Verify it's really you

Please re-enter your password to continue with this action.

Recent Notifications

View all
Mar 21, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

Content Proposed National Youth Policy 2026 to align India’s Youth Power with Viksit Bharat 2047 Veerangana Rani Avantibai Lodhi Martyrdom Day Proposed National Youth Policy 2026 to align India’s Youth Power with Viksit Bharat 2047 Why in News ? Government proposed National Youth Policy 2026 to align India’s demographic potential with the long-term vision of Viksit Bharat 2047, signalling a strategic policy overhaul. Announcement in Rajya Sabha reflects policy shift toward outcome-based governance, integrating digital tools like MY Bharat platform for real-time monitoring and youth engagement. Policy responds to emerging concerns of rising youth unemployment, skill mismatch, and declining quality of human capital .  Data from the 2024-25 PLFS reports andrecent Economic Surveys indicate a crisis of “jobless growth,” with youth unemployment (15–29 years) remaining high (roughly 14–18% range) Relevance GS 1 (Indian Society): Demographic dividend and youth population dynamics Social inclusion, gender gaps, and youth aspirations GS 2 (Governance): Public policy design and outcome-based governance Cooperative federalism and participatory policymaking Digital governance (MY Bharat, MyGov) Practice Question Q. “India’s demographic dividend can become a demographic disaster without effective policy intervention.” Examine in the context of National Youth Policy 2026. (250 words) Static Background National Youth Policy 2014 provided a broad framework focusing on education, employment, health, and social values, but lacked strong measurable outcomes and digital integration mechanisms. Youth defined as 15–29 years; India hosts approximately 371 million youth (UNICEF estimates), constituting around 27–28% of total population, the largest globally. India’s demographic dividend, which began in 2005–06, provides a critical opportunity window until approximately 2055–56 with the peak working-age population share occurring around 2041 ( Economic Survey 2018-19). Institutional ecosystem includes Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports, NYKS (grassroots outreach), RGNIYD (research and Youth Development Index). Core Features of National Youth Policy 2026 Policy identifies six priority domains: leadership, education, skilling, entrepreneurship, health, sports, and climate action, ensuring a holistic human capital development framework. Marks transition from welfare-oriented approach to capability enhancement and outcome-driven governance, aligning youth policy with measurable developmental indicators. Emphasises youth as active stakeholders in nation-building, integrating economic productivity with civic responsibility, sustainability, and leadership development. Aligns with SDGs 2030, human capital theory, and inclusive growth paradigm, ensuring global benchmarking and long-term policy coherence. MY Bharat Platform  MY Bharat platform acts as a centralised digital ecosystem enabling youth registration, profiling, participation in volunteering, and experiential learning opportunities across sectors. Integrates opportunities from government ministries, NGOs, private sector organisations, creating a convergence-based governance model for youth engagement. Facilitates real-time data capture (registrations, activity participation, institutional partnerships) enabling evidence-based policymaking and adaptive governance. Promotes “Seva Bhav” and participatory citizenship, transforming youth from passive beneficiaries into active agents of socio-economic change. Governance Dimensions Promotes Whole-of-Government approach through inter-ministerial convergence and coordination with State/UT governments, strengthening cooperative federalism in youth development. Ensures participatory policymaking through consultations on platforms like MyGov and MY Bharat, incorporating diverse regional and demographic perspectives. Monitoring strengthened via NITI Aayog’s Output-Outcome Monitoring Framework (OOMF) and real-time dashboards, shifting focus from inputs to measurable outcomes. Encourages data-driven governance architecture, improving transparency, accountability, and responsiveness of youth-centric programmes. Economic Dimensions    Recent quarterly estimates show ~14–15% youth unemployment (2025–26 trends, Economic Times analysis of PLFS), reflecting persistent employment stress among educated youth. Around 67% of unemployed youth are graduates (State of Working India 2026 report by Azim Premji University), highlighting severe education-employment mismatch. Only ~4.9% youth formally skilled (Economic Survey 2023–24), underscoring low employability and need for large-scale skill ecosystem reforms. Policy aligns with Skill India, Startup India, Digital India, promoting entrepreneurship, innovation, and future-ready workforce development. Social & Ethical Dimensions Addresses gender disparity in labour force participation: Female LFPR remains significantly lower (~25% urban, ~36% rural – PLFS 2025 data, PIB). Recognises rising mental health challenges among youth (WHO: 1 in 7 adolescents affected globally), integrating well-being into policy priorities. Promotes inclusive development targeting marginalized groups (SC/ST, rural youth), reducing socio-economic inequalities in access to opportunities. Encourages civic engagement, ethical leadership, and volunteerism, strengthening democratic participation and social cohesion. Environmental Dimensions Integrates youth into climate action and environmental governance, aligning with India’s commitments under the Paris Agreement and SDGs. Promotes green skills, eco-entrepreneurship, and sustainable livelihoods, preparing youth for emerging green economy opportunities. Supports LiFE (Lifestyle for Environment) initiative, encouraging youth-led behavioural change towards sustainable consumption and production patterns. Positions youth as key agents of climate resilience and grassroots environmental action. Data & Evidence Youth unemployment:10.2% (PLFS 2023–24, MoSPI/PIB); rising to ~14–15% in recent quarterly estimates (2025–26). Overall unemployment: ~4.9–5% (PLFS 2026 estimates) indicating disproportionate youth burden. Formal skill training: only 4.9% youth formally skilled (Economic Survey 2023–24). Graduate unemployment crisis: 67% of unemployed youth are graduates (TOI, CMIE/PLFS trends). Youth population: ~371 million (UN estimates), largest globally. Challenges Persistent skill mismatch between academic outputs and industry demand reduces employability and productivity of youth workforce. Significant regional disparities, with states like Punjab and Himachal Pradesh reporting >19–29% youth unemployment (PLFS-based reports). Digital divide limits equitable access to MY Bharat platform, especially for rural and marginalized youth populations. Fragmented implementation due to multiple overlapping schemes and weak inter-ministerial coordination mechanisms. Past policies faced implementation deficits and weak monitoring frameworks, raising concerns about execution effectiveness. Way Forward Strengthen industry-academia linkage under NEP 2020 and Skill India, ensuring alignment of education with labour market needs. Expand formal skilling ecosystem, which can potentially increase employment by ~13% (Economic Survey estimate). Ensure universal digital access through BharatNet and digital literacy initiatives, bridging rural-urban divide. Institutionalise independent third-party evaluation and real-time monitoring systems to improve accountability and outcomes. Promote state-specific youth strategies integrating local economic opportunities, demographic characteristics, and governance capacities. Prelims Pointers Youth age group: 15–29 years (National Youth Policy definition). PLFS (MoSPI) is India’s official employment-unemployment data source. Youth Development Index prepared by RGNIYD (Chennai). MY Bharat platform: digital interface for youth engagement, volunteerism, and data-driven governance. Veerangana Rani Avantibai Lodhi Martyrdom Day Context Union Home Minister paid tribute on her martyrdom day, highlighting her role in the Revolt of 1857. Reflects push toward inclusive historiography and recognition of regional and unsung freedom fighters. Relevance GS 1 (Modern History): Revolt of 1857 – regional dimensions Role of women and local leaders in freedom struggle Practice Question Q. “The Revolt of 1857 was not merely a sepoy mutiny but a broad-based resistance with significant regional and social participation.” Discuss with reference to leaders like Rani Avantibai Lodhi. (250 words) Static Background Rani Avantibai Lodhi (c. 1831–1858): Queen of Ramgarh (Mandla, Madhya Pradesh), key leader in 1857 revolt (Central India). British annexed her kingdom under Doctrine of Lapse (Lord Dalhousie) after her husband’s death. Represented participation of OBC/agrarian communities (Lodhi) in anti-colonial resistance. Doctrine of Lapse (Lord Dalhousie)  Definition: Policy under Lord Dalhousie whereby princely states without a natural male heir were annexed; adopted heirs were not recognized. Legal Basis: Claimed legitimacy under paramountcy of the East India Company, rejecting Indian tradition of adoption recognized under Hindu law. Major Annexations: Satara (1848), Jaitpur & Sambalpur (1849), Baghat (1850), Udaipur (1852), Jhansi (1853), Nagpur (1854). Major Objective: Expansion of British territory and consolidation of imperial authority; reduced autonomy of princely states. Role in Revolt of 1857 Organised armed rebellion against British East India Company after annexation of Ramgarh. Mobilised peasants, tribal groups, and local chiefs, showing grassroots character of revolt. Adopted guerrilla warfare tactics in forested regions of Central India against British forces. Chose martyrdom (1858) instead of surrender, symbolising resistance and self-respect. Historical Significance Highlights decentralised and regional spread of 1857 revolt beyond major centres like Delhi and Kanpur. Demonstrates role of women leaders alongside Rani Lakshmibai and Begum Hazrat Mahal. Shows peasant-tribal participation, countering view of revolt as merely a sepoy mutiny. Reflects early anti-colonial consciousness rooted in local autonomy and resistance. Governance Dimensions Resistance triggered by Doctrine of Lapse, exposing exploitative colonial annexation policies. Demonstrates local political assertion against colonial centralisation and economic extraction. Modern recognition aligns with nation-building through inclusive historical narratives. Social & Ethical Dimensions Symbol of women empowerment, breaking patriarchal barriers in leadership and warfare. Represents contribution of backward and rural communities in freedom struggle. Embodies values of courage, sacrifice, dignity, and patriotism relevant for civic education. Challenges Underrepresentation in mainstream historiography, overshadowed by prominent 1857 leaders. Limited archival documentation and academic research on regional figures. Inadequate integration into national curriculum and public discourse. Way Forward Integrate such personalities into NCERT and higher education curricula for balanced historiography. Promote research via ICHR and regional archives to document local resistance movements. Use digital platforms, museums, and memorials for wider public awareness. Prelims Pointers Rani Avantibai Lodhi: Queen of Ramgarh (MP), associated with Revolt of 1857 (Central India). Linked to Doctrine of Lapse policy under Lord Dalhousie. Known for guerrilla resistance and martyrdom in 1858.

Mar 21, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Content On GLP-1 drugs, match access with vigilance It’s time to bring fathers into fold of parental leave On GLP-1 drugs, match access with vigilance Source : Indian Express Why in News ? Patent expiry of Semaglutide (March 20, 2026) enabling entry of ~50 generic brands, significantly reducing prices by 20–30% (industry estimates). Rising concern over misuse of GLP-1 drugs (Ozempic, Wegovy) amid increasing diabetes and obesity burden in India. Relevance GS 2 (Governance): Drug regulation framework (Drugs & Cosmetics Act, CDSCO) Public health policy and regulatory enforcement Pharmacovigilance and ethical marketing GS 3 (Economy & Science & Tech): Pharmaceutical industry and generics market Healthcare affordability and NCD burden Biotech innovations in diabetes and obesity treatment Practice Question Q. “While GLP-1 drugs can revolutionise diabetes and obesity management, their misuse and regulatory gaps pose significant challenges.” Analyse in the Indian context. (250 words) Static Background GLP-1 receptor agonists are drugs that enhance insulin secretion, delay gastric emptying, and reduce appetite, used in Type-2 Diabetes and obesity management. Examples: Semaglutide, Liraglutide; globally popular due to dual benefits—glycaemic control + weight reduction. Classified as Schedule H drugs (CDSCO) → require mandatory prescription, not for over-the-counter sale. India has ~101 million diabetics (ICMR 2023) and rising obesity prevalence (~24% adults overweight/obese, NFHS-5).As of 2024–2025, India faces a massive diabetes epidemic with an estimated 101 million people living with diabetes and another 136 million with pre-diabetes.(International Diabetes Federation) Central Drugs Standard Control Organization (CDSCO) Definition: India’s national regulatory authority for drugs and medical devices, functioning under Central Drugs Standard Control Organization within the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. Legal Basis: Operates under Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940 and Rules, 1945; complemented by Medical Devices Rules, 2017. Head: Led by the Drugs Controller General of India (DCGI)—central authority for approvals and regulatory decisions. Core Functions: Approval of new drugs, vaccines, clinical trials, regulation of imports, and setting standards for drugs across India. Division of Powers: Centre (CDSCO) – approvals, imports, clinical trials; States – manufacturing licenses, sale, and distribution (federal regulatory structure). Public Health Significance Affordable generics can expand access to middle- and lower-income groups, improving health equity in chronic disease care. Provides multi-dimensional benefits: glycaemic control, weight loss (~10–15% body weight in trials), reduced cardiovascular risk. Can reduce long-term healthcare burden, lowering complications like heart disease, kidney failure, stroke. Aligns with shift toward preventive healthcare and NCD management (National Health Policy 2017). Economic Dimensions Cost reduction (40–50%) improves affordability in a system where ~48% health expenditure is out-of-pocket (NHA estimates). Expansion of domestic pharma manufacturing strengthens India’s role as “pharmacy of the world”. Potential to reduce economic burden of NCDs, estimated to cost India ~5–10% GDP loss (WHO projections).Addressing this burden through targeted interventions offers significant potential to reduce this economic impact, with some projections indicating a 15% return on investment . However, uncontrolled use may increase irrational drug expenditure and strain public health systems. Governance Dimensions CDSCO regulates GLP-1 drugs under Schedule H, requiring prescription-based access. Risk of over-the-counter culture undermining regulation and enabling misuse. Need for pharmacovigilance systems to track adverse effects and long-term outcomes. CDSCO advisory restricts misleading advertisements, preventing branding as “weight-loss shortcuts”. Social & Ethical Dimensions Risk of cosmetic misuse among non-obese individuals due to rapid weight-loss appeal. May reinforce body image pressures and inequitable access, favouring urban affluent populations initially. Ethical concern over diversion of drugs from diabetic patients to lifestyle users. Raises question of medicalisation of lifestyle issues vs holistic health approaches. Health Concerns Side effects: nausea, pancreatitis risk, gastrointestinal complications (clinical trial evidence). Global BMI thresholds may not suit Indians, who develop metabolic risks at lower BMI (~23 vs 25 WHO Asian standards).South Asians, including Indians, develop metabolic risks such as Type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and cardiovascular disease at lower BMI levels.  Lack of long-term Indian population data on safety and efficacy. Requires context-specific clinical guidelines tailored to Indian metabolic profiles. Data & Evidence        Diabetes burden: ~101 million cases (ICMR–INDIAB Study 2023). Pre-diabetes: ~136 million individuals (ICMR 2023). Overweight/obesity: ~24% adults (NFHS-5, 2019–21).Roughly 24% of women and 23% of men aged 15–49 classified as overweight or obese Out-of-pocket expenditure: ~48% of total health spending (National Health Accounts 2021–22). Weight loss efficacy: 10–15% reduction (global clinical trials, NEJM studies on Semaglutide). Challenges  Regulatory gaps due to proliferation of multiple generic brands (~50 expected). Weak pharmacovigilance infrastructure for monitoring adverse drug reactions. OTC misuse undermining Schedule H compliance. Lack of India-specific clinical guidelines and BMI thresholds. Risk of inequitable access and diversion from medically eligible patients. Way Forward Strengthen prescription enforcement and digital tracking (e-prescriptions, Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission). Develop India-specific clinical guidelines for GLP-1 use considering lower BMI risk thresholds. Expand pharmacovigilance systems (PvPI under CDSCO) for real-time monitoring of adverse effects. Regulate advertising and marketing practices to prevent misuse as lifestyle drugs. Integrate with NCD programmes (NPCDCS) combining medication with lifestyle interventions. Prelims Pointers GLP-1 receptor agonists: used in Type-2 diabetes and obesity management. Semaglutide: key drug whose patent expiry enables generics. Schedule H drugs: require prescription; cannot be sold OTC legally. CDSCO: India’s national drug regulatory authority. It’s time to bring fathers into fold of parental leave Why in News? Supreme Court judgment dated 17 March 2026 struck down restriction on maternity leave for adoptive mothers under Code on Social Security, 2020. The court ruled that adoptive mothers are entitled to 12 weeks of paid leave, regardless of the child’s age, calling the previous restriction unconstitutional and discriminatory. Court further urged Centre on 18 March 2026 to frame a law on paternity leave as social security measure. Debate intensified after judicial remarks on menstrual leave and women’s employment trade-offs (March 2026 hearings). Relevance GS 1 (Indian Society): Gender roles, family structure, and unpaid care work Changing social norms and shared parenting GS 2 (Polity & Governance): Fundamental Rights (Articles 14, 15, 21) Labour laws (Code on Social Security, 2020) Judicial activism in social policy Practice Question Q. “Gender-neutral parental leave is essential for achieving substantive equality in the workplace.” Examine in light of recent judicial developments in India. (250 words) Static Background Maternity Benefit Act, 1961 (Amended 2017) provides 26 weeks paid leave for biological mothers in formal sector. Code on Social Security, 2020 (Section 60(4)) earlier restricted adoptive mothers’ leave to children below 3 months (now invalidated). As of March 2026, paternity leave for male central government employees in India remains limited to 15 days of paid leave under the Central Civil Services (Leave) Rules, 1972. There is no universal, statutory legal mandate in India that enforces similar paternity leave entitlements in the private sector.  India’s labour market marked by low female LFPR (~35.3%, PLFS Feb 2026) and high informal workforce (~80%). Key Judicial Observations  17 March 2026 verdict: Court held denial of leave for adoptive mothers of older children “irrational/unconstitutional”, ensuring equal maternity rights. Recognised that motherhood is linked to caregiving, not childbirth, expanding scope to adoptive and surrogate mothers. 18 March 2026 observation: recommended formal legal recognition of paternity leave, acknowledging fathers’ caregiving role. Emphasised rights-based approach over employer convenience, strengthening substantive gender equality framework. Legal Dimensions Based on Article 14 (equality), Article 15(3) (protective discrimination), Article 21 (dignity & autonomy). Reinforces Directive Principles (Article 39, 42) promoting maternity relief and humane work conditions. Expands doctrine of reproductive autonomy beyond biological childbirth, consistent with progressive SC jurisprudence. Moves toward gender-neutral parental rights framework, not limited to women-centric benefits. Administrative Dimensions Requires amendment of Code on Social Security, 2020 to remove unconstitutional age restriction. Necessitates national framework for paternity leave across public and private sectors. Calls for implementation mechanisms within labour codes and compliance monitoring systems. Needs integration with ICDS, POSHAN, maternal-child health schemes for holistic caregiving support. Economic Dimensions Employer concerns: extended leave may increase cost of hiring women, especially in MSMEs. The burden of financing these leaves can lead to “short-sighted” decisions, creating a “men’s club” atmosphere and limiting women’s participation in the formal sector.  However, gender-equal leave improves female workforce retention and productivity (OECD evidence). Reduces long-term costs of child health, attrition, and skill loss in labour market. Countries with parental leave show higher female LFPR and inclusive growth outcomes. Social & Ethical Dimensions Addresses unequal burden of unpaid care work, historically borne by women.Globally, women spend 2.5 times more hours on unpaid care tasks than men, limiting their access to education, formal employment, and personal leisure. Encourages shared parenting, challenging patriarchal norms in household labour division. Promotes child welfare, emotional bonding, and equitable family structures. Raises ethical balance between labour market efficiency vs social justice in workplace policies. Statistics Sweden reports show a steadily narrowing gender gap in parental leave, with men’s share of benefit days rising from ~10% in 1999 to roughly 30-31% by 2018–2023, largely driven by “use-it-or-lose-it” earmarked months. Challenges Employer bias may discourage hiring women due to perceived cost of extended leave benefits.This phenomenon, sometimes called the “motherhood penalty” or statistical discrimination. Lack of universal statutory paternity leave limits transformation of gender roles. Informal sector exclusion (~90%) reduces reach of legal protections. Persistent social norms may restrict actual uptake of paternity leave even if legislated. Best Practices in Paternity Leave Globally Universal Provision + Legal Right ~35/38 OECD countries provide paid leave for fathers → indicates global norm formation in welfare states Ensures job protection + income security → core labour right. Adequate Duration (Beyond Tokenism) OECD average ≈ 2–3 weeks, but best performers go far beyond Spain: 16 weeks fully paid (global benchmark) Korea/Japan: up to 1 year (shared/earmarked) Wage Replacement (Income Security) Best systems offer 70–100% wage replacement (Nordic model) Prevents “leave avoidance” due to income loss. Father-Specific Quotas (“Use-it-or-lose-it”) Nordic countries (Norway, Sweden, Iceland) reserve non-transferable leave for fathers Increases uptake and promotes gender equality in care work Way Forward Introduce gender-neutral parental leave framework with earmarked father quotas (“use-it-or-lose-it”). Provide state subsidies/incentives to employers to offset maternity/paternity costs. Extend benefits to informal workers via social insurance/DBT mechanisms. Promote behavioural change campaigns to normalise male caregiving roles. Align reforms with SDG 5 (Gender Equality) and ILO work-life balance standards. Prelims Pointers 17 March 2026 SC Judgment: struck down 3-month age cap for adoptive mothers’ maternity leave. 18 March 2026 SC Observation: recommended law on paternity leave. Code on Social Security 2020 governs maternity provisions. Time Use Survey (MoSPI) measures unpaid care work.

Mar 21, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Content PM-JAY & Rising Out-of-Pocket Expenditure (OOPE) Hippopotamus Attack in Shivamogga CAPF (General Administration) Bill, 2026 Renewable Energy Ministry demands sweeping powers RBI injects ₹25,101 cr. in banking system via 3-day VRR auction High-Octane / Premium Petrol Semaglutide Generics in India – GLP-1 Drugs & Public Health Transformation Indoor Athletics vs Outdoor Athletics PM-JAY & Rising Out-of-Pocket Expenditure (OOPE) Why in News ? A NITI Aayog-commissioned evaluation (reported 8 March 2026) revealed persistently high out-of-pocket expenditure under PM-JAY, especially in private hospitals. Study conducted by IQVIA Consulting and Information Services India Pvt. Ltd. highlights gaps in “cashless” coverage, raising concerns ahead of 16th Finance Commission (2026–31) review. Relevance GS 2 (Governance): Welfare schemes (Ayushman Bharat, PM-JAY) Public health policy and regulatory gaps Role of National Health Authority (NHA) GS 3 (Economy): Out-of-pocket expenditure (~48%) and poverty linkages Health financing and insurance inefficiencies Public vs private healthcare dynamics Practice Question Q. “Despite the expansion of PM-JAY, high out-of-pocket expenditure continues to undermine financial protection in healthcare.” Critically analyse. (250 words) Static Background Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana (PM-JAY) launched on 23 September 2018 under Ayushman Bharat to provide ₹5 lakh annual health cover per family. Targets ~12 crore families (~55 crore individuals), making it the world’s largest publicly funded health insurance scheme. Covers 1,961 medical procedures across 27 specialties, delivered through public and empanelled private hospitals. Expanded in September 2024 to include all citizens aged 70 years and above, irrespective of socio-economic status. Key Findings of Study  Average OOPE in private hospitals under PM-JAY stands at ₹53,965 per hospitalisation, indicating significant financial burden despite insurance coverage. Average OOPE in public hospitals is ₹21,827, showing relatively better cost protection but still substantial expenses. Around 65% of PM-JAY beneficiaries incurred OOPE, while only 35% experienced completely cashless treatment. Overall average OOPE for insured households is ₹34,790 compared to ₹38,084 for uninsured, showing only marginal financial relief (~₹3,294 difference). Among uninsured patients, OOPE in private hospitals is ₹74,847, highlighting severity of healthcare costs without insurance support. Study based on 2,283 households across 13 States/UTs, with 23% hospitalisation incidence over last five years. Economic Dimensions High OOPE undermines PM-JAY’s core objective of financial risk protection and reduction of catastrophic health expenditure. National Health Accounts (NHA) 2021–22 estimates released in late 2024, India’s Out-of-Pocket Expenditure (OOPE) actually declined to 39.4% of the Total Health Expenditure (THE) Heavy dependence on private healthcare leads to cost escalation in medicines, diagnostics, and hospital services. Limited cost reduction under PM-JAY suggests inefficiencies in package pricing and incomplete coverage design. Continued OOPE can push vulnerable households into poverty traps and indebtedness, negating welfare gains. Governance Dimensions Despite “cashless” promise, non-covered components such as medicines, diagnostics, and transport costs result in hidden expenditures. Weak regulation of private hospitals allows practices like overcharging, unnecessary diagnostics, and balance billing. PM-JAY package rates often lower than market prices, incentivising providers to shift additional costs to patients. Monitoring challenges persist due to variation in implementation across states and limited real-time audit systems. Role of National Health Authority (NHA) critical in improving compliance, transparency, and grievance redressal. Social Dimensions High OOPE disproportionately affects economically weaker sections, defeating the scheme’s pro-poor objective. Leads to catastrophic health expenditure, where households spend more than 10–25% of income on healthcare. Regional disparities in public healthcare capacity force patients in poorer states to rely on expensive private facilities. Impacts achievement of Universal Health Coverage (UHC) and SDG-3 (Good Health and Well-being). Health System Issues Medicines and diagnostic tests constitute the single largest component of Out-of-Pocket Expenditure (OOPE) in India, often accounting for 40% to over 60% of total health expenses, even for patients with health insurance. Transport costs not included in PM-JAY packages, particularly affecting rural patients accessing distant facilities. Public hospitals face capacity constraints (infrastructure, workforce shortages) leading to spillover into private sector.Lack of standardised treatment protocols and pricing transparency contributes to cost variations. Challenges  Persistent high OOPE despite insurance coverage, indicating incomplete financial protection. Dominance of private healthcare sector with weak regulatory oversight. Exclusion of critical cost components (drugs, diagnostics, transport) from insurance packages. Public healthcare infrastructure gaps increasing reliance on private facilities. Limited awareness among beneficiaries regarding entitlements and grievance mechanisms. Way Forward Expand PM-JAY coverage to include medicines, diagnostics, and transport costs, ensuring comprehensive financial protection. Strengthen regulation of private hospitals through standard pricing, audits, and strict anti-overcharging norms. Increase public investment in health infrastructure (target 2.5% of GDP as per National Health Policy 2017). Leverage Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission (ABDM) for real-time tracking of claims and fraud prevention. Enhance beneficiary awareness and grievance redressal systems for effective utilisation of scheme benefits. Prelims Pointers PM-JAY launched: 23 September 2018 under Ayushman Bharat. Provides ₹5 lakh annual cover per family for secondary and tertiary care. Covers 1,961 procedures across 27 specialties. Implemented by National Health Authority (NHA). Expanded in September 2024 to include all citizens aged ≥70 years. Hippopotamus Attack in Shivamogga   Why in News ? A 27-year-old trainee veterinary officer died on 20 March 2026 after a hippopotamus attack at Tyavarekoppa Lion & Tiger Safari (Shivamogga, Karnataka). Incident occurred during temperature check of a pregnant hippo, raising concerns over zoo/safari safety protocols and wildlife handling standards. Karnataka Forest Minister ordered probe, highlighting governance gaps in captive wildlife management. Relevance GS 2 (Governance): Wildlife regulation (Wildlife Protection Act, CZA) Institutional accountability in zoos/safaris GS 3 (Environment & Security): Wildlife management and conservation ethics Occupational safety in forest and wildlife sectors Practice Question Q. “Human–wildlife conflict is not limited to natural habitats but extends to captive environments as well.” Examine with reference to recent incidents in India. (250 words) Static Background Hippopotamus (Hippopotamus amphibius): large semi-aquatic mammal native to Sub-Saharan Africa, known for territorial and aggressive behaviour. Among most dangerous large animals globally, responsible for ~500 human deaths annually (IUCN/WWF estimates). In India, hippos are non-native species, found only in zoos, safaris, and captive breeding facilities. Governed under Wild Life (Protection) Act, 1972 → captive animals regulated via Central Zoo Authority (CZA) guidelines. Behavioural Aspects Hippos are highly territorial in water bodies, especially females during pregnancy, increasing aggression risk. Possess strong jaws (~1,800 psi bite force) and can charge at 30 km/h on land, making them extremely dangerous. Unpredictable behavioural triggers include stress, proximity, or perceived threat during medical intervention. Require specialised veterinary protocols such as sedation or remote monitoring for safe handling. Governance Dimensions Central Zoo Authority (CZA) prescribes Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) for handling captive wild animals. Zoos and safaris must follow animal-specific handling protocols, including barrier systems, sedation guidelines, and trained personnel use. Incident suggests possible SOP violation or inadequate enforcement, necessitating audit of safety compliance. State Forest Department responsible for oversight, staff training, and incident reporting mechanisms. Data & Evidence Hippos cause ~500 deaths annually in Africa (IUCN/WWF estimates), among most dangerous large mammals. India has ~160+ recognised zoos under CZA managing diverse captive species. Multiple past incidents globally indicate higher aggression in captive megafauna under stress conditions. Wildlife staff face high-risk exposure, though systematic national data on zoo-related injuries remains limited. Challenges Inadequate adherence to SOPs for handling dangerous animals during veterinary procedures. Limited specialised training and simulation-based preparedness for zoo staff. Weak monitoring and audit mechanisms for safety compliance in zoos/safaris. Lack of standardised emergency response protocols across states. Ethical concerns over keeping high-risk exotic species in confined environments. Way Forward Strict enforcement and periodic audit of CZA guidelines and SOP compliance across all zoos and safaris. Mandatory specialised training, certification, and simulation drills for veterinary and animal-handling staff. Use of technology (remote monitoring, sedation tools, AI-based animal behaviour tracking) to reduce direct contact. Develop national database on zoo-related incidents for evidence-based policy improvements. Shift toward conservation-centric zoo models prioritising animal welfare and human safety. Prelims Pointers Hippopotamus: semi-aquatic herbivore, native to Africa, not India. Regulated under Wild Life (Protection) Act, 1972 via Central Zoo Authority (CZA). Known for territorial aggression, especially in water bodies. Among most dangerous mammals globally in terms of human fatalities. CAPF (General Administration) Bill, 2026 Why in News ? CAPF Bill, 2026 (to be tabled in Rajya Sabha; report dated 21 March 2026) proposes statutory reservation of senior posts for IPS officers on deputation. Seeks to override Supreme Court judgment dated 23 May 2025, which mandated progressive reduction of IPS deputation up to IG rank within 2 years. Government justifies move on grounds of Centre–State coordination and reducing litigation. Relevance GS 2 (Polity & Governance): Centre–State relations and All India Services (Article 312) Service reforms, cadre management, and administrative accountability Judicial review vs legislative override (SC judgment vs Parliament) GS 3 (Internal Security): Role and functioning of CAPFs (BSF, CRPF, CISF, ITBP, SSB) Leadership structure and operational efficiency in security forces Practice Question Q. “The CAPF (General Administration) Bill, 2026 raises concerns of institutional balance, federal coordination, and service equity.” Critically examine in light of recent Supreme Court judgments. (250 words) Static Background CAPFs: BSF, CRPF, CISF, ITBP, SSB under Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA). Total strength: ~10 lakh personnel, including ~13,000 Group A officers (MHA data, 2026). Recruitment: Assistant Commandants via UPSC CAPF exam, forming cadre officers. IPS (Article 312): All India Service with roles in Centre and States, historically deputed to CAPFs. Key Provisions of the Bill 50% posts at Inspector General (IG) level reserved for IPS officers. Minimum 67% posts at Additional Director General (ADG) level reserved for IPS. 100% posts at Special DG and DG levels to be filled exclusively by IPS officers. Codifies earlier executive orders into statutory law, creating binding framework. Introduces umbrella legislation for recruitment and service conditions of CAPF officers. Supreme Court Context 23 May 2025 SC judgment: Declared CAPF officers as Organised Group A Services (OGAS). Directed reduction of IPS deputation up to IG level within 2 years. Ordered cadre review within 6 months. 28 October 2025: SC dismissed review petition by MHA, making ruling final. Bill attempts legislative override of judicial directive, raising constitutional concerns. Governance Dimensions Government argument: IPS officers ensure coordination between Centre and States, critical for CAPFs operating across jurisdictions. Aims to resolve fragmented service rules and repeated litigation due to absence of statutory framework. However, institutionalising IPS dominance may weaken cadre autonomy and internal leadership development. Raises issue of generalist vs specialist leadership in internal security forces. Security Dimensions CAPFs handle border security (BSF, ITBP), internal security (CRPF), industrial security (CISF). Require domain expertise, long-term operational experience, and continuity in leadership. IPS officers bring administrative coordination and inter-agency linkage, especially with State police. Over-dependence on deputation may reduce operational efficiency and institutional memory. Social Dimensions CAPF officers face career stagnation, with first promotion taking 15–18 years (field data). Perceived institutional discrimination affects morale and organisational cohesion. Officers often lead from front in high-risk operations, raising concerns of recognition and fairness. Ethical issue of merit vs hierarchy and equitable career progression in public services. Data & Evidence CAPF strength: ~10 lakh personnel; vacancies: ~93,000 posts (Parliament data, 2026). Group A officers: ~13,000, with limited senior posts. Existing system: 20% DIG posts and 50% IG posts already reserved for IPS (executive order). Promotion lag: 15–18 years for first promotion for CAPF officers. Challenges  Overrides final Supreme Court judgment, raising concerns about judicial authority. Institutionalises IPS dominance, limiting upward mobility of CAPF cadre officers. May lead to low morale, internal friction, and reduced operational effectiveness. Risk of talent attrition and reduced attractiveness of CAPF careers. Does not address core issue of cadre restructuring and promotion bottlenecks. Way Forward Introduce balanced cadre policy ensuring greater representation of CAPF officers in senior ranks. Implement time-bound cadre review and promotion reforms to reduce stagnation. Develop hybrid leadership model combining IPS coordination role + CAPF operational expertise. Institutionalise independent cadre management authority for objective decision-making. Ensure reforms align with constitutional principles of equality, efficiency, and fairness. Prelims Pointers CAPFs under MHA: BSF, CRPF, CISF, ITBP, SSB. IPS: All India Service under Article 312. SC Judgment (23 May 2025): CAPF officers recognised as OGAS; reduction of IPS deputation. CAPF recruitment via UPSC CAPF (Assistant Commandant). Renewable Energy Ministry demands sweeping powers Why in News ? Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) in submission to Parliamentary Committee (February 2026; public March 2026) sought recognition as “Central Government” under Electricity Act, 2003. Proposal aims to expand MNRE’s authority over renewable energy regulation, planning, and market design, currently dominated by Ministry of Power. Debate reflects need for institutional clarity amid India’s 500 GW non-fossil target by 2030. Relevance GS 2 (Governance & Federalism): Institutional overlap and policy coordination Centre–State relations (Concurrent List – Electricity) GS 3 (Economy & Environment): Energy transition and renewable governance Climate commitments (NDCs, net-zero) Power sector reforms Practice Question Q. “Institutional fragmentation is a major bottleneck in India’s renewable energy transition.” Discuss in the context of MNRE’s demand for expanded powers. (250 words) Static Background Electricity Act, 2003: primary legislation governing generation, transmission, distribution, and regulation of electricity in India. Ministry of Power (MoP): nodal authority overseeing CERC, CEA, transmission planning, and electricity markets. MNRE: responsible for policy promotion of renewable energy (solar, wind, bioenergy) but limited statutory control. Key regulatory bodies: CERC (Central Electricity Regulatory Commission) → tariff, market regulation CEA (Central Electricity Authority) → planning, technical standards Key Proposals by MNRE Recognition as “Central Government” for renewable energy matters under Electricity Act, 2003. Authority to design renewable electricity markets and bidding frameworks. Power to guide CERC on tariff determination and regulatory principles for renewables. Oversight over Renewable Purchase Obligations (RPOs) planning and monitoring. Directional control over CEA and National Committee on Transmission for renewable integration. Energy Sector Context Total installed power capacity (31 Jan 2026): 520.50 GW. Non-fossil capacity: 271.96 GW (~52%), including 263.18 GW renewable energy. However, actual electricity generation from non-fossil sources ~25%, indicating intermittency challenges. India’s target: 500 GW non-fossil capacity by 2030 (updated NDC commitments). Governance Dimensions Proposal seeks to resolve fragmentation between MNRE (policy) and MoP (regulation & implementation). Could create single-point accountability for renewable energy governance, improving coordination. However, risks overlapping jurisdiction and turf conflict between two central ministries. Raises question of institutional restructuring vs strengthening existing coordination mechanisms. Economic Dimensions Stronger MNRE role may accelerate renewable investments, competitive bidding, and market innovation. Improved RPO enforcement can drive demand for renewable energy, boosting private sector participation. However, regulatory uncertainty during transition may affect investor confidence and power market stability. Efficient renewable integration crucial for reducing import dependence on fossil fuels. Federal Dimensions Electricity is a Concurrent List subject (Entry 38, List III) → requires coordination between Centre and States. Stronger MNRE control over RPOs may face resistance from States lagging in compliance. Raises concerns over centralisation vs cooperative federalism in energy governance. Need for alignment with State Electricity Regulatory Commissions (SERCs). Challenges  Risk of institutional overlap and bureaucratic turf war between MNRE and Ministry of Power. Existing framework already integrates renewables → need for clarity rather than duplication. Weak enforcement of RPOs at state level remains core issue, not just institutional design. Grid challenges: intermittency, storage gaps, transmission bottlenecks. Regulatory complexity may increase if multiple authorities issue overlapping directives. Way Forward Establish clear functional demarcation: MNRE (policy & promotion) vs MoP (regulation & grid management). Strengthen inter-ministerial coordination mechanisms instead of full institutional restructuring. Enhance RPO enforcement with penalties and incentives for states. Invest in grid infrastructure, storage technologies, and smart grids for renewable integration. Consider incremental legal reforms within Electricity Act, 2003 rather than sweeping restructuring. Prelims Pointers Electricity Act, 2003 governs India’s power sector. CERC regulates tariffs and electricity markets; CEA handles planning and technical standards. RPO (Renewable Purchase Obligation) mandates minimum renewable energy consumption. Electricity is in Concurrent List (List III). RBI injects ₹25,101 cr. in banking system via 3-day VRR auction Why in News ? RBI conducted a 3-day VRR auction on 21 March 2026, injecting ₹25,101 crore liquidity into the banking system. Auction cut-off and weighted average rate stood at 5.26%, below the notified amount of ₹75,000 crore. Move comes amid liquidity tightening due to advance tax outflows impacting banking system surplus. Relevance GS 3 (Economy): Monetary policy tools (LAF, VRR) Liquidity management and banking system stability Interest rate transmission GS 2 (Governance): Role of RBI in financial regulation and macroeconomic stability Practice Question Q. “Variable Rate Repo (VRR) operations reflect RBI’s shift toward flexible and market-based liquidity management.” Analyse. (250 words) Static Background Variable Rate Repo (VRR) is a liquidity tool under Liquidity Adjustment Facility (LAF) used by RBI to inject short-term funds into banks. Introduced as part of flexible liquidity management framework (post-2014 reforms) to improve transmission of monetary policy. Repo transactions involve banks borrowing from RBI against government securities as collateral. Unlike fixed repo, interest rate is determined through auction (market-based discovery). Working Mechanism of VRR RBI announces amount, tenor (e.g., 3-day, 7-day), and auction schedule. Banks bid for funds quoting interest rates; lowest accepted rate becomes cut-off rate. Funds injected for short-term liquidity mismatches, especially during temporary cash shortages. Ensures efficient price discovery of short-term interest rates in money market. Monetary Policy Dimensions VRR helps RBI manage system liquidity without altering policy repo rate, maintaining policy stance. Used to address transient liquidity shocks, such as tax outflows, government cash balances, or forex operations. Supports monetary transmission by aligning short-term market rates with policy corridor. Prevents excessive volatility in call money rates and interbank lending rates. Current Context Analysis  Despite ₹75,000 crore notified, only ₹25,101 crore absorbed, indicating moderate demand for liquidity. Earlier injection of ₹48,014 crore on 17 March 2026 shows RBI’s continuous liquidity fine-tuning approach. Advance tax payments typically lead to temporary liquidity tightening, requiring short-term interventions. Lower uptake suggests banks may have alternative liquidity sources or cautious borrowing behaviour. Advantages of VRR Provides flexible, market-based liquidity injection mechanism. Avoids distortion associated with fixed-rate repo operations. Enhances transparency and efficiency in interest rate determination. Allows RBI to fine-tune liquidity without signalling major policy shift. Challenges Effectiveness depends on bank demand for funds, not fully under RBI control. May not address structural liquidity deficits, only short-term mismatches. Limited impact if banks face risk aversion or weak credit demand. Requires continuous monitoring to avoid excess liquidity or tightness cycles. Way Forward Combine VRR with other tools like Open Market Operations (OMOs) and Standing Deposit Facility (SDF) for balanced liquidity management. Improve forecasting of liquidity conditions using data analytics and digital payment trends. Strengthen monetary transmission channels to ensure VRR benefits flow into credit markets. Maintain calibrated liquidity approach aligned with inflation and growth objectives. Prelims Pointers VRR: liquidity injection tool under LAF, rate determined via auction. Opposite tool: Variable Rate Reverse Repo (VRRR) → absorbs liquidity. Repo involves borrowing against government securities. Policy repo rate currently 6.50% (RBI MPC). High-Octane / Premium Petrol Why in News ? On 20 March 2026, price of 95-octane premium petrol increased by ₹2/litre to ₹101.89/litre in Delhi, while bulk diesel rose sharply by ~₹22/litre. Triggered by surge in global crude prices due to West Asia conflict impacting India’s public sector OMCs (IOC, BPCL, HPCL). Regular petrol/diesel prices unchanged, indicating selective price adjustment strategy. Relevance GS 2 (Governance): Fuel pricing policy and regulatory approach GS 3 (Economy & Environment): Energy security and import dependence (~85%) Inflation and fuel pricing Transition to alternative fuels Practice Question Q. “India’s fuel pricing strategy reflects a balancing act between economic stability, political considerations, and energy security.” Discuss. (250 words) Static Background Premium petrol (high-octane fuel) typically has RON 95 or higher, compared to regular petrol (~91 RON in India). Octane number measures fuel’s resistance to knocking (premature combustion) in high-performance engines. Used in luxury vehicles, sports cars, turbocharged engines, forming a niche segment of fuel consumption. Technical Aspects (Octane & Performance) Higher octane fuels allow higher compression ratios, improving engine efficiency and performance. Reduces engine knocking, ensuring smoother combustion in advanced engines. Does not significantly benefit standard engines, hence limited consumer base. Premium petrol also often contains additives improving engine cleanliness and emissions. Environmental Dimensions High-octane fuels may improve combustion efficiency, marginally reducing emissions in compatible engines. However, overall fossil fuel dependence persists, conflicting with climate goals. India targeting 20% ethanol blending by 2025–26, reducing petrol consumption intensity. Push towards electric mobility and green fuels needed to reduce long-term oil dependence. Policy Dimensions Government maintains price stability for mass fuels (petrol/diesel) due to inflation sensitivity. Allows selective price hikes in niche segments like premium petrol to protect OMC finances. Reflects balancing act between fiscal prudence, inflation control, and energy pricing reforms. Bulk diesel pricing deregulated, allowing market-driven adjustments for industrial consumers. Challenges  Continued reliance on imported crude exposes economy to global price volatility. Differential pricing may lead to market distortions between retail and bulk consumers. OMC financial stress persists if global prices remain elevated while retail prices are controlled. Limited awareness leads to misuse of premium petrol in vehicles that do not require it. Way Forward Accelerate energy diversification (renewables, green hydrogen, EVs) to reduce oil dependence. Strengthen strategic petroleum reserves (SPR) to cushion geopolitical shocks. Promote ethanol blending and alternative fuels to reduce petrol demand. Enhance consumer awareness on appropriate fuel usage to prevent inefficiencies. Move toward gradual market-based pricing with targeted subsidies, ensuring fiscal sustainability. Prelims Pointers Octane number measures anti-knocking property of fuel. Regular petrol in India: ~91 RON; premium petrol: ~95 RON or higher. India follows dynamic fuel pricing (since 2017). PPAC (Petroleum Planning & Analysis Cell) provides oil sector data. Semaglutide Generics in India – GLP-1 Drugs & Public Health Transformation Why in News ? Patent expiry of Semaglutide on 21 March 2026 enabled launch of generic versions by Indian pharma companies, drastically reducing prices. Generics priced at ₹1,290/month vs ₹8,800–₹16,400 for innovator drugs, marking 70–90% price reduction. Expected to expand access amid rising obesity and diabetes burden in India. Relevance GS 2 (Governance): Drug regulation (CDSCO, Schedule H) Public health policy and pharmacovigilance GS 3 (Economy & Science & Tech): Pharmaceutical industry and generics market NCD burden (diabetes, obesity) Practice Question Q. “The entry of generic GLP-1 drugs can transform India’s NCD management but raises regulatory and ethical challenges.” Analyse. (250 words) Static Background Semaglutide is a GLP-1 receptor agonist, used for Type-2 diabetes and obesity management. Works by enhancing insulin secretion, suppressing appetite, and slowing gastric emptying. Originally developed by Novo Nordisk (brands: Ozempic, Wegovy), introduced in India in June 2025. Classified as prescription drug (Schedule H under CDSCO) → cannot be sold over-the-counter. Key Developments  Indian companies like Natco Pharma, Eris Lifesciences, Zydus, Dr Reddy’s, Alkem entering market. Generics priced at ₹1,290–₹1,750/month (vials) and ₹4,000–₹4,500 (pen devices). Innovator drugs priced at: Ozempic: ₹8,800–₹11,175/month Wegovy: ₹10,850–₹16,400/month ~43 companies have approvals/pipeline products → competitive market expansion. Economic Dimensions Price drop of 70–90% improves affordability and access, especially for middle-income groups. India’s GLP-1 market size ~₹1,500 crore (Feb 2026), expected to grow rapidly. Monthly sales ~1.2 lakh units, projected to double within 3 months (Pharmarack estimate). Strengthens India’s role as global generics hub (“pharmacy of the world”). Public Health Significance India faces dual burden: ~101 million diabetics (ICMR 2023) ~254 million obese individuals; 351 million including abdominal obesity Semaglutide offers multi-benefit therapy: glycaemic control + weight loss + cardiovascular risk reduction. Supports preventive healthcare approach, reducing long-term NCD burden. WHO recognises obesity as chronic disease requiring lifelong management (latest guidelines). Social Dimensions Improved affordability enhances health equity, enabling access beyond elite urban populations. Rising obesity linked to urbanisation, sedentary lifestyle, dietary transitions. Risk of cosmetic misuse among non-eligible individuals due to rapid weight-loss appeal. Need to balance medical necessity vs lifestyle consumption trends. Regulatory Dimensions Drugs classified under Schedule H → prescription mandatory, but India faces weak enforcement of OTC norms. Risk of market flooding (~50 brands) leading to quality variation and regulatory challenges. Need for strong pharmacovigilance (PvPI under CDSCO) to monitor adverse effects. Government must ensure standard treatment guidelines and ethical marketing practices. Health Concerns Side effects include nausea, gastrointestinal issues, pancreatitis risk (clinical evidence). BMI thresholds (≥30 or ≥27 with comorbidities) based on Western standards, may not suit Indian populations. Indians develop metabolic risks at lower BMI (~23–25) → need for India-specific guidelines. Requires long-term adherence, making affordability critical but also raising compliance challenges. Data & Evidence   Price of generics (March 2026): ₹1,290/month (lowest dose) vs innovator ₹8,800–₹16,400/month. Obesity burden: 254 million obese; 351 million incl. abdominal obesity Men: 1.53 crore (1990) → 8.12 crore (2021) → projected 21.4 crore (2050) Women: 2.14 crore (1990) → 9.8 crore (2021) → projected 23.17 crore (2050) (Lancet study) GLP-1 consumption: ~1.2 lakh units/month, expected to double (Pharmarack, 2026). Challenges Potential misuse for cosmetic weight loss, straining supply for diabetic patients. Weak regulatory enforcement may lead to irrational prescriptions and overuse. High dependence on long-term usage increases economic burden despite lower prices. Lack of India-specific clinical protocols for safe and targeted use. Risk of inequity in access due to urban concentration of healthcare providers. Way Forward Develop India-specific clinical guidelines for GLP-1 usage based on local BMI and metabolic risks. Strengthen prescription enforcement and pharmacovigilance systems (CDSCO, PvPI). Integrate drug therapy with lifestyle interventions under NPCDCS programme. Regulate advertising to prevent misuse as cosmetic weight-loss solution. Expand public health screening for obesity and diabetes, aligning with WHO recommendations. Prelims Pointers Semaglutide: GLP-1 receptor agonist used for Type-2 diabetes and obesity. Schedule H drug: requires prescription for sale. Patent expiry: 21 March 2026 (India) enabling generic entry. Major players: Novo Nordisk, Eli Lilly (Mounjaro). Indoor Athletics vs Outdoor Athletics  Why in News ? World Athletics allotted 2028 World Indoor Championships to Bhubaneswar (20 March 2026 announcement), marking India’s entry into global indoor athletics hosting. Venue: Kalinga Indoor Stadium (completed March 2024), first dedicated indoor athletics facility in India. India to host 1st National Indoor Athletics Championships on 24–25 March 2026, signalling ecosystem development. Relevance GS 2 (Governance): Sports policy and institutional coordination GS 3 (Economy): Sports infrastructure and economic impact Sports technology and performance science Practice Question Q. “Hosting global sporting events can catalyse long-term sports development in India, provided infrastructure and policy are aligned.” Discuss. (250 words) Static Background World Athletics Indoor Championships is a global event conducted in indoor stadiums during winter season (Jan–March). Governed by World Athletics (formerly IAAF), regulating track, field, and combined indoor events. Indoor athletics differs structurally due to space constraints, climate control, and track design. India traditionally focused on outdoor athletics, with indoor infrastructure emerging recently. Key Differences: Indoor vs Outdoor Athletics Track Structure & Design Indoor track is 200 metres oval, compared to 400 metres outdoor track, leading to tighter bends and higher curvature stress. Indoor lanes are narrower (0.90–1.10 m; Kalinga: 1 m) vs 1.22 m outdoor lanes, causing congestion and tactical racing. Indoor tracks feature banked curves (~10° incline) to counter centrifugal force and maintain speed. Events Structure 100 metres (blue riband event) absent indoors; replaced by 60 metres sprint, emphasising explosive starts. Indoor includes 1,000m and 3,000m events, while excludes some outdoor staples like javelin throw. Field events limited to long jump, triple jump, high jump, pole vault, shot put, due to space constraints. Competition Dynamics Indoor races involve more jostling and tactical positioning, especially after breakline in middle-distance events. Lane advantage differs: outer lanes (especially lane 6) faster due to banked track geometry, unlike outdoor middle lanes advantage. Smaller track radius affects stride rhythm, often disadvantaging taller athletes. Environmental Conditions Indoor stadiums eliminate wind factor, unlike outdoor where tailwind/headwind affects performance. Provides controlled, neutral conditions, making performance dependent on technique and reaction time. Lack of wind reduces assistance in events like long jump, affecting distance outcomes. Surface & Performance Indoor tracks use prefabricated Mondo surfaces (~9 mm thick) laid on concrete → harder and faster tracks. Favour sprinters and explosive athletes, but may not suit endurance runners preferring softer surfaces. Performance more dependent on reaction time and acceleration, especially in short events like 60m. Season & Format Indoor season is shorter (Jan–Feb) with compact competitions (2–3 days). Structured into Challenger, Bronze, Silver, Gold categories under World Athletics Indoor Tour. Contrasts with longer outdoor season culminating in World Championships/Olympics. Policy Dimensions Hosting global event enhances India’s sports infrastructure, international visibility, and soft power. Aligns with India’s push to become global sporting hub (Khelo India, Olympic hosting ambitions). Requires coordination between World Athletics, Athletics Federation of India (AFI), and Odisha government. Investment in indoor facilities helps year-round training unaffected by weather conditions. Economic Dimensions Boosts sports tourism, infrastructure investment, and local economy (Odisha sports model). Encourages private sector participation (Reliance Foundation involvement) in high-performance training. Generates employment in sports management, event logistics, and allied services. Social Dimensions Promotes sports culture and grassroots participation, especially in emerging disciplines like indoor athletics. Provides scientific training ecosystem for athletes with access to modern facilities. Enhances India’s chances in global athletics competitiveness, especially sprint and middle-distance events. Data & Evidence Kalinga Indoor Stadium completed March 2024, first of its kind in India. Indoor track length: 200 m; lane width ~1 m (Kalinga) vs 1.22 m outdoor. Banked curves: ~10° incline for speed compensation. Indoor events include 60m, 400m, 800m, 1000m, 1500m, 3000m, relays + field events. Challenges  Limited indoor infrastructure across India, restricting athlete exposure. Need for specialised coaching and adaptation to indoor track dynamics. High cost of construction and maintenance of indoor facilities. Risk of underutilisation post-events without sustained sports ecosystem development. Way Forward Develop network of indoor stadiums across regions for year-round athlete training. Integrate indoor athletics into Khelo India and grassroots talent identification programmes. Strengthen sports science, biomechanics, and coaching ecosystem for indoor formats. Leverage events for long-term sports development rather than one-time hosting gains. Prelims Pointers Indoor track length: 200 metres (vs 400 m outdoor). No 100m event indoors; replaced by 60m sprint. Banked curves (~10°) used in indoor tracks. Governing body: World Athletics.