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IASbaba's Daily Current Affairs [Prelims + Mains Focus] - 5th February 2018

IASbaba's Daily Current Affairs (Prelims + Mains Focus)- 5th February 2018 Archives (PRELIMS+MAINS FOCUS) The proposed Outward Direct Investment (ODI) policy Part of: Mains GS Paper III- Indian Economy Key pointers It may contain provisions to make it easy for many Indian firms to transform themselves into multi-national companies (MNC), to go global and expand. Approval requirements and other norms would be simplified in a manner that would encourage ‘internationalisation’ of Indian companies. The ODI policy is also expected to tighten regulations to prevent round-tripping structures, where funds are routed by India-based companies into a newly formed or existing overseas subsidiary and then brought back to India to circumvent regulations here. They said the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and the Finance Ministry (tax departm According to India Brand Equity Foundation (IBEF), “Indian firms invest in foreign shores primarily through mergers and acquisition (M&A) transactions. With rising M&A activity, companies will get direct access to newer and more extensive markets, and better technologies, which would enable them to increase their customer base and achieve a global reach.” Export-Import Bank of India (EXIM Bank), in a July 2017 research brief, had said: “... policy measures by way of removing hindrances and providing broad support (such as financial and technological), especially to firms with small foreign investment intensities (small overseas investment positions) can help improve firms’ competitiveness, export earnings and sales.” Article link: Click here World-class cancer research park to come up in Visakhapatnam Part of: Mains GS Paper III- Infrastructure Key pointers: A high-level team from America-based Elixsys and noted companies in cancer care will be exploring the option of developing a world-class cancer research park in Visakhapatnam. Named Vyas Cancer Park (VCR), it is aimed at making the park a prominent hub for cancer research. The project was cleared by the Empowered Committee of Secretaries. It had recommended the AP Industrial Infrastructure Corporation (APIIC) to develop a joint venture model for the project and place it before the Cabinet, if required, for approval. The aim of the project is to create a comprehensive life science ecosystem that specialises in bringing together various stakeholders from around the world to undertake research in the VCR Park. Article link: Click here Ceasefire violations on rise across India-Pak border Part of: Mains GS Paper II- Internal security Key pointers: Indian troops have been given instructions to “shoot limitless bullets to retaliate to a single fire on our territory” from Pakistan, by the Home minsitry. Ceasefire violations continued to rise with January 2018 witnessing the most number since the 2003 ceasefire agreement. Army sources said 2017 has turned out to be the most violent year along the India-Pakistan border since the two sides entered into a ceasefire agreement in 2003. At least 860 incidents of ceasefire violations have been recorded in the past year. Ceasefire violations have been steadily rising over the past three years. Article link: Click here (MAINS FOCUS) NATIONAL 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. General Studies 3: Indian economy and issues related to planning, mobilization of resources, growth, development and employment. Economic Survey 2017-18: Analysis Background: The Economic Survey is a statutory document tabled in Parliament. It is meant to be a scorecard of the economy for the current fiscal year. Over the years, it has become a sourcebook for data and policy analysis. Facts about the Indian economy: Highlighted in ES 2017-18 Demonetisation and more formalisation of the economy have led to a huge jump in the number of taxpayers, for both direct and indirect taxes. The formal part of the non-agricultural payroll is much bigger than believed. India’s export sector is more diversified in comparison to other peer countries; that is, the top 1% of exporting firms account for a much smaller share of total exports, compared to East Asian countries. Small and medium enterprises play an important rolein industrial employment and exports. Farm incomes have remained stagnant for the past four years, hit by a drop in crop prices, output glut, and possibly demonetisation. Issues: Fiscal slippage: The Survey hints that some slippage from pre-announced fiscal deficit targets are to be expected in this pre-election Budget. Issue: The bond markets hate fiscal slippage. This will lead to a rise in interest rates. The biggest loser from a higher interest rate is the biggest borrower in the system, the Government of India. Even an increase of 0.5-0.6% rate over one year is an increase in the interest burden of more than ₹40,000 crore, equivalent to the full budget of the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act. Way out: The disinvestment target was overachieved this year which is quite impressive and could be continued next year. Also, the widening of the tax net can be positive for revenues, thus cutting the deficit. Macroeconomic headwinds from abroad: Oil prices are going up. This would mean that the triple advantage that the government enjoyed since late-2014 for almost two years of a lower import bill, lower oil subsidy burden and lower inflation is going to go away. Every $10 increase in oil prices can reduce GDP growth by 0.2-0.3%. The tightening stance of the world’s most influential central bank, the U.S. Fed. As rates are being tightened in the U.S., it is likely to lead to a reversal of dollar flows, which can impact India’s domestic liquidity situation, the stock market, and perhaps the exchange rate. Domestic challenges: The Budget priorities are in folowing five areas: Job creation Revival of private investment spending Revival of exports Focus on rural and agricultural economy. Bringing the banking sector back to a healthier condition. Other challenges: Increasing inequality- Oxfam recently released a report which said that 1% of India owns 73% of its wealth. One cause of inequality is the strain of indirect taxes, which tend to be regressive because they affect the poor disproportionately. The goods and services tax is an indirect tax. Excise duties on petrol and diesel are indirect taxes. In the last three years, the share of indirect taxes in total taxation has gone up steadily, which needs to be reversed. Tax disputes- The Survey points out that India’s rank in ease of doing business has jumped significantly, but an area which remains a cause for concern is the settlement of disputes or litigation. By definition, one party to the litigation is the tax department, and quite often the other party is also a government company. The total amount estimated to be locked up in tax disputes is more than ₹8.2 lakh crore. There is an incentive problem because tax officers are not incentivised to settle claims for fear of being accused of collusion or corruption. The Economic Survey points out that such a high rate of pendency and the huge amounts stuck in litigation are hurting India’s ease of doing business. Conclusion: The Survey is overall an excellent document. It provides a realistic picture whether it is about jobs, investments, growth outlook or burdensome litigation. Connecting the dots: Economic Survey has over the years, become a sourcebook for data and policy analysis. Discuss. MUST READ If that door should shut now The Hindu Understanding the HPV vaccine risk The Hindu Mixing work with study The Hindu A common man's view of India's progress Livemint Reviewing the passage of the Aadhaar Bill Livemint 

PIB

IASbaba PIB Weekly : Press Information Bureau – 29th Jan to 3rd Feb, 2018

IASbaba Press Information Bureau 29th Jan to 3rd Feb, 2018 ARCHIVES GS-2 Launch of GeM 3.0 – National Procurement Portal of India (Topic: Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation) The GeM 2.0 was launched as a pilot in August 2016 and its success led to this massive transformation program - GeM 3.0 which would offer standardised and enriched catalogue management, powerful search engine, real time price comparison, template-based Bid and RA creation, demand aggregation, e-EMD, e-PBG, user rating, advanced MIS and analytics and more. GeM 3.0 has undergone a digital transformation with superior technology and ability to scale from the previous version. This will bring together many sellers and service providers for products and services across the country under one roof, truly making it a digital tool of empowerment and entrepreneurship. This initiative gives a huge uplift for growth of MSME’s, manufacturers & service providers. As Digital India aims to bring in maximum transparency by minimising Government’s human transactional interface, the launch of the Sellers On-boarding Campaign will streamline the procurement of goods and services making it an easy, go-to portal for sellers and service providers Notable enhancements in the 3.0 version: Market Based generic requirements across all government agencies Standardization of specifications of both products and services enabling empirical price comparability Completely transparent transactions across all ranges Generic standards established through universal service levels and cost comparison enabled Open and dynamic market place with rating based on performance of user on website GoI and World Bank sign $100 Million Project to Boost Rural Economy of Tamil Nadu (Topic: Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India’s interests) Purpose: To promote rural enterprises Facilitate their access to finance Create employment opportunities for youth, particularly women, in selected blocks of Tamil Nadu across 26 districts, directly benefitting over 400,000 people. The Tamil Nadu Rural Transformation Project will create an enabling environment for producer organizations and enterprises to promote businesses across select value chains. Based on the analysis, communities will identify commodities and subsectors in the value chain for preparing business plans. The Project will enable producer organizations and enterprises especially women entrepreneurs in Tamil Nadu, build businesses that will help them access finance, markets and networks and generate employment. ​It will also specifically support eligible households from socially and culturally disadvantaged groups harness their existing assets, skills, and resources; break their entry barriers to value-added economic activities; enhance their ability to access finance, markets, technology, and related support services; help them graduate to value-added economic activities with higher returns such as garment manufacturing and food processing units, eco-tourism ventures, and businesses around creative industries. Selected innovations and start-up ideas will also be tested or scaled up under a newly created platform known as the Tamil Nadu Rural Transformation Marketplace. This platform will identify, showcase and celebrate innovative solutions related to themes that have the potential to impact rural economic growth in the state. Innovative ideas related to promoting rural artisans, local nutritious food systems and traditional health practices will be considered. Please Note: India’s first Rail and Transportation University: Vadodara, Gujarat “Operation Greens” launched: To address price fluctuations in potato, tomato and onion for benefit of farmers and consumers. Launch of Gobar-Dhan Scheme: to make the villages open defecation free and improving the lives of villagers; manage and convert cattle dung and solid waste in farms to compost, bio-gas and  bio-CNG. Dynamic Façade lighting system: Energy efficient as well as cost effective; this LED fixtures has around 1 lakh burning hour whereas earlier light fixtures were around 10,000 burning hour. New lighting system has computerized control having unified power and data cable for easy installation and maintenance with automation in selection of colour combination scheme using opti-bin technology, selection of timing, facility of dimming, switching on/off facility, individual/combined control of light fittings etc. through Ethernet based controller. Has features to produce multi-colour combinations. Guru Ravidasji A North Indian mystic poet-sant of the bhakti movement during the 15th to 16th century CE. Considered as the founder of 21st-century Ravidassia religion, by a group who previously were associated with Sikhism. Tradition and medieval era texts state Ravidas was one of the disciples of the Brahmin bhakti saint-poet Ramananda (a 14th-century Vaishnava devotional poet sant, his disciples included later Bhakti movement poet-sants such as Kabir, Ravidas, Bhagat Pipa and others) taught removal of social divisions of caste and gender, and promoted unity in the pursuit of personal spiritual freedoms Economic Survey 2017-18 Economic Survey for 2017-18 estimates a real GDP growth rate of 6.75 per cent for the full year, based on a 7.5 per cent real growth for the second half of the year. For 2018-19 it projects a real GDP growth between 7 – 7.5 per cent. India jumped 30 places to break into the top 100 for the first time in the World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business Report (EODB), 2018. India leaped 53 and 33 spots in the taxation and insolvency indices, respectively, on the back of administrative reforms in taxation and passage of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), 2016.

RSTV Video

RSTV- The Big Picture : India-Israel Joint Statement

India-Israel Joint Statement Archives  TOPIC: General Studies 2 Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India's interests It is the beginning of new era of friendship between India and Israel with 9 bilateral agreements signed in diverse fields other than defence. As per Israeli media reports, the discussion of Israeli issues was recognition of Israel’s status as partner of India and an increased say in trade and investments in India by Israel. The 9 agreements are in the field of Cybersecurity Cooperation Cooperation in Oil and Gas Sector Air Transport Agreement Amendments Film-co-production Cooperation in the field of Research in Homeopathic Medicine Cooperation in the field of space Invest in India and invest in Israel Metal-air batteries Concentrated solar thermal technologies The two countries are now exhibiting confidence to provide a profile to the relationship which has developed over 25 years. India-Israel relationship till now was premised only on defence and security cooperation which was a robust one. In major boost to investment environment, India is going to eliminate red tape to allow Israeli companies to invest in India and set up companies. This is important as Israel has technology and India has huge market. Also, leveraging this market with technological capacities can be used to export to third countries. Thus, an attempt is being to provide broad degree of institutional framework for the relationship to prosper. Significance of joint statement India and Israel have decided to take this strategic partnership on a wider scale. Two countries have decided to move forward and not get stuck on one (Palestine) issue. The UN vote has no significance as India and Israel have chosen to upgrade the relationship in bilateral context. Earlier India had calibrated relationship with Israel based on India’s support for Palestine. Very often due to growing relationship with Israel, it was felt that India would completely transform.  But this will not happen as India has principled support for Palestinian cause and India supports Palestinian independence, aspirations to be met and their right to be in a separate independent territory. Growing relationship with Israel doesn’t mean weakening of political support Palestine. India is keeping its general assertiveness and confidence in dealing with the international issues and is showing greater degree of confidence and pragmatism and deal with issues on their own merits and individualism. Wider implications India and Israel relationship has now come out of the closet because of changing geopolitical scenario in the region. If India and Israel would have come out in open before, there would have been reactions across the world. But today majority of countries are with Israel- Saudi Arabia, UAE- they are major trading partners and major interest areas. Apart from relationship with Iran, India doesn’t have any challenges vis-à-vis Israel. Mutual benefits for both countries Israel has specialized in precision agriculture. India is now waiting for another green revolution. Hence, India can tap into Israeli technology and support to benefit the states which were not a part of first green revolution. Tourism is a hit with Israelis as they feel safe in India. But the Indian tourists visiting Israel has been limited. tourism in two decades has grown between both countries which still has fully untapped potential. Though, not same number of tourists in India because Israel has not been marketed well in India There is an apprehension of it being a conflict prone zone Bollywood is India’s best soft power. To complement the tourism, there is an air traffic MOU also signed. There is an inherent complementarity between India and Israel- India is producing platforms- aircrafts tanks, ships, Israelis has best sensors to be fitted on it. India has advantage in space research which Israel can take advantage of Israel has second largest number of startups in world after USA. Thus, India can induce the spirit of entrepreneurship in the country by exposing the Israeli startup environment. Conclusion India’s relationship with Israel has evolved and it has to look at it in bilateral context. Simultaneously, India has to carefully calibrate its relationship with Iran as it is an important pillar in the Middle East approaches. To serve the national interest should be the only context of growing relationship with Israel. And thus, India’s relationship with Israel would not impact India’s relationship with other countries. However, to improve its relationship with israel, India has to improve its delivery mechanisms else it will difficult on part of israel to maintain high value and high quantity business opportunities with India. Israel is a reliable friend, it has provided critical support in defence which has to be now extended to defense production areas, agriculture, water management- water harvesting, water recycling, solar energy. Connecting the dots: India-Israel relation has the potential to create huge institutional gains in India’s infrastructure- social and economic. Critically examine.

MindMaps

IASbaba’s MINDMAP : Issue – Rising Oil Prices

IASbaba’s MINDMAP : Issue – Rising Oil Prices Archives NOTE – Instructions to download Mind Maps/Images Right Click on the image and ‘Open in a new tab’ Remove/Delete the resolution part from the URl. Eg. “-1024×869” and Press Enter/Load Again Afterwards the URL will look something like this – “iasbaba.com/…./…/..-IASbaba.jpg” Right Click and Save As/Download (You’ll get the maximum resolution)

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz- 2018 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz [Day 136]

UPSC Quiz- 2018 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz [Day 136] Archives Q.1) ‘CriSidEx’ is associated with MSMEs Housing NPAs Power and Energy Q.2) Sheen Khalai has origin in Cambodia Mongolia Myanmar None of the above Q.3) Consider the following statements about ‘International Kala Mela’ The inaugural ‘International Kala Mela’ was held in 2015 It is organised by the Lalit Kala Akademi in partnership with IGNCA of the Ministry of Culture Select the correct statements 1 Only 2 Only Both 1 and 2 Neither 1 nor 2 Q.4) ‘Shigmo’ is a spring festival celebrated in Sikkim Nagaland Goa Odisha Q.5) Consider the following statements about National Health Protection Scheme It will cover over 10 crore poor and vulnerable families providing coverage upto 5 lakh rupees per family per year for secondary and tertiary care hospitalization It is a flagship programme under Ayushman Bharat Select the correct statements 1 Only 2 Only Both 1 and 2 Neither 1 nor 2 To Download the Solution – Click here All the Best  IASbaba

Motivational Articles

Creative Guidance – Art of Letting Go – Inspirational & Educative Articles

Art of Letting Go: You have to know when to quit. If you have grown up in an environment where quitting is considered negative, you would have not appreciated the importance of knowing when to quit. Most people suffer, struggle and waste enormous amounts of time being in the wrong place just because they don’t know when to quit. Let us understand a few important things before learning the art of quitting. There is enormous ego satisfaction in struggling. In fact, struggling is the food of the ego; it simply loves the whole idea of striving and struggling, even if the point of which is futile. If you do not understand this craving desire of your ego to struggle, you will eventually become a victim of it. Most people simply love the idea of struggling; hence they pick up difficult and challenging things to do, without ever questioning if they actually possess the necessary interest, ability and skills to accomplish what they have picked up. Since the ego loves a bigger challenge, it simply jumps into it. For most, only a bitter failure will teach them this lesson of learning how to quit. Quitting is not a bad thing, especially if you base it on sound reasoning and scientific understanding. Quitting doesn’t mean failure; it only means that you chose something you could not accomplish, it is time to move on to something else. As much as it requires courage to pick up a big challenge, it takes even bigger courage to know when to quit. It is a subtle art, mastered only by carefully observing yourself. Each and every individual possesses a natural talent and affinity towards something. If you ignore this inner desire and simply go on picking up various challenges to satisfy your ego, you will end up nowhere. The problem is, when you study the lives of successful people, you almost always study it from the outside. From the outside, everything they are doing seems to be a struggle because you are not actually experience what they are experiencing. There is a totally different internal reality at work here. Let us take a simple example of playing soccer. When you watch a soccer match from the outside without knowing much about it, all you can see is strife, struggle and effort. What else is visible apart from the enormous amount of effort put in by the player to constantly keep running behind a ball that doesn’t seem to like him? But for the player himself, the reality is something else. He is enjoying the game. For him it is not a struggle. This is where it is extremely important to understand the difference between passion and ego. While passion makes everything simple and easy, ego makes everything hard and difficult. Know what you are chasing; is it your passion or ego? Always choose to do what you are passionate about, or try and bring passion to what you are doing. If you cannot do either of these, then learn how to let go. “The articles are a copyright of The Ahamo Movement and IASBABA.”  

IASbaba's Daily Current Affairs [Prelims + Mains Focus] - 3rd February 2018

IASbaba's Daily Current Affairs (Prelims + Mains Focus)- 3rd February 2018 Archives (PRELIMS+MAINS FOCUS) Jallikattu a cultural right or not?  Part of: Mains GS Paper II- Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation. Key pointers: The Supreme Court is considering the question of granting constitutional protection to jallikattu as a collective cultural right under Article 29 (1). Article 29(1) is a fundamental right guaranteed under Part III of the Constitution to protect the educational and cultural rights of citizens. Though commonly used to protect the interests of minorities, Article 29(1) mandates that “any section of the citizens residing in the territory of India or any part thereof having a distinct language, script or culture of its own shall have the right to conserve the same”. People for Ethical Treatment of Animals and activists have filed petitions to strike down the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (Tamil Nadu Amendment) Act of 2017 and the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (Conduct of Jallikattu) Rules of 2017. They contended that the amended laws had opened the gates for the conduct of the popular bull-taming sport in the name of culture and tradition despite a 2014 ban by the Supreme Court. The PETA petition contends that the 2017 Jallikattu Act and Rules violate the five internationally recognised freedoms — the freedom from hunger, malnutrition and thirst; freedom from fear and distress; freedom from physical and thermal discomfort; freedom from pain, injury and disease; and freedom to express normal patterns of behaviour. The Constitution Bench would also look into whether the 2017 jallikattu and bullock-cart races laws would actually sub-serve the objective of “prevention” of cruelty to animals under the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act of 1960. In 2014, in the A. Nagaraja judgment, the Supreme Court had held jallikattu as cruelty to bulls. Article link: Click here KUSUM scheme Part of: Mains GS Paper III- Inclusive development Key pointers: The Centre has announced a ₹1.4 lakh-crore scheme for promoting decentralised solar power production of up to 28,250 MW to help farmers. The Centre will spend ₹48,000 crore on the ten-year scheme which was announced in the Union Budget 2018-19. Kisan Urja Suraksha evam Utthaan Mahaabhiyan or KUSUM scheme will provide extra income to farmers, by giving them an option to sell additional power to the grid through solar power projects set up on their barren lands. It would help in de-dieselising the sector as also the DISCOMS. India had about 30 million farm pumps that include 10 million pumps running on diesel. The scheme: The components of the scheme include- Building 10,000 MW solar plants on barren lands and providing sops to DISCOMS to purchase the electricity produced. 'Solarising’ existing pumps of 7250 MW as well as government tube wells with a capacity of 8250 MW and distributing 17.5 lakh solar pumps. The 60% subsidy on the solar pumps provided to farmers will be shared between the Centre and the States while 30% would be provided through bank loans. The balance cost has to be borne by the farmers. Benefits: Promotion of decentralised solar power production. Reduction of transmission losses as well as providing support to the financial health of DISCOMs by reducing the subsidy burden to the agriculture sector. The scheme would also promote energy efficiency and water conservation and provide water security to farmers. Article link: Click here Dust mitigation plan must for firms Part of: Mains GS Paper III- Environmental conservation Key pointers: The Environment Ministry has made it mandatory for companies seeking environment clearance to ensure that they put in place a dust mitigation plan. Requirements as notified: Roads leading to or at construction sites must be paved and black-topped. There could be no soil excavation without adequate dust mitigation measures in place. No loose soil, sand, construction waste could be left uncovered. A water sprinkling system was mandatory, and the measures taken should be prominently displayed at the construction site. The grinding and cutting of building materials in open area were prohibited and no uncovered vehicles carrying construction material and waste would be permitted. The standards were developed by the Central Pollution Control Board as part of the National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS). The organisation is now empowered to fine companies and agencies for not complying with norms. Background: A study by the Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur and commissioned by the Delhi government reported, in 2015, that road dust, burning of biomass and municipal solid waste, constituted the lion’s share of the city’s air pollution. Road dust contributed 56% of all PM10 pollution, while it was 38% for PM2.5. Dust is a generic term for a vast mix of metals and non-metals — silicon, aluminium, titanium, manganese, copper, barium, antimony, selenium and zinc. Article link: Click here Kindly note: Exclusive budget series will be released soon MUST READ Forging a new nuclear deal The Hindu Get cracking The Hindu A court of equals Indian Express 

RSTV Video

RSTV- The Big Picture : Growth and Fiscal Management

Growth and Fiscal Management Archives TOPIC: General Studies 3 Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilization of resources, growth, development and employment. The 3.2% fiscal deficit target for FY18 has gone up due to CSO lowering the growth for FY18 in its first advance estimate. The blip was expected given the earlier aggressive forecast of 11.75% growth in normal GDP for FY18 which has now been revised down to 9.5%. While the miss in fiscal deficit target is a marginal 4 basis points for now, it could be higher growth estimates for the current estimates are revised lower during CSO’s second revised estimates. The CSO’s growth estimate implies real GDP growth to pick up from 6% in first half of FY18 to 7% in second half. While the transitory impact of demonetization and GST is expected to wane in the second half, leading to higher growth, a substantial jump is unlikely. Growth needs more public spending but there is a need to look beyond than just spending more money. The key is boosting private investments- it is not the question of new projects not being taken up as 100 trillion rupees worth of projects under implementation. The companies are going slow as they don’t feel the need to have maximum capacity utilization. Though the fiscal deficit is being brought down, there is no increase in investments from private sector. The problem is the ability to induce the private sector to invest. It will invest once they see demand picking up on a sufficient scale and they can also increase their own capacity. Secondly, companies are occupying vast quantities of cash in mutual funds of around 800,000 crores. This is the reason why markets are doing well. But these companies don’t have the capacity to spend it. Here, an action can be taken that as the income which it earns is not part of stated goal as a company, it will be treated as a different tax rate. So if they are making money by investing in mutual funds and they are an engineering company, big profits being untaxed won’t do. These are things which can be done to boost growth and not hurt the fiscal management. The size of the budget per se matters and not only the fiscal deficit. In 1991, the union budget was 17% of GDP and today it is down to 12.55% of GDP. So how much the government spends of total output of the economy also has impact on economic growth and momentum. PPP projects must be revived so that investments can flow in. The population is now increasingly migrating towards urban areas. The tier-I cities are filled to brim and now is the turn to develop the tier-2 cities, industrial townships and constructions around industrial corridors like DMIC. Increased investments in projects will give rise to increased spending. Today the private savings, the non-government sector savings are not being fully utilized by government for investments. So there is plenty of scope for government to tap the savings and use for capital formation. The need of the hour is to increase the spending in agriculture infrastructure to attract the private investments in the supply chain. This will create employment opportunities in rural areas, thereby decreasing growing burden on urban infrastructure. Improve the governance in the public utility to increase the non-tax revenue with the improvement in the quality of expenditure and quality of public utilities. Revive the debt and bond market and increase large infrastructure project funds through bond markets. Measure for short term and long term Short term Increase the demand scenario, with the revival of rural demand. More focus on MSMEs development Capacity utilization problem will also be solved if there is increase in demand Despite rise in crude oil prices or increasing US federal interest rates, India has remained stable. Long term Focus on infrastructure development with public spending, particular agriculture sector to solve the supply side problems because inflation is again increasing. Focus on export scenario. Global market is reviving but not able to compete due to domestic issues. Focus on exporters to increase competitiveness in international market Focus on stalled projects which can revive the demand for raw materials and basic industries. Conclusion There shouldn’t be a single goal oriented fiscal policy and single goal oriented monetary policy. The interest rate, exchange rate and fiscal deficit have to work together keeping in mind internal balance and external balance. It is very important to know whether the deficit is to create asset or run revenue expenditure. The FRBM is expenditure switching mechanism from revenue deficit to capital expenditure. FRBM has three targets Fiscal deficit Revenue deficit Public debt target It is more crucial to achieve revenue debt target rather than fiscal deficit. If the government is forced to achieve 3.25 % fiscal deficit, there will be impact on outstanding liability. The 3.2% fiscal deficit was assumed when there were no shocks in the economy. Now there is effect of demonetization, GST which has contributed to ring down the fiscal deficit. Hence, the government should avoid sticking to FRBM target very strictly. Connecting the dots: “Achieving the fiscal deficit target holds key to fiscal management of the economic growth”. Do you agree with the statement? Give reasons for your answer.

MindMaps

IASbaba’s MINDMAP : Issue – UDAN

IASbaba’s MINDMAP : Issue – UDAN Archives NOTE – Instructions to download Mind Maps/Images Right Click on the image and ‘Open in a new tab’ Remove/Delete the resolution part from the URl. Eg. “-1024×869” and Press Enter/Load Again Afterwards the URL will look something like this – “iasbaba.com/…./…/..-IASbaba.jpg” Right Click and Save As/Download (You’ll get the maximum resolution)

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz- 2018 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz [Day 135]

UPSC Quiz- 2018 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz [Day 135] Archives Q.1) Medaram Jatara is a tribal festival from Telangana Jharkhand Odisha Madhya Pradesh Q.2) Which of the following are members of the Ashgabat agreement? Turkmenistan Uzbekistan Tajikistan Select the correct code: 1 and 2 2 and 3 1 and 3 1, 2 and 3 Q.3) Consider the following statements about United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) It was created aftermath of the Arab Spring It is the only agency dedicated to helping refugees from a specific region or conflict Select the correct statements 1 Only 2 Only Both 1 and 2 Neither 1 nor 2 Q.4) Consider the following statements in respect of Trade Related Analysis of Fauna and Flora in Commerce (TRAFFIC) TRAFFIC is a bureau under United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) The mission of TRAFFIC is to ensure that trade in wild plants and animals is not a threat to the conservation of nature Select the correct statements 1 Only 2 Only Both 1 and 2 Neither 1 nor 2 Q.5) The term 'Intended Nationally Determined Contributions' is sometimes seen in the news in the context of Pledges made by the European countries to rehabilitate refugees from the war-affected Middle East Plan of action outlined by the countries of the world to combat climate change Capital contributed by the member countries in the establishment of Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank Plan of action outlined by the countries of the world regarding Sustainable Development Goals To Download the Solution – Click here All the Best  IASbaba