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Mar 7, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

Content Foundations of Women Empowerment Key Interventions for Women’s Economic Advancement Foundations of Women Empowerment Conceptual & Developmental Foundations Women empowerment refers to enhancing agency, access to resources, participation in decision-making, and dignity for women. According to UNDP, gender equality directly improves human capital, productivity, and intergenerational welfare outcomes. India’s empowerment approach follows a life-cycle framework—beginning from early childhood nutrition, progressing through education, skills, employment, safety, and leadership participation, ensuring continuous capability development across life stages. According to World Bank estimates, closing gender gaps in labour force participation could increase India’s GDP by nearly 27%, highlighting empowerment as both a social justice imperative and economic growth strategy. Women constitute 48.4% of India’s population (Census projections) but female labour force participation remains around 37% (Periodic Labour Force Survey 2023-24), indicating structural barriers in education, safety, mobility, and employment. The Ministry of Women and Child Development (MWCD) leads policy convergence through umbrella missions such as Mission Shakti, Poshan 2.0, and Mission Vatsalya, integrating welfare, protection, and empowerment interventions. Relevance GS Paper I – Society Gender equality, status of women and social empowerment. Structural barriers such as patriarchy, gender bias, and unequal access to education and health. GS Paper II – Governance / Social Justice Government programmes for women and child development. Institutional frameworks such as Mission Shakti, POSHAN Abhiyaan, Beti Bachao Beti Padhao. Practice Question Q. Women empowerment requires a life-cycle approach integrating health, education, safety, and economic participation. Examine the role of government interventions in strengthening the foundational pillars of women empowerment in India. (250 words) Nutrition and Health: Biological Foundation of Empowerment 1. Saksham Anganwadi & POSHAN 2.0 Mission Saksham Anganwadi and Poshan 2.0 integrates nutrition support, early childhood care, and maternal health services for children (0-6 years), adolescent girls, pregnant women, and lactating mothers through strengthened Anganwadi infrastructure. Anganwadi Centres (AWCs) provide supplementary nutrition, pre-school education, health check-ups, immunisation, and nutrition awareness, acting as grassroots human development institutions under Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS). Poshan Vatikas (Nutri-gardens) promote diet diversity and micronutrient intake, enabling access to fruits, vegetables, and medicinal plants, thereby improving community nutrition resilience and food security. 2. POSHAN Abhiyaan POSHAN Abhiyaan (2018) aims to reduce stunting, undernutrition, anaemia, and low birth weight through multi-sectoral convergence across health, sanitation, education, and women development programmes. The Poshan Tracker digital platform enables real-time monitoring of beneficiaries, Anganwadi services, and nutrition indicators, improving data-driven governance and last-mile service delivery accountability. 3. Scheme for Adolescent Girls (SAG) SAG targets girls aged 14-18 years, focusing on nutrition supplementation, Iron-Folic Acid (IFA) distribution, health education, and skill training, aiming to break intergenerational cycles of malnutrition and anaemia. 4. PM POSHAN (Mid-Day Meal) PM POSHAN Scheme provides one hot cooked nutritious meal daily to students in Classes I–VIII, improving attendance, retention, and cognitive outcomes, particularly benefiting girls from low-income households. 5. Maternal Health Interventions Pradhan Mantri Matru Vandana Yojana (PMMVY) provides ₹5,000 maternity benefits for the first child and ₹6,000 for a second girl child, supporting maternal nutrition, wage compensation, and positive girl child attitudes. Janani Suraksha Yojana (JSY) and Janani Shishu Suraksha Karyakram (JSSK) ensure free institutional delivery services, diagnostics, drugs, and transport, reducing maternal and neonatal mortality risks. 6. Health Outcomes: Evidence of Impact Maternal Mortality Ratio (MMR) declined from 130 (2014-16) to 93 per 100,000 live births (2019-21) according to Sample Registration System (SRS) data. Under-five mortality rate reduced from 48 to 28 per 1,000 live births (2015-2023), while neonatal mortality fell from 28 to 17, according to UN Inter-agency Group for Child Mortality Estimation (2025). Education & Skills: Capability Foundation 1. Beti Bachao Beti Padhao (BBBP) BBBP (2015) addresses declining Sex Ratio at Birth (SRB), girl child education, and societal gender biases through multi-ministerial convergence across WCD, Health, and Education ministries. Sex Ratio at Birth improved from 918 (2014-15) to 929 (2024-25) according to Health Management Information System (HMIS), reflecting gradual attitudinal change and enforcement measures. 2. Kasturba Gandhi Balika Vidyalaya (KGBV) KGBVs provide residential schooling for girls aged 10-18 from socio-economically disadvantaged groups (SC, ST, OBC), particularly in educationally backward blocks to prevent dropout and early marriage. ₹28,841.96 lakh allocated (FY 2024-25) for 3,564 ICT labs and 3,655 smart classrooms under Samagra Shiksha, enabling digital learning and STEM exposure for girls. 3. Women in Higher Education Female Gross Enrolment Ratio (GER) in higher education has steadily increased, signalling improved gender parity in tertiary education and research participation. Women’s PhD enrolment increased by 135.6% between 2014-15 and 2022-23, adding 64,724 additional female researchers, indicating rising female presence in advanced academic spaces. 4. Scholarship Support Central Sector Scholarship Scheme reserves 50% scholarships for girls, enabling meritorious students from economically weaker backgrounds to pursue higher education. National PG Scholarship (2023-24) provides ₹1.5 lakh annual financial support, with 30% seats reserved for women, supporting female participation in STEM and humanities research. 5. AICTE Pragati Scholarship AICTE Pragati Scholarship offers 10,000 scholarships annually to girl students in technical education, strengthening female participation in engineering and technology disciplines. 6. Women in STEM Vigyan Jyoti Scheme supports girls from rural areas in Classes IX–XII, providing science camps, mentoring, laboratory exposure, and counselling, promoting gender equity in STEM careers. Supernumerary seats in IITs and NITs increased female enrolment from below 10% to above 20%, addressing gender imbalance in elite engineering institutions. 7. Skill Development: NAVYA Initiative NAVYA Programme (2025) trains adolescent girls aged 16-18 under PMKVY 4.0, focusing on digital marketing, AI services, cybersecurity, and green jobs. The pilot covers 27 aspirational and North-Eastern districts across 19 states, aiming to train 3,850 girls, with 671 girls already trained by December 2025. Safety & Security: Institutional Foundation 1. Mission Shakti Mission Shakti is the umbrella programme integrating women safety, protection, and empowerment, structured into Sambal (safety) and Samarthya (empowerment) sub-schemes. 2. Sambal Components One Stop Centres (Sakhi Centres) provide integrated support services—medical aid, legal assistance, police facilitation, psycho-social counselling, and temporary shelter for survivors of violence. Women Helpline (181) offers 24×7 crisis support, counselling, and emergency referrals, linking victims with police, healthcare facilities, and legal assistance networks. Nari Adalat initiative promotes community-based dispute resolution mechanisms, addressing domestic violence and harassment through mediation, awareness, and social accountability. 3. Samarthya Components Shakti Sadan offers shelter, rehabilitation, and counselling for women rescued from trafficking or violence, supporting reintegration into society. Sakhi Niwas (Working Women Hostels) provide safe and affordable accommodation, addressing urban mobility constraints faced by working women. National Creche Scheme (Palna) provides day-care facilities for children aged 6 months to 6 years, enabling women’s workforce participation. 4. SHe-Box Portal SHe-Box (Sexual Harassment electronic Box) launched in August 2024, acts as a centralised digital platform to file and track workplace harassment complaints under the POSH Act, 2013. The portal enables real-time tracking, automated complaint forwarding to Internal Committees, multilingual interface, and confidentiality safeguards, improving enforcement of workplace safety laws. Child Protection Ecosystem Mission Vatsalya Mission Vatsalya focuses on child welfare, rehabilitation, and protection, supporting children affected by abuse, trafficking, neglect, and loss of parental care. It operates through Child Welfare Committees (CWCs), Juvenile Justice Boards (JJBs), Child Care Institutions (CCIs), and adoption agencies, ensuring institutional and family-based care. Child Helpline integrated with ERSS-112 is operational in 728 districts (2026), enabling a unified national emergency child protection response mechanism. Governance & Digital Foundations Digital governance platforms such as Poshan Tracker, SHe-Box, and Mission Vatsalya Portal improve real-time monitoring, grievance redressal, and scheme convergence across ministries. Convergence across MWCD, Ministry of Health & Family Welfare, Ministry of Education, and Ministry of Skill Development ensures multi-sectoral policy integration for women empowerment. Broader Developmental Impact Women empowerment strengthens human capital formation, demographic dividend utilisation, and inclusive economic growth, aligning with SDG-5 (Gender Equality) and SDG-3 (Health). Investments in women’s health, education, and safety produce intergenerational development gains, improving nutrition, schooling outcomes, and productivity of future generations. Prelims Pointers POSHAN Abhiyaan launched: 8 March 2018 Mission Shakti components: Sambal and Samarthya PMMVY benefit: ₹5,000 first child, ₹6,000 second girl child SHe-Box: centralised portal for POSH Act complaints (2024) Mission Vatsalya: umbrella scheme for child protection systems Key Interventions for Women’s Economic Advancement Conceptual Foundation: Women’s Economic Empowerment Women’s economic empowerment refers to enabling women to control productive resources, access markets, participate in labour markets, and make economic decisions. According to the World Bank, closing gender gaps could increase global GDP by nearly 20%. India’s empowerment strategy aligns with SDG-5 (Gender Equality) and SDG-8 (Decent Work and Economic Growth), focusing on financial inclusion, entrepreneurship, technology adoption, and market access for women, particularly in rural and informal sectors. Women constitute nearly 48.4% of India’s population, yet female labour force participation remains around 37% (PLFS 2023-24), indicating persistent structural barriers such as credit access, skill gaps, mobility constraints, and unpaid care work. Over the past decade, India has adopted a women-led development approach, integrating financial inclusion, digital infrastructure, community institutions, and entrepreneurship programmes to transform women from welfare beneficiaries to economic stakeholders. Relevance GS Paper II – Governance Implementation of schemes such as DAY-NRLM, PMJDY, PM Mudra Yojana, Stand-Up India, PM SVANidhi. Institutional support for women entrepreneurship and rural livelihoods. GS Paper I – Society Gender inequality in labour markets and barriers to women’s economic participation. Practice Question   Q. Women’s economic empowerment is essential for inclusive growth and sustainable development. Analyse the role of financial inclusion, entrepreneurship programmes, and community institutions in enhancing women’s economic participation in India. (250 words) Financial Security for Girls Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana (SSY) Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana, launched in January 2015 under Beti Bachao Beti Padhao, is a long-term small savings scheme encouraging families to invest in education and future financial security of the girl child. The scheme provides 8.2% annual interest (2025), among the highest in small savings instruments, with tax exemption under Section 80C and tax-free maturity benefits. Deposits range from ₹250 to ₹1.5 lakh annually, with deposits allowed for 15 years and maturity after 21 years, ensuring long-term financial planning for girls’ education and marriage. As of December 2025, the scheme has accumulated over ₹3.33 lakh crore in deposits, demonstrating widespread adoption and strengthening household-level financial security for girls. Rural Livelihoods and Community Institutions Deendayal Antyodaya Yojana – National Rural Livelihoods Mission (DAY-NRLM) DAY-NRLM, implemented by the Ministry of Rural Development, mobilises rural women into Self-Help Groups (SHGs) to promote financial inclusion, livelihood diversification, and entrepreneurship development. The mission has mobilised over 10.05 crore rural women across 90.90 lakh SHGs, forming one of the largest women-led community institutional networks in the world. SHGs demonstrate repayment rates exceeding 98%, reflecting strong financial discipline, peer accountability, and sustainable credit ecosystems. Bank Sakhis, Krishi Sakhis, and Pashu Sakhis act as trained community resource persons providing banking support, agricultural extension, and livestock advisory services. Women farmers (Mahila Kisans) receive training in sustainable agriculture and productivity enhancement, benefiting over 4.6 crore women as of October 2025. Through the Start-up Village Entrepreneurship Programme (SVEP), more than 5.88 lakh rural enterprises have been supported in sectors like food processing, handicrafts, and agro-based industries. Technology-Driven Livelihoods NaMo Drone Didi Scheme NaMo Drone Didi Yojana empowers women SHGs with drone technology for precision agriculture services such as fertiliser spraying and crop monitoring, introducing advanced technology into rural farming systems. The scheme provides 80% central financial assistance (up to ₹8 lakh) for drone procurement along with technical training for drone pilots and maintenance assistants. Women SHGs generate rental income by providing drone services to farmers, improving agricultural productivity, reducing input costs, and creating new technology-based rural livelihoods. Women-Led Entrepreneurship Lakhpati Didi Initiative Lakhpati Didi refers to Self-Help Group members earning more than ₹1 lakh annual household income through diversified livelihood activities supported by DAY-NRLM. The government has set a target to create 6 crore Lakhpati Didis, transforming women from subsistence workers to entrepreneurs and rural economic leaders. A National Entrepreneurship Campaign (2026) aims to train 50 lakh SHG members through 50,000 Community Resource Persons, strengthening women-led enterprise ecosystems. Digital tools like LokOS App and Digital Aajeevika Register track real-time income data and monitor progress of SHG entrepreneurs across India. Market Access and Public Procurement SHE-Mart Initiative SHE-Mart, announced in the Union Budget 2026-27, proposes community-owned retail outlets in every district to promote marketing of SHG-produced goods and rural women’s products. The initiative aims to enable women engaged in agriculture, livestock, and handicrafts to transition from subsistence activities to market-oriented entrepreneurship. Womaniya Initiative (Government e-Marketplace – GeM) Womaniya Initiative, launched in January 2019, promotes participation of women-led Micro and Small Enterprises (MSEs) and SHGs in government procurement markets through GeM. Over 2 lakh women-led enterprises have registered on GeM, securing procurement orders worth ₹80,000 crore (4.7% of total GeM order value) as of January 2026. Partnerships with SEWA Bharat, UN Women, Usha Silai School, and Women’s Collective Forum provide training, compliance assistance, and market linkages. The initiative addresses the triple barriers faced by women entrepreneurs—access to markets, finance, and value addition. Financial Inclusion and Credit Access Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY) PMJDY, launched in August 2014, is the world’s largest financial inclusion programme, enabling universal access to bank accounts, insurance, pensions, and credit facilities. Women constitute a significant share of over 50 crore Jan-Dhan accounts, enabling direct benefit transfers (DBT) and strengthening financial autonomy. Key features include zero-balance accounts, RuPay debit cards, accidental insurance up to ₹2 lakh, and overdraft facility up to ₹10,000. Pradhan Mantri Mudra Yojana (PMMY) PMMY (2015) provides collateral-free loans up to ₹10 lakh, recently expanded to ₹20 lakh under the Tarun Plus category, for micro-entrepreneurs. A majority of Mudra loan accounts are held by women entrepreneurs, enabling them to establish micro-enterprises in services, manufacturing, and trade sectors. Stand-Up India Scheme Stand-Up India (2016) promotes entrepreneurship among women and SC/ST communities by providing bank loans ranging from ₹10 lakh to ₹1 crore. Each bank branch must provide at least one loan to a woman borrower, encouraging inclusive credit expansion for new enterprises. Urban Livelihood Support PM Street Vendor’s AtmaNirbhar Nidhi (PM SVANidhi) PM SVANidhi (2020) provides collateral-free working capital loans to street vendors, many of whom are women engaged in informal urban livelihoods. Vendors receive initial loans of ₹15,000, followed by ₹25,000 and ₹50,000 tranches, with 7% interest subsidy and digital transaction incentives. As of December 2025, more than 1.46 crore loans have been sanctioned, supporting livelihood recovery after the COVID-19 pandemic. Digital Governance & Economic Inclusion Digital tools such as GeM marketplace, LokOS platform, Poshan Tracker, and DBT architecture enable transparent service delivery, financial tracking, and market access for women entrepreneurs. Integration with UPI, Aadhaar, and Jan-Dhan accounts (JAM Trinity) strengthens financial inclusion and reduces leakages in welfare delivery. Economic and Developmental Impact Women-led entrepreneurship strengthens rural incomes, local value chains, and employment generation, contributing to inclusive economic growth and poverty reduction. Empowering women economically enhances household spending on education, health, and nutrition, producing strong intergenerational development gains. Women-centric development aligns with India’s Viksit Bharat 2047 vision, ensuring women participate equally in innovation, enterprise, governance, and economic growth. Prelims Pointers Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana launched: 22 January 2015 DAY-NRLM mobilised: 10.05 crore women in 90.90 lakh SHGs Womaniya Initiative: launched 2019 under GeM PM SVANidhi loan tranches: ₹15,000 → ₹25,000 → ₹50,000 Stand-Up India loans: ₹10 lakh – ₹1 crore

Mar 7, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Content Rights, justice, action for India’s women farmers Balancing innovation with women’s digital safety Rights, justice, action for India’s women farmers Context: International Women’s Day 2026 & Global Focus International Women’s Day (8 March 2026) emphasises “Rights, Justice and Action for Women and Girls”, aligning with the International Year of the Woman Farmer, highlighting women’s central role in agriculture, food systems and rural economies. In India, women constitute nearly 75% of the female rural workforce and contribute significantly to crop production, livestock management and food processing, yet their formal recognition as farmers remains limited. According to Agriculture Census 2015-16, only 13.9% of operational landholdings are owned by women, despite their dominant role in agricultural labour and farm management. This gap between women’s agricultural contribution and their ownership of productive assets creates structural barriers to credit access, insurance, extension services and agricultural subsidies. Relevance GS Paper I – Indian Society Feminisation of agriculture and gender inequality in rural livelihoods. Structural barriers faced by women farmers in land ownership, labour recognition and decision-making. GS Paper II – Governance / Social Justice Implementation of National Food Security Act (2013), nutrition programmes and gender-sensitive policy frameworks. Land rights reforms under Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act, 2005 and farmer recognition policies. GS Paper III – Agriculture / Food Security Role of women in agricultural productivity, food security and sustainable food systems. Linkages between nutrition-sensitive agriculture, climate resilience and rural development. Practice Question Q. Despite playing a central role in agricultural production, women farmers in India face structural barriers in land ownership, access to resources and policy recognition. Examine the challenges faced by women farmers and suggest policy measures to strengthen their economic and social empowerment. (250 words) Structural Exclusion: Land Ownership and Legal Recognition Despite legal reforms granting equal inheritance rights to daughters under the Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act, 2005, women’s land ownership remains low due to patrilineal inheritance norms, social pressures and lack of awareness. In many rural households, land titles are registered in men’s names, even though women manage daily farming operations, labour supervision and household food provisioning. Without formal land titles, women farmers often lack eligibility for institutional credit, crop insurance schemes, irrigation subsidies, and agricultural input support programmes. This results in systemic exclusion embedded in programme design, where eligibility for benefits is linked to land ownership rather than agricultural activity. Feminisation of Agriculture Increasing male migration to urban areas has resulted in the “feminisation of agriculture”, where women assume greater responsibility for cultivation, farm management and food security. However, feminisation has not translated into economic empowerment, as women often lack decision-making power, access to productive resources and institutional recognition. Women farmers face high work burdens, balancing productive agricultural labour and reproductive household responsibilities, leading to time poverty and physical strain. Limited access to drudgery-reducing technologies, mechanisation and irrigation infrastructure further intensifies labour burdens for women in agriculture.  Nutrition Crisis Among Women Farmers India continues to face a serious nutrition challenge among women, with anaemia affecting around 57% of women aged 15–49 (NFHS-5). Heavy agricultural workloads combined with poor dietary diversity and micronutrient deficiencies result in declining health outcomes for women farmers. Diets in many rural households remain cereal-dominated, with insufficient consumption of pulses, fruits, vegetables and animal-source foods, leading to hidden hunger and micronutrient deficiencies. Maternal undernutrition and anaemia contribute to low birth weight, stunting and impaired cognitive development in children, creating intergenerational cycles of malnutrition. Right to Food Framework India’s National Food Security Act (NFSA), 2013 provides legal entitlements for subsidised food grains, maternity benefits and supplementary nutrition for women and children. Key food security programmes include Public Distribution System (PDS), Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS), and PM POSHAN (school meals). Several states have expanded the framework by including millets, fortified grains and local food items to improve dietary diversity and nutrition outcomes. Despite these measures, anaemia trends remain alarming, indicating gaps in nutritional diversity, programme quality and behavioural awareness. Governance Gaps and Implementation Challenges Many food and agricultural programmes remain cereal-centric, limiting access to nutrient-dense foods such as pulses, vegetables and animal protein. Frontline workers such as Anganwadi workers and ASHAs are often overburdened, affecting the quality and outreach of nutrition programmes. Digitalisation of welfare delivery systems improves transparency but may exclude women lacking digital literacy, documentation or internet access. The absence of gender-disaggregated agricultural data limits evidence-based policymaking and underestimates the economic contribution of women farmers. Key Priorities for Women Farmers’ Empowerment 1. Recognition of Women as Farmers Policies must adopt the definition of farmer under the National Policy for Farmers (2007), which recognises farmers based on agricultural activities rather than land ownership. Collecting gender-disaggregated agricultural data can improve programme design and enable targeted support for women cultivators, sharecroppers, and agricultural labourers. 2. Strengthening Land and Resource Rights Promoting joint spousal land titles and implementing equal inheritance provisions can improve women’s ownership of productive assets. Incentivising land and housing registration in women’s names through fiscal benefits can enhance their legal and economic security. Strengthening women’s participation in management of common lands, water bodies and forest resources can expand their access to productive assets. 3. Nutrition-Sensitive Agriculture Agricultural procurement policies should prioritise nutri-cereals, pulses, fruits and vegetables, particularly from small-scale women farmers. Integrating these foods into PDS, Anganwadi nutrition programmes and school meals can simultaneously improve farmer incomes and dietary diversity. Community initiatives such as kitchen gardens, women’s seed banks and local food planning can strengthen nutrition-sensitive farming systems. 4. Technology and Extension Services Access to labour-saving technologies and mechanisation can reduce drudgery and improve productivity for women farmers. Expanding gender-responsive agricultural extension services ensures women receive training, climate-resilient farming knowledge and market information. Improved access to digital advisory platforms, climate information and agricultural credit can strengthen women’s decision-making power. Institutional and Policy Perspectives Prof. M.S. Swaminathan emphasised the “four Cs of agriculture” — conservation, cultivation, consumption and commercialisation, arguing women must control all stages of agri-food systems. Evidence from M.S. Swaminathan Research Foundation (MSSRF) shows that women-led agriculture promotes climate resilience, biodiversity conservation and nutrition-sensitive farming practices. Global experiences of the World Food Programme (WFP) demonstrate that placing women at the centre of food security programmes significantly improves household nutrition and community welfare. Developmental Significance Empowering women farmers strengthens food security, agricultural productivity and rural livelihoods, contributing to SDG-2 (Zero Hunger) and SDG-5 (Gender Equality). When women gain land rights, access to credit and decision-making power, household spending on nutrition, education and health improves significantly. Gender equality in agriculture is therefore critical for achieving sustainable food systems and inclusive rural development in India. Prelims Pointers Agriculture Census (2015-16): Women own 13.9% operational landholdings. NFHS-5: Anaemia among women aged 15-49 is 57%. NFSA 2013: Provides legal entitlement to subsidised food grains and maternity benefits. National Policy for Farmers (2007): Defines farmers based on agricultural activity, not land ownership. Balancing innovation with women’s digital safety Context: AI Expansion and Gendered Digital Risks With rapid advancements in Artificial Intelligence (AI) following events like the India AI Impact Summit 2026, global focus has shifted toward ethical AI governance, algorithmic accountability, and digital safety, particularly for women. International Women’s Day 2026 emphasises the need for “ethical AI” and women’s digital safety, as digital technologies increasingly shape social interaction, employment, governance, and information ecosystems. Rising Internet penetration has expanded women’s digital participation but simultaneously increased gendered online harassment, cyberbullying, doxxing, and image-based abuse, exposing systemic gaps in cyber governance frameworks. Relevance GS Paper II – Governance Regulation of digital platforms and cyber laws under the Information Technology Act and IT Rules 2021. Policy challenges in AI governance, digital rights and online safety frameworks. GS Paper III – Science & Technology Ethical implications of Artificial Intelligence, deepfakes and generative AI technologies. Technological challenges in regulating AI-driven cybercrime and digital misinformation. Practice Question   Q. Rapid advances in Artificial Intelligence have created new opportunities but also intensified risks of digital violence against women. Discuss the challenges posed by AI-enabled abuse and suggest measures to ensure women’s digital safety in the emerging AI ecosystem. (250 words) Scale of Digital Harassment Against Women Studies indicate 16%–58% of women globally experience online harassment, including cyberstalking, non-consensual image sharing, threats, trolling, and impersonation, reflecting widespread gendered digital violence. Online abuse mirrors offline inequalities, where one in three women globally experience physical or sexual violence, according to UN Women and WHO estimates, highlighting the continuum between physical and digital violence. Digital environments amplify harassment due to anonymity, algorithmic amplification, weak platform moderation, and cross-border jurisdiction challenges, making enforcement significantly harder than in offline spaces. Rise of Deepfakes and AI-enabled Abuse Deepfakes are AI-generated synthetic media (images, audio, or video) created using machine learning algorithms such as generative adversarial networks (GANs) that mimic real individuals convincingly. Deepfake technologies increasingly enable non-consensual sexualised images, reputational harm, misinformation, and political manipulation, disproportionately targeting women journalists, public figures, and activists. Platforms and AI chatbots, including systems like Grok AI, have raised concerns after being misused to generate sexualised or manipulated images of women without consent, demonstrating emerging ethical risks of generative AI. According to Sensity AI research, over 90% of deepfake content online involves non-consensual pornography, with women constituting the overwhelming majority of victims. Gender Gap in AI Development Women remain significantly underrepresented in AI research, development, and leadership, limiting diversity in algorithm design and technological governance. According to UNDP estimates, women constitute only 22% of AI professionals globally, while less than 14% occupy senior AI leadership positions. Lack of gender diversity leads to algorithmic bias, inadequate safety mechanisms, and blind spots in addressing gendered harms, particularly in areas such as content moderation and AI-generated imagery. Research by UN Women indicates that many deepfake tools are primarily trained on datasets that disproportionately target female faces, reflecting systemic bias embedded in technological development. Legal and Regulatory Framework in India Information Technology Act, 2000 India regulates cyber offences under the Information Technology Act, 2000, including provisions related to identity theft, cyber harassment, obscene content, and electronic impersonation. IT (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021 These rules mandate social media intermediaries to remove unlawful content, ensure grievance redressal, and cooperate with law enforcement authorities in cybercrime investigations. Recent Deepfake Regulation The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) issued guidelines requiring online intermediaries to remove deepfake content within three hours of receiving takedown notices, strengthening accountability mechanisms. These measures aim to reduce irreversible reputational harm caused by manipulated AI-generated content, though enforcement and technological capacity remain critical challenges. Challenges in Ensuring Women’s Digital Safety Technological Challenges Rapid advancements in generative AI tools make it easier to create convincing deepfake content with minimal technical expertise. Weak AI detection mechanisms and content moderation algorithms often struggle to identify synthetic media promptly. Institutional and Legal Challenges Cross-border nature of online platforms complicates jurisdictional enforcement and legal accountability. Limited technical capacity within law enforcement agencies delays investigation and prosecution of AI-enabled cybercrimes. Socio-cultural Challenges Patriarchal social attitudes often lead to victim blaming, stigma, and reluctance among women to report digital abuse. Low digital literacy and legal awareness prevent many victims from accessing grievance redressal mechanisms. Importance of Digital Literacy and Early Education With one-third of global Internet users being children, early education on digital ethics, online safety, and responsible technology use becomes essential. Integrating cyber safety, digital rights awareness, and AI ethics into school curricula can create a generation capable of navigating digital ecosystems responsibly. Digital literacy programmes should focus on identifying misinformation, reporting cyber abuse, protecting privacy, and understanding AI-generated content risks. Ethical AI Framework Ethical AI emphasises principles such as fairness, accountability, transparency, explainability, and inclusivity, ensuring AI technologies do not reinforce existing inequalities. Incorporating gender-sensitive algorithm design, inclusive datasets, and diverse development teams can reduce biases and improve safety outcomes. AI governance frameworks must ensure human oversight, regulatory compliance, and strong grievance redressal mechanisms. Policy Imperatives for Women’s Digital Safety 1. Inclusive AI Development Increasing women’s participation in AI research, data science, and technology leadership roles can ensure that AI systems incorporate diverse perspectives and lived experiences. 2. Strengthening Legal Frameworks Enacting clear regulations on deepfakes, synthetic media, and AI-generated harassment can enhance legal clarity and enforcement. Establishing specialised cybercrime units and AI forensic capabilities will strengthen investigation capacities. 3. Platform Accountability Social media companies must implement AI detection tools, rapid response systems, and robust content moderation frameworks to identify and remove harmful synthetic media. 4. Digital Literacy and Awareness Expanding nationwide digital literacy campaigns, cyber safety training, and awareness programmes can empower women to protect themselves online. 5. International Cooperation Given the cross-border nature of AI platforms, global regulatory cooperation and digital governance frameworks are necessary to address AI-driven cyber abuse. Developmental and Governance Significance Ensuring women’s digital safety is essential for inclusive digital transformation and equitable participation in the digital economy. Safe digital environments enable women to participate in education, entrepreneurship, governance, and public discourse without fear of harassment or exploitation. Ethical AI development is therefore crucial to achieving SDG-5 (Gender Equality), SDG-9 (Innovation and Infrastructure), and SDG-16 (Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions). Prelims Pointers Deepfakes: AI-generated synthetic media created using machine learning algorithms. Women in AI workforce: Approximately 22% globally (UNDP). Deepfake content: Around 90% involves non-consensual pornography (Sensity AI). India’s deepfake guidelines: Intermediaries must remove content within 3 hours of notice.

Mar 7, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Content Proposal to Ban Social Media Use by Children: Federal and Digital Governance Issues U.S. Allows India to Buy Russian Oil for 30 Days Women Borrowers in India: Rapid Credit Growth with Low Delinquency Karnataka Links Liquor Tax to Alcohol Content (ABV-Based Taxation) RBI Proposal: Zero Liability for Customers in Case of Lender Negligence Black Death and Biodiversity: Rethinking Human–Nature Relationships Proposal to Ban Social Media Use by Children: Federal and Digital Governance Issues I. Context The governments of Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh have proposed restrictions on social media use by minors to address rising concerns about mental health, online abuse, and excessive mobile phone usage among children. Karnataka proposes a ban for children below 16 years, while Andhra Pradesh plans restrictions for children below 13 years, with possible regulations for the 13–16 age group. Andhra Pradesh has indicated that the policy may be implemented within a 90-day timeline. Relevance GS Paper II – Polity & Governance Federalism and division of legislative powers between Union and States. Regulation of digital platforms under IT Act, 2000 and IT Rules 2021. GS Paper II – Social Justice Child protection, mental health, and online safety. Practice Question Q. State governments proposing restrictions on social media use by minors raise questions of child protection, digital rights, and federal legislative competence. Examine the constitutional and governance challenges associated with regulating children’s social media access in India. (250 words) II. Rationale Behind the Proposed Ban 1. Mental Health Concerns Studies indicate that excessive social media exposure among adolescents contributes to anxiety, depression, sleep disorders, and attention deficits. Children are particularly vulnerable to cyberbullying, online grooming, and harmful content exposure. 2. Digital Addiction Growing smartphone penetration has led to increased screen time among minors, affecting academic performance, physical activity, and social interaction. 3. Protection from Harmful Content Social media platforms expose minors to misinformation, explicit content, online harassment, and algorithm-driven addictive behaviour patterns. III. Legal and Constitutional Issues Regulation of Internet: Union Domain Regulation of the internet, digital platforms, and intermediaries largely falls under Union jurisdiction, governed by central legislation such as: Information Technology Act, 2000 Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021 Since these frameworks are created under central laws, a state-level ban may raise questions of legislative competence and constitutional validity. Possible Federal Overlap States may justify restrictions using powers related to: Public order Public health Child welfare However, once the regulation directly affects digital intermediaries or internet services, it may encroach upon the Centre’s legislative domain.  IV. Implementation Challenges Technological Enforcement Enforcing age-based bans requires robust age verification systems, which remain technologically challenging and may raise privacy concerns. Jurisdictional Issues Most social media platforms operate as global digital intermediaries, making enforcement across borders difficult. Household-Level Regulation Monitoring children’s access to social media at home or through personal devices may be practically difficult to enforce. V. International Precedent Australia’s Social Media Law In December 2025, Australia became the first country to legislate a social media ban for children below 16 years. The law requires platforms to implement strict age verification systems, with penalties up to $32 million for repeated violations. However, the law remains controversial due to limited empirical evidence on its effectiveness and concerns about digital rights.  VI. Arguments Supporting the Ban Child Protection Age-based restrictions may protect minors from online harassment, harmful content, and digital exploitation. Mental Health Benefits Reduced social media exposure could improve psychological well-being, attention span, and academic focus among children. Regulation of Big Tech The measure may push technology companies to design safer digital environments for minors. VII. Criticism and Concerns Freedom of Expression Critics argue that blanket bans may restrict children’s right to information, expression, and participation in digital spaces. Implementation Feasibility Experts suggest that such bans may become “paper rules” with limited enforcement capacity, making compliance difficult. Root Cause Issues Digital rights groups argue that the problem lies more with platform design, addictive algorithms, and weak data protection frameworks rather than children’s access alone. VIII. Alternative Policy Approaches Digital Literacy and Awareness Introducing digital safety education in schools can help children learn responsible technology use. Parental Control Mechanisms Platforms can introduce stronger parental control systems and age-appropriate content filters. Platform Accountability Social media companies should strengthen content moderation, child protection policies, and algorithm transparency. Regulatory Framework India may consider a comprehensive child online safety law, similar to regulations in other countries. IX. Governance Significance The debate highlights tensions between child protection, digital rights, and federal legislative powers. It also reflects growing concerns globally about the impact of social media on children’s mental health and development. Prelims Pointers IT Act governing digital platforms: Information Technology Act, 2000. Australia social media ban age: below 16 years. Penalty under Australian law: up to $32 million for repeated violations. Proposed ban age: Karnataka <16, Andhra Pradesh <13. U.S. Allows India to Buy Russian Oil for 30 Days I. Context The U.S. Department of the Treasury has issued a temporary 30-day permission allowing India to continue purchasing Russian crude oil, amid global energy supply disruptions. The decision comes in the backdrop of Western sanctions on Russia after the Russia–Ukraine war, which restricted Russian oil trade and financial transactions. The move provides India short-term flexibility to manage energy supply disruptions and oil price volatility in global markets. Relevance GS Paper II – International Relations India–U.S. relations and geopolitical implications of the Russia–Ukraine conflict. Strategic autonomy in foreign policy. GS Paper III – Economy Energy security and global oil supply disruptions. Impact of crude oil prices on inflation and current account balance. Practice Question   Q. India’s continued import of Russian crude oil reflects its strategic autonomy in foreign policy. Analyse the geopolitical and energy security implications of India’s oil trade with Russia in the context of global sanctions. (250 words) II. India’s Current Oil Supply Situation India maintains strategic fuel reserves of about 50 days, consisting of: 25 days of crude oil reserves 25 days of petroleum product reserves (petrol and diesel) These reserves are intended to buffer against global supply shocks, geopolitical disruptions, and sudden price spikes. III. India’s Dependence on Imported Oil India imports nearly 85% of its crude oil requirement, making energy security highly sensitive to global geopolitical developments. Since the Russia–Ukraine conflict in 2022, India has significantly increased imports of discounted Russian crude, making Russia one of India’s largest oil suppliers. IV. Russian Oil Supply Dynamics Russian oil shipments to India typically take 25–40 days to arrive, depending on shipping routes and tanker availability. More than 55% of India’s crude imports pass through the Strait of Hormuz, making it a critical maritime chokepoint for India’s energy security. In January 2026, India’s Russian oil imports were valued at $1.98 billion, representing a 44-month low, reflecting fluctuations in global oil trade patterns. V. Reasons for the U.S. Decision 1. Managing Global Energy Supply Allowing temporary oil purchases helps avoid sudden supply shocks and stabilise global oil markets. 2. Strategic Flexibility The measure is seen as a short-term waiver to support India’s energy security, while maintaining broader sanctions on Russia. 3. Geopolitical Considerations India plays a crucial role in Indo-Pacific geopolitical balance and global energy markets, prompting the U.S. to adopt a pragmatic approach toward India’s energy imports. VI. Challenges for India Declining Discount on Russian Oil Russian crude may no longer be available at earlier discounted rates, as other countries, particularly China, increasingly compete for Russian supplies. Shipping and Logistics Constraints Sanctions on Russian shipping companies and insurers complicate logistics and payment mechanisms for oil shipments. Geopolitical Pressure India faces diplomatic balancing challenges between Western sanctions regimes and strategic relations with Russia. VII. Strategic Importance for India Energy Security Access to Russian crude helps India diversify its import sources and reduce exposure to price volatility in Middle Eastern markets. Strategic Autonomy Continued oil imports reflect India’s policy of strategic autonomy in foreign policy, balancing relations with both Western nations and Russia. Economic Stability Affordable oil imports help control inflation, reduce fuel prices, and stabilise India’s current account balance. VIII. Policy Implications The temporary waiver signals a flexible sanctions regime where geopolitical considerations influence enforcement. India may increasingly pursue diversification of crude imports, renewable energy expansion, and strategic petroleum reserve expansion. Prelims Pointers India’s crude oil import dependence: ~85%. India’s strategic fuel reserves: about 50 days. Russian oil shipment time to India: 25–40 days. Key energy chokepoint: Strait of Hormuz. Women Borrowers in India: Rapid Credit Growth with Low Delinquency I. Context A study by CRIF High Mark shows that women borrowers are the fastest-growing segment in India’s credit market, reflecting expanding financial inclusion and women’s economic participation. The report indicates that women’s credit portfolios have grown significantly over the last five years, with compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 14.2% between December 2020 and December 2025. Women borrowers demonstrate strong repayment discipline, with delinquency levels remaining extremely low compared to overall credit growth. Relevance GS Paper III – Economy Financial inclusion and credit access for women. Role of microfinance, SHGs, and fintech in expanding credit markets. GS Paper II – Governance / Social Justice Government initiatives such as PMJDY, SHG-Bank Linkage Programme, Mudra loans. Practice Question Q. Expanding access to credit is a key driver of women’s economic empowerment in India. Examine the trends in women’s credit participation and the challenges that still limit financial inclusion. (250 words) II. Key Findings of the Study Rapid Growth in Women Borrowers The number of women borrowers increased to 8.9 crore by December 2025, compared to 8.2% growth among men during the same period, highlighting stronger expansion of women-led credit portfolios. Women borrowers recorded 23.4% year-on-year growth in credit portfolios (Dec 2025), nearly double the 11.8% growth recorded among male borrowers. Low Delinquency Rates Women borrowers exhibit lower credit risk, with delinquency rates of only 2.8% (PAR 31–180 days), indicating strong repayment discipline. This trend strengthens the perception among financial institutions that women borrowers represent lower default risk compared to male borrowers. III. Share of Women in Retail Credit Women now account for 27.6% of India’s total retail credit portfolio outstanding, marking a steady increase in their participation in the formal financial system. Rising participation reflects the success of financial inclusion initiatives, digital banking expansion, and targeted credit schemes for women entrepreneurs and households. IV. Sector-wise Credit Distribution Gold Loans Women dominate gold loan portfolios, accounting for 43.5% of total loan originations, reflecting the widespread use of gold as collateral in household finance. Education Loans Women account for 36.7% of education loan originations, indicating rising female participation in higher education and skill development. Home Loans Women represent 32.2% of home loan originations, supported by government incentives such as lower stamp duty for female property owners and housing subsidies. Auto Loans Women account for 18% of auto loan originations, with auto loans growing 10.1% year-on-year in FY26, showing increased mobility and financial independence. Personal Loans Women’s share in personal loan volumes rose to 15.9%, reflecting growing access to consumer credit and unsecured lending products. V. Demographic Trends Young Women Borrowers Women below 30 years account for 24.3% of personal loan originations, reflecting increasing participation of young women in the formal credit ecosystem. Regional Patterns The top 10 states account for 78.2% of women’s credit portfolio, including states such as: Tamil Nadu Andhra Pradesh Kerala These states show higher participation and stronger growth compared to many northern and western states. VI. Reasons for Growth in Women’s Credit Participation Financial Inclusion Initiatives Government schemes like Jan Dhan accounts, SHG-bank linkage programmes, and microfinance initiatives have expanded women’s access to formal credit. Digital Financial Infrastructure Growth of UPI, fintech lending platforms, and digital credit assessment tools has reduced traditional barriers to financial access. Entrepreneurship and Self-Employment Increased participation of women in micro-enterprises, self-help groups (SHGs), and small businesses has driven credit demand. Policy Incentives Government policies promoting women entrepreneurship, housing ownership, and education financing have improved women’s credit access. VII. Economic and Social Significance Women’s Economic Empowerment Access to credit enables women to invest in education, housing, businesses, and household welfare, strengthening economic independence. Household Development Impact Research shows that women borrowers often prioritise education, health, and nutrition expenditure, improving long-term household welfare outcomes. Financial System Stability Lower delinquency among women borrowers improves portfolio stability for financial institutions, encouraging expansion of gender-focused lending. VIII. Challenges Persistent Credit Gap Despite growth, women still represent only 27.6% of retail credit portfolios, indicating continued gender gaps in financial access. Collateral and Asset Ownership Issues Women often lack formal asset ownership or property titles, limiting their eligibility for larger institutional loans. Regional Disparities Credit access remains uneven across different states and socio-economic groups, with rural women facing greater barriers. IX. Way Forward Gender-Sensitive Lending Policies Financial institutions should expand women-focused lending products, flexible collateral requirements, and microenterprise financing. Digital Financial Literacy Promoting digital literacy, financial awareness, and credit education among women can strengthen responsible borrowing and financial inclusion. Strengthening SHG Ecosystems Expanding Self-Help Group (SHG) networks and community-based financial institutions can further improve women’s access to credit. Prelims Pointers Women borrowers CAGR (2020–2025): 14.2%. Women share in retail credit: 27.6%. Delinquency rate among women borrowers: 2.8%. Women borrowers (2025): 8.9 crore. Karnataka Links Liquor Tax to Alcohol Content (ABV-based Taxation) I. Context In a first-of-its-kind reform in India, the Karnataka government has proposed linking liquor taxation directly to alcohol content (Alcohol by Volume – ABV) under its Excise Policy announced in the 2026–27 Budget. The reform aims to modernise the state excise structure, simplify pricing slabs, improve transparency, and align taxation with public health considerations. The new ABV-based taxation system will be implemented from April 2026, making Karnataka the first Indian state to adopt alcohol-content-based taxation. Relevance GS Paper III – Economy State taxation systems and excise revenue. Fiscal policy tools to influence consumption patterns. GS Paper II – Governance State powers under State List (Entry 51 – excise duty on alcoholic liquor). Practice Question Q. Taxation policy can be used as a public health instrument. Examine the rationale and implications of alcohol-content-based taxation (ABV-based taxation) in regulating alcohol consumption in India. (250 words) II. What is Alcohol by Volume (ABV)? Alcohol by Volume (ABV) is a global standard measurement that indicates the percentage of ethanol present in an alcoholic beverage. For example: Beer: typically 4–8% ABV Wine: around 10–15% ABV Whisky/Spirits: generally 36–50% ABV Higher ABV means higher alcohol concentration, which is associated with greater health risks and social externalities. III. Key Features of the New Tax Framework 1. ABV-Based Excise Duty The excise duty will now be directly linked to the alcohol content of beverages, ensuring that stronger alcohol products attract higher taxes. The system targets alcohol as the primary source of negative externalities, rather than taxing beverages uniformly. 2. Reduction of Tax Slabs The number of price-based taxation slabs will be reduced from 16 to 8, simplifying the taxation structure and improving pricing transparency. 3. Gradual Implementation The government plans to phase the reform over four years, ensuring gradual price adjustments and minimal disruption to markets. 4. Impact on Prices Beer and wine may become cheaper, as they typically contain lower alcohol content compared to distilled spirits. High-strength alcoholic beverages such as whisky and strong spirits are likely to face higher taxation. IV. Economic Significance Excise Revenue The Karnataka government has set an ambitious excise revenue target of ₹45,000 crore for the next financial year, making liquor taxation a major source of state revenue. State excise duties on alcohol constitute one of the largest own tax revenue sources for Indian states, as alcohol is outside the GST framework. Ease of Doing Business Simplified taxation slabs aim to improve regulatory clarity for liquor manufacturers, breweries, and retailers, reducing administrative complexity. Industry stakeholders believe the reform could encourage premiumisation and investment in the alcohol sector. V. Public Health Rationale The ABV-based taxation model is globally recognised, recommended by organisations such as the World Health Organization as an effective alcohol control strategy. Higher taxes on stronger alcohol can discourage excessive consumption and reduce alcohol-related harm, including: Alcohol addiction Road accidents Domestic violence Public health burdens VI. Global Practice Several countries already follow ABV-based alcohol taxation, including: United Kingdom Australia European Union member states These systems tax ethanol content directly, creating a more rational taxation framework aligned with health outcomes. VII. Concerns and Challenges Industry Adjustment Liquor manufacturers may need to adjust product pricing and formulations, potentially affecting supply chains and retail markets. Consumer Behaviour There is a risk that price-sensitive consumers may shift toward cheaper high-alcohol beverages, depending on pricing dynamics. Implementation Complexity Accurate measurement of ABV levels and enforcement of taxation categories will require strong regulatory oversight and testing infrastructure. IX. Governance and Policy Significance The reform reflects a broader shift toward evidence-based alcohol policy, combining public health objectives with fiscal efficiency. If successful, Karnataka’s model could influence other Indian states to adopt alcohol-content-based taxation frameworks. Prelims Pointers ABV: Alcohol by Volume (percentage of ethanol in beverages). Beer ABV: typically 4–8%. Whisky ABV: typically 36–50%. Liquor taxation: outside GST, falls under state excise powers (Entry 51, State List). RBI Proposal: Zero Liability for Customers in Case of Lender Negligence I. Context The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has proposed zero liability for bank customers in cases where digital banking fraud occurs due to negligence by banks or lenders, strengthening consumer protection in the digital financial ecosystem. The proposal forms part of the “Review of Framework of Limiting Customer Liability in Unauthorised Electronic Banking Transactions”, reflecting the rapid growth of digital payments, fintech platforms, and online banking transactions in India. The new framework is expected to apply to electronic banking transactions conducted on or after 1 July 2026, once the guidelines are finalised. Relevance GS Paper III – Economy Digital payments ecosystem and financial consumer protection. Banking regulation and cybersecurity risks. GS Paper II – Governance Role of Reserve Bank of India in regulating banking and payment systems. Practice Question Q. With the rapid expansion of digital payments in India, consumer protection against cyber fraud has become critical. Discuss the significance and challenges of the RBI’s proposal for zero liability in cases of bank negligence. (250 words) II. Key Provisions of the Proposed Framework Zero Liability for Customers Customers will have zero liability if unauthorised digital banking transactions occur due to negligence or lapses by the bank, regardless of whether the fraudulent transaction was reported by the customer immediately. In such cases, the bank must reverse the entire unauthorised transaction amount, ensuring customers are fully compensated for the financial loss. Limited Liability in Certain Cases If fraud occurs without bank negligence but is reported promptly by the customer, compensation may be limited to 85% of the net loss or ₹25,000 (whichever is lower) as a one-time compensation during the customer’s lifetime. Mandatory Reporting Requirement Customers must report fraudulent transactions to: National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal National Cyber Crime Helpline (1930) Concerned bank or financial institution The fraud must generally be reported within five days of the transaction to claim compensation. III. Definition of Bank Negligence Under the draft framework, bank negligence may include: Failure to maintain adequate cybersecurity systems and safeguards for electronic banking transactions. Failure to send mandatory alerts or notifications for transactions. System malfunctions, security breaches, or internal frauds within banking institutions. Inadequate fraud detection mechanisms or risk management protocols. IV. Rationale for the Reform Growth of Digital Payments in India India has become the largest digital payments ecosystem globally, with UPI transactions exceeding 12 billion monthly transactions (2025 estimates). Rapid digitisation has increased cyber fraud risks, phishing attacks, identity theft, and unauthorised digital transactions. Need for Consumer Protection Customers often lack technical knowledge to prevent sophisticated cyber fraud, making stronger institutional accountability necessary. The proposed framework shifts responsibility toward banks and financial institutions that control digital infrastructure and security systems. V. Governance and Regulatory Significance The framework reinforces the RBI’s role as the primary regulator of banking system stability, consumer protection, and payment system security under the RBI Act 1934 and Banking Regulation Act 1949. It complements national initiatives such as Digital India, financial inclusion, and expansion of digital payment systems like UPI, AEPS, and mobile banking. By ensuring stronger safeguards, the policy aims to enhance trust in digital banking and strengthen financial system credibility. VI. Challenges and Concerns Implementation Issues Banks must significantly upgrade fraud detection algorithms, real-time monitoring systems, and cybersecurity infrastructure to prevent misuse. Operational Burden on Banks Increased compensation liability could raise operational costs and compliance burdens for financial institutions. Risk of Moral Hazard Some analysts argue that guaranteed compensation might reduce customer vigilance, potentially increasing fraud attempts. VII. Way Forward Strengthening Cybersecurity Infrastructure Banks must deploy AI-based fraud detection, behavioural analytics, and multi-factor authentication systems to reduce cyber risks. Financial Literacy and Awareness Nationwide campaigns should improve digital financial literacy, fraud awareness, and cyber hygiene practices among users. Improved Inter-agency Coordination Strong coordination between RBI, banks, fintech companies, and cybercrime agencies is essential to investigate and prevent digital fraud. Prelims Pointers National Cyber Crime Helpline: 1930 Regulator of digital banking framework: Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Effective date of proposed framework: 1 July 2026 Compensation limit in limited liability cases: 85% of net loss or ₹25,000 (whichever lower) Black Death and Biodiversity: Rethinking Human–Nature Relationships I. Context and Background The Black Death (1347–1353) was a devastating bubonic plague pandemic caused by Yersinia pestis, killing 30–50% of Europe’s population, leading to massive abandonment of farms, villages, and cultivated landscapes. This demographic collapse triggered a historical “rewilding event”, where previously cultivated land reverted to forests and unmanaged vegetation due to the sudden withdrawal of human agricultural activity. Conventional ecological theory often assumes human presence negatively impacts biodiversity, suggesting that reduced human activity would naturally produce more diverse and pristine ecosystems. However, a recent University of York study published in the journal Ecology Letters (2026) challenges this assumption by analysing long-term plant biodiversity trends before and after the Black Death. Relevance GS Paper III – Environment Biodiversity conservation and ecosystem management. Role of human activities in shaping ecological systems. GS Paper I – Geography Human–environment interaction and cultural landscapes. Practice Question Q. The relationship between human activity and biodiversity is complex and context-dependent. Discuss how historical ecological evidence challenges the assumption that reduced human presence always improves biodiversity. (250 words) II. Key Findings of the Study Contrary to expectations, the study found that plant biodiversity significantly declined during the 150 years following the Black Death, despite the widespread abandonment of agricultural land. Researchers analysed historical ecological datasets, pollen records, and plant species distribution patterns across Europe to reconstruct biodiversity trends across pre- and post-pandemic landscapes. When farmland was abandoned, traditional land management practices such as grazing, crop rotation, and clearing ceased, allowing dense forests to expand rapidly. The spread of uniform forest cover reduced habitat diversity and ecological niches, causing a decline in plant species that depended on open or semi-managed landscapes. Biodiversity recovery began only after human populations rebounded and agricultural activities resumed, a process that took nearly 300 years to restore pre-plague biodiversity levels. III. Ecological Interpretation Many plant species in European ecosystems evolved under long-term human disturbance regimes, including farming, grazing, burning, and periodic land clearing. These disturbances create heterogeneous landscapes with varied habitats, supporting species that require open grasslands, transitional zones, and agricultural margins. When human activity stopped abruptly after the Black Death, landscapes shifted toward monotonous forest ecosystems, reducing ecological complexity and species diversity. Thus, biodiversity loss occurred because habitat heterogeneity declined, not because ecosystems were damaged by human withdrawal. IV. Implications for Environmental Theory The study challenges the assumption that ecosystems untouched by humans are always the most biodiverse, questioning the idealised notion of “pristine wilderness”. It suggests that in many regions, biodiversity has historically developed within human-modified landscapes, shaped by centuries of traditional agricultural practices. Human–nature interactions can therefore be mutually reinforcing rather than inherently destructive, particularly when land management practices are sustainable. This supports the concept of “Anthropocene biodiversity”, where biodiversity patterns are influenced by human cultural landscapes and ecological stewardship. V. Relevance for Modern Conservation Strategies Debate on Rewilding The findings have implications for the growing “rewilding movement”, which advocates removing human activity from landscapes to allow ecosystems to recover naturally. While rewilding can restore ecological processes in some regions, the study suggests that complete human withdrawal may not always enhance biodiversity. Many ecosystems require active management and disturbance regimes to maintain species diversity and habitat variety. Landscape Mosaic Approach Researchers recommend adopting a “patchwork landscape approach”, where different land uses coexist to support diverse ecosystems. Such landscapes include croplands, woodlands, grasslands, wetlands, ponds, and pastures, creating multiple ecological niches and microhabitats. This approach enhances ecosystem resilience, species richness, and sustainable land use practices. VI. Examples of Balanced Human–Nature Landscapes Traditional agro-ecosystems such as Iberian Dehesas and Montados combine trees, grazing livestock, and crop cultivation, supporting high biodiversity and sustainable livelihoods. Alpine pasture systems maintain species-rich grasslands through seasonal grazing and traditional farming practices. The Hungarian Tanya system, a dispersed agricultural settlement model, integrates small-scale farming with natural ecosystems, preserving biodiversity. These systems demonstrate that sustainable human land use can coexist with and even enhance biodiversity. VII. Broader Environmental Significance The study highlights the importance of human stewardship in shaping biodiversity-rich landscapes, challenging simplistic narratives of human–nature conflict. Sustainable agricultural practices can promote ecosystem services such as pollination, soil fertility, and carbon sequestration. Integrating traditional ecological knowledge and modern conservation science is essential for maintaining balanced socio-ecological systems. This perspective aligns with contemporary environmental frameworks such as nature-based solutions and sustainable land management. Prelims Pointers Black Death: Bubonic plague pandemic between 1347–1353, caused by Yersinia pestis. Estimated mortality: 30–50% of Europe’s population. Study published in Ecology Letters (2026) by University of York. Key concept: Biodiversity depends on habitat heterogeneity, not merely absence of human activity.