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May 13, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

Content AI-Powered Financial Inclusion in India AI-Powered Financial Inclusion in India Context On 13 May 2026, the Government highlighted how Artificial Intelligence (AI) integrated with Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) is transforming India’s financial inclusion ecosystem from simple account ownership to intelligent, real-time credit, payments, fraud detection and multilingual banking services. New initiatives such as Banking BHASHINI, expansion of Unified Lending Interface (ULI), adoption of MuleHunter.AI, and RBI’s Regulatory Sandbox demonstrate India’s policy push to make financial services more accessible, secure and personalized for underserved populations. The development is significant because India now possesses one of the world’s largest digital financial datasets, including 58.16 crore Jan Dhan accounts, 2,264 crore monthly UPI transactions, and 252.9 million Account Aggregator users. Relevance GS Paper II: Governance, e-Governance, welfare delivery, inclusive development, and social justice. GS Paper III: Inclusive growth, financial inclusion, Artificial Intelligence, fintech innovation, and cyber security. Practice Question “Artificial Intelligence integrated with Digital Public Infrastructure is transforming India’s financial inclusion architecture from account ownership to intelligent and personalized financial services.” Discuss the opportunities, challenges, and safeguards required to ensure inclusive and secure financial access. (250 words) Static Background Financial Inclusion: Meaning Financial inclusion means ensuring affordable access to banking, credit, insurance, pensions and payments for vulnerable groups such as low-income households, women, small farmers, informal workers and MSMEs, enabling them to participate fully in economic development. Evolution of Financial Inclusion in India India’s financial inclusion journey progressed from Bank Nationalisation (1969) and Lead Bank Scheme to PM Jan Dhan Yojana (2014) and now to AI-driven systems using digital footprints for instant and evidence-based credit decisions. Constitutional and Policy Basis Article 38 directs the State to reduce inequalities, Article 39(b) promotes equitable distribution of resources, and Article 46 protects weaker sections, making inclusive finance a constitutional instrument for social and economic justice. Basics and Key Concepts Artificial Intelligence (AI) AI refers to computer systems capable of learning patterns from large datasets and making predictions. In finance, AI is used for credit scoring, fraud detection, customer support, and risk management with greater speed and precision. Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) DPI comprises interoperable digital systems such as Aadhaar, UPI, DBT, ULI and Account Aggregator that enable secure identity verification, data exchange and low-cost service delivery at population scale. Alternative Credit Scoring Instead of relying solely on CIBIL scores, AI analyses UPI transactions, GST returns, utility payments, bank statements and land records to assess creditworthiness of first-time borrowers and enterprises lacking formal financial histories. Unified Lending Interface (ULI) ULI is a lending-focused DPI that connects lenders with data providers through standardized APIs, reducing loan processing time from weeks to minutes and improving credit access for farmers, MSMEs and informal workers. Account Aggregator Framework Account Aggregators (AAs) are RBI-regulated NBFCs that enable consent-based sharing of financial data, allowing individuals to securely transfer bank and investment information to lenders and other financial institutions. Digital Foundation Enabling AI JAM Trinity JAM (Jan Dhan-Aadhaar-Mobile) provides universal financial identity and connectivity. As of April 2026, India had 58.16 crore Jan Dhan accounts, 144+ crore Aadhaar numbers, and 125.87 crore wireless subscribers. Unified Payments Interface (UPI) UPI is a real-time interoperable payments platform. In March 2026, it processed 2,264.11 crore transactions worth ₹29.53 lakh crore, accounting for nearly 81% of India’s retail payment volume. Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) DBT transfers welfare benefits directly into bank accounts. By January 2026, cumulative transfers reached ₹49.09 lakh crore, while eliminating leakages and generating estimated savings of ₹4.31 lakh crore. Overview Banking BHASHINI: Linguistic Inclusion In February 2026, Reserve Bank of India partnered with BHASHINI to create Banking BHASHINI, enabling multilingual banking access across all 22 Scheduled Languages and reducing language barriers for millions. RBI Regulatory Sandbox The Regulatory Sandbox allows fintechs and banks to test AI-based innovations under regulatory oversight, balancing innovation with consumer protection, prudential supervision and systemic stability before large-scale deployment. MuleHunter.AI Developed by Reserve Bank Innovation Hub, MuleHunter.AI identifies suspicious “mule accounts” used in cybercrime by analysing real-time transaction patterns beyond traditional rule-based monitoring systems. Digital ShramSetu Mission Digital ShramSetu, announced in 2025, seeks to digitally empower nearly 490 million informal workers using AI, blockchain and skill verification to connect them with finance, social security and employment opportunities. AI-Based Lending for MSMEs AI-driven credit models can unlock an estimated USD 130–170 billion in economic value by addressing the financing gap of MSMEs, which contribute nearly 30% of GDP and around 45% of exports. Unified Lending Interface (ULI) As of December 2025, 64 lenders including 41 banks and 23 NBFCs were onboarded, using 136 data services across 12 loan journeys to deliver frictionless digital credit. Account Aggregator Ecosystem By December 2025, over 2.6 billion accounts were enabled for data sharing and 252.9 million users had linked their accounts, strengthening consent-based data portability and credit assessment. Governance Benefits AI reduces information asymmetry, improves targeting, cuts processing costs, enhances transparency and supports evidence-based lending decisions, thereby reducing dependence on informal moneylenders and improving institutional efficiency. Economic Impact AI-powered finance promotes formalization, entrepreneurship and consumption by expanding affordable credit access, particularly for underserved groups that were historically excluded due to lack of documented credit histories. Social Justice Dimension Women entrepreneurs, small farmers, migrant workers and rural households gain access to tailored financial products, advancing inclusive growth and narrowing socio-economic disparities. Cybersecurity Benefits AI continuously monitors transaction patterns to detect fraud, money laundering and identity theft, making the financial system more resilient and improving trust in digital banking. Ethical and Privacy Concerns Risks include algorithmic bias, opaque decision-making, weak informed consent and data misuse. Poorly trained models may unintentionally exclude the very communities financial inclusion seeks to empower. Implementation Challenges Limited digital literacy, smartphone affordability, patchy connectivity and regulatory capacity constraints continue to hinder equitable adoption, especially in remote and socio-economically disadvantaged regions. Conclusion India is moving from financial inclusion to financial intelligence, where AI combined with DPI delivers customized, secure and real-time financial services at population scale, converting digital footprints into economic opportunity. With strong safeguards for privacy, fairness and consumer protection, AI-powered finance can become a cornerstone of Viksit Bharat 2047, ensuring inclusive and resilient growth rooted in constitutional values of justice and equality. Prelims Pointers ULI is to lending what UPI is to payments. Account Aggregators are RBI-regulated NBFCs, not payment banks. Banking BHASHINI aims to provide services in 22 Scheduled Languages. MuleHunter.AI detects suspicious mule bank accounts linked to cybercrime. DBT savings have exceeded ₹4.31 lakh crore. UPI processed ₹29.53 lakh crore in March 2026. Jan Dhan deposits crossed ₹3.02 lakh crore in April 2026. Regulatory Sandbox provides a controlled environment for fintech innovation.

May 13, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Content Managing Coexistence in Human-Wildlife Conflict Zones Data and justice Managing Coexistence in Human-Wildlife Conflict Zones Context Growing incidents of human-wildlife conflict (HWC) across India, especially involving elephants, tigers, leopards, wild boars and monkeys, have renewed attention on the need to shift from reactive control measures to long-term coexistence strategies. A recent expert analysis emphasized that HWC is not merely a conservation issue but a socio-ecological challenge driven by habitat fragmentation, land-use change, climate stress and expanding human settlements near biodiversity-rich areas. India records hundreds of human deaths annually due to elephant encounters, while livestock depredation and crop losses impose significant economic burdens on forest-dependent and agrarian communities. Relevance GS Paper III: Conservation, biodiversity, climate change, disaster risk reduction, and environmental governance. GS Paper II: Role of State institutions, compensation mechanisms, and community participation in forest governance. Essay: Balancing development with ecological sustainability and environmental justice. Interview: Wildlife corridors, community-based conservation, and ethical dimensions of coexistence. Practice Question “Human-wildlife conflict is a socio-ecological challenge arising from habitat fragmentation and unsustainable land use.” Discuss the causes, impacts, and policy measures required to promote long-term coexistence between humans and wildlife in India. (250 words) Static Background Human-Wildlife Conflict (HWC): Meaning Human-Wildlife Conflict refers to negative interactions between people and wild animals resulting in injury, death, crop damage, livestock predation, property loss or retaliatory killing, undermining both conservation goals and local livelihoods. Legal and Policy Framework Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972 provides legal protection to species and habitats, while the National Wildlife Action Plan (2017–2031) emphasizes coexistence and conflict mitigation. Constitutional Basis Article 48A directs the State to protect wildlife and forests, while Article 51A(g) makes environmental protection a fundamental duty of every citizen. Institutional Framework National Tiger Conservation Authority Project Elephant State Forest Departments Basics and Key Concepts Habitat Fragmentation Habitat fragmentation occurs when roads, railways, mines and settlements divide continuous forests into smaller patches, disrupting animal movement and forcing wildlife into agricultural and peri-urban landscapes. Wildlife Corridors Wildlife corridors are linear landscape linkages connecting fragmented habitats, enabling seasonal migration, genetic exchange and reduced conflict by keeping animals away from human-dominated areas. Carrying Capacity Carrying capacity refers to the maximum population an ecosystem can sustainably support. Habitat degradation lowers carrying capacity, increasing competition for food, water and shelter. Compensation Mechanism Compensation schemes provide financial support to affected households for crop damage, livestock loss and human injury, reducing resentment and retaliatory actions against wildlife. Overview Magnitude of the Problem India loses an estimated 500–600 people annually in elephant encounters, while tiger and leopard attacks and widespread crop raiding by wild boars and monkeys intensify distress in forest-fringe villages. Ecological Drivers Expansion of agriculture, infrastructure and mining disrupts natural migration routes. Species such as elephants and big cats, requiring large home ranges, adapt by moving through farms and settlements. Behavioural Adaptation, Not Aggression Crop raiding and livestock predation are often adaptive survival responses to declining prey, habitat loss and food scarcity rather than inherently aggressive behaviour by wildlife. Climate Change as a Conflict Multiplier Altered rainfall patterns, droughts and forest fires reduce natural food and water availability, increasing animal movement into human landscapes and making conflict more frequent and unpredictable. Socio-Economic Impacts Small and marginal farmers face crop losses, livestock deaths and psychological stress. Delayed compensation disproportionately affects vulnerable households with limited savings and insurance coverage. Governance Challenges in India Fragmented institutional coordination, inadequate field staff, delayed claim settlement, weak ecological planning and insufficient community participation reduce the effectiveness of conflict mitigation strategies. Limitations of Technical Fixes Solar fencing, drones and early-warning systems are useful but context-specific. Without habitat restoration and corridor protection, these measures provide only temporary and localized relief. Inadequacy of Simplistic Solutions Proposals such as elephant fertility control have limited applicability because India’s elephant populations move across vast landscapes; the root cause remains habitat fragmentation and resource competition. Global Best Practice: Botswana and Namibia Community-based natural resource management allows local communities to share tourism revenues and exercise resource rights, aligning economic incentives with conservation objectives and reducing hostility toward wildlife. Global Best Practice: Costa Rica Ecological corridors are integrated into national land-use planning, ensuring habitat connectivity and reducing the probability of animal movement through high-conflict agricultural landscapes. Global Best Practice: Finland Real-time wildlife monitoring combined with rapid compensation systems lowers both risk and public resentment, demonstrating the value of trust-based governance. Regional Examples: Bhutan and Nepal Community forests, coordinated grazing systems and predator-proof livestock enclosures have reduced conflict while strengthening local stewardship and conservation outcomes. Conservation and Development Balance HWC demonstrates that biodiversity conservation cannot succeed if local livelihoods are ignored; sustainable solutions must treat people as partners rather than obstacles. Ethical Dimension Conservation policies must uphold inter-generational equity, environmental justice and the principle that both human dignity and wildlife survival deserve equal consideration. Way Forward Secure and Restore Wildlife Corridors Legally protect elephant and carnivore corridors, remove critical bottlenecks and integrate ecological connectivity into infrastructure and land-use approvals. Improve Compensation Systems Use digital platforms, geotagged evidence and direct benefit transfers to ensure time-bound, transparent and adequate compensation, particularly for marginal communities. Community-Based Conservation Share tourism benefits, strengthen eco-development committees and involve local communities in surveillance, decision-making and habitat management. Climate-Resilient Landscape Planning Restore water bodies, fodder resources and forest quality to reduce resource stress and minimize wildlife movement into human settlements. Technology with Ecological Planning Deploy AI-based alerts, radio collars, drones and mobile applications in conjunction with landscape-level scientific assessments. Education and Awareness Promote behavioural protocols, school education and public campaigns to build tolerance and reduce risky human behaviour in conflict-prone areas. Conclusion Human-wildlife conflict is a predictable consequence of unsustainable land use and ecological disruption rather than an isolated anomaly or purely law-and-order problem. India must move from reactive compensation to science-based coexistence, combining corridor conservation, community participation and climate-resilient planning to secure the future of both biodiversity and human livelihoods. Prelims Pointers Article 48A: State shall protect wildlife and forests. Article 51A(g): Fundamental duty to protect the natural environment. Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972 is the primary wildlife law in India. Project Elephant was launched in 1992. National Wildlife Action Plan (2017–2031) emphasizes conflict mitigation. Wildlife corridors are essential for genetic exchange and seasonal movement. NTCA is a statutory body under the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change. Data and justice Context The Surya Kant announced two major digital initiatives in May 2026: One Case, One Data (OCOD) and Su-Sahayak, an AI-powered chatbot on the Supreme Court of India website. These initiatives mark a significant step in India’s judicial digitisation, aiming to create a unified digital trail for every case and improve access to case status, orders, judgments and e-services. The development has renewed debate on whether AI can enhance access to justice while safeguarding privacy, due process, fairness and inclusion for vulnerable and digitally excluded litigants. Relevance GS Paper II: Judiciary, e-Courts, access to justice, and constitutional rights under Articles 14, 21, and 39A. GS Paper III: Artificial Intelligence, cyber security, and digital governance. Practice Question “Artificial Intelligence can improve judicial efficiency, but justice must remain a fundamentally human constitutional function.” Critically examine the opportunities and challenges of AI-driven judicial reforms in India. (250 words) Static Background Judicial Digitisation in India India has pursued judicial technology reforms through the e-Courts Mission Mode Project, launched in 2007 under the National e-Governance Plan to computerize courts and provide online judicial services. Previous AI Initiatives SUVAS (Supreme Court Vidhik Anuvaad Software) uses AI for translation of judgments into Indian languages, while SUPACE (Supreme Court Portal for Assistance in Court Efficiency) assists judges with legal research. Constitutional Basis Article 14 guarantees equality before law, Article 21 protects fair procedure and access to justice, and Article 39A mandates equal justice and free legal aid. Basics and Key Concepts One Case, One Data (OCOD) OCOD is a unified judicial data platform that creates a single digital identity for each case, linking filings, orders, appeals and procedural history across district courts, High Courts and the Supreme Court. Su-Sahayak Su-Sahayak is an AI-powered chatbot that assists users in navigating case status, cause lists, judgments, e-services and frequently asked questions on the Supreme Court website. Artificial Intelligence in Judiciary AI in courts is currently limited to administrative assistance, such as translation, document search and workflow support, rather than substantive judicial reasoning or final adjudication. Access to Justice Access to justice means that all individuals, regardless of socio-economic status, can effectively use legal institutions to enforce rights and obtain timely and affordable remedies. Overview Administrative Efficiency Gains OCOD can standardize data across thousands of subordinate courts, reduce duplication, improve case tracking and generate accurate statistics to identify bottlenecks and improve judicial administration. Reduction in Pendency India has over 5 crore pending cases across courts. Unified digital records can accelerate scrutiny, appeals and document verification, thereby reducing delays and improving case management. Improved Transparency Litigants and lawyers can access complete procedural histories through a single platform, reducing uncertainty and improving accountability in judicial processes. Better Policy Formulation Standardized judicial data enables evidence-based reforms, including better judge allocation, infrastructure planning and targeted interventions in courts with chronic delays. Digital Divide Concerns Small practitioners in district and taluka courts may struggle with costs of scanners, software, cloud storage and reliable internet, potentially increasing inequality between large firms and independent lawyers. Emergence of Digital Middlemen Litigants unfamiliar with e-filing and AI interfaces may depend on intermediaries, creating new unofficial costs and barriers that undermine the objective of affordable justice. Accessibility Limitations Su-Sahayak is largely text-based and may exclude users with low literacy, visual impairment or limited typing ability, highlighting the need for multilingual voice-based interfaces. Data Privacy Risks Centralized case records may expose sensitive personal information, especially in matrimonial, juvenile, sexual offence and national security matters if access controls are weak. Algorithmic Bias AI models trained on historical data may replicate systemic biases, particularly against marginalized communities who were historically over-policed or denied bail. Threat to Judicial Independence AI must remain assistive rather than determinative. Delegating substantive reasoning to algorithms could undermine human judgment, accountability and constitutional values. Staff Capacity Constraints Court staff require continuous training in digitisation, cybersecurity and AI oversight to ensure accurate data entry and responsible use of new technologies. Cybersecurity Concerns Judicial databases contain highly sensitive information and are attractive targets for hacking, data theft and ransomware, necessitating robust encryption and audit systems. Comparative Perspective Countries such as Estonia and Singapore use AI for administrative efficiency while retaining human control over judicial decisions. Constitutional and Ethical Dimensions Equality Before Law Under Article 14, AI systems must not discriminate on the basis of class, caste, gender, disability or digital literacy. Right to Privacy The K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India judgment recognized privacy as a fundamental right, requiring strict safeguards for judicial data. Natural Justice Litigants must understand and challenge decisions influenced by AI, preserving transparency, explainability and the right to be heard. Human Oversight Judges must retain full authority over legal reasoning and final orders, ensuring accountability remains with constitutionally appointed judicial officers. Way Forward AI as an Assistive Tool Only Restrict AI to translation, search, scheduling and analytics; prohibit its use for adjudication, sentencing or bail recommendations without rigorous safeguards. Inclusive Design Introduce multilingual voice interfaces, offline kiosks and assisted service centres to ensure access for rural litigants, senior citizens and persons with disabilities. Strong Data Governance Adopt encryption, anonymization, role-based access and audit trails in line with the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023. Algorithmic Audits Conduct regular independent audits to assess bias, explainability, accuracy and compliance with constitutional standards. Capacity Building Train judges, court staff and lawyers in AI literacy, cybersecurity and ethical oversight to ensure responsible adoption. Retain Hybrid Systems Maintain physical filing and in-person support during transition to prevent exclusion of those lacking digital capabilities. Conclusion AI offers a historic opportunity to transform India’s judiciary by improving efficiency, transparency and accessibility, particularly in a system burdened by over 5 crore pending cases. However, justice is fundamentally a human constitutional function. Technology must remain a servant of the judiciary, not a substitute for judicial reasoning, empathy and accountability. Prelims Pointers OCOD stands for One Case, One Data. Su-Sahayak is an AI chatbot on the Supreme Court website. SUVAS is used for AI-based translation of judgments. SUPACE assists judges with research and case processing. Article 39A mandates equal justice and free legal aid. K.S. Puttaswamy (2017) recognized privacy as a fundamental right. e-Courts Mission Mode Project was launched in 2007.

May 13, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Content Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana (PMGSY) and Launch of PMGSY-IV National Technology Day National Panchayat Awards 2025 Structural Adjustment Programmes and the Global South Electrical Fires in Urban India Unchanged since 2012, old age pension of Rs 200 eroded due to inflation: Study India’s Gold Import Problem and the UAE CEPA Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana (PMGSY) and Launch of PMGSY-IV Context The Ministry of Rural Development celebrated 25 years of Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana (PMGSY) and launched PMGSY-IV on 10 May 2026 at Bhairunda, Madhya Pradesh. Under the event, a symbolic allocation of ₹18,907 crore was announced for PMGSY in FY 2026–27, including ₹830 crore for Madhya Pradesh to strengthen last-mile rural connectivity. PMGSY-IV marks a new phase of technology-driven, green and inclusive rural infrastructure, aligned with PM Gati Shakti, PM-JANMAN and the vision of Viksit Bharat@2047. Relevance GS Paper II: Rural development, welfare schemes, and Centre–State cooperation. GS Paper III: Infrastructure, inclusive growth, and green technology in public works. Practice Question “Rural road connectivity is a foundational public investment that drives inclusive growth and social development.” Examine the significance of PMGSY and discuss how PMGSY-IV seeks to transform rural infrastructure through technology and sustainability. (250 words) Static Background What is PMGSY? Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana was launched on 25 December 2000 to provide all-weather road connectivity to eligible unconnected rural habitations. Constitutional Basis Article 38 directs the State to reduce inequalities, while Article 40 encourages village self-governance and strengthens rural development. Implementing Agency The scheme is implemented by the Ministry of Rural Development through the National Rural Infrastructure Development Agency. Basics All-Weather Road An all-weather road is a paved road that remains motorable throughout the year, except during extraordinary natural events such as severe floods or landslides. Funding Pattern The Centre-State cost sharing ratio is generally 60:40 for most states and 90:10 for North-Eastern and Himalayan states and Union Territories. OMMAS Online Management, Monitoring and Accounting System (OMMAS) is the digital platform for real-time monitoring of physical and financial progress. Panchayat and Habitation A habitation is a cluster of population, distinct from a revenue village, and serves as the planning unit under PMGSY. Evolution of PMGSY PMGSY-I (2000) Focused on providing basic all-weather connectivity to previously unconnected habitations, transforming rural accessibility and reducing isolation. PMGSY-II (2013) Emphasized upgradation and consolidation of existing rural roads to improve connectivity to markets and service centres. Road Connectivity Project for LWE Areas (2016) Covered 44 Left Wing Extremism-affected districts, enhancing both security force mobility and socio-economic integration. PMGSY-III (2019) Targeted upgradation of 1,25,000 km of through routes connecting villages to Gramin Agricultural Markets, schools and hospitals; by December 2025, 83% (1,01,623 km) had been completed. PMGSY-IV (2024–2029) Aims to connect 25,000 unconnected habitations by constructing 62,500 km of roads with a total outlay of ₹70,125 crore. Population Eligibility Criteria Habitations with population of 500 or more in plain areas and 250 or more in North-Eastern and Himalayan states are eligible based on Census 2011. Special priority is given to Schedule V areas, desert regions and Aspirational Districts and Blocks. Convergence with Tribal Initiatives PMGSY-IV is aligned with PM-JANMAN and Dharti Aaba Janjatiya Gram Utkarsh Abhiyan to improve connectivity in tribal habitations. Technology Integration Road alignments are mapped through the PMGSY Gram Sadak Survey App and the PM Gati Shakti National Master Plan. GPS-enabled tracking, e-MARG and performance-linked maintenance payments improve transparency and accountability. Green Technology Mandate Use of waste plastic, fly ash, cold mix technology and full-depth reclamation reduces carbon emissions and promotes circular economy principles. By July 2025, over 1.24 lakh km of roads had been built using waste and green materials. Economic Impact Rural roads improve market access, reduce transport costs and support higher farm-gate prices and non-farm employment opportunities. Social Impact Improved connectivity increases school attendance, institutional deliveries, emergency healthcare access and women’s mobility. Security Significance Enhanced road infrastructure in LWE-affected regions supports administration, service delivery and internal security operations. Governance Significance PMGSY operationalizes cooperative federalism and results-based management through standardized quality control and digital monitoring. Conclusion PMGSY has transformed rural India by turning village roads into pathways of prosperity, connecting communities to markets, schools, hospitals and economic opportunities. With PMGSY-IV, India is entering a new era of green, technology-enabled and inclusive rural connectivity, accelerating balanced development and strengthening the foundation of Viksit Bharat@2047. Prelims Pointers PMGSY was launched on 25 December 2000. PMGSY is a Centrally Sponsored Scheme. PMGSY-IV (2024–2029) aims to connect 25,000 habitations. Proposed road length under PMGSY-IV: 62,500 km. Financial outlay under PMGSY-IV: ₹70,125 crore. Funding ratio: 60:40 (general states), 90:10 (special category states). OMMAS stands for Online Management, Monitoring and Accounting System. Over 1.24 lakh km of roads have used green technologies. National Rural Infrastructure Development Agency monitors implementation and quality control. National Technology Day Context On 11 May 2026, Prime Minister Narendra Modi marked National Technology Day, recalling the historic Pokhran-II nuclear tests (Operation Shakti) conducted on the same date in 1998. The Prime Minister described the tests as a symbol of India’s scientific excellence, strategic autonomy and self-reliance, and shared a Sanskrit Subhashitam linking Agni to the immense power hidden within matter. The 2026 theme, “Responsible Innovation for Inclusive Growth”, emphasizes ethical and inclusive technological advancement to support Aatmanirbhar Bharat and Viksit Bharat 2047. Relevance GS Paper III: Science and Technology, indigenisation, and strategic technologies. GS Paper II: Government initiatives promoting research and innovation. Practice Question   “Technological self-reliance is central to India’s economic competitiveness and strategic autonomy.” Discuss in the context of National Technology Day and the theme ‘Responsible Innovation for Inclusive Growth’. (250 words) Static Background National Technology Day National Technology Day is observed annually on 11 May to commemorate India’s technological achievements and honour scientists, engineers and innovators who contribute to national development. Historical Origin The day marks the success of Operation Shakti (Pokhran-II), a series of five nuclear tests conducted in 1998 at Pokhran, Rajasthan. The first National Technology Day was celebrated on 11 May 1999 under Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee. Constitutional and Strategic Relevance Scientific advancement supports the constitutional vision of national development and strengthens India’s sovereignty, security and technological independence. Basics Operation Shakti (Pokhran-II) Operation Shakti was India’s second series of nuclear tests, demonstrating capability in both fission and thermonuclear technologies and establishing India as a de facto nuclear weapons state. Pokhran-I India’s first nuclear test, code-named Operation Smiling Buddha, was conducted on 18 May 1974 at Pokhran. Strategic Autonomy Strategic autonomy refers to India’s ability to pursue independent security and foreign policy decisions without external pressure. Responsible Innovation Responsible innovation promotes technological development that is ethical, inclusive, safe and aligned with societal needs. Overview Pokhran-II: Strategic Milestone On 11 and 13 May 1998, India conducted five nuclear tests at Pokhran in Rajasthan, demonstrating advanced nuclear capabilities despite international scrutiny. Following the tests, India declared itself a nuclear weapon state, significantly strengthening deterrence and strategic credibility. Leadership and Scientific Contribution The mission was led by A. P. J. Abdul Kalam, along with the Defence Research and Development Organisation and Bhabha Atomic Research Centre. Other Achievements on 11 May 1998 India also successfully tested the Trishul surface-to-air missile and conducted a test flight of the indigenous Hansa-3 aircraft, making the day significant for defence and aerospace technology. Theme 2026: Responsible Innovation for Inclusive Growth The theme stresses that technological progress should expand opportunities, protect ethical values and ensure that innovation benefits all sections of society. Role in Aatmanirbhar Bharat Indigenous technologies reduce import dependence, strengthen domestic manufacturing and enhance national competitiveness in strategic sectors. Major Government Initiatives Key initiatives include National Quantum Mission, Anusandhan National Research Foundation, India Semiconductor Mission and Deep Ocean Mission. Economic Significance Technology drives productivity, innovation, employment and global competitiveness, helping India move toward a knowledge-based economy. National Security Dimension Advances in nuclear, missile, cyber and space technologies strengthen deterrence and strategic resilience. Social Inclusion Dimension Technologies such as Digital Public Infrastructure, telemedicine and precision agriculture improve service delivery and enhance quality of life. Conclusion National Technology Day celebrates India’s journey from strategic scientific breakthroughs to inclusive innovation that powers economic growth and national security. By promoting responsible and indigenous technological development, India is laying the foundation for a secure, self-reliant and globally competitive nation by 2047. Prelims Pointers National Technology Day is observed on 11 May. Pokhran-II (Operation Shakti) was conducted in 1998. India conducted five nuclear tests under Operation Shakti. Pokhran-I (Smiling Buddha) was conducted in 1974. The first National Technology Day was celebrated in 1999. The 2026 theme is “Responsible Innovation for Inclusive Growth.” Trishul is a surface-to-air missile. Hansa-3 is an indigenous light aircraft. Pokhran is located in Rajasthan. National Panchayat Awards 2025  Context The Ministry of Panchayati Raj announced the National Panchayat Awards (NPA) 2025, selecting 42 Panchayats from across India for excellence in grassroots governance and sustainable rural development. Karnataka secured the highest number of awards with 6 winners, followed by Andhra Pradesh and Odisha with 5 awards each. Winning Panchayats will receive financial incentives ranging from ₹50 lakh to ₹5 crore, reinforcing Panchayati Raj Institutions as key drivers of Localisation of Sustainable Development Goals (LSDGs) and Viksit Bharat@2047. Relevance GS Paper II: Panchayati Raj, decentralization, and grassroots governance. GS Paper III: Sustainable development and local governance outcomes. Practice Question   “Performance-based incentives can transform Panchayats into effective institutions of grassroots democracy.” Discuss with reference to the National Panchayat Awards and the Localization of Sustainable Development Goals. (250 words) Static Background Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs) Panchayati Raj Institutions are constitutionally mandated local self-governments in rural areas, functioning at Gram Panchayat, Block Panchayat and District Panchayat levels. Constitutional Basis The 73rd Constitutional Amendment Act, 1992 inserted Part IX (Articles 243–243O) and the Eleventh Schedule, empowering Panchayats with 29 functional subjects. Rashtriya Gram Swaraj Abhiyan (RGSA) Rashtriya Gram Swaraj Abhiyan is a Centrally Sponsored Scheme aimed at improving governance capacities of Panchayats. Basics National Panchayat Awards (NPA) The National Panchayat Awards are annual awards conferred by the Ministry of Panchayati Raj to recognize outstanding Panchayats for inclusive, participatory and sustainable development. Incentivization of Panchayats (IoP) The Incentivization of Panchayats component under RGSA provides performance-based grants and financial rewards to best-performing Panchayats. Panchayat Advancement Index (PAI) 2.0 PAI 2.0 is a data-driven assessment tool used to measure Panchayat performance across governance, service delivery and Sustainable Development Goal indicators. Localization of Sustainable Development Goals (LSDGs) LSDGs translate global SDG targets into local planning priorities and measurable outcomes at the Panchayat level. Award Categories Deen Dayal Upadhyay Panchayat Satat Vikas Puraskar (DDUPSVP) This category recognizes Gram Panchayats performing exceptionally across 9 LSDG themes, with 34 Gram Panchayats from 17 States and Union Territories selected in 2025. Nanaji Deshmukh Sarvottam Panchayat Satat Vikas Puraskar (NDSPSVP) This category rewards best-performing Panchayats overall, with 8 awardees comprising 3 District Panchayats, 2 Block Panchayats and 3 Gram Panchayats. Financial Incentives Awards range from ₹50 lakh to ₹5 crore, with the highest incentive provided to top-performing District Panchayats and ₹1 crore awarded to the best Gram Panchayats. Nine LSDG Themes The themes include Poverty-Free and Enhanced Livelihoods, Healthy Panchayat, Child-Friendly Panchayat, Water-Sufficient Panchayat, Clean and Green Panchayat, Women-Friendly Panchayat, and Good Governance. Special Categories Additional awards include Climate Action Special Panchayat Award (CASPA), Atma Nirbhar Panchayat Special Award (ANPSA) and Panchayat Kshamta Nirman Sarvottam Sansthan Puraskar (PKNSSP). Governance Significance The awards encourage evidence-based planning, transparency, participatory decision-making and improved delivery of public services at the grassroots. Social Justice Dimension Themes focusing on women, children, social security and inclusion strengthen democratic participation and ensure development reaches vulnerable communities. Economic Impact Performance incentives create competition among Panchayats and improve utilization of public funds for livelihoods, infrastructure and human development. Environmental Dimension Awards for clean, green and climate-resilient Panchayats promote sustainable resource management and climate adaptation. Federalism and Decentralization The awards operationalize the constitutional vision of democratic decentralization by rewarding local governments that effectively translate national priorities into local action. Conclusion National Panchayat Awards 2025 demonstrate how performance-based incentives can transform Panchayats into accountable, data-driven and citizen-centric institutions of grassroots democracy. By aligning Panchayat performance with LSDGs and SDGs, the awards strengthen local governance as the foundation of inclusive rural transformation and Viksit Bharat@2047. Prelims Pointers 73rd Constitutional Amendment Act, 1992 constitutionalized Panchayats. Part IX of the Constitution deals with Panchayats. Eleventh Schedule contains 29 subjects. National Panchayat Awards are conferred by the Ministry of Panchayati Raj. 42 Panchayats were selected under NPA 2025. Karnataka won the highest number of awards (6). Incentives range from ₹50 lakh to ₹5 crore. PAI 2.0 is used for performance assessment. Awards are implemented under RGSA. Structural Adjustment Programmes and the Global South Context A March 2026 paper published in BMJ Global Health argued that the International Monetary Fund and World Bank owe reparations to countries of the Global South for the socio-economic damage caused by Structural Adjustment Programmes (SAPs). The paper, authored by Jason Hickel, Salmaan Keshavjee, Maxine Burkett, and Eugene T. Richardson, links SAPs to weakened health systems, stagnant incomes, rising poverty and excess mortality across Asia, Africa and Latin America. The issue has renewed calls for democratisation of global financial governance, reduction of coercive loan conditionalities and strengthening of South-led institutions such as the New Development Bank. Relevance GS Paper II: International institutions and global governance reforms. GS Paper III: Inclusive development, poverty, and development economics. Practice Question “Structural Adjustment Programmes have had enduring socio-economic consequences for developing countries.” Critically examine the case for reforming global financial governance in light of these experiences. (250 words) Static Background What are Structural Adjustment Programmes (SAPs)? Structural Adjustment Programmes (SAPs) were policy packages imposed by the IMF and World Bank during the 1980s debt crisis as conditions for loans and debt restructuring. Historical Context Between 1960 and 1980, many newly independent countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America experienced rising incomes through state-led industrialisation, public investment and expansion of health and education. The crisis intensified when the Federal Reserve sharply increased interest rates in the late 1970s, dramatically raising debt-servicing burdens for developing countries. Bretton Woods Institutions The IMF and World Bank were established in 1944 at the Bretton Woods Conference to ensure global monetary stability and development finance. Basics Austerity Austerity involves reducing public expenditure on healthcare, education, food subsidies and social security to lower fiscal deficits and prioritise debt repayment. Privatisation Privatisation means transferring public enterprises and services into private ownership or management. Deregulation Deregulation removes state controls over trade, labour and capital flows to promote market-oriented economic activity. Capital Controls Capital controls are restrictions on cross-border financial movements aimed at preventing capital flight and preserving domestic economic stability. Overview Economic Slowdown in the Global South Average annual growth in the Global South declined from 3.2% before SAPs to only 0.7% during the 1980s and 1990s, indicating a sharp loss of developmental momentum. The paper estimates developing countries lost approximately $480 billion every year in potential national income during the structural adjustment era. Impact on Latin America and Africa In Latin America, real income per adult fell by nearly 15% after 1980 and did not recover until 2006. In Sub-Saharan Africa, incomes declined by almost 20%, delaying poverty reduction for decades. Public Health Consequences SAPs reduced government health spending, increased medicine costs and introduced user fees, weakening already fragile healthcare systems. A 2017 review linked SAPs to an additional 85.62 child deaths per 1,000 children and 360 maternal deaths per 1,00,000 live births in Sub-Saharan Africa. Kenya Case Study In Kenya, the authors estimate approximately 3,05,000 excess infant deaths occurred between 1986 and 2010 relative to pre-adjustment trends. Poverty and Inequality Cuts in subsidies, wage compression and privatisation increased poverty and disproportionately harmed women, children and low-income households. Reduced access to food, healthcare and education entrenched long-term human development deficits. Capital Flight and Resource Drain Removal of capital controls enabled foreign companies to repatriate profits worth up to $250 billion annually. Trade deregulation facilitated illicit and tax-avoiding outflows exceeding $1 trillion per year, reducing domestic investment capacity. Neo-Colonial Critique Critics argue SAPs reversed post-colonial development gains by reopening economies to external control and maintaining low-cost labour and resource extraction for Global North economies. Governance Imbalance in IMF and World Bank Countries of the Global North, representing only 15% of the world’s population, control nearly 60% of voting power in both institutions. The United States holds an effective veto over major decisions. Reparations Proposal The paper suggests compensation based on lost income, reduced public services, capital outflows and excess mortality caused by SAPs. It also calls for abolition of structural adjustment conditionalities, democratisation of governance and removal of sovereign immunity protections. Alternative Development Finance Institutions The New Development Bank and the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank provide alternatives that generally avoid traditional structural adjustment conditions. Conclusion Structural Adjustment Programmes profoundly shaped the development trajectories of the Global South, often imposing significant social and economic costs in the name of macroeconomic stabilisation. The reparations debate underscores the urgent need for a more equitable international financial architecture rooted in policy sovereignty, social justice and inclusive development. Prelims Pointers IMF and World Bank were created in 1944. SAPs became widespread during the 1980s debt crisis. Core components: Austerity, Privatisation and Deregulation. Growth in the Global South fell from 3.2% to 0.7% during SAP years. Estimated annual income loss: $480 billion. Global North controls nearly 60% voting power in IMF and World Bank. The New Development Bank is associated with BRICS. Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank is headquartered in Beijing. Electrical Fires in Urban India Context A major fire in Delhi’s Vivek Vihar on 3 May 2026 killed nine people, with the suspected cause being an air-conditioner malfunction or electrical short circuit, highlighting the growing threat of electrical fires in urban India. According to Delhi Fire Service, more than 80% of fires in Delhi are attributed to electrical faults, while Mumbai Fire Brigade reports nearly three out of four fires arise from similar causes. Rising temperatures, rapid air-conditioner adoption and ageing building wiring are creating a structural electrical safety challenge as India’s electricity demand and cooling load expand sharply. Relevance GS Paper III: Disaster management, urban infrastructure, and energy demand. GS Paper II: Urban governance, public safety, and regulatory enforcement. Practice Question (GS Paper III) “Electrical fires are emerging as a structural urban risk linked to rising cooling demand and ageing infrastructure.” Analyze the causes and suggest preventive measures for enhancing electrical safety in India. (250 words) Static Background What is an Electrical Fire? An electrical fire is a fire caused by overheating, arcing, short circuits, loose connections, overloads or equipment ageing in electrical systems and appliances. Legal and Institutional Framework Bureau of Indian Standards publishes the National Electrical Code (SP 30:2023), while National Building Code 2016 Part 4 lays down fire and life safety norms. Constitutional Basis Article 21 guarantees the right to life and safety, while Article 47 obligates the State to improve public health and living conditions. Basics Short Circuit A short circuit occurs when electricity flows through an unintended low-resistance path, causing excessive current and heat that may ignite insulation or nearby combustible materials. Harmonics Harmonics are distortions in electrical current generated by inverter-based appliances such as air-conditioners, LEDs, UPS systems and EV chargers, leading to overheating of conductors. Arc Fault An arc fault is an unintended electrical discharge between conductors that generates extremely high temperatures capable of igniting surrounding materials. Thermography Scan A thermography scan uses infrared imaging to detect hotspots in switchboards and wiring before visible failure or fire occurs. Overview Rising Electricity Demand India’s peak electricity demand reached 256.11 GW on 25 April 2026, roughly double early-2010s levels, driven by urbanization, rising incomes and increasing dependence on cooling. Cooling Load Explosion Cooling already accounts for nearly 50 GW of peak demand and may reach 180 GW by 2035, significantly increasing stress on household and distribution infrastructure. Rapid Growth of Air-Conditioners India purchased 15.4 million air-conditioners in 2025, and the International Energy Agency projects installed units will rise from 93 million in 2024 to 240 million by 2030. Ageing Electrical Infrastructure Many homes built in the 1980s were designed only for fans and lighting but now support heavy loads such as air-conditioners, geysers, induction stoves and EV chargers. Air-Conditioners as High-Risk Loads Air-conditioners draw startup currents six to eight times their normal operating current and are often connected to shared circuits that are undersized for such loads. Poor Installation Quality Counterfeit wires, low-quality breakers, loose terminations and inadequate earthing significantly increase the likelihood of overheating and ignition. Harmonic Distortion Inverter-based appliances inject non-linear currents that overheat neutral conductors, particularly in three-phase buildings, creating hidden fire risks. Common Failure Modes Major causes include overloads, short circuits, oxidized connections, ground faults, arc faults and insulation degradation due to ageing and heat stress. Weak Fire Forensics National Crime Records Bureau data often classify incidents under “other,” limiting root-cause analysis and evidence-based policy responses. Infrastructure Deficit The Fire and Security Association of India has highlighted a 96% shortage in fire infrastructure, indicating severe capacity gaps. International Best Practices Japan and South Korea mandated periodic residential electrical inspections, contributing to fire reductions of nearly 90%. Regulatory Gap in India Devices such as Arc-Fault Circuit Interrupters (AFCIs), mandatory in U.S. homes since 1999, are not widely mandated or adopted in Indian residential buildings. Social Justice Dimension Lower-income tenants and residents of informal or ageing housing stock face disproportionately higher fire risks due to poor maintenance and substandard installations. Climate Change Linkage Intensifying heat waves increase cooling demand, making electrical safety a climate adaptation and urban resilience issue. Conclusion Electrical fires are no longer isolated accidents but a systemic risk arising from rapid electrification, rising cooling demand and outdated building infrastructure. India must move from reactive firefighting to preventive electrical safety through inspections, standards enforcement, forensic analysis and consumer awareness to protect life and property. Prelims Pointers Peak electricity demand reached 256.11 GW on 25 April 2026. India sold 15.4 million air-conditioners in 2025. Cooling demand may rise to 180 GW by 2035. AFCI stands for Arc-Fault Circuit Interrupter. BIS SP 30:2023 is the National Electrical Code of India. National Building Code 2016 Part 4 deals with fire and life safety. Fire infrastructure shortage is estimated at 96%. Harmonics are caused by non-linear loads such as inverter ACs and EV chargers. Unchanged since 2012, old age pension of Rs 200 eroded due to inflation: Study Context A study commissioned by the Ministry of Rural Development found that the Centre’s old age pension contribution of ₹200–₹500 per month, unchanged since 2012, has lost nearly 45% of its real value due to inflation. The report recommends introducing a National Floor Pension (NFP) linked to the Consumer Price Index (CPI), similar to the National Floor Level Minimum Wage, to ensure inflation-indexed and equitable social assistance. The issue is significant because the National Social Assistance Programme supports more than 297 lakh beneficiaries, including elderly persons, widows and persons with disabilities. Relevance GS Paper II: Social justice, welfare schemes, and rights of vulnerable groups. GS Paper III: Poverty reduction, social security, and inclusive growth. Practice Question “Adequate and inflation-indexed social pensions are essential for ensuring dignity and social justice.” Discuss with reference to the National Social Assistance Programme. (250 words) Static Background National Social Assistance Programme (NSAP) Launched in 1995, NSAP is a centrally sponsored social security programme providing direct cash assistance to vulnerable citizens living below the poverty line. It is implemented by the Ministry of Rural Development and represents a key pillar of India’s non-contributory social protection system. Constitutional Basis Article 41 directs the State to provide public assistance in cases of old age, sickness, disability and unemployment within its economic capacity. Article 21 guarantees the right to live with dignity, which includes basic income security for vulnerable populations. Basics Social Pension A social pension is a non-contributory cash transfer provided by the government to vulnerable individuals who may not have formal retirement savings or social insurance coverage. Consumer Price Index (CPI) CPI measures changes in retail prices of goods and services and is used to assess inflation and changes in purchasing power. National Floor Pension (NFP) The proposed National Floor Pension would set a minimum pension amount across all states and automatically revise benefits based on inflation. Overview Coverage Under NSAP NSAP includes five schemes: Indira Gandhi National Old Age Pension Scheme (IGNOAPS), Widow Pension Scheme (IGNWPS), Disability Pension Scheme (IGNDPS), National Family Benefit Scheme (NFBS) and Annapurna Scheme. Current beneficiaries include over 221 lakh elderly persons, 67 lakh widows, and 8.8 lakh persons with disabilities, making NSAP one of India’s largest social assistance programmes. Pension Amounts Unchanged Since 2012 Under IGNOAPS, beneficiaries aged 60–79 years receive only ₹200 per month, while those above 80 years receive ₹500 per month as the central contribution. Similar fixed amounts of ₹300–₹500 are provided to widows and persons with disabilities. Inflation-Induced Erosion The study notes that CPI increased from 100 in 2012 to 191 in 2024, indicating a cumulative inflation of 91%. As a result, ₹200 in 2012 has the purchasing power of only about ₹110 today, reducing the real benefit by nearly 45%. Inflation-Adjusted Pension Requirements To preserve purchasing power, the ₹200 pension should have increased to ₹382, and the ₹500 pension should have risen to ₹955 by 2024. Adjusted to current prices, even a minimum of ₹353 is needed to match the original real value of ₹200. Regional Disparities States such as Andhra Pradesh, Telangana and Haryana provide substantial top-ups, resulting in better income stability and improved well-being. Poorer states with limited fiscal capacity offer lower top-ups, creating unequal social protection across India. Social Justice Dimension Elderly persons, widows and disabled citizens often have limited earning capacity and high healthcare costs; inadequate pensions undermine their dignity and increase dependence on families or informal work. Gender Dimension Since women constitute the majority of widows and many elderly poor, low pension amounts disproportionately affect female-headed households and reinforce feminization of poverty. Governance Challenges Delays in verification, exclusion errors, outdated beneficiary lists and inconsistent state top-ups reduce the effectiveness of the programme. Economic Significance Social pensions support consumption, improve nutrition and reduce distress borrowing, generating positive multiplier effects in rural economies. International Perspective Countries such as Brazil and South Africa provide more generous inflation-indexed social pensions, demonstrating the developmental role of income security. Conclusion The real value of NSAP pensions has eroded substantially because benefit amounts have remained unchanged for more than a decade despite sustained inflation. Introducing an inflation-linked National Floor Pension is essential to uphold constitutional commitments to dignity, social justice and economic security for India’s most vulnerable citizens. Prelims Pointers NSAP was launched in 1995. Implemented by the Ministry of Rural Development. Constitutional basis: Article 41. IGNOAPS central pension for age 60–79 is ₹200 per month. CPI increased from 100 (2012) to 191 (2024). Real value of fixed pensions declined by nearly 45%. NFBS provides one-time assistance on death of the primary breadwinner. Annapurna Scheme provides 10 kg foodgrains per month to eligible elderly persons not receiving pensions. India’s Gold Import Problem and the UAE CEPA Context Prime Minister Narendra Modi urged citizens to postpone non-essential gold purchases as rising crude prices and prolonged tensions in West Asia threaten India’s foreign exchange reserves and overall macroeconomic stability. India’s gold imports rose sharply to $71.97 billion in FY26, nearly 25% higher than FY25, even though physical imports declined to 721.04 tonnes, indicating the impact of soaring international gold prices. Policymakers and economists have flagged that the India–United Arab Emirates Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) may have unintentionally encouraged imports of refined bullion over semi-processed dore. Relevance GS Paper III: Balance of payments, current account deficit, and trade policy. GS Paper II: Bilateral economic relations with the UAE. Practice Question “India’s high gold imports reflect both structural demand and policy distortions.” Examine their macroeconomic implications and assess how trade agreements can influence domestic value addition. (250 words) Static Background Gold and the Indian Economy India is among the world’s largest consumers of gold, importing roughly 700–800 tonnes annually because domestic production is negligible and household demand remains culturally and economically significant. Gold serves as a store of value, hedge against inflation and symbol of social security, especially during weddings, festivals and inheritance transfers. Current Account Deficit (CAD) The Current Account Deficit arises when import payments exceed export earnings, increasing dependence on foreign capital and exerting pressure on the rupee and foreign exchange reserves. India-UAE CEPA Signed in February 2022, CEPA aims to liberalize bilateral trade, reduce tariffs and deepen economic integration between India and the UAE. Basics Bullion Bullion is highly refined gold in bar or coin form, ready for trading or manufacturing with minimal additional processing. Dore Dore is a semi-pure gold-silver alloy requiring refining, thereby generating domestic value addition, employment and technological development. Foreign Exchange Reserves These are external assets held by the Reserve Bank of India to finance imports, stabilize the currency and manage external shocks. Overview Rising Gold Import Bill Gold imports increased from $58 billion in FY25 to $71.97 billion in FY26, despite lower quantities, because global gold prices rose by more than 40% over the past year. Historical import values show persistent volatility: $45.54 billion in FY24, $35.01 billion in FY23, and $46.16 billion in FY22. Macroeconomic Implications Higher gold imports widen the CAD, reduce foreign exchange reserves, weaken the rupee and increase imported inflation, especially when crude oil prices exceed $100 per barrel. Excessive gold demand diverts household savings away from productive investments such as equities, bonds and infrastructure financing. Impact of UAE CEPA The agreement appears to have created a tariff inversion, making imports of refined bullion more attractive than dore, contrary to India’s goal of promoting domestic refining. An Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad study observed that this reduced opportunities for domestic value addition and job creation. Weak Refining Ecosystem India’s refining capacity remains underutilized due to policy inconsistencies, lack of scale and weaker integration with global gold markets. NITI Aayog noted that countries such as Switzerland and the UAE capture greater economic value through advanced refining ecosystems. Social and Behavioral Drivers Gold remains a preferred savings instrument because of cultural trust, inflation protection and limited financial literacy in many rural and semi-urban households. Informal and cash-based gold purchases may also facilitate tax evasion, smuggling and accumulation of unaccounted wealth. Strategic Concerns Simultaneous spikes in gold and crude oil imports significantly increase external vulnerability, particularly during geopolitical disruptions in critical trade routes such as the Strait of Hormuz. Conclusion India’s gold import problem reflects structural demand, rising global prices and unintended policy distortions that weaken macroeconomic resilience. Correcting tariff anomalies, strengthening refining and promoting financial alternatives to physical gold are essential for safeguarding external stability and advancing inclusive capital formation. Prelims Pointers India imported $71.97 billion worth of gold in FY26. Physical gold imports in FY26 were 721.04 tonnes. India and the UAE signed CEPA in February 2022. Bullion is refined gold; dore is semi-pure gold alloy. High gold imports widen the Current Account Deficit (CAD). Sovereign Gold Bond Scheme reduces dependence on physical gold imports.