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Jun 3, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

GS-III • Economy • Statistical Reforms WPI Base Year Revision & Introduction of Producer Price Index (PPI) Office of Economic Adviser, DPIIT  •  New Series Release: 15 June 2026 Syllabus RelevanceGS-III: Inflation & Index Numbers GS-III: Monetary Policy GS-III: Industrial Growth GS-III: Statistical Reforms GS-III: Infrastructure & PPP Contracts GS-II: Data Governance GS-II: Evidence-based Policymaking 1Issue in Brief Wholesale Price Index (WPI) base year revised from 2011–12 to 2022–23, replacing an outdated basket that missed renewables, digital services, and post-pandemic structural shifts in India’s economy. Three new Producer Price Indices introduced — Output PPI, Input PPI, and Service PPI — marking India’s shift toward globally accepted price measurement standards. New series to be released on 15 June 2026 by the Office of Economic Adviser, DPIIT; WPI will run parallel for 5 years before discontinuation. Transition aligns with IMF recommendations and practices of advanced economies like USA, EU, UK, and Japan, which already use PPI as their primary producer-side price measure. 2Static Background What is WPI? WPI measures price changes at the wholesale/bulk transaction level, before goods reach the retail consumer; it captures inflation from the producer’s perspective, not the consumer’s. Released monthly by the Office of Economic Adviser, DPIIT under the Ministry of Commerce and Industry; widely used in price escalation clauses in infrastructure and PPP contracts. WPI vs CPI Key Distinction: RBI uses CPI, not WPI, for its 4% inflation targeting (±2 band) under the Flexible Inflation Targeting framework introduced in 2016. Historical Base Year Revisions of WPI Revisions: 1952–53, 1961–62, 1970–71, 1981–82, 1993–94, 2004–05, 2011–12, and now 2022–23 — each revision reflects structural changes in the economy’s production basket. Key Institutional Bodies Involved Technical Advisory Committee (TAC) on Statistics of Price and Cost of Living (SPCL) approved the compilation methodology before its presentation to the National Statistical Commission (NSC). Final approval granted by the competent authority on 25 May 2026; institutional layering ensures statistical credibility and independence of the revision process. 3Key Dimensions A. Expanded Item Coverage Total items in WPI basket increased from 697 to 957, a rise of 260 items (~37%), capturing new sectors like renewable energy, advanced manufacturing, and emerging commodity categories. Broader basket improves representativeness of India’s evolved production structure, reducing the risk of index distortion due to missing or under-weighted commodities. B. Inclusion of Renewable Energy Solar energy, wind energy, and nuclear electricity added under the ‘Electricity’ group for the first time, reflecting India’s rapidly expanding clean energy capacity. Critical given India’s target of 500 GW renewable energy capacity by 2030; the old WPI basket was blind to price movements in this strategically important sector. C. Structural Reorganisation — Fuel & Power Group Crude Petroleum and Natural Gas shifted from ‘Primary Articles’ to ‘Fuel and Power’ group, consolidating all major energy commodities — coal, electricity, petroleum products — under one unified group. This reorganisation enables coherent, integrated tracking of energy price movements and improves analytical clarity for policymakers and researchers studying energy inflation. D. Weight Derivation — Methodology Upgrade GVO-based (Gross Value of Output) weights are superior because they represent what is actually produced domestically, eliminating distortions caused by import-export fluctuations in the old weighting formula. E. Computation and Imputation Upgrades Chain-based method recalculates the index frequently, making it more responsive to recent price changes and avoiding the base-year drift problem of long-term formulations. Targeted Mean Imputation replaces the carry-forward method, where missing prices were simply repeated — a statistically flawed practice that artificially suppressed price volatility. F. Three New Producer Price Indices Index Price Basis Weight Source Frequency Output PPI Basic Price (excl. taxes & margins) Supply Table, National Accounts 2022–23 Monthly Input PPI Purchaser’s Price (incl. taxes & margins) Use Table, National Accounts 2022–23 Monthly (Experimental) Service PPI Basic Price Administrative sources (7 services, Phase 1) Quarterly G. Seven Services Under Service PPI (Phase 1) Phase 1 covers: Banking, Securities Transaction, Insurance, Management of Pension Funds, Railways, Air (Passenger), and Telecom — selected based on data availability from administrative sources. Services contribute approximately 55% of India’s GDP; their complete exclusion from WPI was a significant structural gap in India’s inflation measurement architecture. H. Price Basis Distinction WPI, Output PPI, and Service PPI compiled at Basic Price, which excludes net taxes and trade/transport margins — capturing the pure price at the point of production. Input PPI compiled at Purchaser’s Price — includes taxes and margins — because industries actually buy inputs at market prices, making this the economically accurate basis for input cost measurement. I. Data Availability and Back Series WPI and Output PPI back series available monthly from April 2023 to April 2026 (37 months); Service PPI back series available quarterly from Q1 2023–24 to Q3 2025–26. Input PPI released on experimental/trial basis from March 2026 to assess data quality and gather stakeholder feedback before regular publication. 4Critical Analysis Strengths of the Revision The jump from 697 to 957 items makes the index far more representative of India’s diversified industrial structure, reducing the measurement errors that plagued the outdated 2011–12 basket. Inclusion of renewables (solar, wind, nuclear) in the WPI basket is timely; India’s energy mix is transforming rapidly, and price indices must reflect this structural shift for accurate inflation analysis. Chain-based indexing and Targeted Mean Imputation bring India’s statistical methodology closer to international standards, improving the credibility of data for foreign investors and multilateral institutions. Why PPI is Superior to WPI WPI captures prices at the first point of bulk sale, which includes trade margins and taxes — distorting the true price signal received by producers at the factory or farm gate. PPI measures prices at the producer level (Basic Price), providing a cleaner, purer signal of production-side inflation that is more useful for monetary policy and national accounts compilation. The IMF’s Producer Price Index Manual explicitly recommends PPI as the internationally accepted standard; India’s adoption closes a long-standing gap in statistical best practices. Inflation Transmission Signal — Input PPI vs Output PPI A rising Input PPI with stable Output PPI indicates producers are absorbing cost pressures, compressing margins — a leading indicator of corporate stress and potential future supply contraction. A rising Output PPI ahead of CPI signals that cost-push inflation is being passed to consumers — this makes the PPI spread a valuable leading indicator for RBI’s monetary policy decisions. Limitations and Challenges Critical Gap: Service PPI covers only 7 services in Phase 1, leaving out critical sectors like healthcare, education, real estate, and logistics — limiting its utility as a comprehensive services inflation measure. Input PPI is experimental, meaning its data quality and methodological robustness are yet to be validated — policymakers cannot rely on it for major decisions in the near term. Quarterly frequency of Service PPI versus monthly frequency for goods indices creates a timing mismatch that complicates real-time inflation analysis and policy response. WPI is embedded in thousands of infrastructure and PPP contracts through escalation clauses; the 5-year transition window may be insufficient for complex, long-term public contracts to migrate smoothly. Linking factor methodology (geometric mean of 2024–25 indices) introduces a statistical discontinuity, making long-run historical comparisons between old and new series technically challenging. 5Way Forward Expand Service PPI progressively to include healthcare, education, real estate, and logistics in subsequent phases, leveraging GST transaction data and administrative records for weight derivation. Upgrade Input PPI from trial to regular release after rigorous data quality assessment, stakeholder consultation, and methodology validation over the initial experimental period. Integrate PPI with GST and e-commerce price data to enable near-real-time price collection, reducing data lags and improving the accuracy of monthly index compilation. Capacity building for public procurement officials is essential to facilitate smooth migration of price escalation clauses in PPP and infrastructure contracts from WPI to PPI within the 5-year window. Align with SNA 2025 (System of National Accounts) framework to ensure India’s price statistics remain internationally comparable and eligible for IMF Article IV assessments. NSC and TAC-SPCL should establish a permanent review mechanism for periodic basket updates — preventing the next index from becoming as outdated as the 2011–12 WPI became by 2026. 6Prelims Pointers WPI Base Year: Revised from 2011–12 to 2022–23; new series release on 15 June 2026. Nodal Ministry: Office of Economic Adviser, DPIIT, Ministry of Commerce & Industry. WPI Basket: Expanded from 697 → 957 items (addition of ~260 items, ~37% rise). New Indices: Output PPI, Input PPI, Service PPI; parallel operation for 5 years before WPI discontinuation. Output PPI Price Basis: Basic Price (excl. taxes & margins) | Source: Supply Table. Input PPI Price Basis: Purchaser’s Price (incl. taxes & margins) | Source: Use Table. Service PPI: Phase 1 — 7 services: Banking, Securities Transaction, Insurance, Pension Fund Management, Railways, Air Passenger, Telecom; frequency: Quarterly. Imputation Change: Carry-forward replaced by Targeted Mean Imputation; indexing switched to chain-based method. New Additions: Solar, wind, nuclear electricity added under ‘Electricity’ group; Crude Petroleum & Natural Gas shifted to ‘Fuel & Power’. Weight Methodology: Old — Net Value of Output (NVO); New — Gross Value of Output (GVO). RBI Inflation Targeting: Based on CPI (not WPI); target: 4% ±2 band (since 2016). TAC-SPCL: Technical Advisory Committee on Statistics of Price and Cost of Living — approves methodology before NSC review. IMF Recommendation: IMF Producer Price Index Manual recommends PPI over WPI as international standard. Back Series: WPI & Output PPI — monthly from Apr 2023 to Apr 2026 (37 months); Service PPI — quarterly from Q1 2023–24 to Q3 2025–26. 7Practice Mains Questions GS-III  |  15 Marks “The transition from WPI to PPI in India is not merely a statistical correction but a structural reform in how inflation is understood and governed.” Critically examine, with reference to monetary policy, contract management, and international best practices. GS-III  |  10 Marks Discuss the key methodological improvements introduced in the revised WPI (base year 2022–23). How do chain-based indexing and Targeted Mean Imputation enhance the quality and reliability of India’s price statistics? 8Practice MCQ with Explanation Q. With reference to India’s Producer Price Index (PPI), consider the following statements: The Input PPI is compiled using Basic Price, which excludes taxes and trade margins. The Output PPI weights are derived from the Use Table of National Accounts. The Service PPI in Phase 1 covers seven services including Banking and Telecom. The transition from WPI to PPI is in line with IMF recommendations. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 3 and 4 only (c) 1, 3 and 4 only (d) 2, 3 and 4 only Answer: (b) — Statements 3 and 4 only Statement 1 — Incorrect. Input PPI is compiled using Purchaser’s Price, not Basic Price. Purchaser’s Price includes taxes and trade/transport margins, which is appropriate since industries buy inputs at market prices. Statement 2 — Incorrect. Output PPI weights are derived from the Supply Table; the Use Table is the source for Input PPI weights — a critical distinction reflecting production versus consumption sides. Statement 3 — Correct. Service PPI Phase 1 covers exactly 7 services: Banking, Securities Transaction, Insurance, Pension Fund Management, Railways, Air Passenger, and Telecom. Statement 4 — Correct. The IMF explicitly recommends PPI over WPI as the internationally accepted standard for measuring producer-side price changes, consistent with the PPI Manual published by the IMF. GS-I / GS-II / GS-III • Society • Governance • Economy Women Empowerment in India — Policy, Progress & Gaps Lifecycle-based Convergence Framework  •  Viksit Bharat 2047 Syllabus RelevanceGS-I: Women Empowerment & Gender Issues GS-II: Welfare Schemes & SHGs GS-II: PRI & Political Representation GS-III: Female LFPR GS-III: Financial Inclusion & Skilling 1Issue in Brief India has pursued a lifecycle-based approach to women’s empowerment — covering education, health, skills, finance, safety, and political representation under converging policy frameworks since 2014. Progress is measurable: female enrolment, financial inclusion, healthcare access, and political participation have all recorded statistically significant improvements over the past decade. However, gaps persist in representation, quality of employment, service delivery in remote areas, and transition from scheme beneficiary to independent economic actor. Women’s empowerment is now explicitly positioned as a prerequisite for Viksit Bharat 2047, recognising that demographic dividend cannot be realised without female labour force participation. 2Static Background Constitutional and Legal Framework Article 14 — Equality before law; Article 15(3) — permits special provisions for women and children; Article 16 — equal opportunity in public employment. Article 243D — mandates not less than 1/3rd reservation for women in Panchayati Raj Institutions; foundation for today’s 46% female representation in PRIs. Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam, 2023 — provides 33% reservation for women in Lok Sabha and State Legislative Assemblies; implementation pending delimitation exercise. Key Policy Frameworks National Policy for Women, 2016 — umbrella policy for gender equity across sectors. National Education Policy, 2020 — mandates gender-inclusive education; integrates Poshan Bhi Padhai Bhi for early childhood care. Beti Bachao Beti Padhao (BBBP) — launched 2015; targets sex ratio at birth, girls’ education, and empowerment in districts with low Child Sex Ratio. Flagship Scheme Architecture (Overview) Sector Key Scheme(s) Nodal Ministry Education Samagra Shiksha, KGBV, Vigyan Jyoti, PRAGATI Ministry of Education Health & Nutrition AB-PMJAY, Poshan 2.0, Mission Indradhanush, AAM MoH&FW, WCD Financial Inclusion PMJDY, PMMY, DAY-NRLM, Stand-Up India, SVANidhi Finance, Rural Dev. Skilling PMKVY, NAVYA Skill Development Safety & Housing Mission Shakti, PMAY, PMUY, JJM WCD, Housing, MoPNG Political Empowerment Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam, Article 243D Law & Justice, MoPR 3Key Dimensions A. Education — Access, Infrastructure, and Retention Female enrolment in schools grew from 1.57 crore (32%) in 2014–15 to 11.93 crore (48%) in 2024–25 — a near-tripling in absolute numbers and a 16-percentage-point jump in share. Samagra Shiksha (2018–19) integrates pre-primary to Class XII under one framework; over 4,073 schools upgraded and 1.49 lakh ICT/digital learning initiatives supported between 2018–19 and 2025–26. School infrastructure — critical for girl child retention: 97.3% schools have functional girls’ toilets (up from 92.09% in 2014–15) and 99.3% have drinking water (up from 95.72%). Vocational education coverage expanded from 9,477 to 25,000 schools, improving early skilling and reducing pressure on girls to drop out for economic reasons. Kasturba Gandhi Balika Vidyalayas (KGBVs): Residential schools for girls from SC, ST, OBC, and minority communities in educationally backward blocks; cover Classes VI to XII under Samagra Shiksha. Functional KGBVs increased from 4,996 (2022) to 5,316 (2026); enrolment grew from 6.07 lakh (2020–21) to 7.58 lakh (2025–26). KGBVs address the specific barrier of distance and safety that prevents marginalised girls from accessing secondary education in rural areas. B. Higher Education and STEM Vigyan Jyoti Scheme (launched December 2019) — supports girls in Classes IX–XII through mentoring, lab exposure, and workshops; reached 1.12 lakh girls across 300 districts in 34 States and UTs. Supernumerary seats in IITs and NITs raised women’s participation from below 10% to over 20% — a structural correction to institutional gender imbalance without reducing male seats. Women accounted for over 53% of UGC NET-JRF scholars in STEM subjects in 2024–25 — a counterintuitive and significant data point challenging the narrative of women’s disinterest in science. Over 12 lakh additional women enrolled in higher education between 2014–15 and 2022–23, supported partly by the Central Sector Scholarship (50% reserved for girls) and National PG Scholarship (₹1.5 lakh/year, 3,000 women annually). AICTE PRAGATI Scholarship — 10,000 scholarships annually since 2014–15; nearly 36,000 girl students benefited by 2024–25 in technical diploma and degree courses. C. Skilling and Digital Inclusion PMKVY (2015) — nearly 45% of beneficiaries are women across all phases; cumulative training: PMKVY 1.0 (19 lakh), 2.0 (1.10 crore), 3.0 (7.35 lakh), 4.0 (27 lakh trained, 18.79 lakh certified in 3 years). PMKVY 4.0 focuses on future-ready sectors — AI, drones, green energy, electronics — aligning women’s skilling with India’s emerging industrial and technological priorities. NAVYA (2025) — targets girls aged 16–18 years in 27 Aspirational and North-Eastern districts across 19 states; trains in digital marketing, cybersecurity, AI services, and sustainable jobs; as of December 2025, 1,295 enrolled, 671 trained — early-stage implementation. D. Health and Nutrition AB-PMJAY — over 43.52 crore Ayushman cards created (as of February 2026); women hold nearly 49% (21 crore); 4.97 crore women have received authorised hospital admissions; women constitute 48% of authorised admissions. Ayushman Arogya Mandirs (AAM) — 1.84 lakh centres operational (as of February 2026); provide maternal healthcare, NCD screening, and reproductive healthcare at primary level, reducing the distance barrier for rural women. Mission Indradhanush — 5.46 crore children and 1.32 crore pregnant women vaccinated against vaccine-preventable diseases through U-WIN digital platform; 8.73 crore women screened for cervical cancer (as of February 2026). Saksham Anganwadi and Poshan 2.0 — 1.03 lakh Anganwadi Centres upgraded; 10.58 lakh Anganwadi Workers trained; focus on SAM/MAM treatment, diet diversity, and Poshan Bhi Padhai Bhi (play-based early learning aligned with NEP 2020). E. Financial Inclusion and Economic Empowerment PM Jan Dhan Yojana (2014) — foundation of women’s financial inclusion; zero-balance accounts enabled access to Direct Benefit Transfers, insurance, and credit for previously unbanked women. Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana (2015) — minimum deposit ₹250; interest rate 8.2% per annum; tax-free under Section 80C; targeted at girls up to 10 years; promotes long-term financial planning for daughters’ education and marriage. DAY-NRLM — covers 7,627 blocks; SHGs accessed ₹12.18 lakh crore in bank credit; 50,548 Bank Sakhis deployed; 5.88 lakh enterprises supported under SVEP; 1.51 crore community cadre members developed. Lakhpati Didi — target of 6 crore Lakhpati Didis (annual income ≥ ₹1 lakh); currently covers 34 States/UTs, 757 districts, 93.85 lakh SHGs with 10.07 crore members. PMMY (2015) — collateral-free loans under Shishu, Kishor, Tarun, and Tarun Plus categories; total loans grew from 3.49 crore (2015–16) to 57.79 crore (till March 2026); total amount from ₹1.37 lakh crore to ₹40.07 lakh crore. Stand-Up India (2016–March 2025) — loans of ₹10 lakh to ₹1 crore for women entrepreneurs; supported 2.05 lakh women entrepreneurs; women accounts grew from 55,000 (2018) to 1.90 lakh (2024). PM SVANidhi — over 1.15 crore loans sanctioned; women are 46% of beneficiaries; loans up to ₹15,000 (first tranche), ₹25,000 and ₹50,000 for timely repayment; 7% interest subsidy provided. NaMo Drone Didi (November 2023) — scheme outlay ₹1,261 crore (2023–24 to 2025–26); targets 15,000 drones to women SHGs; 1,094 drones distributed in 2023–24; training conducted at DGCA-authorised Remote Pilot Training Organisations. Womaniya on GeM (2019) — 2.1 lakh women-led enterprises registered; 13.7 lakh orders in FY 2025–26; ₹28,000 crore+ contract value awarded; accounts for 5.6% of GeM’s total order value, surpassing the mandated 3% procurement target. SHE-Mart (announced Union Budget 2026–27) — community-owned retail spaces managed by SHG federations for direct consumer sales; target of benefiting 1 crore women. F. Safety, Sanitation, Housing, and Dignified Living Mission Shakti (April 2022) — two verticals: Sambal (safety: OSCs, Women Helpline 181, Nari Adalat) and Samarthya (empowerment: Shakhi Sadan, Sakhi Niwas, Palna creche scheme); 973 One Stop Centres operational; 14.49 lakh women assisted; 3 crore+ women supported through Helpline 181. 15,000+ Women Help Desks across police stations; integrated with Emergency Response Support System (ERSS-112) for faster response to distress calls. SHe-Box portal — enables online reporting of workplace sexual harassment complaints; digital grievance mechanism aligned with the Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace (Prevention, Prohibition and Redressal) Act, 2013 (POSH Act). PMAY-Gramin — 4.15 crore houses allocated, 2.99 crore completed (as of March 2026); financial assistance over ₹4.03 lakh crore; 96% houses under PMAY-U 2.0 allotted to women — asset ownership being systematically transferred to women. PMUY (2016) — 10.55 crore LPG connections released (as of 14 May 2026); reduces indoor air pollution, a major cause of respiratory disease in women; deposit-free connection design removes the upfront cost barrier. Jal Jeevan Mission (2019) — 15.84 crore families given tap water connections; reduces women’s daily water-fetching burden — historically a multi-hour task — freeing time for education and income activities; mission extended to 2028. G. Political Representation Women constituted 48.62% of the electorate (47 crore+ registered voters) in 2024; voter turnout at 65.78%, marginally higher than men — a significant democratic participation milestone. 75 women elected to Lok Sabha in 2024; women account for nearly 17% of Rajya Sabha members; electoral candidacy rose to nearly 10% in 2024. 14.5 lakh+ women elected representatives in PRIs — nearly 46% of total PRI representatives; grassroots governance increasingly shaped by women’s priorities (water, sanitation, nutrition, schools). Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam, 2023 — 33% reservation for women in Lok Sabha and State Assemblies; implementation linked to post-delimitation exercise; a structural legislative intervention for long-term representation. First batch of 17 women cadets graduated from NDA in 2025; women entered NDA in 2022 following Supreme Court direction; 158 women cadets at NDA by early 2026 — marks integration into combat-track military institutions. 4Critical Analysis Achievements Worth Noting The shift from isolated schemes to lifecycle convergence — Poshan 2.0, Samagra Shiksha, Ayushman Bharat, and Mission Shakti operating as interconnected systems — represents a mature policy design compared to siloed programmes of earlier decades. Women holding 53% of UGC NET-JRF STEM scholarships challenges the structural narrative that girls self-select out of science; it points to aspiration being present when institutional access improves. Womaniya exceeding the 3% GeM procurement mandate (achieving 5.6%) demonstrates that women-led enterprises can compete in formal procurement markets when digital access is provided. Persistent Gaps and Concerns Missing Middle Problem: Female Labour Force Participation Rate (LFPR) remains structurally low in India despite gains in education and skilling. LFPR gains have not matched enrolment or skilling progress — a missing middle problem between education and employment. (Verification Required for precise current figure) NAVYA’s reach is extremely limited — 671 girls trained against a target of 3,850, across only 27 districts; aspirational programme but implementation scale is negligible relative to the demographic need. Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam has not yet come into effect — reservation for women in Parliament depends on delimitation, which has no confirmed timeline; the law exists on paper but delivers no representation benefit currently. Quality of PMKVY training has been questioned across evaluations; 18.79 lakh certified out of 27 lakh trained in PMKVY 4.0 means nearly one-third did not get certified. SHE-Mart is announced but unimplemented (Union Budget 2026–27); premature to assess impact; the gap between scheme announcement and ground-level rollout remains a recurring governance challenge. Women’s participation as electoral candidates remains at only ~10% despite strong voter turnout; turnout without candidacy representation suggests women remain voters but not yet leaders at parliamentary levels. Structural vs Symptomatic Interventions Schemes like PMUY and JJM reduce the burden of domestic labour — essential, but they address symptoms of gender inequity (women doing unpaid care work) rather than redistributing that work structurally. Asset registration in women’s names under PMAY is a deeper structural intervention — property ownership is consistently linked in literature to improved bargaining power, reduced domestic violence, and better child outcomes. The SHG-to-Lakhpati Didi pipeline is the most coherent economic graduation model — from savings group to credit access to enterprise to formal market (Womaniya/GeM); but the target of 6 crore Lakhpati Didis vs 10.07 crore SHG members implies roughly 60% graduation rate is expected, which is ambitious. 5Way Forward Bridge the education-employment gap by mandating placement tracking for PMKVY-certified women and linking skilling centres with industry clusters in districts where women’s LFPR is critically low. Accelerate delimitation or delink Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam implementation from it through interim legislative mechanisms; delayed implementation erodes credibility of the reservation commitment. Expand NAVYA from 27 to at least 200 districts in the next phase; future-skills training for adolescent girls cannot remain a pilot when AI and green economy transitions are already reshaping labour markets. Strengthen POSH Act implementation beyond large corporates to cover informal sector women, domestic workers, and gig workers — segments with highest vulnerability and lowest institutional protection. Integrate gender-disaggregated data into all scheme monitoring frameworks; currently many schemes report aggregate beneficiary counts without tracking women’s outcomes — income, employment, health — post-intervention. Scale SHE-Mart with dedicated budgetary allocation and SHG federation capacity building; retail market access is the final bottleneck in the rural women’s enterprise value chain. Address unpaid care work through a national policy framework — childcare infrastructure (Palna creches), elder care, and flexible work norms are prerequisites for sustained female LFPR improvement. 6Prelims Pointers Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam, 2023: 33% reservation in Lok Sabha + State Assemblies; pending delimitation. Article 243D: Minimum 1/3rd reservation for women in PRIs — foundation for current 46% representation. BBBP: Launched 2015; targets sex ratio at birth, girls’ education, empowerment in low Child Sex Ratio districts. KGBVs: Residential schools for marginalised girls (SC/ST/OBC/Minority), Classes VI–XII under Samagra Shiksha; 5,316 functional (2026); 7.58 lakh enrolled. Vigyan Jyoti: Launched December 2019; targets girls Classes IX–XII in STEM; 1.12 lakh girls, 300 districts, 34 States/UTs. NAVYA (2025): Digital skilling for girls aged 16–18 in 27 Aspirational/NE districts; 671 trained (as of Dec 2025). Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana: Min deposit ₹250; interest 8.2% p.a.; tax-free under Section 80C; for girls ≤10 years. DAY-NRLM: 7,627 blocks; ₹12.18 lakh crore bank credit; 50,548 Bank Sakhis; 5.88 lakh enterprises (SVEP). Lakhpati Didi: Target 6 crore; annual income ≥ ₹1 lakh; 93.85 lakh SHGs, 10.07 crore members. NaMo Drone Didi: ₹1,261 crore outlay; 15,000 drones to SHGs; launched November 2023. Womaniya on GeM: 2.1 lakh women enterprises; 5.6% of GeM order value (mandate was 3%); ₹28,000+ crore contracts. SHE-Mart: Announced Union Budget 2026–27; SHG federation-managed retail; target: 1 crore women. Mission Shakti: Two verticals — Sambal (safety) + Samarthya (empowerment); 973 One Stop Centres; Helpline 181. SHe-Box: Online portal for POSH Act complaints; aligned with POSH Act, 2013. PMUY: 10.55 crore LPG connections (as of May 2026); deposit-free. JJM: 15.84 crore tap connections; extended to 2028. AB-PMJAY: 43.52 crore Ayushman cards; women hold ~49% (21 crore); 4.97 crore women admissions authorised. NDA Women Cadets: First 17 graduated 2025; 158 cadets by early 2026; SC direction in 2022. Voter Data 2024: Women — 48.62% electorate, 65.78% turnout; 75 elected to Lok Sabha; 46% PRI representatives. PMAY-U 2.0: 96% houses allotted to women (note: Urban, not Gramin). 7Practice Mains Questions GS-II  |  15 Marks “India’s approach to women’s empowerment has evolved from targeted welfare to systemic convergence, yet structural barriers persist.” Critically examine this statement with reference to key government schemes and data from the past decade. GS-I  |  10 Marks Analyse the role of Self Help Groups in women’s economic empowerment in India. How have schemes like DAY-NRLM, Lakhpati Didi, and Womaniya on GeM created an integrated pathway from financial inclusion to market participation? GS-II  |  10 Marks Despite constitutional provisions and legislative measures, women’s political representation in India’s Parliament remains disproportionately low. Examine the causes and suggest structural reforms to bridge this gap. 8Practice MCQ with Explanation Q. With reference to women-focused government schemes in India, consider the following statements: Vigyan Jyoti Scheme was launched in December 2019 and covers girls from Classes IX to XII. Under PMAY-Gramin, 96% of houses have been allotted to women as of March 2026. The Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam, 2023 provides 33% reservation for women in Parliament and State Legislatures. Input PPI under the new WPI framework is compiled on the basis of Basic Price. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? (a) 1 and 3 only (b) 2 and 4 only (c) 1, 2 and 3 only (d) 1, 3 and 4 only Answer: (a) — Statements 1 and 3 only Statement 1 — Correct. Vigyan Jyoti was launched in December 2019 and targets girls from Classes IX to XII in STEM through mentoring, lab visits, and workshops. Statement 2 — Incorrect. The 96% allotment to women figure applies to PMAY-Urban 2.0, not PMAY-Gramin. Under PMAY-Gramin, 4.15 crore houses were allocated and 2.99 crore completed — but the 96% women-allotment statistic is specifically Urban. Statement 3 — Correct. Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam, 2023 provides 33% reservation for women in Lok Sabha and State Legislative Assemblies, pending delimitation for implementation. Statement 4 — Incorrect. Input PPI is compiled using Purchaser’s Price, not Basic Price. Basic Price is used for WPI, Output PPI, and Service PPI. This is a deliberate design choice since industries buy inputs at market prices inclusive of taxes and margins.

Jun 3, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

UPSC Editorial Digest — Combined Issue The Hindu Editorial Analysis Premium analytical notes for GS answers, essay, interview and revision Contents01 How land pooling solves acquisition woes Author: Amit Gotecha  ·  Urban Planning, Land Policy, Governance GS 2 — GovernanceGS 3 — InfrastructureGS 1 — UrbanisationEssay 02 From Ladakh, a sea buckthorn parable about enterprise Author: Chirag Paswan  ·  Food Processing, Rural Enterprise, Women’s Empowerment GS 3 — AgricultureGS 2 — Social JusticeGS 1 — GeographyEssay Editorial 01 of 02 Article 01 How land pooling solves acquisition woes Amit Gotecha — Urban Planner, The Hindu Relevance: Urban governance, infrastructure delivery, land rights, and Centre-State federalism — a core GS 2 and GS 3 topic with direct links to Smart Cities Mission, AMRUT, PMAY, and the 74th Constitutional Amendment. GS 2 — Governance & FederalismGS 3 — Infrastructure & EconomyGS 1 — UrbanisationEssay — Development vs Rights 1 — Issue in Brief India’s urban infrastructure programme has been severely constrained by the high financial and procedural cost of compulsory land acquisition under the LARR Act, 2013, creating a widening gap between planned projects and their actual ground-level execution across cities. Land Pooling and Town Planning (TP) Schemes have emerged as a voluntary, participatory, and financially self-sustaining alternative to forced acquisition — enabling infrastructure delivery without displacing landowners from their livelihoods and communities. Rajasthan recently announced its first-ever land pooling scheme, marking a significant policy shift. Tamil Nadu, Madhya Pradesh, and Delhi are also evaluating similar frameworks to unlock land for urban development. While Gujarat has operated TP schemes for nearly 100 years and planned over 1,000 sq. km of urban land through them, most other states lack the legislative clarity, institutional experience, and digitised land records necessary to replicate the model effectively. 2 — Static Background The Land Acquisition Act, 1894 was a colonial-era law granting the state sweeping powers to acquire land for “public purpose” with minimal compensation and no rehabilitation support, routinely causing socio-economic distress among displaced communities — a legacy that shaped the post-independence policy debate on land rights for decades. The LARR Act, 2013 overhauled this framework by mandating Social Impact Assessment (SIA), requiring 70–80% consent of affected families, and introducing comprehensive rehabilitation and resettlement (R&R) provisions — all of which significantly raised the time and financial cost of acquisition, making large-scale urban land assembly increasingly unviable for state governments. A Town Planning (TP) Scheme is a statutory planning instrument under state urban development laws that reorganises fragmented landholdings, provides infrastructure from contributed land, and returns serviced plots to original owners — aligning development incentives with landowner interests and avoiding the adversarial dynamics of compulsory acquisition. The Gujarat Town Planning and Urban Development Act, 1976 formalised TP schemes in Gujarat and became the national model — clearly defining contribution percentages, reconstitution procedures, cost recovery mechanisms, and institutional roles that newer states are now trying to replicate within their own legislative frameworks. The Government of India has actively promoted TP schemes since 2019 through MoHUA as a preferred tool for urban land assembly, particularly to deliver on Smart Cities Mission, AMRUT, and PMAY targets that require rapid mobilisation of serviced urban land for infrastructure and affordable housing. The 74th Constitutional Amendment, 1992 devolved urban planning powers to Urban Local Bodies (ULBs). TP schemes operate through these bodies, making their institutional capacity — in land records, engineering, finance, and grievance redressal — a critical determinant of whether schemes succeed or stall at the implementation stage. 3 — Key Dimensions Core mechanism: Landowners voluntarily contribute 25–40% of their total landholding for roads, parks, EWS housing, and civic amenities. In return, they receive 60–75% as reconstituted, well-shaped, fully serviced plots that command significantly higher market value than the original unserviced land — creating a win-win structure absent in compulsory acquisition. Financial self-sustainability: Unlike compulsory acquisition — which requires large upfront government outlays for compensation and R&R — TP schemes recover infrastructure costs through incremental charges on landowners over time, making the model fiscally viable even for cash-strapped state governments and urban local bodies with limited capital budgets. Gujarat success story: Over 1,000 sq. km across five major cities — Ahmedabad, Surat, Rajkot, Vadodara, and Gandhinagar — have been planned through TP schemes, representing one of the world’s largest urban land pooling exercises, delivering planned infrastructure without mass displacement over nearly a century of consistent implementation. Guwahati adaptation: The Guwahati Metropolitan Development Authority (GMDA) modified the standard TP model to suit weak local land records — reducing contribution to just 12–15% (versus the usual 35–45%) and using existing revenue maps instead of time-consuming joint surveys, cutting scheme preparation time significantly and making it more politically acceptable to landowners. Rajasthan’s approach: Despite statutory TP provisions since 2016, Rajasthan lacked institutional experience to implement them. The state is now revising land-value calculation methodology and absorbing a portion of infrastructure costs — making the financial burden on individual landowners manageable and the scheme attractive enough to generate voluntary participation. Maharashtra revival: Pune Municipal Corporation and MMRDA have revived the TP model for peripheral urban areas after a long gap caused by failure to update statutory provisions. This demonstrates that even states with dormant TP frameworks can restart the model through targeted legislative and institutional updating rather than starting from scratch. 4 — Critical Analysis Favour — Eliminates displacement: Since landowners voluntarily participate and receive serviced land in return, TP schemes avoid the coercive uprooting associated with compulsory acquisition, reduce litigation, and align with constitutional guarantees of life and livelihood under Article 21 — addressing the most persistent criticism of India’s land acquisition history. Favour — Value capture for landowners: Rising land value post-infrastructure development benefits original landowners directly, creating a positive incentive structure where communities actively support development rather than resist it — a sharp contrast to the adversarial dynamics that typically surround compulsory acquisition proceedings and judicial challenges. Favour — EWS housing built-in: The contributed land portion is used not just for roads but also for EWS housing, parks, and public utilities, making TP schemes inherently inclusive — urban infrastructure and affordable housing are delivered simultaneously rather than as separate, disconnected government interventions requiring additional budget outlays and political will. Concern — Poor land records: As the Guwahati experience demonstrates, the absence of accurate digitised land records is the biggest practical bottleneck. Discrepancies between revenue records and actual ground conditions can delay scheme preparation for years, eroding landowner trust and increasing legal disputes that undermine the voluntary character on which the entire model depends. Concern — Risk of elite capture: Large landholders with better legal awareness and political connections tend to receive premium reconstituted plots, while small and marginalised landowners — particularly women, scheduled castes, and tenant farmers — may not fully understand the value trade-offs, making them vulnerable to exploitation by developers and local political intermediaries. Concern — Limited applicability: TP schemes work best in peri-urban greenfield areas with fragmented private ownership. They are far less effective in densely built-up urban cores, tribal land areas governed by PESA or the Forest Rights Act, or regions with large public landholdings — requiring different instruments entirely and limiting TP’s universal application across diverse Indian geographies. 5 — Way Forward The Centre should draft a Model TP Legislation through MoHUA — similar to the Model Tenancy Act, 2021 — providing a standardised legal framework covering contribution ratios, reconstitution formulas, cost recovery, grievance redressal, and timelines that states can adopt and contextualise, significantly reducing legislative ambiguity across India’s diverse urban governance systems. Accelerating the DILRMP (Digital India Land Records Modernisation Programme) is a prerequisite for TP scheme rollout in states with weak records. Digitised, geo-referenced cadastral maps integrated with revenue records must be available to urban planning authorities before large-scale land pooling is attempted, to prevent the kind of implementation paralysis witnessed in the early Guwahati pilot. States must invest in institutional capacity within ULBs through dedicated TP cells staffed with urban planners, GIS analysts, financial managers, and legal officers. Gujarat’s success is not just legislative — it reflects accumulated decades of institutional knowledge and on-ground expertise that newer states must invest time and resources to organically develop. Robust community outreach and informed consent mechanisms using local language materials, visual planning tools, and ward-level consultations must precede scheme preparation. Tamil Nadu, MP, and Delhi, as first-time implementers, must invest heavily in awareness campaigns to build the voluntary participation and community trust that the TP model fundamentally depends on for legitimacy and success. 6 — Data & Key Facts 1,000+sq. km planned via TP schemes in Gujarat across 5 cities ~100 yrsGujarat’s land pooling tradition; formalised under GTPUDA 1976 25–40%Typical land contribution by owners in standard TP schemes 12–15%Adapted contribution rate in Guwahati pilot due to weak land records 2013LARR Act enacted — raised acquisition costs, slowed infrastructure delivery 2016Rajasthan added TP statutory provisions; first scheme launched recently Gujarat Town Planning and Urban Development Act, 1976 — foundational statute; defines contribution %, reconstitution process, cost recovery; enabled planned development across Ahmedabad, Surat, Rajkot, Vadodara, and Gandhinagar for five decades without mass displacement, making it the most successful land pooling model in India’s urban planning history. Guwahati Metropolitan Development Authority Act, 1985 — had TP provisions but lacked operational detail; pilot adapted the model by reducing contribution to 12–15%, using existing revenue records, and government absorbing part of the cost — a replicable template for states with similar constraints of weak land records and limited institutional capacity. 7 — Prelims Pointers LARR Act 2013 — SIA mandatory; 70–80% consent required; comprehensive R&R provisions; significantly increased cost and time of land acquisition TP Scheme — voluntary; contribute 25–40%; receive 60–75% serviced plots back; infrastructure from contributed portion; no displacement DILRMP — Centre’s land record digitisation programme; GIS integration; critical for TP scheme implementation in states with manually maintained records 74th Amendment 1992 — devolved urban planning to ULBs; TP schemes operate through these bodies; ULB capacity is a key success determinant MoHUA — promotes TP schemes since 2019; also oversees Smart Cities Mission, AMRUT, PMAY — all require rapid urban land assembly MMRDA — Mumbai Metropolitan Region Development Authority; revived TP model for peripheral areas alongside Pune Municipal Corporation Exam note: Never conflate Land Pooling (voluntary, serviced plot returned, no displacement) with Land Acquisition (compulsory, cash compensation, displacement risk). This distinction is tested frequently in both Prelims MCQs and GS 2/3 mains answers. 8 — Practice Mains Question “Town Planning (TP) schemes offer a more equitable and efficient alternative to compulsory land acquisition for urban infrastructure development in India.” Critically examine with examples.GS 2 + GS 3 crossover | 15 marks | ~250 words | Governance + Infrastructure + Urban Policy Intro: Frame India’s urban infrastructure gap and LARR Act’s role in making compulsory acquisition increasingly unviable — financially and socially. Introduce TP schemes as a participatory alternative gaining national momentum with Centre’s active promotion since 2019. Body 1 — How TP schemes work: Mechanism, Gujarat’s 1,000 sq. km success across five cities, financial self-sustainability through incremental charges, EWS housing integration, and the Guwahati adaptation as evidence of contextual flexibility in states with weak land records. Body 2 — Challenges: Poor land records (Guwahati), legal ambiguity (Rajasthan’s 2016 provisions lying unused for years), elite capture risk for marginalised landowners, and limited applicability in tribal or built-up urban areas. Avoid one-sided analysis. Conclusion: Model TP legislation through MoHUA, DILRMP acceleration, ULB institutional capacity building, and community outreach as the way forward. Close with the idea that localised innovation — not mechanical replication of Gujarat — is the key to scaling land pooling across diverse Indian urban geographies. 9 — Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about Town Planning (TP) Schemes in India: 1. Landowners typically contribute 25–40% of their land and receive 60–75% back as reconstituted, serviced, higher-value plots. 2. The LARR Act, 2013 introduced Town Planning Schemes as a mandatory alternative to compulsory land acquisition in urban areas. 3. Gujarat has planned over 1,000 sq. km of urban land via TP schemes across Ahmedabad, Surat, Rajkot, Vadodara, and Gandhinagar. 4. The Guwahati TP pilot increased the contribution norm to 45% to recover higher infrastructure costs in difficult terrain. Which of the statements are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only(b) 1 and 3 only(c) 2, 3 and 4 only(d) 1, 3 and 4 only Editorial 02 of 02 Article 02 From Ladakh, a sea buckthorn parable about enterprise Chirag Paswan — Minister of Food Processing Industries, The Hindu Relevance: Food processing, rural enterprise, women’s empowerment, border area development, PMFME scheme — central to GS 2 (social justice, governance) and GS 3 (agriculture, economy, infrastructure) with strong essay and interview value. GS 3 — Agriculture & Food ProcessingGS 2 — Governance & Social JusticeGS 1 — Geography & Regional Dev.Essay — Enterprise & Empowerment 1 — Issue in Brief India’s food processing discourse is dominated by large industrial plants and aggregate export targets, but this editorial redirects attention to micro-level enterprise in remote, high-altitude regions like Ladakh, where processing is not a growth strategy but a survival necessity driven by crop perishability and geographic isolation from mainstream markets. Sea buckthorn — a cold-climate superfood shrub native to the Himalayas — symbolises the untapped economic potential of India’s border regions, where unique natural resources remain commercially underutilised due to poor logistics, lack of formal finance, and the absence of structured market linkages connecting local producers to urban and export consumers. The PMFME Scheme is the institutional bridge converting raw agricultural potential into formal enterprise in Ladakh — through credit-linked subsidies, machinery support, shared incubation infrastructure, and collective branding under “Wonder Berry” for sea buckthorn products and “Kargil Gold” for apricot products from Kargil district. The journey of Deachen Angmo — from Rs. 8,000/month wage labourer to multi-crore enterprise owner — is the editorial’s central empirical proof: that targeted, well-designed government support meeting the actual constraints of a perishable local crop can trigger transformative, community-sustaining rural enterprise in India’s most remote geographies. 2 — Static Background Sea buckthorn (Hippophae rhamnoides) is a thorny shrub growing at 2,500–4,000 metres in cold, arid zones across Ladakh, Himachal Pradesh, and Uttarakhand. Rich in Vitamins C and E and omega fatty acids, it is a high-value nutraceutical and superfood crop with significant domestic health-product and international export market demand that remains largely underdeveloped. The PMFME Scheme was launched in 2020 under the Aatmanirbhar Bharat Abhiyan with a national outlay of Rs. 10,000 crore over five years. It operates on the One District One Product (ODOP) framework and provides a 35% credit-linked capital subsidy to micro food processing enterprises, alongside branding, packaging, and common infrastructure support for clusters. Ladakh as a Union Territory — reorganised from J&K under the J&K Reorganisation Act, 2019 — has unique developmental challenges: extreme cold, short cropping seasons, very high logistics costs, and limited connectivity. It lacks a state legislature, making centrally sponsored schemes administered directly by the Centre the primary vehicle for economic development and enterprise promotion. The SHG model under DAY-NRLM has been integrated with PMFME to channel seed capital to women processors. This convergence of rural livelihoods infrastructure with food processing support is crucial in areas like Ladakh where individual enterprise capacity is constrained by remoteness, capital scarcity, and limited exposure to formal financial systems and business management practices. Aseptic processing — used in the Tirith unit — involves sterilising and packaging food in a sterile environment so it can be stored without refrigeration for extended periods. Mobile aseptic units are especially valuable in remote areas without cold chain infrastructure, as processed products must survive long transport distances across seasonal mountain roads to reach urban markets. 3 — Key Dimensions Geography as constraint and opportunity: Ladakh’s extreme altitude, short harvest windows, and long supply chains mean that agricultural produce either gets processed close to the source or loses commercial value entirely. This geographic compulsion makes micro food processing units not a policy preference but an economic necessity — a lesson applicable to all of India’s remote tribal belts, hill districts, and island territories. Perishability problem of sea buckthorn: The berry ripens in a narrow autumn window and begins degrading rapidly post-harvest. Without on-site processing into juice, pulp, dried berries, or jam, the entire harvest cycle loses commercial value. The mobile aseptic unit at Tirith directly addresses this by bringing the first stage of value addition to the point of harvest, rather than depending on distant industrial facilities. PMFME in Ladakh — quantified impact: Under the scheme, 101 loans sanctioned and 89 disbursed to micro food processing units across Ladakh UT; seed capital of Rs. 1.81 crore approved for 651 SHG members; common incubation centres approved for sea buckthorn processing in Leh and apricot processing in Kargil — delivering shared infrastructure individual micro-enterprises could never afford alone. Collective branding as value addition: Individual micro-processors selling unbranded products receive commodity prices with no quality premium. PMFME-supported branding of sea buckthorn under “Wonder Berry” and apricots under “Kargil Gold” creates a collective geographic identity — similar in concept to GI tags — enabling premium pricing in urban retail, e-commerce, and international health-product markets. Women’s entrepreneurship as a central thread: Deachen Angmo’s K-Top Food Processing exemplifies how women in remote communities, given access to formal finance and technical machinery support through PMFME, can transition from marginal wage labour to enterprise ownership — employing workers and sustaining a backward supply chain linked to local berry collectors and farming families across the community. Shared vs. individual infrastructure: A single enterprise can process berries, but storage, testing labs, quality certification, packaging lines, and cold chain access require pooled investment beyond individual capacity. Common incubation centres under PMFME at Leh and Kargil bridge this gap — enabling multiple micro-enterprises to achieve the quality standards required for formal market access and export compliance. 4 — Critical Analysis Favour — Corrects market failure: In remote regions, private capital does not naturally flow toward micro food processing because returns are uncertain, infrastructure absent, and markets distant. PMFME corrects this structural market failure by de-risking early investment through subsidised credit, shared infrastructure, and branding support — creating conditions for private enterprise to take root and eventually become self-sustaining. Favour — Value chain development over primary production: Traditional agriculture policy stops at the farm gate — yield, irrigation, input subsidies. PMFME moves the intervention further up the value chain into processing, branding, and marketing, enabling farmers and berry collectors to capture a larger share of the final consumer price rather than selling undifferentiated raw produce at low commodity margins to distant intermediaries. Favour — Border area development dimension: Ladakh is a strategically sensitive border UT. Economic development through enterprise and local employment — especially when it creates income from indigenous resources — directly supports the national objective of retaining population in border areas, reducing out-migration to plains cities, and strengthening community attachment to strategically critical frontier territories. Concern — Scale and replication gap: 101 sanctioned loans across all of Ladakh UT, while meaningful as a start, represent a small fraction of potential enterprise demand. Sustained multi-year budgetary commitment — not just pilot-phase support — is required to replicate the Deachen Angmo model across every valley, as the editorial itself explicitly acknowledges as the ultimate policy objective that remains far from achieved. Concern — Cold chain and logistics deficit: Well-processed, well-branded sea buckthorn products still face the fundamental challenge of reaching markets affordably. Khardung La and other passes close for months, air freight is expensive, and road freight is slow. Without complementary investment in cold chain logistics from the Agriculture Infrastructure Fund and PM Gati Shakti, processing value is partially eroded at the distribution stage. Concern — Single-crop climate vulnerability: Ladakh’s food processing economy centres heavily on sea buckthorn and apricots — both crops with narrow harvest windows and high sensitivity to changing snowfall and temperature patterns. As climate change alters Himalayan micro-climates, the cropping calendar and yields of these shrubs may shift unpredictably, creating fragility in the entire processing ecosystem built around them. 5 — Way Forward Expand PMFME allocations for Ladakh significantly beyond the current 101 sanctioned loans, targeting district-level saturation of micro-processing units. Set measurable targets not just for loans sanctioned but for enterprise survival rate at three and five years — a more meaningful indicator of policy impact than disbursement numbers, which only measure input rather than developmental outcome. Develop a GI (Geographical Indication) tag for Ladakhi sea buckthorn under the Geographical Indications of Goods Act, 1999 — similar to Darjeeling tea or Kashmiri saffron — to legally protect origin identity, enable premium international pricing, and create an institutional quality standardisation framework that benefits all processors in the region rather than just a few well-resourced enterprises. Build cold chain infrastructure under AIF and PM Gati Shakti specifically for Ladakh UT — including cold storage at Leh airport, refrigerated trucks for the Leh–Manali corridor, and solar-powered village cold rooms — so that processing value created by micro-enterprises is preserved through the distribution chain and is not eroded by poor post-processing logistics and temperature management. Integrate sea buckthorn and apricot products with ONDC, GeM, and TRIFED platforms so that “Wonder Berry” and “Kargil Gold” reach urban consumers directly without depending on intermediaries who capture most of the retail margin, leaving micro-producers with insufficient surplus to invest in quality improvement, enterprise expansion, and worker welfare over the medium term. 6 — Data & Key Facts 101PMFME loans sanctioned in Ladakh UT to micro food processing units 89Loans disbursed out of 101 sanctioned under PMFME in Ladakh Rs. 1.81 CrSeed capital approved for 651 SHG members in Ladakh under PMFME 651SHG members receiving seed capital assistance under PMFME in Ladakh Rs. 8,000Deachen Angmo’s monthly wage as a labourer before PMFME support Rs. 10,000 CrTotal national outlay of the PMFME Scheme (2020–25) K-Top Food Processing (Deachen Angmo, Leh): Women-led micro enterprise processing sea buckthorn into juice, pulp, dried berries, and jam using PMFME-financed machinery. Grew from wage labour background to multi-crore turnover; employs local workers and sources berries from a community collector network — demonstrating the full multiplier effect of one well-supported rural enterprise on the surrounding village economy. Tirith village unit (Nubra Valley, beyond Khardung La): Uses mobile aseptic processing technology to handle sea buckthorn at source, eliminating post-harvest quality loss from delayed processing. Located in one of India’s remotest inhabited areas, it exemplifies how decentralised, geography-adapted processing design can overcome the constraints that a centralised industrial model cannot address in high-altitude terrain. PMFME Scheme (2020, MoFPI): Centrally sponsored; ODOP framework; 35% credit-linked capital subsidy; supports individual enterprises, SHG clusters, and FPOs; provides common infrastructure (incubation centres), branding and marketing support; targets formalisation of 2 lakh micro food processing units over five years; sea buckthorn assigned to Leh district, apricots to Kargil district under ODOP. 7 — Prelims Pointers PMFME Scheme 2020 — MoFPI; Rs. 10,000 cr outlay; ODOP framework; 35% credit-linked subsidy; targets 2 lakh micro units in 5 years under Aatmanirbhar Bharat Sea buckthorn — grows at 2,500–4,000 m; Vitamin C, E, omega acids; short autumn harvest; Ladakh, HP, Uttarakhand; high perishability requires on-site processing ODOP framework — One District One Product; sea buckthorn for Leh; apricots for Kargil; concentrates resources on district-specific comparative advantage Aseptic processing — sterile packaging; no refrigeration needed; critical for remote areas without cold chain; mobile units bring processing to harvest point GI Tag (GI Act 1999) — protects geographic origin; Darjeeling tea, Kashmiri saffron as examples; Ladakhi sea buckthorn currently lacks GI protection — a policy gap DAY-NRLM + PMFME convergence — SHG seed capital channelled through NRLM infrastructure; Rs. 1.81 crore approved for 651 SHG members in Ladakh UT Exam note: Do not confuse PMFME (food processing formalisation, MoFPI, 2020) with PMKSY (irrigation) or PMFBY (crop insurance). Also remember Ladakh is a UT without a legislature — central schemes operate differently here than in states with their own legislative assemblies and finance commissions. 8 — Practice Mains Question “Micro food processing enterprises in India’s remote and border regions are not merely economic units but instruments of social transformation and national security.” Critically examine with reference to the PMFME Scheme.GS 2 + GS 3 crossover | 15 marks | ~250 words | Governance + Food Processing + Women Empowerment + Border Development Intro: Contrast large-plant food processing narrative with micro-enterprise reality in border regions; frame processing as a necessity born of perishability and isolation; introduce PMFME as the policy instrument bridging the gap between natural resource potential and commercial enterprise reality in Ladakh. Body 1 — Economic dimension: PMFME’s ODOP framework, Ladakh data (101 loans, Rs. 1.81 crore seed capital, 651 SHG members), value addition from branded processing, common incubation centres, mobile aseptic units. Use Deachen Angmo and Tirith as specific, data-backed examples to demonstrate concrete impact. Body 2 — Social and security dimension: Women’s empowerment through enterprise ownership (Deachen’s Rs. 8,000 to multi-crore journey); SHG convergence; community supply chains retaining income locally; border area population retention reducing out-migration from strategically sensitive zones near the LAC. Conclusion: GI tagging, cold chain investment under AIF and PM Gati Shakti, e-commerce integration via ONDC and GeM, and sustained PMFME funding as the way forward to replicate the Ladakh micro-enterprise model across India’s remote valleys, tribal districts, and northeastern frontier areas. 9 — Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about the PMFME Scheme and sea buckthorn processing in Ladakh: 1. The PMFME Scheme operates on a One District One Product (ODOP) framework and provides 35% credit-linked capital subsidy to micro food processing enterprises. 2. Under PMFME in Ladakh, sea buckthorn products are collectively branded as “Wonder Berry” and apricot products as “Kargil Gold.” 3. Sea buckthorn is a warm-climate crop cultivated in Punjab and Haryana and is primarily exported as a raw berry without processing. 4. Common incubation centres for sea buckthorn processing have been approved under PMFME for Leh district. Which of the statements are correct? (a) 1, 2 and 3 only(b) 2, 3 and 4 only(c) 1, 2 and 4 only(d) 1, 2, 3 and 4

Jun 3, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Contents 03 June 2026 Prisons in India Continue to Be Overcrowded by UndertrialsGS2 Beaufort Castle: Israel’s Capture in Southern LebanonGS2 Operation Mule Hunt 1.0 — Combating Cyber Fraud Through Mule AccountsGS3 Tylosaurus Rex — A New Species of Giant Marine ReptileGS3 Project Tiger — Funding Has Not Kept Pace With ExpansionGS3 The Future of India’s Chip Industry — India Semiconductor MissionGS3 Bolides: Fireballs Going BoomGS3 Data Upgrade: New WPI and PPIs — Base Year Revision to 2022-23GS3 Article 01 Prisons in India Continue to Be Overcrowded by Undertrials GS Paper 2 — Fundamental Rights | Judiciary | Policy Implementation | Vulnerable Sections Why in News The National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) released its Prison Statistics India report for 2024, revealing that while the national prison occupancy rate fell to a decade-low of 112.7%, overcrowding remains a chronic structural crisis driven largely by the high proportion of undertrial prisoners, sluggish capacity expansion, and severe staff vacancies. Key Highlights — Prison Statistics India 2024 Surpassing Sanctioned Capacity India operates 1,333 jails with a sanctioned capacity of 4.53 lakh inmates. Actual inmate population exceeded 5.11 lakh — well above sanctioned limits. Regional Deficits More than half of States/UTs recorded occupancy rates exceeding 100%. Delhi recorded the highest occupancy at 194.6%; followed by Meghalaya (163.5%), J&K (148.3%), MP (147.1%). J&K: occupancy surged from 78% in 2015 to over 148% in 2024. Chhattisgarh improved from 234% in 2015 to 127.6% in 2024. Modest Capacity Growth Prison capacity grew by 24% between 2015–2024 through renovations of 2,268 prisons and construction of 120+ new ones. Growth has not kept pace with rising inmate populations in several regions. Undertrial Dominance Undertrials: 73% of total inmate population in 2024 (down from 77% peak in 2021). Share of convicted prisoners fell from 32% in 2016 to 26.6% in 2024. Delhi and Bihar: over 87% of prison population consists of undertrials. 9,028 individuals (2.4%) have been in prison for over 5 years without conviction. Staff Vacancies Nearly half of sanctioned posts vacant in 8 States/UTs. Delhi and J&K: at least 60% of sanctioned prison staff posts vacant. Medical staff vacancy rate: 46.4% nationally. Concerns Right to Life and Personal Liberty (Article 21) In Hussainara Khatoon v. State of Bihar (1979), the SC held that a speedy trial is an integral part of Article 21. Prolonged detention without conviction constitutes punitive detention and violates the presumption of innocence. Derogation of Inmate Dignity In Sunil Batra v. Delhi Administration (1980), the SC ruled that prisoners do not lose all fundamental rights upon incarceration. Overcrowding denies basic needs — sanitation, sleep space, privacy — amounting to cruel and degrading treatment. Violation of International Standards Indian prison conditions fall short of the UN Standard Minimum Rules for Treatment of Prisoners (Nelson Mandela Rules) on space, hygiene, and medical access. Failure of Bail Jurisprudence The foundational principle — “bail is the rule, jail is the exception” — has been effectively reversed. High financial sureties and local bond requirements create wealth-based discrimination against the poor. Mechanical Remands and Arbitrary Arrests Despite Arnesh Kumar v. State of Bihar (2014) restricting automatic arrests for offences punishable by under 7 years, police continue unnecessary arrests. Section 479 of BNSS 2023, meant to decongest jails, remains underutilized. Administrative Vulnerabilities Overcrowding accelerates spread of TB and HIV; high medical staff vacancies compound this. Undertrial Review Committees (UTRCs), mandated to meet quarterly, suffer from bureaucratic delays. “School of Crime” Phenomenon Inadequate segregation of first-time offenders from hardened criminals accelerates recidivism and criminal network exposure. Socio-Economic Impact 86.3% of prison population falls in the 18–50 productive age bracket. Majority belong to SC, ST, OBC communities; the Law Commission’s 268th Report (2017) identifies poverty as the biggest barrier to bail. Violates the spirit of Article 39A (equal justice and free legal aid). Government Interventions Intervention Key Provision BNSS 2023, Section 479(1) First-time offenders who serve 1/3rd of maximum sentence must be released on bond Model Prisons and Correctional Services Act, 2023 Replaces Prisons Act of 1894; shifts focus from retribution to rehabilitation; introduces electronic tagging Model Prison Manual 2016 Standardizes prison management, classification, medical care, vocational training Prisons Development Fund (2018) Modernizes prison infrastructure at state level E-Prisons Project Integrates prison records with ICJS for timely bail eligibility alerts Support to Poor Prisoners Scheme MHA-funded financial assistance for bail/surety for marginalised undertrials Way Forward Comprehensive Bail Act: As recommended in Satender Kumar Antil v. CBI (2022), to standardize bail and reduce judicial discretion. Fast-Track Courts: For petty offences, as recommended by the Justice Amitava Roy Committee (2018). Expansion of Open Prisons: Emulating Sanganer Open Camp, Rajasthan — lower cost, less overcrowding, better rehabilitation. AI for Case Management: Deploy SUVAS and SUPACE to automate bail hearing triggers for eligible undertrials. Gender-Sensitive Reforms: Exclusive institutions for women prisoners, as recommended by Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer Committee (1987). Fund for Poor Prisoners: All States should create a dedicated fund modeled on Andhra Pradesh’s ‘Cheyutha Nidhi’, as recommended by the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Home Affairs (2023). Conclusion As Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer observed, “Prisons are built with stones of law, but they must be managed with the touch of humanism.” The Supreme Court’s emphasis in the Suhas Chakma case (2024) on prisoners’ rights, open prisons, and data-driven rehabilitation underscores the urgent need to shift India’s correctional system from a punitive to a humane and reform-oriented framework. Prelims Pointers NCRB publishes Prison Statistics India annually under the Ministry of Home Affairs. Undertrial prisoners are those in custody awaiting trial — not convicted. Article 21 — right to life and personal liberty; speedy trial is part of it (Hussainara Khatoon, 1979). Article 39A — mandates equal justice and free legal aid. Nelson Mandela Rules = UN Standard Minimum Rules for Treatment of Prisoners (2015 revision). Section 479 BNSS 2023 — replaces CrPC Section 436A; release of first-time offenders after 1/3rd sentence. FASTER System = Fast and Secured Transmission of Electronic Records — digital transmission of court orders. SUVAS = Supreme Court Vidhik Anuvaad Software; SUPACE = Supreme Court Portal for Assistance in Courts Efficiency. Sanganer Open Camp, Rajasthan — India’s most cited example of open prison success. UTRCs = Undertrial Review Committees — mandated to meet quarterly to review eligible cases for release. Arnesh Kumar v. State of Bihar (2014) — SC restricted arrests for offences with punishment below 7 years. Practice Mains Question “Bail is the rule, jail is the exception — yet India’s prison statistics suggest the opposite. Critically examine the structural and systemic factors responsible for the high proportion of undertrial prisoners in India and suggest a comprehensive reform agenda.” GS Paper 2  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Which of the following correctly describes the provision under Section 479(1) of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS), 2023? (a)An undertrial prisoner may be released on bail after completing half of the maximum prescribed sentence. (b)A first-time offender undertrial must be released on bond after serving one-third of the maximum prescribed sentence for the offence. (c)Any undertrial prisoner, regardless of prior conviction history, must be released after completing one-third of the maximum sentence. (d)Section 479 applies only to offences punishable with imprisonment of up to 7 years. Correct Answer: (b) Section 479(1) of BNSS 2023 (replacing CrPC Section 436A) specifically applies to first-time offenders and mandates their release on bond after serving one-third (not half) of the maximum prescribed sentence. Option (c) is incorrect because the provision is limited to first-time offenders, not all undertrials. Option (d) conflates this with the Arnesh Kumar guidelines on arrest. Article 02 Beaufort Castle: Israel’s Capture in Southern Lebanon GS Paper 2 — International Relations | Effect of Policies of Developed Countries | India’s Neighbourhood Why in News Israeli forces announced the capture of the 900-year-old Beaufort Castle (Qalaat al-Shaqif) in southern Lebanon as part of a ground offensive crossing the Litani River — Israel’s deepest military advance into Lebanon in over two decades — despite a nominally active ceasefire. The move drew sharp international condemnation from France, Germany, the UK, and others. About Beaufort Castle Feature Detail Also Known As Qalaat al-Shaqif / Shaqif Arnoun Age ~900 years (built 12th century CE by Crusaders) Location Near Nabatiyeh, ~14 km north of Israel border Strategic Vantage Overlooks Litani River valley, Bekaa Valley, Golan Heights, northern Galilee UNESCO Status Enhanced protection list (added during 2024 Israel-Hezbollah conflict) Historical Ownership Sequence: Crusaders → Saladin’s Forces → Mamluks → Ottomans → French Colonial Authorities → PLO → Israel (1982–2000) → Lebanese Armed Groups → Israel (2026) Strategic and Historical Significance Military Value Commands sweeping surveillance over southern Lebanon and northern Israel from a steep rocky ridge. Controls artillery positioning and troop movement monitoring over a vast operational area. Consistently regarded as one of the most valuable observation points in the region. 1982 Lebanon War Connection Israel captured Beaufort Castle from the PLO during the 1982 Lebanon War. Maintained as a major military outpost until 2000 withdrawal from southern Lebanon. Became a cultural symbol of the occupation in Israeli public memory. 2026 Context Israel crossed the Litani River, expanding what it calls a “Forward Defense Line.” Advance came despite a ceasefire nominally in place since April 2026. The Litani River — Key Facts Longest river entirely within Lebanon. Originates in the Beqaa Valley; flows south; drains into the Mediterranean near Tyre. Critical water resource for southern Lebanon. UNSCR 1701 (2006) functionally designated the Litani line as a security boundary. Concerns and Implications Violation of Ceasefire Architecture: Undermines UNSCR 1701 (2006) which mandated withdrawal of armed forces south of the river. Cultural Heritage in Conflict: UNESCO-enhanced protection status raises questions about applicability of the Hague Convention (1954) during active hostilities. Regional Escalation Risk: Complicates US-mediated diplomatic efforts and risks direct confrontation with Lebanese state forces. India’s Interest: India is a significant contributor to UNIFIL and has substantial stakes in West Asian stability through energy security and diaspora. Way Forward Reinforce UNSCR 1701: International community must press for full implementation of the 2006 Security Council resolution. Protect Cultural Heritage: UNESCO and ICRC must invoke enhanced protection mechanisms under the 1954 Hague Convention. India’s Role: India can advocate for de-escalation through multilateral platforms as a UNSC non-permanent member aspirant and UNIFIL contributor. Conclusion Beaufort Castle has witnessed over nine centuries of conquests, withdrawals, and renewals. Its latest capture tests the resilience of international ceasefire frameworks and the global commitment to protecting cultural heritage in armed conflict — two challenges with significant implications for the rules-based international order. Prelims Pointers Beaufort Castle = Qalaat al-Shaqif; 12th century Crusader fortress in southern Lebanon near Nabatiyeh. Litani River = Longest river entirely within Lebanon; originates in Beqaa Valley; drains into Mediterranean near Tyre. UNSCR 1701 (2006) = Called for full cessation of hostilities; established the Litani line as a security boundary. UNIFIL = United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon — India is a major troop contributor. UNESCO Enhanced Protection = Special category under 2nd Protocol to Hague Convention (1999) for greatest-importance cultural heritage. Hezbollah = Lebanese Shia militant group; designated as terrorist organization by US, EU, and others. Nabatiyeh = District in southern Lebanon near Beaufort Castle. Beqaa Valley = Eastern Lebanon; strategically and agriculturally significant region. Golan Heights = Syrian territory occupied by Israel since 1967; annexed in 1981 (not internationally recognized). 1982 Lebanon War = Israel invaded Lebanon; captured Beaufort Castle from PLO; withdrew in 2000. Practice Mains Question “The capture of Beaufort Castle by Israeli forces highlights the recurring intersection of cultural heritage, military strategy, and international law in West Asian conflicts. Examine the geopolitical implications of Israel’s northward advance in Lebanon and India’s strategic interests in the region.” GS Paper 2  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ With reference to the Litani River, consider the following statements: 1. It is the longest river that flows entirely within Lebanon. 2. It originates in the Bekaa Valley and drains into the Red Sea near Tyre. 3. UNSCR 1701 (2006) called for Israeli military withdrawal to positions south of the Litani River. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? (a)1 only (b)1 and 3 only (c)2 and 3 only (d)1, 2, and 3 Correct Answer: (b) Statement 1 is correct. Statement 2 is incorrect — the Litani drains into the Mediterranean Sea, not the Red Sea. Statement 3 is correct — UNSCR 1701 (2006) called for cessation of hostilities and withdrawal of Israeli forces south of the Litani River. Article 03 Operation Mule Hunt 1.0 — Combating Cyber Fraud Through Mule Accounts GS Paper 3 — Internal Security | Cybersecurity | Money Laundering | GS Paper 2 — Government Policies Why in News Gujarat Police, under Operation Mule Hunt 1.0, uncovered cyber fraud worth ₹2,289 crore, took action against 913 mule bank accounts, registered 565 FIRs, and made 638 arrests. The operation was coordinated through the Cyber Centre of Excellence (CCOE) using a data-driven, multi-agency approach. What is a Mule Account? A mule account is a legitimate-looking bank account used — knowingly or unknowingly — by cybercriminals to receive, transfer, or launder fraudulently obtained money. The person operating such an account is called a money mule. Cybercriminals exploit the bulk payout facility offered by banks, using accounts of shell companies and individuals as intermediary nodes in the fraud chain. Key Highlights — Operation Mule Hunt 1.0 Achievements Metric Number FIRs Registered 565 Arrests Made 638 Mule Accounts Acted Against 913 Cybercrime Cases Identified 4,052 (491 from Gujarat) Total Economic Fraud Exposed ₹2,289 crore Measurable Impact Cheque withdrawals declined by 75% (monthly from ₹126 cr to ₹25 cr). First-layer mule accounts reduced by 30% (Aug–Dec 2025). ATM withdrawals linked to fraudulent activity dropped by 66%. Technology and Institutional Framework AI-Based Risk Scoring (IDPIC–RBI) IDPIC (Indian Digital Payment Intelligence Corporation) is implementing an AI-based risk-scoring system under RBI guidelines. Every transaction classified as low, medium, or high risk. mulehunter.ai registry created for inter-bank sharing of suspicious account information. Key Institutions I4C (Indian Cybercrime Coordination Centre) — central nodal body for cybercrime coordination under MHA. NCRP (National Cybercrime Reporting Portal) — online platform for citizens to report cybercrime. 1930 Helpline — national cybercrime helpline for reporting financial fraud in real time. Concerns Scale of Digital Vulnerability: India has over 100 crore internet users (up from 25 crore a decade ago) with exponentially growing UPI transactions. Traceability Problem: Multi-layered mule account chains create jurisdictional and technical obstacles, especially across state or national borders. National Security Dimension: Home Minister Amit Shah noted that cybersecurity is directly linked to national security given involvement of transnational criminal networks. Way Forward Mandatory KYC Audits: Regular audits of dormant and high-frequency transfer accounts to detect early-stage mule activity. Bank Accountability: Hold banks institutionally responsible for enabling mule ecosystems through bulk payout without adequate due diligence. Scaling IDPIC Model: Replicate Gujarat’s CCOE model at the national level with dedicated Cyber Financial Intelligence Units in every state. Legislative Framework: Enact a dedicated Cybercrime Prevention Act to plug gaps in the IT Act, 2000. Conclusion Operation Mule Hunt 1.0 demonstrates that intelligence-led, data-driven policing can deliver measurable results against sophisticated cyber fraud networks. As India’s digital economy deepens, building institutional resilience against financial cybercrime is no longer optional but a prerequisite for the credibility of Digital India itself. Prelims Pointers Mule Account = Bank account used to receive/transfer illegally obtained money; operator = money mule. I4C = Indian Cybercrime Coordination Centre — nodal body under MHA. NCRP = National Cybercrime Reporting Portal — citizens report cybercrime online. 1930 = National helpline for cyber financial fraud. IDPIC = Indian Digital Payment Intelligence Corporation — under RBI; implements AI risk scoring for transactions. mulehunter.ai = Registry for inter-bank sharing of suspicious account information. CCOE = Cyber Centre of Excellence — Gujarat Police’s specialized cybercrime unit. First-layer mule account = Account where fraud money is deposited first before further dispersal. IT Act 2000 = Primary legislation governing cybercrime in India. BharatNet = Government initiative connecting gram panchayats via optical fibre — backbone of Digital India. Practice Mains Question “Mule accounts have become the invisible infrastructure of cyber financial crime in India. Examine the mechanisms through which mule accounts are exploited, the institutional responses developed so far, and the reforms needed to secure India’s digital payments ecosystem.” GS Paper 3  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about the Indian Digital Payment Intelligence Corporation (IDPIC): 1. IDPIC is established under the Reserve Bank of India to implement AI-based risk scoring of financial transactions. 2. The mulehunter.ai registry, created under IDPIC, enables information sharing about suspicious accounts among banks. 3. IDPIC classifies transactions into three risk categories: low, medium, and high. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a)1 and 2 only (b)2 and 3 only (c)1 and 3 only (d)1, 2, and 3 Correct Answer: (d) All three statements are correct. IDPIC operates under RBI guidelines; the mulehunter.ai registry was created for inter-bank sharing of suspicious account data; and the AI risk scoring system classifies every transaction as low, medium, or high risk. Article 04 Tylosaurus Rex — A New Species of Giant Marine Reptile GS Paper 3 — Science & Technology | Biodiversity | Prehistoric Life Why in News Scientists identified Tylosaurus rex as a distinct species of giant marine reptile after re-examining previously discovered fossils. The largest known specimen, nicknamed “Bunker,” measures approximately 13.2 metres — larger than the famous Tyrannosaurus rex specimen “Sue” (12.2 metres). About Tylosaurus rex Feature Detail Classification Mosasaur (marine reptile, not a dinosaur) Period ~80 million years ago (Late Cretaceous) Size ~13.2 metres (largest specimen “Bunker”) Habitat Western Interior Seaway, North America Closest Living Relatives Monitor lizards Nomenclature “King of the Tylosaurs”; homage to T. rex Key Physical Features Streamlined body with elongated snout Large teeth with fine serrations for cutting flesh Four paddle-like flippers and a powerful tail Heavy jaw and neck musculature — apex marine predator About Mosasaurs Globally distributed marine reptiles that evolved from land-living lizards. Dominant apex marine predators during the final phase of the Mesozoic Era. Not dinosaurs — belong to the squamate family (lizards and snakes). Went extinct at the end of the Cretaceous Period (~66 million years ago). Western Interior Seaway Large shallow inland sea that divided North America into eastern (Appalachia) and western (Laramidia) landmasses during the Cretaceous. Key habitat for mosasaurs and plesiosaurs. Completely dried up by the end of the Cretaceous. Scientific Significance Taxonomic Clarity: Reclassification adds precision to understanding of Late Cretaceous marine biodiversity. Evolutionary Insights: Adaptations provide evidence of convergent evolution between marine and terrestrial apex predators. T. rex and Tylosaurus rex were not contemporaries — T. rex appeared ~68 MYA, Tylosaurus rex ~80 MYA. Conclusion The identification of Tylosaurus rex as a new species is a reminder that Earth’s fossil record continues to hold taxonomic surprises even within well-studied groups. Re-examination of museum collections may yield as many new discoveries as fresh field excavations. Prelims Pointers Tylosaurus rex = Newly identified mosasaur species; Late Cretaceous; NOT a dinosaur. Mosasaurs = Marine reptiles; evolved from land-living lizards; apex predators of Cretaceous seas; extinct ~66 MYA. Cretaceous Period = ~145–66 million years ago; last period of the Mesozoic Era. Western Interior Seaway = Prehistoric shallow sea dividing North America during the Cretaceous. Monitor lizard = Closest living relative of mosasaurs (along with snakes). “Bunker” = Largest known Tylosaurus rex specimen (~13.2 metres). “Sue” = Famous T. rex specimen at Chicago’s Field Museum; ~12.2 metres. Convergent evolution = Unrelated species independently evolving similar traits. Paleontology = Scientific study of prehistoric life through fossils. Practice Mains Question “Re-examination of existing fossil collections has proven as scientifically valuable as new excavations. In light of the identification of Tylosaurus rex, discuss how advances in paleontological methods are reshaping our understanding of prehistoric biodiversity.” GS Paper 3  |  150 words  |  10 marks Prelims Practice MCQ With reference to Mosasaurs, which of the following statements is/are correct? 1. Mosasaurs were a group of dinosaurs that adapted to aquatic life during the Cretaceous Period. 2. The closest living relatives of mosasaurs are monitor lizards and snakes. 3. Mosasaurs became extinct at the end of the Cretaceous Period, approximately 66 million years ago. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? (a)1 and 2 only (b)2 and 3 only (c)1 and 3 only (d)1, 2, and 3 Correct Answer: (b) Statement 1 is incorrect — mosasaurs were not dinosaurs; they were marine reptiles of the squamate order. Statement 2 is correct — monitor lizards (varanids) and snakes are the closest living relatives. Statement 3 is correct — mosasaurs went extinct in the end-Cretaceous mass extinction event (~66 MYA). Article 05 Project Tiger — Funding Has Not Kept Pace With Expansion GS Paper 3 — Environment & Ecology | Conservation | Biodiversity | Government Schemes Why in News Reports from Down to Earth on funding gaps and rising tiger mortality have raised structural concerns about India’s flagship Project Tiger. While India’s tiger count has grown impressively, inflation-adjusted funding per conservation unit has declined, and tiger deaths have nearly doubled from 88 in 2012 to 167 in 2025. Key Highlights Scale of Project Tiger (2026) Launched: 1973 under Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. Current reserves: 58 tiger reserves covering ~78,000 sq km of forest. Evolution: 9 reserves (inception) → 23 (1997) → 39 (2010) → 58 (present). Funding Trend — Nominal vs Real Year Nominal Expenditure Inflation-Adjusted (2008-09 prices) 2008-09 ₹154.7 crore ₹154.7 crore (base) 2021-22 ₹252 crore ~₹82 crore 2025-26 (BE) ₹290 crore ~₹95 crore Key Insight: While nominal expenditure has nearly doubled, real purchasing power has fallen to 61% of 2008-09 levels. The CPI rose from 100 in 2008-09 to approximately 305 in recent years. NTCA 2024 Evaluation — “Bridging the Gap” Report Invasive species affecting habitats in 40 out of 58 tiger reserves. 20 tiger reserves lack sufficient anti-poaching staff. 10 reserves (including Dampa, Mukundara, Mudumalai) face staffing shortages; staffing levels down by at least 40%. Concerns Conservation Success Creating New Pressures: Rising tiger populations lead to more territorial infighting, particularly among sub-adults dispersing out of saturated core zones. Declining Real Funding: On-the-ground activities — anti-poaching patrols, vehicle maintenance, fire management — are progressively underfunded. Staffing Crisis: Vacancies and ageing workforces in multiple reserves create gaps in patrolling, monitoring, and conflict mitigation. Corridor Fragmentation: Infrastructure development continues to fragment wildlife corridors, blocking dispersal of sub-adults and increasing human-wildlife conflict. Invasive Species: Presence in 40 of 58 reserves indicates a systemic ecological threat requiring dedicated management resources. Data Gap: NTCA does not separately record deaths due to infighting — obscuring conservation planning. Government Interventions Project Tiger (1973) — launched under Wildlife Protection Act, 1972; administered by NTCA. NTCA — statutory body under Wildlife Protection Act (amended 2006); nodal authority for tiger conservation. CAMPA (Compensatory Afforestation Fund) — funds afforestation and habitat restoration. Wildlife Crime Control Bureau (WCCB) — coordinates anti-poaching activities. Way Forward Inflation-Indexed Budgeting: Project Tiger allocations must be indexed to CPI to maintain real purchasing power. Per-Unit Funding Norms: Establish minimum per-reserve funding benchmarks based on area, threat level, and staffing requirements. Address Staffing Crisis: Fast-track recruitment for frontline forest staff in the 20 critically understaffed reserves. Invasive Species Management: Dedicated funding for eradication programs in tiger reserves. Wildlife Corridor Protection: Legally notify and protect key wildlife corridors under the Wildlife Protection Act. Expand NTCA Data Collection: Include deaths due to infighting as a separate mortality category. Conclusion India’s rising tiger count is a genuine conservation achievement. However, the NTCA’s own 2024 evaluation reveals that this success rests on a foundation increasingly strained by under-resourcing, understaffing, and ecological threats. Sustaining the tiger recovery requires India to move from celebrating the number to seriously investing in the ecosystem that sustains it. Prelims Pointers Project Tiger — launched in 1973; India now has 58 tiger reserves covering ~78,000 sq km. NTCA = National Tiger Conservation Authority; statutory body under Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 (amended 2006). Royal Bengal Tiger = Panthera tigris tigris; India’s national animal. “Bridging the Gap” Report (2024) = NTCA evaluation report on tiger reserve management effectiveness. Dampa Tiger Reserve = Located in Mizoram; faces staffing and poaching threats. Mudumalai Tiger Reserve = Tamil Nadu; part of Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve. Ranthambore Tiger Reserve = Rajasthan; among India’s best-known tiger reserves. Kanha Tiger Reserve = Madhya Pradesh; inspiration for Rudyard Kipling’s The Jungle Book. CPI (Consumer Price Index) = Measures retail inflation; published by MoSPI. CAMPA = Compensatory Afforestation Fund Management and Planning Authority. Practice Mains Question “India’s tiger conservation success story conceals a deepening resource-performance paradox. Critically analyse the structural funding and management challenges facing Project Tiger and suggest measures to make tiger conservation financially and ecologically sustainable.” GS Paper 3  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about Project Tiger: 1. Project Tiger was launched in 1973 and is administered by the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA). 2. India currently has 58 tiger reserves covering approximately 78,000 sq km. 3. The NTCA was established under the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 as amended in 2006. 4. Inflation-adjusted funding per conservation unit under Project Tiger has increased steadily since 2008-09. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a)1, 2, and 3 only (b)2 and 4 only (c)1 and 4 only (d)1, 2, 3, and 4 Correct Answer: (a) Statements 1, 2, and 3 are correct. Statement 4 is incorrect — inflation-adjusted funding per conservation unit has actually declined. Real spending in 2025-26 (~₹95 crore at 2008-09 prices) is significantly lower than the 2008-09 expenditure of ₹154.7 crore, and the number of conservation units has grown from 38 to 60+, further reducing per-unit real allocation. Article 06 The Future of India’s Chip Industry — India Semiconductor Mission GS Paper 3 — Science & Technology | Indian Economy | Infrastructure | GS Paper 2 — Government Policies Why in News ITI Aayog’s Frontier Tech Hub released a report titled “Future of India’s Semiconductor Industry”, reaffirming that India faces steep challenges in semiconductor fabrication but that national interest demands sustained pursuit. The report provides a strategic framework for ISM 2.0 and advocates selective depth over full-spectrum replication of the global semiconductor supply chain. India’s Semiconductor Landscape India has zero operational semiconductor fabs; all chips for domestic electronics are largely imported. First fab expected at Dholera, Gujarat by 2028; ten more in various development stages. India Semiconductor Mission (ISM): corpus of ₹76,000 crore; fab capital subsidies of 50%+; administered under MeitY. Key Recommendations of the ITI Aayog Report Strategic Focus — Not Full-Spectrum Focus on “selective depth, capital efficiency, and system-level differentiation.” Prioritise mature, advanced-aligned, and compound nodes over frontier 3–7 nm chips. Packaging as a Core Pillar Semiconductor packaging designated a “core production pillar, not a downstream activity.” Less capital-intensive than fabrication; India has existing competitive advantages here. Geopolitical Context China flagged as a strategic adversary in chipmaking despite recent diplomatic thaw. Priority partners: US, Japan, EU, South Korea — for access to tools, equipment servicing, and lifecycle support. Taiwan scenario risk: A crisis could massively disrupt global electronics supply chains; India must reduce dependence. ISM 2.0 Capital Estimate Required state capital expenditure: $45–60 billion over 10 years. Focus on bankable, risk-calibrated projects rather than high-risk frontier fabs. Challenges Gestation Period: Fabs require 4–5 years before commencing production; 50+ specialised equipment must be imported during this phase. Talent Pipeline: Developing a skilled semiconductor workforce requires sustained mission-mode commitment over a decade or more. Ecosystem Readiness: Most chips in defence and aerospace systems are produced outside India — a national security vulnerability. Strategic Significance National Security: Semiconductors in defence systems represent strategic vulnerabilities when sourced entirely from foreign suppliers. Economic Multiplier: Semiconductors are inputs to virtually all electronics — from consumer gadgets to EVs to medical devices. Geopolitical Leverage: Participation in global semiconductor supply chains elevates India’s position in technology diplomacy and aligns with the Quad’s semiconductor cooperation agenda. Way Forward Implement ISM 2.0 with clear focus on packaging, mature nodes, and compound semiconductors. Fast-Track Dholera Fab — ensure operationality by 2028 as a proof-of-concept. Invest in Design Ecosystem — expand semiconductor design talent through IITs, NITs, and dedicated Chip Design Centres. Forge Trusted Supply Chain Partnerships — deepen collaboration with the US (CHIPS Act), Japan (FABS Act), and EU (European Chips Act). Conclusion As the ITI Aayog report concludes, “With sustained commitment and strategic clarity, India can build a competitive semiconductor ecosystem that strengthens economic resilience and positions the nation as a key player in the future of advanced technology.” The semiconductor mission is not merely an industrial policy — it is a strategic imperative for India’s ambitions as a technology power in the 21st century. Prelims Pointers India Semiconductor Mission (ISM) = ₹76,000 crore corpus under MeitY for semiconductor fabs, packaging, and design. Dholera, Gujarat = Location of India’s first expected semiconductor fabrication unit (2028). Semiconductor fab = Facility where chips are manufactured on silicon wafers. Packaging = Final stage of chipmaking; less capital-intensive than fabrication. Nanometre (nm) node = Transistor size; smaller = more advanced (3–7 nm = frontier chips). ISM 2.0 = Expected second phase; estimated capital: $45–60 billion over 10 years. Compound semiconductors = Made from two or more elements (e.g., gallium arsenide); used in defence, 5G, EVs. Taiwan risk = ~90% of world’s most advanced chips made in Taiwan (TSMC). CHIPS Act (USA) = $52 billion for domestic semiconductor manufacturing and R&D. ITI Aayog = India’s premier policy think tank (formerly NITI Aayog). Practice Mains Question “Semiconductors have become the new oil of the 21st century. Critically examine India’s semiconductor strategy, the challenges it faces, and the geopolitical imperatives that make it a national security priority.” GS Paper 3  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ With reference to the India Semiconductor Mission (ISM), consider the following statements: 1. ISM has a total corpus of ₹76,000 crore. 2. Semiconductor fabrication units (fabs) under ISM receive capital subsidies of more than 50%. 3. India’s first semiconductor fabrication unit is expected to be operational in Hyderabad by 2027. 4. The ISM is administered under the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY). Which of the statements given above are correct? (a)1, 2, and 4 only (b)1 and 3 only (c)2, 3, and 4 only (d)1, 2, 3, and 4 Correct Answer: (a) Statements 1, 2, and 4 are correct. Statement 3 is incorrect — India’s first fab is expected in Dholera, Gujarat (not Hyderabad) and by 2028 (not 2027). Article 07 Bolides: Fireballs Going Boom GS Paper 3 — Science & Technology | Space Science | Planetary Defense Why in News On May 30, 2026, a meteor exploded over the northeastern United States, producing loud booming noises. NASA confirmed it broke apart approximately 64 km above the ground while travelling at over 1,20,000 km/hr, releasing energy equivalent to approximately 300 tonnes of TNT. Scientists classified it as a bolide. What is a Bolide? A bolide is an exceptionally bright meteor that breaks apart or explodes in Earth’s atmosphere, releasing a large amount of energy as shockwaves. The terminology follows a size/brightness hierarchy: Term Definition Meteoroid Small piece of rock/metal in space Meteor Meteoroid entering Earth’s atmosphere (the streak of light) Fireball Exceptionally bright meteor (visible in daylight) Bolide Fireball that fragments violently; accompanied by sonic booms Meteorite Meteor that survives and reaches Earth’s surface Physics of a Bolide Event Meteoroid enters atmosphere → air compresses and superheats → glowing streak forms. Larger objects survive longer; brightest become fireballs. Violent fragmentation releases energy rapidly → shockwaves produce the characteristic loud booms heard on the ground. Energy commonly measured in TNT equivalent — May 2026 event: ~300 tonnes of TNT. The Chelyabinsk Bolide (2013) — Key Reference Event Location: Chelyabinsk Oblast, Russia — February 15, 2013. Released energy estimated at ~500 kilotonnes of TNT. Shockwave damaged buildings across a wide area; injured over 1,500 people. Not detected in advance — highlighted the gap in Near-Earth Object (NEO) monitoring for small objects. Concerns — Planetary Defense Gap Detection Gap: Most bolide-scale objects (under 25–50 metres) are too small to be tracked by current NEO catalogues focused on objects 140 metres and above. Shockwave vs. Impact Risk: Many bolides cause damage through atmospheric shockwaves — a risk often underestimated. India’s Interest: ISRO is developing Space Situational Awareness (SSA) capability; bolide monitoring is an emerging area of focus. Way Forward Expand NEO Detection Network: Enhance global tracking of small-to-medium sized near-Earth objects through international telescope networks. Planetary Defense Missions: Support missions like NASA’s DART (successful 2022 asteroid deflection test) and ESA’s Hera mission. International Cooperation: Strengthen the International Asteroid Warning Network (IAWN) and Space Mission Planning Advisory Group (SMPAG). Conclusion Every bolide event is a reminder that Earth operates in a dynamic cosmic environment. While the May 2026 event caused no casualties, the Chelyabinsk bolide demonstrated that even sub-kilometre objects can have significant consequences. Planetary defense — once the preserve of science fiction — is increasingly a practical policy domain requiring sustained international investment and coordination. Prelims Pointers Bolide = Exceptionally bright meteor that fragments/explodes in the atmosphere; accompanied by shockwaves/sonic booms. Meteor vs Meteorite: Meteor = in atmosphere (streak of light); Meteorite = reaches Earth’s surface. Fireball = Exceptionally bright meteor; bolide = fireball that violently fragments. Chelyabinsk Event (2013) = Major bolide over Russia; ~500 kt TNT equivalent; injured 1,500+ people. DART Mission = NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (2022); first successful kinetic impactor planetary defense test. IAWN = International Asteroid Warning Network — UN-backed global alert system for near-Earth objects. Near-Earth Object (NEO) = Asteroid or comet whose orbit brings it close to Earth’s orbit. TNT Equivalent = Standard unit for measuring energy release in explosive events. SSA = Space Situational Awareness — ISRO’s capability to monitor objects near Earth. Practice Mains Question “Bolide events like Chelyabinsk (2013) have exposed critical gaps in humanity’s planetary defense preparedness. Examine the scientific understanding of bolides and discuss the international frameworks and national steps needed to address the threat from near-Earth objects.” GS Paper 3  |  150 words  |  10 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about meteors and related phenomena: 1. A meteoroid that survives its passage through the atmosphere and reaches Earth’s surface is called a meteorite. 2. A bolide is a term used for any meteor that is visible to the naked eye. 3. The Chelyabinsk bolide of 2013 caused damage primarily through its shockwave rather than direct impact with the ground. 4. Bolides originate exclusively from comets. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a)1 and 3 only (b)1, 2, and 3 only (c)2 and 4 only (d)1, 2, 3, and 4 Correct Answer: (a) Statement 1 is correct. Statement 2 is incorrect — a bolide specifically refers to a fireball that fragments violently; not every visible meteor is a bolide. Statement 3 is correct — Chelyabinsk caused most damage through the atmospheric shockwave. Statement 4 is incorrect — bolides most commonly originate from asteroids, not comets. Article 08 Data Upgrade: New WPI and PPIs — Base Year Revision to 2022-23 GS Paper 3 — Indian Economy | Inflation | Economic Statistics | GS Paper 2 — Government Policies Why in News The Commerce Ministry will release a new Wholesale Price Index (WPI) series on June 15, 2026, with 2022-23 as the base year, alongside India’s first-ever output PPI, input PPI (experimental), and Services Producer Price Index. This is part of a comprehensive overhaul of India’s official statistical architecture, which has already updated GDP and IIP base years to 2022-23. Understanding the Indices Index Measures Published By Used For CPI Retail prices paid by consumers MoSPI RBI monetary policy (inflation targeting) WPI Wholesale prices received by producers DPIIT, Commerce Ministry Price escalation clauses in contracts Output PPI Prices received by producers (excludes tax & margins) Commerce Ministry Replacing WPI; GDP deflation Input PPI Prices paid by producers for inputs (includes margins) Commerce Ministry Production cost monitoring Services PPI Price changes in services sector Commerce Ministry Banking, insurance, telecom, railways, air travel IIP Volume of industrial production MoSPI Monthly economic activity indicator Key Highlights of the Statistical Overhaul New WPI Series (2022-23 Base) Replaces WPI with 2011-12 base year. To be discontinued within 5 years as output PPI takes over. Fresh long-term contracts extending beyond 2031 must shift price escalation clauses to PPI. Output PPI Initial basket: 125 items (to expand to ~1,500 after WPI discontinuation). More consistent with national accounts framework and aligned with IMF recommendations. Input PPI (Experimental) Trial period: ~2 years for quality assessment and stakeholder feedback. Closer to CPI in methodology. Services PPI (Quarterly) First of its kind in India. Covers 7 sectors: banking, securities, pension fund management, insurance, railways, air (passenger), and telecom. First release: January–March 2026 quarter. IIP Revision (Released June 2, 2026) New base year: 2022-23; expanded basket: 1,042 products across 463 item groups. Now includes gas supply, water supply, sewerage, and waste management. Electricity split into renewable and non-renewable for the first time. Significance of the WPI to PPI Transition Global Best Practice: IMF has repeatedly called on India to develop PPIs for proper GDP deflation. Better GDP Calculation: Output PPI will replace the current WPI+CPI combination as the primary GDP deflator. Services Coverage: WPI covers only goods; PPI will finally capture price dynamics in India’s dominant services sector. Contract Implications: All fresh long-term contracts extending beyond 2031 must shift from WPI to PPI. Concerns Transition Risk: Simultaneous changes to WPI, CPI, GDP, and IIP base years create temporary data inconsistency. Services PPI Reliability: New and quarterly; reliability for policy use will require time and stakeholder validation. Historical Comparability: Long-term data users will need to recalibrate models to account for multiple simultaneous base year changes. Way Forward Smooth WPI–PPI Transition: Issue clear guidelines for contract users in the 2026–2031 transition window. Expand Services PPI: Scale up from 7 services to a comprehensive basket within 3–5 years. Integrate with GDP Deflation: Formally adopt output PPI as the primary GDP deflator once stable — aligned with IMF standards. Conclusion India’s statistical overhaul — updating base years for WPI, CPI, GDP, and IIP simultaneously while introducing PPIs — represents the most comprehensive modernization of the country’s macroeconomic measurement architecture in over a decade. This transformation will improve the quality of monetary policy, infrastructure contracting, and investment analysis, ultimately strengthening the credibility of India’s economic data with global institutions and investors. Prelims Pointers WPI = Wholesale Price Index; published by DPIIT (Commerce Ministry); measures producer-level prices for goods only; new base year: 2022-23. PPI = Producer Price Index; more comprehensive than WPI; covers services too; aligned with IMF standards. Output PPI = Prices received by producers; excludes tax and margins; to replace WPI as main non-retail inflation measure. Input PPI = Prices paid by producers for inputs; includes trade margins; experimental phase (2 years). Services PPI = New quarterly index covering 7 sectors: banking, insurance, telecom, railways, air travel, securities, pension funds. CPI = Consumer Price Index; measures retail prices; used by RBI for inflation targeting at 4% ± 2%. IIP = Index of Industrial Production; published monthly by MoSPI; new base year: 2022-23; basket expanded to 1,042 products. Base Year = Reference year against which economic indices are measured; set at 100. GDP Deflator = Converts nominal GDP to real GDP; India currently uses WPI+CPI; will transition to output PPI. MoSPI = Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation; publishes CPI, IIP, GDP data. DPIIT = Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (under Commerce Ministry); publishes WPI and PPI. Practice Mains Question “India’s transition from the Wholesale Price Index (WPI) to the Producer Price Index (PPI) is a technically significant but underappreciated reform. Examine the limitations of WPI, the advantages of PPI, and the implications of this transition for monetary policy, GDP measurement, and long-term infrastructure contracts.” GS Paper 3  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about India’s price indices: 1. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) is used by the Reserve Bank of India as the primary inflation benchmark for monetary policy. 2. The Wholesale Price Index (WPI) covers both goods and services. 3. The output Producer Price Index (PPI) measures prices received by producers, excluding net tax and trade/transport margins. 4. India’s new WPI and PPI series both use 2022-23 as the base year. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a)1, 3, and 4 only (b)1 and 2 only (c)2, 3, and 4 only (d)1, 2, 3, and 4 Correct Answer: (a) Statement 1 is correct — RBI uses CPI (targeting 4% ± 2%) for monetary policy. Statement 2 is incorrect — WPI covers only goods, not services; this is one of its key limitations. Statement 3 is correct — output PPI excludes net tax and trade/transport margins. Statement 4 is correct — both new WPI and all three PPI variants use 2022-23 as the base year. Current Affairs Analysis 03 June 2026  |  UPSC CSE — GS Papers 2 & 3 Contents 03 June 2026 Prisons in India Continue to Be Overcrowded by UndertrialsGS2 Beaufort Castle: Israel’s Capture in Southern LebanonGS2 Operation Mule Hunt 1.0 — Combating Cyber Fraud Through Mule AccountsGS3 Tylosaurus Rex — A New Species of Giant Marine ReptileGS3 Project Tiger — Funding Has Not Kept Pace With ExpansionGS3 The Future of India’s Chip Industry — India Semiconductor MissionGS3 Bolides: Fireballs Going BoomGS3 Data Upgrade: New WPI and PPIs — Base Year Revision to 2022-23GS3 Article 01 Prisons in India Continue to Be Overcrowded by Undertrials GS Paper 2 — Fundamental Rights | Judiciary | Policy Implementation | Vulnerable Sections Why in News The National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) released its Prison Statistics India report for 2024, revealing that while the national prison occupancy rate fell to a decade-low of 112.7%, overcrowding remains a chronic structural crisis driven largely by the high proportion of undertrial prisoners, sluggish capacity expansion, and severe staff vacancies. Key Highlights — Prison Statistics India 2024 Surpassing Sanctioned Capacity India operates 1,333 jails with a sanctioned capacity of 4.53 lakh inmates. Actual inmate population exceeded 5.11 lakh — well above sanctioned limits. Regional Deficits More than half of States/UTs recorded occupancy rates exceeding 100%. Delhi recorded the highest occupancy at 194.6%; followed by Meghalaya (163.5%), J&K (148.3%), MP (147.1%). J&K: occupancy surged from 78% in 2015 to over 148% in 2024. Chhattisgarh improved from 234% in 2015 to 127.6% in 2024. Modest Capacity Growth Prison capacity grew by 24% between 2015–2024 through renovations of 2,268 prisons and construction of 120+ new ones. Growth has not kept pace with rising inmate populations in several regions. Undertrial Dominance Undertrials: 73% of total inmate population in 2024 (down from 77% peak in 2021). Share of convicted prisoners fell from 32% in 2016 to 26.6% in 2024. Delhi and Bihar: over 87% of prison population consists of undertrials. 9,028 individuals (2.4%) have been in prison for over 5 years without conviction. Staff Vacancies Nearly half of sanctioned posts vacant in 8 States/UTs. Delhi and J&K: at least 60% of sanctioned prison staff posts vacant. Medical staff vacancy rate: 46.4% nationally. Concerns Right to Life and Personal Liberty (Article 21) In Hussainara Khatoon v. State of Bihar (1979), the SC held that a speedy trial is an integral part of Article 21. Prolonged detention without conviction constitutes punitive detention and violates the presumption of innocence. Derogation of Inmate Dignity In Sunil Batra v. Delhi Administration (1980), the SC ruled that prisoners do not lose all fundamental rights upon incarceration. Overcrowding denies basic needs — sanitation, sleep space, privacy — amounting to cruel and degrading treatment. Violation of International Standards Indian prison conditions fall short of the UN Standard Minimum Rules for Treatment of Prisoners (Nelson Mandela Rules) on space, hygiene, and medical access. Failure of Bail Jurisprudence The foundational principle — “bail is the rule, jail is the exception” — has been effectively reversed. High financial sureties and local bond requirements create wealth-based discrimination against the poor. Mechanical Remands and Arbitrary Arrests Despite Arnesh Kumar v. State of Bihar (2014) restricting automatic arrests for offences punishable by under 7 years, police continue unnecessary arrests. Section 479 of BNSS 2023, meant to decongest jails, remains underutilized. Administrative Vulnerabilities Overcrowding accelerates spread of TB and HIV; high medical staff vacancies compound this. Undertrial Review Committees (UTRCs), mandated to meet quarterly, suffer from bureaucratic delays. “School of Crime” Phenomenon Inadequate segregation of first-time offenders from hardened criminals accelerates recidivism and criminal network exposure. Socio-Economic Impact 86.3% of prison population falls in the 18–50 productive age bracket. Majority belong to SC, ST, OBC communities; the Law Commission’s 268th Report (2017) identifies poverty as the biggest barrier to bail. Violates the spirit of Article 39A (equal justice and free legal aid). Government Interventions Intervention Key Provision BNSS 2023, Section 479(1) First-time offenders who serve 1/3rd of maximum sentence must be released on bond Model Prisons and Correctional Services Act, 2023 Replaces Prisons Act of 1894; shifts focus from retribution to rehabilitation; introduces electronic tagging Model Prison Manual 2016 Standardizes prison management, classification, medical care, vocational training Prisons Development Fund (2018) Modernizes prison infrastructure at state level E-Prisons Project Integrates prison records with ICJS for timely bail eligibility alerts Support to Poor Prisoners Scheme MHA-funded financial assistance for bail/surety for marginalised undertrials Way Forward Comprehensive Bail Act: As recommended in Satender Kumar Antil v. CBI (2022), to standardize bail and reduce judicial discretion. Fast-Track Courts: For petty offences, as recommended by the Justice Amitava Roy Committee (2018). Expansion of Open Prisons: Emulating Sanganer Open Camp, Rajasthan — lower cost, less overcrowding, better rehabilitation. AI for Case Management: Deploy SUVAS and SUPACE to automate bail hearing triggers for eligible undertrials. Gender-Sensitive Reforms: Exclusive institutions for women prisoners, as recommended by Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer Committee (1987). Fund for Poor Prisoners: All States should create a dedicated fund modeled on Andhra Pradesh’s ‘Cheyutha Nidhi’, as recommended by the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Home Affairs (2023). Conclusion As Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer observed, “Prisons are built with stones of law, but they must be managed with the touch of humanism.” The Supreme Court’s emphasis in the Suhas Chakma case (2024) on prisoners’ rights, open prisons, and data-driven rehabilitation underscores the urgent need to shift India’s correctional system from a punitive to a humane and reform-oriented framework. Prelims Pointers NCRB publishes Prison Statistics India annually under the Ministry of Home Affairs. Undertrial prisoners are those in custody awaiting trial — not convicted. Article 21 — right to life and personal liberty; speedy trial is part of it (Hussainara Khatoon, 1979). Article 39A — mandates equal justice and free legal aid. Nelson Mandela Rules = UN Standard Minimum Rules for Treatment of Prisoners (2015 revision). Section 479 BNSS 2023 — replaces CrPC Section 436A; release of first-time offenders after 1/3rd sentence. FASTER System = Fast and Secured Transmission of Electronic Records — digital transmission of court orders. SUVAS = Supreme Court Vidhik Anuvaad Software; SUPACE = Supreme Court Portal for Assistance in Courts Efficiency. Sanganer Open Camp, Rajasthan — India’s most cited example of open prison success. UTRCs = Undertrial Review Committees — mandated to meet quarterly to review eligible cases for release. Arnesh Kumar v. State of Bihar (2014) — SC restricted arrests for offences with punishment below 7 years. Practice Mains Question “Bail is the rule, jail is the exception — yet India’s prison statistics suggest the opposite. Critically examine the structural and systemic factors responsible for the high proportion of undertrial prisoners in India and suggest a comprehensive reform agenda.” GS Paper 2  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Which of the following correctly describes the provision under Section 479(1) of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS), 2023? (a)An undertrial prisoner may be released on bail after completing half of the maximum prescribed sentence. (b)A first-time offender undertrial must be released on bond after serving one-third of the maximum prescribed sentence for the offence. (c)Any undertrial prisoner, regardless of prior conviction history, must be released after completing one-third of the maximum sentence. (d)Section 479 applies only to offences punishable with imprisonment of up to 7 years. Correct Answer: (b) Section 479(1) of BNSS 2023 (replacing CrPC Section 436A) specifically applies to first-time offenders and mandates their release on bond after serving one-third (not half) of the maximum prescribed sentence. Option (c) is incorrect because the provision is limited to first-time offenders, not all undertrials. Option (d) conflates this with the Arnesh Kumar guidelines on arrest. Article 02 Beaufort Castle: Israel’s Capture in Southern Lebanon GS Paper 2 — International Relations | Effect of Policies of Developed Countries | India’s Neighbourhood Why in News Israeli forces announced the capture of the 900-year-old Beaufort Castle (Qalaat al-Shaqif) in southern Lebanon as part of a ground offensive crossing the Litani River — Israel’s deepest military advance into Lebanon in over two decades — despite a nominally active ceasefire. The move drew sharp international condemnation from France, Germany, the UK, and others. About Beaufort Castle Feature Detail Also Known As Qalaat al-Shaqif / Shaqif Arnoun Age ~900 years (built 12th century CE by Crusaders) Location Near Nabatiyeh, ~14 km north of Israel border Strategic Vantage Overlooks Litani River valley, Bekaa Valley, Golan Heights, northern Galilee UNESCO Status Enhanced protection list (added during 2024 Israel-Hezbollah conflict) Historical Ownership Sequence: Crusaders → Saladin’s Forces → Mamluks → Ottomans → French Colonial Authorities → PLO → Israel (1982–2000) → Lebanese Armed Groups → Israel (2026) Strategic and Historical Significance Military Value Commands sweeping surveillance over southern Lebanon and northern Israel from a steep rocky ridge. Controls artillery positioning and troop movement monitoring over a vast operational area. Consistently regarded as one of the most valuable observation points in the region. 1982 Lebanon War Connection Israel captured Beaufort Castle from the PLO during the 1982 Lebanon War. Maintained as a major military outpost until 2000 withdrawal from southern Lebanon. Became a cultural symbol of the occupation in Israeli public memory. 2026 Context Israel crossed the Litani River, expanding what it calls a “Forward Defense Line.” Advance came despite a ceasefire nominally in place since April 2026. The Litani River — Key Facts Longest river entirely within Lebanon. Originates in the Beqaa Valley; flows south; drains into the Mediterranean near Tyre. Critical water resource for southern Lebanon. UNSCR 1701 (2006) functionally designated the Litani line as a security boundary. Concerns and Implications Violation of Ceasefire Architecture: Undermines UNSCR 1701 (2006) which mandated withdrawal of armed forces south of the river. Cultural Heritage in Conflict: UNESCO-enhanced protection status raises questions about applicability of the Hague Convention (1954) during active hostilities. Regional Escalation Risk: Complicates US-mediated diplomatic efforts and risks direct confrontation with Lebanese state forces. India’s Interest: India is a significant contributor to UNIFIL and has substantial stakes in West Asian stability through energy security and diaspora. Way Forward Reinforce UNSCR 1701: International community must press for full implementation of the 2006 Security Council resolution. Protect Cultural Heritage: UNESCO and ICRC must invoke enhanced protection mechanisms under the 1954 Hague Convention. India’s Role: India can advocate for de-escalation through multilateral platforms as a UNSC non-permanent member aspirant and UNIFIL contributor. Conclusion Beaufort Castle has witnessed over nine centuries of conquests, withdrawals, and renewals. Its latest capture tests the resilience of international ceasefire frameworks and the global commitment to protecting cultural heritage in armed conflict — two challenges with significant implications for the rules-based international order. Prelims Pointers Beaufort Castle = Qalaat al-Shaqif; 12th century Crusader fortress in southern Lebanon near Nabatiyeh. Litani River = Longest river entirely within Lebanon; originates in Beqaa Valley; drains into Mediterranean near Tyre. UNSCR 1701 (2006) = Called for full cessation of hostilities; established the Litani line as a security boundary. UNIFIL = United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon — India is a major troop contributor. UNESCO Enhanced Protection = Special category under 2nd Protocol to Hague Convention (1999) for greatest-importance cultural heritage. Hezbollah = Lebanese Shia militant group; designated as terrorist organization by US, EU, and others. Nabatiyeh = District in southern Lebanon near Beaufort Castle. Beqaa Valley = Eastern Lebanon; strategically and agriculturally significant region. Golan Heights = Syrian territory occupied by Israel since 1967; annexed in 1981 (not internationally recognized). 1982 Lebanon War = Israel invaded Lebanon; captured Beaufort Castle from PLO; withdrew in 2000. Practice Mains Question “The capture of Beaufort Castle by Israeli forces highlights the recurring intersection of cultural heritage, military strategy, and international law in West Asian conflicts. Examine the geopolitical implications of Israel’s northward advance in Lebanon and India’s strategic interests in the region.” GS Paper 2  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ With reference to the Litani River, consider the following statements: 1. It is the longest river that flows entirely within Lebanon. 2. It originates in the Bekaa Valley and drains into the Red Sea near Tyre. 3. UNSCR 1701 (2006) called for Israeli military withdrawal to positions south of the Litani River. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? (a)1 only (b)1 and 3 only (c)2 and 3 only (d)1, 2, and 3 Correct Answer: (b) Statement 1 is correct. Statement 2 is incorrect — the Litani drains into the Mediterranean Sea, not the Red Sea. Statement 3 is correct — UNSCR 1701 (2006) called for cessation of hostilities and withdrawal of Israeli forces south of the Litani River. Article 03 Operation Mule Hunt 1.0 — Combating Cyber Fraud Through Mule Accounts GS Paper 3 — Internal Security | Cybersecurity | Money Laundering | GS Paper 2 — Government Policies Why in News Gujarat Police, under Operation Mule Hunt 1.0, uncovered cyber fraud worth ₹2,289 crore, took action against 913 mule bank accounts, registered 565 FIRs, and made 638 arrests. The operation was coordinated through the Cyber Centre of Excellence (CCOE) using a data-driven, multi-agency approach. What is a Mule Account? A mule account is a legitimate-looking bank account used — knowingly or unknowingly — by cybercriminals to receive, transfer, or launder fraudulently obtained money. The person operating such an account is called a money mule. Cybercriminals exploit the bulk payout facility offered by banks, using accounts of shell companies and individuals as intermediary nodes in the fraud chain. Key Highlights — Operation Mule Hunt 1.0 Achievements Metric Number FIRs Registered 565 Arrests Made 638 Mule Accounts Acted Against 913 Cybercrime Cases Identified 4,052 (491 from Gujarat) Total Economic Fraud Exposed ₹2,289 crore Measurable Impact Cheque withdrawals declined by 75% (monthly from ₹126 cr to ₹25 cr). First-layer mule accounts reduced by 30% (Aug–Dec 2025). ATM withdrawals linked to fraudulent activity dropped by 66%. Technology and Institutional Framework AI-Based Risk Scoring (IDPIC–RBI) IDPIC (Indian Digital Payment Intelligence Corporation) is implementing an AI-based risk-scoring system under RBI guidelines. Every transaction classified as low, medium, or high risk. mulehunter.ai registry created for inter-bank sharing of suspicious account information. Key Institutions I4C (Indian Cybercrime Coordination Centre) — central nodal body for cybercrime coordination under MHA. NCRP (National Cybercrime Reporting Portal) — online platform for citizens to report cybercrime. 1930 Helpline — national cybercrime helpline for reporting financial fraud in real time. Concerns Scale of Digital Vulnerability: India has over 100 crore internet users (up from 25 crore a decade ago) with exponentially growing UPI transactions. Traceability Problem: Multi-layered mule account chains create jurisdictional and technical obstacles, especially across state or national borders. National Security Dimension: Home Minister Amit Shah noted that cybersecurity is directly linked to national security given involvement of transnational criminal networks. Way Forward Mandatory KYC Audits: Regular audits of dormant and high-frequency transfer accounts to detect early-stage mule activity. Bank Accountability: Hold banks institutionally responsible for enabling mule ecosystems through bulk payout without adequate due diligence. Scaling IDPIC Model: Replicate Gujarat’s CCOE model at the national level with dedicated Cyber Financial Intelligence Units in every state. Legislative Framework: Enact a dedicated Cybercrime Prevention Act to plug gaps in the IT Act, 2000. Conclusion Operation Mule Hunt 1.0 demonstrates that intelligence-led, data-driven policing can deliver measurable results against sophisticated cyber fraud networks. As India’s digital economy deepens, building institutional resilience against financial cybercrime is no longer optional but a prerequisite for the credibility of Digital India itself. Prelims Pointers Mule Account = Bank account used to receive/transfer illegally obtained money; operator = money mule. I4C = Indian Cybercrime Coordination Centre — nodal body under MHA. NCRP = National Cybercrime Reporting Portal — citizens report cybercrime online. 1930 = National helpline for cyber financial fraud. IDPIC = Indian Digital Payment Intelligence Corporation — under RBI; implements AI risk scoring for transactions. mulehunter.ai = Registry for inter-bank sharing of suspicious account information. CCOE = Cyber Centre of Excellence — Gujarat Police’s specialized cybercrime unit. First-layer mule account = Account where fraud money is deposited first before further dispersal. IT Act 2000 = Primary legislation governing cybercrime in India. BharatNet = Government initiative connecting gram panchayats via optical fibre — backbone of Digital India. Practice Mains Question “Mule accounts have become the invisible infrastructure of cyber financial crime in India. Examine the mechanisms through which mule accounts are exploited, the institutional responses developed so far, and the reforms needed to secure India’s digital payments ecosystem.” GS Paper 3  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about the Indian Digital Payment Intelligence Corporation (IDPIC): 1. IDPIC is established under the Reserve Bank of India to implement AI-based risk scoring of financial transactions. 2. The mulehunter.ai registry, created under IDPIC, enables information sharing about suspicious accounts among banks. 3. IDPIC classifies transactions into three risk categories: low, medium, and high. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a)1 and 2 only (b)2 and 3 only (c)1 and 3 only (d)1, 2, and 3 Correct Answer: (d) All three statements are correct. IDPIC operates under RBI guidelines; the mulehunter.ai registry was created for inter-bank sharing of suspicious account data; and the AI risk scoring system classifies every transaction as low, medium, or high risk. Article 04 Tylosaurus Rex — A New Species of Giant Marine Reptile GS Paper 3 — Science & Technology | Biodiversity | Prehistoric Life Why in News Scientists identified Tylosaurus rex as a distinct species of giant marine reptile after re-examining previously discovered fossils. The largest known specimen, nicknamed “Bunker,” measures approximately 13.2 metres — larger than the famous Tyrannosaurus rex specimen “Sue” (12.2 metres). About Tylosaurus rex Feature Detail Classification Mosasaur (marine reptile, not a dinosaur) Period ~80 million years ago (Late Cretaceous) Size ~13.2 metres (largest specimen “Bunker”) Habitat Western Interior Seaway, North America Closest Living Relatives Monitor lizards Nomenclature “King of the Tylosaurs”; homage to T. rex Key Physical Features Streamlined body with elongated snout Large teeth with fine serrations for cutting flesh Four paddle-like flippers and a powerful tail Heavy jaw and neck musculature — apex marine predator About Mosasaurs Globally distributed marine reptiles that evolved from land-living lizards. Dominant apex marine predators during the final phase of the Mesozoic Era. Not dinosaurs — belong to the squamate family (lizards and snakes). Went extinct at the end of the Cretaceous Period (~66 million years ago). Western Interior Seaway Large shallow inland sea that divided North America into eastern (Appalachia) and western (Laramidia) landmasses during the Cretaceous. Key habitat for mosasaurs and plesiosaurs. Completely dried up by the end of the Cretaceous. Scientific Significance Taxonomic Clarity: Reclassification adds precision to understanding of Late Cretaceous marine biodiversity. Evolutionary Insights: Adaptations provide evidence of convergent evolution between marine and terrestrial apex predators. T. rex and Tylosaurus rex were not contemporaries — T. rex appeared ~68 MYA, Tylosaurus rex ~80 MYA. Conclusion The identification of Tylosaurus rex as a new species is a reminder that Earth’s fossil record continues to hold taxonomic surprises even within well-studied groups. Re-examination of museum collections may yield as many new discoveries as fresh field excavations. Prelims Pointers Tylosaurus rex = Newly identified mosasaur species; Late Cretaceous; NOT a dinosaur. Mosasaurs = Marine reptiles; evolved from land-living lizards; apex predators of Cretaceous seas; extinct ~66 MYA. Cretaceous Period = ~145–66 million years ago; last period of the Mesozoic Era. Western Interior Seaway = Prehistoric shallow sea dividing North America during the Cretaceous. Monitor lizard = Closest living relative of mosasaurs (along with snakes). “Bunker” = Largest known Tylosaurus rex specimen (~13.2 metres). “Sue” = Famous T. rex specimen at Chicago’s Field Museum; ~12.2 metres. Convergent evolution = Unrelated species independently evolving similar traits. Paleontology = Scientific study of prehistoric life through fossils. Practice Mains Question “Re-examination of existing fossil collections has proven as scientifically valuable as new excavations. In light of the identification of Tylosaurus rex, discuss how advances in paleontological methods are reshaping our understanding of prehistoric biodiversity.” GS Paper 3  |  150 words  |  10 marks Prelims Practice MCQ With reference to Mosasaurs, which of the following statements is/are correct? 1. Mosasaurs were a group of dinosaurs that adapted to aquatic life during the Cretaceous Period. 2. The closest living relatives of mosasaurs are monitor lizards and snakes. 3. Mosasaurs became extinct at the end of the Cretaceous Period, approximately 66 million years ago. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? (a)1 and 2 only (b)2 and 3 only (c)1 and 3 only (d)1, 2, and 3 Correct Answer: (b) Statement 1 is incorrect — mosasaurs were not dinosaurs; they were marine reptiles of the squamate order. Statement 2 is correct — monitor lizards (varanids) and snakes are the closest living relatives. Statement 3 is correct — mosasaurs went extinct in the end-Cretaceous mass extinction event (~66 MYA). Article 05 Project Tiger — Funding Has Not Kept Pace With Expansion GS Paper 3 — Environment & Ecology | Conservation | Biodiversity | Government Schemes Why in News Reports from Down to Earth on funding gaps and rising tiger mortality have raised structural concerns about India’s flagship Project Tiger. While India’s tiger count has grown impressively, inflation-adjusted funding per conservation unit has declined, and tiger deaths have nearly doubled from 88 in 2012 to 167 in 2025. Key Highlights Scale of Project Tiger (2026) Launched: 1973 under Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. Current reserves: 58 tiger reserves covering ~78,000 sq km of forest. Evolution: 9 reserves (inception) → 23 (1997) → 39 (2010) → 58 (present). Funding Trend — Nominal vs Real Year Nominal Expenditure Inflation-Adjusted (2008-09 prices) 2008-09 ₹154.7 crore ₹154.7 crore (base) 2021-22 ₹252 crore ~₹82 crore 2025-26 (BE) ₹290 crore ~₹95 crore Key Insight: While nominal expenditure has nearly doubled, real purchasing power has fallen to 61% of 2008-09 levels. The CPI rose from 100 in 2008-09 to approximately 305 in recent years. NTCA 2024 Evaluation — “Bridging the Gap” Report Invasive species affecting habitats in 40 out of 58 tiger reserves. 20 tiger reserves lack sufficient anti-poaching staff. 10 reserves (including Dampa, Mukundara, Mudumalai) face staffing shortages; staffing levels down by at least 40%. Concerns Conservation Success Creating New Pressures: Rising tiger populations lead to more territorial infighting, particularly among sub-adults dispersing out of saturated core zones. Declining Real Funding: On-the-ground activities — anti-poaching patrols, vehicle maintenance, fire management — are progressively underfunded. Staffing Crisis: Vacancies and ageing workforces in multiple reserves create gaps in patrolling, monitoring, and conflict mitigation. Corridor Fragmentation: Infrastructure development continues to fragment wildlife corridors, blocking dispersal of sub-adults and increasing human-wildlife conflict. Invasive Species: Presence in 40 of 58 reserves indicates a systemic ecological threat requiring dedicated management resources. Data Gap: NTCA does not separately record deaths due to infighting — obscuring conservation planning. Government Interventions Project Tiger (1973) — launched under Wildlife Protection Act, 1972; administered by NTCA. NTCA — statutory body under Wildlife Protection Act (amended 2006); nodal authority for tiger conservation. CAMPA (Compensatory Afforestation Fund) — funds afforestation and habitat restoration. Wildlife Crime Control Bureau (WCCB) — coordinates anti-poaching activities. Way Forward Inflation-Indexed Budgeting: Project Tiger allocations must be indexed to CPI to maintain real purchasing power. Per-Unit Funding Norms: Establish minimum per-reserve funding benchmarks based on area, threat level, and staffing requirements. Address Staffing Crisis: Fast-track recruitment for frontline forest staff in the 20 critically understaffed reserves. Invasive Species Management: Dedicated funding for eradication programs in tiger reserves. Wildlife Corridor Protection: Legally notify and protect key wildlife corridors under the Wildlife Protection Act. Expand NTCA Data Collection: Include deaths due to infighting as a separate mortality category. Conclusion India’s rising tiger count is a genuine conservation achievement. However, the NTCA’s own 2024 evaluation reveals that this success rests on a foundation increasingly strained by under-resourcing, understaffing, and ecological threats. Sustaining the tiger recovery requires India to move from celebrating the number to seriously investing in the ecosystem that sustains it. Prelims Pointers Project Tiger — launched in 1973; India now has 58 tiger reserves covering ~78,000 sq km. NTCA = National Tiger Conservation Authority; statutory body under Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 (amended 2006). Royal Bengal Tiger = Panthera tigris tigris; India’s national animal. “Bridging the Gap” Report (2024) = NTCA evaluation report on tiger reserve management effectiveness. Dampa Tiger Reserve = Located in Mizoram; faces staffing and poaching threats. Mudumalai Tiger Reserve = Tamil Nadu; part of Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve. Ranthambore Tiger Reserve = Rajasthan; among India’s best-known tiger reserves. Kanha Tiger Reserve = Madhya Pradesh; inspiration for Rudyard Kipling’s The Jungle Book. CPI (Consumer Price Index) = Measures retail inflation; published by MoSPI. CAMPA = Compensatory Afforestation Fund Management and Planning Authority. Practice Mains Question “India’s tiger conservation success story conceals a deepening resource-performance paradox. Critically analyse the structural funding and management challenges facing Project Tiger and suggest measures to make tiger conservation financially and ecologically sustainable.” GS Paper 3  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about Project Tiger: 1. Project Tiger was launched in 1973 and is administered by the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA). 2. India currently has 58 tiger reserves covering approximately 78,000 sq km. 3. The NTCA was established under the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 as amended in 2006. 4. Inflation-adjusted funding per conservation unit under Project Tiger has increased steadily since 2008-09. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a)1, 2, and 3 only (b)2 and 4 only (c)1 and 4 only (d)1, 2, 3, and 4 Correct Answer: (a) Statements 1, 2, and 3 are correct. Statement 4 is incorrect — inflation-adjusted funding per conservation unit has actually declined. Real spending in 2025-26 (~₹95 crore at 2008-09 prices) is significantly lower than the 2008-09 expenditure of ₹154.7 crore, and the number of conservation units has grown from 38 to 60+, further reducing per-unit real allocation. Article 06 The Future of India’s Chip Industry — India Semiconductor Mission GS Paper 3 — Science & Technology | Indian Economy | Infrastructure | GS Paper 2 — Government Policies Why in News ITI Aayog’s Frontier Tech Hub released a report titled “Future of India’s Semiconductor Industry”, reaffirming that India faces steep challenges in semiconductor fabrication but that national interest demands sustained pursuit. The report provides a strategic framework for ISM 2.0 and advocates selective depth over full-spectrum replication of the global semiconductor supply chain. India’s Semiconductor Landscape India has zero operational semiconductor fabs; all chips for domestic electronics are largely imported. First fab expected at Dholera, Gujarat by 2028; ten more in various development stages. India Semiconductor Mission (ISM): corpus of ₹76,000 crore; fab capital subsidies of 50%+; administered under MeitY. Key Recommendations of the ITI Aayog Report Strategic Focus — Not Full-Spectrum Focus on “selective depth, capital efficiency, and system-level differentiation.” Prioritise mature, advanced-aligned, and compound nodes over frontier 3–7 nm chips. Packaging as a Core Pillar Semiconductor packaging designated a “core production pillar, not a downstream activity.” Less capital-intensive than fabrication; India has existing competitive advantages here. Geopolitical Context China flagged as a strategic adversary in chipmaking despite recent diplomatic thaw. Priority partners: US, Japan, EU, South Korea — for access to tools, equipment servicing, and lifecycle support. Taiwan scenario risk: A crisis could massively disrupt global electronics supply chains; India must reduce dependence. ISM 2.0 Capital Estimate Required state capital expenditure: $45–60 billion over 10 years. Focus on bankable, risk-calibrated projects rather than high-risk frontier fabs. Challenges Gestation Period: Fabs require 4–5 years before commencing production; 50+ specialised equipment must be imported during this phase. Talent Pipeline: Developing a skilled semiconductor workforce requires sustained mission-mode commitment over a decade or more. Ecosystem Readiness: Most chips in defence and aerospace systems are produced outside India — a national security vulnerability. Strategic Significance National Security: Semiconductors in defence systems represent strategic vulnerabilities when sourced entirely from foreign suppliers. Economic Multiplier: Semiconductors are inputs to virtually all electronics — from consumer gadgets to EVs to medical devices. Geopolitical Leverage: Participation in global semiconductor supply chains elevates India’s position in technology diplomacy and aligns with the Quad’s semiconductor cooperation agenda. Way Forward Implement ISM 2.0 with clear focus on packaging, mature nodes, and compound semiconductors. Fast-Track Dholera Fab — ensure operationality by 2028 as a proof-of-concept. Invest in Design Ecosystem — expand semiconductor design talent through IITs, NITs, and dedicated Chip Design Centres. Forge Trusted Supply Chain Partnerships — deepen collaboration with the US (CHIPS Act), Japan (FABS Act), and EU (European Chips Act). Conclusion As the ITI Aayog report concludes, “With sustained commitment and strategic clarity, India can build a competitive semiconductor ecosystem that strengthens economic resilience and positions the nation as a key player in the future of advanced technology.” The semiconductor mission is not merely an industrial policy — it is a strategic imperative for India’s ambitions as a technology power in the 21st century. Prelims Pointers India Semiconductor Mission (ISM) = ₹76,000 crore corpus under MeitY for semiconductor fabs, packaging, and design. Dholera, Gujarat = Location of India’s first expected semiconductor fabrication unit (2028). Semiconductor fab = Facility where chips are manufactured on silicon wafers. Packaging = Final stage of chipmaking; less capital-intensive than fabrication. Nanometre (nm) node = Transistor size; smaller = more advanced (3–7 nm = frontier chips). ISM 2.0 = Expected second phase; estimated capital: $45–60 billion over 10 years. Compound semiconductors = Made from two or more elements (e.g., gallium arsenide); used in defence, 5G, EVs. Taiwan risk = ~90% of world’s most advanced chips made in Taiwan (TSMC). CHIPS Act (USA) = $52 billion for domestic semiconductor manufacturing and R&D. ITI Aayog = India’s premier policy think tank (formerly NITI Aayog). Practice Mains Question “Semiconductors have become the new oil of the 21st century. Critically examine India’s semiconductor strategy, the challenges it faces, and the geopolitical imperatives that make it a national security priority.” GS Paper 3  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ With reference to the India Semiconductor Mission (ISM), consider the following statements: 1. ISM has a total corpus of ₹76,000 crore. 2. Semiconductor fabrication units (fabs) under ISM receive capital subsidies of more than 50%. 3. India’s first semiconductor fabrication unit is expected to be operational in Hyderabad by 2027. 4. The ISM is administered under the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY). Which of the statements given above are correct? (a)1, 2, and 4 only (b)1 and 3 only (c)2, 3, and 4 only (d)1, 2, 3, and 4 Correct Answer: (a) Statements 1, 2, and 4 are correct. Statement 3 is incorrect — India’s first fab is expected in Dholera, Gujarat (not Hyderabad) and by 2028 (not 2027). Article 07 Bolides: Fireballs Going Boom GS Paper 3 — Science & Technology | Space Science | Planetary Defense Why in News On May 30, 2026, a meteor exploded over the northeastern United States, producing loud booming noises. NASA confirmed it broke apart approximately 64 km above the ground while travelling at over 1,20,000 km/hr, releasing energy equivalent to approximately 300 tonnes of TNT. Scientists classified it as a bolide. What is a Bolide? A bolide is an exceptionally bright meteor that breaks apart or explodes in Earth’s atmosphere, releasing a large amount of energy as shockwaves. The terminology follows a size/brightness hierarchy: Term Definition Meteoroid Small piece of rock/metal in space Meteor Meteoroid entering Earth’s atmosphere (the streak of light) Fireball Exceptionally bright meteor (visible in daylight) Bolide Fireball that fragments violently; accompanied by sonic booms Meteorite Meteor that survives and reaches Earth’s surface Physics of a Bolide Event Meteoroid enters atmosphere → air compresses and superheats → glowing streak forms. Larger objects survive longer; brightest become fireballs. Violent fragmentation releases energy rapidly → shockwaves produce the characteristic loud booms heard on the ground. Energy commonly measured in TNT equivalent — May 2026 event: ~300 tonnes of TNT. The Chelyabinsk Bolide (2013) — Key Reference Event Location: Chelyabinsk Oblast, Russia — February 15, 2013. Released energy estimated at ~500 kilotonnes of TNT. Shockwave damaged buildings across a wide area; injured over 1,500 people. Not detected in advance — highlighted the gap in Near-Earth Object (NEO) monitoring for small objects. Concerns — Planetary Defense Gap Detection Gap: Most bolide-scale objects (under 25–50 metres) are too small to be tracked by current NEO catalogues focused on objects 140 metres and above. Shockwave vs. Impact Risk: Many bolides cause damage through atmospheric shockwaves — a risk often underestimated. India’s Interest: ISRO is developing Space Situational Awareness (SSA) capability; bolide monitoring is an emerging area of focus. Way Forward Expand NEO Detection Network: Enhance global tracking of small-to-medium sized near-Earth objects through international telescope networks. Planetary Defense Missions: Support missions like NASA’s DART (successful 2022 asteroid deflection test) and ESA’s Hera mission. International Cooperation: Strengthen the International Asteroid Warning Network (IAWN) and Space Mission Planning Advisory Group (SMPAG). Conclusion Every bolide event is a reminder that Earth operates in a dynamic cosmic environment. While the May 2026 event caused no casualties, the Chelyabinsk bolide demonstrated that even sub-kilometre objects can have significant consequences. Planetary defense — once the preserve of science fiction — is increasingly a practical policy domain requiring sustained international investment and coordination. Prelims Pointers Bolide = Exceptionally bright meteor that fragments/explodes in the atmosphere; accompanied by shockwaves/sonic booms. Meteor vs Meteorite: Meteor = in atmosphere (streak of light); Meteorite = reaches Earth’s surface. Fireball = Exceptionally bright meteor; bolide = fireball that violently fragments. Chelyabinsk Event (2013) = Major bolide over Russia; ~500 kt TNT equivalent; injured 1,500+ people. DART Mission = NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (2022); first successful kinetic impactor planetary defense test. IAWN = International Asteroid Warning Network — UN-backed global alert system for near-Earth objects. Near-Earth Object (NEO) = Asteroid or comet whose orbit brings it close to Earth’s orbit. TNT Equivalent = Standard unit for measuring energy release in explosive events. SSA = Space Situational Awareness — ISRO’s capability to monitor objects near Earth. Practice Mains Question “Bolide events like Chelyabinsk (2013) have exposed critical gaps in humanity’s planetary defense preparedness. Examine the scientific understanding of bolides and discuss the international frameworks and national steps needed to address the threat from near-Earth objects.” GS Paper 3  |  150 words  |  10 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about meteors and related phenomena: 1. A meteoroid that survives its passage through the atmosphere and reaches Earth’s surface is called a meteorite. 2. A bolide is a term used for any meteor that is visible to the naked eye. 3. The Chelyabinsk bolide of 2013 caused damage primarily through its shockwave rather than direct impact with the ground. 4. Bolides originate exclusively from comets. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a)1 and 3 only (b)1, 2, and 3 only (c)2 and 4 only (d)1, 2, 3, and 4 Correct Answer: (a) Statement 1 is correct. Statement 2 is incorrect — a bolide specifically refers to a fireball that fragments violently; not every visible meteor is a bolide. Statement 3 is correct — Chelyabinsk caused most damage through the atmospheric shockwave. Statement 4 is incorrect — bolides most commonly originate from asteroids, not comets. Article 08 Data Upgrade: New WPI and PPIs — Base Year Revision to 2022-23 GS Paper 3 — Indian Economy | Inflation | Economic Statistics | GS Paper 2 — Government Policies Why in News The Commerce Ministry will release a new Wholesale Price Index (WPI) series on June 15, 2026, with 2022-23 as the base year, alongside India’s first-ever output PPI, input PPI (experimental), and Services Producer Price Index. This is part of a comprehensive overhaul of India’s official statistical architecture, which has already updated GDP and IIP base years to 2022-23. Understanding the Indices Index Measures Published By Used For CPI Retail prices paid by consumers MoSPI RBI monetary policy (inflation targeting) WPI Wholesale prices received by producers DPIIT, Commerce Ministry Price escalation clauses in contracts Output PPI Prices received by producers (excludes tax & margins) Commerce Ministry Replacing WPI; GDP deflation Input PPI Prices paid by producers for inputs (includes margins) Commerce Ministry Production cost monitoring Services PPI Price changes in services sector Commerce Ministry Banking, insurance, telecom, railways, air travel IIP Volume of industrial production MoSPI Monthly economic activity indicator Key Highlights of the Statistical Overhaul New WPI Series (2022-23 Base) Replaces WPI with 2011-12 base year. To be discontinued within 5 years as output PPI takes over. Fresh long-term contracts extending beyond 2031 must shift price escalation clauses to PPI. Output PPI Initial basket: 125 items (to expand to ~1,500 after WPI discontinuation). More consistent with national accounts framework and aligned with IMF recommendations. Input PPI (Experimental) Trial period: ~2 years for quality assessment and stakeholder feedback. Closer to CPI in methodology. Services PPI (Quarterly) First of its kind in India. Covers 7 sectors: banking, securities, pension fund management, insurance, railways, air (passenger), and telecom. First release: January–March 2026 quarter. IIP Revision (Released June 2, 2026) New base year: 2022-23; expanded basket: 1,042 products across 463 item groups. Now includes gas supply, water supply, sewerage, and waste management. Electricity split into renewable and non-renewable for the first time. Significance of the WPI to PPI Transition Global Best Practice: IMF has repeatedly called on India to develop PPIs for proper GDP deflation. Better GDP Calculation: Output PPI will replace the current WPI+CPI combination as the primary GDP deflator. Services Coverage: WPI covers only goods; PPI will finally capture price dynamics in India’s dominant services sector. Contract Implications: All fresh long-term contracts extending beyond 2031 must shift from WPI to PPI. Concerns Transition Risk: Simultaneous changes to WPI, CPI, GDP, and IIP base years create temporary data inconsistency. Services PPI Reliability: New and quarterly; reliability for policy use will require time and stakeholder validation. Historical Comparability: Long-term data users will need to recalibrate models to account for multiple simultaneous base year changes. Way Forward Smooth WPI–PPI Transition: Issue clear guidelines for contract users in the 2026–2031 transition window. Expand Services PPI: Scale up from 7 services to a comprehensive basket within 3–5 years. Integrate with GDP Deflation: Formally adopt output PPI as the primary GDP deflator once stable — aligned with IMF standards. Conclusion India’s statistical overhaul — updating base years for WPI, CPI, GDP, and IIP simultaneously while introducing PPIs — represents the most comprehensive modernization of the country’s macroeconomic measurement architecture in over a decade. This transformation will improve the quality of monetary policy, infrastructure contracting, and investment analysis, ultimately strengthening the credibility of India’s economic data with global institutions and investors. Prelims Pointers WPI = Wholesale Price Index; published by DPIIT (Commerce Ministry); measures producer-level prices for goods only; new base year: 2022-23. PPI = Producer Price Index; more comprehensive than WPI; covers services too; aligned with IMF standards. Output PPI = Prices received by producers; excludes tax and margins; to replace WPI as main non-retail inflation measure. Input PPI = Prices paid by producers for inputs; includes trade margins; experimental phase (2 years). Services PPI = New quarterly index covering 7 sectors: banking, insurance, telecom, railways, air travel, securities, pension funds. CPI = Consumer Price Index; measures retail prices; used by RBI for inflation targeting at 4% ± 2%. IIP = Index of Industrial Production; published monthly by MoSPI; new base year: 2022-23; basket expanded to 1,042 products. Base Year = Reference year against which economic indices are measured; set at 100. GDP Deflator = Converts nominal GDP to real GDP; India currently uses WPI+CPI; will transition to output PPI. MoSPI = Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation; publishes CPI, IIP, GDP data. DPIIT = Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (under Commerce Ministry); publishes WPI and PPI. Practice Mains Question “India’s transition from the Wholesale Price Index (WPI) to the Producer Price Index (PPI) is a technically significant but underappreciated reform. Examine the limitations of WPI, the advantages of PPI, and the implications of this transition for monetary policy, GDP measurement, and long-term infrastructure contracts.” GS Paper 3  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about India’s price indices: 1. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) is used by the Reserve Bank of India as the primary inflation benchmark for monetary policy. 2. The Wholesale Price Index (WPI) covers both goods and services. 3. The output Producer Price Index (PPI) measures prices received by producers, excluding net tax and trade/transport margins. 4. India’s new WPI and PPI series both use 2022-23 as the base year. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a)1, 3, and 4 only (b)1 and 2 only (c)2, 3, and 4 only (d)1, 2, 3, and 4 Correct Answer: (a) Statement 1 is correct — RBI uses CPI (targeting 4% ± 2%) for monetary policy. Statement 2 is incorrect — WPI covers only goods, not services; this is one of its key limitations. Statement 3 is correct — output PPI excludes net tax and trade/transport margins. Statement 4 is correct — both new WPI and all three PPI variants use 2022-23 as the base year.