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IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs – 9th February, 2017

IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs – 9th February 2017 Archives SECURITY AND DIASPORA  TOPIC: General Studies 2 Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India’s interests, Indian Diaspora Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India’s interests. General Studies 3 Role of external state and non‐state actors in creating challenges to internal security Various Security forces and agencies and their mandate Diaspora – Security concerns w.r.t. evacuations. Introduction The Indian Diaspora is a generic term to describe the people who migrated from territories that are currently within the borders of the Republic of India. It also refers to their descendants. The Diaspora is currently estimated to number over twenty million composed of "NRIs" (Indian citizens not residing in India) and "PIOs" (Persons of Indian Origin who have acquired the citizenship of some other country). The Diaspora covers practically every part of the world. It numbers more than a million each in eleven countries, while as many as twenty-two countries have concentrations of at least a hundred thousand ethnic Indians. Understanding: According to the latest United Nations estimates, 244 million people, or 3.3% of the world's population, live in a country other than the one where they were born. By far, the most popular destination in 2015 was the United States, followed by Germany, Russia and Saudi Arabia. But the ranking should not be viewed as a popularity contest. Saudi Arabia shows up because it hosts an enormous number of migrant workers, not immigrants who resettle, as in the United States. Indians make up the largest diaspora: 16 million Indians are scattered across the world, which partly reflects the country's demographic size (1.2 billion) and youth (median age is around 26). Issue: The increasing size and complexity of the diaspora requires the government to expand capacity and improve procedures. More than 11 million Indians now reside abroad and 20 million travel internationally every year. As political instability rattles the West Asian region, which hosts more than seven million Indians, the government can no longer rely on heroic efforts by individual officials or quick-fix solutions. Despite extensive experience in conducting evacuation operations of its citizens abroad, India still needs to institutionalise best practices. Previous experiences: On January 26, 1986, as New Delhi celebrated its Republic Day, South Yemen was being engulfed in a civil war that threatened the lives of thousands of foreigners living there. While Britain, France and the Soviet Union coordinated to jointly evacuate their nationals, the 850 Indians in the country were forced to wait for several more days until New Delhi finally managed to convince a merchant ship to pick them up. Fast forward almost 30 years, to April 2015, when Yemen was on fire once again. This time, however, the Indian government successfully conducted Operation Raahatto evacuate almost 5,000 Indians and nearly 1,000 citizens from 41 other countries. Besides Air India aircraft, the Indian Navy deployed vessels, and the Indian Air Force C-17 Globemasters for strategic airlift. Such unprecedented efforts and resources reflect New Delhi’s new drive to protect the lives and assets of its citizens abroad in times of crisis. Measures to be initiated First, the government will need to build on its rich experience in conducting more than 30 evacuation operations since the 1950s. Studying India’s history, best practices and lessons learned will help institutionalise them and avoid the need to reinvent the wheel every time a crisis erupts. By supporting policy-oriented research at universities and think tanks to document the memory of senior officials, the government would also facilitate the transmission of their expertise to younger officials. Preparing a manual Second, the government must avoid the jugaad(careless or reactive)approach. Every evacuation case is unique, given the specific nature and location of the crisis, but this should not preclude an analytical attempt to formulate a blueprint that lists core tasks for all operations. An inter-ministerial committee should prepare a manual with guidelines that establish a clear chain of command and division of competencies; identify regional support bases, assembly points and routes for evacuation; develop country-specific warden systems to communicate with expatriates; and establish evacuation priority and embarkation criteria. Third, India’s diplomatic cadre must be given specific training to operate in hostile environments. As pointed out by a senior government official, when it comes to operating in complex theatres, “practice and preparedness make perfection”. To achieve this, the government could instruct the police or army to train Indian Foreign Service probationers to operate in war zones; conduct frequent evacuation simulations and emergency drills; and create rapid reaction teams of Indian security personnel to be deployed to protect diplomatic staff and installations abroad. Fourth, the success of future operations will also rely on New Delhi’s willingness to work together with friendly governments. India will have to invest in cooperative frameworks that facilitate coordination among countries that have large expatriate populations in West Asia, in particular Nepal, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, and among leading powers with evacuation capacity in the Indian Ocean region. Fifth, the government will have to assign a greater role to its armed forces, in particular by strengthening the Navy and Air Force’s capacity to operate in tandem with civilian authorities. It should, for example, direct the military to develop a non-combatant evacuation (NEO) doctrine, designate the Integrated Defence Staff as the nodal organisation to improve inter-services and civil-military coordination, direct the services to conduct more multilateral NEO exercises, and adapt military modernisation plans to increase capacity for out-of-area deployment and evacuation. Using technology Sixth, to minimise redundancies, the government must institutionalise a permanent inter-ministerial coordinating mechanism for emergency evacuations, incentivise inter-agency cross-posting of officials dealing with diaspora affairs, and encourage State governments to create regional contingency plans. Seventh, to avoid cost inflation and delays, the government must establish a permanent civil reserve air fleet that pools aircraft from all Indian airlines based on pre-established requisition and reimbursement procedures. Eighth, the government will have to invest in new technologies to better monitor the diaspora’s profile and mobility. This can be achieved by encouraging more diplomatic missions to provide online consular registration forms, developing an online registration system for overseas travellers, utilising social media, and by making the Aadhaar card compulsory to facilitate biometric identity verification and reduce identity fraud during evacuation. Finally, the government must expand efforts to manage public opinion and be able to conduct a quiet diplomacy that is crucial to safely extricate Overseas Indians from conflict zones. To reduce domestic pressures, it should embed media representatives more frequently in such missions, reassure the diaspora by ensuring that high-level political representatives are personally engaged, and avoid raising expectations by clearly distinguishing Indian citizens from people of Indian origin. Conclusion India has extensive experience in conducting evacuation operations, but to secure the lives and assets of Indians abroad, the government must avoid an ad hoc approach and seek to institutionalise best practices, bolster diplomatic and military capabilities, and improve coordination. Connecting the dots : With changing global security situation and dispersed Indian diaspora evacuation operations in recent times have been testing. Critically analyse the need for a comprehensive policy in this direction. Give you sketch of a probable policy dimension.   SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY TOPIC: General Studies 3 Science and Technology- developments and their applications and effects in everyday life General Studies 2 Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation. Time to formulate a law for data protection Government’s push to ‘go cashless’, growing pervasiveness and penetration of Aadhar and the age of Big data has led to re-emergence of interest in privacy and data protection in India. Big Data= extremely large data sets that may be analysed computationally to reveal patterns, trends, and associations, especially relating to human behaviour and interactions. There are multiple laws which have impact on privacy of individuals- Information Technology Act, Aadhaar Act, Right to Information Act, and various other delegated legislation. But there is no comprehensive law or policy on privacy or data protection in India. Right to Privacy Bill, 2014 The Right to Privacy bill, 2014 has been lying redundant and has no future dim hope as the government has set no timelines for its reconsideration or re-enactment. The issue of privacy law arose when government of India said in the Supreme Court that “violation of privacy doesn’t mean anything because privacy is not a guaranteed right”, actually arguing that the citizens of India do not have a fundamental right to privacy. The Right to Privacy Bill, 2014 guaranteeing citizen against the misuse of personal data by government or private agencies was being prepared by central government. The objective was to uphold Article 21 of Constitution that states sensitive personal data need not be disclosed by an individual without prior consent to the data subject. This is a constitutional assurance provided for every citizen in India against misuse of personal data. The draft bill is yet to be discussed by the stakeholders and difference of opinions have to be solved. The penalty clause of the bill proposes enhancement of penalties of Rs 2 crore against any person or agencies in illegally using the personal data. Any official of telecom service provider is found guilty in misusing the personal data is subject to penalty of Rs 50 lakhs, illegally obtained personal information on false pretext is also subject to penalty of 50 lakhs. Stealth of personal data on the first attempt is subject to 10 lakhs and on repeated act penalty is enhanced to 20 lakhs. Though the bill is to protect personal data of an individual and ensuring privacy it has a proposed clause to exempt the intelligence and law enforcement agencies from its ambit. The special exemption clause in the bill states exemption of intelligence authorities from the scrutiny of Data Protection Authority. The bill aims at the scrutiny of intelligence agencies only by competent court. Hence, with the growing use of digital content, there is a glaring gap that needs to be filled legally. 5 elements to design a privacy law Data collection The law should require the entities that collect the data to specify the purpose of collecting the data. The users should be provided with ‘opt-out’ clause so that they can withdraw their content from data collection. In Aadhar Act, Lok Sabha rejected the amendment that sought to introduce an opt-out clause which allowed the biometric and demographic information of the Aadhaar-number holder to be deleted. This has left the citizens with the unsettling feeling of having surrendered their biometrics permanently. The laws should specify the manner and form of preserving data, the time limits for retention and whether they recognize the “right to be forgotten”. Use and process of data Data is consistently being collected- actively through giving user information while registering for an app and passively through GPS tracking of movements on Google Maps, etc. Today, Big Data technologies have made it easy to extrapolate personal information about individuals. For example, a recent study found that an individual’s Facebook “likes” reveal, with a reasonable accuracy, their ethnicity, religious and political leanings, sexual orientation, and personality traits. Thus, data collection limitation (how much information one reveals about itself) is not enough. The law has to focus on putting limitation on usage of data also by controlling how data controllers can use the information collected about their users. The onus has to be on entities that collect and control the data. This may also involve formulating rules of proportionality and the narrow modifying of exceptions that will govern the balancing of competing interests. India can also learn from European Union (EU) initiatives on data protection “by design” and “by default”, which focus on improving default privacy settings so as to reduce subsequent regulatory intervention. Sharing and transfer of data Currently there is no regulatory framework to control how data is shared by the data controller with third parties. Also there is no consideration of the different standards that govern the sharing of information with governmental and non-governmental entities, both within India and abroad. Indian law has to be able to deal with situations such as the Facebook-WhatsApp data-sharing policy (for commercial benefits) or the Apple-Federal Bureau of Investigation stand-off (for law enforcement). Rights of users The data privacy law should also recognise the rights of users. Though it is yet to be decided if right to privacy is a constitutional right or not, but it is necessary that right to privacy atleast becomes a statutory right. Once again, EU Privacy law can become a guide here by recognising Rights to data quality- ensuring accuracy of personal data by allowing individuals access and correction rights Data integrity- ensuring security of data Data-breach notification- requiring users to be informed of any privacy-related breaches Data portability- allowing users to transmit their personal data across service providers Supervision and redressal mechanism The success of any law depends on enforcement. More than focussing on writing laws, much attention should be given to effectiveness of redressal mechanisms. For example, in Aadhar Act, only UIDAI is permitted to initiate criminal action and not the Aadhaar number holder. Adding to it, the accompanying regulatory order envisages a grievance redressal “contact centre”. However, the actual process of redress and the binding nature of such a mechanism is left unspecified. Conclusion If the “Privacy Right” has to be taken beyond “Data Protection”, it is necessary to define “Privacy” as a “Sense of personal liberty felt by an individual without the constraints felt by him as radiated by people around him”. The availability and disclosure of data about an individual to the people around is the prime reason for these constraints to be felt by the individual. Hence one of the concepts of Privacy is to give the right to the individual to control how much of the information about himself he would try to share with others. Thus as part of privacy protection mechanism, there can be three classifications “Personal Data, “Sensitive Personal Data” and “Essential Data”. This classification is expected to provide a better foundation for regulation. The new laws have to be broad enough to ensure their wide applicability and simultaneously flexible enough to adapt to technological changes. Along with it, their application to state and private sector, their different standards of application should also be clearly demarcated. India has to be compliant with globally accepted privacy and data-protection standards so as to ensure utmost priority to privacy of a common individual. Connecting the dots: Should there be right to privacy? Discuss. Data protection is one of the key elements for a robust cyber policy. Analyse. MUST READ A sudden lightness of being Hindu   Temptation of spoils Hindu   Why We Fail Our Children Indian Express   Black money, red herring Indian Express   Looking after leaping Indian Express   The promise and pitfalls of urbanization in India Livemint   Liberalism at the crossroads Livemint   It’s time for India to revisit ‘Look East’ Business Line   RBI rightly displays caution, prudence Business Line  

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

IASbaba Daily Current Affairs Quiz [Day 117]

IASbaba Daily Current Affairs Quiz [Day 117] Click here to get all the Tests– Archives Q.1) Consider the following statements about Maritime Power Conference – 2017 It is organized by Ministry of Shipping The theme is The Blue Economy: Concept, Constituents and Development’ Which of the following statements is/are correct? Only 1 Only 2 Both 1 and 2 Neither 1 nor 2 Q.2) Consider the following statements about ‘Rashtriya Yuva Sashaktikaran Karyakaram’ (RYSK) It is under the Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports Nehru Yuva Kendra Sangathan (NYKS) and National Programme for Youth and Adolescent Development (NPYAD) has been subsumed in the Rashtriya Yuva Sashaktikaran Karyakram (RYSK) Which of the following statements is/are correct? Only 1 Only 2 Both 1 and 2 Neither 1 nor 2 Q.3) The present relationship between the President and the council of ministers is governed by the provisions of: 42nd Amendment Act 48th Amendment Act 44th Amendment Act 54th Amendment Act Q.4) In which one of the following union territories, do the people of the Onge tribe live? Andaman and Nicobar Islands Dadra and Nagar Haveli Daman and Diu Lakshadweep Q.5) The term ‘oil zapper’ is concerned with Remediation of oily sludge and oil spills Under­sea oil exploration Genetically engineered high biofuel yielding maize variety Technology to control the accidentally caused flames from oil wells Download the Solution- Click here All the best IASbaba

IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs – 8th February, 2017

IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs – 8th February 2017 Archives National/Culture  TOPIC: General Studies 1 Social empowerment, communalism, regionalism & secularism Salient features of Indian Society, Diversity of India General Studies 2 Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation. The fight against traditions- Nagaland women reservation Background In 1992, the constitution provided for Municipal Councils in urban areas including reservation for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, as well as women. While Nagaland is exempted from the Constitution’s Panchayat system, it is bound by the Municipal Council system, including the 1/3 reservation requirement for women. (Nagaland, Meghalaya and Mizoram have autonomous districts & Councils formed Under Sixth Schedule of Constitution and thus exempted under Article 243M(2) to have a Panchayat) In 2001, Nagaland State Government enacted the Nagaland Municipal Act, 2001 but it did not include the constitutionally mandated reservations for women. Finally, the Nagaland government enacted the Nagaland Municipal (First Amendment) Act in 2006 which provided 33% reservation for women in urban local bodies (ULBs) in Nagaland. This has been opposed by all-male tribal bodies on the grounds that reservation for women in ULBs would violate Article 371(A) of the Constitution and infringe on Naga culture, traditions and customary laws. This opposition has made the local elections due in Nagaland for 16 years now and the 2017 elections for ULBs have once again been postponed. The legal struggle In 2011, spearheaded by the Naga Mothers’ Association (NMA), Naga women filed a writ petition in Guwahati HC, challenging the State government’s refusal to hold municipal elections. The single judge bench directed the government to hold elections to municipal councils and town councils in 2012. Later the Nagaland government filed an appeal before a Division Bench of the Guwahati High Court, which stayed the previous ruling. One of the arguments put forward by the Nagaland government was the claim that implementing such a law would ‘upset the peace’ in Nagaland. In 2012, the State Assembly adopted a resolution rejecting women’s reservation in ULBs on the ground that it infringes on the social and customary practices of the Nagas safeguarded by 371 (A). Further, in 2012, a special leave petition was moved in SC which upheld in 2016 the single-judge ruling of the Gauhati High Court of 2011. So, the Nagaland government enacted the Nagaland Municipal (Third Amendment) Bill 2016, which revoked the September 2012 resolution, paving the way for women’s reservation in ULBs. Rights of women violated NMA has said that article 243(T) of the Constitution, which provides for 33% women’s reservation in municipal bodies, applies to Nagaland as well. But Naga Hoho, the apex body of Naga tribes — contends that article 371(A) gives precedence to Nagaland’s customary traditions and laws over the laws passed by Parliament. Over and above this, the male-dominated tribal bodies assert that Naga society offers equal opportunity to their females. However, these are absolutely false claims. In reality, no woman has ever been elected to the state assembly in over 53 years of Nagaland’s existence as a state. Only late Rano M. Shaiza in 1977 was sole representative in Parliament. Though village development boards have 25% seats reserved for women, but most of tribal bodies which act as the custodians of tribal culture and traditions are dominated by men. As a result, the property and inheritance rights are highly skewed against women. This system has been developed over the years to keep property with the community lest women deicide to marry outside tribe. Violating the constitution Differentiating traditional and constitutional The tribal bodies who opposed the elections are not traditional institutions recognised by Article 371(A). It provides a special status to Nagaland and protects its religious or social practices, customary law ownership and transfer of land and its resources etc. Similarly, the ULBs are constitutional bodies under Part IX of the Constitution and not traditional Naga institutions. Hence they have no right to mandate on its functioning. When the state government did not call off election to be conducted on Feb 1, these tribal bodies called bandh in state from Jan 28 to Feb 1. Despite the bandh, elections took place in several places on February 1. This shows that some towns did not agree with these tribal bodies. It has to be also noted that even before the bandh call, the focus had started shifting from women’s reservation to issues of taxes and land ownership contained in the Nagaland Municipal (Third Amendment) Bill 2016. Running away is not solution What is even more alarming that Nagaland government decided to write to the Centre demanding that Nagaland be exempted from Part IX A of the Constitution. Part IX A of the Constitution dealing with Municipalities contains a mandatory provision under Article 243T for 33% women reservation in ULBs According to them, with such an exemption, the issue will be put to rest and avoid further misunderstanding among the people. This clearly means that the government is washing its hands of the reservations and sacrificing the rights of Naga women because of traditional male ego. If such an exemption happens, Naga women will have absolutely no hope of entering into and participating in decision-making bodies. Conclusion Reservation for women is necessary in patriarchal societies like Naga society, where there is a historical culture of inequalities. Though Nagas don’t practise sati, female foeticide and infanticide, and do not believe in dowry or the caste system, but Naga customs, culture and traditions preclude women from inheriting land and participating in the decision-making process. Art 371(A) exactly protects these rights of women. There is another challenge of how the issue is being portrayed among the masses. Debates around state like Nagaland due to its unique history are complex due to its special relationship with the Union of India enshrined in the Constitution and also insurgency problems. Using words such as ‘upset the peace’ may cloud over the judgement of central government who is not well-versed with ground realities. Hence, ‘one-size-fits-all’ approach of policy making has to be changed and take into account local and ground realities while bringing solutions. Equally, the communities have misused their ‘autonomous status’ to perpetuate their own internal inequalities which needs to be taken into account. Being a case of gender rights, this has to be addressed with a long term vision and not near gains. The women have to fight for their rights, be it triple talaq case or entering into religious institutions. Connecting the dots: The world still believes in patriarchal values and political women empowerment is a myth in India. Do you agree? substantiate Exempting individual states from provisions of constitution of India will hurt the fabric of unity, secularity and equality. Examine. INTERNATIONAL TOPIC: General Studies 2 Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India’s interests. General Studies 1 Role of women and women’s organization, population and associated issues, poverty and developmental issues, urbanization, their problems and their remedies. Africa and its significance for the world Introduction Africa is considered the Dark Continent of the world with numerous possibilities. It has faced the discrimination and scourge of the world. Be it the world wars or the slavery and its associated dynamics Africa has been misused by Europe and America for centuries. The world views Africa through the prism of problems. But it is a continent of hope, promise and vast potential. The need is to facilitate, energize and support the same in all platforms and dimensions. Challenges faced by Africa: Challenge #1: Africa’s current economic growth rate is far too low. Sub-Saharan Africa’s GDP per capita (at constant 2005 prices) was $1,036.10 in 2014. At the 1.4% growth rate estimated for 2015, it would take Africa 50 years to double GDP per capita. Challenge #2: African industrial development has been stalled since the 1970s. Only one in five workers in Africa has a job in the wage economy. Historically, the only way to generate such jobs on a significant scale in developing countries has been by means of export-oriented manufacturing. But Africa has made little headway in growing export-oriented industries in the past four decades. Challenge #3: The lives of most Africans are marred by poverty, hunger, poor education, ill health, and violence. Although the poverty rate in Africa has dropped in recent years, rapid population growth means that the number of people suffering poverty keeps growing: from 280 million in 1990 to an estimated 330 million in 2012. Of the 20 countries in the world with the worst food and nutrition security, 19 are in Africa. More than two out of five African adults cannot read or write. Health outcomes are worse in Africa than anywhere else in the world, even though life expectancy at birth has risen and chronic child malnutrition has declined since the mid-1990s. Tolerance of domestic violence is twice as high as in the rest of the developing world. Incidents of violence against civilians are on the rise. While this listing of suffering is true throughout sub-Saharan Africa, with regard to all these measures, life is particularly harsh for people living in the roughly 34% of Africa where states have collapsed to the point of irrelevance. Challenge #4: Every year more Africans live in urban slums. About 400 million Africans lived in cities in 2010, and 60% of those people lived in slums with no access to basic services. By 2050 that number is expected to grow to 1.26 billion. By 2035 half of all Africans will probably live in cities, with continuing urbanization expected thereafter. Challenge #5: Corruption, corruption, corruption. Perhaps the most upsetting sentence in Foresight Africa reads, “No reasonably democratic government in Africa has seen a rupture from corrupt and clientelistic modes of resource distribution.” Challenge #6: Imminent changes to the architecture of global trade will disadvantage African countries. The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP)—neither of which includes sub-Saharan African countries—will offset many of the trade benefits African countries currently enjoy under America’s Africa Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA). Africa’s significance to the contemporary world Africa provides the majority of UN peacekeepers around the world. African nations are among the world’s largest and most generous hosts of refugees. Africa includes some of the world’s fastest growing economies. The recent resolution of the political crisis in the Gambia once again demonstrated the power of African leadership and unity to overcome governance challenges and uphold democracy, human rights and the rule of law. According to Secretary-General of the United Nations all of humanity will benefit by listening, learning and working with the people of Africa. Looking ahead The plan in place should be to build a better future. The international community has entered the second year of implementing the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, an all-out effort to tackle global poverty, inequality, instability and injustice. Africa has adopted its own complementary and ambitious plan: Agenda 2063. For the people of Africa to fully benefit from these important efforts, these two agendas need to be strategically aligned. It starts with prevention. Our world needs to move from managing crises to preventing them in the first place. We need to break the cycle of responding too late and too little. Most of today’s conflicts are internal, triggered by competition for power and resources, inequality, marginalisation and sectarian divides. Often, they are inflamed by violent extremism or provide the fuel for it. United Nations’ role The UN is committed to working hand-in-hand with partners wherever conflict or the threat of conflict endangers stability and well-being. But prevention goes far beyond focussing solely on conflict. The best means of prevention and the surest path to durable peace is inclusive and sustainable development. The Youth in Africa and necessary efforts We can speed progress by doing more to provide opportunities and hope to young people. More than three out of five Africans are under 35 years of age. Making the most of this tremendous asset means more investment in education, training, decent work and engaging young people in shaping their future. The need to empower women so that they can play a full role in sustainable development and sustainable peace. The African Union has consistently placed a special focus on gender equality and women’s empowerment. Secretary-General of the United Nations believes, ‘When we empower women, we empower the world.’ Conclusion A higher platform of cooperation, gives the whole picture — one that spotlights the enormous potential and remarkable success stories in every corner of the African continent. With that perspective, we can win the battle for sustainable and inclusive development which are also the best weapons in preventing conflict and suffering, allowing Africa to shine even more vibrantly and inspire the world. Connecting the dots Africa has been an unexplored wonder of the world with a mix of rich resources and high incidence of social malice. Critically discuss the necessary efforts the world should initiate to make Africa an equal partner in growth story of the world. Related articles: The Big Picture – India-Africa Ties: Where are they Heading? India Africa Relationship – Kenya Focus In India it’s time for Africa MUST READ Big Brother is winning Indian Express   Undermining Welfare Indian Express   Rehab for the balance sheet Indian Express   From dowry to killing: The shocking oversights in Indian school textbooks Indian Express   In praise of India’s Mittelstand Livemint   India’s de facto carbon tax is excessive Livemint   Not an open book Business Line   The quarterly syndrome cramps vision Business Line  

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

IASbaba Daily Current Affairs Quiz [Day 116]

IASbaba Daily Current Affairs Quiz [Day 116] Click here to get all the Tests– Archives Q.1) Bhitarkanika National Park and Gahirmatha Marine Sanctuary is located in which of the following states? Jharkhand and Odisha Both Odisha Uttarakhand and Gujarat Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra Q.2) Consider the following statements about ‘Measles’ It is caused by a virus It is non-contagious Select the correct code: Only 1 Only 2 Both 1 and 2 Neither 1 nor 2 Q.3) Photons have properties similar to that of Waves Particles Both particles and waves Neither particles nor waves Q.4) Where does exchange of gases (O2 and CO2) take place in our lungs? Alveoli Bronchi Pleura Trachea Q.5) Seasons on the Earth are caused due to The elliptical orbit of the Earth Alteration/change in the speed of revolution of the Earth Inclination of the Earth on its axis of rotation Differences in the amount of energy received from the Sun Download the Solution- Click here All the best IASbaba

MindMaps

IASbaba’s MINDMAP : Issue - Bad Bank

IASbaba’s MINDMAP : Issue - Bad Bank Archives P.S- Right Click on the image and open it in new tab. From there you can save it in your system. Reference -  Link 1 Link 2 Link 3

IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs – 7th February, 2017

IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs – 7th February 2017 Archives Agriculture and Farmer's Welfare  TOPIC: General Studies 3 Science and Technology‐ developments and their applications and effects in everyday life Achievements of Indians in science & technology; indigenization of technology and developing new technology. Awareness in the fields of IT, Space, Computers, robotics, nano‐technology, bio‐technology and issues relating to intellectual property rights. State of Science and Technology Research and significance Introduction Our lives are being transformed by technology daily. It is a reality that new tools like smart phones and the Internet and much more lies under the surface. Novel devices, materials and technologies have brought enormous benefits to our physical well-being in the context of medicine, housing, nutrition, security and sanitation, and to our mental well-being by transforming communication and socialisation. Issue - Concern Though we are happy to purchase smart devices and use medical equipment, we are less curious about how those technologies came into existence. For a country with rich history of science and research this is a state of irony. It is also ironic because India played a remarkable role, even under colonial rule, in planting the seeds of basic research from which they grew. For example, a currently promising breakthrough in testing for cancer, diabetes, asthma and malaria arises from ‘resonant Raman scattering’ and has its roots in C.V. Raman’s research. Curiosity drives social benefit The spirit of inquiry and humanism is what lead to evolution in civilizations. Hence it is a part of our fundamental duties in our constitution. The simple fact is that transformational technologies arise from basic science. Abraham Flexner, founder of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, observed that “throughout the whole history of science, most of the really great discoveries which have ultimately proved to be beneficial to mankind have been made by men and women who were driven not by the desire to be useful but merely the desire to satisfy their curiosity.” Like us, Flexner lived in an era when new inventions were transforming society — in his case these were radio, television, telephones and telegraphy. These transformations back to the path-breaking research on electromagnetism by James Clerk Maxwell and Heinrich Hertz, who sought to understand the fundamental laws of nature rather than work directly for the ‘public good’. Hence it is more curiosity and spirit of questioning that drives inventions, innovations than working for larger public good. Some best illustrations of research and inventions-discoveries The process by which fundamental research results in practical applications cannot be mapped out in advance. It is well known that in the late 1890s, Wilhelm Roentgen, experimenting in his laboratory, accidentally discovered a type of ray that could penetrate the human body, the ‘X-ray’. At the time, several wars had created a stream of wounded soldiers in need of treatment. There was no easy way to locate bullets lodged in the body, so surgeons had to poke a probe into the soldier’s wound and wiggle it around to detect the bullet. This was excruciatingly painful and unsanitary. Medical researchers made incremental improvements, but these were suddenly rendered obsolete by Roentgen’s discovery that one could see through the human body. Thus, his research found immediate application, and saved more lives than all the people working on diagnostics for bullet wounds. In the case of lasers, the path from discovery to invention was longer, but the applications today are more wide-ranging. In 1917, Albert Einstein discovered that when an atom is energized into an excited state it can radiate light in two ways: by spontaneous emission and by stimulated emission. This raised the possibility that photons (tiny quanta of light) could be emitted coherently, like soldiers marching in step. However, application of this concept had to wait until the late 1950s when physicists Arthur Schawlow and Charles Townes in the U.S. and Nikolay Basov and Aleksandr Prokhorov in the then Soviet Union suggested a mechanism to create coherent radiation — the laser, as it was eventually named. Two years later, Theodore Maiman constructed the first working prototype laser. Indian readers would be interested to know that soon thereafter, C. Kumar Naranbhai Patel, born in Baramati and educated at the College of Engineering in Pune, invented the carbon dioxide laser at Bell Laboratories. This variant has played a key role in cutting and welding and as a laser scalpel in surgery. Today, the impact of lasers is incredibly wide-ranging — from dentistry, cosmetic surgery, eye surgery and tumour removal, to cutting, welding and drilling, to optical communications, guidance systems and data retrieval. Significance of Research Institutions None of this would have been possible without understanding the interactions of photons and atoms via relativistic quantum theory and thermodynamics. It is noteworthy that the work of Schawlow and Townes was sponsored by the industrial giant Bell Telephones, yet the publication nowhere mentions any practical application. Maiman worked for another major industry, the Hughes Aircraft Company. These corporations were enlightened enough to understand that the path from basic science to application must be nourished like a garden, not engineered like a bridge. Impact on inventions Pure research in mathematics has also led to socially beneficial inventions. Here again there can be famous examples of how inventions have later on lead to best life changing experiments. Prime numbers, the building blocks of all numbers, play a key role in number theory — the ‘purest’ branch of mathematics and the field in which Srinivasa Ramanujan’s genius flowered. Mathematician G.H. Hardy (who brought Ramanujan to England) wrote: “I have never done anything ‘useful’. No discovery of mine has made, or is likely to make, directly or indirectly, for good or ill, the least difference to the amenity of the world.” But Hardy was wrong. ‘Public Key Encryption’, on which today’s password-based security systems are built, relies on the difficulty of factorising a whole number into primes. Once encryption became vital in daily life, centuries of mathematical insight into prime numbers became socially relevant. India’s contribution did not end with Ramanujan. In 2002, Prof. Manindra Agrawal at IIT Kanpur and two undergraduates published a breakthrough result in ‘primality testing’, with likely implications for cyber security. Conclusion To secure our country’s long-term future we have to generously support fundamental research, which provides the foundation and pillars on which technological applications are built. Fortunately, India today has a strong intellectual base spanning all areas of fundamental science. But governmental involvement needs to increase substantially for us to be competitive. Basic science in India awaits sizeable initiatives from private industry too. The Nobel Laureate, David Gross, recently observed that if India does not dramatically ramp up support for pure science, we will soon become “a user economy, service economy, buying goods made elsewhere, buying inventions invented elsewhere.” Fortunately, we are in a good position to avoid this fate, but we must act now. Connecting the dots: STEAM (Science Technology Engineering and Medicine) are seen as not so rewarding occupations in India. Critically analyse the impact of the same on the economy and country’s higher education landscape.   INTERNATIONAL TOPIC: General Studies 2 Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India's interests Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India's interests, Indian diaspora. Relation between India and America ‘First’ No change of stance from being a candidate to President Moments after the new US President assumed the office as 45th President of USA, his sole goal has been focus on ‘America First’. This means that whatever USA does will have USA at its heart and rarely for larger global good. The present US president has two personalities: transactional and ideological The transactional personality being that all international relations are based on give and take where something is gained and something is lost. There does not exist any larger moral goal such as promotion of democracy, free market or human rights. The ideological personality of the President sees the world threatened by Islam, especially existence of Judeo-Christian civilisation. Thus, he believes in alliances to be build and wars to be fought to secure their survival threatened by Islamic terror. According to President Trump, no measure is too extreme in pursuing that objective of countering Islamism, as demonstrated by the attempted ban on citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries. India’s engagement with America Relationship between India and America would travel non-similar paths as new US President would be open to dealing with India with an ideological frame of reference and a pragmatic, transactional one, simultaneously. However, what needs to be seen is the terms of deal and issues surrounding it. Some tentative suggestions that India should be watchful of: The defeat of Islamism could be common ground between US President and PM Modi who share ideological as well as pragmatic viewpoint. However, the contention point would be Indian government’s continuing crackdown on U.S.-based Christian charities operating in India. In the transactional mode, there could be challenges faced by two as both the Heads of States have promised economic betterment or more precisely, job creation. The growth of bilateral relations between both nations have involved movement of U.S. jobs to India, and of Indian workers to the U.S. Though the recent ties have been warm, India is not top of the mind for the new US administration. Thus, the onus will be on India to catch the attention of new administration while the US President opens multiple battlefronts domestically and internationally. Else, the status quo can be maintained for a while with continuing bilateral relation on numerous areas such as cyber security, intelligence sharing, space, disease control, maritime surveillance, agriculture, education and climate change. Where India needs to look out H-1B The Trump administration is locking down on misuse of H-1B visa by bringing in reformist measures in its allocation eligibility. The business model of Indian IT giants like Infosys, Wipro, TCS is based on their ability to locate a crucial part of their workforce in the U.S. who in turn support the operation of jobs carried out in India. However, due to political resistance to offshoring of services in US, these companies have hired Americans in their local workforce in recent years. So a crackdown on H-1B visas may not necessarily affect such companies as the Americans are anyways supporting the operations that are in India. But now, anti-H-1B campaigners have changed their focus and are targeting the business model instead of migrating workers. They want that companies should not relocate the jobs as restriction on workers coming to the U.S will not serve the purpose unless there is a system that allows work to be taken out of USA. Defence The Trump administration looks willing to carry forward the ongoing cooperation between the two countries in defence. Also, it is willing to go a step further and favourably look at India’s pending request for Avenger armed drones. Right now, Obama administration has cleared all defence deals with India except sale of 22 Guardian unarmed drones to be used for maritime domain awareness. After Obama administration designated India as a major defence partner, India’s requests for high technology are now considered with a ‘presumption of approval’ as opposed to ‘presumption of denial’. However, each request is individually scrutinised and the decision is largely a political one. This will want USA to get in return assurance of India being US partner in tackling China. With respect to India, it has been observed by many that India-U.S. relations is a case of American generosity. A section of U.S. establishment has always argued for extracting more in return from India. Here, USA intends to help India expand its power and prosperity to serve its highest geopolitical interest in Asia and globally. Recently, the U.S. Pacific Command Chief reiterated that India should now sign the COMCASA (Communications Compatibility and Security Agreement) that would enhance joint surveillance of Chinese vessels. Though there is a chance that President Trump would like to put pressure on China through regional powers and allies like Japan, Korea, and Australia as they have most at stake and proximate capabilities. The American generosity to India in defence will likely demand more from the relationship with India. India’s demand for more pressure on Pakistan by US to take action against terrorist groups can have reciprocate demand from Trump administration to send Indian soldiers to Afghanistan. America has wanted India to send its troops to fight third party wars. Back in 2003, when India had closer relations with USA, the then government had considered sending troops to Iraq but it was aborted after domestic opposition. Hence, America has grumble against India’s restraint in sending its soldiers to fight wars elsewhere. Conclusion Right now it is not clear if Trump team will be pro-active on India’s bid for membership in the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG). It is now being also known that America doesn’t command same power like it had earlier. However, it is believed by many that India and USA’s relationship will foster with both its PM and President respectively prevailing their pragmatism over ideological affiliations. As pointed out by a former state department official, “Mr. Modi’s Make in India approach and Mr. Trump’s Buy American, Hire American can go together”. Connecting the dots: Will change in US administration likely to bring in change in improved India-US relationship? Analyse. MUST READ Perilous U-turn on Iran Hindu   Rewiring the WTO Hindu   Equality’s time has come Indian Express   Budgeting For Democracy Indian Express   Why India doesn’t trust its private sector Livemint   Demand for protectionism Livemint   The colonial hangover Livemint   Grappling with virtual reality Business Line   A global drift Business Line  

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

IASbaba Daily Current Affairs Quiz [Day 115]

IASbaba Daily Current Affairs Quiz [Day 115] Click here to get all the Tests– Archives Q.1) Consider the following statements about Austria It is a land locked country It is bordered by Slovakia, Slovenia and Hungary Which of the following statements is/are correct? Only 1 Only 2 Both 1 and 2 Neither 1 nor 2 Q.2) Houthi rebels are from Yemen Saud Arabia Iran Iraq  Q.3) Samagra Gramya Unnayan Yojana (CMSGUY) was launched by the state got of Arunachal Pradesh Assam Odisha Jharkhand  Q.4) Which of the following statements is/are correct? Wheat rusts spread rapidly over long distances by wind TTTTF is the most recently identified race of stem rust Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) is a member of Borlaug Global Rust Initiative (BGRI) Select the correct code: 1 and 2 2 and 3 1 and 3 All of the above Q.5) Cholanaickan tribe primarily inhabit the state of Odisha Kerala Mizoram Jharkhand Download the Solution- Click here All the best IASbaba

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The Big Picture - Two years of NITI Aayog

Two years of NITI Aayog Archives NITI Ayog The National Institution for Transforming India is a policy body serving as ‘think tank’ tasked with a role of formulating policies and directions for the government. It replaced Planning Commission which had been preparing five year plans for India for last 60 years. According to the resolution of the cabinet to set up NITI Ayog, the body is responsible to recommend a national agenda including strategic and technical advice on elements of policy and economic matters. It also develops mechanisms for village level plans and aggregates these progressively at higher levels of government. While the NITI Ayog has been set up with an aim to foster and enhance the centre-state cooperation, the opposition parties criticised saying that the replacement of Planning Commission can be best viewed as a ‘cosmetic change’. The change The main role of Planning Commission was to decide inter-ministerial allocation. If a government allocates Rs. 5 lakh crores as planned fund, how to decide how much for industry, for education, for health etc. was being done by finance ministry in other countries. In India, this role has traditionally been done by Planning Commission. Now this role has been deleted and they are no longer deciding the allocation. It is now directly decided by the finance ministry just as done in state governments and other countries. Planning Commission was not doing well because: Generally members of Planning Commission were defeated politicians and rarely had interest in academic knowledge or finding out why things are not working well. Most of officers posted in Planning Commission were due to its becoming a dumping ground for unwanted officers. Earlier, the Planning Commission had been restricted with assimilating the demands of various ministries, state governments and allocating the resources. This was needing a change and hence from NITI Ayog, the role of assimilating and allocation of resources to the state has now been taken over by 14th FC. Two years of NITI Ayog NITI Ayog is still in infancy and trying to find out its role and how things should be done. The role of think tank is not an easy one. The members have to be aware of all the constraints, be in touch with professional organisations and give suggestions to state governments and central government. This role has still not been performed by NITI Ayog and thus they need some more time to carve out their responsibilities. Any ‘Think tank’ has to be slightly distant from government. It has been however observed that members, vice-chairman of NITI Ayog have been defending government on all issues. That is the role of ministry of information, visual publicity or PMO. If this role is being performed by a ‘Think tank’ then there is a conflict between justifying government and giving advice to government on right kind of issues. Thus, it is not apt by NITI Ayog to justify the government on all issues, especially controversial issues. Though it is true that it may not have accomplished the full work for which the transformation of NITI Ayog was done. But it is moving towards the same as its full term is not yet over. Areas where NITI Ayog intervened Land acquisition was a complicated issue where NITI Ayog set up its task force and explored area such as digitisation, land leasing. It has formulated a model land-leasing law, which Madhya Pradesh has adopted and Uttar Pradesh has substantially incorporated into a pre-existing law. Several other states are actively considering adopting the model law. The Aayog has taken the initiative to identify numerous sick Public Sector units for closure. Action on 17 such units is under way. The Aayog has also identified several functioning units for strategic disinvestment. It has also proposed replacement of the Indian Medical Council Act, 1956, by a Medical Education Commission Act to overhaul medical education in India. The Aayog is also leading a campaign to bring about major reforms in agricultural marketing. However, in the biggest policy decision impacting economic, political and social life had no role of NITI Ayog in terms of providing either the conceptual inputs or in implementation. They belatedly took up the idea of popularising digital payment system and innovating some lottery schemes. Time needed Two years is a short period of time for any institution to evolve. Even the Planning Commission evolved for over 60 years and ultimately rendered itself useless. Thus, in institutional life, two years is very less. Truly independent? The new ‘think tank’ has been called as National Institute for Transforming India thereby giving it a big name. But the work has not been concretized as yet. From the beginning, the terms of conceptualising this institute has been flawed. There was a body that was required to replace Planning Commission and hence something was set up without much thinking. The job of Planning Commission of allocation of resources for planned schemes among the states had been taken over by finance ministry. After that, NITI Ayog was conceived as a think tank. Now NITI Ayog is called a part of government where except for few external consultants, it functions within the same bureaucratic set up as the government. Hence, to think that it will come out with out of the box ideas will be very difficult or sending false signals. Also, NITI Ayog has become a toothless organisation which has no power to implement or voice its decisions. The states also don’t turn up for meeting which they did during Planning Commission, which had allocating functions. Role of Planning Commission vis-a-vis states Planning Commission had no big role in funding the states, but rather had a very big role in deciding the funds for ministries of GoI. The states got funding from 3 sources: 50% from Finance Commission, 45% central ministries as CSS and only 5% from the Planning Commission. So Planning Commission’s role vis-a-vis states had been diluted in 1991 after liberalisation. The Planning Commission no longer decided what state schemes should run and that function was given to respective ministries. These ministries are still running programmes such as SSA, PMGSY, NREGA. Analytical role Job creation is a major concern. Unemployment leads to faltering of economy as well. The government had promised 100 million jobs by 2019. It is very well established that during 2004-14, it was a period of jobless growth. Hardly any jobs were created in that period. In last two years, the government has given lot of importance to it. But what has happened in last two years should be studied by NITI Ayog.  Until two years, NITI Ayog has not fared expectedly in this process. The industry expects from NITI Ayog to create avenues of jobs through its findings and analysis. For example, the MSME sector can create jobs but how and how much is not categorically known. Unfortunately, World Bank came out with a study recently showing that progress is dismal. Programmes like Ajeevika have not rendered any new jobs and hence a failed programme. Government very rightly asked NITI Ayog to monitor sustainable development goals. For one year and half, they have not produced a sigle report as to why MDGs were not achieved by India in respect to gender, health, hunger, education, sanitation. They should analyse it and make a report else all these flaws will remain and sustainable development goals will also not be achieved. Way forward Any criticism which leads to improvement or desired transformation is welcome. More studies need to be done by NITI Ayog to establish itself as a critical institution in fora of planning. Also, there should be some accountability, more information given to public and road map of future course of action given by NITI Ayog. There is a need for an institution to serve the concept of cooperative federalism. The highest decision making on development and planning which used to be NDC, NITI Ayog should serve a similar Team India concept. It would be useful if NITI ayog could make evaluation of government policies and programmes given that it is not able to come up with out of the box ideas by itself. It can give tips which could help to deliver those programmes on ground- Make in India etc. NITI Ayog is disintegrating its planning into three areas. 15 years long term vision document. 7 years implementation plan and 3 years short term action plan. It is expected to come out with the action plan shortly which will expectedly take into account the impact of demonetisation on the economy, especially on informal sector. Connecting the dots: What is NITI Ayog? Critically examine its role post scrapping of Planning Commission.