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Apr 14, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

Content National Agriculture Market (e-NAM) ANRF developing AI-based platform ‘SARAL AI’ National Agriculture Market (e-NAM) Why in News? On 13 April 2026, Government data highlighted expansion of e-NAM to 1,656 mandis, with rising trade value and farmer participation, signalling deeper digital integration of agricultural markets. Issue in Brief e-NAM, launched on 14 April 2016, is a pan-India electronic trading portal integrating APMC mandis to enable transparent price discovery and nationwide agricultural trade. By March 2026, cumulative trade reached ₹4.84 lakh crore (13.25 crore MT), indicating rapid scaling and growing institutional adoption. Relevance GS Paper II: Governance, Cooperative Federalism, Welfare delivery (farmer-centric reforms) GS Paper III: Agriculture, Agricultural Marketing Reforms, Digital Economy, Inclusive Growth Practice Question “e-NAM seeks to transform India’s fragmented agricultural markets into a unified national market. Evaluate its impact on price discovery, farmer welfare, and market efficiency, while highlighting key challenges.” (250 words) Structural Background: APMC Constraints India has ~6,900+ APMC mandis, governed by state laws, resulting in fragmented markets, entry barriers, and restricted inter-state agricultural trade flows. Trader cartels and multiple mandi fees historically depressed farm-gate prices and increased transaction costs, disproportionately affecting small and marginal farmers. e-NAM acts as a digital integration layer, not a replacement, connecting mandis into a single national market architecture. Core Features and Operational Architecture e-NAM offers end-to-end digital trade lifecycle: gate entry, assaying, electronic bidding, price discovery, and direct bank payment settlement. Platform integrates 1.80 crore farmers, 2.73 lakh traders, and 4,724 FPOs (March 2026), demonstrating expanding stakeholder participation. Supports 247 tradable commodities, expanding diversification and improving farmers’ access to multiple markets and buyers. Provides inter-state trading through unified licensing, reducing geographical barriers and enabling competitive national-level bidding. Multi-Dimensional Impact Constitutional and Federal Dimension Advances Article 38 (economic justice) and Article 39(b) by ensuring equitable access to markets and reducing exploitative intermediaries in agricultural trade. Reflects cooperative federalism, where agriculture remains a State subject, but Centre provides digital infrastructure and financial assistance for mandi integration. Governance and Administrative Dimension Digital workflows reduce discretionary power of intermediaries, improving transparency, auditability, and accountability in mandi operations. Real-time dashboards enable data-driven governance, allowing policymakers to monitor price trends, arrivals, and inter-state trade flows efficiently. Government provides financial assistance up to ₹75 lakh per mandi for infrastructure upgradation, strengthening digital ecosystem integration. Economic Dimension Competitive bidding across mandis improves price realisation, reducing dependence on local traders and enhancing farmers’ income potential. Trade value increased from ₹3.19 lakh crore (2024) to ₹4.84 lakh crore (March 2026), reflecting deepening market penetration and efficiency gains. Integration with logistics, warehousing, and financial services reduces transaction costs and supply chain inefficiencies. Social Dimension Participation of 4,724 FPOs enhances aggregation, enabling small farmers to achieve economies of scale and stronger bargaining power. Direct digital payments via UPI, NEFT, RTGS promote financial inclusion and create formal credit histories for farmers. Reduces dependency on arthiyas (commission agents), limiting exploitative informal credit-trade linkages. Technology and Innovation Dimension Incorporates AI-enabled quality assaying, improving standardisation, dispute resolution, and enabling quality-based price discovery mechanisms. Platform of Platforms (PoP) launched on 14 July 2022 integrates logistics, insurance, warehousing, and advisory services into a unified interface. Mobile-based access ensures scalability, though effectiveness depends on digital literacy and rural internet penetration levels. Environmental Dimension e-NWR integration reduces physical transportation of produce, lowering logistics costs and associated carbon emissions in agricultural supply chains. Scientific warehousing reduces post-harvest losses (estimated 6–10% in India), improving resource efficiency and sustainability. Institutional Innovation: e-NWR Integration Electronic Negotiable Warehouse Receipts (e-NWR) enable digital ownership and transfer of stored produce without physical movement, improving market flexibility. Farmers can use e-NWR as collateral for institutional credit, enhancing liquidity and reducing distress sales immediately after harvest. Integration with e-NAM links storage, finance, and market access, strengthening the agricultural value chain and price discovery efficiency. Challenges and Structural Gaps Only about 23% of total APMC mandis are integrated with e-NAM, limiting its reach and effectiveness in achieving full national market integration. Inter-state trade remains low, as many states have not fully amended APMC laws to allow seamless electronic trading across borders. Rural digital divide persists, with rural teledensity ~60% compared to >140% urban, constraining digital participation. Inadequate infrastructure such as assaying labs, grading facilities, and reliable internet connectivity limits quality-based trading adoption. Behavioural resistance persists as farmers prefer cash transactions and trusted local intermediaries, slowing digital adoption. Way Forward Harmonise APMC Acts across states to enable seamless inter-state trade and deepen the “One Nation, One Market” framework. Expand digital infrastructure through BharatNet and mandi modernisation, ensuring universal connectivity and real-time access to e-NAM services. Strengthen assaying, grading, and warehousing infrastructure, ensuring quality-based pricing and improved market trust. Promote digital literacy via KVKs and extension services, targeting small and marginal farmers for inclusive participation. Integrate private agri-tech platforms and e-commerce players, creating a hybrid competitive agricultural marketing ecosystem. Use AI and big data analytics for price forecasting, crop planning, and real-time decision-making support. Prelims Pointers Launch date: 14 April 2016 Implementing agency: Small Farmers’ Agribusiness Consortium (SFAC) PoP launch: 14 July 2022 e-NWR Act: Warehousing (Development and Regulation) Act, 2007 e-NAM integrates APMCs; does not replace them ANRF developing AI-based platform ‘SARAL AI’ Why in News? On 13 April 2026, Government reviewed Anusandhan National Research Foundation (ANRF) progress and announced SARAL AI, an AI platform to simplify research into multilingual public-oriented formats. Issue in Brief ANRF, India’s apex research body, is shifting focus toward mission-mode research, societal impact, and innovation-led governance, aligning science outputs with national development priorities. Launch of SARAL AI enables conversion of complex research into podcasts, videos, and social media content in 18 Indian languages, enhancing accessibility and outreach. Relevance GS Paper III: Science & Technology (AI, R&D ecosystem), Innovation, Digital Public Infrastructure GS Paper II: Governance (Science policy, institutional frameworks), Education (research accessibility) Practice Question “AI-based platforms like SARAL developed by ANRF aim to democratise scientific knowledge and strengthen India’s research ecosystem. Critically analyse their significance and limitations.” (250 words) Static Background and Basics The Anusandhan National Research Foundation Act, 2023 (Act No. 25 of 2023) received Presidential assent on 12 August 2023, establishing ANRF as India’s apex research coordination body. The Act came into force on 5 February 2024, signalling a major reform in India’s fragmented research funding architecture. ANRF replaces the Science and Engineering Research Board (SERB, 2008) and expands scope to include industry participation and interdisciplinary research ecosystems. It aligns with National Education Policy (NEP) 2020, aiming to build a robust, innovation-driven knowledge economy through integrated R&D systems. Key Developments (Data-rich) ANRF evaluated nearly 20,000 research applications within 4 months, indicating rapid expansion and strong national participation in research funding programmes. Deployment of nodal officers in ~250 institutions improves administrative efficiency and reduces procedural delays in research project execution. SARAL AI will convert research outputs into podcasts, short videos, presentations, and multilingual content in 18 Indian languages, enhancing science communication. Launch of MAHA (Mission for Advancement in High Impact Areas) programmes promotes mission-driven research targeting national priorities like climate resilience, agriculture, and health. Conceptual Foundation: Science–Society Interface Traditional research ecosystems often suffer from knowledge silos, where scientific outputs remain inaccessible to policymakers, industry, and citizens. ANRF introduces a “lab-to-society” model, ensuring research translates into policy inputs, technological solutions, and public awareness. SARAL AI operationalises this by converting technical knowledge into vernacular, simplified, and scalable communication formats. Dimensions Constitutional and Ethical Dimension Promotes scientific temper (Article 51A(h)), enabling citizens to understand science in accessible formats and fostering rational, evidence-based societal decision-making. Strengthens democratic participation, as informed citizens can engage with policies related to health, climate change, and technology. Governance and Administrative Dimension ANRF centralises fragmented funding mechanisms, improving coordination across ministries, institutions, and research domains. Appointment of nodal officers enhances ease of doing research, reducing bureaucratic delays and improving project execution efficiency. Promotes mission-mode governance, aligning research funding with national priorities instead of isolated academic pursuits. Economic and Innovation Dimension India’s GERD remains ~0.64% of GDP, significantly lower than global leaders like USA (~3.5%) and China (~2.4%), indicating underinvestment in R&D. ANRF aims to crowd-in private sector participation, currently ~36% of total R&D expenditure, compared to >70% in developed economies. MAHA programmes focus on high-impact sectors, accelerating innovation-led growth and improving India’s global competitiveness. Social Dimension SARAL AI’s 18-language output addresses linguistic barriers, enabling inclusive dissemination of scientific knowledge across rural and non-English populations. Simplified formats such as podcasts and videos enhance public engagement with science, improving awareness in areas like health, agriculture, and disaster management. Encourages youth and early-career researchers, strengthening India’s human capital in science and innovation. Technology and AI Dimension SARAL AI represents application of Generative AI in science communication, transforming dense academic outputs into structured, accessible content. Integration with platforms like WhatsApp and digital channels ensures real-time dissemination and wider outreach. Reflects India’s push toward AI-enabled governance and knowledge ecosystems, aligning with emerging global digital trends. Science Policy and Institutional Dimension ANRF shifts focus from fragmented schemes to “fewer, high-impact flagship programmes”, improving efficiency and reducing duplication in funding. Emphasis on Technology Readiness Levels (TRLs) ensures faster transition from laboratory research to real-world applications. Initiatives like ATRI (Translational Research Initiative) bridge gap between TRL-4 (lab validation) and TRL-7 (commercialisation), addressing innovation bottlenecks. Challenges and Concerns India’s low R&D expenditure (~0.64% of GDP) limits global competitiveness despite institutional reforms like ANRF. Risk of AI-driven oversimplification, potentially distorting complex scientific findings or reducing technical accuracy in public communication. Uneven research capacity across institutions, especially in state universities and tier-2/3 cities, limits equitable utilisation of ANRF funding. Limited private sector participation constrains innovation-commercialisation pipeline, affecting technology translation into market-ready solutions. Digital divide and infrastructural gaps may hinder last-mile dissemination of simplified scientific knowledge despite multilingual initiatives. Way Forward Increase R&D expenditure to at least 1–2% of GDP, ensuring sustained funding for innovation and aligning with global benchmarks. Develop AI governance and validation frameworks to ensure accuracy, credibility, and ethical use of SARAL AI outputs. Strengthen industry-academia collaboration through co-funded projects, innovation clusters, and incentives for private R&D investment. Expand research infrastructure and institutional capacity, particularly in emerging universities and regional institutions. Promote science communication as a discipline, integrating it into education, research training, and public outreach strategies. Align ANRF initiatives with national missions like Viksit Bharat 2047, Digital India, and Climate Action goals. Prelims Pointers ANRF Act: 2023 (Act No. 25 of 2023) Assent date: 12 August 2023 Operationalised: 5 February 2024 Replaces: Science and Engineering Research Board (SERB) SARAL AI: AI-based science communication platform Multilingual (18 languages)  

Apr 14, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Content Rupee is more than a measure of price. It’s also a barometer of credibility Global health governance must depend less on FDA Rupee is more than a measure of price. It’s also a barometer of credibility Why in News? Recent macroeconomic trends (2025–26) show persistent BoP pressures, weak FPI inflows, and rupee volatility, raising concerns over currency stability and macroeconomic credibility. Issue in Brief The Indian Rupee (INR) is not merely an exchange rate variable but a macroeconomic credibility indicator, reflecting investor confidence, capital flows, and external sector stability. Sustained depreciation risks triggering inflation, capital flight, and balance sheet stress, undermining long-term economic growth prospects. Relevance GS Paper III: Economy (External Sector, Exchange Rate, Inflation), Banking & Monetary Policy GS Paper II: Governance (RBI policy credibility, macroeconomic stability) Practice Question “The exchange rate of a currency reflects not just economic fundamentals but also macroeconomic credibility. Analyse the factors influencing rupee stability and the policy challenges associated with it.” (250 words) Static Background and Basics Exchange rate is the price of one currency in terms of another, determined by demand-supply dynamics in forex markets under managed float regime in India. RBI follows a managed floating exchange rate system, intervening to curb excessive volatility without targeting a fixed level. India’s forex reserves stood around $640+ billion (2024–25), providing buffer against external shocks. Current Account Deficit (CAD) becomes critical as India imports ~85% of crude oil, making rupee sensitive to global commodity prices. Core Economic Theories  Dornbusch Overshooting Model Due to sticky goods prices and flexible financial markets, exchange rates adjust sharply in the short run, often overshooting equilibrium levels before stabilising. Explains why currencies fall faster and deeper than macroeconomic fundamentals justify, especially during crises. Mundell-Fleming Model (Impossible Trinity) A country cannot simultaneously maintain: Fixed exchange rate Free capital mobility Independent monetary policy India manages trade-offs by allowing partial flexibility in exchange rate with controlled interventions. Dimensions Economic Dimension Currency depreciation initially improves export competitiveness, but sustained decline leads to imported inflation, especially in oil-dependent economies like India. India’s CAD vulnerability persists, as high import dependence offsets export gains from weaker currency. Persistent depreciation increases external debt burden, especially for firms with foreign currency borrowings. Financial and External Sector Dimension FPI flows volatile: Positive inflows recorded in only 1 out of last 5 years (till 2026), weakening capital account stability. Continued outflows create funding pressure on CAD, increasing dependence on reserves or external borrowing. Currency volatility reduces investor confidence, discouraging long-term capital inflows and increasing risk premium. Inflation and Welfare Dimension Depreciation acts as an implicit tax on citizens, increasing cost of imported goods such as fuel, fertilisers, and electronics. Leads to cost-push inflation, eroding real incomes and disproportionately affecting poor households. Export gains are often neutralised by higher input costs, especially in import-dependent industries. Governance and Policy Dimension RBI faces trade-offs: Raising interest rates stabilises currency but slows growth Allowing depreciation fuels inflation and instability Use of tools like sterilised interventions, swap windows, and reserve requirements reflects calibrated policy response. Historical Lessons Global Financial Crisis (2008–09) RBI reduced repo rate from 9% to 4.75%, injected ₹2.25 lakh crore liquidity, stabilising markets. Fiscal stimulus of ~3% of GDP boosted demand but raised fiscal deficit to 6.5% of GDP. Taper Tantrum (2013) Rupee depreciated ~20%, triggered by US Fed policy signals. Policy response: FCNR(B) deposit schemes Oil swap windows Gold import duty hike (6% → 10%) CAD reduced from 4.8% to 1.3% of GDP, restoring macro stability. Global and Structural Dimension Emerging markets like Turkey, Brazil faced severe inflation due to currency depreciation, highlighting limits of export-led devaluation strategies. Persistent depreciation reflects structural weaknesses: low export diversification, energy dependence, and weak manufacturing base. Geopolitical and Trade Dimension External pressures such as tariffs, Section 301 investigations, geopolitical tensions, and AI-driven trade disruptions influence currency volatility. Global monetary tightening cycles amplify capital outflows from emerging markets like India. Challenges and Risks Persistent BoP deficit and weak capital inflows create sustained downward pressure on rupee stability. Over-reliance on monetary tools risks policy ineffectiveness during supply-side shocks like oil price spikes. High import dependence in energy and electronics limits benefits of depreciation-led export competitiveness. Currency volatility increases corporate balance sheet risks, especially for firms with unhedged foreign liabilities. Rising reputation risk may deter both new and existing investors, affecting long-term capital formation. Way Forward Strengthen external sector resilience by diversifying exports and reducing dependence on imported inputs, especially in energy and electronics sectors. Enhance energy security through renewable expansion and strategic reserves to reduce oil import vulnerability. Improve investment climate via policy stability, ease of doing business, and regulatory predictability to attract sustained FDI inflows. Use coordinated monetary-fiscal strategy, avoiding excessive reliance on interest rate adjustments during supply shocks. Expand inclusion of petroleum products and electricity under GST to improve fiscal efficiency and reduce cascading costs. Maintain adequate forex reserves buffer and deploy calibrated interventions to prevent disorderly currency movements. Prelims Pointers India follows managed floating exchange rate system CAD + capital flows = Balance of Payments (BoP) Dornbusch Model → explains exchange rate overshooting Mundell-Fleming → Impossible Trinity concept FCNR(B) deposits used during 2013 crisis stabilisation Global health governance must depend less on FDA Why in News? Recent 2025–2026 developments within the US FDA, including leadership turnover, regulatory shifts, and policy changes in AI and biologics, have raised concerns over global regulatory stability. Issue in Brief The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) acts as a global benchmark regulator, influencing drug approvals, clinical trials, and regulatory standards across multiple countries. Current institutional instability within FDA risks delays, uncertainty, and cascading disruptions in global drug approval ecosystems. Relevance GS Paper II: International Relations, Global Health Governance, Institutions GS Paper III: Science & Technology (Pharma, Biotech regulation) Practice Question “Excessive reliance on a single national regulator like the US FDA creates systemic risks in global health governance. Critically examine and suggest alternatives.” (250 words) Static Background and Basics The U.S. Food and Drug Administration was established in 1906 (Pure Food and Drugs Act) and operates under the US Department of Health and Human Services. It regulates drugs, vaccines, biologics, medical devices, diagnostics, and food safety, covering products worth ~20% of US consumer spending. Other key global regulators include: European Medicines Agency (EU) Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation (India) Global regulatory cooperation guided by International Council for Harmonisation (ICH) ensures standardisation of safety, quality, and efficacy norms. Conceptual Foundation: Regulatory Reliance Model Many low- and middle-income countries adopt “regulatory reliance pathways”, using approvals from FDA/EMA to fast-track domestic approvals without duplicating full review processes. This reduces: Approval timelines Regulatory burden Ensures minimum global safety standards despite limited domestic capacity. Dimension Governance and Institutional Dimension FDA serves as a de facto global standard-setter, influencing regulatory frameworks, clinical trial norms, and approval pathways across developing and developed economies. Leadership instability in critical divisions (e.g., biologics) creates policy uncertainty in high-risk areas like vaccines and gene therapy regulation. Budget constraints and structural reforms within FDA may reduce institutional predictability and regulatory consistency globally. Global Health Governance Dimension Over-reliance on FDA creates systemic vulnerability, where regulatory disruptions in one country affect multiple national health systems. Highlights need for multipolar regulatory architecture, reducing concentration of authority in a single institution. Strengthening regional regulators improves resilience and decentralisation in global health governance systems. Economic and Pharmaceutical Industry Dimension FDA approval is considered gold standard for global market access, influencing investment decisions and pharmaceutical R&D strategies. Pharmaceutical companies design clinical trials aligned with FDA standards, affecting global research protocols and innovation pipelines. Regulatory uncertainty increases cost of compliance and delays product commercialisation, affecting global supply chains. Science and Technology Dimension FDA plays a critical role in regulating emerging technologies such as AI in healthcare, digital health tools, and clinical decision support systems. Changes in FDA guidelines influence global standards for AI validation, safety protocols, and ethical use in medicine. Instability may slow adoption of cutting-edge innovations like gene therapy and personalised medicine. Social and Ethical Dimension Delays in approvals due to regulatory uncertainty affect timely access to life-saving medicines and vaccines, especially in developing countries. Raises concerns of equity in global health, as countries dependent on FDA may face delays in access to critical healthcare technologies. Over-centralisation of regulatory authority raises ethical issues of global dependence on a single national institution. India-Specific Dimension India’s Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation increasingly aligns with global standards but still relies partly on FDA approvals for accelerated pathways and benchmarking. India is expanding regulatory capacity through: Strengthening CDSCO Enhancing clinical trial ecosystem Presents opportunity to emerge as a regional regulatory hub for Global South countries. Challenges and Risks Excessive reliance on FDA creates systemic regulatory dependency, limiting autonomy of national regulators in decision-making. Leadership turnover within FDA introduces uncertainty in approval timelines, especially in biologics and advanced therapies. Divergence in regulatory standards may increase compliance burden for global pharmaceutical firms. Limited capacity in developing countries constrains their ability to independently evaluate complex drugs and technologies. Fragmentation of regulatory standards could lead to inconsistent safety and efficacy benchmarks globally. Way Forward Strengthen national regulatory institutions like CDSCO, enhancing technical capacity, staffing, and infrastructure for independent drug evaluation. Promote regional regulatory cooperation frameworks (e.g., Asia-Africa collaboration) to reduce dependence on Western regulators. Enhance participation in ICH and WHO regulatory harmonisation initiatives to align global standards while maintaining autonomy. Develop robust domestic clinical trial ecosystems, reducing reliance on foreign regulatory benchmarks. Encourage multi-regulator validation models, where approvals consider inputs from multiple global agencies rather than a single authority. Invest in AI-driven regulatory tools to improve efficiency, transparency, and speed of drug approval processes. Prelims Pointers FDA established: 1906 (Pure Food and Drugs Act) FDA regulates: Drugs, biologics, devices, food EMA: European Union drug regulator CDSCO: India’s national drug regulatory authority ICH: Harmonises global drug regulatory standards

Apr 14, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Content Deposit Tokens & Asset Tokenisation: Next Phase of India’s Financial Digitalisation Jallianwala Bagh Massacre (1919) 135th Birth Anniversary of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar Rise in Middle Class Vulnerability 9th Indian Ocean Conference (IOC) & Landlocked Countries: Key Takeaways Need Stronger Social Protection for a Changing World of Work: ILO South West Monsoon Rainfall to be Below Normal or Deficient in 2026 Deposit Tokens & Asset Tokenisation: Next Phase of India’s Financial Digitalisation Why in News? Recent discussions (April 2026) highlight deposit tokens and real-world asset tokenisation as next-stage reforms to modernise India’s banking system beyond UPI-led Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI). Issue in Brief India’s financial system faces a transition toward programmable, real-time, blockchain-based settlement systems, raising need for innovation without compromising financial stability and regulatory oversight. Relevance GS Paper III: Economy (Banking, Fintech, Financial Markets), Science & Technology (Blockchain) GS Paper II: Governance (Regulation – RBI, SEBI), Digital Public Infrastructure Practice Question “Deposit tokens and real-world asset tokenisation represent the next frontier in financial digitalisation. Analyse their potential benefits and regulatory challenges in the Indian context.” (250 words) Static Background and Basics India has built robust Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI): UPI (real-time payments) Aadhaar (identity) DBT (welfare delivery) Current banking operates on: Batch-based settlements (T+1/T+2) Intermediated clearing systems Emerging technologies: Blockchain (distributed ledger) Tokenisation (digital representation of assets) RBI is already exploring Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC – e₹) as sovereign digital money. Conceptual Foundations Deposit Tokens Deposit tokens are digital representations of bank deposits, issued by regulated banks on permissioned blockchain networks. Fully backed by deposits, they are direct claims on bank balance sheet, unlike cryptocurrencies. Enable: Real-time settlement Programmability (smart contracts) Atomic Delivery vs Payment (DvP) Real-World Asset (RWA) Tokenisation Converts physical assets like real estate, gold, infrastructure, private equity into tradable digital tokens. Enables: Fractional ownership Improved liquidity Efficient collateralisation Dimensions Economic and Financial Efficiency Deposit tokens shift banking from delayed batch settlement to real-time settlement, improving liquidity management and reducing systemic friction. Tokenisation unlocks illiquid assets (real estate, gold), enhancing capital efficiency and deepening financial markets. Combined system enables instant settlement with regulated money, reducing counterparty and settlement risks. Banking and Institutional Dimension Enhances interbank settlements, treasury operations, and corporate payments, reducing reconciliation costs and operational delays. Integrates compliance (KYC, AML) directly into transactions via programmable finance, reducing post-transaction verification burden. Strengthens role of banks by extending regulated money into digital programmable layer, unlike disintermediating crypto models. Technology and Innovation Dimension Blockchain enables distributed, tamper-proof, and transparent ledgers, improving trust in financial transactions. Smart contracts automate: Settlement Compliance Reporting Aligns with global shift toward “always-on financial systems” (24×7 programmable finance). Global Competitiveness Dimension Financial centres like Singapore, EU, UAE are integrating tokenisation into mainstream banking systems. Delay in adoption risks capital flight and innovation migration to more advanced jurisdictions. India has opportunity to shape global standards in regulated digital finance, leveraging DPI success. Governance and Regulatory Dimension Requires clarity in: Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA) for cross-border token flows AML/KYC norms for blockchain-based systems Custody and ownership laws for tokenised assets Current initiatives largely limited to RBI regulatory sandboxes, restricting scalability. Financial Stability Dimension Deposit tokens preserve bank-based monetary system, avoiding risks associated with unregulated cryptocurrencies. No additional credit or liquidity risk, as tokens are fully backed by deposits. However, risks include: Cybersecurity threats Operational vulnerabilities Regulatory arbitrage Synergy: Deposit Tokens + Tokenisation Tokenised assets combined with deposit tokens enable: Instant settlement in regulated digital money Reduction in settlement time and counterparty risk Creation of efficient, transparent financial markets Facilitates advanced use cases: Trade finance Cross-border payments Collateralised lending Challenges Regulatory uncertainty around cross-border tokenised transactions and capital controls. Lack of legal clarity on ownership rights and dispute resolution for tokenised assets. Interoperability issues between existing banking systems and blockchain infrastructure. Risk of exclusion if digital systems are not inclusive and accessible. Cybersecurity and operational risks in decentralised systems. Way Forward Develop comprehensive regulatory framework integrating RBI, SEBI, and Ministry of Finance guidelines on tokenisation and digital money. Align deposit tokens with CBDC ecosystem, ensuring complementarity rather than fragmentation. Expand pilot projects from sandbox to production-scale systems, especially in trade finance and interbank settlements. Establish global interoperability standards, enabling cross-border programmable finance. Strengthen cybersecurity and digital infrastructure resilience. Promote public-private partnerships in blockchain innovation within regulated environment. Prelims Pointers Deposit tokens: Issued by banks Fully backed by deposits Tokenisation: Digital representation of real-world assets CBDC: Issued by central bank (RBI) Blockchain: Distributed ledger technology Jallianwala Bagh Massacre (1919) Why in News? On 13 April 2026, India observed the 107th anniversary of the Jallianwala Bagh massacre, paying tribute to martyrs of one of the most brutal colonial atrocities. The massacre exposed the repressive nature of British colonial rule, transforming moderate nationalism into mass-based resistance and revolutionary consciousness. Relevance GS Paper I: Modern Indian History (Freedom Struggle) Practice Question “The Jallianwala Bagh massacre marked a turning point in India’s freedom struggle. Examine its impact on nationalist politics and colonial legitimacy.” (250 words) Static Background and Basics The Rowlatt Act, 1919 (Anarchical and Revolutionary Crimes Act) allowed detention without trial for up to 2 years, curbing civil liberties. Mahatma Gandhi launched nationwide hartal on 6 April 1919 (“Black Day”), marking first mass civil disobedience against colonial rule. Punjab became epicentre due to arrests of leaders Dr. Saifuddin Kitchlew and Dr. Satyapal (9 April 1919). The Jallianwala Bagh Massacre (13 April 1919) On Baisakhi (13 April 1919), thousands gathered at Jallianwala Bagh, Amritsar, many unaware of ban on public gatherings. Brigadier General Reginald Dyer blocked exits and ordered troops to fire without warning on unarmed civilians. Official estimates: 379 deaths, but actual casualties widely believed to exceed 1,000, with hundreds injured. Firing continued for ~10 minutes, targeting densest parts of crowd, reflecting deliberate intent to punish and terrorise. Immediate Consequences Imposition of martial law in Punjab, including humiliating punishments like “crawling order”, intensifying colonial repression. The Hunter Commission (1919) censured Dyer but imposed no serious punishment, exposing colonial bias. Indian National Congress inquiry termed massacre “premeditated and inhuman”, strengthening nationalist critique of British rule. Political and Nationalist Impact Transformation of Freedom Struggle Marked shift from moderate constitutionalism to mass nationalism, strengthening Gandhian leadership. Provided momentum for Non-Cooperation Movement (1920–22), integrating Khilafat and anti-colonial struggle. Rise of Revolutionary Nationalism Incident deeply influenced youth like Bhagat Singh, accelerating growth of organisations like HSRA. Udham Singh assassinated Michael O’Dwyer in 1940, symbolising delayed retributive justice. Moral and Intellectual Protest Rabindranath Tagore renounced Knighthood (1919), calling it protest against colonial inhumanity. Mahatma Gandhi returned Kaiser-i-Hind medal, marking rejection of British honours. C. Sankaran Nair resigned from Viceroy’s Council, exposing colonial injustice internationally. Conceptual Significance Represents collapse of “British moral legitimacy” in India, shifting perception from reformist empire to coercive colonial power. Demonstrates limits of repressive governance, as violence triggered stronger resistance instead of submission. Reinforced importance of civil liberties and rule of law, later embedded in Indian Constitution. Dimensions Political Dimension Converted Indian National Congress into a mass-based movement, expanding participation across regions and classes. Strengthened demand for Swaraj (self-rule) as ultimate political objective. Social Dimension United diverse sections of society—peasants, workers, middle class—under a shared anti-colonial identity. Created collective memory of colonial injustice, shaping nationalist consciousness. Ethical Dimension Highlights ethical failure of colonial state, violating principles of justice, human dignity, and proportionality. Raises enduring questions on state violence and accountability in governance. International Dimension Attracted global criticism of British rule, weakening its moral authority internationally. Became symbol of colonial oppression in global anti-imperialist discourse. Challenges in Historical Interpretation Official colonial narratives underreported casualties, leading to data ambiguity and contested historiography. Limited accountability of perpetrators reflects structural bias in colonial justice systems. Need to balance emotive memory with analytical historical understanding in academic discourse. Way Forward Strengthen commitment to constitutional values of liberty, equality, and dignity, preventing misuse of state power. Promote historical awareness and civic education, ensuring lessons of colonial repression remain relevant. Uphold human rights and accountability mechanisms in governance and security frameworks. Preserve historical sites like Jallianwala Bagh National Memorial for collective memory and reflection. Prelims Pointers Date: 13 April 1919 (Baisakhi) Act: Rowlatt Act, 1919 Commission: Hunter Commission (1919) Key figures: Reginald Dyer (executed massacre) Michael O’Dwyer (Punjab Lt. Governor) Udham Singh assassination: 1940 (London) 135th Birth Anniversary of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar Why in News? On 14 April 2026, India celebrated the 135th Birth Anniversary of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, with the President highlighting his role in social justice, constitutionalism, and inclusive democracy. Dr. B.R. Ambedkar remains central to India’s development discourse as chief architect of Constitution and pioneer of social justice, with continued relevance in debates on inequality, rights, and governance. Relevance GS Paper II: Constitution, Rights, Social Justice GS Paper IV: Ethics (Equality, Justice, Constitutional morality) Practice Question “Dr. B.R. Ambedkar’s vision of social democracy remains central to India’s constitutional and developmental discourse. Discuss.” (250 words) Static Background and Basics B. R. Ambedkar was born on 14 April 1891 at Mhow (Madhya Pradesh) into a socially disadvantaged Mahar caste. He earned doctorates from Columbia University (USA) and London School of Economics (UK), specialising in economics, law, and public finance. Served as Chairman of Drafting Committee (1947–49) and India’s first Law Minister (1947–51). Awarded Bharat Ratna in 1990 for his contribution to nation-building. Core Philosophy Advocated principles of Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity, inspired by French Revolution, as foundation of Indian democracy. Emphasised constitutional morality, rule of law, and institutional safeguards over majoritarian impulses. Viewed social democracy as essential complement to political democracy, warning against “life of contradictions”. Key Contributions Constitutional and Legal Contributions As Drafting Committee Chairman, ensured inclusion of Fundamental Rights, Directive Principles, and safeguards for marginalized communities. Described Article 32 (Right to Constitutional Remedies) as the “heart and soul” of the Constitution, ensuring enforceability of rights. Strengthened federalism, independent judiciary, and checks and balances in governance architecture. Social Justice and Anti-Caste Movements Led Mahad Satyagraha (1927) asserting right of untouchables to access public water sources, challenging caste-based exclusion. Spearheaded Temple Entry Movements (e.g., Kalaram Temple, 1930) promoting religious equality. Played key role in Poona Pact (1932) ensuring political representation through reserved seats instead of separate electorates. Economic Thought and Policy Authored “The Problem of the Rupee”, influencing establishment of Reserve Bank of India (1935) monetary framework. Advocated state-led industrialisation, labour welfare, and public finance reforms for inclusive economic development. Highlighted importance of water and energy resources, proposing river valley projects as economic drivers. Labour and Welfare Reforms As Labour Member (1942–46), introduced: 8-hour workday (reduction from 14 hours) Maternity benefits Equal pay for equal work Strengthened foundations of modern labour rights and welfare state in India. Women’s Empowerment Introduced Hindu Code Bill (1951) proposing equal rights in inheritance, marriage, and divorce, though later diluted. Advocated women’s education and participation as key to social transformation and equality. Religious and Ethical Contributions Embraced Buddhism on 14 October 1956 at Nagpur (Deekshabhoomi), initiating mass conversion movement. Founded Navayana Buddhism, focusing on social equality, rationality, and rejection of caste hierarchy. Institutions, Movements and Writings Founded organisations: Bahishkrit Hitakarini Sabha (1924) Independent Labour Party (1936) Scheduled Castes Federation (1942) Key writings: Annihilation of Caste (1936) The Untouchables (1948) The Buddha and His Dhamma (1957) Panchteerth   Janma Bhoomi (Mhow) – Birthplace Shiksha Bhoomi (London) – Education Deeksha Bhoomi (Nagpur) – Conversion to Buddhism Mahaparinirvan Bhoomi (Delhi) – Place of death (6 Dec 1956) Chaitya Bhoomi (Mumbai) – Cremation site Prelims Pointers Birth: 14 April 1891 (Mhow) Chairman, Drafting Committee: 1947–49 Article 32 → “Heart and Soul” Conversion to Buddhism: 14 October 1956 (Nagpur) Bharat Ratna: 1990 Rise in middle class vulnerability Why in News? Recent analysis highlights that despite rapid GDP growth and poverty reduction, India faces rising concerns over inequality, wage stagnation, and lack of upward economic mobility. Issue in Brief India’s poverty has declined significantly, yet a large population remains just above poverty line, forming a “vulnerable middle” with unstable incomes and limited mobility prospects. Raises question: Is growth translating into sustainable economic security and upward mobility? Relevance GS Paper III: Economy (Growth vs inequality, Employment, Informality) GS Paper II: Welfare policies, Inclusive growth Practice Question “Despite poverty reduction, a ‘vulnerable middle’ is emerging in India. Analyse the structural factors behind this phenomenon and suggest policy measures.” (250 words) Static Background and Basics Poverty measurement: World Bank poverty lines: $2.15/day (extreme poverty) $3.65/day (lower-middle income poverty) India follows multidimensional poverty approach (NITI Aayog MPI) incorporating health, education, and living standards. Economic development involves: Growth (increase in GDP) Structural transformation (labour shift to productive sectors) Mobility (sustained income progression) Key Data and Trends Share of population below lower-middle income poverty line declined from >50% (2010s) to ~30% (recent estimates). 94% informal workers earn <₹10,000/month, indicating limited capacity for savings and upward mobility. <10% workforce in formal sector, highlighting structural employment constraints. Manufacturing lost ~24 million jobs (2016–2021) despite economic growth. Agriculture employs ~46% workforce but contributes only ~18% of GDP, indicating low productivity trap. Top 1% captures >22% national income, while 271 billionaires hold ~25% of national wealth. Youth unemployment ~45%, graduate unemployment ~29%, indicating skill-employment mismatch. Household savings declined to ~5% of GDP, while debt is rising, especially unsecured borrowing. Conceptual Shift: Poverty vs Well-being Traditional poverty metrics measure threshold crossing, not distance from economic security or quality of life improvements. New approach (World Bank): Treats well-being as a spectrum, focusing on how far individuals are from a reasonable standard of living. Highlights that poverty reduction may mask stagnation in upward mobility. Dimensions Economic Dimension India’s growth is increasingly capital-intensive and service-driven, limiting large-scale job creation. Weak growth-employment linkage, resulting in “jobless growth” phenomenon. Stagnant real wages despite productivity growth indicate decoupling of income from output expansion. Structural Transformation Dimension Shift of labour from agriculture to manufacturing/services has slowed or reversed, weakening development trajectory. Manufacturing sector failed to absorb ~12 million annual labour force entrants, causing labour reversion to low-productivity agriculture. Indicates premature deindustrialisation risk. Labour Market Dimension Dominance of informal employment (~90%) leads to: Income volatility Lack of social security Gig economy and contractualisation further weaken job stability and income predictability. Inequality Dimension Rapid wealth accumulation at top coexists with stagnant incomes for majority, widening inequality. High concentration of wealth reduces aggregate demand and social mobility opportunities. Reflects Kuznets curve reversal concerns in developing economies. Social and Human Development Dimension Persistent malnutrition indicators: Child wasting: 18.7% Stunting: 35.5% Poor human capital outcomes limit future productivity and intergenerational mobility. Education no longer guarantees upward mobility due to weak job creation. Financial Dimension Rising household debt and falling savings indicate financial vulnerability and consumption smoothing through credit. Credit increasingly used for basic consumption rather than investment, reflecting structural stress. Governance Dimension Welfare programmes (DBT, PDS, financial inclusion) have reduced extreme deprivation, improving last-mile delivery efficiency. However, welfare alone cannot ensure long-term mobility without employment generation and productivity growth. Core Problem: “Vulnerable Middle” Large population has crossed poverty threshold but remains: Economically insecure Income volatile Lacking upward mobility pathways Growth is preventing fall into poverty, but not enabling rise into stable middle class. Challenges Structural constraints in manufacturing and labour-intensive sectors limit job creation. Weak linkage between productivity growth and wage growth undermines income gains. High informality reduces effectiveness of social protection and labour regulations. Inequality and regional disparities restrict inclusive growth outcomes. Measurement limitations obscure true welfare conditions above poverty line. Way Forward Promote labour-intensive manufacturing (PLI redesign, MSME support) to generate large-scale employment. Strengthen formalisation of workforce through labour reforms and social security expansion. Enhance human capital investment in education, health, and nutrition to improve productivity. Improve wage-productivity linkage, ensuring fair income distribution. Expand social protection systems for vulnerable middle, not just poor (insurance, income support). Adopt multidimensional and spectrum-based welfare metrics for better policy targeting. Prelims Pointers Poverty lines: $2.15/day (extreme) $3.65/day (lower-middle income) Informal workforce in India: ~90% Agriculture: ~46% workforce, ~18% GDP MPI: Multidimensional poverty index by NITI Aayog 9th Indian Ocean Conference (IOC) & Landlocked Countries: Key Takeaways Why in News? On 11 April 2026, at the 9th Indian Ocean Conference (Mauritius), Nepal highlighted rights of landlocked countries to access seas under international law, stressing inclusive maritime governance. Issue in Brief The discussion centred on Indian Ocean governance, maritime security, and inclusivity, with emphasis on ensuring equitable participation of landlocked states in global maritime economy. Relevance GS Paper II: International Relations (Indian Ocean Region, Neighbourhood policy) GS Paper I: Geography (Landlocked states, connectivity) GS Paper III: Security (Maritime security) Practice Question “Discuss the significance of inclusive maritime governance in the Indian Ocean Region, particularly for landlocked countries.” (250 words) About Indian Ocean Conference (IOC) The Indian Ocean Conference (IOC) is a flagship consultative forum launched in 2016 by India Foundation to promote dialogue among Indian Ocean Region countries. The 9th IOC (2026) saw participation from 40+ countries, focusing on regional cooperation, maritime security, and economic connectivity. It aligns with India’s SAGAR vision (Security and Growth for All in the Region), promoting inclusive and cooperative regional architecture. IOC serves as a platform to address: Maritime security threats Trade and connectivity challenges Emerging geopolitical issues in IOR Significance of IOC Provides a multilateral platform for Indo-Pacific dialogue, bridging interests of littoral, island, and landlocked states. Addresses strategic chokepoints and supply chain vulnerabilities, crucial for global energy and trade flows. Promotes cooperative security frameworks against piracy, terrorism, and trafficking in Indian Ocean Region. Strengthens India’s role as a regional leader and net security provider in maritime domain. Landlocked Countries: Key Perspective Landlocked countries lack direct sea access but have legal rights under UNCLOS to access high seas through transit states. Around 44 landlocked countries globally, many facing higher trade costs and logistical disadvantages (often 2× coastal countries). Their participation in maritime economy depends on: Transit infrastructure Regional cooperation Nepal’s statement reinforces principle that access to seas is a right, not a privilege, under international law. Relevance for India India plays a key role in providing connectivity access to neighbours like Nepal and Bhutan through ports and corridors. Strengthens India’s Neighbourhood First policy and regional integration initiatives (e.g., BBIN). Supports India’s strategic goal of building an inclusive Indo-Pacific order, countering exclusive geopolitical blocs. Challenges Landlocked countries remain dependent on transit states’ infrastructure and political relations, creating vulnerabilities in trade access. Rising geopolitical competition in IOR may undermine rules-based maritime cooperation frameworks. Limited institutional mechanisms to fully operationalise rights of landlocked states under international law. Way Forward Strengthen regional connectivity corridors and port access agreements for landlocked countries. Promote inclusive maritime governance under UNCLOS framework, ensuring equitable participation. Enhance multilateral cooperation through platforms like IOC to address shared regional challenges. Prelims Pointers IOC launched: 2016 Participation: 40+ countries UNCLOS: Provides rights of landlocked states (Part X) Landlocked countries globally: ~44 Need stronger social protection for a changing world of work: ILO Why in News? On 14 April 2026, the International Labour Organization released report “Universal Social Protection in Changing Labour Markets”, calling for expansion of social protection to all workers. Issue in Brief Rapid labour market transformation driven by gig economy, informality, automation, and climate change is exposing workers to new vulnerabilities. The report emphasises need for universal, inclusive, and adaptive social protection systems covering all forms of employment. Relevance GS Paper II: Welfare schemes, Social justice GS Paper III: Economy (Labour, Informality, Employment) Practice Question “Universal social protection is essential in the era of gig economy and labour market transformation. Examine.” (250 words) Static Background and Basics Social Protection (Social Security) refers to policies ensuring income security, healthcare access, and protection from life-cycle risks such as unemployment, illness, and old age. The International Labour Organization identifies 9 core components: Child benefits, maternity, unemployment, employment injury, sickness, health care, old age, disability, survivors’ benefits Globally, only ~47% population covered by at least one social protection benefit (ILO estimates), indicating significant coverage gaps. Key Findings of ILO Report Social security contributions accounted for 18.8% of total taxation and 5.7% of global GDP (2019), highlighting their fiscal importance. In Europe and Central Asia, contributions exceed 27% of total taxation, reflecting mature welfare states. Expansion of social insurance to agriculture, domestic work, MSMEs, and gig workers improves income security and labour market equity. Social protection systems must shift from poverty alleviation to vulnerability prevention, ensuring proactive risk management. Changing Nature of Work  Rise of gig economy, platform work, contractualisation, and self-employment is weakening traditional employer-employee relationships. Informal sector accounts for ~90% of India’s workforce, limiting access to formal social security mechanisms. Technological disruption and automation are increasing job insecurity and skill obsolescence risks. Dimensions Governance and Institutional Dimension Universal social protection strengthens state capacity to manage economic shocks, including pandemics, financial crises, and climate disasters. Acts as a tool for inclusive governance, ensuring coverage beyond formal sector workers to informal and gig economy participants. Requires integration of digital platforms, labour registries, and welfare databases for efficient delivery. Economic Dimension Social protection stabilises aggregate demand by ensuring income security during economic downturns, acting as an automatic stabiliser. Enhances labour productivity and human capital formation, as workers are more willing to invest in skills when protected against risks. Reduces inequality, supporting inclusive and sustainable economic growth. Social and Ethical Dimension Promotes equity and social justice, ensuring vulnerable groups such as women, informal workers, and migrants receive adequate protection. Social insurance enables risk pooling and redistribution, reducing disparities between high-income and low-income groups. Addresses gender inequality, as women face higher employment insecurity and unpaid care burdens. Labour and Employment Dimension Extending coverage to non-standard workers (gig, part-time, self-employed) is essential in modern labour markets. Encourages formalisation of workforce, as access to benefits incentivises registration and compliance. Supports labour mobility by ensuring portable social security benefits across jobs and regions. Technology and Future of Work Dimension Digital platforms can enable universal registration, benefit delivery, and portability, especially for gig and platform workers. However, platformisation also creates fragmented employment relationships, complicating contribution-based social insurance systems. Requires innovative financing models such as platform contributions and hybrid insurance systems. Climate and Resilience Dimension Social protection acts as a shock absorber against climate risks, supporting workers affected by disasters, crop losses, and displacement. Critical for just transition policies, ensuring workers in fossil fuel sectors are supported during green transition. Enhances economic resilience by reducing vulnerability to systemic shocks. India-Specific Context India has expanded social protection through schemes such as: PM Jan Dhan Yojana (financial inclusion) PMJJBY, PMSBY (insurance) Atal Pension Yojana (old-age security) e-Shram portal (informal worker database) However, challenges persist: Fragmented schemes Low coverage of gig workers Limited adequacy of benefits Challenges and Gaps Large informal workforce limits contributory social insurance coverage, especially in developing economies like India. Fiscal constraints restrict expansion of universal social protection, particularly in low-income countries. Fragmented welfare systems create duplication, inefficiency, and exclusion errors. Lack of portability and interoperability affects migrant workers and gig economy participants. Gender gaps persist due to unequal labour force participation and unpaid care responsibilities. Way Forward Move toward universal social protection floors, ensuring minimum income security and healthcare access for all citizens. Integrate databases like e-Shram, Aadhaar, and labour registries for targeted and efficient benefit delivery. Expand coverage to gig and platform workers, including mandatory contributions from aggregators. Strengthen contributory social insurance systems while complementing them with tax-funded schemes for vulnerable groups. Promote portability of benefits across states and employment types. Align social protection policies with SDG 1 (No Poverty) and SDG 8 (Decent Work). Prelims Pointers ILO: Established in 1919, part of UN system Social protection includes 9 components (child, maternity, unemployment, etc.) Social security contributions: 18.8% of taxation globally (2019) Informal workforce in India: ~90% of total workforce South West Monsoon rainfall to be below normal or deficient in 2026 Why in News? On 13 April 2026, the India Meteorological Department released its first Long Range Forecast, predicting below normal monsoon (92% of LPA) for 2026. Issue in Brief Southwest Monsoon (June–September) is projected at 92% of Long Period Average (LPA = 868.6 mm), indicating below normal rainfall (~800 mm ±5%). High probability (35%) of deficient rainfall (<90% LPA) compared to climatological probability of 16%, signalling elevated drought risk. Relevance GS Paper I: Geography (Monsoon system, Climatology) GS Paper III: Agriculture, Disaster management, Climate change Practice Question “Monsoon variability poses significant challenges to India’s agricultural and economic stability. Analyse the factors influencing monsoon and suggest adaptation strategies.” (250 words) Static Background and Basics: Southwest Monsoon contributes ~75% of India’s annual rainfall, critical for agriculture, water resources, and overall economic stability. Driven by land-sea thermal contrast, ITCZ shift, and cross-equatorial winds, bringing moisture-laden winds from Indian Ocean to Indian subcontinent. Long Period Average (LPA) is calculated over 1971–2020 baseline, currently 868.6 mm, used for classifying monsoon performance. Classification of Monsoon (IMD Criteria) Normal: 96–104% of LPA Below Normal: 90–95% of LPA Deficient: <90% of LPA 2026 forecast (92%) → Below Normal category, with significant downside risk of deficiency. Key Climate Drivers Affecting 2026 Monsoon El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) Expected transition from weak La Niña → ENSO neutral (April–June 2026) → El Niño conditions during SWM. El Niño (warming of Equatorial Pacific) weakens monsoon circulation, reducing rainfall over Indian subcontinent. Historically associated with drought years (e.g., 2002, 2009), though exceptions exist due to interaction with other factors. Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) IOD currently neutral, expected to turn positive by late monsoon (2026). Positive IOD (warmer western Indian Ocean) enhances monsoon rainfall, potentially offsetting El Niño effects partially. Acts as a regional compensatory mechanism against Pacific-driven anomalies. Eurasian Snow Cover Below-normal snow cover (Jan–March 2026) over Eurasia supports stronger monsoon circulation, as reduced albedo increases land heating. Acts as a favourable factor for rainfall, counterbalancing negative ENSO influence. Climate Change Factor Post-2000 trends show increased atmospheric moisture due to global warming, leading to extreme rainfall events rather than uniform distribution. Enhances spatial variability, with some regions experiencing floods while others face drought-like conditions. Probability Distribution (IMD Forecast) Deficient rainfall (<90% LPA): 35% probability (vs normal 16%) Below normal (90–95%): 31% probability Normal (96–104%): 27% probability Above normal: 6% | Excess: 1% Indicates skewed probability toward weaker monsoon outcomes. Dimensions Agricultural Dimension Around 60% of Indian agriculture is rainfed, making monsoon performance critical for Kharif crops like rice, pulses, and oilseeds. Below-normal rainfall risks lower sowing, reduced yields, and income shocks, especially for small and marginal farmers. Pre-monsoon losses due to hailstorms and flooding (2026) compound vulnerability, creating double stress scenario. Economic Dimension Weak monsoon can reduce agricultural GDP growth, impacting overall economic performance due to strong rural demand linkages. Leads to higher food inflation, especially in cereals, pulses, and vegetables, affecting macroeconomic stability. Increases pressure on fiscal resources through subsidies, MSP procurement, and relief measures. Water Resource Dimension Below-normal monsoon reduces reservoir levels, groundwater recharge, and river flows, affecting irrigation and drinking water availability. Raises risk of urban water stress and inter-state water conflicts. Disaster and Environmental Dimension Increased variability due to climate change may cause localized extreme rainfall events, leading to floods alongside drought conditions. Enhances risk of heatwaves, droughts, and land degradation, particularly in semi-arid regions. Governance and Policy Dimension Requires coordinated response involving: IMD forecasting Agricultural advisories Water management strategies Tests effectiveness of schemes like PMFBY (crop insurance) and PMKSY (irrigation). Challenges Forecast uncertainty due to complex interactions between ENSO, IOD, and climate change reduces prediction reliability. High dependence on monsoon exposes structural weakness in irrigation coverage (~50% net sown area irrigated). Climate change is increasing frequency of extreme weather events, complicating traditional monsoon patterns. Limited adaptive capacity among small farmers increases vulnerability to rainfall variability. Way Forward Expand irrigation infrastructure and micro-irrigation (PMKSY) to reduce monsoon dependence. Strengthen climate-resilient agriculture, including drought-resistant crop varieties and diversification. Improve forecast accuracy using AI and climate modelling, enhancing early warning systems. Promote water conservation and groundwater management through community-based approaches. Strengthen crop insurance (PMFBY) and direct income support mechanisms to protect farmer incomes. Integrate climate adaptation into agricultural policy, aligning with India’s National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC). Prelims Pointers LPA (1971–2020): 868.6 mm ENSO: El Niño → weak monsoon La Niña → strong monsoon IOD: Positive → enhances rainfall Negative → suppresses rainfall Southwest Monsoon contributes ~75% of India’s rainfall