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Mar 27, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

Content India’s Resilient Production Systems in Agriculture One Station One Product: Bringing India’s Local Heritage to Railway Platforms India’s Resilient Production Systems in Agriculture Introduction India’s agriculture contributes ~18–20% of GVA, employs 46.1% workforce, and supports ~55% population, making it central to food security, livelihoods, and macroeconomic stability. Record production of 357.73 MMT foodgrains and 362.08 MT horticulture (2024–25) reflects structural transition towards diversified, high-value, and resilient agricultural systems. Agricultural growth averaged ~4.4% (last 5 years), driven by improved seeds, irrigation expansion, mechanisation, and policy-led resilience strategies integrating production with markets. Relevance GS Paper III (Economy / Agriculture / Environment) Agricultural productivity, diversification, and value addition Food security and nutritional security Climate-resilient agriculture and sustainability Agricultural marketing reforms, exports, and value chains Digital agriculture (AgriStack, e-NAM) Practice Questions  Q1.“India’s agricultural resilience is increasingly shaped by diversification, technology, and institutional support rather than mere production expansion.”Critically examine.(250 Words) Static Background Post-Green Revolution, India ensured cereal self-sufficiency, but current policy focus has shifted towards diversification, income enhancement, climate resilience, and global value chain integration. Structural features include 86% small and marginal farmers, ~45% rainfed area, and regional specialisation, influencing productivity, vulnerability, and targeted policy design. Constitutional Dimensions Agriculture is a State subject (Entry 14), while Centre intervenes via Entry 33 (Concurrent List), MSP, trade regulation, and centrally sponsored schemes under cooperative federalism. National Food Security Act, 2013 ensures subsidised foodgrain to 81.35 crore beneficiaries, linking agricultural production systems with rights-based food security framework. Absence of statutory MSP creates policy uncertainty, while reform attempts highlight tensions between market liberalisation and federal autonomy in agricultural governance. Governance Dimension Mission-mode interventions like NFSNM, NMEO, and Aatmanirbharta in Pulses (2025–31) aim at productivity enhancement, import substitution, and crop diversification. 25.55 crore Soil Health Cards issued covering 12 parameters, enabling scientific nutrient management, improved soil fertility, and balanced fertiliser usage. Irrigation coverage increased to 55.8% gross cropped area under PMKSY, promoting micro-irrigation, water-use efficiency, and climate resilience. Institutional credit reached ₹28.67 lakh crore (2024–25) with 7.72 crore KCC accounts, enhancing formal credit penetration and reducing dependence on moneylenders. Economic Dimension India produced 150.18 MT rice and 117.94 MT wheat (2024–25), maintaining its position as second-largest global producer, ensuring food security and export strength. Pulses production reached 25.68 MT and millets 18.59 MT, reflecting emphasis on protein security, climate-resilient crops, and import substitution strategies. Horticulture output rose to 362 MT, surpassing foodgrain production, indicating structural shift towards high-value crops, diversification, and income-enhancing agriculture. Agricultural exports increased from $34.5 billion (FY20) to $51.1 billion (FY25) with 8.2% CAGR, reflecting improved global competitiveness and export diversification. Processed food share rose from 14.9% (FY18) to 20.4% (FY25), indicating gradual transition from raw commodity exports to value-added agri-products. Social Dimension PM-KISAN disbursed ₹4.27 lakh crore in 22 instalments, providing ₹6,000 annual income support, stabilising rural consumption and reducing distress. MSP (≥1.5× cost) ensures price assurance for 22 crops, but cereal bias raises concerns about crop diversification and long-term sustainability. PMFBY insured 4.19 crore farmers covering 6.2 crore hectares, with claims exceeding ₹1.90 lakh crore, strengthening climate risk mitigation. ONORC achieved 99.8% Aadhaar seeding, covering 81.35 crore beneficiaries, enhancing portability, inclusion, and leak-proof food distribution. Environmental Dimensions Natural farming expanded to 6.39 lakh hectares with 15.79 lakh farmers, reducing chemical inputs and promoting sustainable, low-cost agriculture practices. Millets (Shree Anna) promoted as climate-resilient crops due to low water requirement, supporting nutrition security and climate adaptation goals. Ethanol blending programme saved ₹1.44 lakh crore forex, linking agriculture with energy security and diversified farmer income streams. e-NAM platform integrates 1.8 crore farmers and 1,656 mandis, enabling transparent price discovery, inter-state trade, and digital agriculture ecosystem. Market And Value Chain Dimension 49,796 storage projects and 25,009 marketing infrastructure projects received subsidies exceeding ₹7,000 crore, strengthening post-harvest management and reducing wastage. 10,000 FPOs registered (2026) improve collective bargaining, scale economies, and market access, especially for small and marginal farmers. Food processing contributes 12.91% of organised manufacturing employment, with PMKSY and PLISFI boosting infrastructure, investments, and export competitiveness. PMFME scheme supported 4.04 lakh applications, promoting micro-enterprises, women SHGs, and decentralised value addition in rural areas. Global And Strategic Dimension India ranks 1st in pulses, millets, spices and 2nd in rice, wheat, fruits, vegetables, strengthening its role as a global food security anchor. Rice exports reached $12.95 billion, highlighting dominance in global cereal markets, while diversification into processed food enhances export resilience and stability. India’s agricultural system supports South-South cooperation, contributing to global food supply stability and climate-resilient crop promotion (millets). Challenges And Gaps 86% small landholdings limit mechanisation, productivity gains, and economies of scale, constraining income growth despite policy support and technological interventions. Regional imbalance persists with Green Revolution states dominating cereals, while rainfed regions lag in productivity, infrastructure, and income levels. Environmental stress includes groundwater depletion, soil degradation, and N:P:K imbalance, threatening long-term sustainability of intensive agriculture. Market inefficiencies in APMC system, price volatility in perishables, and low processing share (~20%) limit farmer income realisation and export potential. Governance issues include scheme fragmentation, weak extension services, and last-mile delivery gaps, particularly affecting small and marginal farmers. Way Forward Reorient MSP towards pulses, oilseeds, millets to promote diversification, reduce import dependence, and ensure sustainable cropping aligned with agro-climatic conditions. Scale climate-smart agriculture through micro-irrigation, agroforestry, and weather-based advisories integrating traditional knowledge with modern technology. Strengthen FPOs with credit, capacity building, and market linkages to transform smallholders into competitive market participants. Expand cold chains, logistics, and agro-processing clusters to reduce post-harvest losses and increase farmer share in consumer prices. Promote digital agriculture (AgriStack, AI advisories, precision farming) to enhance productivity, reduce input costs, and improve decision-making efficiency. Prelims Pointers Foodgrain production (2024–25): 357.73 MMT; Horticulture: 362 MT PMFBY launched: 2016; MSP covers 22 crops NFSA beneficiaries: 81.35 crore e-NAM mandis: 1,656 India largest producer: pulses, millets, spices One Station One Product: Bringing India’s Local Heritage to Railway Platforms Introduction One Station One Product (OSOP) launched in Union Budget 2022–23 aims to promote indigenous products, local artisans, and regional identity through dedicated retail outlets at railway stations. As of January 2026, OSOP covers 2,000+ railway stations with 2,326 outlets, benefiting over 1.32 lakh individuals, demonstrating integration of public infrastructure with livelihood generation. Concept aligns with “Vocal for Local”, transforming railway stations into marketplaces for local goods, bridging gaps between production centres and consumer markets. Relevance   GS II (Governance / Polity) Innovative governance using public infrastructure Cooperative federalism (Railways–States–SHGs coordination) Directive Principles (Article 43 – promotion of cottage industries) GS Paper III (Economy / MSME / Inclusive Growth) MSME development and rural non-farm employment Market access, value chains, and local product promotion Infrastructure-led economic development Local-to-global economic strategy Practice Question  Q1.“One Station One Product (OSOP) reflects a paradigm shift in using infrastructure for inclusive economic development.” Discuss.(250 Words) Static Background Inspired by “One Village One Product (OVOP)” (Japan), focusing on local specialisation, branding, and decentralised economic development models. India adapted the model to the railway ecosystem, leveraging Indian Railways’ ~8 billion annual passengers (pre-COVID) to ensure mass-scale market access for local products. Constitutional And Legal Dimension Linked to Directive Principles (Article 43) promoting cottage industries and rural livelihoods through decentralised and community-based production systems. Supports Article 19(1)(g) by enabling artisans, SHGs, and MSMEs to access formal markets, economic opportunities, and entrepreneurial activities. Operates under an executive policy framework, implemented by Indian Railways in coordination with states, MSMEs, and SHGs, reflecting cooperative federalism. Governance And Administrative Dimension Launched on 25 March 2022, initially piloted across 19 stations for 15 days, and later scaled nationwide through structured and phased implementation. OSOP stalls are allotted on a rotational basis at nominal fees, ensuring inclusive participation and equitable access for artisans, SHGs, and MSMEs. Implementation involves Railway divisions, State agencies, SHGs, and MSMEs, ensuring institutional convergence, coordination, and operational efficiency. Economic Dimension Provides direct market access to local producers, reducing middlemen dependence, improving price realisation, income stability, and profitability. Enhances rural non-farm employment by promoting handicrafts, handlooms, agro-products, and processed goods at high-footfall railway stations. Supports MSME sector, contributing ~30% of GDP and ~45% of exports, strengthening grassroots entrepreneurship and economic diversification. Converts railway stations into commercial hubs, improving economic utilisation of public infrastructure and stimulating local economic ecosystems. Social And Ethical Dimension Prioritises women-led SHGs, artisans, weavers, and farmers, promoting inclusive growth, gender empowerment, and social equity in rural and semi-urban regions. Benefits over 1.32 lakh individuals, enhancing income security, dignity of labour, and community-level socio-economic empowerment. Encourages preservation of traditional crafts (Madhubani, Sanganeri prints, cane work), safeguarding intangible cultural heritage and local knowledge systems. Enhances consumer awareness, enabling travellers to engage with authentic local products, traditions, and cultural narratives. Environmental And Sustainability Dimension Promotes local production and consumption, reducing carbon footprint associated with long-distance logistics and supply chains. Encourages eco-friendly products such as handlooms, natural dyes, and handicrafts, which have lower environmental impact compared to industrial goods. Supports sustainable livelihoods, reducing pressure on agriculture and enabling diversification into non-farm and low-carbon economic activities. Market And Value Chain Dimension Integrates local producers into national market networks, improving visibility, branding, demand generation, and price discovery for regional products. Acts as a last-mile market linkage, complementing initiatives like e-NAM, ODOP, and PMFME in strengthening agricultural and rural value chains. Rotational stall allocation ensures product diversity, inclusivity, and wider participation, preventing monopolisation and ensuring equitable access. Enhances tourism-linked consumption, where passengers act as buyers of regional crafts and souvenirs, boosting local economies. Cultural And Heritage Dimension Showcases region-specific products such as Madhubani paintings (Bihar), Sanganeri textiles (Rajasthan), cane products (Tamil Nadu), reflecting India’s diversity. Transforms railway stations into cultural spaces, where commerce intersects with heritage, identity, and storytelling traditions. Strengthens domestic cultural diplomacy, promoting awareness of India’s diverse traditions, crafts, and regional identities among citizens and tourists. Challenges And Gaps Limited branding, packaging, and standardisation affects competitiveness against organised retail and e-commerce platforms. Inconsistent quality control across stations can reduce consumer trust, repeat demand, and brand reliability. Dependence on footfall-based physical sales limits scalability compared to digital and online marketplaces. Institutional coordination challenges between Railways, states, and SHGs may affect implementation efficiency and uniformity. Lack of digital integration and online sales channels restricts long-term market expansion and sustained income growth. Way Forward Integrate OSOP with digital platforms (e-commerce, ONDC) to expand market access, scalability, and national/global outreach. Develop standardised branding, packaging, and GI tagging to enhance product quality, recognition, and export competitiveness. Provide capacity building and skill development for artisans in design, marketing, and quality assurance systems. Converge with schemes like ODOP, PMFME, and National Handicrafts Mission for holistic value chain development and synergy. Introduce QR-based traceability and digital payments, improving transparency, consumer confidence, and digital inclusion. Prelims Pointers OSOP launched: 2022 (Union Budget) Coverage: 2,000+ stations; 2,326 outlets Beneficiaries: 1.32 lakh individuals Inspired by: OVOP (Japan) Focus: local products, SHGs, MSMEs

Mar 27, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Content The key to India’s multi-domain deterrence, capabilities Should men get paternity leave in India? The key to India’s multi-domain deterrence, capabilities Introduction China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) poses a systemic military challenge to India, with widening gaps in technology, scale, and industrial capacity, necessitating a robust defence-industrial strategy. Rapid evolution of military technologies (AI, drones, cyber, space) outpaces doctrinal adaptation, making capability prioritisation and procurement choices increasingly complex and uncertain. India faces critical decisions on “what to buy vs what to build”, balancing strategic autonomy, cost efficiency, and deterrence effectiveness against a technologically superior adversary. Relevance GS II (Polity / Governance / IR) National security governance and institutional coordination (MoD, DRDO, armed forces) India–China relations and border management Defence reforms, procurement policies (DAP 2020) Role of executive in defence planning (Union List – Entry 1) GS III (Security / Economy / S&T) Defence preparedness and deterrence strategy Defence industrial base, indigenisation, Atmanirbhar Bharat Emerging technologies: AI, drones, cyber, space warfare Internal security linkage: multi-domain warfare readiness Economic aspects: defence budget, R&D, industrial capacity Practice Question Q1.“India’s deterrence against China depends more on industrial capacity and multi-domain integration than on individual platforms.” Examine.(250 Words) Static Background China’s military modernisation driven by civil-military fusion and large-scale industrial capacity enables rapid production of missiles, drones, and advanced platforms at scale. India’s defence ecosystem historically dominated by public sector undertakings (DPSUs) faces constraints in speed, innovation, and scale, limiting its response to evolving threats. Constitutional And Legal Dimension Defence falls under Union List (Entry 1), giving Centre exclusive authority over armed forces, procurement, and national security policy. Policy frameworks like Defence Acquisition Procedure (DAP 2020) and Atmanirbhar Bharat in Defence aim to enhance indigenisation and private sector participation. Lack of clear long-term defence industrial legislation leads to fragmented planning and weak alignment between military doctrine and industrial policy. Governance And Administrative Dimension India faces three strategic options: bold technological leap, conservative integration, or middle-path hybrid approach, each involving trade-offs in risk, cost, and deterrence capability. Current procurement systems are often slow, bureaucratic, and risk-averse, limiting the military’s ability to adapt to rapidly evolving operational requirements. Need for institutional convergence between military, DRDO, private sector, and policymakers to create a unified deterrence vision and execution framework. Economic Dimension China’s defence budget (~$225+ billion) far exceeds India’s (~$75 billion), creating disparities in R&D investment, industrial output, and technological capabilities. India’s defence-industrial base lacks scale and surge capacity, particularly in missiles, munitions, drones, and advanced electronics, creating vulnerabilities in prolonged conflicts. Increased defence spending must focus on efficiency and prioritisation, rather than incremental expansion, to maximise deterrence per rupee spent. Security And Strategic Dimension India lacks a decisive “exquisite capability”, making deterrence dependent on layered capabilities rather than singular technological superiority. Strengthening deterrence requires altering China’s risk perception and military confidence, preventing assumptions of quick or decisive victory. Nuclear deterrence remains critical, especially given China’s nuclear capabilities, but cannot substitute for credible conventional deterrence. Technology And Military Dimension  Strategic Approaches Bold approach: Invest in next-generation technologies (AI, hypersonics, autonomous systems), but high risk of implementation failure and capability gaps. Conservative approach: Upgrade existing systems with digital integration, cyber, and electronic warfare, but limited impact on long-term balance of power. Middle path (optimal): Combine legacy platforms with enabling layers, enabling gradual transition towards multi-domain operations (MDO). Enabling Layers For Deterrence C4ISR systems (Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance) are critical; dominance ensures information superiority and battlefield awareness. Need for low-cost, expendable ISR platforms (drones, satellites) to maintain surveillance despite losses, ensuring operational continuity in conflict scenarios. Integration of missiles, aircraft, and drones forms a deep-strike layer capable of disrupting adversary logistics and command structures. Close-battle layer involving tanks, artillery, and infantry remains essential for territorial defence and frontline engagements. Robust logistics and infrastructure layer critical for sustaining long-duration conflicts, especially in high-altitude terrains like Ladakh sector. Industrial Dimension India’s key constraint lies not in technological capability, but in industrial capacity to produce at speed and scale, particularly in wartime scenarios. Urgent investments required in missiles, munitions, drones, C4ISR networks, and modernisation of legacy platforms. Greater role for private sector participation needed, as private firms often offer efficiency, innovation, and faster delivery timelines compared to DPSUs. Challenges And Gaps Weak alignment between military requirements and industrial output, leading to delays, inefficiencies, and capability gaps. Lack of long-term contracts and budget stability discourages private investment and limits industrial scaling. Bureaucratic procurement processes constrain innovation, flexibility, and rapid adaptation to emerging technologies. China’s advantage in mass production and inventory depth (missiles, drones) creates asymmetry in prolonged conflict scenarios. Limited integration of cyber, space, and electronic warfare capabilities weakens India’s ability to operate in modern multi-domain battlefields. Way Forward Prioritise development of enabling layers (C4ISR, strike systems, logistics) rather than focusing solely on platform-centric acquisitions. Expand defence-industrial base with private sector participation, supported by long-term contracts, policy stability, and reduced regulatory barriers. Adopt middle-path strategy, combining legacy systems with emerging technologies for gradual transition to multi-domain warfare capability. Increase investment in cyber, space, and electronic warfare, ensuring dominance in information and digital battlespaces. Reform procurement by emphasising speed, flexibility, and outcome-based planning, aligning acquisitions with evolving doctrinal needs. Prelims Pointers C4ISR: Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance DAP 2020: Defence procurement framework PLA: China’s armed forces India defence budget: ~$75 billion vs China ~$225 billion Focus areas: drones, missiles, cyber, space warfare Note: The views expressed are those of the newspaper editorial author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Legacy IAS Academy. Should men get paternity leave in India? Introduction The Supreme Court, in Hamsaanandini Nanduri case (2026), urged the Union government to examine a formal paternity leave law, recognising shared parenting as essential for child welfare. The Court highlighted that parenthood is not a solitary function, and excluding fathers from early childcare constitutes “a kind of injustice”, reinforcing gendered caregiving roles. Debate centres on balancing child development, gender equality, labour market realities, and economic feasibility within India’s predominantly informal workforce structure. Relevance GS Paper I (Indian Society) Gender roles, patriarchy, and division of unpaid work Changing family structures and urbanisation Women’s labour force participation GS Paper II (Polity / Governance / Social Justice) Labour laws and social security framework Welfare policies: Maternity Benefit Act, parental leave debate Role of state in promoting gender equality (DPSP, Fundamental Rights) Practice Question Q1.“Paternity leave is not merely a labour policy issue but a tool for gender equality.” Discuss.(250 Words) Static Background India currently lacks a statutory paternity leave law, though Central government employees receive ~15 days leave, and some private firms offer up to 3 months. Maternity Benefit Act, 1961 (amended 2017) provides 26 weeks paid leave, but applies mainly to the formal sector (~10% workforce). Global models like Sweden’s 480 days parental leave (with 90 days non-transferable for each parent) highlight progressive gender-equal frameworks. Constitutional And Legal Dimension Linked to Article 14 (equality) and Article 15(3) enabling special provisions for women and children, extending logically to shared parental responsibilities. Supports Article 21 (right to life and dignity), including child’s right to care, development, and parental presence during formative years. Absence of statutory paternity leave reflects legal asymmetry, reinforcing gender stereotypes in caregiving roles and labour participation. Governance And Administrative Dimension Implementation challenges arise due to labour market dualism, with 90% workforce in informal sector lacking access to statutory benefits. Small enterprise structure (90% firms employ 1–10 workers) limits feasibility of long leave policies due to operational and cost constraints. Labour Codes (2020) aim at formalisation, but transition remains gradual, delaying universal applicability of parental leave frameworks. Economic Dimension Women’s labour force participation remains low (~20–25%), partly due to disproportionate childcare burden and lack of support systems. Time Use Survey shows women spend ~10 times more hours on unpaid domestic work than men, affecting productivity and economic inclusion. Employers may perceive maternity benefits as a cost burden, leading to hiring discrimination and “motherhood penalty” in wages and promotions. Extending parental leave without structural reforms may increase compliance costs for MSMEs, affecting employment generation and firm viability. Social And Ethical Dimension Reinforces need to challenge patriarchal norms, where caregiving is seen as women’s responsibility and men as primary earners. Promotes shared parenting, improving child development outcomes and reducing gender bias in early socialisation. Addresses gender inequality in unpaid care work, enabling women greater participation in education, employment, and decision-making. However, risk exists that without behavioural change, leave may be underutilised or misused, failing to achieve intended social outcomes. Labour And Structural Dimension Informal sector dominance (~90% workforce) limits reach of any statutory leave policy, excluding the most vulnerable workers from benefits. Gig economy workers face absence of social security and leave entitlements, leading to labour force exit during childbirth or caregiving phases. Small firm size and fragmented labour markets create structural barriers to universal parental leave implementation. Comparative Perspective Scandinavian countries show that non-transferable paternity quotas increase male participation in childcare and improve female labour force participation. Evidence indicates positive correlation between paternity leave and gender equality, but contextual adaptation is necessary for India’s economic structure. Challenges And Gaps Absence of universal legal framework for paternity leave creates inequality across sectors and employment types. Risk of reinforcing discrimination against women, as employers may avoid hiring women due to perceived higher costs of parental benefits. Cultural resistance due to deep-rooted patriarchal norms limits acceptance and effective utilisation of paternity leave. Economic constraints in MSMEs and informal sector make implementation financially and operationally difficult. Monitoring issues: subtle discrimination (promotion delays, role downgrading) difficult to prove under existing legal frameworks. Way Forward Shift from maternity leave to gender-neutral parental leave, with non-transferable quota for fathers to ensure actual participation. Introduce phased implementation, starting with formal sector and gradually expanding through labour formalisation and social security frameworks. Provide government incentives/subsidies to MSMEs to offset cost burden and encourage compliance with parental leave policies. Promote behavioural change campaigns to address patriarchal norms and normalise shared caregiving responsibilities. Extend coverage to gig and informal workers through universal social security schemes and maternity benefit expansion models. Prelims Pointers Maternity Benefit Act, 1961 (amended 2017): 26 weeks leave Informal workforce: ~90% of total employment Central govt paternity leave: ~15 days Sweden parental leave: 480 days (90 days reserved for each parent) Time Use Survey: women do ~10× unpaid work

Mar 27, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Content Pink Bollworm, Cotton Crisis And Implications For India Gold Price Fall During Crisis – Changing Safe Haven Dynamics India Exploring Local Currency Trade For Oil Imports Living Will And End-of-Life Care In India UDAN Scheme Revamp – Regional Connectivity And Viability Concerns Punjab–Rajasthan Water Dispute – ₹1.44 Lakh Crore Claim WTO Dispute Settlement Crisis And India’s Position Pink Bollworm, Cotton Crisis And Implications For India Introduction The resurgence of pink bollworm (Pectinophora gossypiella) has triggered a cotton productivity crisis in India, especially in north-western states like Haryana, Punjab, and Rajasthan. Once controlled by Bt cotton (early 2000s), the pest has developed resistance since ~2010s, leading to sharp yield decline and farmer losses. Relevance   GS I (Geography / Society) Cropping patterns and regional shifts (cotton → paddy in NW India) Agrarian distress and rural livelihood patterns Impact on women labour and migration GS III (Agriculture / Economy / Environment) Agricultural productivity decline and pest resistance GM crops (Bt cotton) and technological limitations Climate-unsuitable cropping and groundwater depletion Agri-value chains and textile industry linkages Practice Question “The pink bollworm crisis highlights structural weaknesses in India’s cotton economy.” Analyse.(250 Words) Cotton In India – Key Facts India is among the largest cotton producers globally, but productivity remains low compared to countries like USA, China, Brazil. Cotton contributes to: Textile industry (~45 million jobs) Export earnings (~$12–15 billion annually) Livelihoods of ~6 million farmers Production declined from 36.07 million bales (2019–20) to 29.72 million bales (2024–25) (~14.84% fall). Pink Bollworm – Nature Of Crisis Pink bollworm is a major cotton pest that damages bolls internally, reducing yield and fibre quality. Bt cotton initially effective due to Bacillus thuringiensis toxin, but pest developed genetic resistance, reducing effectiveness. Yield impact: Earlier: 10–12 quintals/acre Current: ~3–4 quintals/acre in affected regions Continuous monocropping of Bt cotton and lack of refuge crops accelerated resistance development. Impact On Farmers Cost of cultivation: ~₹40,000 per acre vs returns ~₹25,000, resulting in losses ~₹15,000 per acre. Market price often ₹1,000–₹1,600 below MSP, due to quality issues and weak procurement. Farmers face triple burden: Pest infestation Rising input costs Price realisation failure Regional Evidence (Haryana Case) Cotton area declined from 0.72 million ha (2019–20) to 0.40 million ha (2024–25). District-level losses up to ₹17,500 per acre reported (CCSHAU study). Yield volatility: 714 kg/ha (2019) → 264 kg/ha (2022) → ~534 kg/ha (2024). Cropping Pattern Shift Farmers shifting from cotton to paddy, despite ecological unsuitability. Example: Sirsa district saw 55.18% increase in paddy area (2020–2024). This shift worsens groundwater depletion in already water-stressed regions of north-west India. Policy And Institutional Issues MSP exists but procurement is weak, forcing farmers into distress sales. Crop insurance (PMFBY) suffers from delayed or denied payouts, reducing effectiveness. Incentives like: ₹3,000/acre (desi cotton) ₹8,000/acre (Mera Pani-Meri Virasat) have low uptake due to market and seed constraints. Labour And Social Impact Cotton is labour-intensive, especially for manual picking, supporting rural employment. Decline in cotton reduces employment for women labourers, with seasonal income loss of ₹10,000–₹15,000. Shift to paddy increases reliance on migrant labour, displacing local workers and increasing distress migration. Structural Issues In Cotton Economy Overdependence on single technology (Bt cotton) without continuous innovation. Weak R&D ecosystem for developing next-generation pest-resistant varieties. Lack of value chain integration (ginning, textiles, exports) reduces farmer share in final price. Limited availability of desi cotton seeds despite better resilience. Broader Implications Threat to textile industry supply chain, increasing reliance on cotton imports. Undermines crop diversification and sustainability goals, especially in water-stressed regions. Reflects larger agrarian issue of price-cost imbalance and technological stagnation. Indicates limits of genetically modified crops without integrated pest management. Way Forward Develop next-generation pest-resistant cotton varieties and strengthen public sector seed research. Promote Integrated Pest Management (IPM) and enforce refuge policy to delay resistance development. Strengthen MSP procurement mechanisms and ensure better price realisation. Improve insurance delivery (PMFBY) with timely payouts and transparency. Promote diversified cropping systems with assured markets to reduce monoculture risks. Expand cotton value chain (processing, textiles) to enhance farmer income share. Prelims Pointers Pink bollworm: major cotton pest; affects bolls internally Bt cotton: introduced early 2000s using Bacillus thuringiensis Cotton production: 36.07 → 29.72 million bales Haryana cotton area: 0.72 → 0.40 million ha Scheme: Mera Pani-Meri Virasat (₹8,000/acre) Gold Price Fall During Crisis – Changing Safe Haven Dynamics Introduction Contrary to historical trends, gold prices fell sharply during the West Asian conflict (Feb 2026), declining from ~₹1.9 lakh to ~₹1.3 lakh per 10 grams in India. Traditionally a safe haven asset, gold usually rises during crises (e.g., 2008 crisis, COVID-19, Ukraine war 2022), but current behaviour reflects changing macro-financial dynamics. Relevance GS II (IR) Impact of global conflicts (West Asia) on financial markets Role of US dollar dominance in global economy GS Paper III (Economy) Monetary policy: interest rates, inflation, bond markets Safe haven assets (gold, dollar, US Treasuries) External sector dynamics and capital flows Commodity price behaviour under crisis Practice Question Why did gold fail to act as a safe haven during recent global crises? Analyse.(250 Words) How Gold Typically Behaves In Crises ? Gold acts as a store of value when uncertainty rises, especially when financial markets, currencies, or institutions are unstable. It becomes attractive when interest rates fall, as gold does not yield returns, reducing its opportunity cost relative to bonds. A weak US dollar boosts gold demand globally, as gold becomes cheaper for non-dollar buyers, increasing prices. What Changed In Current Crisis ? The West Asian conflict triggered a sharp rise in crude oil prices (> $120/barrel), creating inflationary pressures globally. Markets now expect interest rates to remain higher for longer, reversing earlier expectations of rate cuts by central banks. Higher expected interest rates increase returns on US Treasury bonds, making gold (a non-yielding asset) less attractive. Role Of Dollar And Interest Rates Rising interest rate expectations led to capital inflows into US bonds, strengthening the US dollar. A stronger dollar makes gold more expensive globally, reducing demand and putting downward pressure on prices. Thus, key drivers of gold rallies (low rates + weak dollar) moved in the opposite direction simultaneously. Liquidity And Market Dynamics Gold had already reached record highs (~₹1.8–1.9 lakh per 10 grams; >$5,000/ounce globally) before the conflict, creating scope for correction. Falling prices triggered automatic sell orders (stop-loss), causing a chain reaction of selling and accelerating price decline. Investors facing losses in equities sold gold to book profits and meet liquidity needs, reinforcing downward pressure. Shift In Safe Haven Preference In the short run, the US dollar has re-emerged as the primary safe haven, especially during inflation-driven crises. Oil price rise increases global demand for dollars (since oil is dollar-denominated), further strengthening the currency. Despite diversification trends (dollar share in reserves: ~71% → <60%), the dollar remains dominant in global trade and reserves. Why Gold Still Retains Importance ? Central banks continue to accumulate gold reserves, reflecting long-term confidence as a sanction-proof asset. After Russia asset freeze (2022), countries increased gold holdings as it is immune to financial sanctions. Gold ETF inflows in India remained positive for 10 consecutive months, indicating sustained investment demand. Indian Context Gold imports fell 38% month-on-month (Feb 2026) but remained ~80% higher year-on-year, indicating underlying demand strength. Physical jewellery demand softened due to high prices, but investment demand via ETFs remained resilient. Gold continues to play a key role in household savings, inflation hedge, and cultural asset in India. Key Economic Insight Current episode highlights that gold behaves differently depending on type of crisis: Financial crisis → gold rises Inflation + high interest rates → gold may fall Indicates shift from “uncertainty-driven demand” to “interest rate-driven valuation” in global financial markets. What Lies Ahead ? If oil prices stabilise, inflation concerns may ease, leading to rate cuts → favourable for gold. If conflict intensifies and inflation persists, stagflation scenario may emerge, which historically supports gold prices. Long-term outlook remains bullish, with corrections seen as part of cyclical market adjustments. Prelims Pointers Gold priced in US dollars globally Relationship: Interest rates ↑ → Gold ↓ Dollar ↑ → Gold ↓ Safe haven assets: Gold, US dollar, US Treasury bonds Stagflation: High inflation + low growth India Exploring Local Currency Trade For Oil Imports Introduction India is exploring local currency trade with GCC countries to reduce dependence on the US dollar for oil imports, which constitute nearly 80% of total crude imports. The move is driven by surging oil prices ($69 → $123/barrel) and rupee depreciation (₹91.3 → ₹94.1/$), increasing India’s import burden. Relevance GS II (IR) India–GCC relations and energy diplomacy De-dollarisation and global financial geopolitics Strategic balancing between US and emerging blocs GS Paper III (Economy) Current Account Deficit (CAD) and exchange rate External sector vulnerability and forex management Rupee internationalisation Trade settlement mechanisms and currency risks Practice Question Analyse the implications of local currency trade for India’s energy security and external stability.(250 Words) Key Context And Data GCC countries account for ~49% of India’s oil imports, while Russia contributes ~30.4% (Apr 2025–Jan 2026). India’s crude basket price rose to $123.15/barrel, significantly increasing import bills and widening current account deficit pressures. Each currency conversion costs ~1–2% per transaction, leading to cumulative costs of ~5–6% in multi-stage conversions. Why India Is Moving Towards Local Currency Trade ? Rupee depreciation increases cost of dollar-denominated imports, making oil more expensive and worsening inflation and fiscal pressures. High oil prices amplify import costs, creating a double shock: price effect + exchange rate effect. Local currency trade reduces transaction costs, exchange rate risks, and dependency on dollar liquidity. Economic Implications Potential savings of 5–6% on high-value oil transactions can significantly reduce India’s import bill and fiscal stress. Helps stabilise current account deficit (CAD) by lowering outflow of foreign exchange reserves. Reduces exposure to currency volatility, improving predictability in trade payments. Strategic And Geopolitical Implications Indicates gradual move towards de-dollarisation in trade, aligning with global trends of currency diversification. Strengthens economic ties with GCC countries, which are India’s key energy partners. However, may attract US pressure, as the US has historically opposed alternatives to the dollar in global trade. Existing Precedents India already uses local currencies and dirham-based payments for Russian oil imports. Similar arrangements have been explored with countries like UAE (rupee-dirham trade mechanism). Benefits Of Local Currency Mechanism Reduces currency conversion costs (1–2% per stage), especially in multi-currency transactions. Enhances trade settlement efficiency and speed, avoiding multiple intermediary conversions. Promotes internationalisation of the rupee and strengthens India’s financial sovereignty. Challenges And Risks Limited acceptance of rupee internationally, especially among oil-exporting nations with dollar-linked economies. Risk of geopolitical backlash, particularly from the US, including potential tariff or trade pressures. Currency volatility and lack of deep financial markets for rupee settlement may limit scalability. GCC economies are heavily dollar-pegged, making transition to alternative currencies complex. Way Forward Develop bilateral currency swap agreements and settlement mechanisms with GCC countries. Strengthen rupee internationalisation through trade invoicing, financial markets, and reserve currency usage. Build robust payment infrastructure (like UPI cross-border, digital currency frameworks) for seamless transactions. Maintain a balanced approach, ensuring diversification without disrupting strategic ties with the US. Prelims Pointers India imports ~85% of crude oil needs GCC share: ~49%; Russia: ~30.4% Oil priced in US dollars globally Indian crude basket: $123.15/barrel (2026) Currency conversion cost: ~1–2% per stage Living Will And End-of-Life Care In India  Introduction A living will (advance directive) is a legal document specifying an individual’s preferences regarding life-sustaining treatment in terminal or irreversible conditions, ensuring dignity in end-of-life care. Recognised by the Supreme Court in Common Cause vs Union of India (2018), it upholds patient autonomy and right to die with dignity under Article 21. Relevance   GS Paper I (Society) Changing attitudes towards death, dignity, and autonomy Family structures and decision-making GS Paper II (Polity / Governance) Article 21: Right to life with dignity Supreme Court judgments (Common Cause case) Healthcare governance and palliative care policy GS Paper III (Social Sector) Healthcare infrastructure and palliative care systems Cost of healthcare and end-of-life expenditure Practice Question Discuss the ethical and legal dimensions of living wills in India.(250 Words) What Is A Living Will ? It allows individuals to decide in advance whether to accept or refuse life-support interventions such as ventilators, CPR, artificial feeding, or ICU care in irreversible conditions. Applies only when a person is terminally ill or in irreversible states (e.g., persistent vegetative state, metastatic cancer), not for routine or curable illnesses. Requires signature of the individual, two witnesses, and attestation by a notary/gazetted officer, with recent simplification removing magistrate requirement. Why It Is Important ? Prevents unnecessary prolongation of suffering, especially in cases with no hope of recovery. Reduces emotional burden on families, who otherwise face difficult decisions amid conflict, guilt, and uncertainty. Ensures doctors respect patient preferences, rather than defaulting to aggressive life-prolonging treatments. Studies show it does not affect survival, but reduces unnecessary interventions and healthcare costs. Current Reality In India Most end-of-life decisions are family-driven or doctor-driven, often leading to continued ICU care even in terminal cases. Lack of awareness leads to patients spending final days on life support, disconnected from family, with poor quality of life. Palliative care access remains limited, despite guidelines by Indian Association of Palliative Care (IAPC) and Indian Society of Critical Care Medicine (ISCCM). Ethical And Social Issues Reflects tension between sanctity of life vs quality of life in medical ethics. Challenges patriarchal and family-centric decision-making, shifting focus to individual autonomy. Cultural reluctance to discuss death leads to lack of preparedness and planning. Risk of misuse or misunderstanding if clear guidelines and safeguards are not followed. Key Judicial Developments Common Cause (2018): Legalised passive euthanasia and recognised living wills. Recent SC rulings (e.g., Harish Rana case 2026) clarified that withdrawal of artificial feeding/medical support can be allowed under medical supervision. Simplified procedure: removed requirement of judicial magistrate approval, making implementation easier. Practical Aspects Living will can specify preferences such as: No ventilator support No artificial feeding No CPR Preference for palliative/comfort care It is flexible and revisable, allowing individuals to update preferences over time. Requires prior discussion with family members and treating doctors to avoid future disputes. Challenges Low awareness and social taboo around death planning. Limited integration into hospital protocols and medical practice. Absence of strong palliative care infrastructure, especially in rural India. Fear among doctors of legal liability and ethical dilemmas. Way Forward Increase public awareness campaigns on living wills and end-of-life planning. Integrate advance directives into digital health records (Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission). Strengthen palliative care services and include them in primary healthcare. Provide legal clarity and standardised templates for easy adoption. Train healthcare professionals in end-of-life communication and ethical decision-making. Prelims Pointers Living will = Advance directive Recognised in 2018 SC judgment (Common Cause case) Applies only to terminal/irreversible conditions Requires 2 witnesses + notary/gazetted officer Linked to Article 21 (right to dignity) UDAN Scheme Revamp – Regional Connectivity And Viability Concerns Introduction The government has revamped the UDAN (Ude Desh ka Aam Nagrik) scheme with an outlay of ₹28,840 crore, marking a ~6-fold increase from the earlier ₹4,500 crore allocation (2017). The reform aims to address low route viability and high discontinuation rates, shifting focus from infrastructure creation to sustained operational support. Relevance GS II (Governance) Public policy design and subsidy frameworks Role of government in regional development Centre–state coordination in infrastructure GS III (Economy / Infrastructure) Aviation sector development Viability Gap Funding (VGF) Infrastructure financing and regional growth Tourism and logistics connectivity Practice Question Critically evaluate the performance of UDAN scheme and recent reforms.(250 Words) Key Changes In UDAN Revamp Subsidy period extended from 3 years to 5 years for regional routes to improve long-term sustainability. Funding mechanism shifted from RCS levy (airfare-based) to direct budgetary support (exchequer-funded), reducing burden on passengers. ₹10,043 crore allocated specifically for Viability Gap Funding (VGF) to airlines over 10 years. Performance Of Earlier UDAN Scheme Out of 663 routes launched (since 2017), 327 routes discontinued (~49%), indicating poor sustainability. Only 7–10% of routes remained viable after subsidy withdrawal (CAG findings). Of 95 revived airports, 15 became non-operational, highlighting underutilisation of infrastructure. Infrastructure And Expansion Plans 100 airports to be redeveloped from unused airstrips with ₹12,159 crore outlay over 8 years. Support for operations and maintenance (O&M): ₹3.06 crore per airport ₹90 lakh per heliport/water aerodrome Total ₹2,577 crore for ~441 aerodromes Development of 200 helipads at ₹15 crore each (total ₹3,661 crore) to improve last-mile connectivity in remote areas. Operational Mechanism Airlines bid for routes under UDAN; selected airlines receive VGF subsidy. In return, airlines must cap fares at ₹2,500 per hour of flight for 50% of seats, ensuring affordability. Key Issues Highlighted Commercial unviability of Tier-2 and Tier-3 routes due to low passenger demand and high operational costs. Over-reliance on short-term subsidies (earlier 3 years) failed to create self-sustaining routes. Infrastructure created without adequate traffic demand assessment led to idle airports. Economic Implications Higher subsidy burden shifts cost to government finances, increasing fiscal expenditure. However, improved connectivity can boost regional economies, tourism, trade, and employment generation. Reduces regional imbalance in aviation access, aligning with inclusive growth objectives. Governance And Policy Shift Transition from infrastructure-centric approach → viability-centric approach. Recognition that regional aviation requires long-term state support, not short-term market correction. Direct exchequer funding improves transparency and predictability compared to indirect levy mechanism. Strategic Importance Enhances connectivity to remote, hilly, and underserved regions, improving national integration. Supports multi-modal connectivity vision under PM Gati Shakti. Boosts defence and emergency access in border and strategic areas via helipads and small airports. Challenges Risk of continued dependency on subsidies, without achieving long-term route viability. Potential inefficiencies in route selection and demand forecasting. Limited airline participation due to thin profit margins in regional aviation. High operational costs (fuel, maintenance) may still deter sustainability despite extended subsidies. Way Forward Improve route selection using data-driven demand forecasting to ensure viability. Encourage smaller aircraft and regional carriers suited for low-demand routes. Integrate UDAN with tourism circuits, cargo logistics, and regional economic planning. Strengthen state government participation and incentives for last-mile connectivity. Gradually move towards hybrid funding models combining public support and private viability. Prelims Pointers UDAN launched: 2017 Fare cap: ₹2,500 per hour (50% seats) Revamp outlay: ₹28,840 crore Routes launched: 663; ~327 discontinued Subsidy: Viability Gap Funding (VGF) Punjab–Rajasthan Water Dispute – ₹1.44 Lakh Crore Claim Introduction Punjab CM has demanded ₹1.44 lakh crore from Rajasthan for use of ~18,000 cusecs water since 1960, reviving a long-standing dispute over Ravi-Beas river waters. Issue combines colonial-era agreements, post-Independence allocations, and present water scarcity, making it a complex inter-state dispute. Relevance GS I (Geography) River systems (Ravi–Beas) and water distribution Water scarcity and regional imbalances GS II (Polity / Governance) Inter-state water disputes (Article 131) Federalism and river water sharing Role of tribunals and Supreme Court Practice Question Analyse the legal and constitutional dimensions of inter-state water disputes in India.(250 Words) Historical Background 1920s Agreement (Bikaner–Punjab): Maharaja Ganga Singh secured water from Sutlej (Gang Canal). Rajasthan (Bikaner) paid royalty/usage charges linked to irrigated land. Payments continued till ~1960, after which the system was discontinued. Post-Independence Shift Indus Waters Treaty (1960): India got full control over Ravi, Beas, Sutlej (Eastern rivers). Water reallocation became an internal matter, not commercial. Development of Harike Barrage + Rajasthan Canal (Indira Gandhi Canal) enabled large-scale diversion to Rajasthan. Royalty-based payment system ended; water treated as inter-state allocation. 1981 Water Sharing Agreement Tripartite agreement (Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan) fixed total availability at 17.17 MAF. Allocation: Rajasthan: 8.6 MAF (largest share) Punjab & Haryana shared remaining Rajasthan’s entitlement formalised despite being a non-riparian state. Origin, Course And Features Beas River originates from Beas Kund near Rohtang Pass (Himachal Pradesh, ~4,000 m) and flows through Himachal Pradesh and Punjab, joining Sutlej at Harike Barrage. Ravi River originates in Chamba (Himachal Pradesh) near Rohtang region, flows through Punjab, and enters Pakistan to join Chenab. Both are part of the Indus River System and classified as Eastern Rivers under Indus Waters Treaty (1960), giving India full usage rights. Legal Developments Punjab Termination of Agreements Act (2004) attempted to scrap water-sharing agreements. However, it protected “existing utilisation”, so Rajasthan’s supply continued. Supreme Court (2016) ruled that a state cannot unilaterally terminate inter-state agreements, restoring legal validity of earlier arrangements. Punjab’s Current Argument Based on riparian principle: States through which rivers flow should have primary rights over water. Rajasthan is a non-riparian state (not in Ravi-Beas basin), yet has largest share. Punjab argues that historical diversion has imposed economic and ecological cost, now quantified as ₹1.44 lakh crore. Changing Ground Realities Water availability assumptions (“surplus waters”) used in 1981 have weakened due to: Climate variability Increased demand Over-extraction Punjab groundwater extraction: 156.36% of annual recharge (highest in India) vs national average ~60.63%. Canal irrigation in Punjab increased from ~26.5% (2022) to ~78% (2025), indicating rising internal demand. Rajasthan’s Position Relies on Indira Gandhi Canal system for irrigation in Thar desert region. Water supports agriculture, livelihoods, and desert development, making reallocation politically and economically sensitive. Key Issues Conflict between riparian rights vs national redistribution for regional equity. Historical allocations remain fixed despite changing hydrological realities. Lack of updated basin-level water assessment and adaptive allocation mechanism. Political dimension: water disputes linked to federal tensions and regional identity. Why Issue Has Resurfaced Now ? Severe groundwater depletion in Punjab and sustainability concerns. Increasing focus on water security and river basin management at national level. Quantifying claim (₹1.44 lakh crore) converts political grievance into negotiation leverage. Possible Legal And Institutional Routes Punjab may approach Supreme Court (Article 131 – inter-state disputes). Issue can be revisited through Ravi-Beas Tribunal (pending for decades). Any resolution requires Centre-mediated negotiation among states. Challenges Revisiting allocations may trigger chain reaction of inter-state disputes across India. Balancing equity (desert irrigation) vs rights (riparian states) is politically sensitive. Lack of consensus on actual water availability (MAF estimates outdated). Way Forward Conduct fresh basin-level hydrological assessment based on current data. Move towards dynamic allocation mechanisms, not fixed historical quotas. Strengthen river basin authorities for integrated water management. Promote water-use efficiency (micro-irrigation, crop diversification) in both states. Encourage cooperative federalism through negotiated settlements rather than litigation. Prelims Pointers Indus Waters Treaty (1960): Eastern rivers to India Ravi-Beas allocation (1981): Total 17.17 MAF Rajasthan share: 8.6 MAF Punjab groundwater extraction: 156.36% Article 131: SC jurisdiction in inter-state disputes WTO Dispute Settlement Crisis And India’s Position Introduction India has called for restoring a fully functional WTO dispute settlement system, highlighting paralysis since 2019 due to US blocking Appellate Body appointments. The issue was raised at the 14th WTO Ministerial Conference (MC14), Cameroon (2026), reflecting a deep crisis in global trade governance. Relevance   GS II (IR) WTO crisis and multilateralism India as voice of Global South Trade diplomacy and negotiations GS III (Economy) Global trade governance Dispute settlement mechanism Digital trade and e-commerce issues Impact on developing economies Practice Question Discuss the implications of WTO dispute settlement crisis on global trade governance.(250 Words) Background Of The Crisis WTO’s dispute settlement system (DSS) was a two-tier mechanism: Panel stage Appellate Body (final authority) Since December 2019, the Appellate Body is non-functional due to insufficient judges (<3 required). Trigger: US opposition, citing concerns over judicial overreach and delays. India’s Core Position Calls for automatic and binding dispute settlement restoration, ensuring predictability and rule-based trade order. Opposes “dysfunctional system” depriving members of effective redressal. Advocates reforms that preserve core WTO principles: Non-discrimination Consensus-based decision-making Equity and inclusiveness Key Reform Concerns Developed countries pushing for plurilateral agreements (outside consensus), risking fragmentation of WTO. India supports multilateral, consensus-driven approach, resisting dilution of developing country interests. Debate over moratorium on customs duties on e-commerce: In place since 1998 Renewed every 2 years India’s Stand On E-Commerce Moratorium India (with South Africa, Indonesia) seeks reconsideration/ending of moratorium. Argument: Loss of tariff revenue Constraint on policy space for digital industrialisation UNCTAD estimate: Developing countries may lose ~$10 billion annually in tariff revenue. By 2025, digital services projected to form ~56% of global services exports, amplifying revenue loss concerns. Economic Implications Weak dispute system reduces trust in global trade rules, increasing unilateralism. Benefits powerful economies, while developing countries lose enforcement capability. Digital trade rules without tariffs may deepen digital divide and limit domestic industry growth. Strategic Dimensions Crisis reflects shift from multilateralism → power-based trade order. India positioning itself as voice of Global South, advocating fair rules. Aligns with broader push for reformed multilateral institutions (WTO, IMF, World Bank). Challenges US resistance remains a major obstacle to restoring Appellate Body. Divergence between developed vs developing countries on digital trade, subsidies, and transparency. Rise of regional trade agreements (RTAs) reducing WTO centrality. Way Forward Restore Appellate Body with reformed procedures addressing US concerns (timelines, mandate clarity). Strengthen consensus-based multilateralism, avoiding fragmentation via plurilaterals. Revisit e-commerce moratorium with balanced approach ensuring revenue + innovation. Enhance capacity of developing countries in dispute settlement and digital trade negotiations. Prelims Pointers WTO Appellate Body non-functional since 2019 MC14 held in Cameroon (2026) E-commerce moratorium: since 1998 DSS requires minimum 3 judges India + South Africa oppose continuation of moratorium