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Apr 2, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

Content Census 2027 – Digital Demographic Transformation Connectivity and Development in North East Region (NER) – Act East Catalyst Census 2027 – Digital Demographic Transformation Why in News ? Census 2027 Phase-I (Houselisting & Housing Census) launched on 1 April 2026, initiating world’s largest demographic exercise with first-ever digital data capture. Introduction of Self-Enumeration facility; ~55,000 households participated on Day 1, signalling early digital adoption. High-level participation (President, PM, HM) aimed at enhancing citizen engagement and trust in digital governance processes. Relevance GS I (Society): Population dynamics, migration, caste, gender ratio, urbanisation. GS II (Polity & Governance): Evidence-based policymaking, welfare targeting, delimitation, fiscal federalism. Practice Question Q1.“Digital Census 2027 represents a shift from periodic enumeration to real-time governance infrastructure.”Critically examine. (15M) Static Background Census is a decennial exercise conducted under the Census Act, 1948 by Registrar General of India (Ministry of Home Affairs). First Census: 1872 (non-synchronous); first complete synchronous Census in 1881. Last Census conducted in 2011; 2021 Census deferred due to COVID-19 disruptions. Conducted in two phases: Houselisting & Housing Census (HLO) Population Enumeration (PE) Provides basis for delimitation, fiscal transfers, welfare targeting, and socio-economic planning. Governance & Administrative Significance Enables granular household-level data for targeted delivery of schemes like PMAY, SBM, Jal Jeevan Mission. Digital enumeration reduces time lag in data processing, improving real-time governance capabilities. Strengthens cooperative federalism through disaggregated state-level demographic planning inputs. Enhances transparency and accountability via standardized digital data collection mechanisms. Economic Implications Provides baseline for labour force estimates, dependency ratios, and consumption patterns. Critical for urban planning, infrastructure allocation, and industrial location strategies. Influences Finance Commission transfers through population and demographic indicators. Supports private sector decisions via market size estimation and demographic dividend mapping. Social Dimensions Captures data on literacy, gender ratio, migration, caste, and vulnerable sections for inclusive policy design. Facilitates targeted interventions for SC/ST, minorities, elderly, urban poor, and migrants. Helps identify regional disparities in housing, sanitation, and access to basic services. Digital participation may highlight social inequalities in access to technology and internet penetration. Technology & Data Governance First Census using end-to-end digital tools, mobile applications, and self-enumeration portals. Ensures data security via encryption and multi-factor authentication systems. Opens scope for AI-driven analytics and predictive governance frameworks. Raises concerns on data privacy, consent architecture, and cybersecurity vulnerabilities. Data & Facts India hosts ~17.8% of global population, making Census 2027 the largest statistical exercise globally. Census 2011 covered 121 crore people and ~24 crore households; scale significantly expanded in 2027. 33 questions notified for HLO phase capturing housing conditions, amenities, and asset ownership. Data protected under Section 15, Census Act—strict confidentiality, not admissible as legal evidence. Challenges Digital divide: Rural, elderly, and marginalized groups face barriers in self-enumeration access. Data privacy concerns: Lack of fully operationalized data protection ecosystem raises trust issues. Time lag impact: 15+ year gap since last Census affects reliability of planning indicators. Capacity constraints: Enumerator training and digital readiness uneven across regions. Accuracy risks: Self-reported digital entries may introduce inconsistencies and reporting bias. Way Forward Inclusive Digital Participation : Expand digital literacy and assisted enumeration centres to bridge rural–urban and socio-economic gaps. Strengthening Data Protection Framework : Align Census processes with Digital Personal Data Protection architecture ensuring privacy, consent, and accountability. Capacity Building & Training : Intensive training of enumerators in digital tools, cybersecurity awareness, and verification protocols. Data Integration for Governance : Integrate Census outputs with administrative databases cautiously to enhance targeting and reduce duplication. Leveraging Advanced Analytics : Use AI, GIS mapping, and big data tools for predictive planning and efficient resource allocation. Prelims Pointers Census conducted under Census Act, 1948; not a constitutional mandate. Conducted by Registrar General & Census Commissioner of India. Data is confidential and not admissible in courts. Two phases: HLO and Population Enumeration. Census 2027: first digital census with self-enumeration feature. Connectivity and Development in North East Region (NER) – Act East Catalyst Why in News ? Government highlighted infrastructure expansion in NER under Act East Policy, showing tangible gains in connectivity, trade integration, and regional development. Data reveals ₹6.11 lakh crore expenditure (2014–25) under 10% Gross Budgetary Support (GBS) mechanism. Focus on multi-modal connectivity + sustainability lens in ecologically sensitive North East region. Relevance GS II (Governance): Regional development, cooperative federalism, institutional mechanisms (MDoNER, NEC). GS III (Economy): Infrastructure-led growth, logistics efficiency, trade corridors. Practice Question Q1.“Connectivity is the primary driver of economic transformation in the North East Region.” Analyse in the context of Act East Policy. (15M) Static Background North Eastern Region includes 8 states, strategically located between South Asia and Southeast Asia. Act East Policy (2014) upgraded from Look East Policy; aims at economic integration with Indo-Pacific. NER is central to India’s land bridge to ASEAN, sharing borders with China, Myanmar, Bangladesh, Bhutan. Ministry of Development of North Eastern Region (MDoNER) and North Eastern Council (NEC) coordinate development. Governance & Administrative Dimension Whole-of-Government approach via mandatory 10% GBS ensures dedicated funding across ministries. Promotes cooperative federalism with state-specific infrastructure and socio-economic planning. Focus on participatory governance—community involvement in infrastructure and sustainability projects. Institutional mechanisms like NEC and DoNER Ministry ensure coordinated regional development. Connectivity as Growth Multiplier Road Connectivity National Highways expanded from 10,905 km (2014) → 16,207 km (2025), improving intra- and inter-state mobility. 46,296 km rural roads (PMGSY) constructed, enhancing last-mile connectivity and rural integration. Railway Connectivity Railway allocation increased from ₹2,122 crore/year (2009–14) → ₹10,440 crore (2025-26). Strategic lines (Jiribam–Imphal, Agartala–Akhaura) enhance border trade and defence logistics. Air Connectivity UDAN Scheme operationalised 90 routes; airports like Pasighat, Tezu, Pakyong integrated into national network. Enhances tourism, emergency services, and business mobility in remote terrains. Telecom Connectivity 6355 Gram Panchayats broadband-enabled; 3718 mobile towers covering 5366 villages. Strengthens Digital India penetration, enabling e-governance and digital economy participation. Inland Waterways National Waterways increased from 1 to 20, with ₹1,040 crore investment. Facilitates low-cost, sustainable logistics and cross-border trade (especially via Brahmaputra-Barak systems). Power Connectivity Hydropower projects (e.g., Subansiri 2000 MW, Dibang 2880 MW) boost energy security and industrial growth. Transmission strengthening projects (~₹15,800+ crore) improve grid reliability and regional integration. Economic Dimension Connectivity reduces logistics cost, integrating NER into national and global value chains. Boosts border trade, export growth, and logistics hubs aligned with ASEAN markets. Enhances tourism, agro-processing, and MSME growth, leveraging region’s natural resources. Promotes employment generation through infrastructure-led multiplier effects. Social Dimension Improved connectivity enhances access to healthcare, education, and markets in remote tribal regions. Reduces regional disparities and isolation, fostering national integration. Supports inclusive growth by linking marginalized communities to development processes. Strengthens people-to-people connectivity with Southeast Asia, enhancing cultural exchanges. Environmental & Sustainability Dimension NER is ecologically fragile (Eastern Himalayas, biodiversity hotspot) requiring balanced development. Adoption of sustainability lens—afforestation, watershed management, eco-restoration initiatives. Focus on climate-resilient infrastructure under NEC’s Focused Development Component (FDC). Risk of hydropower-induced ecological disruption and displacement remains critical concern. Security & Strategic Dimension Enhanced connectivity improves border infrastructure and defence mobility along China and Myanmar borders. Counters insurgency and isolation-driven instability by integrating remote areas. Strengthens India’s role in Indo-Pacific geopolitics and ASEAN engagement. Facilitates cross-border trade routes, reducing illegal trade and enhancing surveillance. Data & Facts ₹6.11 lakh crore expenditure vs ₹6.02 lakh crore allocation (2014–25) under 10% GBS. NH length increased by ~48% in a decade. Inland waterways increased 20-fold (1 → 20). Telecom expansion: 6355 GPs broadband-ready, 3718 towers installed. Challenges Difficult terrain and high project costs delay infrastructure completion. Ecological fragility—deforestation, landslides, biodiversity loss due to infrastructure expansion. Insurgency and law & order issues in some pockets hinder project execution. Limited private investment due to market size and connectivity gaps. Cross-border projects face geopolitical sensitivities and coordination challenges. Way Forward Integrated Multi-Modal Connectivity : Develop seamless road–rail–waterways–air networks to maximise logistics efficiency and regional integration. Sustainable Infrastructure Development: Mandate environmental impact assessments and climate-resilient designs for all major projects. Boosting Regional Economy : Establish border trade hubs, SEZs, and logistics parks aligned with ASEAN supply chains. Strengthening Institutional Capacity : Enhance coordination between MDoNER, NEC, and state governments for timely project implementation. Promoting Inclusive Growth : Ensure community participation, livelihood support, and rehabilitation frameworks in infrastructure projects. Prelims Pointers Act East Policy launched in 2014, replacing Look East Policy. 10% GBS mechanism mandates ministries to allocate funds for NER development. UDAN is a market-driven scheme for regional air connectivity. NER has 20 National Waterways (significant recent expansion).  

Apr 2, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Content Indians give to save each other from free fall A West Asia security rethink amid America’s role Indians give to save each other from free fall Why in News ? Study “How India Gives” reveals household-level philanthropy (~$6 billion annually) despite low incomes; challenges notion of elite-driven charity. Highlights emergence of “informal welfare system” driven by social networks amid gaps in formal state provisioning. Relevance GS I (Society): Social capital, community networks, caste/kinship-based support systems. GS II (Governance): Welfare state, Directive Principles, gaps in service delivery. GS III (Economy): Informal economy, savings, credit systems, inequality. Practice Question Q1.“Informal welfare systems in India act as both safety nets and signals of state failure.”Critically analyse. (15M) Static Background Philanthropy in India rooted in civilisational ethos—daan, seva, zakat, langar traditions across religions. Welfare state envisaged under Directive Principles (Articles 38, 39, 41, 47) ensuring social and economic justice. India’s welfare architecture includes PDS, MGNREGA, DBT, NFSA, but gaps persist in coverage and quality. Informal institutions: chit funds, kinship networks, caste/community associations act as parallel support systems. Core Insight: Informal Welfare Provision Giving in India is not discretionary charity but survival-driven reciprocity embedded in social structures. Functions as a decentralised safety net, compensating for inadequacies in formal welfare delivery. Based on mutual interdependence—individual well-being tied to community survival. Governance & Administrative Dimension Reflects state capacity gaps in universal welfare provisioning (health, education, social security). Informal systems reduce pressure on state but mask structural governance failures. Weak last-mile delivery, leakages, and exclusion errors necessitate community-level support. Indicates need for stronger institutional welfare architecture and accountability mechanisms. Economic Dimension Despite low incomes (90% earning < ₹10,000/month), significant resource redistribution occurs informally. Poor contribute higher proportion of income (regressive burden) compared to wealthy donors. Informal credit systems (chit funds, borrowing networks) enable liquidity during shocks. Limits capital accumulation and savings, potentially perpetuating poverty cycles. Social Dimension Rooted in kinship, caste, neighbourhood, and occupational networks ensuring social cohesion. Promotes trust, reciprocity, and social capital formation (Robert Putnam framework). Acts as shock absorber during crises—health emergencies, migration, unemployment. However, may reinforce exclusionary networks (caste/community-based access). Ethical Dimension Reflects Indian moral philosophy—dharma and duty over rights-based entitlement. Giving driven by empathy and shared vulnerability, not surplus wealth. Raises ethical concern: should survival depend on charity rather than rights? Tension between compassion-driven society vs rights-based welfare state. Data & Evidence ~$6 billion annual giving by households (study estimate). ~90% Indians earn < ₹10,000/month, yet widespread participation in giving. Only ~1% population pays income tax, indicating limited direct fiscal capacity. High reliance on indirect taxes → regressive burden on poor. Challenges / Criticisms Substitution effect: Informal welfare may reduce urgency for systemic state reforms. Inequality reinforcement: Access depends on social networks, excluding marginalized groups. Lack of scalability and predictability compared to formal welfare systems. Debt cycles: Informal borrowing to support others may deepen financial vulnerability. Scholars argue this reflects “everyday state failure” rather than cultural virtue alone. Way Forward Strengthening Formal Welfare State : Expand universal basic services (health, education, social security) to reduce dependence on informal support. Reducing Regressive Tax Burden : Rationalise indirect taxes and widen direct tax base to ensure equitable fiscal capacity. Leveraging Community Networks : Integrate self-help groups, cooperatives, and community institutions into formal welfare delivery. Financial Inclusion & Social Security : Promote micro-insurance, pension schemes, and accessible credit systems to reduce vulnerability. Ethical Governance Approach : Shift from charity-based survival → rights-based dignity framework aligned with constitutional values. Prelims Pointers Directive Principles (Art 38, 39, 41, 47) relate to welfare state. Informal institutions include chit funds, SHGs, kinship networks. India’s tax system has high indirect tax component (regressive nature). A West Asia security rethink amid America’s role Why in News ? Ongoing U.S.–Israel conflict with Iran escalates into second month, triggering Strait of Hormuz disruption and regional insecurity. Gulf countries reconsider dependence on U.S. security umbrella, exploring regional and Islamic security frameworks. Implications for global energy markets, India’s energy security, and Indo-Pacific geopolitics. Relevance GS II (International Relations): West Asia geopolitics, U.S. role, India’s foreign policy. GS III (Economy): Energy security, oil price volatility, trade disruptions. GS III (Internal Security): Maritime security, chokepoints, regional instability. Practice Question Q1.“Declining U.S. dominance is reshaping West Asia’s security architecture.”Analyse its implications for regional stability and India. (15M) Static Background West Asia’s security architecture historically shaped by U.S. hegemony post-World War II, ensuring oil flow stability. Strait of Hormuz: Strategic chokepoint carrying ~20% global oil and ~25% LNG trade. Long-standing Iran–U.S.–Israel tensions, rooted in nuclear issue, regime security, and regional influence. Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states rely on external security guarantees (primarily U.S.). Changing Nature of Conflict Iran adopts “regional escalation doctrine”—targeting Gulf states and global shipping in retaliation. Israel demonstrates long-range air dominance, expanding conflict geography (Red Sea → Persian Gulf). War shifts from bilateral confrontation → regional systemic crisis affecting multiple actors. Governance & Strategic Dimension Declining U.S. Security Credibility U.S. unable to fully prevent attacks on Gulf infrastructure (2019, 2026), eroding trust. Increasing burden-sharing demands on Gulf states reflect strategic retrenchment. Energy self-sufficiency reduces U.S. incentive to act as sole security guarantor. Emergence of Regional Security Thinking Gulf states exploring autonomous and collective security mechanisms beyond U.S. dependence. Attempts to revive intra-Gulf cooperation (Saudi–Qatar rapprochement) despite past conflicts. China-mediated Iran–Saudi détente (2023) shows diversification of security partnerships. Role of Key Actors Iran Uses asymmetric warfare (drones, proxies, maritime disruption) to offset conventional disadvantages. Strategy: Raise cost of war globally (energy shock) → deter regime-change attempts. Israel Pursues pre-emptive, extra-territorial strikes, reshaping deterrence norms. Creates anxiety among Gulf states despite shared anti-Iran stance. Pakistan Attempts strategic re-entry into West Asia via mediation and Islamic identity politics. Leverages position as only nuclear Muslim-majority country and ties with U.S. leadership. Risks friction with India due to geopolitical signalling and alignment shifts. Gulf States (GCC) Moving toward strategic hedging—balancing U.S., China, regional actors. Seeking security autonomy + economic diversification (Vision 2030 models). Economic Dimension Strait of Hormuz disruption causes global oil price volatility and supply shocks. Increased shipping insurance and freight costs, affecting global trade (including India). Gulf economies face dual risk—security instability and revenue uncertainty. India responds via RoDTEP extension to support exporters amid rising logistics costs. Security Dimension Risk of regional war spillover involving non-state actors (Houthis, militias). Maritime insecurity threatens global commons and energy supply chains. Nuclear dimension: Pakistan’s positioning raises concerns of strategic proliferation dynamics. Weak regional institutions (e.g., Arab League) limit collective crisis response capacity. Social & Political Dimension Rising instability may trigger migration, refugee flows, and humanitarian crises. Intensifies Sunni–Shia geopolitical faultlines, despite recent détente attempts. Domestic legitimacy pressures on Gulf regimes to ensure security and economic stability. Data & Facts ~20% global oil and 25% LNG transit through Strait of Hormuz. Iran’s Kharg Island handles ~90% of its oil exports—critical vulnerability point. U.S. deployed A-10 and Apache systems to secure maritime routes (March 2026). India imports ~60% of crude oil from West Asia, highlighting vulnerability. Challenges Absence of inclusive security framework—Iran excluded from many regional arrangements. Deep intra-Gulf divisions undermine collective security efforts. Over-reliance on external powers (U.S., China) limits regional autonomy. Energy market volatility impacts global economy and developing countries disproportionately. Lack of institutionalised conflict resolution mechanisms in West Asia. Way Forward Inclusive Regional Security Architecture : Develop multi-stakeholder framework including Iran, GCC, and external powers for sustainable stability. Reducing Overdependence on U.S. : Gulf states to pursue strategic autonomy with diversified partnerships (India, China, EU). Strengthening Maritime Security : Enhance multilateral naval cooperation to secure sea lanes and global energy flows. Energy Diversification : Accelerate shift to renewables and diversified supply chains to reduce chokepoint vulnerability. Institutional Reform : Revitalise regional bodies (GCC, Arab League) for effective conflict management and cooperation. Prelims Pointers Strait of Hormuz connects Persian Gulf to Gulf of Oman. Kharg Island = Iran’s major oil export terminal. GCC includes Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, Kuwait, Oman, Bahrain. Act East Policy linked to West Asia via energy and diaspora connections.

Apr 2, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Content Piped Natural Gas (PNG) – India’s Cooking Energy Shift Dengue Vaccine (Qdenga / TAK-003) Census 2027 – Self-Enumeration & Digital Census Samrat Samprati & Spread of Jainism Heatwaves in India – IMD Forecast Fiscal Deficit Trends (2025–26) Piped Natural Gas (PNG) – India’s Shift in Cooking Energy What is PNG? PNG (Piped Natural Gas) is natural gas supplied directly to households via pipelines for cooking and heating. Derived from domestic gas fields or imported LNG (regasified) and delivered continuously. Cleaner fuel: emits ~25% less CO₂ than LPG, no soot, no storage required. Relevance GS III (Economy): Energy security, import dependence, subsidy burden. GS III (Environment): Cleaner fuel transition, emission reduction. GS III (Infrastructure): Gas grid, CGD networks, urban infrastructure. Practice Question Q1.Discuss the role of Piped Natural Gas (PNG) in India’s transition towards a gas-based economy. (10M) LPG vs LNG vs PNG vs CNG LPG: Propane–butane mix; stored in cylinders; widely used for cooking. LNG: Natural gas liquefied at –160°C for transport; regasified at destination. PNG: Natural gas supplied via pipelines to homes/industries. CNG: Compressed natural gas used as transport fuel (vehicles). Why India is Pushing PNG Now ? High LPG import dependence (~60%), vulnerable to geopolitics (e.g., Strait of Hormuz disruption). Natural gas has diversified global supply sources, improving energy security. PNG ensures continuous supply (no refill logistics) and reduces subsidy burden. Aligns with gas-based economy target (15% energy mix by 2030). How PNG System Works ? Natural gas → Liquefied (LNG) → transported via LNG carriers → regasified → pipelines → households. Delivered through City Gas Distribution (CGD) networks for last-mile connectivity. Uses SE ID–like metering system (meter-based billing, no cylinder handling). Can PNG Replace LPG? PNG is a “drop-in replacement” for cooking—similar flame, efficiency. 1 kg natural gas gives higher energy than LPG, making it efficient. No major behavioural change required for households. However, industrial uses may need equipment recalibration. Why LPG Dominated Earlier ? Ease of last-mile delivery (cylinders via trucks even in remote areas). No need for expensive pipeline infrastructure. Strong government push via Ujjwala Yojana (33 crore connections). PNG requires high upfront capital and urban infrastructure readiness. Economic Dimension PNG reduces import bill and subsidy burden on LPG. Lower logistics cost in long run (no transport/refill chain). High capex for pipelines (~25,000 km existing + 10,500 km under construction). Pricing needs to remain competitive with subsidised LPG. Governance & Policy Push Target: 12+ crore PNG connections by 2034. CGD licences expanded to 300+ geographical areas. Policy reforms: time-bound approvals, mandatory PNG adoption in some areas. Push for switching households from LPG → PNG (dual holding restricted). Challenges Pipeline infrastructure gaps—large regions (East, NE, South) under-covered. Last-mile connectivity issues in congested urban areas. 90 CGD areas not yet linked to trunk pipelines. High initial cost and slow adoption in rural/semi-urban areas. Limited storage capacity → LNG supply disruptions risk (just-in-time system). Supply Constraints Current domestic gas production insufficient for mass PNG expansion. Need ~30–35% increase in production to meet future demand. ONGC KG Basin projects may boost output (~10–15%). Increased reliance on LNG imports inevitable. Environmental Dimension PNG is cleaner than LPG and coal, aiding climate commitments (NDCs). Reduces indoor air pollution compared to biomass fuels. Supports transition to low-carbon economy. Strategic Significance Reduces dependence on West Asia LPG supply chokepoints. Enhances energy security via diversified LNG imports (US, Australia, Africa). Supports India’s goal of becoming a gas-based economy. Way Forward Infrastructure Expansion : Accelerate national gas grid and CGD network penetration in underserved regions. Domestic Production Boost : Enhance exploration via HELP policy, ONGC investments, KG basin projects. Affordable Pricing : Ensure PNG pricing parity with LPG subsidies for mass adoption. Integrated Energy Strategy : Balance gas allocation between fertiliser, power, and household sectors. Storage & Supply Security : Develop strategic LNG storage reserves to avoid supply shocks. Prelims Pointers LNG liquefied at –160°C; volume reduced ~1000 times. PNG supplied via CGD networks. CNG used in transport sector. LPG = propane + butane mixture. Dengue Vaccine (Qdenga / TAK-003) Why in News India’s first dengue vaccine Qdenga (TAK-003) cleared by DCGI expert panel for ages 4–60. Marks shift from vector-control approach → vaccine-based disease management. Relevance GS II (Health): Public health policy, immunisation strategy. GS III (Science & Tech): Vaccine development, biotechnology. GS III (Environment): Climate change & vector-borne diseases. Practice Question Q1.Discuss the potential and limitations of dengue vaccines in India’s public health strategy. (10M) Static Background Dengue caused by 4 serotypes (DENV-1 to 4); transmitted by Aedes aegypti mosquito. Infection with one serotype gives lifelong immunity to that serotype but not others. Secondary infection may cause severe dengue (Antibody-Dependent Enhancement). Key Features of Qdenga Tetravalent vaccine (targets all 4 serotypes); developed on DENV-2 backbone. No pre-vaccination screening required (advantage over earlier Dengvaxia). Proven efficacy in reducing severe dengue and hospitalisation. Requires 2 doses (3-month gap); approved in 40+ countries. Public Health Significance Reduces ICU burden, hospitalisation, and mortality, especially among children. Helps decongest healthcare systems during peak dengue seasons. Marks transition towards preventive healthcare strategy. Limitations Uneven efficacy across serotypes—strong for DENV-2, weaker for DENV-3 & DENV-4. India seeing rising DENV-3 prevalence (~20–30%), affecting vaccine effectiveness. Vaccine does not prevent infection fully—only reduces severity (“disease-modifying”). Hence, outbreaks will continue despite vaccination. Epidemiological Concerns All 4 serotypes co-circulate in India; dynamic regional variation. Changing serotype dominance may reduce population-level effectiveness. Risk of false public perception of complete protection. Economic Dimension Cost: ₹6,000–12,000 per full course → affordability challenge. Likely initial uptake in private sector or targeted high-burden areas. High cost limits universal immunisation feasibility. Governance & Policy Dimension SEC mandated post-marketing surveillance studies for Indian conditions. Requires integration with National Vector Borne Disease Control Programme (NVBDCP). Policy challenge: introduce now vs wait for better vaccines. Future Pipeline Indigenous vaccine “DengiAll” (ICMR + Panacea Biotec) in Phase III trials. Potential advantages: Better balanced serotype protection Possible single-dose regimen Expected availability: ~2027. Challenges Serotype variability complicates vaccine effectiveness. Affordability and access barriers for large population. Continued dependence on vector control measures. Risk of complacency reducing preventive behaviours. Way Forward Integrated Disease Control Strategy : Combine vaccination + vector control + surveillance systems. Targeted Vaccination Approach : Prioritise high-burden regions and vulnerable groups (children). Strengthening Surveillance : Monitor serotype distribution and vaccine effectiveness in real time. Affordable Access : Explore public procurement, subsidies, and inclusion in UIP (if viable). Support Indigenous Innovation : Accelerate Indian vaccine pipeline (DengiAll) for long-term solution. Prelims Pointers Dengue vector: Aedes aegypti (day-biting mosquito). Serotypes: DENV-1, 2, 3, 4. Qdenga = TAK-003 (tetravalent dengue vaccine). ADE (Antibody-dependent enhancement) → severe dengue risk. Census 2027 – Self-Enumeration Rollout & Digital Census Transformation Why in News ? Around 55,000 households used self-enumeration portal on Day 1, marking early success of India’s first Digital Census initiative. Launch across 8 States/UTs signals shift towards citizen-led, technology-driven data collection. Relevance GS II (Governance): Digital governance, welfare targeting. GS III (Tech): Data governance, cybersecurity. GS I (Society): Demographic profiling. Practice Question Q1.Evaluate the benefits and risks of self-enumeration in Census 2027. (10M) Static Background Census conducted under Census Act, 1948; decennial exercise (last: 2011). Two phases: Houselisting & Housing Census (HLO) Population Enumeration (PE) (scheduled Feb 2027). Provides basis for policy planning, delimitation, welfare targeting, and fiscal transfers. Key Features of Self-Enumeration First-ever web-based self-enumeration facility (16 languages) enabling citizen participation. Covers 33 questions in HLO phase—housing conditions, assets, amenities, digital access. Generates unique Self-Enumeration ID (SE ID) for verification during enumerator visit. Hybrid model: digital entry + physical verification ensures accuracy and inclusivity. Governance & Administrative Dimension Enhances efficiency, transparency, and speed of census operations. Reduces manual errors, duplication, and delays in data processing. Enables real-time monitoring and centralized data management. Reflects shift towards e-governance and Digital India ecosystem integration. Economic Dimension Accurate household data supports targeted welfare schemes and subsidy rationalisation. Facilitates better infrastructure planning (housing, electricity, water, digital access). Supports labour market and consumption pattern analysis for policy formulation. Improves ease of doing business through reliable demographic data. Social Dimension Captures critical indicators: housing quality, sanitation, digital divide, asset ownership. Helps identify vulnerable populations and regional disparities. Digital participation may exclude elderly, rural, and digitally illiterate populations. Encourages citizen engagement and ownership of governance processes. Technology & Data Governance Use of secure web portals, encryption, and authentication mechanisms. Integration with mobile-based enumerator apps for verification. Raises concerns on data privacy, consent, and cybersecurity risks. Potential for AI-based analytics and big data governance in future. Data & Facts ~55,000 households self-enumerated on Day 1. Portal active 15 days before field enumeration. Census budget: ₹11,718 crore approved. Administrative boundaries frozen Jan 2026–March 2027 for data consistency. Challenges Digital divide limiting participation in rural and marginalized communities. Risk of data inaccuracies in self-reported entries. Privacy concerns amid absence of robust data protection enforcement. Logistical complexity of large-scale digital + physical hybrid enumeration. Political sensitivity around caste data collection in Phase II. Way Forward Bridging Digital Divide : Establish assisted enumeration centres and digital literacy campaigns for inclusive participation. Strengthening Data Security : Align with Digital Personal Data Protection framework ensuring privacy and trust. Capacity Building : Train enumerators in digital tools, verification processes, and grievance handling. Leveraging Data for Governance : Integrate Census data with policy dashboards and evidence-based planning systems. Ensuring Transparency & Trust : Promote public awareness campaigns and grievance redressal mechanisms. Prelims Pointers Census under Census Act, 1948; data is confidential. Two phases: HLO and Population Enumeration. Self-enumeration + SE ID introduced for first time. Census 2027 includes digital data capture and possible caste enumeration. Samrat Samprati & Spread of Jainism – Mauryan Religious Policy Why in News ? PM inaugurated Samrat Samprati Museum (Gandhinagar) on Mahavir Jayanti, highlighting role of Ashoka’s grandson in spreading Jainism. Renewed focus on plural religious patronage under Mauryas, beyond Ashoka’s Buddhist legacy. Relevance GS I (History & Culture): Mauryan polity, religious pluralism. GS IV (Ethics): Ahimsa, tolerance. Practice Question Q1. Highlight the role of lesser-known rulers like Samprati in shaping India’s religious landscape. (10M) Static Background Mauryan Empire (4th–2nd century BCE) marked first pan-Indian political unification. Religious diversity: Buddhism, Jainism, Ajivikas coexisted alongside Vedic traditions. Chandragupta Maurya (Jain tradition) associated with Jainism; Ashoka with Buddhism. Jainism founded by Mahavira (6th century BCE) emphasizing ahimsa, asceticism, and non-possession. Ashoka vs Samprati – Comparative Religious Patronage Ashoka promoted Buddhism via Dhamma, edicts, stupas, and missionaries (Sri Lanka, Central Asia). Samprati seen as Jain counterpart, promoting Jainism through temples, icons, and monk networks. Both represent state-supported religious expansion with ethical governance dimension. Role of Samrat Samprati in Spread of Jainism Ruled circa 230–220 BCE, grandson of Ashoka, son of Kunala. Converted to Jainism under monk Suhasti (8th Jain acharya) at Ujjain. Patronised construction and renovation of thousands of Jain temples across India. Facilitated movement of Jain monks to distant regions, expanding geographic spread. Promoted icon worship (Jina images)—institutionalising ritual practices in Jainism. Played key role in western India (Gujarat–Rajasthan) Jain consolidation. Governance & Administrative Dimension Reflects religious pluralism and tolerance under Mauryan statecraft. Use of state resources for religious patronage to legitimise rule. Strengthened cultural integration across regions via shared religious institutions. Indicates decentralised religious policy post-Ashoka (multiple traditions coexisting). Social & Cultural Dimension Expansion of Jainism through merchant networks and urban centres. Reinforced ahimsa-based ethical framework influencing society and economy (trade, vegetarianism). Development of temple culture and iconography, shaping Jain identity. Contributed to regional cultural traditions in western and southern India. Economic Dimension Jainism spread along trade routes and urban guild networks, linking economy with religion. Temple construction stimulated local economies (artisans, architecture, donations). Merchant patronage aligned with Jain ethics of non-violence and commerce. Historiography & Sources Samprati’s accounts largely from Jain texts (especially Shvetambara traditions). Limited epigraphic evidence, leading to debates on historical accuracy. Works like “Samprati Rajya Charitra” and writings of John E. Cort provide narratives. Example of sectarian historiography shaping historical memory. Significance Demonstrates continuity of religious patronage beyond Ashoka’s Buddhism-centric narrative. Highlights role of lesser-known rulers in cultural and religious diffusion. Shows Mauryan Empire as pluralistic rather than mono-religious polity. Strengthens understanding of state–religion interface in ancient India. Challenges / Criticisms Myth vs history debate due to lack of inscriptional corroboration. Over-attribution of temples/icons to Samprati in absence of evidence. Dominance of Ashoka narrative overshadowing other Mauryan contributions. Sectarian bias between Digambara vs Shvetambara traditions. Way Forward Balanced Historiography : Promote multi-source historical analysis (archaeology + texts) to validate narratives. Integrating Lesser-Known Figures : Include rulers like Samprati in mainstream historical discourse and textbooks. Cultural Heritage Preservation : Protect and document Jain temple heritage linked to early historical traditions. Interfaith Understanding : Highlight Mauryan pluralism to promote contemporary values of tolerance and coexistence. Prelims Pointers Samprati: Grandson of Ashoka; associated with Jainism. Suhasti: Jain monk linked to Samprati’s conversion. Chandragupta Maurya associated with Shravanabelagola (Jain tradition). Jain sects: Digambara and Shvetambara. Most parts of India to see more heatwave days: IMD Why in News ? IMD forecasts spatial temperature divergence: cooler-than-normal summer in north India, but above-normal temperatures and heatwaves elsewhere. April rainfall expected ~12% above normal, while El Niño risk by July raises concerns for monsoon 2026. Relevance GS I (Geography): Monsoon, Western Disturbances, ENSO. GS III (Environment): Climate change, extreme weather. GS III (Disaster Management): Heatwave mitigation. Practice Question Q1.Analyse the role of climate variability (ENSO, WDs) in influencing India’s monsoon. (15M) Static Background India’s climate driven by monsoon system (SW Monsoon: June–Sept) dependent on land–sea thermal gradient. Heatwaves: IMD defines ≥40°C plains (≥4.5°C above normal) as heatwave conditions. El Niño: warming of Central Pacific → weakens monsoon via reduced Walker circulation. Western Disturbances (WDs): Mediterranean-origin systems bringing winter–spring rainfall to north India. Key Observations (IMD Data) Above-normal temperatures in east, northeast, central and parts of northwest & peninsular India. North India cooler-than-normal due to increased Western Disturbances (8 vs normal 5–6). Heatwave-prone regions: Odisha, WB, Andhra, TN, Gujarat, Maharashtra, Karnataka. April rainfall likely 12% above normal, indicating active pre-monsoon conditions. Environmental & Climatic Dimension Uneven warming reflects regional climate variability and circulation anomalies. Increased WDs → cloud cover and rainfall → lower land heating in north India. Reduced land heating weakens thermal gradient → weaker monsoon pull mechanism. Possible “super El Niño” risk may override local cooling effects. Economic Dimension Heatwaves in east/central India impact labour productivity, agriculture, and power demand. Above-normal April rainfall may support early soil moisture and pre-kharif activities. Weak monsoon risk affects kharif sowing, food inflation, and fertilizer demand. Energy demand spikes due to cooling needs → pressure on power infrastructure. Social Dimension Heatwaves increase mortality, health risks (heatstroke, dehydration)—vulnerable groups worst affected. Regional disparity: north relief vs eastern/central stress. Impacts urban poor, outdoor workers, and informal sector disproportionately. Water stress risks intensify in heatwave-prone regions. Governance & Disaster Management IMD forecasts enable early warning systems and heat action plans. NDMA guidelines on heatwave preparedness, urban cooling strategies, and water management. Need for state-level coordination in health advisories and disaster mitigation. Link with climate adaptation policies (NAPCC, State Action Plans). Data & Facts April rainfall forecast: ~12% above Long Period Average (LPA). Western Disturbances: 8 events vs normal 5–6 (March 2026). Historical pattern: 2004, 2014 cooler summers → weak monsoon years. India received normal/above-normal monsoon since 2020 (except 2023). Challenges Forecast uncertainty: complex interaction between WDs, ENSO, IOD, local factors. Increasing frequency of extreme weather events due to climate change. Weak institutional capacity in heatwave mitigation at local level. Agriculture remains monsoon-dependent (~50% net sown area rainfed). Urban areas face heat island effect worsening impacts. Way Forward Strengthening Climate Forecasting : Improve seasonal prediction models integrating ENSO, IOD, and regional variability. Heatwave Mitigation Strategies : Implement city-level heat action plans, cooling infrastructure, and work-hour regulations. Climate-Resilient Agriculture : Promote drought-resistant crops, micro-irrigation, and contingency crop planning. Water Resource Management : Enhance rainwater harvesting, groundwater recharge, and reservoir management. Institutional Preparedness : Strengthen NDMA–IMD coordination and local disaster response systems. Prelims Pointers El Niño = warming of Central/Eastern Pacific affecting Indian monsoon negatively. Western Disturbances originate in Mediterranean region. Heatwave criteria defined by IMD temperature thresholds. LPA = benchmark average rainfall (1961–2010 baseline). Fiscal Deficit Trends (2025–26)   Why in News ? Centre’s fiscal deficit reached ₹12.52 trillion (80.4% of BE) by Feb-end 2026, lower than 85.8% last year, indicating improved fiscal discipline. Government targets 4.4% of GDP fiscal deficit (₹15.58 trillion) for FY 2025–26, aligning with consolidation roadmap. Relevance GS III (Economy): Fiscal policy, macroeconomic stability. GS II (Governance): Budget management, fiscal discipline. Practice Question Q1.Analyse the significance of fiscal deficit targets in ensuring macroeconomic stability. (10M) Static Background Fiscal Deficit = Total Expenditure – Total Receipts (excluding borrowings). Indicates government borrowing requirement and macroeconomic stability. Governed by FRBM Act, 2003, targeting fiscal prudence and debt sustainability. India follows glide path consolidation post-COVID (peak ~9.2% in FY21 → 4.4% target FY26). Key Data & Trends Fiscal Deficit: ₹12.52 trillion (80.4% of target) vs 85.8% previous year → improved control. Total Receipts: ₹27.91 trillion (82% of BE); strong revenue mobilisation. Tax Revenue: ₹21.45 trillion; Non-tax revenue: ₹5.8 trillion. Total Expenditure: ₹40.44 trillion (81.5% of BE); balanced spending pattern. Capex: ~₹9.29 trillion; Revenue Expenditure: ~₹31.15 trillion. Governance & Administrative Dimension Reflects effective fiscal management by Ministry of Finance and CGA monitoring system. Improved budget execution efficiency and expenditure rationalisation. Emphasis on capex-led growth strategy while maintaining fiscal prudence. Supports credibility of medium-term fiscal consolidation roadmap. Economic Dimension Lower fiscal deficit enhances macroeconomic stability and investor confidence. Capex focus generates multiplier effect (2.5–3x) boosting growth and employment. Controlled deficit helps manage inflationary pressures and interest rates. Strong tax buoyancy reflects formalisation and economic recovery. Social Dimension Continued revenue expenditure ensures subsidies (₹3.89 trillion) for food, fertilizer, welfare. Balancing growth (capex) with inclusion (subsidies, welfare spending). Fiscal discipline ensures long-term sustainability of social sector schemes. Financial & Debt Implications Lower deficit reduces government borrowing needs → lowers crowding-out of private investment. Helps stabilise public debt trajectory (~81% of GDP combined Centre + States). Improves sovereign credit rating outlook and capital inflows. External & Global Context Fiscal performance maintained despite global uncertainties (oil price volatility, West Asia tensions). Enhances India’s position as stable emerging economy amid global slowdown risks. Critical for maintaining rupee stability and managing current account pressures. Challenges High interest payments (~₹10.65 trillion) constrain fiscal space. Persistent reliance on indirect taxes → regressive burden concerns. Pressure from subsidy commitments and welfare demands. Need to sustain tax buoyancy amid global slowdown risks. Off-budget liabilities and contingent risks reduce true fiscal transparency. Way Forward Sustaining Fiscal Consolidation : Adhere to credible FRBM glide path with transparent fiscal targets and reporting. Enhancing Revenue Mobilisation : Broaden tax base, improve compliance, and rationalise GST structure. Expenditure Rationalisation : Shift towards productive capital expenditure while pruning inefficient subsidies. Debt Management Strategy : Develop medium-term debt framework to reduce interest burden and rollover risks. Strengthening Fiscal Federalism : Ensure predictable transfers and state-level fiscal discipline for overall macro stability. Prelims Pointers Fiscal Deficit excludes borrowings in receipts calculation. FRBM Act enacted in 2003. Capital Expenditure creates assets; revenue expenditure does not. CGA releases monthly fiscal data.