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Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 31st January 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 – 31 January 2026

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Solar Cycles Category: Science and Technology Context: Recently, the IIT-Kanpur team developed a new way to predict solar cycles. About Solar Cycles: Nature: The solar cycle describes an approximately 11-year cycle of solar activity. Mechanism: It is driven by the Solar Dynamo mechanism, where the movement of electrically charged plasma generates powerful magnetic fields. Frequency: It is indicated by the frequency and intensity of sunspots visible on the surface. Every 11 years or so, the Sun’s magnetic field completely flips. Polarity flip: This means that the Sun’s north and south poles switch places. Then it takes about another 11 years for the Sun’s north and south poles to flip back again. Hale Cycle: A full magnetic cycle (returning to original polarity) takes two solar cycles, roughly 22 years. Measurement: It is tracked by counting sunspots—dark, cooler regions with intense magnetic fields Impact: The solar cycle has the potential to impact Earth’s climatic conditions through changes in solar radiation, cosmic rays, and ozone distribution. Cycle Stages: Solar minimum: It is the beginning of a solar cycle or when the Sun has the least sunspots. Over time, solar activity—and the number of sunspots—increases. Solar maximum: It is the middle of the solar cycle or when the Sun has the most sunspots. As the cycle ends, it fades back to the solar minimum, and then a new cycle begins. Source: The Hindu                   Pechora Missile System Category: Defence and Security Context: Bengaluru-based Alpha Design Technologies Ltd (ADTL) has completed a major upgrade of the Indian Air Force’s Pechora, a surface-to air missile (SAM) system. About Pechora Missile System: Official name: The Pechora missile system is officially known as the S-125 Neva/Pechora. Nature: It is a Soviet-origin, medium-range surface-to-air missile (SAM) system designed to intercept low- to medium-altitude targets. Induction: It has been a mainstay of India’s air defence network since the 1970s. Composition: The system consists of a radar-guided missile launcher and a fire control unit, typically employing the V-600 missile.  Radar: It uses the 4R90 Yatagan radar, equipped with five parabolic antennas, to detect, track, and lock onto targets. Once a threat is identified, the system can launch missiles to intercept and destroy it mid-air. Effectiveness: It is particularly effective against slow-moving or low-flying targets, making it well-suited for countering drones and cruise missiles.  Operational efficiency: It can operate independently or as part of a larger, integrated air defence network, and is capable of functioning even in environments with heavy electronic jamming. Range: The Pechora system has an operational firing range of up to 30–35.4 km, with some upgraded versions reaching 35.4 km. Altitude: It can engage targets flying at altitudes from as low as 20 meters up to 20–25 km, making it versatile for both low and medium-altitude threats. Detection: The system’s radar can detect targets up to 100 km away, providing early warning and engagement capability. Accuracy: The Pechora boasts a high kill probability of around 92% and can engage up to two targets simultaneously at speeds up to 900 m/s. Source: The Times of India PAIMANA Portal Category: Government Schemes Context: MoSPI has operationalised a new web-based portal, PAIMANA portal for the mandated monitoring of Central Sector Infrastructure Projects worth ₹150 crore and above. About PAIMANA Portal: Full Form: PAIMANA stands for Project Assessment, Infrastructure Monitoring & Analytics for Nation-building. Nodal ministry: It is a flagship initiative of the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI). Objective: It functions as a centralised national repository of infrastructure projects, enabling web-generated analytical reports and enhancing data accuracy, and operational efficiency. Integration: It is integrated with DPIIT’s Integrated Project Monitoring Portal (IPMP/IIG-PMG) through APIs. Centralized project monitoring: It serves as a centralized project monitoring system, providing a single-window interface for ministries, departments, and implementing agencies to upload, track, and review project information. Real-time dashboards: It features real-time dashboards with drill-down capabilities, enabling users to monitor progress across sectors, states, and timelines. Advanced data analytics: It includes role-based user access, interactive dashboards, reporting and query modules, and review cases for identification of data gaps. Source: PIB National Legal Services Authority Category: Polity and Governance Context: Recently, Minister of State of the Ministry of Law and Justice informed the Rajya Sabha about district legal services clinics established by the National Legal Services Authority. About National Legal Services Authority (NALSA): Establishment: It was established under the Legal Services Authorities (LSA) Act, 1987. Objective: It aims to provide free and competent legal services to the poor and marginalised sections of the society including Scheduled Caste (SC) and Scheduled Tribe (ST). Constitutional mandate: It fulfils the objectives of Article 39A (Directive Principle), which mandates the State to provide free legal aid. It is also supported by Articles 14 (Equality before law) and Article 22(1) (Rights of arrested persons). Lok Adalats: NALSA organizes Lok Adalats for amicable settlement of disputes. Awards made by Lok Adalats are deemed to be a decree of a civil court and are final and binding. Organizational Structure: Patron-in-chief: The Chief Justice of India. Executive chairman: The second senior-most judge of the Supreme Court. State level: State Legal Services Authority (SLSA) headed by the Chief Justice of the High Court. District level: District Legal Services Authority (DLSA) chaired by the District Judge.  The free legal services include: Payment of court fees, process fees, and all other charges payable or incurred in connection with any legal proceedings Providing the service of lawyers in legal proceedings; Obtaining and supply of certified copies of orders and other documents in legal proceedings. Preparation of appeal, paper book, including printing and translation of documents in legal proceedings. Persons eligible for free legal services includes: Women and children Members of SC/ST Industrial workmen Victims of mass disasters, violence, flood, drought, earthquake, and industrial disaster Disabled persons Persons in custody Persons whose annual income does not exceed Rs. 1 lakh (in the Supreme Court Legal Services Committee the limit is Rs. 5,00,000). Victims of trafficking in human beings. Source: PIB Sunabeda Wildlife Sanctuary Category: Environment and Ecology Context: Sunabeda Wildlife Sanctuary in Odisha is emerging as a promising habitat for leopards, with an estimated population of over 70 individuals, according to forest officials. About Sunabeda Wildlife Sanctuary: Location: It is located in the Nuapada district of Odisha. Establishment: It was declared a sanctuary in 1983. Tiger reserve: The sanctuary has received “in-principle approval” from the NTCA to become a Tiger Reserve.  Connectivity: Sunabeda is part of the Deccan Peninsula biogeographic zone. It serves as a corridor connecting Satkosia Gorge Wildlife Sanctuary with Sitanadi and Udanti sanctuaries in Chhattisgarh.  Terrain: The sanctuary harbours a great diversity of wildlife habitats, with a vast plateau, canyons, and 11 waterfalls. Rivers: It also forms the catchment area of the Jonk River (tributary of the Mahanadi River), over which a dam has been constructed to facilitate irrigation. Vegetation: The important vegetation of this sanctuary comprises dry deciduous tropical forests. Flora: Bija, Teak, Sisoo, Asan, Dharua, Mahul, Char, Sandalwood, Sidha, etc. Fauna: It is an ideal habitat for the Barasingha (swamp deer). Other important animals found are tigers, Leopards, hyenas, Barking Deer, Chital, Gaur, Sambar, Sloth Bear, Hill Myna, etc. Tribes: The area is inhabited by tribal communities like the Gond and Paharia tribes.  Source: The Times of India (MAINS Focus) “ Green Steel: The Missing Link in India’s Climate and Industrial Transition” GS-III: “Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation.”.   Context (Introduction) At COP30 in Belém (2025), India committed to submitting a revised, more ambitious Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC). Achieving this commitment requires economy-wide decarbonisation, especially in hard-to-abate sectors—with steel being the most critical. India’s steel sector: Produces ~125 million tonnes/year Needs to scale to >400 million tonnes by mid-century Contributes ~12% of India’s total carbon emissions, primarily due to coal-based blast furnace technology This places steel at the centre of India’s climate–growth dilemma. Core Idea Green steel is not optional—it is a strategic necessity. Without rapid transition to low-carbon steelmaking, India risks: Lock-in of carbon-inefficient infrastructure Loss of export competitiveness Failure to meet climate commitments Key Challenges  Carbon Lock-in Risk Steel investments today determine emissions for 30–40 years Continued expansion of coal-based blast furnaces risks locking in billions of dollars of high-carbon assets High Cost & Technology Barriers Low-carbon steel has 30–50% higher capital intensity Technologies (hydrogen DRI, CCUS) are still: Capital-heavy Low-maturity Scale-constrained Input Constraints Green hydrogen: limited supply, high cost Renewable energy: insufficient dedicated capacity for steel Scrap steel market: informal, fragmented, limited availability Natural gas: limited availability as a transition fuel Policy Gaps Despite: Green Steel Roadmap (Sept 2025) Green Steel Taxonomy (Dec 2024) – first globally National Green Hydrogen Mission Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS) covering 253 steel units Investment signals remain weak; incentives have not yet shifted capital away from coal-based routes. Global Context & External Pressure EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) penalises high-carbon steel imports Carbon prices in Europe reached $90–100 per tonne of CO₂, making green steel viable Countries unable to demonstrate low-carbon production risk: Border taxes Loss of premium export markets Why It Matters  Steel underpins: Infrastructure Manufacturing Defence and urbanisation Decarbonising steel: Enables India’s net-zero pathway Preserves export competitiveness Prevents future stranded assets Early movers in green steel gain first-mover advantage globally Way Forward  Carbon Pricing & Market Signals Roll out carbon price regime early Use price signals to disperse green steel costs across value chains Scale from Pilots to Commercialisation Fast-track: Demonstration plants Near-zero emission full-scale facilities Mandate all new steel capacity to be low or near-zero carbon Public Procurement & Demand Creation Create domestic demand via: Public procurement of green steel Infrastructure mandates Socialise Green Steel Taxonomy Infrastructure & Shared Ecosystems Government-led hubs for: Green hydrogen Renewable energy CO₂ transport and storage Shared infrastructure to reduce costs for MSME steel producers Equitable Transition Fiscal support for: Small and medium producers Workforce reskilling Ensure transition is just and inclusive Conclusion Steel is India’s next climate frontier. What renewable energy was to India a decade ago, green steel is today—a test of policy credibility, industrial vision and climate leadership. By combining: Decisive corporate action, Robust, market-aligned policy frameworks, Early investment signals, India can decarbonise steel, safeguard growth, and shape the future of global sustainable industrialisation. Mains Question India’s climate goals cannot be achieved without decarbonizing its steel sector. Examine the challenges and policy imperatives of green steel in shaping India’s climate transition. (15 marks) (250 words) The Hindu India’s Manufacturing Leap: From Volume Expansion to Strategic Value Creation GS-III: “Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilisation of resources, growth, development and employment.”   Context (Introduction) India’s manufacturing sector has regained momentum amid: Geopolitical reconfiguration of global supply chains Firm-level diversification away from single-country dependence Renewed industrial policy focus worldwide As highlighted in the Economic Survey, the next phase of India’s industrial growth will depend not on how much India manufactures, but what it manufactures and how strategically indispensable it becomes in global production networks. Core Idea India’s manufacturing transition must shift from: Broad-based volume expansion → to Strategically important, technology-intensive and export-competitive production This requires: Moving up the value chain Deepening industrial ecosystems Aligning manufacturing with infrastructure quality, logistics efficiency, and standards compliance Key Arguments  Manufacturing Is Moving Up the Value Chain India is witnessing early gains in sectors combining: High technology content Value addition Export potential Examples: Electronics: Production expanded ~6x, exports grew ~8x in 11 years Pharmaceuticals: World’s largest vaccine supplier; major generic medicines hub These sectors demonstrate: Strong R&D–industry linkages Faster technology absorption Greater global tradability Limits of Cluster-First Industrialisation While industrial clusters have been central to policy: Many clusters remain small, fragmented and low-productivity Limited capacity to generate scale efficiencies There should be a shift towards: Larger, deeper and integrated industrial ecosystems Greater backward–forward linkages Enhanced skill and innovation density Tier-2 and Tier-3 Cities as the Next Industrial Frontier The next generation of industrial clusters is likely to be anchored in Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities Advantages highlighted: Lower land and real-estate costs Lower operating and wage costs Larger labour pools Less congestion than metros However, competitiveness here depends critically on: Quality infrastructure Logistics connectivity Reliable utilities Infrastructure & Logistics as Competitiveness Multipliers India has made notable progress: Logistics costs declined to ~14% of GDP (FY23) Several Indian ports ranked among World Bank’s top-100 (CPPI 2024) Initiatives: PM Gati Shakti National Logistics Policy Rapid highway expansion Yet: Road freight dominates despite rail and coastal shipping being cheaper for bulk movement Limited multimodal integration constrains efficiency gains Standards, Quality and Global Market Access Quality Control Orders (QCOs) Alignment with international standards Credible certification and labelling systems Purpose: Prevent low-quality imports Push domestic firms up the quality ladder Enhance export credibility However, success depends on: Phased implementation Adequate testing infrastructure Industry consultation MSMEs: Backbone with Binding Constraints MSMEs contribute significantly to: Employment Output Exports Recent gains: Formalisation Better access to finance Deeper supply-chain integration Yet challenges persist: Credit gaps Skill shortages Technology adoption constraints Their integration into strategic value chains is critical for sustained manufacturing growth. Why It Matters Strategic manufacturing: Enhances export resilience Improves terms of trade Reduces vulnerability to global shocks Deep manufacturing ecosystems: Generate high-quality jobs Strengthen innovation capacity Infrastructure-manufacturing synergy determines: Speed of industrial scaling Global competitiveness Manufacturing is no longer about scale alone—it is about strategic indispensability. Way Forward Prioritise Strategic & Technology-Intensive Sectors Electronics Pharmaceuticals Advanced materials Clean-tech manufacturing Build Integrated Industrial Ecosystems Shift from fragmented clusters to: Large-scale industrial zones Strong backward–forward linkages Infrastructure with Manufacturing Focus Time-bound approvals Reliable utilities Multimodal logistics hubs near industrial centres . MSME Integration Bridge credit gaps Strengthen skilling Accelerate technology diffusion Predictable Regulatory Regimes Stable policies Single-window systems Fast dispute resolution Conclusion India’s next manufacturing leap will not be measured by output alone, but by strategic relevance, technological depth and ecosystem strength. As global production networks fragment and reconfigure, India has a historic opportunity to position itself not just as a manufacturing location, but as a manufacturing anchor in global value chains. The challenge is clear: scale with strategy, infrastructure with intent, and growth with resilience. Mains Question India’s next phase of industrialisation depends not merely on scaling manufacturing, but on what it produces and how deeply it integrates into global value chains. Examine. (15 marks) (250 words) The Indian Express  

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 30th January 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 – 30th January 2026

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Deuteron Category: Science and Technology Context: Recently, a new study out of the ALICE collaboration at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider (LHC) has explained how deuterons survive high-energy particle collisions. About Deuteron: Nature: A deuteron is a stable isotope of hydrogen with a nucleus containing one proton and one neutron. Symbol: It is denoted by the symbol “²H” or “D”. Presence: It is found in small amounts in natural water and in the atmosphere of Jupiter and Saturn. Mass: The mass of a deuteron is approximately about twice the mass of a proton. Charge: A deuteron has a net positive charge of +1, since it contains one proton. Spin: The deuteron has a nuclear spin of 1, which means that it behaves like a tiny magnet with a north pole and a south pole. Magnetic moment: The deuteron has a magnetic moment that is approximately 0.8574 nuclear magnetons, which is about 0.31 times the magnetic moment of a proton. Applications: It is used in the production of heavy water, which is used as a moderator in nuclear reactors. It is used in the production of deuterium, which is used as a fuel in fusion reactors. It is used in the production of tritium, which is used in nuclear weapons. Source: The Hindu                 Sea of Japan Category: Geography Context: Recently, North Korea fired a ballistic missile towards the Sea of Japan. About Sea of Japan: Location: The Sea of Japan, or East Sea, is a marginal sea of the western Pacific Ocean.  Boundaries: It is bound by Japan and Sakhalin to the east and by mainland Russia, North Korea, and South Korea to the west. Connections: It is connected with the East China Sea via the Tsushima and Korea straits and with the Okhotsk Sea in the north by the La Perouse and Tatar straits. In the east, it is connected with the Inland Sea of Japan via the Kanmon Strait and the Pacific Ocean by the Tsugaru Strait. Deepest point: Dohoku Seamount, an underwater volcano, is its deepest point. Climate: Its relatively warm waters contribute greatly to the mild climate of Japan. Tides: Like the Mediterranean Sea, it has almost no tides due to its nearly complete enclosure from the Pacific Ocean.  Uniqueness: The sea is known for its high concentration of oxygen (dissolved in the seawater), which results in high biological productivity.  Major Ports: Russia: Vladivostok, Sovetskaya Gavan, Nakhodka, Alexandrovsk-Sakhalinsky, and Kholmsk.  North Korea: Hamhung, Chongjin, and Wonsan. Japan: Niigata, Tsuruta, and Maizuru. Source: The Hindu Shri Mahakaleshwar Temple Category: History and Culture Context: Supreme Court of India recently declined to entertain a plea against the practice of ‘VIP Darshan’ at the Shri Mahakaleshwar Temple in Ujjain. About Shri Mahakaleshwar Temple: Location: It is a Hindu temple located on the banks of the River Shipra at Ujjain in Madhya Pradesh. Significance: It is dedicated to Lord Shiva. It is one of the 12 Jyotirlingas in India. Uniqueness: It is the only Jyotirlinga that faces south (Dakshinamukhi), a unique feature associated with Tantric traditions where Shiva is considered the ‘Lord of Time and Death’. History: The history of the temple dates back to ancient times, with references to the temple found in various Hindu scriptures and texts. The temple finds mention in the Puranas. The renowned poet Kalidas also mentioned this temple in his creations.  Construction: The current structure of the temple was built in the 18th century by the Maratha ruler Ranoji Shinde. However, the temple has been destroyed and rebuilt several times throughout history. Architecture: The architecture of the temple shows the influence of Maratha, Bhumija, and Chalukya styles of structural design.  Spread: The temple complex is spread over five levels, one of which is underground. The Sabha Mandap (assembly hall) and Garbha Griha (sanctum sanctorum) are adorned with elaborate sculptures depicting various Hindu deities and mythological scenes.  Craftsmanship: The sanctum houses the Jyotirlinga, which is the focal point of devotion and rituals. The grand spire (shikhara), intricately carved pillars, and ornate ceilings are proof of the exquisite craftsmanship. Source: News 18 Model Youth Gram Sabha Category: Government Schemes Context: The Ministry of Panchayati Raj recently organised a National Award Ceremony to felicitate the winners of the Model Youth Gram Sabha. About Model Youth Gram Sabha: Nature: It is a simulated forum for school children to participate in mock Gram Sabha sessions. Objective: It is a pioneering initiative to strengthen Janbhagidari and promote participatory local governance by engaging students in simulated Gram Sabha sessions. Uniqueness: It is an initiative based on the Model UN – an educational simulation of the United Nations – in schools across the country Nodal ministries: It is an initiative of the Ministry of Panchayati Raj, in collaboration with the Ministry of Education and the Ministry of Tribal Affairs. Implementation: It will be rolled out across more than 1,000 schools nationwide, including Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalayas, Eklavya Model Residential Schools (EMRSs), and State Government Schools. Focus: Students from classes 9-12 will play the roles of sarpanch, ward members, and village-level officials, including village secretary, Anganwadi worker etc. They will hold mock meetings of the Gram Sabha, discuss various issues, and prepare the village budget and development plans. Financial support: The Panchayati Raj Ministry also provides a support of Rs 20,000 to each school for holding the mock Gram Sabha. Source: PIB Hoya Nagaensis Category: Environment and Ecology Context: Recently, a new plant species has been discovered in Nagaland and it’s named as Hoya Nagaensis. About Hoya Nagaensis: Location: It is a new plant species found in the high-altitude forests of Nagaland. Nature: It is a member of the ‘wax plant family’ discovered in the Kavunhou Community Reserved Forest in Phek district. Genus: It belongs to the Hoya genus, a group known for its ornamental value. Uniqueness: It is currently known from only a single location, making it highly vulnerable. Features: The plant displays unique leaf shapes and floral features. It produces distinctive star-shaped flowers and exudes milk-like latex, a characteristic of many species in the Apocynaceae or milkweed family. Habitat: It was found growing in a temperate forest ecosystem that remains largely unexplored by science. Threats: Major threats to this plant include shifting cultivation and forest disturbance. Ecological significance: It highlights the importance of community-protected forests of Nagaland as a vital refuge for rare and endemic plants. It underscores the Eastern Himalaya as a reservoir of undiscovered plant diversity. Conservation status: It is classified as ‘Critically Endangered’ (provisional classification) as per the IUCN Red List. Source: Deccan Herald (MAINS Focus) “India–Arab League Partnership: From Energy Security to Strategic Convergence” GS-II: India and its neighbourhood–extended (West Asia / Middle East).   Context (Introduction) The 2nd India–Arab Foreign Ministers’ Meeting (Jan 30–31, 2026, New Delhi) marks a significant milestone in India’s West Asia diplomacy. It comes amid: Intensifying conflicts in Gaza, Iran–Israel tensions, Syria, and A shifting global order shaped by U.S. unilateralism and erosion of rule-based norms. At a time of regional instability, India’s outreach to the 22-member Arab League (LAS) signals its intent to build institutionalised, multi-pillar engagement with the Arab world. Core Idea India–Arab League relations have evolved from historical goodwill and energy dependence into a comprehensive strategic partnership, encompassing: Energy security Trade and investment Defence and maritime security Digital public infrastructure Connectivity and supply chains As India grows into a major economic and geopolitical power, the Arab League region has become a critical pillar of India’s global matrix. Key Pillars of Engagement  Institutional and Diplomatic Architecture Arab League founded: 1945 (Cairo) India–LAS engagement formalised via MoU (2002) Arab-India Cooperation Forum (AICF) established in 2008 Regular ministerial and summit-level interactions Trade, Investment and Connectivity Bilateral trade: ~$240 billion CEPA with UAE and Oman; trade with UAE crossed $115 billion Target: $200 billion trade with UAE by 2030 Major investments pledged: UAE: $75 bn Saudi Arabia: $100 bn Qatar: $10 bn India–Middle East–Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC) adds strategic depth Energy Security (Critical Pillar) Arab region supplies: ~60% of India’s crude oil 70% of natural gas >50% of fertilisers Strategic agreements: UAE strategic oil storage in India ($400 million) Qatar LNG deal (2024): 7.5 million tonnes/year for 20 years ADNOC–IOC LNG contract (2023): 1.2 MTPA for 14 years Security and Defence Cooperation Defence agreements with Oman, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Qatar Maritime security under SAGAR framework Strategic access to Duqm Port (Oman) – Indian Navy advantage Joint production and exports: Tejas, BrahMos, Akash missiles Convergence on counter-terrorism; LAS countries condemned major terror attacks in India Digital & Financial Integration RuPay card launched in UAE (2019) Indian Rupee accepted at Dubai airports (2023) UPI operational in UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain Rupee–dirham settlement system with UAE Challenges & Strategic Risks Regional volatility: Gaza conflict, Iran tensions, Yemen war Intra-Arab fault lines (Saudi Arabia–UAE competition) Risk of India being drawn into great-power rivalries Balancing relations with Israel, Iran and Arab states simultaneously Maritime security threats in Red Sea and Gulf of Aden Why It Matters for India  Secures India’s energy lifelines and sea lanes Supports India’s rise as a net security provider in the Indian Ocean Strengthens India’s position in Global South leadership Enables diversification from over-dependence on any single bloc Enhances India’s strategic autonomy Way Forward Deepen India–LAS economic corridor integration Expand defence co-production and maritime coordination Leverage digital public infrastructure as a soft-power tool Institutionalise crisis-consultation mechanisms Promote people-to-people ties, skilling and diaspora engagement Conclusion India–Arab League relations are no longer limited to oil and remittances. They reflect a mature strategic partnership based on trust, convergence and shared interests. As geopolitical turbulence intensifies, closer India–LAS engagement offers: Stability for the region, Strategic depth for India, and a credible alternative model of cooperation in a fractured global order Mains Question India’s engagement with the Arab League reflects a shift from transactional ties to strategic convergence. Examine the key pillars, opportunities and challenges of India–Arab League relations. (15 marks) (250 words) The Hindu “Central PSU Turnarounds: Governance Lessons for Cooperative Federalism” GS-III: “Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilisation of resources, growth, development and employment.” GS-II: “Important aspects of governance, transparency and accountability, e-governance—applications, models, successes, limitations, and potential; citizens’ charters, transparency & accountability and institutional and other measures.”   Context (Introduction) Public Sector Enterprises (PSEs), once associated with policy paralysis, inefficiency and fiscal burden, have undergone a remarkable transformation in the last decade, particularly at the Central level (CPSEs). CPSEs today are emerging as drivers of investment, profitability and national savings, offering important governance lessons for State PSUs. Core Idea The turnaround of CPSEs is not accidental, but the outcome of systematic governance reforms involving: Strategic clarity Financial discipline Professional management Market accountability This experience provides a template for reforming State-level PSUs, many of which continue to suffer from inefficiency and fiscal stress. Key Drivers of CPSE Turnaround  Policy Clarity through the New PSE Policy, 2020 Classification of sectors into: Strategic sectors (defence, energy, space, telecom) Non-strategic sectors with minimum presence (1–4 PSEs) Enabled: Exit from non-core areas Private participation Focused resource allocation Improved Financial Performance Profit-making CPSEs increased from 157 (FY15) → 227 (FY25) Loss-making CPSEs declined from 77 → 63 Net profit: ₹1.30 lakh crore (FY15) → ₹3.09 lakh crore (FY25) Contribution to Capital Formation & Savings CPSEs account for: ~10% of national savings Significant share in gross capital formation Gross capital formation by non-financial CPSEs grew by 11.9% Governance Reforms & Market Discipline Listing of CPSEs and adoption of: Corporate governance norms Professional boards Performance benchmarking Market capitalisation of CPSEs (FY25): ₹38.57 lakh crore Sector-Specific Turnarounds Public sector banks: Net profits: ₹8,913 crore (FY14) → ₹1.78 lakh crore (FY25) ROE improved from –14.09% (FY18) → +14.09% (FY25) Indian Railways: Electrification of 45,000 km Transition towards green energy (solar, wind, hydrogen) Defence CPSEs: Defence exports at ₹23,622 crore (2024-25) Why This Matters for Governance (GS-2) CPSEs now: Reduce fiscal burden Support counter-cyclical investment Strengthen strategic autonomy Demonstrates that public ownership and efficiency are not mutually exclusive Reinforces the role of the state as: Facilitator, not micromanager Lessons for State PSUs Replicate Strategic Clarity Clearly identify: Core public interest sectors Non-essential commercial activities Improve Transparency & Professionalism Independent boards Market-linked incentives Performance audits Reduce Political Interference Separate ownership from management Minimise populist pricing distortions Use Technology & Skill Upgradation Focus on: Digital systems Energy transition Human capital renewal Cooperative Federalism in Reform Centre can act as: Knowledge provider Reform catalyst State PSU reforms can unlock regional development potential Challenges Ahead Technology disruption Skill gaps Market volatility Need for sustained governance discipline Reforms must be institutionalised, not personality-driven. Conclusion As India prepares for the next phase of growth, State-level PSU reform is the missing link. Learning from CPSE successes can transform public enterprises from fiscal liabilities into engines of inclusive development. Mains Question Recent turnaround of Central Public Sector Enterprises (CPSEs) highlights the role of governance reforms in improving public sector performance. Examine the key drivers of this turnaround and discuss lessons for State-level PSUs. (15 marks) (250 words) The Indian Express  

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 29th January 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 – 29th January 2026

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Doomsday Clock Category: Science and Technology Context: Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists advanced the 2026 Doomsday Clock to 85 seconds to midnight, underscoring that the world is edging closer to a man-made global disaster. About Doomsday Clock: Nature: It is a symbolic clock adopted by atomic scientists to show how close human beings are considered to be to a global catastrophe. Symbolism: Midnight represents total annihilation, while movements away from or toward midnight reflect changes in existential risk. Origin: Doomsday Clock was established in 1947 by the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists (BAS), which was founded two years earlier. During that time, the clock was set at seven minutes to midnight. Setting mechanism: The time is adjusted annually by the Bulletin website in consultation with its Board of Sponsors. Key determinants: Existential threats include nuclear risk, climate change, disruptive technologies like generative AI and cyberattacks, and biological risks. Mechanism: Metaphorically, the clock’s minute hand moves closer to or farther from midnight, depending on the level of threat thought to be posed by nuclear weapons, climate change, or disruptive technologies. Current setting: Since its invention in 1947, the clock has been reset 27 times. In January 2026 the clock was set to 85 seconds before midnight, the closest it has ever been to doomsday. Source: Livemint                   Euratom Category: International Organisations Context: The European Union (EU) and India recently committed to promoting collaboration on the peaceful uses of nuclear energy under the India-Euratom agreement. About Euratom: Full Form: Euratom stands for European Atomic Energy Community. Establishment: Euratom is an international organization established under the Treaty of Rome in 1957. Objective: It aims to form a common market for the development of the peaceful uses of atomic energy.  Association with nuclear materials: A major incentive for the creation of Euratom was the desire to facilitate the establishment of a nuclear-energy industry on a European rather than a national scale. Euratom’s control was not extended to nuclear materials intended for military use. Membership: The original members were Belgium, France, West Germany, Italy, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands. It subsequently came to include all members of the European Union (EU). Regulation: Euratom regulates the European civil nuclear industry, which produces almost 30% of energy in the EU. Euratom’s work safeguards nuclear materials and technology, facilitates investment, research, and development, and ensures equal access to nuclear supplies, as well as the correct disposal of nuclear waste.  Governance: It is governed by the Commission and Council, operating under the jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice. Its main instruments are the Euratom Supply Agency and its research and nuclear safeguard activities.  Research: The EU has its own Joint Research Centre (JRC) in the nuclear field. Euratom is involved in developing atomic fusion technology, which has the potential of delivering abundant sustainable energy in the future. Source: The Hindu Achanakmar Tiger Reserve Category: Environment and Ecology Context: A young male tiger was found dead inside Chhattisgarh’s Achanakmar Tiger Reserve, with forest officials attributing the death to a territorial clash with another male. About Achanakmar Tiger Reserve: Location: It is situated in the state of Chhattisgarh.  Establishment: Originally a wildlife sanctuary (1975), it was declared a Tiger Reserve in 2009. Biosphere connection: It forms the core area of the Achanakmar-Amarkantak Biosphere Reserve, which was recognized by UNESCO in 2012. Wildlife corridor: It provides a vital migratory link between Kanha Tiger Reserve and Bandhavgarh Tiger Reserve in Madhya Pradesh, ensuring genetic diversity. Drainage: The Maniyari River flows through the heart of the reserve and is considered its lifeline. Tribal Communities: It is home to the Baigas (a Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Group or PVTG), as well as the Gond communities, residing inside of this tiger reserve. Vegetation: Tropical moist deciduous vegetation covers the majority of the area. Flora: Sal, bija, saja, haldu, teak, tinsa, dhawara, lendia, khamar, and bamboo bloom here, along with over 600 species of medicinal plants. Fauna: It includes the tiger, leopard, bison, flying squirrel, Indian giant squirrel, chinkara, wild dog, hyena, sambar, chital, and over 150 species of birds. Source:  The Times of India Polar Vortex Category: Geography Context: A severe winter storm impacting the U.S. from Texas to New England recently highlights the dynamic role of the stratospheric polar vortex. About Polar Vortex: Nature: The polar vortex is a large area of low pressure and cold air surrounding both of the Earth’s poles. The polar vortex contains some of the coldest air on Earth.  Extension: The polar vortex extends from the tropopause (the dividing line between the stratosphere and troposphere) through the stratosphere and into the mesosphere (above 50 km). Nomenclature: The term “vortex” refers to the counter-clockwise flow of air that helps keep the colder air near the Poles. These winds circulate and form a vortex near the North and South Poles of the planet. Intensity: The strength of the polar vortex varies with the season, but it is strongest during the winter season in each hemisphere, when the temperature contrast between the pole and the Equator is greatest. It may weaken or disappear entirely during the warmer months of the year. Expansion: Many times, during winter in the northern hemisphere, the polar vortex will expand, sending cold air southward with the jet stream. This occurs fairly regularly during wintertime and is often associated with large outbreaks of Arctic air in the United States. Cold surges: This is not confined to the United States. Portions of Europe and Asia also experience cold surges connected to the polar vortex. By itself, the only danger to humans is the magnitude of how cold temperatures will get when the polar vortex expands, sending Arctic air southward into areas that are not typically that cold. Difference between Antarctic and Arctic polar front: The Antarctic polar-front jet stream is more uniform and constant than its Arctic counterpart, because Antarctica is surrounded by ocean rather than a mix of land and water. Cold-air outbreaks, however, do occur in the Southern Hemisphere, but less frequently. Source: The Indian Express PANCHAM Category: Government Schemes Context: Recently, the Union Minister of State for Panchayati Raj launched the PANCHAM – Panchayat Assistance and Messaging Chatbot.           About PANCHAM: Full form: PANCHAM stands for Panchayat Assistance and Messaging Chatbot. Development: It is a digital tool developed in collaboration with UNICEF. Objective: It is a flagship digital initiative aimed at empowering Panchayat Elected Representatives and Functionaries. Focus areas: It is designed as a digital companion for Panchayats, providing timely and contextual guidance, simplified workflows, and easy access to information to support day-to-day governance and service delivery functions. Direct connect: It enables, for the first time, a direct digital-connect between the Government of India and Elected Panchayat Functionaries across the country. Language support: It is integrated with BHASHINI and will support 22 Indian languages, enabling Panchayat representatives to interact with the platform in their preferred local language. Citizen access: Citizens would be able to access PANCHAM through a QR-code-based entry mechanism. It will facilitate quicker decision-making, and stronger feedback loops between the grassroots and decision-making centres. Two-way communications:  It facilitates two-way communication and officials can send feedback, ask questions, and flag local problems directly to the ministry.  Information dissemination: The Ministry would be able to directly disseminate circulars, advisories, key messages, and updates to Panchayat Elected Representatives and Functionaries. Source: PIB   (MAINS Focus) “Urban Is the New Political: Urbanisation, Infrastructure and the Recasting of Indian Democracy” GS-I: Urbanisation: problems and remedies.   Context (Introduction) India marks 20 years of the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM)—one of the earliest large-scale urban regeneration programmes. Since 1990, India’s urban population has risen from 25% to about one-third, and is projected to reach ~40% by the end of the decade. This shift signals not just demographic change, but a reorientation of political power, infrastructure priorities, and state–citizen relations. Core Idea Urbanisation in India has transformed the city from a site of residence into a site of power. “Urban is the new political” because cities now shape: Economic growth strategies Infrastructure investment models Social aspirations Democratic engagement Urbanisation must therefore be understood as a political and infrastructural process, not just spatial expansion. Key Arguments & Analysis From Agrarian Imagination to Urban Reality (GS-1) India, long imagined as: A village-centric society (Gandhian ideal) An agrarian democracy is now experiencing a decisive urban turn: Over 500 million Indians live in towns and cities Urban spaces increasingly define youth aspirations, consumption patterns and social mobility Evolution of Urban Policy Regime (GS-3) Post-1990 liberalisation reshaped urban governance through: JNNURM (2005) – infrastructure + governance reforms AMRUT (2015) – water, sanitation, mobility Smart Cities Mission – technology-driven urban management These programmes reflect a shift from welfare-oriented planning to growth-led urban infrastructure. The New Urban Model: Capital Attraction over Citizenship According to the article, contemporary cities are increasingly designed to: Attract global capital Enable elite consumption Promote urban beautification and gentrification Manifestations include: Gated communities Corporate-friendly highways Glass towers replacing traditional livelihoods This top-down urbanism privileges: Wealthy residents Cosmopolitan elites Entrepreneurial classes often at the cost of: Informal workers Migrants Urban poor Infrastructure Conflicts as Political Flashpoints Urban infrastructure has become a site of contestation: Protests against Aravalli hill exploitation Opposition to Great Nicobar Island Development Project Gig workers’ resistance to platform-based service aggregators These conflicts reflect: Displacement and ecological stress Unequal distribution of urban gains Weak participatory planning Urban infrastructure is no longer neutral—it is political. Changing State–Citizen Relationship Urbanisation reshapes democracy itself: Citizens engage the state through municipal politics, not just national elections Governance shifts from redistribution to service delivery and growth management Democracy becomes more managerial, technocratic and uneven Why It Matters  Cities generate the bulk of GDP and infrastructure demand Urban youth shape future political behaviour Poorly governed urbanisation leads to: Social unrest Ecological degradation Democratic alienation Urbanisation, if exclusionary, can undermine social cohesion and democratic legitimacy. Way Forward: Towards Good Urban Politics Re-centre Citizenship in Urban Planning Move beyond capital-centric city building Recognise migrants, informal workers and slum dwellers as urban citizens, not encroachments Strengthen Urban Local Governments Genuine fiscal and functional devolution Empower municipalities as democratic institutions, not implementation agencies Infrastructure with Social Legitimacy Participatory planning Environmental safeguards Inclusive housing and transport systems Balance Growth with Justice Avoid “glass-tower urbanism” Integrate ecological sustainability with infrastructure expansion Conclusion Urbanisation in India is not just about cities growing bigger, but about democracy changing shape. Better cities will not emerge from infrastructure alone. They require good urban politics inclusive, participatory and socially grounded if India’s urban future is to strengthen rather than fragment its democracy. Mains Question Urbanisation in India is not merely a demographic shift but a political and infrastructural transformation. Examine how urban growth is reshaping Indian politics and development priorities. (15 marks) (250 words) The Indian Express “India the Beautiful Must Become India the Functional: Tourism, Society and the Experience Economy” GS-I: “Salient features of Indian Society.” GS-III: “Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilisation of resources, growth, development and employment.”   Context (Introduction) India possesses extraordinary civilisational depth, cultural diversity and natural beauty, yet attracts only 5.6 million foreign tourists (Aug 2025)—a modest figure for a country of 1.4 billion people. Countries like Thailand and Singapore, despite smaller size, outperform India in tourism receipts and arrivals. This gap reflects not a lack of heritage, but structural and social deficits in how India delivers the tourism experience. Core Idea  Tourism is a social experience economy, not just a cultural showcase. India’s tourism underperformance arises from three interlinked societal challenges: The Three “I” Deficit Image Infrastructure India itself (social behaviour and service culture) Unless these are addressed together, India will remain a “tantalising idea rather than a top-tier destination.” Key Challenges (Indian Society Lens) Image Deficit: Perception of Safety and Inclusiveness Persistent global concerns about women’s safety, harassment, and scams Negative headlines outweigh branding campaigns like ‘Incredible India’ Tourists seek welcome, trust and predictability, not confrontation Infrastructure as a Social Experience Tourist experience begins at: Airports, immigration counters, taxis, public toilets, signage, Wi-Fi. Hospitality sector faces a ~40% trained staff shortfall Issues: Poor last-mile connectivity Unreliable sanitation and digital access Inconsistent quality outside luxury hotels “India Itself”: Social Behaviour and Service Culture Overcrowding, noise, aggressive solicitation Lack of multilingual professionalism Tourism seen as fallback employment, not a respected vocation Graduates prefer office jobs over hospitality, affecting service quality. Gender Dimension  Women travellers disproportionately affected by safety concerns Underrepresentation of women in tourism workforce reduces trust Harassment and scams erode India’s social image abroad Why It Matters  Tourism creates more jobs per rupee than manufacturing (WTO data) Employs unskilled and semi-skilled youth—key for demographic dividend Acts as a soft-power amplifier shaping global perceptions of Indian society In South Asia, tourism failure has contributed to youth unrest (Sri Lanka, Bangladesh) Tourism is not just economic—it is a social stabiliser. Way Forward  Rebrand Beyond Monuments Move from generic branding to segmented narratives: Spiritual India, Adventure India, Luxury India, Living India Promote curated circuits: Buddhist Circuit Ramayana Circuit Himalayan & Coastal Trails Professionalise the Social Interface Large-scale vocational training in hospitality Multilingual guides and tourist police Centralised verified apps for guides, transport, and payments Treat tourism as a calling, not casual labour Gender-Responsive Tourism Hire and train more women in tourism services Strong enforcement against harassment and scams Safe public spaces and transport as default infrastructure Ease of Entry & Welcome Culture Expand e-visas, long-term multi-entry visas Train immigration officers in courtesy and cultural sensitivity “Visa on Arrival for the World” as an aspirational goal Sustainable & Community-Based Tourism Regulate footfalls at fragile sites Promote homestays, eco-lodges, local artisans Ensure development does not degrade culture or environment Conclusion India does not need to reinvent itself it needs to refine itself.  The world is not rejecting India’s culture; it is hesitating at India’s functionality, safety and social experience. Until image, infrastructure and social behaviour align, India will remain admired from afar but avoided in practice. Making India functional is the first step to making India unforgettable. Mains Question Tourism is not merely about heritage and culture but about social experience, safety and functionality. Critically examine India’s tourism challenges and suggest measures to make India a truly global destination. (15 marks) (250 words) The Hindu  

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 28th January 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 – 28th January 2026

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Chattergala Pass Category: Geography Context: Recently, the Border Roads Organisation (BRO) successfully carried out a high-altitude rescue and road restoration operation under Project Sampark at Chatergala Pass. About Chattergala Pass: Location: It falls on the boundary of the Doda and Kathua districts in Jammu region of Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir. Connectivity: It connects Bhaderwah (Neeru river valley) in Doda district with Basohli (Shiwalik hills) in Kathua district. Mountain range: It is situated at an elevation of approximately 10,500 feet in the Middle Himalayas. It is tucked in the Chamba-doda ranges of the greater Himalayas.  Terrain: It is surrounded by alpine meadows, snow-covered peaks, and dense forest. Fauna: Himalayan monals, ibex, and musk deer are found here. Strategic significance: The pass is critical for border security and regional connectivity, often used by the Border Roads Organisation (BRO) to ensure the movement of troops and supplies. Gateway: It serves as a gateway between the Jammu and Kashmir divisions, specifically bypassing the traditional NH-44 route. Chattergala Tunnel Project: To overcome the challenges of heavy snowfall (which can reach up to 5-6 feet in winters), the government is constructing a tunnel beneath the pass. It is a 6.8 km long road tunnel, which will be constructed at an estimated cost of Rs. 4,000 crore. Source: PIB                   Jeevan Raksha Padak Awards Category: Miscellaneous Context: Recently, the President of India has conferred the Jeevan Raksha Padak Series of Awards-2025 to 30 persons. About Jeevan Raksha Padak Awards: Nature: The Jeevan Raksha Padak awards are a series of civilian life-saving honours presented by the Government of India for meritorious acts of courage in saving a person’s life. Establishment: Originally instituted in 1961 as an offshoot of the Ashoka Chakra series, these awards are traditionally announced on Republic Day. Categories: The Jeevan Raksha Padak Award is given in three categories, namely, Sarvottam Jeevan Raksha Padak: It is awarded for conspicuous courage in saving life under circumstances of very great danger to the life of the rescuer. Uttam Jeevan Raksha Padam: It is awarded for courage and promptitude in saving life under circumstances of great danger to the life of the rescuer. Jeevan Raksha Padak: It is awarded for courage and promptitude in saving life under circumstances of grave bodily injury to the rescuer. Eligibility: Persons of all walks of life are eligible for these awards.  The award can also be conferred posthumously. Presentation: It is presented to the awardees by the respective Union Ministries/Organizations/State Government to which the awardee belongs.  Nomination and approval: Its nominations are invited annually from States/UTs and Union Ministries. The recommendations of the award are considered by the Awards Committee within a period of two calendar years from the date of performance of the act. Final approval is given by the Prime Minister and the President of India. Award: The decoration of the award consists of a Medal, Certificate, along with a one-time monetary allowance: Sarvottam Jeevan Raksha Padak (₹2 lakh), Uttam Jeevan Raksha Padam (₹1.5 lakh) and Jeevan Raksha (₹1 lakh). Source: News on AIR Bacillus Subtilis Category: Science and Technology Context: Recently, Kerala officially declared Bacillus subtilis as ‘State microbe’. About Bacillus Subtilis: Classification: It is a rod-shaped, Gram-positive bacterium. Metabolism: It is a facultative anaerobe, meaning it can grow in both oxygen-rich and oxygen-poor environments. Nature: Bacillus subtilis (B. subtilis) is a type of probiotic (“good” bacteria) found naturally in the human gut. It’s also found in fermented foods. Habitat: It is mostly found in soil and vegetation with an optimal growth temperature from 25-35 degrees Celsius.  Significance: B. subtilis has the ability to produce and secrete antibiotics. The genomic structure of this microorganism contains five signal peptidase genes that are important for the secretion of these antibiotics. It has shown to be capable of secreting polymyxin, difficidin, subtilin, and mycobacillin. Resilience: A major feature is its ability to form tough, protective endospores. These allow it to survive extreme conditions like heat, UV radiation, and drought for decades. Transmission and disease: B.subtilis is non-pathogenic but can contaminate food and be considered an opportunistic pathogen among the immuno-compromised. Applications: Agriculture (Bio-control): It is widely used as a bio-fungicide (e.g., the product ENTAZIA) to protect crops from diseases like Bacterial Leaf Blight by colonising root systems and producing antibiotics. Probiotics: It supports gut health and immunity in humans and animals. It is even used to enhance performance in poultry. Fermentation: It is essential for traditional fermented foods like Natto (Japan), Kinema (Sikkim), and Akhuni (Nagaland). Biotechnology: It is used on an industrial scale to produce enzymes like amylases and proteases, as well as vitamins. Environmental utility: It plays a role in bioremediation by cleaning heavy metals and hydrocarbons from contaminated sites and can even be used to degrade certain plastics.  Source: The Hindu Pygmy Hog Category: Environment and Ecology Context: India’s pygmy hog is vanishing from its grasslands, just as it is needed the most. About Pygmy Hog: Scientific Name: Its scientific name is Porcula salvania (It is the sole member of its genus). Uniqueness: It is the smallest and rarest species of wild pig in the world. It is one of the very few mammals that build its own home, or nest, complete with a ‘roof’. Endemic: It is currently found only in Assam, India. Its primary strongholds are grasslands of Manas National Park and Orang National Park.  Reintroduction: Captive-bred hogs have been successfully reintroduced into Sonai-Rupai Wildlife Sanctuary and Barnadi Wildlife Sanctuary  Significance: It is an indicator species as its presence reflects the health of its primary habitat. Its presence reflects the health of the Terai-Duar ecosystem. Habitat: It prefers undisturbed patches of grassland dominated by early succession riverine communities, typically comprising dense tall grass intermixed with a wide variety of herbs, shrubs and young trees. Ecological role: Using its snout, it digs for roots, tubers, wild fruits, termites, earthworms, eggs and other food sources found in the grasslands. This digging aerates the soil and enhances its quality. It also helps disperse seeds through its dietary and foraging habits. Conservation Status: IUCN: Critically Endangered The Wildlife Protection Act, 1972: Schedule I. Source: Down to Earth Indian Ocean Naval Symposium (IONS) Category: International Organisations Context: Boosting maritime engagement with Indonesia and advancing the vision of MAHASAGAR, Indian Navy’s First Training Squadron departed Belawan recently. About Indian Ocean Naval Symposium (IONS): Nature: It is a voluntary initiative that seeks to increase maritime cooperation among navies of the littoral states of the Indian Ocean Region by providing an open and inclusive forum for discussion of regionally relevant maritime issues. Origin: It was conceived by the Indian Navy in 2008. The inaugural edition of IONS was held in Feb 2008 at New Delhi, with the Indian Navy as the Chair for two years (2008–2010).  Objective: It endeavours to generate a flow of information between naval professionals that would lead to common understanding and possibly cooperative solutions on the way ahead. Significance: It promotes maritime cooperation, mutual understanding, and collaboration on issues such as maritime security and humanitarian assistance and disaster relief (HADR). Governance: IONS is structured around a rotating chairmanship, biennial conclaves of chiefs, and working groups. Membership: It includes 34 members (25 full members and 9 observers) from Indian Ocean littoral states. The full members are: South Asian Littorals: Bangladesh, India, Maldives, Pakistan, Seychelles, Sri Lanka. West Asian Littorals: Iran, Oman, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates (UAE). East African Littorals: Kenya, Mauritius, Mozambique, South Africa, Tanzania, Eritrea. Southeast Asian & Australian Littorals: Australia, France (via Reunion), Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, Singapore, Thailand, Timor-Leste. Other: United Kingdom (British Indian Ocean Territory). Focus areas: Maritime cooperation: Enhancing naval collaboration for regional security. Information sharing: Exchanging best practices on maritime issues. Disaster response: Developing effective mechanisms for Humanitarian Assistance & Disaster Relief (HADR). Source: PIB (MAINS Focus) The Rupee in the Crossfire of Geopolitics and Capital Flows GS-II: India and its relations with other countries; international institutions, global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India’s interests.   Context (Introduction) India has witnessed a sharp depreciation of the rupee since April 2025 (~6%), despite strong macroeconomic fundamentals GDP growth ~7.4% CPI inflation at 3.33% (below RBI lower tolerance band) Current Account Deficit at just 0.76% of GDP (H1 2025–26) This disconnect suggests that the rupee’s fall is not primarily economic, but geopolitical and diplomatic in origin. Core Idea  The recent rupee depreciation is driven less by trade fundamentals and more by geopolitically induced capital outflows, especially due to U.S. tariff actions and strategic uncertainty. Hence, diplomacy not devaluation or monetary intervention—is the primary solution. The exchange rate problem has shifted from economics to geopolitics. Key Drivers of Rupee Weakness Capital Outflows (Primary Villain) Net capital inflows fell from +$10.6 bn (Apr–Dec 2024) to –$3.9 bn (Apr–Dec 2025) Triggered by: 50% U.S. import tariffs on Indian exports Threat of secondary sanctions linked to India’s oil trade with Russia and Iran Capital outflows accelerate as rupee weakens, creating a self-reinforcing cycle Weaponisation of Trade & Tariffs  U.S. trade actions driven by strategic hostility, not macro fundamentals Tariffs used as geopolitical instruments, shifting resolution from WTO/economic forums to bilateral diplomacy Limits of RBI Intervention  Since 1993, India follows a market-determined exchange rate RBI intervenes only to reduce volatility, not to defend a level Intervention: Can smooth sudden shocks Cannot counter persistent geopolitical capital exits Why Devaluation Is Not the Remedy Export Gains Are Limited High U.S. tariffs negate competitiveness gains India’s export basket increasingly value-added, not price-sensitive Inflation Risks Are High Crude oil = ~25% of total merchandise imports Rupee fall → higher import costs → imported inflation REER, Not Nominal Rate, Matters Devaluation helps only when inflation differential is large, which is not the case for India Focus must be on Real Effective Exchange Rate (REER), not nominal depreciation Why This Matters  Macroeconomic stability cannot offset geopolitical shocks Currency stability is now linked to foreign policy credibility Prolonged rupee weakness can: Undermine investor confidence Depress equity markets (via FPI exits) Complicate inflation management This marks a shift from globalisation-driven economics to geopolitics-driven markets. Way Forward Diplomatic Resolution with the U.S. (Priority) Early conclusion of trade negotiations De-escalation of tariff and sanctions uncertainty Strategic Economic Diplomacy Reduce overexposure to single markets Strengthen ties with EU, ASEAN, Middle East RBI’s Role: Calibrated, Not Aggressive Continue volatility management, not rate defence Clear communication to anchor market expectations Capital Flow Resilience Improve real returns to attract long-term investors Policy certainty over fiscal, taxation, and regulation Conclusion The rupee’s recent fall is not a verdict on India’s economic fundamentals, but a reflection of geopolitical stress transmitted through capital markets. In an era where tariffs and finance are tools of strategic contestation, currency stability requires diplomatic solutions, not devaluation. When geopolitics drives markets, diplomacy becomes macroeconomic policy. Mains Question In an era where trade policy, sanctions, and capital flows are increasingly shaped by geopolitical contestation, exchange-rate movements can no longer be analysed purely through macroeconomic fundamentals. Critically examine. (250 words) The Hindu From Diplomacy to Delivery: Reframing the India–EU Partnership GS-II: “India and its relations with other countries; effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India’s interests.” GS-III: “Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilisation of resources, growth, development and employment.”   Context (Introduction) India–EU relations have entered a phase of strategic convergence amid a turbulent global order marked by U.S. unpredictability, China’s assertiveness, supply-chain shocks, and fragmentation of multilateralism. The January 2026 visit of the EU’s top leadership to Delhi signalled political momentum, but the real test lies in translating breakthroughs into delivery—especially in trade, technology, defence cooperation, and economic resilience. Core Idea  India–EU relations have matured politically, but now face a delivery deficit. While strategic intent is aligned, outcomes depend on institutional capacity, economic reforms, regulatory coordination, and sustained bureaucratic follow-through, not summit diplomacy alone. India must move from episodic engagement to deep, operational partnerships, while the EU must treat India as a strategic equal, not merely a market or values partner. Key Areas of Convergence  Trade and Economic Integration Revival of the India–EU Free Trade Agreement (FTA) after years of stagnation. EU is already India’s second-largest trade partner after China. FTA aims at: Supply chain diversification Resilient value chains Reduced over-dependence on China Shift from tariff-centric trade to standards, data rules, sustainability norms. Technology and Strategic Autonomy Cooperation in artificial intelligence, semiconductors, green hydrogen, advanced manufacturing. Objective: Prevent a global technology duopoly. Technology is not just economic power but norm-setting power. Defence and Security Cooperation Expansion of cooperation in: Western Indian Ocean Maritime domain awareness Defence industrial collaboration Europe emerging as an advanced defence partner, not just arms supplier. Geopolitical Alignment Shared concerns on: Russia–Ukraine war China’s rise Global South instability EU seeks reduced dependence on U.S. security umbrella. India seeks multipolar partnerships without alliance entanglements. Structural and Institutional Challenges Delivery Deficit Agreements stall at: Regulatory approvals Bureaucratic coordination Centre–State alignment in India Trade liberalisation requires years of administrative mobilisation, not just political consensus. Asymmetry in Expectations EU emphasises: Sustainability standards Labour and climate conditionalities India prioritises: Growth Manufacturing Developmental flexibility Fragmented European Landscape EU is multilingual, multinational, requiring: Engagement beyond Brussels Outreach to Germany, France, Nordics, Central & Eastern Europe Why This Matters for India  India’s $10 trillion economy goal by 2030s depends on: Stable export markets Capital inflows Technology access EU partnership supports: Manufacturing upgrade Green transition Skill mobility Reduces vulnerability to: U.S. trade weaponisation China-centric supply chains Way Forward  Move from Summits to Systems Empower joint secretariats Time-bound implementation roadmaps Deepen Sub-regional Engagement Nordics (green tech) Germany (manufacturing, defence) France (strategic and nuclear cooperation) Regulatory Readiness in India Align domestic standards with global benchmarks Strengthen institutional capacity at State level Link FTA with Industrial Policy Use FTA to integrate India into EU value chains Complement with PLI schemes and skilling Sustain Political Attention High-level engagement beyond symbolism Continuous bureaucratic ownership Conclusion India–EU relations have reached a strategic inflection point. The challenge is no longer vision, but execution. If Delhi and Brussels succeed in converting political alignment into economic and technological delivery, the partnership can become a pillar of a new multipolar order. Failure, however, would relegate it to yet another high-potential but under-performing strategic relationship. In a fractured world, partnerships that deliver rather than merely declare will shape the future order. Mains Question “India–EU relations have reached a strategic convergence, but the real challenge lies in translating political breakthroughs into economic and technological delivery.” Critically examine (250 words, 15 marks) The Indian Express  

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 27th January 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 – 27th January 2026

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Madras Hedgehog Category: Environment and Ecology Context: For the first time, the Tamil Nadu forest department has begun a study on the rare mammal species Madras Hedgehog at the Theri forests in the district. About Madras Hedgehog: Nature: It is a nocturnal species, which curls into a ball to protect itself from danger. It has mastered survival in some of the harshest and driest landscapes. Scientific name: Its scientific name is Paraechinus nudiventris. Other names: Madras Hedgehog, locally known as Mulleli is a tiny mammal. It is also known as the bare-bellied hedgehog, discovered in 1851. Features: It has sharp spines on its back and soft white fur on its belly. Its spines offer protection from predators such as foxes, jackals and mongooses. Habitat: The species prefers dry scrublands, thorn forests, grasslands and the edges of farmlands.  Distribution: It is found only in peninsular India, primarily across Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh and parts of Karnataka. Diet: It feeds on insects such as beetles, ants, earthworms and termites, apart from plants. Threats: Its population declined largely due to hunting driven by mythical beliefs that its quills and meat have medicinal value. Conservation status: It is classified as Least Concern in the IUCN Red List. Hedgehog Species in India: Of the 17 species of hedgehog around the world, India is home to three: Madras Hedgehog: Southern India (Endemic). Indian Long-eared Hedgehog: Northern India and Pakistan. Indian Hedgehog: Arid and sandy desert regions of India and Pakistan. Source: The New Indian Express National Voters' Day Category: Polity and Governance Context: Recently, the Prime Minister of India extended greetings to citizens on the occasion of National Voters’ Day. About National Voters’ Day (NVD): Commemoration: It is observed on January 25th across India every year since 2011 to commemorate the foundation day of the Election Commission of India. Objective: It is celebrated to honour voters, strengthen democratic values, encourage youth participation, and promote universal adult suffrage. It celebrates democracy and empowers every citizen to take part in the electoral process.  Theme: The theme for National Voters’ Day 2026 is “My India, My Vote” with a tagline of “Citizen at the Heart of Indian Democracy. Celebrations: It is celebrated at the level of national, state, district, constituency, and polling booth and NVD stands as one of the country’s most widespread and significant celebrations. Focus on young voters: It is dedicated to the voters of the nation, National Voters’ Day also promotes the enrolment of new voters, particularly young individuals who have recently become eligible. Historical  milestone: In 2025, the ECI celebrated its 75th year of service to the nation (it was established on Jan 25, 1950). Significance of NVD: Electoral reforms: NVD highlights initiatives like SVEEP (Systematic Voters’ Education and Electoral Participation) and digital tools like the Voter Helpline App and e-EPIC. Democratic values: It reinforces the concept that voting is not just a right but a civic responsibility essential for the accountability of representatives. Inclusivity: Efforts are made to include Persons with Disabilities (PwDs), senior citizens, and marginalised groups through the principle of “No Voter to be Left Behind.” Source: PIB ASC Arjun Category: Miscellaneous Context: Recently, the Indian Railways has introduced a humanoid robot named “ASC ARJUN” at Visakhapatnam Railway Station. About ASC Arjun: Nature: It is a humanoid robot introduced by the Indian Railways. Objective: The robot will operate alongside Railway Protection Force (RPF) personnel to assist in station operations, particularly during periods of heavy passenger movement.  Development: It is designed and developed entirely in Visakhapatnam using home-grown technology. A dedicated team worked continuously for more than a year to bring this project to fruition. Use of AI: It is equipped with a Face Recognition System (FRS) for intrusion detection, AI-based crowd monitoring and real-time alert generation for RPF control rooms. Multilingual: It can also make automated public announcements in English, Hindi and Telugu to assist passengers and promote safety awareness. Navigation: It also features semi-autonomous navigation with obstacle-avoidance capability, Patrolling: It can patrol station platforms round the clock, supporting surveillance and optimising manpower deployment. Welcoming gestures: It has been designed for passenger interaction, offering gestures such as a ‘Namaste’ for passengers and salutes for RPF personnel, along with an interface to provide information and assistance. Equipped for emergency: It is also fitted with fire and smoke detection systems to aid timely response during emergencies. Source: PIB Forever Chemicals Category: Science and Technology Context: New filtration technology developed by Rice University may absorb some Pfas “forever chemicals” at 100 times the rate previously possible. About Forever Chemicals: Nature: Forever chemicals, are a large chemical family of thousands of highly persistent, toxic, man-made, hazardous chemicals. Nomenclature: The name ‘forever chemicals’ comes from the fact that they remain in the environment without breaking down for generations. Other names: They are also known as PFAS (per- and poly- fluoroalkyl substances). Uniqueness: PFAS molecules have a chain of linked carbon and fluorine atoms. Because the carbon-fluorine bond is one of the strongest, these chemicals do not degrade easily in the environment. Durability: In manufacturing, PFAS are favoured for their durability and useful properties such as non-stick, water repellence, and anti-grease.  Uses: PFAS are used in the manufacture of many domestic products, including- skin creams and cosmetics, car and floor polish, rinse aid for dishwashers, textile and fabric treatments, food packaging and microwave popcorn bags, baking equipment, frying pans, outdoor clothing and shoes, firefighting foam, etc. Concerns: Over time, PFAS may leak into the soil, water, and air. Exposure: People are most likely exposed to these chemicals by consuming PFAS-contaminated water or food, using products made with PFAS, or breathing air containing PFAS. Because PFAS breaks down slowly, if at all, people and animals are repeatedly exposed to them, and blood levels of some PFAS can build up over time. Impacts of PFAS on human health: Forever chemicals have been linked to multiple health problems, including compromised immune systems, liver damage, thyroid diseases, increased cholesterol levels, hypertension, developmental delays in infants, and increased certain cancers such as kidney and testicular.  Regulation: The Stockholm Convention has listed some PFAS, such as Perfluorooctane sulfonic acid (PFOS) and Perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA), as persistent organic pollutants (POPs). Source: The Guardian Gandak River Category: Geography Context: The Gandak River has emerged as the second major river after the Chambal with the highest number of gharials, also known as fish-eating crocodiles. About Gandak River: Location: Gandak is one of the major rivers in Nepal and a left-bank tributary of the Ganges in India. Other names: The Gandak River is also known as the Narayani and Gandaki. Mentioned in Epics: It is mentioned in the ancient Sanskrit epic Mahabharata. Length: The total length of the river is 700 km. In India, it covers a course of more than 300 km. Boundaries: It is bounded on the north by the Himalayas, south by the River Ganga, east by the Burhi Gandak Basin and on the west by the Ghagra Basin. Origin: It originates at an altitude of 7620 m above msl to the north of Dhaulagiri Mountain in Tibet near the Nepal border. After flowing through Tibet, it crosses Nepal, where it is also known as Narayani, to enter the Indian Territory.  Course in India: The river enters India from Valmikinagar in the West Champaran district of Bihar. The entry point of the river is at the Indo–Nepal border and is known as Triveni. In India, it flows southeast, across the upper Gangetic plain in eastern Uttar Pradesh and northwestern Bihar.  Shifting of course: Due to the steep slope and loose soil in the upper catchment, it carries a lot of silt and other deposits to the Indian side, resulting in a continuous shifting course of the river. Because of this, it is also known as ‘Sorrow of Bihar.’ Formation of gorge: While flowing through the Nepal Himalayas, it forms the Kali Gandaki gorge, one of the deepest river gorges in the world. Glaciers: There are about 1,710 glaciers and over 300 lakes in the upper catchment of Gandaki. Major tributaries: These include Daraudi, Seti, Madi, Marsyandi, and Budhi Gandaki. Protected areas: Two important protected areas, Chitwan National Park in Nepal and the adjacent Valmiki Tiger reserve in India, have been established in the basin. Source: The Times of India (MAINS Focus) Cybercrime and the Crisis of Global Governance GS-II: India and its relations with other countries; international institutions, global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India’s interests. GS-III: Awareness in the fields of Information Technology, Computers; cyber security; issues relating to intellectual property rights   Context (Introduction) Cybercrime has emerged as a transnational threat cutting across national security, economic stability, democratic rights, and data sovereignty. In December 2024, the UN General Assembly adopted the UN Convention against Cybercrime, the first global criminal justice instrument in over two decades. However, India, the U.S., Japan, and Canada did not sign, exposing deep fractures in global cyber governance and highlighting a wider crisis of multilateralism. Core Issue The debate around the UN Cybercrime Convention reflects a principle–practice divide in international law, where consensus on abstract norms masks sharp divergence in implementation, especially concerning: Definition of cybercrime Human rights safeguards State control over data Cross-border law enforcement cooperation This fragmentation is occurring amid a shift from rule-based multilateralism to polycentrism, where governance increasingly relies on smaller, issue-based coalitions. Key Developments  The Convention was proposed by Russia (2017) and negotiated through 8 formal UN sessions. Adopted in Dec 2024, supported by 72 countries. Seeks to move beyond the Budapest Convention (2001), which: Is European-led Excludes Russia and China Operates via invitation-only accession India actively participated in negotiations but rejected the final text. U.S. and civil society groups flagged risks of: Overbroad crime definitions Political misuse against journalists and activists Russia–China view the Convention as a way to legitimise sovereign control over cyberspace. Challenges Exposed Principles–Practice Rift Vague definitions of “serious cybercrime” allow criminal law expansion, threatening: Freedom of expression Due process Judicial oversight Human rights protections remain anchored in domestic legal systems, not international enforcement. Data Sovereignty vs Data Flows India sought stronger institutional control over citizens’ data, which was diluted. Near-universal acceptance that trusted data flows are necessary, but mechanisms remain contested. Erosion of Multilateral Institutions UN credibility weakened by: Security Council paralysis (Ukraine, Gaza) U.S. funding cuts WTO dispute settlement paralysis (since 2019) Cyber governance mirrors this institutional breakdown. Rise of Polycentrism Governance shifting to: Plurilateral groups (Quad, Five Eyes) Regional frameworks Leads to institutional overlap, coordination failures, and uneven state capacity. Why This Matters for India Cybersecurity is now integral to: National security Digital economy Democratic resilience India risks: Losing rule-making influence Being forced into rule-taker status India’s regulatory experiments (e.g., AI content watermarking) show the danger of over-prescriptive domestic rules diverging from global norms. Balancing: Strategic autonomy Human rights Global interoperability is becoming increasingly complex. Way Forward At the Global Level Advocate narrow, precise definitions of cybercrime. Push for mandatory judicial review, proportionality, and due process safeguards. Engage in issue-based coalitions without abandoning multilateral forums. At the National Level Build technical negotiating capacity across: Cyber law Encryption AI governance Harmonise domestic cyber laws with globally accepted principles (privacy, necessity, proportionality). Invest in regulatory institutions, not just rule-making. Strategic Approach Adopt a calibrated polycentric strategy: Multilateral engagement where possible Plurilateral leadership where necessary Avoid binary choices between sovereignty and cooperation. Conclusion Cybercrime governance today mirrors the wider global governance crisis—fragmented authority, contested norms, and weakened institutions. For India, the challenge is not merely whether to sign a convention, but whether it can shape the evolving cyber order without surrendering institutional autonomy or democratic values. The shift to polycentrism is unavoidable, but without strategic capacity-building, it risks deepening inequality and instability in cyberspace governance. Mains Question The failure to build consensus around the UN Convention against Cybercrime highlights a deeper crisis of multilateral governance in cyberspace. Critically examine. (250 words) The Hindu This is box title GS-II: “India and its relations with other countries; effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India’s interests.” GS-III: “Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilisation of resources, growth, development and employment.”   Context (Introduction) The erosion of the rules-based global economic order marked by US policy unpredictability, Chinese excess capacity, weakening multilateralism, and rising protectionism—has altered the external environment facing India. While near-term indicators suggest a cyclical recovery in India’s economy in 2026, however, cyclical tailwinds are insufficient in a structurally volatile global system. Only deep domestic reforms can provide durable economic insulation. Core Idea  Cyclical growth impulses vs structural growth capacity: India’s current upturn is driven by GST and income-tax buoyancy, lower commodity prices, regulatory easing, and residual post-pandemic momentum. However, in a world where global trade rules are fragmenting, export-led certainty cannot be assumed. Therefore, India’s growth strategy must pivot decisively from temporary demand support to long-term structural reform, especially in investment, labour, capital formation, and productivity. Key Economic Signals Highlighted GDP growth shows cyclical strength, supported by: GST and direct tax collections Monetary and regulatory easing Moderation in urban consumption slowdown Consumption recovery is uneven: Wage growth in listed firms slowed to mid-single digits (2025) Personal credit growth driven by gold loans, not income growth Exports resilient but slowing: Non-oil export growth slowed to ~3% by end-2025 Export momentum expected to weaken further in 2026 Private capex remains tentative, constrained by: Excess Chinese capacity US trade and industrial policy uncertainty Structural Challenges Identified Global Economic Fragmentation Collapse of predictable trade rules Weaponisation of tariffs and industrial policy Weakening WTO dispute settlement Rising geopolitical risk premia Exhaustion of Cyclical Policy Space Fiscal consolidation imperative: Combined Centre–State fiscal deficit must decline by ~1% of GDP Limited monetary policy headroom: Real interest rates already ~1.25% Nominal GDP growth alone cannot sustain long-term expansion Investment and Productivity Constraints India’s growth has become capital-intensive, not labour-absorbing Formalisation and compliance costs risk crowding out MSMEs Labour productivity growth remains inadequate for demographic needs Why It Matters for India External insulation: With exports exposed to geopolitical shocks, domestic demand and private investment must anchor growth. Employment challenge: Only labour-intensive growth can absorb India’s expanding workforce. Strategic autonomy: Economic resilience underpins India’s foreign policy flexibility in an unstable global order. Middle-income transition: Achieving $15,000 per capita income by 2047 requires sustained 8% growth, which cyclical rebounds cannot deliver. Way Forward  Structural Investment Push Shift from episodic public capex to crowding-in private investment Focus on capital deepening without suppressing labour demand Labour-Intensive Growth Strategy Mission-mode focus on: Education Skilling Health Align labour reforms with employment elasticity, not only ease of doing business Trade and Industrial Strategy Avoid pessimistic trade disengagement Selective FTAs that enhance competitiveness (not defensive protectionism) Rationalise tariffs and non-tariff barriers to integrate into global value chains Institutional Reforms Predictable tax and regulatory regime Simplification without excessive compliance burdens Strengthen policy credibility to revive animal spirits Conclusion As the rules-based global order weakens, India cannot rely on external stability or short-term macro tailwinds. Cyclical recovery may provide breathing space, but only sustained structural reforms—in investment, labour markets, productivity, and institutional credibility—can shield the economy from global volatility. In a fragmented world, domestic reform becomes the first line of economic defence. Mains Question “In a phase of weakening rules-based global economic governance and rising geoeconomic fragmentation, India’s economic resilience increasingly depends on domestic institutional capacity rather than external trade predictability.” Critically examine (250 words, 15 marks) The Indian Express