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60 Days Plan: UPSC IAS Prelims 2019 - Environment and Current Affairs (Day 6)

60 Day plan has been published on the website (www.iasbaba.com - Click here). Since we have come up with the 'Quiz Format', it will not be feasible to publish it on the app. For feasibility and getting to know where you stand among your peers (we have a leaderboard which gives your marks and rank) it would be advisable to take the test on the website. All the best. make the best use of the initiative ! Before taking the Test, read the post below, ARCHIVES Hello Friends,  The most beloved 60 Days for UPSC IAS Prelims 2019  has finally begun :) Once again the time has come for the battle (Prelims). And who else than your best companion in the last preparatory phase for UPSC IAS Prelims 2019 i.e 60 days plan. It does not matter how slowly you go as long as you do not stop.  Hope the message given above makes sense to you all. The productive utilization of this programme demands consistency, honesty, faith and strong determination to be in the process of learning and unlearning. You might not be fully prepared to solve all the questions but the learning and unlearning through these questions will prepare you for the real battle on 2nd June 2019. You have to unlearn your repetitive mistakes, gut feeling on which you mark doubtful questions. You have to learn new things and also those concepts that you were very sure of but somehow because of traps in the option, got it wrong. You have to learn 'how to convert knowledge into marks' (Because most of the times, after ending the exam, you regret making mistakes in known concepts).  Secondly, keep a long distance from following too many things at this point. It will always backfire. Once you are here, put complete faith and follow this initiative along with whatever you were doing. It is very important to consolidate your preparation with many revisions. Simply following many things will leave you in despair. You can cross check this with veterans. Everything that seems attractive is not productive. You should always go for productivity. Be wise! Let us pledge to make it a big game changer (better than last year) in the next 60 days of this plan! Importance of Self - Tracking: Learning from Last Year Last year, aspirants used to type/post their answers in the comment box on a daily basis. There were huge participation and discussion below the test post. Putting answers in the comment box has been very effective to self-track yourself after updating the score. In the end, you can cross check your performance through Disqus profile. It was highly effective in the last edition of 60 Days that propelled aspirants to monitor their performance and learn through discussion. Let you solve these questions with full honesty and write your result in the comment box. Interact with peers to know your mistakes. The importance of this initiative stands time-bound and aggressive reverse engineering to learn the concepts. Many of you must be busy with your own strategy but let us tell you honestly that in the last few months, it is very important to revise and consolidate your learning. Just reading won’t suffice. So, take out a few hours from your schedule and make it a revision exercise. How can you make the best use of it? Be honest to your effort and do not start competing with XYZ aspirants just for the sake of marks. It is more important for you to introspect and check your learning than focusing on others. Try to answer the questions in 25 minutes only.  Do not get into negative feeling that I don’t have enough knowledge to answer these questions. Feel like you are taking the real exam. What would be your response then? The same will be replicated in the UPSC exam. Here, you get marks only and nothing else matters. So, make effort to know the answers to all questions. Do not cheat :P DETAILED MICRO ANALYSIS MATRIX SAMPLE- is given here. You can download this and do an assessment for yourself (the excel sheet must be modified as per this years planning. The provided excel sheet is only for reference).  DOWNLOAD You can copy paste the same format/modify as per your need in Google Spreadsheet and update it on daily basis. Feedback talks about daily test results. Follow-up talks about daily target achieved from sources and the number of revisions to do/done and dates. Sources column is to ensure that aspirants do not run behind various sources and follow the same throughout. Would like to end on this quote:  Either you run the day or the day runs you.  Are you ready? Let's start! Important Note Don't forget to post your marks in the comment section. Also, let us know if you enjoyed today's test :)  You can post your comments in the given format  (1) Your Score (2) Matrix Meter (3) New Learning from the Test

Daily Current Affairs IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 7th March 2019

IAS UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 7th March 2019 Archives (PRELIMS+MAINS FOCUS) Indian museum of natural history In news: India is home to a vast treasury of geological and palaeontological specimens that contain a wealth of scientific information about the planet and its history. But these rare specimens are scattered in different labs all over the country. So, to better conserve this prehistoric heritage, the government is planning to house them in one place — an ‘Earth Museum’. Do you know? This museum will be modelled on the American Museum of Natural History, or the Smithsonian museum in the U.S. The museum, which will be set up as a public-private partnership, would be located somewhere in Delhi, Noida or Gurugram. A meeting of experts from the U.S., the U.K, and South Korea to discuss the practical aspects of developing and maintaining such a museum is scheduled to be held in Delhi. Plastic waste import Part of: GS Prelims and Mains III – Environment and Biodiversity; Pollution In news: In spite of a ban on the import of plastic waste into India, the influx of PET bottles has quadrupled from 2017 to 2018 (due to legal loophole) Indian firms are importing plastic scraps from China, Italy, Japan and Malawi for recycling. To incentivise domestic plastic recycling units, the government had banned the import of plastic waste, particularly PET bottles in 2015. In 2016, an amendment allowed such imports as long as they were carried out by agencies situated in Special Economic Zones. It’s this loophole that’s been exploited. https://d39gegkjaqduz9.cloudfront.net/TH/2019/03/07/CNI/Chennai/TH/5_09/9760aba3_2780102_101_mr.jpg Do you know? Solid plastic waste has been prohibited from import into the country including in Special Economic Zones (SEZ) and by Export Oriented Units (EOU). The change in law was part of the Hazardous and Other Wastes (Management & Transboundary Movement) Amendment Rules, 2019. Government and industry estimates suggest that India consumes about 13 million tonnes of plastic and recycles only about 4 million tonnes. A lack of an efficient waste segregation system and inadequate collection is the root cause for this wide gap. ISRO, French agency seal agreement on maritime security In news: National space agency ISRO and its French counterpart CNES sealed an agreement to set up a joint maritime surveillance system in the country in May. The two nations will explore putting up a constellation of low-Earth orbiting satellites that will identify and track movement of ships globally – and in particular those moving in the Indian Ocean region where France has its Reunion Islands. Do you know? The two agencies have put up two climate and ocean weather monitoring satellites Megha-Tropiques (of 2011) and SARAL-AltiKa (2013) that are considered a model. This fleet will be augmented with the launch of Oceansat-3-Argos mission in 2020 along with a joint infrared Earth-observation satellite. Swachh Survekshan 2019 In news: According to Centre’s ‘Cleanliness Survey’ - Swachh Survekshan Indore - India’s cleanest city for the third year in a row The second and third positions were bagged by Ambikapur in Chhattisgarh and Mysuru in Karnataka. New Delhi Municipal Council was given award for the ‘Cleanest Small City’ award. The ‘Cleanest Big City’ award has been bagged by Ahmedabad. Raipur is the ‘Fastest Moving Big City’. Ujjain has been the adjudged the ‘Cleanest Medium City’. Do you know? The Swachh Survekshan awards 2019 were conferred by President Ram Nath Kovind in New Delhi. Top-ranked cities received a statue of Mahatma Gandhi as a memento for their work towards cleanliness. Swachh Survekshan covered all urban local bodies in the country, making it the largest such cleanliness survey in the world. Key prelims pointers: Swachh Survekshan survey is released by Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs. The performance evaluation of the Swachh survekshan is conducted by Quality Council of India (QCI), an autonomous body established by Government of India in 1997 for Quality assurance in all spheres of activities including Governance. Kyasanoor Forest Disease (KFD) or Monkey Fever Part of: GS Prelims and Mains II – Health issue In news: For the first time, the virus causing Kyasanur Forest Disease, also known was monkey fever, has been found in tick pools from Hassan district in Karnataka. Key pointers: Kyasanoor Forest Disease (KFD) is tick-borne viral hemorrhagic fever endemic to South Asia. The virus is transmitted to human beings through parasitic ticks which latch on to monkeys. KFD was first detected in the Kyasanur forest in Karnataka in 1957. Since then, between 400 and 500 human cases are reported each year in South Asia, mainly India. The disease is caused by Kyasanur forest disease virus (KFDV), a member of the virus family Flaviviridae, which also cause yellow fever and dengue. Rodents, shrews, and monkeys are common hosts for KFDV after being bitten by an infected tick. KFDV kills most primates it infects. The symptoms in humans include fever for more than 12 days, accompanied by cough, headache, diarrhoea and vomiting. The fever is followed by mental disturbances, tremors and vision deficits. Vaccination against monkey fever is used in endemic areas of India. Additional preventative measures include using insect repellents and wearing protective clothes in areas where ticks are endemic. (MAINS FOCUS) EDUCATION/SOCIAL ISSUE TOPIC:General studies 2  Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation. Issues relating to development and management of Social Sector/Services relating to Health, Education, Human Resources. A systematic approach to reform education Context: Despite enormous and well-meaning efforts, the policy makers have failed to deliver quality learning outcomes to the children. Concerted efforts like the Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan, and initiatives like mid-day meals have ensured to solved the problem of access to school education for our children. With gross enrolment crossing 100%, the focus now has to shift to improving learning outcomes. How to improve learning outcomes? Effective Assessment Mechanism – Timely assessment by National Achievement Survey (NAS) and other studies like Annual Status of Education Report (ASER), will help to sustain quality. Shift in the thinking of policymakers – Learning outcomes depends on various factors such as good infrastructure, quality teachers, books, uniforms, etc. Therefore, it is important to track all these educational inputs to understand the overall outcomes of the system. Active role by both state and non-state actors – States should undertake various initiatives to revamp the quality of school education, often bringing on board the services of non-state actors to support interventions like improving classroom pedagogy, teacher training, and tech-enabled learning. However, above piecemeal initiatives won’t help to improve student learning in any meaningful way, unless accompanied with administrative reforms aimed at creating a new systemic approach to reforming education. Need for a new systemic approach: A clear comprehensive road map: The new systemic approach involves aligning all stakeholders and orienting their collective efforts towards following a single and “comprehensive transformation road map" towards better learning outcomes. Academic interventions: adoption of grade competence framework instead of just syllabus completion, as well as other initiatives like effective delivery of remedial education for weaker students rather than earlier stand-alone interventions. Administrative reforms: Administrative reforms such as enabling and incentivizing teachers to perform better through data-driven insights, training, and recognition. More time to teachers: Interventions are need to ensure that teachers have more time available in the classrooms and are empowered to tailor their content to the learning needs of their students, resulting in improved quality of “in-classroom transactions". Implementing both systemic (tech platforms) and human enablers will help. Robust accountability system: A robust accountability system is required wherein there is a clear articulation of the roles and responsibilities of all relevant stakeholders, and the administration is empowered to act where necessary. User-friendly dashboards: User-friendly dashboards that assist education officials and the state leadership in decision-making. Conclusion: Apart from enabling and aligning incentives of all stakeholders, there is a need to hold them accountable. Only then we can shorten the distance between the nation’s current state of education and its aspirations. Connecting the dots: Highlight the challenges and the reforms needed in Indian education policy with respect to primary and higher education. An unacceptably large number of Indian children are attending school but not learning enough. The issue of low learning trap is not just with Indian but is a global epidemic. The need of the hour is planned action and evidence-based policymaking. Discuss. WOMEN/SOCIAL ISSUE TOPIC:General studies 1 Social empowerment General Studies 2 Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation. Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections of the population by the Centre and States and the performance of these schemes General Studies 3 Indian economy and issues related to planning, mobilization of resources, growth, development and employment. A strange paradox for Indian women Context: The very success of India's economic transformation brings with it a stark realization that it has not paid particular care and attention to women. The most promising sign of the improving conditions of Indian women lies in declining inequality in education. Almost all girls go to primary school and, according to the India Human Development Survey (IHDS) of 2011-12, 70% of girls aged 15 to 18 are still studying, only five percentage points less than boys. They frequently outperform boys. In 2018, in the Class xII C8SE examination, 88.31% girls passed, compared to 78.99% boys. However, in spite of rising education and rising aspirations, labour markets and social norms constrain women, almost as if they are all dressed up for a party with nowhere to go. Issues in transformation of Education to Employment: U-shaped relationship between Education and Employment Data from the National Sample Survey Office (NSSO) and the IHDS show that education and employment have a U-shaped relationship. Illiterate women are most likely to participate in the workforce. Work participation drops sharply for women with primary and secondary education and rises only with college education. Lack of white-collar jobs and inhospitable job environment for women White-collar jobs are either not available or demand long hours and offer little job security in this time of a gig economy. NSSO data for 25- to 59-year-old workers in 2011-12 show that among farmers, farm labourers and service workers, nearly one-third are women, while the proportion of women among professionals, managers and clerical workers is only about 15%. Young men with Class 10 or 12 education find jobs as mechanics, drivers, sales representatives, postmen and appliance repairmen. Few of these opportunities are available to women. (because of difficult working conditions and inhospitable environment). Sometimes employers avoid hiring women in these positions. Marriage: major barrier Young women’s lives are also circumscribed by social norms that shape their family situation. Marriage remains the only acceptable fate for young women in India. Whereas a third of Japanese women and 11% of Sri Lankan women aged 30-34 are single, less than 3% of Indian women are single at that age. Moreover, women’s education does not seem to carry the same value in the ‘marriage market’ as caste, the family’s economic status and horoscope. Research from other countries shows that educated women marry similarly educated men. But in India, women frequently marry men with lower education than themselves. Therefore, we can conclude that for most of the women, rising education does not offer increasing income-earning opportunities or better marriage prospects. Does it at least give women greater autonomy in other areas of their lives? Based on recent National Family Health Survey data, there seems to be little evidence that a moderate level of education offers women a greater say in household decisions or freedom of movement outside the home. College graduates fare slightly better, but even for them, the difference is relatively small. 48% of women with no schooling do not go to a health centre alone; the proportion for college graduates is only slightly lower at 45%. Conclusion: Parents make tremendous sacrifices to educate their daughters, and young women joyously work hard at school in search of a better life, only to have their aspirations frustrated by economic and social barriers that restrict their opportunities. Another major concern is the way the political process sees women. Our political process sees women as an extension of the men in their households and assumes that no special effort is needed to win their hearts and minds. India needs to take gender segmentation as an opportunity. We need to increase women entrepreneurship. Thus women will be creating jobs and opportunities for themselves, and bringing other women on board. In short, if India’s growth story has to translate into shared prosperity for all its people, then it cannot afford to have one half of its population sit out. Connecting the dots: India is still a land of missing women. Do you agree? Examine how empowered is India’s surviving female population in terms of access to basic rights? MUST READ A fight for the forest The Hindu Tackling child malnutrition The Hindu Flying in the face of the demand for transparency The Hindu There’s no silver bullet solution to Pak-sponsored terror Indian Express Govt’s scheme to pay Rs 6,000 to poor rural households will up their expenditure, reduce poverty Indian Express On Air Pollution: The suffocation that India needs to avert Livemint

60 Days Plan: UPSC IAS Prelims 2019 - Science & Technology and Current Affairs (Day 5)

60 Day plan has been published on the website (www.iasbaba.com - Click here). Since we have come up with the 'Quiz Format', it will not be feasible to publish it on the app. For feasibility and getting to know where you stand among your peers (we have a leaderboard which gives your marks and rank) it would be advisable to take the test on the website. All the best. make the best use of the initiative ! Before taking the Test, read the post below, ARCHIVES Hello Friends,  The most beloved 60 Days for UPSC IAS Prelims 2019  has finally begun :) Once again the time has come for the battle (Prelims). And who else than your best companion in the last preparatory phase for UPSC IAS Prelims 2019 i.e 60 days plan. It does not matter how slowly you go as long as you do not stop.  Hope the message given above makes sense to you all. The productive utilization of this programme demands consistency, honesty, faith and strong determination to be in the process of learning and unlearning. You might not be fully prepared to solve all the questions but the learning and unlearning through these questions will prepare you for the real battle on 2nd June 2019. You have to unlearn your repetitive mistakes, gut feeling on which you mark doubtful questions. You have to learn new things and also those concepts that you were very sure of but somehow because of traps in the option, got it wrong. You have to learn 'how to convert knowledge into marks' (Because most of the times, after ending the exam, you regret making mistakes in known concepts).  Secondly, keep a long distance from following too many things at this point. It will always backfire. Once you are here, put complete faith and follow this initiative along with whatever you were doing. It is very important to consolidate your preparation with many revisions. Simply following many things will leave you in despair. You can cross check this with veterans. Everything that seems attractive is not productive. You should always go for productivity. Be wise! Let us pledge to make it a big game changer (better than last year) in the next 60 days of this plan! Importance of Self - Tracking: Learning from Last Year Last year, aspirants used to type/post their answers in the comment box on a daily basis. There were huge participation and discussion below the test post. Putting answers in the comment box has been very effective to self-track yourself after updating the score. In the end, you can cross check your performance through Disqus profile. It was highly effective in the last edition of 60 Days that propelled aspirants to monitor their performance and learn through discussion. Let you solve these questions with full honesty and write your result in the comment box. Interact with peers to know your mistakes. The importance of this initiative stands time-bound and aggressive reverse engineering to learn the concepts. Many of you must be busy with your own strategy but let us tell you honestly that in the last few months, it is very important to revise and consolidate your learning. Just reading won’t suffice. So, take out a few hours from your schedule and make it a revision exercise. How can you make the best use of it? Be honest to your effort and do not start competing with XYZ aspirants just for the sake of marks. It is more important for you to introspect and check your learning than focusing on others. Try to answer the questions in 25 minutes only.  Do not get into negative feeling that I don’t have enough knowledge to answer these questions. Feel like you are taking the real exam. What would be your response then? The same will be replicated in the UPSC exam. Here, you get marks only and nothing else matters. So, make effort to know the answers to all questions. Do not cheat :P DETAILED MICRO ANALYSIS MATRIX SAMPLE- is given here. You can download this and do an assessment for yourself (the excel sheet must be modified as per this years planning. The provided excel sheet is only for reference).  DOWNLOAD You can copy paste the same format/modify as per your need in Google Spreadsheet and update it on daily basis. Feedback talks about daily test results. Follow-up talks about daily target achieved from sources and the number of revisions to do/done and dates. Sources column is to ensure that aspirants do not run behind various sources and follow the same throughout. Would like to end on this quote:  Either you run the day or the day runs you.  Are you ready? Let's start! Important Note Don't forget to post your marks in the comment section. Also, let us know if you enjoyed today's test :)  You can post your comments in the given format  (1) Your Score (2) Matrix Meter (3) New Learning from the Test

Daily Current Affairs IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 6th March 2019

IAS UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 6th March 2019 Archives (PRELIMS+MAINS FOCUS) Pradhan Mantri Shram Yogi Mandhan (PM-SYM) Yojana Part of: GS Prelims and Mains II – Government schemes and policies; Welfare/social issue In news: Prime Minister launched the Pradhan Mantri Shram Yogi Mandhan (PM-SYM) Yojana. The national pension scheme for workers and labourers of the unorganised sector was announced in the interim Budget in February this year. It provides for a monthly pension of ₹3,000 to employees in the unorganised sector after 60 years of age. PM also distributed the PM-SYM pension cards to select beneficiaries, and said that for the first time in independent India, workers of the unorganised sector would be entitled to a monthly pension. Pakistan Govt. cracks down on terror outfits Part of: GS Mains II and III – India and its neighbours; Security issues; Role of International Organisations In news: Pakistan has taken 44 members of banned organisations, including Jaish-e-Mohammad chief Masood Azhar’s son and brother, into preventive detention, and put Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) offshoots Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD) and Falah-i-Insaniyat Foundation (FiF) on its proscribed list. Pakistan had earlier failed to ban the JuD and the FiF, which are banned by the UN Security Council. Both organisations were subsequently put on the National Counter Terrorism Authority (NACTA)’s list under the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997. Tariff hike to hit exports to U.S. Part of: GS Prelims and Mains II and III – India and US bilateral relations; International relations; Indian Economy and issues related to it. In news: S. President announced that he intends to end preferential trade terms for India under the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) programme. GSP is an arrangement that allows concessional or zero tariff imports from developing couturiers into the US. Withdrawal of the GSP benefit is expected to adversely affect exports from India. The GSP programme accounts for some $5.6 billion of India’s exports to the U.S., making India the largest GSP beneficiary. Chemicals, gems and jewellery, engineering and textiles are among the Indian industrial sectors that benefit from the GSP. About GSP Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) is a preferential tariff system extended by developed countries (also known as preference giving countries or donor countries) to developing countries (also known as preference receiving countries or beneficiary countries). It involves reduced MFN Tariffs or duty-free entry of eligible products exported by beneficiary countries to the markets of donor countries. US arguments – India has implemented a wide array of trade barriers that create serious negative effects on United States commerce. India’s new e-commerce rules which have impacted American companies like Amazon and Walmart (majority owner of Flipkart) Price controls on medical devices (cardiac stents) Tariffs on ICT products like smart watches and high-end mobile phones Lack of greater market access for the U.S. dairy industry The above are some of the issues that have caused trade friction between the two countries. Indian government arguments – The impact would amount to only $190 million on the value of $5.6 billion in exports to the U.S. that fall under the GSP category. Federation of Indian Export Organisations (FIEO) has said that overall impact will amount to less than 0.4% of India’s exports to the U.S. India’s exports to the U.S. stood at $50.57 billion in 2017 with a GSP tariff advantage of only $190 million, which was less than 0.4% of total exports. According to FIEO, the sectors that will likely be significantly impacted will include processed foods, leather products other than footwear and engineering goods such as spark ignition, turbines and pipes. The export body also pointed out that the withdrawal of GSP benefits to Indian exporters will also impact the downstream industries in the U.S. that were using the cheaper inputs from India. However the government would continue to talk to the U.S. during the 60-day period after which the GSP withdrawal would come into effect, in an effort to work out a deal. Do you know? Difference between GSP and the other trade arrangement under WTO Under the normal trade laws, the WTO members must give equal preferences to trade partners. There should not be any discrimination between countries. This trade rule under the WTO is called the Most Favored Nation (MFN) clause. The MFN instructs non-discrimination that any favorable treatment to a particular country. At the same time, the WTO allows members to give special and differential treatment to from developing countries (like zero tariff imports). This is an exemption for MFN. The MSP given by developed countries including the US is an exception to MFN. Fifteen of the 20 most polluted cities in the world are in India In news: Fifteen of the top 20 most polluted cities in the world are located in India. Gurugram in Haryana topped the list with an average annual particulate matter (PM 2.5) quality of 135 micrograms/cubic metre, in 2018. Delhi – a frequent fixture on global pollution hotspots – was only the 11th most noxious city behind Lahore, Pakistan (10th) and Hotan, China (8th). The other cities in India that made the list of 20 were Ghaziabad, Faridabad, Bhiwadi, Noida, Patna, Lucknow, Jodhpur, Muzaffarpur, Varanasi, Moradabad, Agra, Gaya and Jind. Do you know? Of the cities analysed, 64% exceeded the WHO’s annual exposure guideline (10 micrograms/cubic metre) for fine particulate matter, also known as PM 2.5. India’s annual guidelines range from 40-60 micrograms/cubic metre, depending on whether they are residential or industrial areas. Every single one of measured cities with data in the Middle East and Africa exceeded the WHO guideline, while 99% of cities in South Asia, 95% of cities in Southeast Asia and 89% of cities in East Asia breached this level. Ranking by country: Bangladesh the most polluted followed by Pakistan and India respectively; Iceland with the cleanest air. Methodology: The ranking relies on ground-based sensors located in 3,000 cities from 73 countries and was compiled by IQAir Group, a manufacturer of air-monitoring sensors as well as purifiers and environmentalist group Greenpeace. Pollution hubs Jakarta and Hanoi emerged as Southeast Asia’s two most polluted cities and average concentrations in the cities in China fell by 12% from 2017 to 2018. Beijing ranks now as the 122nd most polluted city in the world in 2018 and China, the 12th most polluted country in the world. Pic: https://d39gegkjaqduz9.cloudfront.net/TH/2019/03/06/DEL/Delhi/TH/5_07/a1c26bcd_2779485_101_mr.jpg Assam gets ‘smart’ fence along border Part of: GS Prelims and Mains III – Security issues; Defence In news: A digital ‘barrier’ has finally filled a 61 km gap on the 4,096.7 km India-Bangladesh border fence three decades after the project kickstarted. Union Home Minister inaugurated an electronic surveillance system that “is expected to diminish challenges faced by the Border Security Force in manning this stretch against cross-border crimes.” Comprising microwave communication, optical fibre cables, cameras, and an intrusion detection device, this system is called BOLD-QIT (Border Electronically Dominated QRT Interception Technique) and was established under the Comprehensive Integrated Border Management System. Do you know? Assam shares a 263 km border with Bangladesh. Much of the border was fenced, but a 61 km stretch in Dhubri district remained open owing to the terrain dictated by the Brahmaputra. (MAINS FOCUS) INTERNATIONAL/SECURITY TOPIC:General studies 2  Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India’s interests India and the World ; India and its neighborhood- relations. Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India's interests, Indian diaspora. General studies 3  Role of external state and nonstate actors in creating challenges to internal security.  Security challenges and their management in border areas; Pullback after Pulwama? Here’s what game theory suggests Introduction: India’s muscular approach towards Pakistan, especially post-Uri, post-Pulwama has underpinnings in game theory. India launched its “surgical strike", after the jihadi attack on the Uri army camp in 2016. Last month Indian Air Force struck a terrorist camp in Balakot deep inside Pakistan, in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. The below article deals with the question – “Will tit for tat work in the Pakistani context?” What Game Theory suggests? Game theory suggests that tit for tat strategy should work better than any other strategy India has followed in the past. India had adopted strategies that involve strategy of restraint or non-retaliation in response to a provocation. In other words, India accepted mistreatment without retaliating or seeking revenge. For 30 years, Indian decision makers were paralysed when it came to responding to terror emanating from Pakistan. India is perhaps the only country in the world which did not respond militarily when its Parliament was attacked and when its financial capital was brutalised. Such soft strategies have not prompted even small changes in Pakistani behaviour. Therefore, according to Game Theory, if tit for tat is a consistent policy for India, the chances are it will deliver better results. Do you know: About Game Theory? Game theory is a theoretical framework for conceiving of social situations among competing players. In some respects, game theory is the science of strategy, or set of concepts aimed at decision making in situations of competition and conflict (as well as of cooperation and interdependence) under specified rules. Any time we have a situation with two or more players that involves known payouts or quantifiable consequences, we can use game theory to help determine the most likely outcomes. Tit for tat strategy Tit for tat as an effective strategy originated in the 1980s. It was first introduced by Anatol Rapoport in Robert Axelrod's two tournaments, held around 1980. An agent using this strategy will first cooperate, then subsequently replicate an opponent's previous action. If the opponent previously was cooperative, the agent is cooperative. If not, the agent is not. For example, if provoked, a player subsequently responds with retaliation; if unprovoked, the player cooperates. In the India-Pakistan context, India has been following the strategy of restraint, even non-retaliation.  However, under current regime, we have seen a variation of the tit-for-two-tats strategy. After the Pathankot air force station attack by the Jaish-e-Mohammed, India tried to get Pakistani cooperation in identifying who the attackers were. It was only after Uri followed that India retaliated with the surgical strike. Earlier, India was okay with even a tit-for-several-tats non-strategy, which failed miserably in getting Pakistan to behave better. The only lesson Pakistan learnt from our tepid response was that we have a high threshold for pain and punishment, and thus their “death-by-a-thousand-cuts" plan was working. Under current regime, this strategy is being reworked to become a true tit for tat, and if India persists with this over the long term, it should improve Pakistan’s behaviour. If we accept tit for tat as a more moral and workable strategy in the long run, clearly India needs to deploy it consistently in both directions—retaliation and cooperation. Conclusion: The lesson to learn from game theory is that consistency in policy is vital to get the message across. Tit for tat will work as long as it is consistent across governments. Giving it up for meaningless talks will mean loss of all the gains made so far from the surgical strike and Balakot. Connecting the dots: What strategy should India adopt in order to deal with proxy-wars from the neighbouring countries? M.K. Gandhi believed that an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth would leave the whole world blind and toothless. Would Gandhi's philosophy of non violence work in today's world? Examine. Essay: “To retaliate with hate and bitterness would do nothing but intensify the hate in the world,” Martin Luther King, Jr. said. SOCIETY TOPIC:General studies 1 Effects of globalization on Indian society Social empowerment, communalism, regionalism and secularism  Salient features of Indian Society, Diversity of India The loss of intellectual autonomy About Intellectual Autonomy: Intellectual autonomy is a ‘willingness and ability to think for oneself’. The young are particularly keen to have the freedom to decide which beliefs to form. Intellectual autonomy is widely considered to be an important value. Do you know? In the past, large numbers of people were illiterate, knowledge was produced and stored by a few, and there was wider social legitimacy for submission to those with power and authority. However, an intellectually autonomous person is capable of forming her own judgements, initiating reflection and asking probing questions. Strategy of undermining of Intellectual Autonomy in British Colonialism Since the end of the 18th century, as technologies of knowledge production became increasingly available to larger sections of society, intellectual autonomy has been threatened not only by state power, but in other invidious ways. The British strategy of intellectual control was implemented by crafting a system of education rather than brute coercion. Although the best of our thinkers outmaneuvered this system. For example, our most original thinker of this period, Gandhi, was a product of this very education. However this system created acute anxiety among self-reflexive thinkers. For example, Sri Aurobindo lamented the “increasing impoverishment of the Indian intellect” in the face of new knowledge imposed by European contact. “Nothing is our own, nothing native to our intelligence, all is derived,” he complained. “As little have we understood the new knowledge; we have only understood what the Europeans want us to think about themselves and their modern civilization”. What were the impacts of Intellectual Control by British Colonialism? It undermined the capacity of critical thinking and non influential decision making. Indians (especially the then English-educated Indians and who were in authority) blindly accepted ideas coming either from outside, from Europe. It was as if the only choice before Indian intellectual elites was a hyper-westernised modernism or ultra-traditionalism. Cultural subjugation instead of creative assimilation. Our English culture if culture it can be called has increased tenfold the evil of our dependence instead of remedying it. Idea of religion and nation: Religion, as a demarcated system of practices, beliefs and doctrines, is largely an early modern European invention and begins its existence in and through the theological disputes of the 16th and 17th centuries. In India, people did not think of themselves as belonging to a single system of belief and doctrine in competition with and opposition to all others. Indeed, mobility across communities and multiple allegiances were common. As a result, most people refused to be slotted into rigid, compartmentalised entities. They were religious but did not belong to a religion. This has virtually ceased to be the case. Thanks to narrow-minded education institutions and now the electronic media, the idea was first disseminated and then unquestioningly accepted by Indians as if it were a long-held indigenous Indian idea. Conclusion In accepting this alien idea of religion and nation without proper comparison or competition with Indian ideas of faith and community, we have sacrificed intellectual autonomy and gone down the road to hell from which Europe has itself yet to recover. To define one’s identity or community in terms of a single, exclusive religion Hindu, Muslim or any other is a perverse European notion, a mark of our cultural subjugation, a symptom of the loss of our intellectual autonomy. To have done so is to have uncritically abandoned our own collective genius for something ill-suited to our conditions. This need to be reversed by building our collective intellectual autonomy and critical analysis. Connecting the dots: What do you mean by ‘Intellectual Autonomy’? Do you think intellectual autonomy is smothered by temptations of power. Elucidate your opinion. MUST READ Recovering from the Hanoi setback The Hindu India really needs to enhance its counterterrorism capabilities The Hindu  BCCI seems to have forgotten that foreign policy is not its mandate Indian Express A new paradigm has emerged on Pakistan-sponsored terrorism Indian Express Apology for Jallianwala Bagh massacre could offer a chance for Britain to atone Indian Express

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RSTV IAS UPSC – Launch of SHREYAS

Launch of SHREYAS Archives General studies 2 Skill development; Education, Human Resources development Government schemes and policies Scheme for Higher Education Youth in Apprenticeship and Skills (SHREYAS) Aim: Boost the employment skills of Indian youth by providing them with ‘on the job work exposure’ through the National Apprenticeship Promotional Scheme (NAPS) and the National Career Service (NCS). Target: Cover over 50 lakh students by 2022 Ministries involved: Ministry of Human Resources Development Ministry of Skill Development and Entrepreneurship Ministry of Labour and Employment Objectives To improve employability of students by introducing employment relevance To forge a close functional link between education and industry To provide skills to the students in a dynamic manner To establish an ‘earn while you learn’ system into higher education To help industry in securing good quality manpower To link student community with employment facilitating efforts of the Government Phases of the Scheme: 1st Track: Add-on apprenticeship (Degree apprenticeship) The students, who are about to complete the degree programme, would be invited to choose a job role of their choice from a selected list of apprenticeship or training job roles. This apprenticeship programme would commence immediately after completion of the degree programme (May each year) with basic training regarding the sector and will long for 6 months. During the apprenticeship period, the student would get a monthly stipend of about Rs 6,000 per month by the industry. At the end, successful students would get skills certificate in addition to their degree certificate. 2nd Track: Embedded Apprenticeship The existing B.Voc (Bachelor of Vocation) programmes would be restructured into B.A (Professional), B.Sc (Professional) or B.Com (Professional) courses. These courses would include educational input, vocational input, and mandatory apprenticeship of 6 to 10 months. Alternatively, one full semester of an existing B.Voc course would be dedicated to apprenticeship with industry. During the apprenticeship period, the student would get a monthly stipend of about Rs 6,000 per month by the industry, 25 percent of which would be reimbursed under the NAPS programme.   At the end, successful students would get skills certificate in addition to their degree certificate. 3rd Track: Linking National Career Service with Colleges Under this, the National Career Service (NCS) portal of Ministry of Labour & Employment would be linked with the Higher Education institutions. The students would be trained in soft skills required by the market. This would improve the employment opportunities. The ‘WHY’ behind the scheme The education with skills is the need of the hour and the SHREYAS will be a major effort in this direction to make our degree students more skilled, capable, employable and aligned to the needs of our economy so that they contribute to country's progress and also obtain gainful employment. The scheme has been conceived for students in degree courses, primarily non-technical with a view to introduce employable skills into their learning, promote apprenticeship as integral to education and also amalgamate employment facilitating efforts of the government into the education system. Connecting the Dots: Low standards in education, lack of requisite skills and unemployment form a vicious cycle which is detrimental to India’s demographic dividend. Comment. How can human resource development play a role in addressing this problem? Examine. Imparting skills to the burgeoning youth population is imperative to address the jobless growth being witnessed in India. Critically comment. Also discuss the various initiatives that aim at imparting skills to different target groups. Today, Skill India looks like a patient who, after having their treatment diagnosed as successful, has relapsed into a condition worse than before and is on their last leg. Do you agree? Can SHREYAS tackle this issue? Discuss.

60 Days Plan: UPSC IAS Prelims 2019 - Geography and Current Affairs (Day 4)

60 Day plan has been published on the website (www.iasbaba.com - Click here). Since we have come up with the 'Quiz Format', it will not be feasible to publish it on the app. For feasibility and getting to know where you stand among your peers (we have a leaderboard which gives your marks and rank) it would be advisable to take the test on the website. All the best. make the best use of the initiative ! Before taking the Test, read the post below, ARCHIVES Hello Friends,  The most beloved 60 Days for UPSC IAS Prelims 2019  has finally begun :) Once again the time has come for the battle (Prelims). And who else than your best companion in the last preparatory phase for UPSC IAS Prelims 2019 i.e 60 days plan. It does not matter how slowly you go as long as you do not stop.  Hope the message given above makes sense to you all. The productive utilization of this programme demands consistency, honesty, faith and strong determination to be in the process of learning and unlearning. You might not be fully prepared to solve all the questions but the learning and unlearning through these questions will prepare you for the real battle on 2nd June 2019. You have to unlearn your repetitive mistakes, gut feeling on which you mark doubtful questions. You have to learn new things and also those concepts that you were very sure of but somehow because of traps in the option, got it wrong. You have to learn 'how to convert knowledge into marks' (Because most of the times, after ending the exam, you regret making mistakes in known concepts).  Secondly, keep a long distance from following too many things at this point. It will always backfire. Once you are here, put complete faith and follow this initiative along with whatever you were doing. It is very important to consolidate your preparation with many revisions. Simply following many things will leave you in despair. You can cross check this with veterans. Everything that seems attractive is not productive. You should always go for productivity. Be wise! Let us pledge to make it a big game changer (better than last year) in the next 60 days of this plan! Importance of Self - Tracking: Learning from Last Year Last year, aspirants used to type/post their answers in the comment box on a daily basis. There were huge participation and discussion below the test post. Putting answers in the comment box has been very effective to self-track yourself after updating the score. In the end, you can cross check your performance through Disqus profile. It was highly effective in the last edition of 60 Days that propelled aspirants to monitor their performance and learn through discussion. Let you solve these questions with full honesty and write your result in the comment box. Interact with peers to know your mistakes. The importance of this initiative stands time-bound and aggressive reverse engineering to learn the concepts. Many of you must be busy with your own strategy but let us tell you honestly that in the last few months, it is very important to revise and consolidate your learning. Just reading won’t suffice. So, take out a few hours from your schedule and make it a revision exercise. How can you make the best use of it? Be honest to your effort and do not start competing with XYZ aspirants just for the sake of marks. It is more important for you to introspect and check your learning than focusing on others. Try to answer the questions in 25 minutes only.  Do not get into negative feeling that I don’t have enough knowledge to answer these questions. Feel like you are taking the real exam. What would be your response then? The same will be replicated in the UPSC exam. Here, you get marks only and nothing else matters. So, make effort to know the answers to all questions. Do not cheat :P DETAILED MICRO ANALYSIS MATRIX SAMPLE- is given here. You can download this and do an assessment for yourself (the excel sheet must be modified as per this years planning. The provided excel sheet is only for reference).  DOWNLOAD You can copy paste the same format/modify as per your need in Google Spreadsheet and update it on daily basis. Feedback talks about daily test results. Follow-up talks about daily target achieved from sources and the number of revisions to do/done and dates. Sources column is to ensure that aspirants do not run behind various sources and follow the same throughout. Would like to end on this quote:  Either you run the day or the day runs you.  Are you ready? Let's start! Important Note Don't forget to post your marks in the comment section. Also, let us know if you enjoyed today's test :)  You can post your comments in the given format  (1) Your Score (2) Matrix Meter (3) New Learning from the Test

Daily Current Affairs IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 5th March 2019

IAS UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 5th March 2019 Archives (PRELIMS + MAINS FOCUS) PM launches ‘One Nation One Card’ Part of: GS Prelims and Mains II and III - Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors; Indian Economy – Digitalization of Economy In news: PM launched the indigenously-developed National Common Mobility Card to enable people to streamline payments of multiple kinds of transport charges. Dubbed as ‘One Nation One Card’, the inter-operable transport card would allow the holders to pay for their bus travel, toll, parking, retail shopping and money withdrawal. This card runs on RuPay card and it will eliminate all travel related problems. Do you know? The Indigenous Automatic Fare Collection System based on One Nation One Card Model i.e. National Common Mobility Card (NCMC) is the first of its kind in India. People can also withdraw money using this Common Mobility Card. RuPay card can be used for travelling in metros in any part of the country. Pakistan bans UNSC designated outfits Part of: GS Prelims and Mains II and III – India and its neighbouring countries – Bilateral ties; International Relations; Security issues In news: Facing severe pressure from the Financial Action Task Force, and calls from several countries to crack down on terror groups, the Pakistan government passed an order to effectively ban Lashkar-e-Taiba offshoots Jamat-ud Dawa and Falah-i-Insaniyat Foundation. However, India is sceptical about the move, given Pakistan’s attempts to ban these groups in the past, only to drop the ban over a period of time. In February 2018, Islamabad passed a similar order as a Presidential Ordinance, but then allowed it to lapse six months later. https://d39gegkjaqduz9.cloudfront.net/TH/2019/03/05/DEL/Delhi/TH/5_01/4897be14_2776847_101_mr.jpg Crop burning raises risk of respiratory illness threefold Part of: GS Prelims and Mains II and III – Health Issue; Air Pollution In news: According to a study by the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) – The burning of agricultural residue a contributor to north India’s winter pollution increases the risk of respiratory illnesses three fold for those who experience it. It may also be responsible for an annual $30 billion (approximately ₹2 trillion) loss in terms of days of work lost in States affected by crop burning. Living in an area where crop burning is practiced is a leading risk factor for respiratory disease in northern India. North India is impacted more compared to South. Do you know? The researchers used health records and satellite data for crop-burning fires detected by the Moderate-Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) Terra satellite, managed by the National Aeronautics Space Administration (NASA). In 2013, the National Green Tribunal (NGT) issued a directive to Punjab, Haryana and Uttar Pradesh, asking them to ban stubble burning. The Environment Ministers of these States as well as top officials at the Centre declared a “zero tolerance” policy on the burning of stubble, which has been estimated to contribute anywhere from 7% to 78% of the particulate matter-emission load in Delhi during winter. https://d39gegkjaqduz9.cloudfront.net/TH/2019/03/05/DEL/Delhi/TH/5_07/56d80f2f_2776857_101_mr.jpg India to tie-up with 4 nations to save rhinos In news: India will collaborate with Bhutan, Nepal, Indonesia and Malaysia to increase the population of three species of Asian rhinos, including the Greater one-horned rhinoceros found in the Indian sub-continent. The five rhino range nations signed a declaration ‘The Declaration on Asian Rhinos 2019’ for the conservation and protection of the species at the recently held Second Asian Rhino Range Countries meeting held in Delhi. The declaration includes undertaking studies on health issues of the rhinos, their potential diseases and taking necessary steps; collaborating and strengthening wildlife forensics and strengthening of transboundary collaboration among India, Nepal and Bhutan for conservation of the Greater one-horned rhino. Do you know? Three species of Asian rhinos – Greater one-horned rhinoceros (found in the Indian sub-continent) Javan rhinos Sumatran rhinos IUCN Status: Javan and Sumatran Rhino are critically endangered but the greater one-horned (or Indian) rhino vulnerable. Miscellaneous: Manipur ‘considering’ ST status for Meiteis Do you know? The Meitei people are the majority ethnic group of Manipur and because of this they are sometimes referred to as Manipuris. Generally speaking, Meitei is an endonym and Manipuri is an exonym. The Meitei people are made up of seven clans, who trace their written history back to 33 AD. The Meitei people speak the Meitei language, a Tibeto-Burman language. Meiteis believe that the ancestor of one of their clans manifested himself as Pakhangba, a mythical dragon. (MAINS FOCUS) INTERNATIONAL TOPIC:General studies 2  Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India’s interests India and the World ; India and its neighborhood- relations. Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India's interests, Indian diaspora. India-Pakistan and Gulf Countries: The Gulf as a channel of peace Context: The below editorial focuses on following issues – India’s and Pakistan’s relations with Gulf countries in the past and present. How Pakistan succeeded to mobilise significant support within the Middle East especially during 1990s? How Undivided-India enjoyed better relationship with Middle-East? How India lost its influence (especially after its independence) in the region and provided Pakistan an edge? Pakistan and India’s relation with Gulf Countries   We all know that Pakistan has a long-standing history with the Arab Gulf countries, particularly Saudi Arabia and the UAE. Many Gulf countries and Middle East countries tended to act as Pakistan’s strategic depth. For decades, shared religious identity and common approach to regional affairs gave Pakistan a political edge over India in the region. Ties during undivided India In the colonial era, the Gulf and other locations in the Middle East were critical links in the larger architecture of Great Britain’s Imperial defence system in the eastern hemisphere centred on undivided India. The armies of India had to embark on repeated expeditionary operations in the Gulf and the Middle East through the 19th and early 20th centuries. The Indian army played a key role in the Middle Eastern theatre in both the World Wars. Post-Independence Ties After Independence, India pulled out of any security role in the Gulf and the Middle East (opting NAM policy). Pakistan, however, joined the Anglo-American effort (Central Treaty Organisation -CENTO) to replace the security vacuum created by the Indian withdrawal. CENTO had regional members which included Pakistan, Iran, Iraq and Turkey. Pakistan embraced conservative and pro-Western regimes, while India aligned with the nationalist and non-aligned governments like Egypt. CENTO provided the basis for Pakistan’s external and internal security cooperation with a number of countries in the Gulf region. Some of them like Jordan, Iran and Turkey backed Pakistan during its wars with India in 1965 and 1971. As the Arab nationalist regimes steadily weakened in relation to the regional conservatives, India steadily lost political ground to Pakistan in the 1970s. Matters got worse in the 1980s as India remained silent on the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan and the Gulf regimes joined Pakistan in promoting jihad against the Soviet Union. On trade and commerce front, India’s energy and economic dependence on the Gulf grew. But on political front, ties were vulnerable. The 1990s also saw Pakistan mobilise significant support within the Middle East, including at the OIC and other international forums, to castigate India’s internal policies. The attack on the Babri Masjid and India’s troubles in the Kashmir valley gave ample political ammunition to Pakistan. Paradoxically, the nuclear tests by India and Pakistan in May 1998 and the Kargil crisis in the summer of 1999, opened the possibilities for restructuring South Asia’s relations with the Gulf. The US mobilised Saudi Arabia during the Kargil War to encourage Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to accept the Indian demand to pull Pakistan’s army back to the Line of Control. Contemporary Relations After Kargil, the then Indian government brought a new self-confidence and intensity to the engagement with the Gulf and the Middle East. It was during the late 2000, Indian foreign minister first visited Saudi Arabia and underlined how far India and Saudi Arabia had drifted in the decades before. The bilateral relationship with Saudi Arabia steadily improved thereafter and has now acquired a fresh momentum under Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Today the House of Saud is becoming a valuable partner for Delhi in promoting regional security in the Subcontinent and beyond. Many Gulf countries, especially Saudi Arabia and the UAE, has developed stronger economic and security bonds with India. There has been a significant activism from the Gulf countries to help defuse the current tensions between India and Pakistan. For instance, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) pressed Pakistan to release Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman who was downed after a dogfight in the air with Pakistan Air Force. Some of the Gulf countries could become potential allies in nudging Pakistan towards political moderation and regional accommodation in the Subcontinent. Pakistan’s uncertain state of economy and dependence on financial bailouts from the UAE and Saudi Arabia has made Pakistan more amenable to such an outcome. Connecting the dots: Examine how Middle East has been crucial for India for decades. Discuss India’s historical ties with Middle East countries. Examine India’s “Look West” policy in context of modern day geopolitical realities. India’s “Link West” policy has seen both continuity and change. Comment. GOVERNANCE/ECONOMY TOPIC:General studies 2  Functions and responsibilities of the Union and the States, issues and challenges pertaining to the federal structure, devolution of powers and finances up to local levels and challenges therein. Functions and responsibilities of various Constitutional Bodies. Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation.  Important aspects of governance General studies 3  Indian Economy and issues relating to mobilization of resources, growth, development; Government Budgeting.  Inclusive growth and issues arising from it. The role of finance commissions in sustainable development Context: Government expects the 15th Finance Commission (FC) to play a key role in fostering sustainable development in India. Its constitutional status and the ability to suggest far-reaching reforms – on financing, allocation and use of funds by three tiers of governance – makes the central and state FCs completely capable to discharge this role of fostering sustainable development. However, effective implementation will be the responsibility of the three tiers, which is an issue of good governance. Path to sustainable development Importance of Social Sector Expenditure Education and health expenditure by states play a key role in improving developmental outcomes. Additional financing requirements of ₹12.1 trillion and ₹53.6 trillion have been estimated for health and education, respectively, to meet the sustainable development goal, or SDG targets, by 2030. Aware of the importance of social sector expenditure, many poor states have increased their expenditures in social services. Concerns: Despite such increase in education and health spending, experts indicate that efficiency of education spending has deteriorated in Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and Odisha between 2002 and 2015. In other words, even though some of these states spent most out of their budget on capital expenditure, health and education sectors remained impoverished. There is no evidence of poorer states “catching up" with richer states in quality of human capital formation and health-related expenditure. Several of these states now lack sizeable funds to consistently invest in human development. Reasons - Declines in grants-in-aid and their own revenues; Inefficient spending; fiscal deficits due to takeover of debt of distribution companies under the UDAY scheme and farm loan waiver announcements. Achieving long-run sustainability of debt and deficits continue to be a major challenge for such states. The way ahead: Good governance, coupled with growth, is key in achieving spending efficiency in education, health and social sectors. The role of local governments has often been ignored in human development, despite them being closest to ground and having the ability to make investment choices based on evidence and consistently monitor outcomes. Bottom up approach: State FCs should take into account the requirements of local governments and inform the central FC. Constitution also envisages for bottom up approach in determining resource allocations among the three tiers of governance. Increase local government expenditure: Local government expenditure as a percentage of total public sector expenditure is only around 7% compared with 24% in Europe, 27% in North America and 55% in Denmark. Coordination between central and state FCs: There is no coordination between central and state FCs to understand a consolidated account of the reality at the sub-state level. Realistic assessment of ground realities and course correction: FCs will need to look within and improve internal processes for better coordination, making realistic assessment of ground realities and improving outcomes. Implement suggestions recommended by experts and committees on Fiscal Federalism: Swaminathan A. Aiyar recommended that central FCs propose substantial rewards for states that are serious about decentralisation, and penalties for those that are not. Noted econocrat Vijay Kelkar recommended creating a consolidated fund for municipalities and panchayats to ensure that revenue allocated by central and state FCs flow directly to it. Kelkar also advocated that states and the Centre should share an equal percentage of their respective goods and services tax collection with the third tier. This will lead to creation of better public goods resulting in growth of economic activities, resident citizens’ incomes and consumption which, in turn, will provide high fiscal resources to the local governments. Suggestions have also been made to create market-based mechanisms for financing government expenditures and fixing accountability. Monitor performance through appropriate index: An index of debt sustainability and fiscal prudence performance indicators for measuring performance can be created, wherein fiscally strong governments can get themselves rated to get better rates in auction of bonds. Cash surplus state governments can be allowed to lend to those in deficit at a market-linked rate. Conclusion: FCs need to become agents of change. To this end, they must examine these suggestions, and make appropriate recommendations to empower local governments, enable good governance and play their part in fostering sustainable development. Connecting the dots: Examine how Central and states' finance commissions can play an important role in fostering sustainable development in India. Analyze how empowerment of local governments and good governance can lead to sustainable development. (TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE) Model questions: (You can now post your answers in comment section) Note: Featured Comments and comments Up-voted by IASbaba are the “correct answers”. IASbaba App users – Team IASbaba will provide correct answers in comment section. Kindly refer to it and update your answers. Q.1) Meiteis are majority ethnic group of Manipur Mizoram Assam Nagaland Q.2) ‘The Declaration on Asian Rhinos 2019’ was signed between India and - Bhutan, Nepal, Bangladesh and Myanmar Bhutan, Nepal, Indonesia and Malaysia Bhutan, Nepal, China and Bangladesh Bhutan, Nepal, Bangladesh and Indonesia Q.3) Indian rhinoceros are found in Assam West Bengal Uttar Pradesh Select the correct code: 1 and 2 2 and 3 1 and 3 All of the above Q.4) ‘One Nation One Card’ is associated with - Kisan Credit Card ID cards for Safai Karamcharis National Common Mobility Card National Common Insurance Card MUST READ The loss of intellectual autonomy The Hindu  Solar powerhouse The Hindu  Our fitting tribute Indian Express Unmet farm challenge Indian Express We need to dramatically raise the cost for Pak’s terror strategy Livemint

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RSTV IAS UPSC – Universal Basic Income

Universal Basic Income Archives TOPIC: General Studies 2 Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation. Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections of the population by the Centre and States and the performance of these schemes; mechanisms, laws, institutions and bodies constituted for the protection and betterment of these vulnerable sections In News: Sikkim’s ruling Sikkim Democratic Front (SDF) has decided to include Universal Basic Income (UBI) in its manifesto for the upcoming assembly and Lok Sabha elections. The state has already begun the process of introducing the unconditional direct cash transfer scheme and is planning to implement the same by 2022. It could become the first state in India to implement UBI. Background: The 2017 Economic Survey had advocated implementation of UBI as an alternative to the various social welfare schemes in an effort to reduce poverty. The Survey said, “UBI is a powerful idea whose time even if not ripe for implementation, is ripe for serious discussion.” However, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley in June 2017 said the scheme as proposed in the Economic Survey will not be politically feasible in today's India. What is Universal Basic Income? Universal basic income (UBI) is a model for providing all citizens of a country or other geographic area with a given sum of money, regardless of their income, resources or employment status. Purpose of the UBI: To prevent or reduce poverty and increase equality among citizens Underlying principle: Basic income is the idea that all citizens are entitled to a livable income, whether or not they contribute to production and despite the particular circumstances into which they are born. The idea and its appeal While India has made considerable progress in bringing down poverty from about 70% of the population at the time of independence to about 22% in 2011-12 (Tendulkar Committee estimates), the effectiveness of the targeted schemes run by central and state governments have always been in question. Studies and government audits reflect the data manipulation and leakages that characterise the system, with the poor and deserving crowded out of BPL card ownership and the rich reaping undeserved benefits. Targeting is seen as being both inefficient and inequitable, a licence for corruption that has spawned an entire industry of middlemen. UBI envisages an uncompromised social safety net that seeks to assure a dignified life for everyone, a concept that is expected to gain traction in a global economy buffeted by uncertainties on account of globalisation, technological change, and automation. The concept of universal basic income has three main features: UBI is universal in nature. It means UBI is not targeted. The second feature of UBI is cash transfer instead of in-kind transfer. The third feature is that UBI is unconditional. That means one need not prove his or her unemployment status or socio-economic identity to be eligible for UBI. As a form of social security UBI will help in reducing inequality and eliminating poverty. Thus it ensures security and dignity for all individuals. As human labour is being substituted by technology, there will be reduced wage income and reduced purchasing power. UBI will compensate for reduced purchasing power. What would UBI mean to the Government? There would be drastic changes in the way government spends its revenue generated from taxation and other sources. Currently, Government spends its revenue on various services as well as on subsidies. UBI would mean that government may move away from service delivery and empower its citizens to access services through cash transfer. What are the advantages of UBI? First, UBI would strengthen economic liberty at an individual level; would help them to choose the kind of work they want to do, rather than forcing them to do unproductive work to meet their daily requirements. Universal Basic Income would be a sort of an insurance against unemployment and hence helps in reducing poverty. It will result in equitable distribution of wealth. Increased income will increase the bargaining power of individuals, as they will no longer be forced to accept any working conditions. Because of its universal character, there is no need to identify the beneficiaries. Thus it excludes errors in identifying the intended beneficiaries – which is a common problem in targeted welfare schemes. As every individual receive basic income, it promotes efficiency by reducing wastages in government transfers. This would also help in reducing corruption. Considerable gains could be achieved in terms of bureaucratic costs and time by replacing many of the social sector schemes with UBI. As economic survey points out, transferring basic income directly into bank accounts will increase the demand for financial services. This would help banks to invest in the expansion of their service network, which is very important for financial inclusion. What are the main arguments against UBI? A guaranteed minimum income might make people lazy and it breeds dependency. They may opt out of labour market. There is no guarantee that the additional income will be spent on education, health etc. there are chances that the money will be spent on ‘temptation goods’ such as alcohol, tobacco, drugs etc. Given the large population size, the fiscal burden on government would be high. Also, as Economic Survey 2016-17 noted, once implemented, it may become difficult for the government to wind up a UBI in the case of failure. If the UBI is funded by higher taxes, especially by the indirect taxes, it will result in inflation. This, in turn, will reduce the purchasing power of the people and lowers the value of the amount transferred. A ‘guaranteed minimum income’ might reduce the availability of workers in some sectors which are necessary but unattractive and raise the wages of such works. For example, the wages of agriculture labour might increase due to non-availability of workers willing to work in others’ farm. What are the challenges that may face in Implementation of UBI? According to World Bank, in India, there are only 20 ATMs for every one lakh adult population. Nearly one-third of the Indian adults remain unbanked. With such a state of financial service infrastructure and financial inclusion, it would be difficult for the people to access their benefits. Financing the ‘guaranteed minimum income’ would be another challenge. There are chances that UBI would become an add-on to existing subsidies rather than replace them. Conclusion Despite making remarkable progress in poverty reduction, nearly 22 percent of the population lives below poverty line (Tendulkar committee report, 2011-12). One of the major criticisms of poverty alleviation programmes is significant leakages. UBI is seen as a more efficient alternative. Though UBI has many advantages, there are many practical challenges too. A transparent and safe financial architecture that is accessible to all is important for the success of the UBI. In other words, the success of UBI depends on the success of efficient mode of delivery like JAM Trinity. Also, a behavioral change on the part of account holders needed so that they use their accounts more often. Banks need to find it profitable to provide access to banking services. Connecting the Dots: UBI is a powerful idea whose time even if not ripe for implementation is ripe for serious discussion. Discuss. Discuss the merits and challenges associated with ‘Universal Basic Income’.

60 Days Plan: UPSC IAS Prelims 2019 - Geography and Current Affairs (Day 3)

60 Day plan has been published on the website (www.iasbaba.com - Click here ). Since we have come up with the 'Quiz Format', it will not be feasible to publish it on the app. For feasibility and getting to know where you stand among your peers (we have a leaderboard which gives your marks and rank) it would be advisable to take the test on the website. All the best. make the best use of the initiative ! Before taking the Test, read the post below, ARCHIVES Hello Friends,  The most beloved 60 Days for UPSC IAS Prelims 2019  has finally begun :) Once again the time has come for the battle (Prelims). And who else than your best companion in the last preparatory phase for UPSC IAS Prelims 2019 i.e 60 days plan. It does not matter how slowly you go as long as you do not stop.  Hope the message given above makes sense to you all. The productive utilization of this programme demands consistency, honesty, faith and strong determination to be in the process of learning and unlearning. You might not be fully prepared to solve all the questions but the learning and unlearning through these questions will prepare you for the real battle on 2nd June 2019. You have to unlearn your repetitive mistakes, gut feeling on which you mark doubtful questions. You have to learn new things and also those concepts that you were very sure of but somehow because of traps in the option, got it wrong. You have to learn 'how to convert knowledge into marks' (Because most of the times, after ending the exam, you regret making mistakes in known concepts).  Secondly, keep a long distance from following too many things at this point. It will always backfire. Once you are here, put complete faith and follow this initiative along with whatever you were doing. It is very important to consolidate your preparation with many revisions. Simply following many things will leave you in despair. You can cross check this with veterans. Everything that seems attractive is not productive. You should always go for productivity. Be wise! Let us pledge to make it a big game changer (better than last year) in the next 60 days of this plan! Importance of Self - Tracking: Learning from Last Year Last year, aspirants used to type/post their answers in the comment box on a daily basis. There were huge participation and discussion below the test post. Putting answers in the comment box has been very effective to self-track yourself after updating the score. In the end, you can cross check your performance through Disqus profile. It was highly effective in the last edition of 60 Days that propelled aspirants to monitor their performance and learn through discussion. Let you solve these questions with full honesty and write your result in the comment box. Interact with peers to know your mistakes. The importance of this initiative stands time-bound and aggressive reverse engineering to learn the concepts. Many of you must be busy with your own strategy but let us tell you honestly that in the last few months, it is very important to revise and consolidate your learning. Just reading won’t suffice. So, take out a few hours from your schedule and make it a revision exercise. How can you make the best use of it? Be honest to your effort and do not start competing with XYZ aspirants just for the sake of marks. It is more important for you to introspect and check your learning than focusing on others. Try to answer the questions in 25 minutes only.  Do not get into negative feeling that I don’t have enough knowledge to answer these questions. Feel like you are taking the real exam. What would be your response then? The same will be replicated in the UPSC exam. Here, you get marks only and nothing else matters. So, make effort to know the answers to all questions. Do not cheat :P DETAILED MICRO ANALYSIS MATRIX SAMPLE- is given here. You can download this and do an assessment for yourself (the excel sheet must be modified as per this years planning. The provided excel sheet is only for reference).  DOWNLOAD You can copy paste the same format/modify as per your need in Google Spreadsheet and update it on daily basis. Feedback talks about daily test results. Follow-up talks about daily target achieved from sources and the number of revisions to do/done and dates. Sources column is to ensure that aspirants do not run behind various sources and follow the same throughout. Would like to end on this quote:  Either you run the day or the day runs you.  Are you ready? Let's start! Important Note Don't forget to post your marks in the comment section. Also, let us know if you enjoyed today's test :)  You can post your comments in the given format  (1) Your Score (2) Matrix Meter (3) New Learning from the Test

Daily Current Affairs IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 4th March 2019

IAS UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 4th March 2019 Archives (PRELIMS + MAINS FOCUS) India and Myanmar: Countering Naga militants Part of: GS Mains II and III – India and its neighbouring countries – Bilateral ties; International Relations; Security issues In news: India’s improved ties with Myanmar fuelled the crackdown on Naga militants training camps. In late January, Myanmar took over National Socialist Council of Nagaland-Khaplang (NSCN-K), which is considered to be the mother lode of most extremist groups in the northeastern region. NSCN-K outfit had violated an agreement not to allow Myanmar territory to be used by “any rebel group to attack a neighbouring country [India].” Extremist groups such as the United Liberation Front of Asom and the United National Liberation Front of Manipur are known to use jungle routes for hit-and-run operations in India from the NSCN-K’s base. A.P. villagers yearn to revive historic temple @Motupalli port Part of: GS Prelims and Mains II – Indian art and heritage; Culture In news: Motupalli — where a historic temple of Veerabhadraswamy, a fiery form of Lord Siva, is located — has been an important port for centuries with flourishing trade with South Asian countries, especially during the medieval period. Why in news? Motupalli Veerabhadraswamy temple - This heritage site in Andhra Pradesh presents a picture of neglect now. The temple remains closed ever since the Department of Archaeology took it over for conservation and preservation of the archaeological marvel in the wake of discovery of Panchaloha idols of gods and goddesses including that of Lord Nataraja in dancing posture and Bhadrakali in the 1970s from nearby farms, after idol-lifters tried to lay their hands on them in view of the demand for such idols overseas. Motupally is well connected by road and rail network on the east coast. People of Motupalli now demanding for reviving the past glory of the temple by reinstalling the idols in the historic temple and promotion of temple tourism in a big way. Most of the antique idols were shifted either to the State Archaeology Museum or to the Victoria Museum, Vijayawada. The villagers’ demand is that they should be brought back and reinstalled. Key pointers for Prelims: Veerabhadra Swamy temple was constructed during the regime of the Cholas. It has stone inscriptions in Telugu and Tamil and awe-inspiring Panchaloha idols. Sri Rama and Veerabhadra Swamy Temples in Motupalli Village reflect the rich culture of Satavahana Kings. It is said that this Temple flourished during the times of Kakatiya rulers who established sea trade with foreign countries. Inscriptions on the temple walls were written in Telugu, Tamil and Sanskrlt Languages. Motupalli Village is located in the coastal region of Andhra Pradesh in Chinnaganjam Mandal, Prakasam District. During Kakatiyas, Motupalli acted as the major hub for sea transportation. Carving on the temple walls and Idols in the temple premises shows the architecture and style of Kakatlya Kings. This region was ruled by Satavahanas, Pallavas, Chalukyas and Cholas. Currently, this site is under the maintenance of Archaeological Survey of India (ASI). U.K. offers collaboration in fighter tech, carriers Part of: GS Prelims and Mains II and III – International Relations; India and the World; Bilateral ties; Security issues In news: As the Indian Air Force (IAF) continues its efforts to procure new fighter jets, the U.K. has made a pitch for cooperation in the fields of building aircraft carriers and future fighter aircraft technologies. It is a partnership building exercise on how India and the U.K. can collaborate as future defence technologies are increasingly going to be delivered by collaborative programmes. Do you know? The IAF has floated a tender for 114 fighter jets, while a proposed fifth generation stealth fighter, the Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA), is on the drawing board. As part of the air combat strategy, BAE Systems has begun the Tempest project to develop sixth generation stealth fighters to replace the Typhoons in service with the Royal Air Force and are scheduled to be phased out by 2040. Odisha shelter homes to have lightning protection system Part of: GS Prelims and Mains III – Disaster Management; Government schemes and policies In news: 640 shelters to be taken up in first phase with funding from World Bank under the National Cyclone Risk Mitigation Project Lightning has emerged as the leading cause behind natural deaths across the State. In Odisha, lightning claims an average of 400 lives every year. The total number of reported deaths due to lightning during the last three years from 2015-16 to 2017-18 is 1,256, which accounts for about 27% of total number of disaster deaths. Important value additions: About National Cyclone Risk Mitigation Project (NCRMP) NCRMP was started by the Ministry of Home Affairs to mitigate vulnerability to the cyclone and hazards prone coastal communities. After the formation of National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA), management of the project was transferred to NDMA in September, 2006. NCRMP-I covers States of Andhra Pradesh and Odisha. NCRMP-II covers States of Gujarat, Maharashtra, Goa, Karnataka, Kerala, and West Bengal. The project is implemented by the Ministry of Home Affairs through National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) and executed by the respective State Disaster Management Authorities at the State level. The project is partly funded by the World Bank. Objectives of NCRMP The overall objective of the National Cyclone Risk Mitigation Project (‘NCRMP’) is to minimize vulnerability to cyclones and make people and infrastructure disaster resilient in harmony with conservation of the coastal eco-system in the cyclone hazard prone States and Union Territories of India. Miscellaneous: 1. ICC rejects request to ‘isolate’ Pakistan In news: The appeal of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) for ‘isolation’ of nations supporting terrorism, without naming Pakistan, did not find support at the International Cricket Council (ICC) board meeting. The BCCI CEO Rahul Johri raised the issue of security at the next World Cup and received an assurance from the ICC in this regard. Since Pakistan was a permanent member of the ICC, it would not be possible to “isolate” it unless it is supported by all Test playing countries. Do you know? India has been raising the issue of terror emanating from Pakistan at various international forums for a long time. India, supported by France, is preparing a fresh proposal to place Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM) chief Masood Azhar on the ban list operated by the UNSC’s 1267 committee. 2. SpaceX’s capsule docks on ISS Part of: GS Prelims and Mains III – Science and Technology; Space Missions In news: SpaceX’s new Dragon capsule successfully docked on the International Space Station (ISS). The capsule was launched on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from the Kennedy Space Center at Cape Canaveral in Florida. The Dragon capsule will remain on the ISS for few days before detaching to splash down in the Atlantic. It will be slowed by four parachutes, in what is the one of the mission’s riskiest stages. The launch is a key step towards resuming manned space flights from U.S. soil after an eight-year break. (MAINS FOCUS) WELFARE/HEALTH TOPIC:General studies 2  Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation. Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections of the population by the Centre and States and the performance of these schemes; mechanisms, laws, institutions and bodies constituted for the protection and betterment of these vulnerable sections. Issues relating to development and management of Social Sector/Services relating to Health, Education, Human Resources. Issues relating to poverty and hunger. ‘For Healthy India’: The basics are vital Context: We had earlier noted in many editorials and analysis dealing with Health Care that why Strengthening of Primary Health Care is important and also major concern for poor health conditions in India is due to Lack of Government Funding. According to high-level expert group on universal health coverage, nearly 70% of government health spending should go to primary health care. National Health Policy (NHP) 2017 also advocated allocating resources of up to two-thirds or more to primary care. Major concerns: 1. Lack of Government Funding to Primary Health Care The current outlay of ₹1,600 crore by the government to transform existing sub-health centre into a health and wellness centre, which provide a wider range of primary care services, is less than half the conservative estimate. Government has proposed to transform 1.5 lakh sub-health centres into Primary health and wellness centres by 2022 and with the current estimates at the given rate, it can fulfil not even half the proposed target of 1.5 lakh health and wellness centres till 2022. This is in contrast to several recommendations to increase the primary health care government expenditure. 2. Dismal situation of National Health Mission: The overall situation with the NHM, India's flagship programme in Primary health care, continues to be dismal. The NHM's share in the health budget fell from 73% in 2006 to 50% in 2019 in the absence of uniform and substantial increases in health spending by States. Ministry of Finance had projected a 17% increase in allocation for the NHM in 2019-20. However, there has only been only an increase of 3.4% this year. NHM budget for this year (₹31,745 crore) barely crosses the actual spending on the programme in 2017-18 (₹ 31,510 crore). 3. Dominance of private players: Centre has committed to increase access to hospitalisation care, predominantly through private players. There has been an increase in allocation this year by 167% for the Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana (PMJAY) — the insurance programme. PMJAY aims to cover 10 crore poor families for hospitalisation expenses of up to ₹5 lakh per family per annum. Government has also taken steps to incentivise the private sector to open hospitals in Tier II and Tier III cities. The increase in the PMJAY budget is a welcome step and should be increased further every year, however the same coming at the expense of other critical areas is ill-advised. 4. Shortage of PHCs and staffs There is a shortage of PHCs (22%) and sub-health centres (20%) Only 7% sub-health centres and 12% primary health centres meet Indian Public Health Standards (IPHS) norms. Numerous primary-level facilities need complete building reconstruction. They are operated out of rented apartments and thatched accommodations; lack basic facilities such as toilets, drinking water and electricity. There is a staggering shortage of medical and paramedical staff at all levels of care. Importance of Primary Health Care: Vital for effective and efficient health system. Instrumental in reducing the out of pocket expenditure. Vital for achieving “distress-free and comprehensive wellness system for all” Crucial for the success of PMJAY Conclusion: Adequate emphasis should be given on primary health care and there is a need to depart from the current trend of erratic and insufficient increases in health spending and make substantial and sustained investments in public health over the next decade. Without this, the ninth dimension (‘Healthy India’) of “Vision 2030” will remain unfulfilled. Connecting the dots: Why India’s health achievements are very modest and has poor health indicators compared to its neighbours? Examine. Also suggest ideas to improve the status of public healthcare in India. Can increase in scope of private financing to fund public health care be a rational option? Evaluate. ECONOMY TOPIC:General studies 2  Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation. General studies 3  Indian Economy and issues relating to mobilization of resources, growth, development; Government Budgeting. Tackling the issues in GST Regime Introduction: We know that GST is one of the biggest indirect tax reforms in the country. GST is expected to bring together state economies and improve overall economic growth of the nation. GST has the best intentions, but the Goods and Services Tax (GST) Council is nevertheless systematically eroding the strongest features of the new tax regime that is simplicity and transparency. Concerns: 1. Issue of Tax Simplicity: Before the GST was introduced, Arvind Subramanian panel related to GST, came up with a standard rate of 15% for most items, a “low rate” for essentials, and a “high rate” for demerit goods. However the government introduced GST with five different tax slabs: 0%, 5%, 12%, 18% and 28%. The GST Council then introduced two more highly specific rates: a nominal 0.25% for rough diamonds and 3% for gold. In the latest GST Council meeting, it introduced yet another rate of 1% for the sale of under-construction affordable houses. Though, the number of tax slabs does not affect the concept of 'One Nation One Tax’, as a single product is still taxed at the same rate across the country. But specifying eight different GST rates is a blow to tax simplicity, which the GST was to provide. 2. Wrong precedent which undermine ‘One Nation One Tax’ concept: Government felt it was necessary to provide Kerala additional funds for rehabilitation after the devastating floods of 2018 and allowed the State to impose a 1% disaster relief cess. However, it had several options available apart from the one it chose. As a result, for two years, the Indian market will be divided into two: Kerala, where goods and services are 1% more expensive, and the rest of India. While it can be argued that the cess in Kerala is a one-off, the fact remains that this is a bad precedent to set. It's not too hard to imagine a situation where States start clamouring for a cyclone relief cess, drought relief cess, flood relief cess, etc. Recovery from natural disasters is an expensive process, and additional funds must be made available. But mechanisms for this have already been put in place. There is a National Disaster Response Fund at the Central level and each State has a State Disaster Response Fund. Increasing budgetary allocations in these areas instead of spending on giant statues and advertising campaigns is an option. 3. Increasing the Opacity: Recent decision by GST council to remove the input tax credit provision from the real estate sector will likely go a long way in increasing opacity in an already murky sector. The input tax credit system was designed to create a seamless chain in the entire supply process. Under a fully functioning GST system, the government can verify the amount of credits to be paid to the company by matching its invoices with those provided by the vendor. Such a system encourages honesty and transparency. 4. Not utilizing the National Anti-Profiteering Authority: This is the third time the Council has removed this vital provision (input tax credit), and its reason for doing so is weak that is real estate developers were not dropping their prices in line with what they should be doing, considering they were getting the benefit of input tax credits. This happened before in the case of restaurants. In both situations, the government took the easy way out and simply removed the input tax credit provision altogether. So, rather than relying on the body it had created to handle such issues, the National Anti-Profiteering Authority, the Council instead chose to weaken the entire tax system. This wouldn't have been too much of a problem if the real estate sector was as small as the restaurant industry or the sanitary pads industry (the third industry where there is no input tax credits). But the real estate industry is estimated to be at least 40O00 crore in size. Not to forget the fact that cement, a huge input in real estate, is taxed at the highest rate of 28%, and will now not be offset by credits. Conclusion: In both cases (disaster relief and anti-profiteering), the GST Council has chosen to ignore established institutions designed for those very purposes in favour of a patchwork approach that is likely to cause more problems than it solves. Connecting the dots: How has GST impacted the economy of India in short term? Critically analyse. Determine the importance of GST Council and Anti-Profiteering Authority in GST. Do you think the present GST tariff structure addresses the generally regressive nature of indirect taxes? Critically examine. (TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE) Model questions: (You can now post your answers in comment section) Note: Featured Comments and comments Up-voted by IASbaba are the “correct answers”. IASbaba App users – Team IASbaba will provide correct answers in comment section. Kindly refer to it and update your answers. Q.1) Which one of the following was a very important seaport in the Kakatiya kingdom? (UPSC 2017) Kakinada Motupalli Machilipatnam (Masulipatnam) Nelluru Q.2) Consider the following statements about National Cyclone Risk Mitigation Project (NCRMP) The project is implemented by the Ministry of Home Affairs. The project covers only coastal states on eastern side of the country which are prone to cyclones. Select the correct statements 1 only 2 only Both 1 and 2 Neither 1 nor 2 Q.3) Consider the following statements about National Cyclone Risk Mitigation Project (NCRMP) National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) under the aegis of Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) will implement the Project in coordination with participating State Governments and the National Institute for Disaster Management (NIDM) NCRMP Phase – 1 covers states of Goa,Gujarat,Karnataka,Kerela,Maharashtra and West Bengal Which of the following statements is/are correct? Only 1 Only 2 Both 1 and 2 Neither 1 nor 2 Q.4) Consider the following statements with regard to Motupalli Veerabhadraswamy temple: It was constructed during the regime of the Cholas. It has stone inscriptions in Telugu and Tamil only. Carving on the temple walls and idols in the temple premises shows the architecture and style of Kakatiya Kings. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? Only 1 Only 2 1 and 3 1, 2 and 3 MUST READ Lines being crossed The Hindu The week after: on India-Pak relations The Hindu Deepening slowdown: on the Indian economy The Hindu  Failing the forest The Hindu Lessons from a crisis Indian Express  Towards dignity Indian Express Kashmir needs a robust education system Indian Express No achhe din for the farmer Indian Express The right climate Indian Express India needs to get its priorities right, focus on water and power Livemint The positive side of having coalition governments Livemint