developed MXene-coated waveguides to guide microwaves in satellites, which significantly lightens the payload compared to traditional aluminum components. Biomedical Use: They are explored for cancer theranostics (imaging + therapy) and drug delivery due to their biocompatibility and ability to convert near-infrared (NIR) light into heat (photothermal therapy). Surface Chemistry: The surface functional groups (-O, -OH, -F) are critical as they allow for tunable properties, enabling scientists to adjust conductivity and chemical stability for specific tasks. Structural Stability: While strong in-plane, MXenes are prone to oxidation in water or air over time, often degrading into metal oxides, which is a major hurdle for commercialisation. Catalysis: They serve as efficient catalysts for green energy processes, including Hydrogen Evolution Reactions (HER) and water splitting. Recent Trends: Emerging research focuses on fluorine-free synthesis (to avoid toxic HF) and high-entropy MXenes to further enhance thermal and chemical stability. Source: DD News Nagoya Protocol Category: International Protocols Context: MoEFCC recently submitted India’s First National Report on the implementation of the Nagoya Protocol to the Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity. About Nagoya Protocol: Full Name: The Nagoya Protocol is officially titled the Nagoya Protocol on Access to Genetic Resources and the Fair and Equitable Sharing of Benefits Arising from their Utilization. Adoption: It was adopted in 2010 in Nagoya, Japan, and entered into force on October 12, 2014. Nature of Agreement: It is a legally binding supplementary agreement to the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD). Objective: Its primary aim is to fulfil the CBD’s third goal: the fair and equitable sharing of benefits arising from the use of genetic resources. Biopiracy Prevention: It provides a legal framework to prevent “biopiracy”—the unauthorized use of biological resources and traditional knowledge without compensating the source country or community Scope of Resources: It applies to genetic resources (animals, plants, microorganisms) and the traditional knowledge (TK) associated with them. Prior Informed Consent (PIC): Users (researchers/companies) must obtain the consent of the provider country before accessing genetic resources. Mutually Agreed Terms (MAT): Benefit-sharing must be based on a contract established between the provider and the user. Types of Benefits: Benefits can be monetary (royalties, joint ownership of IP) or non-monetary (technology transfer, research sharing, capacity building). Compliance Obligations: Parties must take measures to ensure that genetic resources used within their jurisdiction were accessed according to the PIC and MAT of the provider country. India’s Participation: India is a party to the protocol, having ratified it in 2012. Legal Framework in India: The protocol is implemented through the Biological Diversity Act, 2002 and the Biological Diversity Rules (amended in 2023). Three-Tier Governance: India uses a decentralized structure: National Biodiversity Authority (NBA) at the national level, State Biodiversity Boards (SBBs) at the state level, and Biodiversity Management Committees (BMCs) at the local body level. Source: PIB (MAINS Focus) India’s Demographic Crossroads: Managing the Ageing Surge and the Shrinking Young UPSC Mains Subject: GS I – Society (Population), GS II – Social Justice, GS III – Economy   Introduction India is transitioning from a “population explosion” narrative to one of a “greying population.” By 2051, the elderly (60+) will surge to 32.5 crore (20.5% of the population), while the pre-primary cohort (0-4 years) will crash to just 8.6 million.  This dual shift—a shrinking base and a bulging top—will strain healthcare, empty schools, and test fiscal resilience, demanding an urgent overhaul of India’s social infrastructure.   The Demographic Shift at a Glance (2021-2051) Indicator 2021 2051 (Projected) Key Implication Total Population 135.6 crore 159.0 crore Growth stabilizing; end of explosion debate. Elderly (60+) 13.1 crore (9.6%) 32.5 crore (20.5%) Massive rise in dependency. Working Age (15-59) 65.2% 62.8% (↓ post-2041 peak) Demographic window closing. Pre-School (0-4 yrs) 11.4 crore 8.6 crore School consolidation inevitable. Median Age 28 years 40 years Society is rapidly ageing. (Source: IIMAD & Population Foundation of India)   Key Challenges: A Two-Pronged Crisis The “Empty Classroom” Crisis (Social & Administrative) Declining Enrolments: The 0-4 years cohort is set to shrink by nearly 33%. Result: Rise of ‘uneconomic schools.’ Data Point: Government schools reduced from 11.07 lakh (2014-15) to 10.18 lakh (2023-24)—a drop of ~90,000 schools. Paradox: Private schools increased by 43,000 in the same period. Risk: Teacher layoffs (as seen in Kerala) and further stratification in educational quality, widening the gap between rich and poor.   The “Silver Tsunami” Crisis (Economic & Fiscal) Healthcare Burden: Shift from communicable to non-communicable diseases (NCDs) requiring long-term, expensive geriatric care. Fiscal Strain: Increased demand for pensions and social security (e.g., NSAP) from a shrinking tax base. Lost Dividend: Working-age population peaks in 2041. If not skilled by then, India will have an unemployable aged population.   Critical Analysis: Policy Gaps Parameter Existing Framework Critical Gap Education NEP 2020 (ECCE focus) No clear roadmap for consolidating “uneconomic schools” without job losses. Health NHP 2017, PM-JAY PM-JAY covers hospitalization, not OP care/chronic diseases (core elderly needs). Social Security Code on Social Security, 2020 Weak implementation; 90% workforce in unorganised sector has no old-age security.   Way Forward: Strategic Interventions Strategy 1: Converting Empty Classrooms into Quality Hubs Consolidation, not Closure: Merge low-enrolment schools into model schools (smart classrooms, labs) as suggested by the NEP 2020. Teacher Re-skilling: Retrain surplus teachers for special education, digital learning, or adult literacy. Strategy 2: Building a Geriatric-Care Ecosystem Mainstream Geriatrics: Implement Dr. V.K. Paul Committee recommendations to include geriatric medicine in MBBS curriculum. Expand NPHCE: Integrate the National Programme for Health Care of the Elderly with PM-JAY for holistic coverage (OPD + IPD). Strategy 3: Unlocking the “Second Demographic Dividend” Silver Economy: Promote industries focused on assistive devices, retrofitted housing, and elderly travel. Gender Dividend: Offset the shrinking workforce by boosting Female Labour Force Participation Rate (FLFPR) through targeted schemes (creches, safe transport). Strategy 4: Learning from Global Models Japan: Community-based integrated care systems (Kaigo Hoken) for ageing. Sweden: Notional Defined Contribution (NDC) pension model for fiscal sustainability.   Conclusion India’s demographic future is a tale of two transitions: a shrinking youth base and a swelling elderly population. The window to harness the demographic dividend is narrow (closing by 2041). By strategically consolidating educational infrastructure, building a robust geriatric healthcare system, and unlocking the gender dividend, India can transform these challenges into a sustainable “silver economy,” ensuring the constitutional promise of a life of dignity for all ages.   UPSC Mains Practice Question “India’s demographic dividend is peaking, but the country is simultaneously grappling with the challenges of an ageing population.” In light of recent population projections, analyse the socio-economic implications of this dual transition and suggest a comprehensive policy roadmap to mitigate the associated risks. (250 words)   Source: https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/indias-future-demographic-challenges/article70759334.ece Pakistan-Afghanistan Conflict: Regional Fallout and India's Diplomatic Imperative UPSC Mains Subject: GS II – International Relations (Bilateral Relations, Regional Groupings, Effect of Foreign Policy)   Introduction The recent escalation along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border, marked by Pakistani airstrikes killing over 400 Afghan civilians at a rehabilitation centre in Kabul, has opened a new fault line in India’s neighbourhood. This conflict, simmering since the Taliban’s return to power in 2021, threatens to destabilise an already volatile region grappling with the spillover effects of the West Asia war.  For India, this presents both a strategic dilemma and a diplomatic opportunity to leverage its influence within multilateral forums to prevent further humanitarian catastrophe.   The Conflict at a Glance: Key Drivers Dimension Pakistan’s Position Afghanistan’s (Taliban) Position Core Grievance Accuses Taliban of harbouring Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which attacks Pakistan. Denies harbouring TTP; accuses Pakistan of violating its sovereignty. Military Action Operation Ghazab Lil Haq (Righteous Fury) – airstrikes on Taliban bases. Retaliatory fire on Pakistani border posts. Civilian Impact TTP attacks killed 11 soldiers and 32 civilians in recent months. Omid Rehabilitation Facility destroyed; ~400 civilians killed. Geopolitical Angle Believes Afghanistan is becoming an “Indian colony” due to India-Taliban ties. Resents Pakistan’s 2021 support for their takeover, now seen as interference.   Geopolitical Dimensions: A Region on Fire The “Three-Front” Entanglement for Pakistan Pakistan’s military is increasingly overstretched: Eastern Front (India): Active hostility; no dialogue. Western Front (Afghanistan): Open warfare with Taliban. Transnational Front (Terrorism): Internal TTP threat. The Shifting Great Game U.S. Factor: The U.S., focused on Israel-Iran conflict, has given Pakistan tacit impunity by endorsing its “right to self-defence.” China’s Dilemma: The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) is threatened by instability in both Pakistan and Afghanistan. India’s Isolation? Pakistan’s narrative of an “Indian colony” in Afghanistan aims to isolate India regionally.   Critical Analysis: Why This Matters for India Aspect Implication for India Strategic A two-front situation for Pakistan (India + Afghanistan) naturally relieves pressure on India’s western borders. Terrorism Mirrors India’s own cross-border terrorism problem, but with roles reversed—Pakistan now facing what it sponsored. Humanitarian Vulnerable Afghans, especially women and children, bear the brunt. Regional stability is a direct Indian interest. Diplomatic India’s limited leverage (no formal recognition of Taliban) constrains unilateral action.   India’s Diplomatic Constraints and Opportunities Constraints No Formal Recognition: India deals with the Taliban regime but does not formally recognise it, limiting bilateral leverage. No Dialogue with Pakistan: Relations are frozen; backchannel communication is non-existent. Pakistan’s Narrative: Accusations of “Indian colony” hinder India’s proactive role. Opportunities Moral High Ground: India’s condemnation of the “cowardly” attack on a hospital (Omid Facility) and demand for an international inquiry positions it as a voice for humanitarian law. Multilateral Leverage (SCO): As a member of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), India can rally other members (China, Russia, Central Asian states) who are equally concerned about an “open war” in their backyard.   The Way Forward: A Strategic Roadmap for India Priority Action Expected Outcome Immediate (Humanitarian) Push for UN-led inquiry into civilian killings; provide humanitarian aid to affected Afghans. Builds soft power; exposes Pakistan’s actions. Short-Term (Diplomatic) Convene an SCO Emergency Meeting under India’s regional concerns. Creates collective pressure on Pakistan to de-escalate. Medium-Term (Engagement) Deepen sectoral engagement with Taliban (humanitarian, sports, education) without formal recognition. Counteracts “Indian colony” narrative; builds people-level ties. Long-Term (Stability) Support an “Afghan-led, Afghan-owned” peace process; advocate for inclusive governance. Ensures long-term regional stability essential for trade/energy connectivity (e.g., Chabahar Port).   Global Best Practices: Lessons for Regional Conflict Management The Astana Process (Syria): A format where rivals (Russia, Turkey, Iran) cooperate to de-escalate. India could push for a similar “Neighbourhood Contact Group” on Afghanistan under UN or SCO auspices. The “Geneva Format” (Ukraine): Though limited, it shows the value of neutral platforms for dialogue.   Conclusion The Pakistan-Afghanistan conflict is not a bilateral squabble but a regional time bomb. For India, silence is not an option. While a sense of “payback” for Pakistan’s past sponsorship of terrorism against India may be tempting, the larger goal must be regional stability. By leveraging its position in the SCO, upholding international humanitarian law, and engaging strategically with all stakeholders, India can emerge as a responsible regional power committed to peace on its western frontiers.   UPSC Mains Practice Question “The ongoing Pakistan-Afghanistan conflict has opened a new front of instability on India’s western border.” Analyse the geopolitical implications of this conflict for India and suggest a multi-pronged diplomatic strategy to safeguard India’s interests while promoting regional stability. (250 words)   Source: https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/editorial/no-end-to-suffering-on-the-pakistan-afghanistan-conflict/article70758634.ece

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2026 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 18th March 2026

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

DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 18th March 2026

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Petroglyphs Category: History and Culture Context: Researchers recently found two ancient rock carvings (petroglyphs) on a flat rock inside a rock shelter on a hill behind Beerappa Temple in Manchirevula, Telangana. About Petroglyphs: Nomenclature: The word comes from the Greek words petros (stone) and glyphein (to carve). Definition: They are symbolic images created by removing part of a rock surface through carving, incising, picking, or abrading. Petroglyph vs. Pictograph: Petroglyphs are carved into the rock, whereas pictographs (petrographs) are painted or drawn on the surface. Techniques: Creation methods include pecking, sculpting, drilling, and scratching with instruments harder than the rock surface. Global Presence: These are found on every continent except Antarctica. Concentrations: They are especially concentrated in Africa, South America, North America (mainly in the southwestern United States), Siberia, Australia, and Europe (Scandinavia, Spanish Galicia, Ireland and Italy). Chronology: In India, they are typically associated with the Mesolithic, Neolithic, and Chalcolithic periods, with some sites (like Ratnagiri) potentially dating back 20,000 years. Rock Types: They are often carved into hard surfaces like laterite (in Konkan) or quartzite boulders. Common Motifs: Themes include animals (bulls, deer, elephants), human figures in dynamic poses, and complex geometric patterns like circles or spirals. Cultural Utility: Beyond art, they served as territorial markers, astronomical maps, or even musical instruments known as “rock gongs”. Contemporary Threat: Sites like those in Ratnagiri have recently faced risks from industrial projects (e.g., mega oil refineries), leading to calls for protection by the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI). Source: Deccan Chronicle Force Majeure Category: Polity and Governance Context: Highway developers in India have urged from NHAI to classify the ongoing West Asia conflict as a force majeure event for road projects, citing supply disruptions. About Force Majeure: Definition: It refers to extraordinary events or circumstances beyond human control that make it impossible or impractical for parties to fulfil their contractual obligations. Etymology: The phrase comes from French and literally means ‘superior force’. Nature of Events: Typically includes “Acts of God” (natural calamities like earthquakes or floods) and man-made events (war, riots, or government-imposed lockdowns). Predictability: To qualify, an event must be unforeseeable, external to the parties, and its consequences must be unpreventable. Variation: The application of force majeure can vary across legal systems, with some jurisdictions requiring a more stringent definition than others. Legal Framework in India: In India, the doctrine of force majeure is governed by section 56 of the Indian Contract Act, 1872. It provides that a contract becomes void if an act to be performed under the contract becomes impossible after the contract is made, or, by reason of some event, which the promisor could not prevent. Judicial Interpretations: Energy Watchdog v. CERC (2017): The Supreme Court held that if a contract already contains a force majeure clause, relief must be sought under that clause (Section 32) rather than general frustration (Section 56). Satyabrata Ghose v. Mugneeram Bangur (1954): Clarified that “impossible” in Section 56 does not just mean physical impossibility but also practical futility where the very foundation of the contract is shaken. Commercial Hardship: Courts have consistently ruled that mere economic unprofitability, price hikes, or increased difficulty do not constitute force majeure. Recent Government Notifications: COVID-19 as Force Majeure: In February 2020, the Ministry of Finance (Department of Expenditure) issued an Office Memorandum declaring the pandemic a “natural calamity” and a valid ground for invoking force majeure in government procurement contracts. Railways and MNRE: Both the Ministry of Railways and the Ministry of New & Renewable Energy (MNRE) issued similar notifications to provide relief to contractors during the national lockdown. Contract Extensions: The government provided blanket extensions of 3 to 6 months for completion of contractual obligations without penalties for projects affected by the pandemic. Source: Business Today Sahitya Akademi Award Category: Miscellaneous Context: Recently, the Sahitya Akademi has announced its annual Sahitya Akademi Awards in 24 Indian languages recognised by it. About Sahitya Akademi Award: Establishment: It was formally inaugurated by the Government of India on March 12, 1954, and registered as an autonomous society in 1956. Nodal Ministry: It functions under the Ministry of Culture. Headquarters: It is located at Rabindra Bhawan, New Delhi. Languages: Awards are conferred annually for outstanding works in 24 languages (22 languages listed in the 8th Schedule of the Indian Constitution and 2 additional recognized languages: English and Rajasthani). Award Components: Winners receive an engraved copper plaque, a shawl, and a cash prize of ₹1,00,000. Plaque Design: The famous Indian filmmaker Satyajit Ray designed the Akademi’s plaque. Nationality: The author must be an Indian national. Eligible Works: Books must be first published during the five years prior to the award year. Posthumous awards are eligible only if the author died within this five-year window. ISBN Requirement: Starting from January 1, 2025, an ISBN is mandatory for all eligible books. Selection Process: It is a multi-stage process involving experts, a 10-member Preliminary Panel, and finally a 3-member Jury for each language. Recent Notable Winners (2025): English: Navtej Sarna for the novel Crimson Spring. Hindi: Mamta Kalia for the memoir Jeete Jee Allahabad. Source: PIB Kanha Tiger Reserve Category: Environment and Ecology Context: Recently, Kaziranga National Park and Tiger Reserve cleared all formalities to translocate 50 wild Asiatic water buffaloes from the park to the Kanha Tiger Reserve. About Kanha Tiger Reserve (KTR): Location: It is situated in the Maikal range of the Satpuras, spanning the Mandla and Balaghat districts of Madhya Pradesh. Historical Timeline: Originally a reserve forest (1879), it was declared a wildlife sanctuary in 1933, a National Park in 1955, and became one of the first nine reserves under Project Tiger in 1973-74. Drainage System: The reserve is part of the Narmada Catchment area, with the Banjar, Halon, and Surpan rivers forming its primary drainage. Terrain: It features a diverse landscape of plateaus (locally called dadars), steep upper slopes, and undulating valleys. Corridors: KTR maintains vital wildlife corridors connecting it to Pench Tiger Reserve (MP) and Achanakmar Tiger Reserve (Chhattisgarh). Vegetation Types: The park is dominated by Tropical Moist Deciduous forests, specifically evergreen Sal (Shorea robusta) and mixed deciduous trees like Tendu, Jamun, and Arjun. The “Jewel of Kanha”: It is the exclusive home of the Hard Ground Barasingha (Rucervus duvaucelii branderi), the state animal of MP, which was saved from near-extinction here. Flagship Species: It hosts a high density of Royal Bengal Tigers, along with Leopards, Sloth Bears, and Indian Wild Dogs (Dholes). Avian Diversity: Over 300 bird species inhabit the park, including the Crested Serpent Eagle and the Indian Paradise Flycatcher. First Mascot: Kanha is the first tiger reserve in India to introduce an official mascot, “Bhoorsingh the Barasingha”. Literary Inspiration: The dense forests of Kanha are widely believed to be the inspiration for Rudyard Kipling’s The Jungle Book. Tribal Heritage: The region was originally inhabited by the Gond and Baiga tribes, who were later relocated from the core area to protect the tiger habitat. Sunset Point: Bamni Dadar is a famous plateau within the reserve known for its panoramic sunset views and herbivore sightings. Conservation Success: KTR’s management is a “gold standard” for predator-prey balance and successful reintroduction programs (e.g., translocating Barasingha to Satpura). Documentary Fame: The National Geographic documentary Land of the Tigers (1980) was filmed here, showcasing its biodiversity to a global audience. Source: The Assam Tribune Foot and Mouth Disease Category: Science and Technology Context: Recently, the Government of Gujarat has launched an intensive statewide vaccination campaign to control the spread of Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD). About Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD): Causative Agent: FMD is caused by an Aphthovirus belonging to the Picornaviridae family. Viral Serotypes: There are seven globally recognized serotypes: O, A, C, SAT-1, SAT-2, SAT-3, and Asia-1. Prevalence in India: Only three serotypes are currently circulating in India: O, A, and Asia-1. Serotype O is responsible for the majority (approx. 90%) of outbreaks. Eradicated Serotype: Serotype C has not been reported globally since 2004 and in India since 1995; it has been excluded from Indian vaccine formulations. Target Animals: It affects cloven-hoofed animals (those with divided hooves) including cattle, buffalo, sheep, goats, pigs, and deer. Transmission Modes: It is highly contagious and spreads through direct contact, contaminated feed/water, and aerosols (the virus can travel significant distances via wind). Key Symptoms: It is characterized by high fever, blister-like sores (vesicles) on the tongue, lips, and hooves, leading to excessive salivation (drooling) and lameness. Age-Specific Mortality: While rarely fatal in adult animals, it causes high mortality in young calves and piglets due to myocarditis (heart inflammation), often termed “tiger heart”. Human Risk: It is not a major public health threat and is distinct from “Hand, Foot, and Mouth Disease” (HFMD) found in children. Treatment: Vaccination is the only effective preventive measure against FMD. Economic & Strategic Impact: Productivity Loss: The recovered animals suffer permanent damage including a 30-50% drop in milk yield, reduced fertility, and decreased “draft power” for farming. Trade Barriers: India faces significant trade embargoes on its dairy and meat products because FMD is a “Transboundary Animal Disease” (TAD). National Cost: The estimated annual economic losses in India range from Rs. 20,000 to Rs. 25,000 crores. Government Initiatives: NADCP: The National Animal Disease Control Programme was launched in 2019 as a 100% Centrally Funded scheme. Mission Targets: The programme aims to control FMD by 2025 through mass vaccination and achieve total eradication by 2030. Digital Monitoring: Every vaccinated animal is identified via ear-tagging with a unique ID, and data is uploaded to the Bharat Pashudhan (INAPH) portal for traceability. Source: DD News (MAINS Focus) Beyond the Predator: Understanding the Jeffrey Epstein Case as a Structural Failure of Justice Subject: GS-I (Society) & GS-II (Polity & Governance) Sub-topic: Role of Women; Social Empowerment; Mechanisms for Protection of Vulnerable Sections; Challenges of Institutional Impunity   Introduction The Jeffrey Epstein case transcends the narrative of a single criminal, exposing deeply embedded structures of power, patriarchy, and privilege that enable sexual exploitation. It is a stark global case study of how wealth can distort justice, silence victims, and create institutional impunity.  For India, grappling with its own challenges of sexual violence and institutional integrity, the Epstein affair offers critical lessons on the intersection of economic power, gender injustice, and legal accountability.   Conceptual Foundation: Understanding Structural Exploitation The Epstein case is not an anomaly but a manifestation of systemic failures. Patriarchal Structures: As Simone de Beauvoir observed, systems of power are constructed and represented by men. This creates institutional impunity—where institutions protect dominant groups, making it difficult to hold powerful men accountable. Feminisation of Poverty: Epstein targeted girls from economically fragile backgrounds, where poverty robbed them of genuine choice. Economist Amartya Sen’s concept of “capability deprivation” explains how economic vulnerability disguises exploitation as opportunity. Patriarchal Contracts: Political theorist Carole Pateman’s concept explains how non-disclosure agreements transformed exploitation into commercial transactions, disguising coercion as consent. Key Issues and Challenges Political Dimension: Elite Solidarity Epstein’s network of powerful men—politicians, royals, billionaires—functioned as a protective wall. This reflects elite male solidarity, where mutual protection leads to suppression of evidence. Indian Context: Raises concerns about “VIP culture” and differential treatment of powerful individuals by investigative agencies. Economic Dimension: Commodification of Vulnerability Epstein’s operation functioned as a transnational market—private jets, islands, and shell companies facilitated trafficking across borders. This demonstrates how capitalism and patriarchy intersect. Indian Context: Human trafficking for commercial exploitation in India is linked to economic distress and demand from power networks. Legal-Ethical Dimension: Distortion of Justice Initial plea deals, slow legal process, and media focus on Epstein as a “monster” diverted attention from systemic reform. Victim Blaming: Societal tendency to doubt victims is a patriarchal tool. The #MeToo movement globally highlighted how survivors face trial by media before perpetrators face legal scrutiny. Indian Context: Despite Nirbhaya case (2012) reforms, challenges persist in conviction rates and handling victim testimonies. Social Dimension: Media and Narrative Control Sensationalism distracts from structural questions. Ghislaine Maxwell’s portrayal as sole “recruiter” while powerful clients remained unnamed illustrates selective redirection of responsibility. Critical Analysis: Evaluating Responses Strengths: Survivor courage forced global conversation. Maxwell’s conviction showed delayed justice is possible. Weaknesses: Lack of International Cooperation: Transnational networks exploit gaps in extradition treaties. Inadequate Legal Definitions: Need to re-examine consent laws, especially regarding minors and economic duress. Indian law grapples with nuanced application of POCSO Act, 2012. Attack on Feminist Scholarship: Undermining gender studies weakens frameworks to understand power and exploitation. Way Forward Strengthen Institutional Independence: Insulate investigative agencies from political/economic influence. Strengthen Lokpal and Lokayuktas Act, 2013. Reform Legal Processes: Fast-track sexual violence cases. Strengthen Witness Protection Scheme, 2018. Economic Empowerment: Address feminisation of poverty through schemes like Beti Bachao, Beti Padhao. Gender Sensitisation: Mandate training for police, prosecutors, judiciary based on Justice Verma Committee (2013) recommendations. Global Cooperation: Enhance international legal cooperation against human trafficking.   Conclusion The Epstein case warns that gender justice requires challenging entrenched power structures. It reveals that safety remains precarious when wealth can purchase impunity. For India, the path lies in strengthening democratic institutions to uphold constitutional equality, blind to power and privilege.   UPSC Mains Practice Question The Jeffrey Epstein case reveals that sexual exploitation is not merely individual deviance but a product of interlocking structures of patriarchy, economic power, and institutional impunity. Critically analyse. (150 words)   Source: https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/epstein-case-isnt-about-one-man-but-structures-that-enable-men-10587522/?ref=top_opinion The Unseen Sentence: Analysing India's Prison Health Crisis Subject: GS-II (Polity & Governance) & GS-III (Public Health) Sub-topic: Issues relating to development and management of Social Sector/Services relating to Health; Government policies and interventions; Welfare Schemes for Vulnerable Sections.   Introduction India’s prisons, envisioned as reformative institutions, have become epicentres of public health emergencies. The Jalpaiguri Central Jail outbreak (92 HSV infections, 7 deaths during 2025-26) is symptomatic of systemic governance failure. With national occupancy at 131% (NCRB 2023), overcrowding directly contravenes Articles 21 and 47. This note examines the constitutional, administrative, and social dimensions of this crisis.   Background: Right to Health Behind Bars Constitutional Mandate: SC in Parmanand Katara (1989) held health integral to Article 21. Ramanurthy v. Karnataka (1996) directed addressing overcrowding and medical facilities. Statutory Framework: Model Prison Manual, 2016 prescribes mandatory screening, one doctor per 300 prisoners, and psychiatrists. Institutional Gap: Prisons remain siloed from public health discourse. India Justice Report 2025 highlights critical shortages rendering Manual ineffective. Key Challenges: Multidimensional Analysis Social: Overcrowding as Force Multiplier Jalpaiguri at 171% occupancy made infection control impossible. Kandi Sub-Jail historically exceeded 400%. 30% inmates in Kerala prisons have skin diseases (2023). HIV prevalence significantly higher than national average. Administrative: Neglect and Vacancies 43% vacancy rate for medical officers creates patient-doctor ratio 2.6 times higher than recommendation. Only 25 psychologists for 5.7 lakh inmates. Prisons lack isolation wards and diagnostic equipment. Policy: The Undertrial Conundrum Over 75% prisoners are undertrials, acting as disease conduits to wider community. Lancet study (2023): Prisoners 5 times more likely to develop TB. Inadequate screening allows disease entry. Ethical: The Invisible Vulnerable Societal apathy (“they deserve it”) ignores state’s parens patriae responsibility. Seven deaths from manageable virus represents ethical failure. Critical Analysis: Framework Evaluation Strengths: Model Prison Manual 2016 comprehensive; NHRC inspection powers; Home Ministry’s 2025 TB screening order; West Bengal’s 2020 undertrial release shows decongestion possible. Weaknesses: Non-uniform enforcement across States Prisons outside National Health Mission ambit Glacial trial pace for undertrials India’s “warehousing” model vs Norway’s rehabilitation approach Way Forward Decongestion: Fast-track undertrial trials; expand CrPC Section 436 use; expedite foreign national repatriation. NHM Integration: Regular health camps; telemedicine; staff training in infection control. Fill Vacancies: Time-bound recruitment with incentives for challenging postings. Infrastructure: Ventilated barracks; mandatory isolation wards.   Conclusion The prison health crisis reflects the state’s commitment to constitutional justice. Until we recognise that incarceration does not forfeit health rights, outbreaks will recur. Breaking administrative silos and viewing prison health as integral to public health is essential. Prison reform tests our civilisational humanity.   UPSC Mains Practice Question The persistent public health crisis in Indian prisons exemplifies the state’s failure to reconcile reformatory vision with overcrowding and administrative neglect. Critically examine the constitutional and governance challenges in ensuring prisoners’ right to health, suggesting a comprehensive reform framework. (250 words)   Source: https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/editorial/prison-outbreak-on-the-health-crisis-in-indias-prisons/article70750325.ece