Verify it's really you

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

Recent Batch Updates

View all
Jul 10, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

Contents01 BRICS Women Ministerial Meeting: India’s Kochi Declaration and Women-Led Development Architecture Ministry of Women and Child Development · 6–9 July 2026, Kochi GS 2GS 1 02 Sub-Mission on Agricultural Mechanization (SMAM): Inclusive Farm Mechanization for Viksit Krishi Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare · Centrally Sponsored Scheme GS 3GS 2 Article 01 Article 01 BRICS Women Ministerial Meeting: India’s Kochi Declaration and Women-Led Development Architecture Ministry of Women and Child Development · 4th BRICS Women Ministerial Meeting, Kochi · 6–9 July 2026 Relevance: GS 2 (bilateral, regional and global groupings; international institutions; gender policy; governance) · GS 1 (women and social empowerment; role of women in development). GS 2GS 1 Key Data at a Glance 4thBRICS Women Ministerial Meeting; first-ever Joint Statement adopted in the Women Track 11BRICS full members in 2026; India holds the Chairship (Presidency) ~49.5%of global population represented by BRICS member countries 4priority areas under the BRICS Women Track in 2026 2India-proposed deliverables: Digital Repository + Digital Capacity Building Guidelines 41.7%India’s Female Labour Force Participation Rate (2023–24), up from 23.3% in 2017–18 Issue in Brief The 4th BRICS Women Ministerial Meeting (8–9 July 2026, Kochi) concluded India’s four-day BRICS Women Track engagement (6–9 July 2026), comprising the Women Working Group Meeting (6–7 July, senior officials) followed by the Ministerial Meeting (8–9 July, ministers and heads of delegation). Under India’s BRICS Chairship 2026, the meeting adopted the first-ever Joint Statement in the BRICS Women Track — a landmark shift from declaratory cooperation to documented, actionable commitments across member countries. India proposed two concrete deliverables: the BRICS Digital Repository of Best Practices and the BRICS Digital Capacity Building Guidelines, both aimed at institutionalising knowledge exchange on women’s empowerment. Static Background The acronym “BRIC” was coined by economist Jim O’Neill of Goldman Sachs in 2001; formalised as a political grouping at the BRIC Foreign Ministers’ meeting in 2006 (on the sidelines of UNGA, New York); first BRIC Summit: Yekaterinburg, Russia, 2009; South Africa joined in 2010 (making it BRICS). 2024 expansion: Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, UAE and Saudi Arabia admitted; Indonesia joined in January 2025 — taking full membership to 11. A “partner country” category was created at the Kazan Summit (October 2024), enabling invited states to engage without full membership. BRICS operates by consensus with no permanent secretariat; the rotating Chairship sets the agenda. India holds the 2026 Chairship under the theme “Building for Resilience, Innovation, Cooperation and Sustainability” and will host the 18th BRICS Summit in New Delhi. The BRICS Women Track is a thematic working structure within BRICS focused on gender equality. India’s 2026 Chairship is the first to produce a Joint Ministerial Statement under this track — establishing institutional precedent and a measurable baseline for future accountability. Key institutional backbone (India): Ministry of Women and Child Development (MoWCD) is the nodal ministry. Key legislation: Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005; Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace (POSH) Act, 2013; Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam (Women’s Reservation Act), 2023. India’s Female Labour Force Participation Rate (FLFPR) rose from 23.3% (2017–18) to 41.7% (2023–24) as per the Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS). Key Dimensions — Structure and Priority Areas Four-day structure: Women Working Group (senior officials, 6–7 July) → Women Ministerial (ministers/heads of delegation, 8–9 July) — designed to build technical consensus before political endorsement, improving outcome quality. The four priority areas of the BRICS Women Track under India’s Chairship: (1) Women in governance and leadership; (2) Women’s digital and financial inclusion; (3) Women’s entrepreneurship and skill development; (4) Women’s role in climate action, food security and nutrition. Three virtual preparatory meetings preceded the Kochi meetings, enabling member countries to advance consensus ahead of in-person deliberations — a process model that could be replicated across other BRICS tracks. Key Dimensions — First Joint Statement and Two Deliverables The Joint Statement of the 4th BRICS Women Ministerial Meeting is unprecedented in the Women Track — it signals a move from dialogue-only cooperation to documented shared resolve and creates an accountability baseline for future meetings. BRICS Digital Repository of Best Practices: A shared digital platform documenting successful policies, programmes and innovations on women’s empowerment across member countries — enables peer-learning and evidence-based policy adoption without requiring new bilateral agreements. BRICS Digital Capacity Building Guidelines: A roadmap for expanding institutional partnerships, digital learning and capacity-building across the BRICS community — focuses on sustained cooperation rather than one-off interactions; key to reaching frontline practitioners, not just policymakers. Both deliverables are digital-first and scalable — they require no physical infrastructure, reducing implementation friction for the diverse 11-member grouping. Key Dimensions — India’s Domestic Showcase An exhibition showcased India’s women-led development architecture across sectors: rural livelihoods through SARAS and Lakhpati Didi (1.48 crore SHG women achieving ≥₹1 lakh annual income by June 2025); women in sports through ASMITA; women in STEM and financial inclusion. MoWCD flagship programmes highlighted: SHE-Box (online portal for sexual harassment complaints under POSH Act, 2013); One Stop Centres (integrated support for women facing violence); Women’s Helpline. Thematic panels covered digital inclusion, women’s entrepreneurship, financial empowerment, climate resilience, food security and nutrition — directly mapping onto the four Women Track priority areas and offering a replicable “from beneficiary to decision-maker” narrative. India’s G20 2023 Presidency had already shifted the global vocabulary from “women’s development” to “women-led development” — this BRICS meeting deepens that normative leadership into a multilateral institutional framework. Critical Analysis — Strengths The first-ever Joint Statement converts aspirational cooperation into a documented baseline — future meetings can be measured against it, creating genuine institutional memory within the Women Track. India coordinates both deliverables, reinforcing its role as a norm-setter in South-South cooperation on gender — extending its domestic “working architecture” outward rather than merely advocating for abstract principles. The four-day structured engagement (technical working group → ministerial) is a process innovation that improves outcome quality and ensures buy-in at multiple levels of government across member states. Critical Analysis — Structural Questions BRICS operates by consensus without binding commitments; the Joint Statement is politically persuasive but legally non-enforceable — implementation depends on domestic political will in each member state, which varies widely. Divergent legal and cultural contexts across members (from Russia under sanctions to Indonesia’s newly joined status, to Gulf members with different women’s rights frameworks) makes harmonised implementation genuinely challenging. The Digital Repository is useful only if members actively populate and update it; the PIB release mentions no dedicated secretariat, funding mechanism or monitoring framework — a gap that past BRICS initiatives have struggled with. Geopolitical tensions within BRICS (India–China dynamics; Russia–West friction) can limit candid knowledge-sharing even on ostensibly apolitical tracks like women’s empowerment. Way Forward Establish a dedicated nodal cell within MoWCD to manage, update and quality-control the Digital Repository, preventing it from becoming a static archive after the Chairship ends. Create measurable, time-bound indicators (e.g. number of policies adopted from the Repository; number of women trained through the Capacity Building Guidelines) to track implementation across member countries. Use the Kazan partner-country framework to extend Women Track cooperation beyond the 11 full members — peer-learning networks benefit from greater diversity of contexts. Leverage the 2026 BRICS Leaders’ Summit in New Delhi to elevate Women Track outcomes into the Leaders’ Declaration, giving the commitments the highest political endorsement within the grouping. Integrate Women Track outcomes with SDG 5 (Gender Equality) and SDG 8 (Decent Work) reporting to connect multilateral commitments to globally tracked accountability mechanisms. Prelims Pointers 4th BRICS Women Ministerial Meeting: 8–9 July 2026, Kochi; India’s 2026 Chairship; first-ever Joint Statement adopted in the Women Track. BRICS Women Track — 4 Priority Areas: (1) Governance & Leadership; (2) Digital & Financial Inclusion; (3) Entrepreneurship & Skill Development; (4) Climate Action, Food Security & Nutrition. Two India Deliverables: BRICS Digital Repository of Best Practices (shared knowledge platform) + BRICS Digital Capacity Building Guidelines (institutional roadmap) — both proposed by India. BRICS Chairship Theme 2026: “Building for Resilience, Innovation, Cooperation and Sustainability” — the acronym BRICS maps directly onto the four pillars. Lakhpati Didi: SHG-linked livelihood initiative; 1.48 crore SHG women achieved ≥₹1 lakh annual income by June 2025. SHE-Box: Sexual Harassment Electronic Box — online complaint management portal under the POSH Act, 2013; managed by MoWCD. Partner country category: Created at Kazan Summit, October 2024; allows invited states to engage in select BRICS meetings without full membership. India’s FLFPR: Rose from 23.3% (2017–18) to 41.7% (2023–24) — source: Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS). Practice Mains Question The adoption of the first-ever Joint Statement at the BRICS Women Ministerial Meeting (2026) marks a transition from dialogue to institutional cooperation on gender equality. Critically examine its significance and limitations for advancing women-led development. GS Paper 2 · 250 words · 15 marks Practice MCQs Q1. Consider the following statements regarding the BRICS Women Track under India’s 2026 Chairship: (1) The first-ever Joint Statement in the Women Track was adopted at Kochi. (2) The BRICS Digital Repository of Best Practices is legally binding on member states. (3) The BRICS Women Track’s four priority areas include women’s role in climate action and food security. Which of the above are correct? A) 1 and 2 onlyB) 1 and 3 onlyC) 2 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3 Q2. Match List I (Initiative) with List II (Purpose): A. BRICS Digital Repository of Best Practices · B. BRICS Digital Capacity Building Guidelines · C. BRICS Partner Country Category // 1. Roadmap for institutional collaboration and digital learning across BRICS · 2. Framework allowing invited states to engage without full membership · 3. Shared platform documenting successful women’s empowerment policies. Choose the correct match: A) A-3, B-1, C-2B) A-1, B-3, C-2C) A-3, B-2, C-1D) A-2, B-3, C-1 Q3. The SHE-Box portal, showcased at the BRICS Women Ministerial exhibition, is associated with: A) Financial inclusion for women Self-Help GroupsB) Filing sexual harassment complaints under the POSH Act, 2013C) Tracking women’s participation in STEM educationD) Digital skilling of women under Mission Karmayogi Article 02 Article 02 Sub-Mission on Agricultural Mechanization (SMAM): Inclusive Farm Mechanization for Viksit Krishi Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare · Centrally Sponsored Scheme under RKVY Relevance: GS 3 (agriculture, food security, technology in farming, inclusive growth) · GS 2 (government schemes for vulnerable sections; welfare for SC/ST, women and marginalised farmers). GS 3GS 2 Image: Kisan Drone demonstration under SMAM — precision agriculture for small and marginal farmers. [Replace src with image URL] Key Data at a Glance ₹9,404.47 crtotal central assistance disbursed under SMAM (2014–15 to 2025–26) 21.61 lakhagricultural machines distributed to individual farmers since inception 27,554Custom Hiring Centres (CHCs) established across India 25,608Farm Machinery Banks (FMBs) established; 646 Hi-tech Hubs 40,928Kisan Drone demonstrations covering 40,918 hectares (2023–24 to 2025–26) 30%of total SMAM funds earmarked for women farmers Issue in Brief SMAM (Sub-Mission on Agricultural Mechanization), launched in 2014–15, is a Centrally Sponsored Scheme under RKVY (Rashtriya Krishi Vikas Yojana) aimed at democratising access to modern farm machinery — particularly for small and marginal farmers, women, SC/ST communities and North-Eastern states. A PIB review highlights cumulative achievements: ₹9,404.47 crore disbursed, 21.61 lakh machines distributed, 27,554 CHCs and 25,608 FMBs established since inception, with a major recent thrust on drone-based precision agriculture. Static Background India’s structural agricultural challenge: approximately 86% of farm holdings are small and marginal (below 2 hectares), making individual ownership of machinery economically unviable due to high capital cost and low per-unit utilisation. India’s farm mechanisation level stands at approximately 40–45% — far below the USA (~95%), Brazil (~75%) and China (~57%); farm power availability is skewed, with a national average of ~2.02 kW/hectare and stark regional disparities (Punjab/Haryana high; NE states very low). RKVY (Rashtriya Krishi Vikas Yojana), launched in 2007, is India’s flagship scheme incentivising states to increase investment in agriculture and allied sectors; restructured as RKVY-RAFTAR in 2017–18 with enhanced pre- and post-harvest focus. SMAM operates as a sub-mission within this architecture. SMAM was originally a sub-mission under NMAET (National Mission on Agricultural Extension and Technology); aligned under PM-RKVY per revised 2025 operational guidelines. Custom Hiring Centres (CHCs) allow farmers to rent machinery at affordable rates, separating ownership (costly) from access (affordable) — the key solution to the small-landholding structural barrier. Farm Machinery Banks (FMBs) are a collective-ownership model for village-level institutions, enabling aggregated demand in remote areas. Van Dhan Vikas Kendras and Krishi Vigyan Kendras (KVKs) serve as implementation nodes for training and demonstration. Key Dimensions — Financial Architecture and Subsidy Structure Individual farmer subsidy: 40% of machine cost for general beneficiaries; 50% for SC/ST farmers, small/marginal farmers and NER beneficiaries; delivered via Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT). Custom Hiring Centre (CHC) support: 40% of project cost for projects up to ₹250 lakh; mechanised service delivery rate of ₹2,000 per hectare for CHC/SHG/FPO-provided services (including drones). Farm Machinery Bank (FMB) support: 80% funding for projects up to ₹30 lakh (for SHGs, FPOs and local institutions) — the higher subsidy rate reflects the collective-ownership model serving the most marginalised. NER special provisions: Up to 100% subsidy for small machinery; 95% support for FMBs — acknowledging the region’s structural disadvantage in mechanisation access. Centre–State cost sharing: General states 60:40; North-Eastern and Himalayan states 90:10; Union Territories 100% Central funding. Key Dimensions — Drone Integration and Precision Agriculture 40,928 Kisan Drone demonstrations across 40,918 hectares (2023–24 to 2025–26) conducted by ICAR with State Agricultural Universities (SAUs) and KVKs; ₹52.5 crore financial support under SMAM. Drone funding tiers: ICAR institutes, KVKs and SAUs → 100% support, up to ₹10 lakh per drone; FPOs → 75% grant; service-model agencies → ₹6,000 per hectare contingency expenditure. Demonstrations focused on application of nutrients, fertilizers and agro-chemicals per prescribed Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) — precision over blanket application, reducing input waste and environmental load. Convergence with Namo Drone Didi scheme: SHG women trained as drone pilots, combining mechanisation outreach with women’s economic empowerment — a deliberate entry into higher-skilled, higher-income agricultural work. Key Dimensions — Inclusivity and NER Focus 30% of total SMAM funds earmarked for women farmers — ensures mechanisation is not male-default and that women’s participation in mechanised farming is structurally incentivised. Beneficiary count grew from 2.07 lakh (2020–21) to 2.32 lakh (2024–25) for individual farm machinery ownership, reflecting steady expansion in scheme coverage. Special regional focus on North-Eastern states through enhanced subsidies (up to 100%), region-specific interventions, and Hi-tech Equipment Hubs (646 established) for crop-specific high-capacity machinery. Targeted IEC (Information, Education and Communication) activities and on/off-field training through FMTTIs, SAUs and ICAR institutions build operator capacity alongside equipment access. Critical Analysis — Strengths The CHC/FMB model is structurally sound: it separates ownership (costly) from access (affordable), solving the capital-barrier problem without requiring land consolidation — politically feasible and economically rational. Differentiated subsidy tiers (40% / 50% / 80% / 95% / 100%) directly calibrate support to beneficiary vulnerability — a meaningful attempt at equity-weighted public expenditure. Drone integration is forward-looking — it positions even small farmers to benefit from precision agriculture without individual ownership costs; convergence with Namo Drone Didi links this to women’s livelihoods. Critical Analysis — Structural Questions Coverage gap: 21.61 lakh machines over 11 years against India’s ~14 crore farm holdings — penetration remains very thin relative to structural need; the scheme’s scale has not yet matched the problem’s magnitude. Post-purchase support is weak: Machinery subsidies do not guarantee skill to operate, maintain or repair equipment — especially for women, SC/ST and NER beneficiaries who may face social and geographic barriers to accessing repair networks. CHC viability risk: Profitability of CHCs depends on sufficient local demand density; in fragmented, rain-fed or tribal areas, utilisation rates may be too low to sustain centres beyond initial grant periods. Drone demonstrations ≠ drone adoption: 40,928 demonstrations over 40,918 hectares is impressive outreach, but the leap to commercial drone-based farming requires certified operators at scale, robust SOPs and a viable local market for services — all still nascent. Data quality limitation: Beneficiary counts and machine distribution figures are from government self-reporting; independent outcome data on yield improvement, income gains and drudgery reduction for targeted groups is not cited in the PIB release. Way Forward Create post-purchase handholding clusters — especially for women, SC/ST and NER beneficiaries — combining repair networks, operator training and troubleshooting support to bridge the ownership-to-productivity gap. Scale FPO-linked CHC models to improve demand aggregation and centre viability in remote areas where individual farmer density is too low to sustain standalone CHCs. Integrate Kisan Drone demonstrations with a certified drone operator pipeline (linked to skill development missions) so demonstrations convert into livelihood opportunities, not just awareness events. Commission independent third-party outcome audits (yield, income, drudgery indices) rather than relying solely on input metrics (machines distributed, CHCs established) to provide credible evidence for scheme redesign. Deepen convergence with PM-KUSUM (solar-powered irrigation), PMFBY (crop insurance) and post-harvest infrastructure under PMKSY — mechanisation delivers maximum impact when embedded in a full value-chain support system. Prelims Pointers SMAM: Launched 2014–15; Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare; Centrally Sponsored Scheme under RKVY; originally under NMAET; revised under PM-RKVY (2025). Funding pattern: General states 60:40; NE & Himalayan states 90:10; UTs 100% Central. Subsidy rates: General beneficiaries 40%; SC/ST, small/marginal, NER — 50% (individual machines); FMBs — 80%; NER small machinery — up to 100%. CHC vs FMB: CHC = rental service centre (40% subsidy, projects up to ₹250 lakh); FMB = collective ownership bank (80% subsidy, projects up to ₹30 lakh). Kisan Drone support: ICAR/KVK/SAU → 100% (up to ₹10 lakh/drone); FPO → 75%; service model → ₹6,000/hectare; total ₹52.5 cr, 40,928 demos. Women earmark: 30% of total SMAM funds reserved for women farmers; convergence with Namo Drone Didi for SHG women drone pilots. Cumulative (2014–25–26): ₹9,404.47 cr · 21.61 lakh machines · 27,554 CHCs · 25,608 FMBs · 646 Hi-tech Hubs. RKVY: Launched 2007; restructured as RKVY-RAFTAR in 2017–18 (Remunerative Approaches for Agriculture and Allied Sector Rejuvenation). Practice Mains Question Farm mechanisation in India remains skewed by landholding size, region and gender. Critically examine how the Sub-Mission on Agricultural Mechanization (SMAM) addresses these structural barriers and where it falls short. GS Paper 3 · 250 words · 15 marks Practice MCQs Q1. Consider the following regarding SMAM: (1) It was launched in 2014–15 under the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare. (2) Farm Machinery Banks receive 80% financial support for projects up to ₹30 lakh. (3) The funding pattern for North-Eastern states is 60:40 (Centre:State). Which are correct? A) 1 and 2 onlyB) 2 and 3 onlyC) 1 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3 Q2. Under SMAM’s drone promotion framework, which institutions receive 100% financial support (up to ₹10 lakh per drone) for demonstrations? A) Individual farmers and FPOsB) ICAR institutes, KVKs and State Agricultural UniversitiesC) Private agri-tech startups under DPIIT recognitionD) Custom Hiring Centres and SHGs Q3. (Assertion–Reasoning) Assertion (A): SMAM prioritises Custom Hiring Centres over individual machine ownership for small farmers. Reason (R): Small and fragmented landholdings make individual ownership economically unviable due to high capital costs and low equipment utilisation. A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of AB) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of AC) A is true, R is falseD) A is false, R is true

Jul 10, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Contents01 From Hormuz to Malacca: Delhi Must Draw the Right Lessons Arun Prakash, Former Chief of Naval Staff · Maritime strategy, chokepoints, India's strategic posture GS 2 — India & the WorldGS 3 — Maritime SecurityEssay 02 Lost in India's Trade-Pact Celebrations, the Big Deal Surjit S. Bhalla, Economist · Trade policy, FTAs, India-US-China trade arithmetic GS 2 — Bilateral Groupings & AgreementsGS 3 — Indian Economy & TradeEssay Editorial 01 of 02 Article 01 From Hormuz to Malacca: Delhi Must Draw the Right Lessons Arun Prakash — Former Chief of Naval Staff, Indian Navy · The Indian Express Relevance: GS 2 (India & the world, effect of policies of developed and developing countries on India's interests), GS 3 (security — maritime chokepoints, sea lanes of communication, naval strategy) and Essay (geography as strategy, rules-based international order) — examining the Hormuz crisis and the limits of the Hormuz–Malacca analogy for India's maritime posture. GS 2 — India & the WorldGS 3 — Maritime SecurityEssay — Geography as Strategy 1 — Issue in Brief The ongoing Strait of Hormuz crisis vividly illustrates how geography can be weaponised — a single maritime chokepoint can hold the global economy and world peace to ransom by disrupting energy supplies, shipping lanes and global supply chains. The author's core caution: Indian strategists are drawing a flawed parallel between Hormuz and the Andaman & Nicobar Islands / Strait of Malacca. The two theatres are not analytically equivalent, and mistaking them could produce dangerous overconfidence in naval doctrine. A secondary argument: India has displayed an unwarranted "tilt" in the West Asia crisis and must shed its diplomatic lassitude, leveraging its cordial ties with all three belligerents to press for de-escalation. Underlying theme: the urgent need to restore a rules-based international order — anchored in UNCLOS and freedom of navigation — as inter-state competition increasingly weaponises critical maritime routes. 2 — Static Background Strait of Hormuz: a narrow bottleneck between Iran and Oman; the sole maritime exit of the Persian Gulf. Its closure means total maritime isolation of all Gulf littoral states. The strait carries a major share of global seaborne oil exports, making it the world's most consequential energy chokepoint. Strait of Malacca: a long transit corridor (roughly 900 km / 600 nautical miles) between Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore, connecting the Andaman Sea (Indian Ocean) to the South China Sea (Pacific Ocean). Busiest strait in the world — over 94,000 vessels per year, carrying approximately 25% of world traded goods including 80% of China's crude-oil imports. Alternative routes to Malacca (all within Indonesian archipelagic waters): Sunda Strait (between Java and Sumatra — shallow, hazard-prone; avoids Malacca but adds ~1,787 km); Lombok–Makassar Strait (deeper, preferred by VLCC supertankers, adds ~2,963 km / ~4.8 extra days); Ombai–Wetar Straits (near Timor; used by submarines, adds further distance). None can fully substitute Malacca; all add significant cost and time. "Malacca Dilemma": term coined by China's President Hu Jintao in 2003 — recognising that ~80% of China's crude-oil imports transit Malacca, creating a strategic vulnerability to external naval pressure (especially US dominance). Andaman & Nicobar Command (ANC): India's only tri-service (unified) theatre command, headquartered at Port Blair. The island chain stretches ~800 km north–south, dominating the Bay of Bengal and the Six Degree Channel — the western entry to the Malacca approaches. The ANC's militarisation has historically been under-resourced relative to its strategic value. Great Nicobar Island Development Project: a ~₹72,000–81,000 crore, NITI Aayog-conceived, 30-year phased mega-project being executed by ANIIDCO. Key components: Galathea Bay International Container Transshipment Terminal (ICTT) — 16 million TEU ultimate capacity (Phase 1: ~4–6 million TEU by 2028); a dual-use civilian and military airport (3,300 m runway); a 450 MVA power plant; and a township over 16,610 hectares. Located ~150 km from Indonesia's Sabang and near the Six Degree Channel — designed to reduce India's transhipment dependence on Colombo and Singapore and strengthen ANC's maritime domain awareness. UNCLOS 1982 (UN Convention on the Law of the Sea): distinguishes transit passage (a right of all ships through straits used for international navigation, with the coastal state unable to suspend it) from a coastal state's right to regulate its territorial sea. The Hormuz dispute hinges on this legal fault-line: Tehran asserts authority to regulate traffic; Washington insists on free transit passage. Islamabad MoU (17 June 2026): a 60-day provisional ceasefire between the US–Israel coalition and Iran — Article 5 required Iran to use "best efforts" to ensure safe passage through Hormuz. The MoU has since begun to unravel amid conflicting interpretations, US retaliatory strikes, and Israel's non-adherence. 3 — Key Dimensions Geography as a strategic weapon: chokepoints convert commercial sea lanes into geopolitical flashpoints; interdiction of "errant" merchantmen can trigger retaliatory strikes and rapid escalation — as the sequence of Iran attacks → US Central Command strikes over Hormuz demonstrates. The legal fault-line: Iran reads its sovereignty over territorial waters as authority to regulate traffic; the US insists on UNCLOS transit-passage rights. This doctrinal gap — unresolved by the Islamabad MoU — is the structural engine of the crisis. The false Hormuz–Malacca equivalence (the author's central analytical point): Hormuz: short single bottleneck, no alternative route → closure = total Gulf isolation. Iran holds a natural monopoly of exit. Malacca: a long corridor shared by three sovereign states (Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore), with longer alternative routes available → large-scale interdiction is "a bridge too far, even for a major naval power." India's genuine but limited leverage: the 800-km spread of the A&N islands gives India real capacity to dominate the Bay of Bengal and monitor the western mouth of Malacca — meaningful sea-denial capability, but not a "grip" comparable to Iran's over Hormuz. Iran's final strategic card: having suffered tremendous military devastation and economic hardship under prolonged sanctions, the Strait is — as the author puts it — "the final strategic card left for it to play." This asymmetry of desperation makes it a uniquely dangerous chokepoint moment. The diplomatic dimension: India's perceived tilt risks its standing with the Global South and its carefully cultivated ties across West Asia. Given India's energy import dependence on the region, even-handedness is a matter of strategic self-interest, not just principle. 4 — Critical Analysis In favour — Sober strategic realism: the author correctly warns against doctrinal over-reach; assuming India can "choke" Malacca the way Iran throttles Hormuz would produce false confidence and poor strategic planning — the analogy fails on geography, sovereignty and alternatives. In favour — ANC militarisation is overdue: flagging the long-overdue militarisation of the ANC as a genuine gap aligns with the strategic rationale for the Great Nicobar project — sea-denial capacity in the Bay of Bengal is real and worth building. In favour — Diplomatic balance is prudent: for a rising power dependent on energy imports through West Asia, courting the Global South and maintaining strategic autonomy, even-handedness protects long-term interests better than alignment optics. In favour — Rules-based order is India's interest: as a trade-dependent maritime nation, India benefits directly from UNCLOS-guaranteed freedom of navigation and a stable, rules-based maritime order — the disruption at Hormuz is a cautionary scenario for its own sea lanes. Against — Understates India's evolving capability: critics may argue that P-8I maritime patrol aircraft, BrahMos cruise missiles and the Great Nicobar build-up give India meaningful sea-denial leverage that the piece risks under-valuing by focusing on sea-control comparisons with Iran. Against — "Tilt" is a value judgment: whether India's posture is "unwarranted" is contestable; strategic alignment choices reflect hard interests in defence supply chains, technology, diaspora remittances and energy partnerships that the author does not fully weigh against diplomatic optics. Against — Sea-denial vs sea-control conflated: dominating the Bay of Bengal for sea-denial in conflict is a different and achievable goal from the peacetime "regulation" of Malacca traffic; the analogy the author critiques may itself be a straw version of Indian strategic thinking. 5 — Way Forward Draw the correct naval lessons from Hormuz on sea control, trade warfare and blockades — recognising that Malacca's geography (alternative routes, multiple sovereigns) limits India's coercive leverage while the Bay of Bengal offers real dominance. Complete the militarisation of the A&N Command — integrate the Great Nicobar ICTT, dual-use airport, and P-8I / BrahMos deployments into a coherent maritime domain awareness and sea-denial posture, without over-claiming a "Hormuz-style" chokepoint grip. Restore diplomatic balance: leverage India's cordial relations with all parties (US, Israel, Iran, and mediators Pakistan and Qatar) to press for de-escalation, a return to negotiations, and an end to reckless brinkmanship — India's strategic autonomy is an asset here. Champion UNCLOS and freedom of navigation as a rules-based maritime order — directly in India's interest as a trade-dependent nation whose own sea lanes are vulnerable to disruption. Balance the Great Nicobar project's strategic gains with ecological and tribal obligations — safeguarding the Shompen and Nicobarese PVTGs and biodiversity, and addressing the NGT / Supreme Court concerns over environmental clearances. 6 — Data & Key Facts ~25%Of world traded goods transits Strait of Malacca annually; ~94,000 vessels per year ~80%Of China's crude-oil imports transit Malacca — basis of the "Malacca Dilemma" (Hu Jintao, 2003) ~800 kmNorth–south spread of Andaman & Nicobar Islands; India's only tri-service theatre command (ANC) ₹81,000 CrRevised project cost of Great Nicobar Island Development Project (2025); 30-year phased rollout ~1,787 kmExtra distance added by Sunda Strait alternative; Lombok adds ~2,963 km — both within Indonesian waters 150 kmDistance from Great Nicobar to Indonesia's Sabang; overlooks Six Degree Channel, key Malacca entry Islamabad MoU (17 June 2026): 60-day provisional US–Iran ceasefire; Article 5 required Iran to ensure safe passage through Hormuz using "best efforts" — collapsed amid conflicting interpretations; US declared it "dead" on 8 July 2026, followed by strikes on 80+ Iranian targets. Great Nicobar ICTT (Galathea Bay): notified as India's 13th major port (September 2024); Phase 1 target ~4–6 million TEU; ultimate capacity 16–21 million TEU; designed to reduce India's dependence on Colombo (Sri Lanka) and Singapore for transhipment. 7 — Prelims Pointers Strait of Hormuz — between Iran & Oman; sole maritime exit of the Persian Gulf; carries a major share of global seaborne oil; no alternative route Strait of Malacca — Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore; connects Andaman Sea to South China Sea; ~900 km; busiest strait globally; ~25% world trade; alternatives exist (Sunda, Lombok, Ombai–Wetar) "Malacca Dilemma" — coined by Hu Jintao (2003); ~80% of China's crude imports transit Malacca; China's key strategic vulnerability ANC — Andaman & Nicobar Command; India's only tri-service (unified) theatre command; HQ Port Blair; dominates Bay of Bengal and Six Degree Channel approaches Great Nicobar Project — NITI Aayog; ANIIDCO; Galathea Bay ICTT (13th major port); dual-use airport; ~₹81,000 crore; Shompen & Nicobarese are PVTGs UNCLOS 1982 — transit passage through international straits (cannot be suspended by coastal state); archipelagic sea lanes passage; legal basis for freedom of navigation Exam note: Do not conflate Hormuz (sole exit, Iran–Oman, no alternative) with Malacca (long corridor, three states, alternatives via Sunda/Lombok). Also distinguish transit passage (UNCLOS — right of all ships through international straits; coastal state cannot suspend) from innocent passage in territorial sea. The ANC is India's only tri-service command — a frequent MCQ trap. 8 — Practice Mains Question "Not all maritime chokepoints offer equal strategic leverage." Examine this statement by comparing the Strait of Hormuz and the Strait of Malacca, and assess the significance of the Andaman & Nicobar Islands for India's maritime strategy.GS 2 + GS 3 crossover · 15 marks · ~250 words · IR + Maritime Security Intro: Frame chokepoints as where geography meets geopolitics; introduce Hormuz crisis as the live trigger; distinguish sea-denial from sea-control as the analytical lens. Body 1 — Hormuz vs Malacca: Contrast the two — Hormuz (short, single exit, no alternative, Iran–Oman binary) vs Malacca (long corridor, three sovereigns, alternative routes via Sunda/Lombok/Ombai–Wetar). Why India cannot replicate Iran's chokepoint leverage over Malacca. Body 2 — A&N and India's real maritime assets: 800-km island chain; only tri-service ANC; Great Nicobar ICTT and dual-use airport; P-8I/BrahMos deployments; Bay of Bengal dominance as sea-denial, not Hormuz-style sea-control. UNCLOS and India's interest in a rules-based order. Conclusion: India must build realistic maritime doctrine from Hormuz's lessons, complete ANC militarisation, champion freedom of navigation, and restore diplomatic balance in West Asia — matching ambition to geography. 9 — Practice MCQ Consider the following statements regarding maritime straits and India's naval posture: 1. The Strait of Hormuz is the sole maritime exit of the Persian Gulf, with no alternative sea route available for Gulf states. 2. The Sunda and Lombok Straits, alternative routes to the Strait of Malacca, lie within Indonesian archipelagic waters. 3. The Andaman and Nicobar Command is India's only tri-service theatre command. 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 Editorial 02 of 02 Article 02 Lost in India's Trade-Pact Celebrations, the Big Deal Surjit S. Bhalla — Economist; Chairperson, Technical Expert Group for India's Household Income Survey · The Indian Express Relevance: GS 2 (bilateral/regional groupings and agreements involving India's interests), GS 3 (Indian economy — trade, liberalisation, effects of globalisation) and Essay (priorities vs optics in policy, Viksit Bharat) — using India's recent FTA wave to argue the India–US deal is the structural prize being missed. GS 2 — Bilateral Agreements & Trade DiplomacyGS 3 — Indian Economy & TradeEssay — Priorities vs Optics 1 — Issue in Brief India is celebrating a wave of FTAs — with the EU, UK and Japan — but the author argues this amounts to cheering the "hill of beans" while the mountain — the United States — stands unclimbed and unaddressed. The core arithmetic (search-verified): India's average annual goods surplus with the US over 2020–25 was approximately $42 billion, against a combined ~$12 billion surplus with the EU, UK and Japan together — a 4:1 ratio in the US's favour, with no formal trade agreement in place. The bigger prize is not goods at all — it is market access for Indian IT and professional services, which would require a services negotiation, not merely a merchandise one. Central claim: an India–US agreement covering goods and services would be "the most consequential trade agreement India has ever signed" — a structural shift, not an incremental gain like the other three deals. 2 — Static Background FTA / CEPA / CETA: preferential trade agreements that reduce or eliminate tariffs and (where deeper) address non-tariff barriers, services access, investment, and intellectual property — deeper than a plain tariff-cutting FTA. India–UK CETA (Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement) — signed July 2025; grants duty-free access for approximately 99% of India's exports to the UK by value; India's current goods surplus with the UK is only ~$5 billion. India–Japan CEPA (Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement) — signed 2011; trade target of $25 billion by 2014 was not met; 15 years later, India's goods exports to Japan are only ~$6 billion and the balance has swung to a ~$11 billion deficit, illustrating how non-tariff barriers (NTBs) can survive tariff cuts. At the July 2026 Modi–Takaichi summit, the two sides agreed only to review and negotiate a CEPA upgrade — a commitment to talk, not an outcome. India–EU FTA (under negotiation): the EU is India's second-largest goods trading partner; India runs a surplus of ~$18 billion annually (driven partly by petroleum re-exports, pharma and engineering). India pays 9–12% tariffs on textiles entering the EU, while Vietnam (which signed an EU FTA in 2020) pays zero — a genuine competitive disadvantage. India–US trade (FY25, search-verified): India's goods exports to the US ~$86.5 billion; imports from the US ~$45.3 billion; surplus ~$41 billion — making the US India's largest trading partner. India supplies approximately 40% of US generic drug volumes; iPhone assembly for global markets has also shifted partly to India. The two governments are negotiating a deal targeting $500 billion in two-way trade by 2030. India–China trade (FY25, search-verified): a record goods deficit of ~$99.2 billion (imports ~$113 billion vs exports ~$14 billion) — up from $44 billion in FY21. The combined goods surplus from India's deals with the EU, UK and Japan would not cover an eighth of this deficit. India's services strength: India is the world's 8th-largest services exporter (4.2% share of global services exports, 2024); the US accounts for the largest share of global services exports (13%) — making US services-market access the most consequential single liberalisation India could achieve. 3 — Key Dimensions Optics vs substance: three celebrated deals deliver a fraction of the commercial value of one absent deal — a misallocation of diplomatic and strategic attention that the surplus-size arithmetic exposes clearly. The US surplus is structural, not accidental: it reflects India's genuine comparative advantages in pharma generics, electronics assembly (including Apple iPhones), gems and jewellery, and skilled-labour-intensive goods — a durable foundation for deeper integration. A US FTA cuts both ways: zeroing tariffs would cement Indian exports, but would also open India's market wider to US agriculture, energy and defence goods — so the $41 billion surplus "will not simply hold." This is a cost the author acknowledges, not conceals. Services: the real, larger prize: market access for Indian IT and professional mobility (visa provisions, mutual recognition of qualifications) is structurally more valuable than any merchandise deal — yet harder to secure because US domestic politics resists professional-mobility liberalisation. The China linkage: India's US surplus is partly built on importing Chinese intermediate goods, adding value, and re-exporting to the US. Deeper US–India integration would reinforce the global shift away from Chinese manufacturing dominance — a strategic and commercial alignment of interests. Why the US deal is hard — political economy: the likely losers from a comprehensive deal are inefficient Indian producers currently enjoying protection (agriculture, some manufacturing) and China, whose manufacturing dominance depends partly on the current trade architecture — both are powerful blocking forces. 4 — Critical Analysis In favour — The arithmetic is compelling: a 4:1 value ratio between the US surplus and the combined EU/UK/Japan surplus makes a strong, data-grounded case that the US deal deserves the centre of India's trade strategy, not the margin. In favour — Services focus is astute: correctly identifying IT and professional mobility as the true prize reflects India's revealed comparative advantage — services exports drive Indian growth far more than manufactured goods exports do. In favour — Honest about two-way costs: the author concedes a US FTA would open India's market and narrow the surplus — a balanced, non-triumphalist framing that adds analytical credibility. In favour — China-dependence logic is sound: deeper US–India integration creates structural pressure to reduce the $99 billion China deficit by replacing Chinese inputs with domestic or allied-country production — a genuine strategic dividend. Against — Diversification has independent value: FTAs with the EU, UK and Japan reduce over-dependence on any single partner (including the US); the resilience logic of market diversification is not captured by a surplus-size metric alone. Against — Surplus size invites reciprocal pressure: a large and growing goods surplus with the US can trigger tariff threats, Section 301 investigations or retaliatory action — as recent US trade posture has shown — making the "prize" carry significant strategic exposure. Against — Japan's NTB lesson cuts both ways: the same non-tariff and political-economy hurdles the author notes in Japan's case (NTBs surviving tariff cuts) apply with force to a US deal — domestic lobbies, agricultural protectionism and visa politics in the US make a comprehensive deal structurally difficult, not merely under-prioritised. Against — Professional mobility is politically fraught in the US: H-1B visa caps, US domestic labour politics and anti-immigration sentiment mean the biggest services prize is also the hardest to secure — the author acknowledges difficulty without sufficiently modelling the political feasibility. 5 — Way Forward Reprioritise the US at the centre of India's trade strategy — pursue a comprehensive goods-plus-services agreement with stable, near-zero tariffs across pharma, electronics, gems and engineering goods, plus provisions on IT and professional mobility. Anchor the deal in services — press for IT market access and professional-mobility provisions (visa liberalisation, mutual recognition of qualifications), India's structural strength and the real multiplier for Viksit Bharat growth. Use the EU/UK/Japan deals as complements, not substitutes — treat them as useful diversification and market-expansion increments while keeping the US deal as the structural centrepiece of trade diplomacy. Tackle the China dependence underlying the US surplus by deepening domestic value addition — moving beyond import-reliant PLI assembly toward genuine manufacturing depth, so that tighter US–India integration does not merely re-route Chinese inputs. Prepare for reciprocity: ready domestic agricultural and manufacturing reforms to help protected sectors adjust to wider market opening, building the political economy coalitions a deal requires — an economy "more reliant on markets than bureaucrats," as the Viksit Bharat framework demands. 6 — Data & Key Facts ~$41 BnIndia's goods trade surplus with the US in FY25; US = India's largest trading partner ~$99.2 BnIndia's record goods trade deficit with China in FY25 (imports ~$113 bn, exports ~$14 bn) ~$5 BnIndia's goods surplus with the UK; CETA signed July 2025 grants 99% of Indian exports duty-free ~$11 BnIndia's goods deficit with Japan (2026); CEPA (2011) did not overcome Japan's NTBs ~40%Of US generic drug volumes supplied by India — a key pillar of the US surplus $500 BnIndia–US two-way trade target by 2030 (current ~$191 billion total trade) India–US surplus trend (author-cited, search-verified): ~$7 billion in the 2000s → ~$22 billion in the 2010s → ~$42 billion average (2020–25) — all without a single formal trade agreement, underlining how much more could be achieved with one. India–China deficit trend: from ~$0.67 billion (FY01) to a record ~$99.2 billion (FY25) — nearly a 150-fold increase; driven by India's dependence on Chinese electronics, machinery, chemicals and active pharma ingredients. 7 — Prelims Pointers India–US (FY25) — goods surplus ~$41 bn; US = largest trading partner; India supplies ~40% of US generic drug volumes; $500 bn two-way target by 2030 India–China (FY25) — record goods deficit ~$99.2 bn; imports ~$113 bn, exports ~$14 bn; China = 2nd-largest trading partner (after US overtook it) India–UK CETA — signed July 2025; ~99% of India's exports duty-free; current goods surplus ~$5 bn India–Japan CEPA — 2011; tariffs cut but NTBs persisted; India now runs ~$11 bn deficit; July 2026 summit agreed only to review/upgrade CEPA India–EU FTA — EU = India's 2nd-largest goods partner; India surplus ~$18 bn; India pays 9–12% on EU textile exports vs Vietnam's 0% (EU-Vietnam FTA, 2020) CEPA vs CETA vs FTA — CEPA: Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (goods + services + investment); CETA: Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement; FTA: narrower, mainly tariff-cutting Exam note: Do not confuse CEPA (India–Japan, 2011; India–UAE, 2022) with CETA (India–UK, 2025). Also note: India's largest goods trade deficit is with China (~$99.2 bn) — far larger than the surplus with the US (~$41 bn). The India–Japan CEPA is a cautionary example of how tariff cuts alone cannot overcome non-tariff barriers (NTBs) — a common exam theme. 8 — Practice Mains Question "In India's trade-policy universe, the United States is not one deal among several — it is the deal." Critically examine India's recent free-trade-agreement strategy in light of this claim, with reference to trade arithmetic, services, and the China factor.GS 2 + GS 3 crossover · 15 marks · ~250 words · Bilateral Agreements + Indian Economy Intro: Note the FTA wave (EU, UK, Japan) and the contrarian "hill of beans vs mountain" framing — introduce the 4:1 US-surplus argument as the analytical spine. Body 1 — The case for the US: surplus arithmetic ($41 bn vs $12 bn combined); structural comparative advantage in pharma/electronics/services; services/IT mobility as the real prize; China-input linkage and strategic dividend of US–India integration. Body 2 — Counterpoints: diversification and resilience value of other FTAs; surplus invites reciprocal US pressure; NTBs and domestic lobbies (Japan lesson); US visa politics making services liberalisation hard; cost of opening India's market to US agriculture and energy. Conclusion: Prioritise a comprehensive US goods-plus-services deal while using other FTAs as complementary diversification; anchor strategy in domestic reform readiness for reciprocal opening — the Viksit Bharat path runs through markets, not protection. 9 — Practice MCQ Consider the following statements regarding India's trade relations: 1. India recorded its largest-ever goods trade deficit with China in the financial year 2024–25, exceeding $99 billion. 2. India signed the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) with the United Kingdom in July 2025. 3. India currently runs a goods trade surplus with the United States, driven largely by pharmaceuticals, electronics and engineering goods. 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

Jul 10, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Contents 10 July 2026 Life Insurance Sector as Patient Capital: Financing Sovereign DebtGS3 Poshan Tracker: India's Real-Time Nutrition Monitoring PlatformGS2 National Academic Depository (NAD): Digital Governance in EducationGS2 Urban Invisibility: Informal Workers at the City's MarginsGS1 · GS3 NFSA Amendment: Revisiting AAY Foodgrain EntitlementsGS2 India–Australia Summit: Defence Pacts, Trade and Antiquities RepatriationGS2 Ethanol Blending in India: Lessons from Brazil's Proalcool ModelGS3 Justice Varma Inquiry Report Tabled: Judicial Accountability in Uncharted TerritoryGS2 Article 01 Life Insurance Sector as Patient Capital: Financing Sovereign Debt GS Paper 3 — Indian Economy: Capital Markets, Financial Sector, Fiscal Policy Why in News A growing body of analysis has drawn attention to the structural role that India's life insurance industry plays in financing government expenditure. Life insurers collectively hold nearly a quarter of India's outstanding central government dated securities — a share that has held steady even as the total sovereign debt stock expanded by roughly 40 per cent over three years. This concentration of long-duration domestic capital in the sovereign bond market has significant implications for fiscal stability, debt management, and the broader vision of “Insurance for All by 2047” being pursued through the Sabka Bima Sabki Raksha (Amendment of Insurance Laws) Act, 2025. Background: Insurance Sector in India Constitutional basis: Insurance falls under Entry 47 of the Union List (Seventh Schedule), granting exclusive legislative authority to Parliament. Judicial context: The Supreme Court in LIC of India v. Consumer Education & Research Centre (1995) held LIC to be an “instrumentality of the State” under Article 12, requiring its commercial activities to subserve the public good. Origins: Formal insurance began with the Oriental Life Insurance Company (1818) and Triton Insurance (1850); the Insurance Act, 1938 provided the first comprehensive statutory framework. Nationalisation: Life insurance was nationalised through the Life Insurance Corporation Act, 1956, forming LIC. General insurance was nationalised through the General Insurance Business (Nationalisation) Act, 1972, creating GIC. Liberalisation: The Malhotra Committee (1993) recommended market opening; IRDAI was established as an autonomous statutory body in 1999 under the IRDAI Act, 1999. Private players entered in 2000. FDI limits rose from 26% to 74% in 2021. Current landscape: As of April 2026, India has 74 insurance companies (26 life, 35 non-life, plus specialised insurers). Total premium income stood at approximately ₹7.05 lakh crore in FY25, a 5.6% year-on-year increase. India ranks as the 10th largest insurance market globally by premium volume (Swiss Re). How Life Insurers Function as Patient Capital Asset-Liability Matching Life insurers write policies spanning 20 to 40 years. Central government securities, backed by sovereign guarantee and predictable returns, are the natural instrument to match these long-duration liabilities at scale. Millions of retail premiums are pooled and channelled into government securities. Households purchasing life cover to protect against mortality risk are therefore, unwittingly, providing long-term finance to the sovereign. Life insurers collectively hold approximately 25% of outstanding central government dated securities (RBI and IRDAI data). The LIC Anchor LIC alone holds approximately 19% of India's outstanding central government securities, making it the single largest domestic holder. IRDAI classifies LIC as a Domestic Systemically Important Insurer (D-SII), recognising that distress at LIC would cause severe dislocation in the government's borrowing programme itself — not merely in the insurance market. Private life insurers hold a smaller share of government debt because their product mix skews toward Unit-Linked Insurance Plans (ULIPs), which invest more heavily in equities and corporate bonds. Counter-Cyclical Stability Unlike Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs), whose allocations are sensitive to global risk sentiment — oil price shocks, geopolitical events, emerging-market reassessments — life insurers are structural “buy-and-hold” investors. Their participation is counter-cyclical by design: they buy when others sell and reinvest when others pause, providing a stable domestic base that reduces rollover risk and moderates borrowing costs across the maturity spectrum. By absorbing the long end of the yield curve (30–40-year bonds), insurers help the RBI maintain yield curve stability, which moderates the overall cost of sovereign borrowing. Global parallels: India is tracking the trajectory of Japan, the United Kingdom, and South Korea, where insurers are the primary holders of long-dated sovereign debt — a pattern driven by liability-profile requirements, not merely regulatory mandate. Recent Policy Development: Sabka Bima Sabki Raksha Act, 2025 Objective: Advances the “Insurance for All by 2047” goal by amending the Insurance Act, 1938; LIC Act, 1956; and IRDAI Act, 1999. 100% FDI: Raises the foreign direct investment ceiling in insurance companies from 74% to 100%. Ease of doing business: Introduces perpetual registration for intermediaries; raises the IRDAI approval threshold for share transfers from 1% to 5%. Policyholder protection: Establishes a Policyholders' Education and Protection Fund. IRDAI powers: Expands supervisory, investigative, and corrective authority of the regulator. LIC autonomy: Permits LIC to open zonal offices without prior government approval. Key Metrics: India's Insurance Sector (FY25) Indicator Value Total premium income (FY25) ₹7.05 lakh crore (5.6% YoY growth) Insurance penetration (% of GDP) 3.7% (Life 2.7%, Non-life 1%) Insurance density USD 97 per capita (FY25) Global ranking (premium volume) 10th (Swiss Re) Global average penetration 7.3% of GDP LIC share of Govt securities ~19% Life insurer share (total) ~25% of central govt dated securities Health insurance share of non-life ~41% of gross domestic premium (FY25) Challenges Low penetration: At 3.7% of GDP, India's penetration is nearly half the global average of 7.3%; non-life coverage remains particularly thin at 1%. The missing middle: Over 40 crore Indians — including gig workers and MSME employees — fall outside government insurance schemes while remaining unable to afford comprehensive private coverage. Mis-selling and trust deficit: Aggressive push for fee-based income through bancassurance networks has led to coercive cross-selling of complex products like ULIPs, eroding consumer confidence. Despite nearly ₹1 lakh crore in annual claims paid, low insurance literacy and opaque policy terms continue to hinder adoption. Climate protection gap: Extreme weather events expose India's inadequate insurance cover against agricultural, property, and catastrophe risks. Regulatory uncertainty: Frequent policy changes have disrupted near-term business planning and investor confidence. Way Forward Rationalise GST on life and health insurance premiums; provide dedicated income-tax deductions to encourage household coverage. Fully operationalise Bima Sugam as a single-window platform; integrate with the Account Aggregator framework and Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission for paperless underwriting. Develop GIFT City as a global reinsurance hub through regulatory sandboxes and tax incentives to retain reinsurance premiums domestically. Expand parametric insurance for climate risks; develop low-cost, bite-sized products for gig workers, MSMEs, and rural households. Use AI-based monitoring to curb mis-selling; standardise policy exclusions and simplify documentation. The structural role of life insurers as holders of sovereign debt reveals a dimension of insurance penetration that extends well beyond household financial protection. A deeply capitalised, well-regulated insurance sector is both a welfare instrument for citizens and an anchor of macroeconomic stability — stabilising the yield curve, reducing rollover risk, and financing public investment across economic cycles. Achieving “Insurance for All by 2047” is therefore as much a fiscal imperative as a social one. Prelims Pointers Entry 47, Union List, Seventh Schedule — Insurance is an exclusive central subject. LIC as D-SII: IRDAI classifies the Life Insurance Corporation of India as a Domestic Systemically Important Insurer, signifying that its failure would have systemic consequences beyond the insurance sector alone. LIC holds ~19% of outstanding central government securities; all life insurers together hold ~25%. IRDAI established 1999 under IRDAI Act, 1999 — autonomous statutory body under Ministry of Finance. Current Chairman: Ajay Seth (1987-batch IAS, Karnataka cadre; assumed charge September 1, 2025). Sabka Bima Sabki Raksha Act, 2025 — raises FDI limit from 74% to 100%; amends Insurance Act 1938, LIC Act 1956, IRDAI Act 1999. Insurance penetration FY25: 3.7% of GDP (Life 2.7%, Non-life 1%); global average 7.3%. India's rank: 10th largest insurance market globally (Swiss Re); 5th largest life insurance market among emerging economies. Malhotra Committee (1993) — recommended liberalisation; led to IRDAI formation and opening of sector to private players in 2000. Bancassurance in India — introduced 2000; permitted under Banking Regulation Act, 1949 subject to RBI and IRDAI approvals. Unit-Linked Insurance Plans (ULIPs) — market-linked products; private insurers invest more in equities/corporate bonds via ULIPs, hence hold a smaller share of G-Secs than LIC. Mains Practice Question “Life insurance companies in India function as structural anchors of sovereign debt management, yet their macroeconomic significance is rarely acknowledged in public policy discourse.” Examine this statement in the context of asset-liability matching, counter-cyclical stability, and the reforms introduced by the Sabka Bima Sabki Raksha Act, 2025. GS Paper 3 — Indian Economy  |  250 words Practice MCQ Which of the following best describes why IRDAI classifies the Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC) as a Domestic Systemically Important Insurer (D-SII)? ALIC is the oldest nationalised insurer in India and holds a monopoly over life insurance distribution in rural areas. BLIC invests predominantly in Unit-Linked Insurance Plans (ULIPs), giving it significant influence over equity markets. CLIC holds approximately 19% of outstanding central government securities, meaning distress at LIC would severely disrupt the government's sovereign borrowing programme. DLIC is the only insurance entity authorised to invest in government securities under IRDAI regulations. Answer: C The D-SII classification reflects systemic risk — the concern that a failure of LIC would have consequences far beyond the insurance sector, directly destabilising the government's debt management operations. LIC's ~19% holding of central government dated securities makes it the largest single domestic holder; it does not have a rural distribution monopoly (private players operate widely), and ULIPs are primarily a private-sector product. All life insurers can invest in G-Secs; the D-SII status is about LIC's systemic footprint, not exclusive authorisation. Article 02 Poshan Tracker: India's Real-Time Nutrition Monitoring Platform GS Paper 2 — Governance: Social Welfare Schemes, Digital India, Health Policy Why in News Poshan Tracker, the mobile-based governance platform that serves as the digital backbone of POSHAN Abhiyaan, has achieved nationwide coverage across all 28 States and 8 Union Territories as of May 2026, with over 8.93 crore beneficiaries registered on the platform. The system has been recognised internationally by the WHO and UNICEF as an exemplary nutrition data ecosystem, and domestically received the Prime Minister's Award for Excellence in Public Administration in April 2025. Background: POSHAN Abhiyaan and Mission Poshan 2.0 POSHAN Abhiyaan (Prime Minister's Overarching Scheme for Holistic Nourishment) was launched on 8 March 2018 at Jhunjhunu, Rajasthan, under the Ministry of Women and Child Development (MoWCD). It is India's flagship multi-ministerial National Nutrition Mission with time-bound targets, digital monitoring, and a Jan Andolan (people's movement) approach. Targets: Annual reductions in stunting (2%), under-nutrition (2%), anaemia among children, women, and adolescent girls (3%), and low birth weight (2%). Four strategic pillars: Quality services (through ICDS, NHM, PMMVY, focusing on the first 1,000 days); cross-sectoral convergence (across ministries including Water and Sanitation, coordinated by the National Council on India's Nutrition Challenges under NITI Aayog); technology (Poshan Tracker, ICDS-CAS); and Jan Andolan for community-led behavioural change. Mission Poshan 2.0 (Mission Saksham Anganwadi and Poshan 2.0): Announced under Budget 2021–22 by consolidating three schemes — POSHAN Abhiyaan, Anganwadi Services, and the Scheme for Adolescent Girls — into a single integrated programme under MoWCD. Saksham Anganwadi: Upgrades existing Anganwadi Centres (AWCs) with LED screens, water purifiers, smart learning aids, Poshan Vatikas, and improved infrastructure. About Poshan Tracker Nature: A mobile-based governance application enabling near real-time monitoring of nutrition and service delivery through Anganwadi Centres. Launched: March 2021 by MoWCD in collaboration with the National e-Governance Division (NeGD). Operational under: Mission Saksham Anganwadi and Poshan 2.0. Coverage (May 2026): All 28 States and 8 Union Territories; 8.93 crore beneficiaries registered across six life-cycle categories (children, pregnant women, lactating mothers, adolescent girls, and others). Problem solved: Before Poshan Tracker, Anganwadi Workers (AWWs) maintained 11 manual registers, causing delays, inconsistencies, and absence of beneficiary authentication. There was no integration with state and central schemes. Key Features Aadhaar-based verification: Prevents duplicate entries and ghost beneficiaries; ensures benefit delivery only to authenticated individuals. Facial Recognition System (FRS): Integrated for last-mile tracking and service delivery authenticity. IT-enabled Home Visit Scheduler: Supports 23 structured home visits per child across defined life-cycle stages — 4 during pregnancy, 4 in the first postpartum month, 7 from 2 months to 1 year, 5 from 1–2 years, and 3 from 2–3 years — with auto-scheduling and age-appropriate counselling prompts. Poshan Calculator: Uses WHO Child Growth Standards to assess height, weight, age, and gender, classifying children across stunting, underweight, wasting, Severe Acute Malnutrition (SAM), Moderate Acute Malnutrition (MAM), and overweight/obesity. ECCE content delivery: Provides 249 videos, 190 voice notes, and 159 ECCE activity PDFs based on the Aadharshila framework for children aged 3–6 years. Poshan Helpline: Toll-free number 1515 for grievance registration. Device support: All AWWs equipped with smartphones; internet connectivity at ₹2,000 per annum per AWW; Growth Monitoring Devices (GMDs) at each AWC. Nutrition Monitoring: Key Data (May 2026) Indicator Figure Total registered beneficiaries 8.93 crore Live monthly database (children tracked) 7.7 crore (Aadhaar-authenticated) Growth monitoring (children 0–5 years) 6.3 crore (~94% of registered beneficiaries) SNP received for at least 15 days 5.5 crore beneficiaries SNP received for at least 21 days 5.17 crore beneficiaries Recognition and Impact The World Health Organization (WHO) cited Poshan Tracker as an exemplary nutrition data ecosystem. UNICEF appreciated its simplicity and beneficiary tracking features for Anganwadi Workers. Showcased at the G20 Ministerial Conference on Women Empowerment in 2023; the Chair's Statement recognised its role in nutrition monitoring and ECCE delivery. PM's Award for Excellence in Public Administration — April 2025. National Award for e-Governance (Gold) — 27th National Conference on e-Governance, September 2024. Challenges and Way Forward Ensuring data accuracy at scale and guarding against digitally-fabricated entries remains an ongoing concern. Connectivity gaps in remote areas can disrupt real-time data submission by AWWs. Privacy safeguards for Aadhaar-authenticated biometric data must be continuously strengthened. The platform's success ultimately depends on adequate training, motivation, and digital capacity of front-line AWWs. Poshan Tracker represents a significant shift from paper-based welfare delivery to evidence-driven, real-time nutrition governance. By digitising service records, enabling Aadhaar-authenticated tracking, and providing near real-time dashboards to policymakers at district, state, and national levels, the platform strengthens accountability in one of India's most critical social missions. Its international recognition underscores the scalability of India's Digital India infrastructure for public health outcomes. Prelims Pointers Poshan Tracker — mobile governance application; digital backbone of POSHAN Abhiyaan; launched March 2021 by MoWCD and NeGD. POSHAN Abhiyaan — launched 8 March 2018, Jhunjhunu, Rajasthan; nodal ministry: MoWCD. Mission Poshan 2.0 — consolidates POSHAN Abhiyaan + Anganwadi Services + Scheme for Adolescent Girls; announced Budget 2021–22. Supplementary Nutrition Programme (SNP) — monitored through Poshan Tracker under Anganwadi Services. Poshan Helpline: Toll-free number 1515. WHO Child Growth Standards — used by the Poshan Calculator for classifying stunting, underweight, wasting (SAM/MAM), and overweight/obesity. 23 structured home visits supported by IT-enabled scheduler across defined life-cycle stages. Coverage (May 2026): All 28 States + 8 UTs; 8.93 crore registered beneficiaries; 6.3 crore children under growth monitoring (94% of registered). ECCE content (Aadharshila framework): 249 videos, 190 voice notes, 159 activity PDFs for children aged 3–6 years. Awards: PM's Award for Excellence in Public Administration (April 2025); National Award for e-Governance Gold (September 2024). G20 showcase: Ministerial Conference on Women Empowerment, 2023. Mains Practice Question Poshan Tracker has been described as a model of technology-driven nutrition governance. Critically examine how digital platforms can strengthen last-mile delivery of welfare services in India, and identify the structural challenges that limit their effectiveness. GS Paper 2 — Governance and Social Justice  |  250 words Practice MCQ With reference to Poshan Tracker, consider the following statements: Assertion (A): Poshan Tracker was launched under POSHAN Abhiyaan in March 2021 and serves as its digital backbone. Reason (R): POSHAN Abhiyaan itself was announced under Budget 2021–22 by consolidating three nutrition-related schemes. ABoth A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A. BBoth A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A. CA is true, but R is false. DA is false, but R is true. Answer: C The Assertion is correct: Poshan Tracker was launched in March 2021 by MoWCD and NeGD as the digital backbone of POSHAN Abhiyaan. However, the Reason is false: it is Mission Poshan 2.0 (not POSHAN Abhiyaan) that was announced under Budget 2021–22 by consolidating three schemes. POSHAN Abhiyaan itself was launched much earlier, on 8 March 2018 in Jhunjhunu, Rajasthan. Article 03 National Academic Depository (NAD): Advancing Digital Governance in Education GS Paper 2 — Governance: Digital India, Education Policy, e-Governance Why in News The National Academic Depository (NAD) has come into focus as India accelerates its transition to a paperless, interoperable system for managing academic credentials across its vast education ecosystem. Implemented through the DigiLocker platform since 2020, NAD enables secure digital storage, issuance, and verification of academic awards, supporting the flexible learning pathways envisioned by the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020. Background: Why India Needs a Digital Academic Record System Scale of the education system: India has approximately 14.71 lakh schools (2024–25), 1,420 universities, 53,583 colleges, 16,795 standalone educational institutions, and 280 Research & Development institutes — collectively generating millions of academic records annually. Limitations of paper records: Physical documents are prone to loss, damage, and forgery; manual verification creates delays for students, employers, banks, and government agencies. NEP 2020 reforms: The National Education Policy 2020 promotes flexible, learner-centric education through Multiple Entry-Multiple Exit (MEME), the National Credit Framework (NCrF), and the Academic Bank of Credits (ABC) — all of which require a secure, interoperable credential system as students accumulate learning outcomes across multiple institutions. What is the National Academic Depository? Definition: A nationwide digital framework for the storage, issuance, verification, and authentication of academic awards including degrees, diplomas, certificates, mark sheets, and evaluation reports. Platform: Implemented through DigiLocker (launched 1 July 2015 under Digital India) since 2020. DigiLocker acts as the operational digital platform within which NAD functions. Parent ministry: Ministry of Education. Nodal agency: University Grants Commission (UGC) — designated to implement NAD through DigiLocker. Legal validity: Digital academic credentials issued through NAD carry the same legal status as physical documents under the Information Technology Act, 2000. Supporting frameworks include the Digital Locker Rules, 2016 (consent-based sharing) and the National e-Authentication Framework. The NAD Ecosystem: Three Interconnected Components Component Full Name Function DigiLocker / NAD National Academic Depository Digital issuance, storage, and verification of academic credentials APAAR Automated Permanent Academic Account Registry Assigns a unique academic ID to students; manages credit records ABC Academic Bank of Credits Facilitates academic mobility by storing and transferring earned credits across institutions NAD is also integrated with e-Sanad, the government's electronic verification, attestation, and apostille service, enabling Indian nationals to authenticate educational documents for overseas employment, higher education, or immigration purposes without physical attestation. How NAD Works: Process Flow Award creation: Educational institutions (schools, universities, boards) generate verified academic awards after course or examination completion. Digital upload: Institutions securely upload verified records to NAD through the DigiLocker platform. Student access: Issued documents are automatically linked to the student's DigiLocker account for anytime access. Consent-based sharing: Students share credentials with employers, higher education institutions, or government bodies only after providing explicit consent through DigiLocker. Instant verification: Authorised organisations verify document authenticity directly through NAD/DigiLocker, ensuring records are genuine and unaltered. Permanent digital storage: Records remain securely stored, eliminating risk of loss, damage, or forgery. Stakeholders Registering institutions: Central and state universities (private, deemed, public), CBSE and other school boards, Institutions of National Importance, and other accredited higher education institutions. Beneficiaries: Students and academic award holders who gain lifelong digital access to their credentials. Verifying entities: Employers (domestic and overseas), banks, licensing authorities, government departments, and educational institutions. Key Benefits Lifelong access: Students can retrieve and share academic records from anywhere, at any time, throughout their lives. Instant verification: Reduces verification time from days to seconds, accelerating admission and recruitment processes. Fraud prevention: Authenticated digital records eliminate the market for fake certificates. Paperless governance: Reduces administrative burden on institutions and government agencies. Global alignment: Brings India's credential management in line with international best practices. The National Academic Depository exemplifies India's broader Digital India vision by converting a paper-heavy, fraud-prone system into a secure, citizen-centric digital infrastructure. Its integration with APAAR, ABC, and e-Sanad creates a unified ecosystem that supports both the flexible learning pathways of NEP 2020 and the cross-border credential mobility demands of a globally mobile workforce. Prelims Pointers NAD — National Academic Depository; implemented through DigiLocker since 2020; parent ministry: Ministry of Education; nodal agency: UGC. DigiLocker — launched 1 July 2015 under Digital India; the operational platform for NAD. Legal validity: Digital credentials through NAD are legally equivalent to physical documents under the Information Technology Act, 2000. Digital Locker Rules, 2016 — govern consent-based document sharing. APAAR (Automated Permanent Academic Account Registry) — assigns unique academic IDs and manages credit records; distinct from ABC. ABC (Academic Bank of Credits) — stores and transfers earned academic credits across institutions; enables MEME under NEP 2020. e-Sanad — integrated with NAD for electronic verification, attestation, and apostille of documents for overseas use. NEP 2020 provisions relevant to NAD: Multiple Entry-Multiple Exit (MEME), National Credit Framework (NCrF), Academic Bank of Credits (ABC). Scale of education system: ~14.71 lakh schools, 1,420 universities, 53,583 colleges (as of 2024–25). Mains Practice Question The National Academic Depository (NAD), in conjunction with APAAR and the Academic Bank of Credits, has the potential to transform India's education governance landscape. Discuss how this digital ecosystem can enable the flexible learning pathways envisioned under NEP 2020, and examine the challenges of implementation at scale. GS Paper 2 — Governance and Education Policy  |  250 words Practice MCQ Match the following components of India's digital academic records ecosystem with their primary functions: List I: (a) DigiLocker   (b) APAAR   (c) ABC   (d) e-Sanad List II: (1) Stores and transfers earned credits across institutions   (2) Operational platform for digital issuance and access of credentials   (3) Assigns a unique academic identity to each student   (4) Enables electronic attestation and apostille of documents A(a)–1, (b)–3, (c)–2, (d)–4 B(a)–2, (b)–1, (c)–3, (d)–4 C(a)–2, (b)–3, (c)–1, (d)–4 D(a)–3, (b)–2, (c)–4, (d)–1 Answer: C DigiLocker (a) is the operational platform through which NAD functions, enabling issuance and access of credentials — matched with (2). APAAR (b) assigns a unique permanent academic account/ID to each student — matched with (3). The Academic Bank of Credits — ABC (c) — stores and facilitates transfer of earned credits across institutions, enabling the Multiple Entry-Multiple Exit flexibility of NEP 2020 — matched with (1). e-Sanad (d) is the government's service for electronic attestation and apostille of documents for use abroad — matched with (4). Article 04 Urban Invisibility: Informal Workers at the City's Margins GS Paper 1 — Society: Urbanisation, Social Exclusion  |  GS Paper 3 — Economy: Informal Sector, Labour This piece is based on first-person journalistic reportage originally published in The Hindu. The analysis reflects the views and observations of the author and is presented here for its relevance to UPSC syllabus topics on urbanisation, informal labour, and social exclusion. Students are advised to treat the factual references — such as the Draft Master Plan of Delhi 2041 — as policy anchors and to form independent, evidence-based views on the broader argument. Why in News Ground-level reportage from Delhi has drawn attention to the structural conditions that render two large categories of informal urban workers — non-motorised cycle commuters and informal waste pickers — systematically invisible within city planning and governance frameworks. The Draft Master Plan of Delhi 2041 acknowledges an “unequal distribution of roads” that makes the city non-conducive for cycling, while waste workers continue to report restricted access, allegations of theft, and absence of dedicated workspaces. Key Observations Invisibility as a structural condition: Urban workers who cycle to work and informal waste sorters are not difficult to locate within cities — they are present at every intersection and in every neighbourhood. Their invisibility is not an accident of inattention but a product of policy choices that prioritise motorised transport infrastructure and exclude informal labour from formal recognition. Cycle commuters: Many cycle to work as daily wage labourers, security guards, and helpers over distances of 8–10 km or more. Cities that lack consistent footpaths remain even less adequate for cycling. The Draft Master Plan of Delhi 2041 notes the unequal distribution of road space as a structural impediment to cycling. Waste pickers: Informal waste workers collect, sort, and recycle urban waste — reducing the burden on municipal systems — without formal recognition, integration into the waste economy, or access to dedicated workspaces. They often live in jhuggi clusters near landfills (such as Bhalswa, northwest Delhi) while working across the city. Spatial marginalisation: Urban redevelopment has displaced workers to the peripheries of Delhi, 40–50 km from their workplaces, making their problems with transport and healthcare easier to overlook within mainstream policy discourse. Recognition as key demand: Workers in both categories report that formal recognition within government policies — as service providers rather than nuisances — would be the basis for a life of dignity. Prelims Pointers Draft Master Plan of Delhi 2041 — acknowledges the unequal distribution of road space as an impediment to non-motorised transport, including cycling. Master Plans for Delhi are prepared by the Delhi Development Authority (DDA). Informal waste workers / waste pickers — a critical but unrecognised component of India's solid waste management system; collect and sort recyclable waste, reducing the load on municipal solid waste systems without formal employment status. Jhuggi clusters — informal settlements in Indian cities; Bhalswa in northwest Delhi is a major settlement adjacent to a landfill site. Non-motorised transport (NMT): Cycles and other non-motorised vehicles are a key mobility mode for lower-income workers in Indian cities; recognised in urban transport policy frameworks but frequently under-prioritised in road space allocation. Gig workers and informal labour — form part of the “missing middle” in India's social protection framework; relevant to debates on the Code on Social Security, 2020. Article 05 NFSA Amendment: Revisiting AAY Foodgrain Entitlements GS Paper 2 — Governance: Food Security, Welfare Policy, Centre-State Relations, Federalism Why in News On 24 June 2026, the Union Ministry of Food and Public Distribution (F&PD) published a draft amendment Bill to the National Food Security Act (NFSA), 2013, proposing a shift in the foodgrain entitlement structure for Antyodaya Anna Yojana (AAY) households — from a fixed household ceiling to a per-capita allocation. Tamil Nadu Chief Minister C. Joseph Vijay and Kerala's Food and Civil Supplies Minister Anoop Jacob have raised formal objections. The public comment period runs until 13 July 2026. Background: AAY and the NFSA Framework Antyodaya Anna Yojana (AAY): A targeted sub-category within the NFSA specifically for the “poorest of the poor” households. AAY cardholders are entitled to subsidised foodgrains at rates lower than those for priority household (PHH) cardholders. Current entitlement (Section 3, NFSA 2013): Each AAY household is entitled to 35 kg of foodgrains per month, irrespective of the number of household members. Food Corporation of India (FCI): Established in 1965; the central procurement, storage, and distribution agency for the PDS. Kerala's PDS history: Kerala launched a formal Public Distribution System in 1962, three years before the establishment of the FCI — making it one of the earliest states to operate a structured food distribution programme. Tamil Nadu's food politics: Tamil Nadu has twice seen electoral upsets attributed to rice shortages (1952 and 1967). Since 1967, all successive Chief Ministers have exercised significant political caution on rice distribution. Since 2011, Tamil Nadu has provided free rice to all ration cardholders regardless of economic status. What the Proposed Amendment Entails The draft proposes amending the first proviso to sub-section (1) of Section 3 of the NFSA. Proposed entitlement: Every person belonging to an AAY household would receive 7 kg of foodgrains per month, subject to a maximum of 35 kg per household per month. Stated rationale: The current household-based system creates intra-category inequity: smaller households receive a higher per-capita entitlement than larger ones, whose per-capita share may fall below what priority household (PHH) cardholders receive. The amendment aims to provide more rational, nutritionally aligned allocation. What the amendment does not address: The inclusion of ineligible persons as beneficiaries — a problem the F&PD Department acknowledges persists at the state level. Why Southern States Are Opposing Kerala's concern: Kerala is characterised by smaller, nuclear family units. States with families averaging fewer than five members will see a net reduction in total monthly allocation under the 7 kg per capita formula, since the 35 kg household ceiling will not be reached. Kerala Food and Civil Supplies Minister Anoop Jacob (Satheesan Cabinet, May 2026) has stated that any cut in Kerala's allocation is a matter of concern and reiterated that AAY cardholders deserve “special consideration.” Tamil Nadu's concern: Chief Minister C. Joseph Vijay wrote to the Prime Minister on 6 July 2026 noting that the amendment would reduce Tamil Nadu's monthly AAY allocation from 65,261 tonnes to 42,040 tonnes. Of Tamil Nadu's 18.64 lakh AAY cardholders, 15.75 lakh (covering 58.51 lakh beneficiaries) belong to households with fewer than five members. North-South divide risk: Northern states, with larger average family sizes, would generally gain or remain unaffected, while southern states with predominantly nuclear families would face cuts — risking a widening of regional disparities in food security. Historical pattern: Both Kerala and Tamil Nadu resisted the NFSA itself during its 2011–2016 roll-out phase, ultimately implementing it only after securing key concessions, including a legal safeguard for existing allocation levels (2013). Way Forward Civil society voices such as the Right to Food Campaign have called for the proposed amendment to be dropped, warning of its regressive regional impact. A middle path suggested by veteran food policy activist T. Sadagopan (Tamil Nadu Progressive Consumer Centre): fix the AAY allocation at 30 kg per household irrespective of family size, which would also reduce the Union's subsidy burden while avoiding a per-capita formula that disadvantages smaller families. Greater public consultation, in line with the significant nutritional and political stakes, has been recommended before finalising any amendment. The proposed NFSA amendment reflects a genuine equity problem within the current household-based AAY entitlement structure — but the proposed cure carries the risk of widening regional food security disparities between larger-family northern states and smaller-family southern states. Any reform must weigh intra-household equity against inter-state equity and ensure that the nutritional needs of the most vulnerable are not sacrificed to administrative rationalisation. Prelims Pointers Antyodaya Anna Yojana (AAY) — targets the “poorest of the poor” within the NFSA; current entitlement: 35 kg per household per month at subsidised rates. NFSA 2013, Section 3(1) — the provision governing foodgrain entitlements for eligible households; the amendment targets the first proviso to this sub-section. Proposed change: 7 kg per person per month, capped at 35 kg per household — not enacted; a draft proposal open for public comment until 13 July 2026. Food Corporation of India (FCI) — established 1965; central agency for procurement, storage, and distribution under PDS. Kerala's PDS — launched 1962 (formal); predecessor informal systems date to the Travancore princely state era; among the earliest formal PDS in India. Tamil Nadu rice politics: Electoral reversals in 1952 and 1967 attributed to rice shortages; since 2011, free rice to all ration cardholders irrespective of economic status. Tamil Nadu impact: Proposed allocation falls from 65,261 tonnes/month to 42,040 tonnes/month; 15.75 lakh of 18.64 lakh AAY households have fewer than 5 members. Right to Food Campaign — civil society coalition advocating for universal food security; has opposed the proposed amendment. Mains Practice Question The proposed amendment to the National Food Security Act, 2013, seeks to replace the household-based AAY foodgrain entitlement with a per-capita allocation. Critically evaluate the rationale for this change and its potential implications for inter-state equity and food security among the most vulnerable households. GS Paper 2 — Social Justice and Welfare Policy  |  250 words Practice MCQ Which of the following statements about the proposed amendment to the National Food Security Act (NFSA), 2013, is NOT correct? AThe amendment targets the first proviso to sub-section (1) of Section 3 of the NFSA, which governs the right to receive foodgrains at subsidised prices. BUnder the proposed system, each person in an AAY household would be entitled to 7 kg of foodgrains per month, with a household cap of 35 kg per month. CThe proposed amendment also addresses the problem of ineligible persons being included as NFSA beneficiaries at the state level. DKerala launched its formal Public Distribution System in 1965, the same year as the establishment of the Food Corporation of India. Answer: D Option D is incorrect: Kerala launched its formal PDS in 1962, three years before the Food Corporation of India was established in 1965 — making it one of the pioneers of structured food distribution in India. Options A and B correctly describe the proposed amendment. Option C describes what the amendment does not do: the F&PD Department itself has acknowledged that the draft does not seek to address the inclusion of ineligible beneficiaries, which remains a problem at the state level. Article 06 India–Australia Summit: Defence Pacts, Trade and Antiquities Repatriation GS Paper 2 — International Relations: India–Australia Bilateral, Quad  |  GS Paper 1 — Art & Culture: Heritage Repatriation Why in News Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit to Melbourne on 10 July 2026 for the India–Australia Annual Summit with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese resulted in a series of agreements spanning defence and maritime security, nuclear energy cooperation, critical minerals, education, and science and technology. The summit also yielded commitments on the voluntary repatriation of three ancient Tamil Nadu antiquities held at Australian museums and, reciprocally, India's commitment to return the remains of an Australian First Nations ancestor held at the Government Museum, Chennai. Background: India–Australia Relations India and Australia established a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership in 2020, elevating a relationship that has deepened steadily through shared membership of the Quad (India, Australia, US, Japan) and growing convergence on Indo-Pacific security. The two countries are described as “vibrant democracies,” “multicultural societies,” and “significant ocean powers” with shared stakes in peace, stability, freedom of navigation, and a rules-based order in the Indo-Pacific. A Civil Nuclear Agreement was signed between the two countries in 2014, creating a framework for uranium supply to India for peaceful nuclear purposes. The 2026 summit saw a step taken to operationalise this agreement. Concerns over China's assertive behaviour in the Indo-Pacific have reinforced the strategic rationale for the India–Australia partnership within the Quad framework. Key Outcomes of the 2026 Summit Defence and maritime security: New landmark agreements expanding cooperation in defence and security. Nuclear energy: Steps taken to operationalise the 2014 Civil Nuclear Agreement, securing a stable corridor for uranium supplies to India for peaceful purposes. Critical minerals and energy security: Expanded cooperation, building on Australia's position as a major supplier of critical minerals essential for India's clean energy transition. Education, science and technology: New cooperation frameworks announced. Trade: Steps towards fast-tracking a bilateral trade deal. Cultural repatriation: Commitments on the return of antiquities (see below). Antiquities Repatriation: Tamil Nadu Artefacts Three antiquities from Tamil Nadu, dating to the 11th and 12th centuries and held at two Australian museums, are to be returned to India. Their provenance was verified following investigations by the Tamil Nadu Idol Wing CID, which established that the objects had been removed from temples and trafficked overseas. The artefacts will be handed to the Indian mission in Australia before being transported back to India. Antiquity Period Origin Temple / Location Holding Institution (Australia) Stone idol of Nandi (vehicle of Lord Shiva) 11th–12th century Sri Kasiviswanathaswamy Temple, Kollumangudi village, Thiruvarur district — sculpted in Tamil Shaiva temple tradition Art Gallery of New South Wales Metal trident with image of Goddess Bhadrakali 11th century Sri Kasiviswanathaswamy Temple, Kollumangudi — crafted in South Indian temple ritual metal-work tradition National Gallery of Australia Stone idol of six-headed Karthikeya 12th century Naganathswamy Temple, Manambadi village, Thanjavur district — Chola-period sculptural tradition National Gallery of Australia Reciprocal Repatriation: Australian First Nations Ancestor India committed to repatriating the skull of an Australian First Nations ancestor held at the Government Museum, Chennai, received there around 1935 as part of an anthropological exchange. Australia has in recent years focused on the repatriation of First Nations ancestral remains and sacred objects, framing it as a matter of healing, justice, and reconciliation with Indigenous communities. Prime Minister Albanese stated: “The repatriation of First Nations ancestors promotes healing, justice and reconciliation,” and commended the Indian government's decision. The remains will be repatriated unconditionally to their Traditional Custodians. Significance The repatriation of trafficked antiquities strengthens India's ongoing efforts to recover cultural property illicitly removed from its temples and sites — a process in which the Tamil Nadu Idol Wing CID plays a central investigative role. Australia's voluntary return demonstrates commitment to ethical collection management and positions it as a leader in the international cultural repatriation movement. The reciprocal nature of the arrangement — India returning a First Nations ancestor in exchange for Tamil temple artefacts — models a framework of mutual cultural respect between strategic partners. The India–Australia Annual Summit of 2026 reflects the breadth and depth of a partnership that has evolved from modest trade ties to a comprehensive strategic relationship covering defence, energy, education, and cultural heritage. The simultaneous progress on nuclear cooperation, critical minerals, and antiquities repatriation illustrates how bilateral engagements increasingly blend strategic, economic, and civilisational dimensions. Prelims Pointers India–Australia Civil Nuclear Agreement — signed 2014; provides framework for uranium supply to India for peaceful purposes; steps to operationalise taken at July 2026 summit. Quad — quadrilateral security dialogue comprising India, Australia, United States, and Japan; shared focus on Indo-Pacific stability and rules-based order. Tamil Nadu Idol Wing CID — the investigative unit that traced the provenance of the three antiquities to Tamil Nadu temples and established that they had been trafficked overseas. Three repatriated antiquities: Nandi idol (Thiruvarur, 11th–12th c.), Bhadrakali trident (Kollumangudi, 11th c.), six-headed Karthikeya idol (Thanjavur, 12th c. Chola tradition). Holding institutions: National Gallery of Australia and Art Gallery of New South Wales (NSW). Reciprocal repatriation: India to return skull of a First Nations ancestor held at Government Museum, Chennai (received c. 1935 as part of anthropological exchange). Chola sculptural tradition — the Karthikeya idol is carved in this tradition; Chola dynasty (c. 9th–13th century) is renowned for its bronze and stone temple sculpture. First Nations peoples — the Indigenous peoples of Australia; Australia has pursued systematic repatriation of ancestral remains from global museums since the 1990s. Mains Practice Question The voluntary return of cultural artefacts between India and Australia at the 2026 bilateral summit has been described as a model for ethical cultural diplomacy. Discuss the significance of heritage repatriation in contemporary international relations and examine the mechanisms India has developed to recover trafficked antiquities. GS Paper 2 — International Relations  |  250 words Practice MCQ With reference to the antiquities agreed for repatriation from Australia to India at the 2026 India–Australia Summit, consider the following statements: 1. All three antiquities originated from temples in Thanjavur district of Tamil Nadu. 2. The six-headed Karthikeya stone idol is carved in the Chola-period sculptural tradition and was held at the National Gallery of Australia. 3. The metal trident with the image of Goddess Bhadrakali originated from the Sri Kasiviswanathaswamy Temple in Kollumangudi. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? A1 and 2 only B1 and 3 only C2 and 3 only D1, 2 and 3 Answer: C Statement 1 is incorrect: not all three antiquities are from Thanjavur district. The six-headed Karthikeya idol is from the Naganathswamy Temple in Manambadi village, Thanjavur district, but the Nandi idol and the Bhadrakali trident both originate from the Sri Kasiviswanathaswamy Temple in Kollumangudi, Thiruvarur district. Statement 2 is correct: the Karthikeya idol is indeed carved in the Chola-period sculptural tradition and was held at the National Gallery of Australia. Statement 3 is correct: the Bhadrakali trident originated from the Sri Kasiviswanathaswamy Temple, Kollumangudi, crafted in the South Indian temple ritual metal-work tradition. Article 07 Ethanol Blending in India: Lessons from Brazil's Proalcool Model GS Paper 3 — Economy: Energy Security, Biofuels, Infrastructure  |  Environment: Alternative Fuels Why in News India has achieved nationwide E20 (20% ethanol blending in petrol) five years ahead of its original 2030 target, and is now pursuing a phased transition towards E25 and eventually E85–100 fuels for flex-fuel vehicles (FFVs). A comparative assessment of Brazil's ethanol programme — which took roughly 50 years to move from E10 to E30, against India's six years to go from E5 to E20 — raises important questions about the pace, preparation, and consumer-centricity of India's blending strategy. Background: Why Ethanol Blending Matters for India India imports approximately 88.5% of its crude oil requirement, making the economy highly vulnerable to global oil price volatility and geopolitical disruptions. Ethanol, produced largely from sugarcane and surplus grain, offers a domestically producible, lower-carbon substitute that can be blended with petrol to reduce import dependence. Ethanol also improves engine acceleration and reduces knocking (uneven fuel ignition in the cylinder). India's National Policy on Biofuels (2018) provided a policy framework for phased blending; a revised policy extended the target and broadened the feedstock base. Brazil's Proalcool Model: A 50-Year Arc Brazil's experience is built on a long policy timeline beginning with its first ethanol blending law in 1931, which mandated a 5% blend of anhydrous ethanol in petrol — making Brazil's regulatory history nearly a century old. In response to the 1973 global oil crisis, Brazil launched the National Alcohol Program (Proalcool) in 1975 to reduce petroleum dependence by promoting ethanol additives. In 1979, Italian automaker Fiat launched the Fiat 147 in Brazil — the world's first vehicle powered entirely by ethanol. Volkswagen, GM, and Ford followed amid the global oil crisis. After a period of stagnation as oil prices fell, Brazil's auto industry began producing Flex-Fuel Vehicles (FFVs) at scale from 2003. Volkswagen introduced the first commercial flex-fuel car in Brazil on 23 March 2003; GM and Ford followed. Toyota brought in a Corolla flex version. FFV sales grew from 48,178 units (under 4% of light motor vehicle demand) in 2003 to 1.63 million units (nearly 90% of the Brazilian car fleet) in recent years. Brazil's domestic auto industry has delivered 40 million FFVs as of February 2025 (since 2003). In 2024–25, Brazil passed its “Fuel of the Future” and “Mover Program” legislation to boost low-carbon vehicle technology and biofuel adoption; E30 was mandated in 2025. At nearly every petrol pump in Brazil, consumers can choose between blended petrol (typically E27) and E100 (pure hydrous ethanol), with E100 often 25–35% cheaper than lower-blend petrol. Brazil took 50 years to move from E10 to E30, building consumer choice, vehicle readiness, and infrastructure in tandem. India's Ethanol Blending Journey Year Milestone 2003 5% blending planned for 9 states and 4 UTs (launch) 2006 5% for 20 states and 4 UTs; mandatory push but supply shortfalls 2018 National Policy on Biofuels introduced; 4–5% achieved 2022 10% blending (E10) achieved nationwide 2023 12.1%; nationwide phased roll-out of E20 fuel commenced 2025 19.2%; E20 target met 5 years ahead of schedule 2026 E20 nationwide standard; 100% of petrol sold is E20 India took just six years to move from E5 to E20 — a contrast with Brazil's 50-year journey from E10 to E30. What are Flex-Fuel Vehicles (FFVs)? FFVs are internal combustion engine vehicles engineered to run on more than one fuel type — typically petrol blended with ethanol or methanol in varying ratios. They use a fuel composition sensor to automatically adjust fuel injection timing and ignition based on the blend in the tank, enabling seamless switching between petrol, ethanol blends, and E85–E100. India's FFV status: As of 2026, only a handful of models are available — the WagonR flex fuel model, Toyota Hycross hybrid flex prototype, Tata Punch and Hyundai Creta flex versions, and some two-wheelers (Hero, TVS). The majority of vehicles on Indian roads are not equipped for higher ethanol blends. Three Key Differentiators: Brazil vs India Pace and preparation: Brazil adopted a graded, spaced-out approach with predefined milestones over decades; India's push has been compressed into a few years without equivalent vehicle-ecosystem preparation. Consumer choice: Brazil gave motorists the ability to choose between blended petrol and E100 at the pump; Indian motorists were given no such choice, and were told performance would not be affected — while mileage reduction was not disclosed prominently. Vehicle ecosystem readiness: Brazil spent two decades building an FFV fleet from near-zero to near-universal before mandating high blends; India is mandating high blends while the FFV ecosystem is still in its infancy. Concerns for India Mileage reduction: Higher ethanol blends reduce fuel energy density, leading to lower per-litre mileage — a concern that was not communicated adequately to vehicle owners during the rapid blending push. Older vehicles: Concerns about degradation of plastic and rubber components in older vehicles exposed to higher ethanol concentrations. Regional availability: E85/E100 dispensing infrastructure is still being built; without widespread FFV adoption or adequate infrastructure, higher blends risk consumer confusion. India's ethanol blending programme is strategically sound in its goal of reducing fossil fuel import dependence — a necessity given that 88.5% of crude oil needs are met through imports. However, the compressed timeline, insufficient communication on mileage implications, and the still-nascent FFV ecosystem contrast sharply with Brazil's deliberate, consumer-centric, decades-long approach. For India's blending programme to deliver its full potential, vehicle-ecosystem readiness, consumer transparency, and infrastructure development must accompany — not follow — blending mandates. Prelims Pointers India's crude oil import dependence: approximately 88.5% of total crude oil requirement. E20: 20% ethanol blended with 80% petrol; became India's nationwide standard in 2026, five years ahead of the original 2030 target. Flex-Fuel Vehicle (FFV): uses a fuel composition sensor to run on varying ratios of petrol and ethanol (up to E85 or E100); distinct from standard ICE vehicles which are not designed for high ethanol blends. Proalcool (Brazil): National Alcohol Program launched 1975 in response to the 1973 oil crisis; world's first large-scale national biofuel programme. Brazil's first ethanol blending law: 1931 (5% anhydrous ethanol in petrol). Fiat 147 (1979) — world's first vehicle powered entirely by ethanol; launched in Brazil by Fiat. First commercial FFV in Brazil: Volkswagen, 23 March 2003. Brazil FFV milestone: 40 million FFVs delivered as of February 2025 (since 2003); nearly 90% of new cars sold are FFVs. Brazil E30 mandate: from 2025, following passage of “Fuel of the Future” legislation in 2024. National Policy on Biofuels (India): introduced 2018. Brazil timeline: 50 years from E10 to E30; India: 6 years from E5 to E20. Mains Practice Question India has achieved its E20 ethanol blending target five years ahead of schedule but faces criticism for the pace and preparation of its biofuel transition. Compare India's approach to ethanol blending with Brazil's Proalcool model, and suggest measures to make India's biofuel programme more sustainable, equitable, and consumer-friendly. GS Paper 3 — Energy and Infrastructure  |  250 words Practice MCQ Which of the following correctly identifies the world's first vehicle powered entirely by ethanol and the year of its launch? AVolkswagen Golf, launched in Brazil in 1975 following the Proalcool programme. BGeneral Motors Chevette, launched in Brazil in 1977 in response to the 1973 oil crisis. CFiat 147, launched in Brazil in 1979, the world's first vehicle designed to run entirely on ethanol. DToyota Corolla Flex, launched in Brazil in 2003 as the first flex-fuel vehicle in the country. Answer: C The Fiat 147, launched in Brazil in 1979, is documented as the world's first vehicle designed to run entirely on ethanol. Volkswagen, GM, and Ford followed with ethanol or flex-fuel models in subsequent years. The Toyota Corolla Flex was among the FFVs launched in the 2003 wave of flex-fuel adoption — not the first ethanol vehicle. The Proalcool programme was launched in 1975, but the first purpose-built ethanol vehicle came four years later in 1979. Article 08 Justice Varma Inquiry Report Tabled: Judicial Accountability in Uncharted Territory GS Paper 2 — Polity: Judiciary, Constitutional Provisions, Judicial Accountability Why in News Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla's decision to table the report of the parliamentary inquiry committee investigating former Allahabad High Court judge Justice Yashwant Varma has pushed India's judicial accountability framework into territory with no established precedent. Justice Varma resigned in April 2025 before the three-member committee constituted under the Judges (Inquiry) Act could conclude its hearings. Tabling the report challenges the assumption — reinforced by two prior episodes — that a judge's resignation automatically terminates a parliamentary misconduct inquiry. Constitutional and Legal Framework Article 217 — Governs the appointment and conditions of service of High Court judges. Under this provision, a High Court judge may resign by writing to the President. 1978 Supreme Court ruling: The Supreme Court held that a judge's resignation is a unilateral act that takes effect immediately on the date chosen by the judge, without requiring formal presidential acceptance. Article 124(4) — Provides for removal of Supreme Court judges (by analogy, the same procedure applies to HC judges under Article 218) only through an address by each House of Parliament, passed by a majority of the total membership and not less than two-thirds of members present and voting. Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968 — Governs the procedure for investigating allegations of misbehaviour or incapacity against judges. The Act creates a two-stage process: (1) investigation and proof of misbehaviour, and (2) removal from office by Parliament. Legal scholars note that the law does not explicitly state that an inquiry must lapse upon a judge's resignation. Background: The Justice Varma Case Wads of burnt currency notes were recovered from the official residence of Justice Yashwant Varma of the Allahabad High Court. An in-house probe by the Supreme Court reportedly found him culpable. Over 146 Lok Sabha MPs moved a motion for his removal. Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla constituted a three-member parliamentary inquiry committee under the Judges (Inquiry) Act. Before the committee could conclude its hearings, Justice Varma resigned in April 2025. Speaker Birla subsequently took the decision to table the committee's report before the House. Prior Precedents: Why Probes Lapsed Earlier Justice P.D. Dinakaran (Sikkim High Court Chief Justice, 2011): Resigned while the parliamentary inquiry committee was mid-investigation. The Rajya Sabha Secretariat reasoned that since the goal of the probe was removal, resignation rendered the process meaningless. The probe was also wound up partly because a vacancy on the committee made it dysfunctional. Vice President Hamid Ansari (Rajya Sabha Chairman) held that after resignation, the primary objective of removal was moot. Justice Soumitra Sen (Calcutta High Court, 2011): Resigned after the Rajya Sabha had already passed the impeachment motion against him; the Lok Sabha dropped the impeachment vote following his resignation. In the Dinakaran episode, jurist G. Mohan Gopal (a member of the probe panel) argued in a letter to fellow committee members that the two stages of the Judges (Inquiry) Act — “investigation and proof” and “removal from office” — are distinct, and that establishing the truthfulness of charges is an end in itself. His warning: allowing resignation to “veto” even the investigation stage would create an “absurd situation” enabling judges to end inquiries at will. Significance of Tabling the Report Public accountability: Tabling the report brings the findings of a constitutionally mandated, taxpayer-funded inquiry into the public domain. Legal scholar Alok Prasanna Kumar has described this as an opportunity to “overturn the unfortunate precedent set in the Dinakaran case” and has argued that the inquiry is an accountability process, not merely a removal process — and that the public is entitled to know what was found. Financial and legal consequences: Upon normal resignation, a judge retains the same pensionary benefits as one who retires. A formal parliamentary impeachment, by contrast, could strip a judge of pension and other post-retirement entitlements, and could pave the way for further criminal proceedings. Deterrence: If resignation is confirmed as a reliable mechanism to escape parliamentary scrutiny, it creates a perverse incentive for judges facing serious misconduct allegations to resign before investigations conclude. The decision to table the Justice Varma inquiry report is a significant step toward a more robust judicial accountability framework in India — one that treats the parliamentary process as an accountability mechanism independent of, and not extinguished by, a judge's resignation. Whether this practice is institutionalised or remains an exception will depend on how future Speakers and Parliamentary Chairs interpret the Judges (Inquiry) Act in the context of mid-probe resignations. Prelims Pointers Article 217 — Appointment and conditions of service of HC judges; resignation addressed to the President. 1978 SC ruling — Resignation of a judge is a unilateral act effective immediately; no formal presidential acceptance required. Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968 — Two-stage process: (1) investigation and proof of misbehaviour; (2) removal from office by Parliament. The Act does not explicitly state that inquiry lapses upon resignation. No judge has ever been impeached in India since the Constitution came into force. Justice P.D. Dinakaran — Sikkim High Court Chief Justice; resigned 2011 during parliamentary inquiry; probe wound up. Justice Soumitra Sen — Calcutta High Court; resigned 2011 after Rajya Sabha passed impeachment motion; Lok Sabha dropped the vote. Justice Yashwant Varma — Allahabad HC; burnt currency notes found at official residence; in-house SC probe found culpable; 146+ Lok Sabha MPs moved motion; resigned April 2025; Speaker Om Birla tabled the inquiry committee's report. Post-retirement benefits: A judge who resigns normally retains pensionary entitlements; impeachment by Parliament could result in forfeiture of pension and potential criminal action. G. Mohan Gopal — jurist; former member of the Dinakaran probe committee; argued for completing the investigation even after the judge's resignation, distinguishing the “investigation” from the “removal” stages. Mains Practice Question The decision to table the parliamentary inquiry report against Justice Yashwant Varma challenges the precedent established in the Justice Dinakaran case (2011). Critically examine how the existing judicial accountability framework in India allows misconduct probes to be short-circuited, and suggest reforms to strengthen the separation between the investigation and removal stages of the Judges (Inquiry) Act. GS Paper 2 — Polity and Governance  |  250 words Practice MCQ With reference to judicial accountability in India, consider the following: Assertion (A): Under the Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968, the resignation of a judge automatically terminates the parliamentary misconduct inquiry against them. Reason (R): The Act creates two distinct stages — investigation and proof of misbehaviour, and removal from office — and does not explicitly state that an inquiry lapses upon resignation. ABoth A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A. BBoth A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A. CA is false, but R is true. DBoth A and R are false. Answer: C The Assertion is false: resignation does not automatically terminate a parliamentary inquiry under the Judges (Inquiry) Act — the Act contains no such explicit provision. What has happened in practice (Justices Dinakaran and Sen) is that presiding officers chose to wind up inquiries based on the interpretation that the primary purpose of removal was rendered moot. Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla's decision to table the Justice Varma report challenges exactly this assumption. The Reason is true: the Act does distinguish between two stages, and the absence of an explicit lapse provision is the legal basis on which scholars argue investigations can continue even after resignation.