Content
PM’s Appeal to Cut Fuel Use and Avoid Foreign Travel
The Crumbling of Awadh: Heritage Conservation Crisis in Uttar Pradesh
Governor’s Role in Government Formation in a Hung Assembly
TARA Glide Weapon System: India’s Indigenous Precision Strike Multiplier
ASUSE 2025: India’s Unincorporated Sector Expands, But Earnings Remain Low
Why PM Modi Asked Indians to Avoid Buying Gold for a Year and What It Means for Prices
PM’s Appeal to Cut Fuel Use and Avoid Foreign Travel
Why in News?
Prime Minister Narendra Modi urged citizens to reduce fuel consumption, postpone non-essential foreign travel, and avoid buying gold for one year to conserve foreign exchange amid elevated crude oil prices and geopolitical uncertainty in West Asia.
Issue in Brief
The appeal reflects a strategy of economic resilience through voluntary austerity, aimed at reducing import dependence, preserving foreign exchange reserves, and moderating inflationary pressures arising from India’s heavy reliance on imported oil and gold.
Relevance
GS Paper III: Indian Economy, External Sector, Energy Security.
GS Paper II: Governance and Public Policy.
Practice Question
Q. “Reducing import dependence through behavioural change can strengthen macroeconomic stability.” Discuss in the context of recent calls for fuel conservation and reduced discretionary imports. (250 words)
Static Background
India’s Import Dependence
India imports around 85% of its crude oil requirements and more than 90% of domestic gold demand, making both commodities major contributors to the trade deficit and pressure on the rupee.
Foreign Exchange Reserves
India’s foreign exchange reserves were around $691 billion in March 2026, providing a substantial but finite buffer against external shocks and current account pressures.
Current Account Deficit (CAD)
CAD arises when imports of goods, services, and transfers exceed exports and inflows. Higher oil and gold imports widen CAD and increase vulnerability to currency depreciation.
Key Appeals by the Prime Minister
Citizens were asked to reduce petrol and diesel consumption by using public transport, metro rail, carpooling, and electric vehicles to cut fuel imports.
People were urged to avoid buying gold for one year, especially for discretionary purchases, to reduce dollar outflows from non-essential imports.
The Prime Minister advised against unnecessary foreign vacations and destination weddings abroad, promoting domestic tourism and spending within India.
Revival of work-from-home, online meetings, and video conferencing was encouraged to reduce commuting and save fuel.
Citizens were asked to use Swadeshi products, reduce dependence on imported goods, and support local manufacturing.
Economic Rationale
A sustained increase in oil prices raises India’s import bill, worsens the current account deficit, and contributes to inflation through higher transport and energy costs.
Gold is a largely non-productive imported asset; reducing purchases can directly lower foreign exchange outflows without materially affecting productive investment.
Lower import demand supports rupee stability, reduces the need for aggressive central bank intervention, and preserves external sector resilience.
Economic Impact of Gold Imports
India imported approximately $71.98 billion worth of gold in FY 2025–26, a record high and a significant component of the merchandise trade deficit.
High gold imports reflect household savings preferences but divert capital away from financial assets and productive sectors.
Temporary moderation in gold demand can improve balance of payments conditions during external shocks.
Energy Security Dimension
India’s dependence on imported fossil fuels exposes it to supply disruptions in critical chokepoints such as the Strait of Hormuz.
Demand-side measures such as public transport, EV adoption, and energy conservation enhance national energy security at relatively low fiscal cost.
Governance and Behavioural Economics
The appeal represents a form of nudge-based governance, encouraging voluntary behavioural changes rather than imposing formal restrictions.
Similar strategies were used during COVID-19 to reduce travel and increase digital adoption.
Public participation can complement macroeconomic management during periods of geopolitical and market volatility.
Social and Ethical Dimension
The call links personal consumption decisions with broader national interests, reinforcing the idea of responsible citizenship.
It promotes moderation, domestic tourism, and support for local industries while encouraging awareness of collective economic vulnerabilities.
Challenges
Gold holds deep cultural significance in India, especially in weddings and festivals, making demand relatively inelastic despite appeals for restraint.
Foreign travel and consumption patterns are associated with rising incomes and aspirational lifestyles, limiting the effectiveness of voluntary reductions.
Behavioural appeals may produce only short-term effects unless supported by structural reforms in energy, savings, and trade policy.
Reduced spending in jewellery and travel sectors may temporarily affect employment and business sentiment in related industries.
Way Forward
Promote financial alternatives such as Sovereign Gold Bonds and mutual funds to channel household savings into productive assets.
Accelerate adoption of electric mobility, public transport, and domestic renewable energy to structurally reduce fossil fuel dependence.
Expand domestic tourism infrastructure under schemes such as Swadesh Darshan and PRASHAD.
Strengthen domestic production under Make in India and Atmanirbhar Bharat to reduce import intensity.
Use public awareness campaigns to encourage prudent consumption while avoiding coercive restrictions.
Prelims Pointers
India imports about 85% of crude oil and over 90% of gold demand.
Gold imports in FY 2025–26: approximately $71.98 billion.
Foreign exchange reserves (March 2026): around $691 billion.
CAD widens when import growth exceeds export growth.
Mains Enrichment
Intro Options
“Macroeconomic resilience depends not only on policy but also on responsible consumption choices by citizens.”
“In an import-dependent economy, discretionary demand can significantly influence external stability.”
Conclusion Frameworks
“Economic patriotism is most effective when behavioural change is complemented by structural reforms.”
“Reducing import dependence through sustainable lifestyles strengthens both national resilience and long-term self-reliance.”
The Crumbling of Awadh: Heritage Conservation Crisis in Uttar Pradesh
Why in News?
A 2026 Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) report highlighted severe neglect of 487 Centrally Protected Monuments (CPMs) in Uttar Pradesh, including 31 untraceable monuments, 96 encroached sites, and only 31 monuments (6.4%) with proper ownership documentation.
Issue in Brief
Historic monuments of Awadh, representing India’s composite Ganga-Jamuni tehzeeb, are facing encroachment, structural decay, poor documentation, and administrative neglect, threatening both tangible heritage and the broader syncretic cultural identity of the region.
Relevance
GS Paper I: Indian Art and Culture, Architectural Heritage.
GS Paper II: Governance, Accountability, Institutional Effectiveness.
GS Paper III: Conservation and Sustainable Development.
Practice Question
Q. “The decline of historical monuments reflects not only administrative neglect but also erosion of civilisational memory.” Discuss with reference to the heritage crisis in Awadh. (250 words)
Static Background: Awadh and Its Cultural Significance
What is Awadh?
Awadh (Oudh) was a major Indo-Islamic cultural region in present-day Uttar Pradesh, with Lucknow as its capital. It flourished under the Nawabs of Awadh (18th–19th centuries) and became a centre of architecture, literature, music, cuisine, and etiquette.
Syncretic Legacy
Awadh symbolised Ganga-Jamuni tehzeeb, blending Hindu and Islamic traditions, Shia religious architecture, Kathak, Urdu poetry, and shared civic culture.
Important Monuments
Bara Imambara, Chota Imambara, Shah Najaf Imambara, Qadam Rasul, Begum Kothi, and Chhatar Manzil represent Awadh’s artistic and political legacy.
Key Findings of the 2026 CAG Report
Out of 487 CPMs in Uttar Pradesh, 31 monuments were untraceable, indicating a serious breakdown in monitoring and inventory management.
Only 31 monuments (6.4%) had valid ownership documentation, weakening the Archaeological Survey of India’s legal ability to defend heritage assets.
96 monuments were under encroachment by shops, public utilities, government offices, and unauthorized religious or commercial structures.
Several monuments suffered from structural deterioration, inappropriate restoration, and absence of systematic conservation plans.
ASI itself was found altering protected structures, including at Rani Mahal, Jhansi, by installing air conditioners, tiled toilets, and water pipelines.
Constitutional and Legal Framework
Constitutional Provisions
Article 49 directs the State to protect monuments and places of artistic or historic importance.
Article 51A(f) makes it a Fundamental Duty of every citizen to preserve India’s composite culture.
Statutory Framework
Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Sites and Remains (AMASR) Act, 1958 prohibits construction and damage within protected areas.
AMASR Rules, 1959 regulate access, structural alterations, and public use of protected monuments.
Governance and Institutional Dimensions
The Comptroller and Auditor General of India report exposed major shortcomings in the Archaeological Survey of India, including poor documentation, weak enforcement, and absence of long-term preservation strategies.
ASI circles in Uttar Pradesh had not prepared Site Management Plans (SMPs), resulting in fragmented and reactive conservation efforts rather than scientific heritage management.
Encroachments by state agencies themselves reveal weak interdepartmental coordination and lack of institutional accountability.
Cultural and Social Significance
Heritage structures are repositories of collective memory and embody the pluralistic traditions that shaped India’s civilisational identity.
The decline of Awadh’s monuments threatens the continuity of Urdu literature, Shia religious traditions, music, cuisine, and shared civic culture.
Loss of heritage also weakens local identity, community pride, and intergenerational transmission of cultural values.
Economic and Tourism Implications
Restored heritage sites can generate substantial revenue through tourism, hospitality, handicrafts, and cultural industries.
Neglect reduces Lucknow’s potential as a global cultural destination comparable to Istanbul or Cairo.
Heritage-based urban regeneration can create employment while preserving historical authenticity.
Environmental and Urban Dimensions
Unregulated construction, vegetation overgrowth, and poor drainage accelerate structural decay of monuments.
Heritage conservation contributes to sustainable urban planning by integrating historical spaces with green and public-use areas.
Adaptive reuse and conservation support climate-sensitive restoration through traditional building materials and techniques.
Challenges
Encroachment by commercial establishments and government agencies undermines legal protection and physically alters heritage precincts.
Absence of digitised land records and boundary demarcation weakens the State’s ability to establish ownership and initiate legal action.
Inadequate funding and shortage of conservation experts hinder structural restoration and scientific maintenance.
No comprehensive Site Management Plans results in ad hoc and inconsistent preservation efforts.
Delisting of monuments to mask administrative failure risks permanent removal of sites from legal protection.
Low public awareness reduces citizen participation in heritage stewardship and local monitoring.
Way Forward
Enact a dedicated Uttar Pradesh Heritage Conservation Law with strong anti-encroachment provisions, penalties, and citizen grievance mechanisms.
Complete GIS mapping, drone surveys, and digital ownership records for all protected monuments within a fixed timeline.
Prepare mandatory Site Management Plans (SMPs) covering structural conservation, tourism, risk management, and community participation.
Establish a specialised Heritage Protection Task Force involving ASI, district administration, urban local bodies, and civil society.
Promote community-based conservation through schools, resident associations, and heritage volunteers.
Use CSR funding and public-private partnerships for restoration while maintaining expert oversight and historical authenticity.
Develop heritage circuits such as the Awadh Cultural Circuit linking Lucknow, Faizabad (Ayodhya), and Unnao to boost tourism and conservation finance.
Prelims Pointers
Article 49: Protection of monuments of national importance.
Article 51A(f): Fundamental Duty to preserve composite culture.
AMASR Act, 1958: Governs centrally protected monuments.
Site Management Plan (SMP): Long-term scientific conservation blueprint.
Mains Enrichment
Ready-to-Use Introductions
“Monuments are not inert stones; they are living archives of a civilisation’s memory and values.”
“The conservation of heritage is essential to preserving India’s pluralistic and syncretic identity.”
Conclusion Frameworks
“Protecting Awadh’s monuments is both a constitutional responsibility and a civilisational imperative.”
“Heritage conservation must move from symbolic concern to sustained institutional action rooted in community participation.”
Governor’s Role in Government Formation in a Hung Assembly
Why in News?
Recent post-election developments in Tamil Nadu have renewed debate over the discretionary role of the Governor in inviting a leader to form the government when no party secures an absolute majority in the Legislative Assembly.
Issue in Brief
Under Article 164(1), the Governor appoints the Chief Minister. In a hung Assembly, this power involves constitutional discretion, which must be exercised impartially to ensure that the person appointed is most likely to command majority support on the floor of the House.
Relevance
GS Paper II (Polity & Governance): Governor’s discretionary powers, Centre–State relations, constitutional conventions.
Constitutional Provisions: Articles 163, 164, 174, 175, 356.
Committees: Sarkaria Commission, Punchhi Commission, Justice Kurian Joseph Committee.
Practice Question
Q. “The Governor’s discretionary role in government formation should be guided by constitutional morality rather than political expediency.” Examine with reference to hung Assemblies in India. (250 words)
Static Background & Basics
Article 164(1): Appointment of Chief Minister
Article 164(1) states that the Chief Minister shall be appointed by the Governor, and other Ministers shall be appointed on the advice of the Chief Minister. The Council of Ministers holds office during the Governor’s pleasure, subject to legislative confidence.
Article 163: Aid and Advice
Under Article 163, the Governor ordinarily acts on the aid and advice of the Council of Ministers, except in situations where the Constitution expressly allows discretionary action.
Hung Assembly
A hung Assembly arises when no single party or pre-poll alliance secures a majority. The Governor must then identify the leader most likely to command majority support in the Assembly.
Recommended Order of Preference
Sarkaria Commission (1987) and Punchhi Commission (2010)
The two commissions recommended a structured order of preference to reduce arbitrariness and ensure objective decision-making during government formation.
Recommended Sequence
Pre-poll alliance commanding a majority should receive the first invitation, as it reflects a prior electoral mandate and greater political stability.
Single largest party with written support from other members may be invited if it demonstrates credible majority backing.
Post-poll coalition where all supporting parties join the government should be considered next because participation indicates stronger commitment and accountability.
Post-poll alliance with outside support should be the last preference, as external support may be less durable and more vulnerable to withdrawal.
Constitutional Principle: Floor Test
Supreme Court Doctrine
In S.R. Bommai v. Union of India (1994) and Rameshwar Prasad v. Union of India (2006), the Supreme Court held that the floor of the House is the only constitutionally valid forum to determine majority support.
Majority Requirement
The government must secure the support of a majority of members present and voting, not necessarily an absolute majority of the total Assembly strength.
Issues and Concerns
Inconsistent application of constitutional conventions has led to differing outcomes in States such as Goa (2017), Manipur (2017), Karnataka (2018), and Maharashtra (2019), raising questions about neutrality.
Political perception that Governors act as agents of the Union government undermines cooperative federalism and public confidence in constitutional institutions.
Delay in conducting floor tests can encourage defections, political bargaining, and uncertainty in governance.
Absence of codified constitutional rules leaves room for subjective interpretation and potential misuse of discretionary powers.
Key Case Studies
In Goa and Manipur (2017), Governors invited post-poll alliances despite another party emerging as the single largest party, prioritising demonstrable majority support over seat count.
In Karnataka (2018) and Maharashtra (2019), Governors initially invited formations that could not ultimately prove majority support, resulting in judicial intervention and resignation.
Justice Kurian Joseph Committee Recommendation
The Justice Kurian Joseph Committee on Centre–State relations recommended adding a new constitutional schedule to codify norms governing the Governor’s discretionary powers and reduce ambiguity in government formation.
Challenges
Constitutional silence on specific criteria for government formation creates uncertainty and encourages divergent interpretations by Governors.
Judicial intervention after appointments often corrects errors, but political instability may already have affected governance and institutional credibility.
Partisan appointments of Governors can compromise perceptions of neutrality, particularly in politically sensitive States.
Lack of enforceable timelines for floor tests may prolong uncertainty and facilitate political manoeuvring.
Way Forward
Codify the Sarkaria–Punchhi guidelines through legislation or a constitutional schedule to provide binding standards for government formation.
Mandate a time-bound floor test within 48–72 hours whenever majority support is disputed.
Ensure that Governors record and publicly disclose reasons for inviting a particular claimant, improving transparency and accountability.
Strengthen conventions that Governors function as impartial constitutional heads rather than political actors.
Consider reforms in the appointment process to enhance the independence and credibility of the Governor’s office.
Prelims Pointers
Article 164(1): Governor appoints the Chief Minister.
Article 163: Governor acts on aid and advice, except in limited discretionary matters.
S.R. Bommai (1994): Floor test is the constitutional method for proving majority.
Sarkaria and Punchhi Commissions: Provided guidelines for government formation in hung Assemblies.
Mains Enrichment
Ready-to-Use Introductions
“The Governor occupies a pivotal constitutional position in ensuring orderly government formation when electoral outcomes are fractured.”
“In a parliamentary democracy, legitimacy flows from majority support in the legislature, not subjective executive discretion.”
Conclusion Frameworks
“The Governor’s discretion must be guided by constitutional morality, transparency, and respect for democratic mandates.”
“Codified conventions and swift floor tests are essential to preserving federal balance and institutional credibility.”
TARA Glide Weapon System: India’s Indigenous Precision Strike Multiplier
Why in News?
The Defence Research and Development Organisation and Indian Air Force successfully conducted the maiden flight trial of the Tactical Advanced Range Augmentation (TARA) system off the Odisha coast, marking India’s first indigenous glide-kit that converts conventional bombs into precision-guided stand-off weapons.
Issue in Brief
TARA is a modular guidance and wing kit that upgrades unguided “dumb bombs” into “smart bombs,” enabling accurate strikes from longer distances. It significantly enhances India’s stand-off strike capability while reducing dependence on expensive imported precision-guided munitions.
Relevance
GS Paper III (Defence & Internal Security): Defence indigenisation, precision-guided munitions, air power modernisation.
Science & Technology: Inertial navigation, satellite guidance, aerodynamic glide systems.
Practice Question
Q. “Affordable precision-guided munitions are critical to modern warfare and strategic autonomy.” Examine in the context of DRDO’s Tactical Advanced Range Augmentation (TARA) system. (250 words)
Static Background & Basics
What is a Glide Weapon?
A glide weapon uses foldable wings and guidance systems to convert a free-fall bomb into a stand-off munition. Released from aircraft at altitude, it glides toward the target without a rocket motor, increasing range while maintaining low cost and operational simplicity.
What are Precision-Guided Munitions (PGMs)?
PGMs use advanced navigation and control systems to strike targets accurately, reducing collateral damage and improving mission effectiveness. They have become indispensable in modern warfare, where precision and survivability matter more than sheer explosive power.
Global Analogy
TARA is conceptually comparable to the Joint Direct Attack Munition developed by Boeing, which converts conventional bombs into guided weapons through modular kits rather than designing entirely new missiles.
What is TARA?
Tactical Advanced Range Augmentation (TARA) is India’s first indigenous glide weapon kit developed by Research Centre Imarat under DRDO, in collaboration with other laboratories and Indian industry partners.
It is being developed in three variants compatible with warheads weighing 250–500 kg, enabling flexible deployment against different categories of tactical and strategic targets.
The system combines Inertial Navigation System (INS) and satellite-based positioning to continuously correct the weapon’s trajectory and achieve high accuracy even over long stand-off distances.
How TARA Works
A fighter aircraft releases the weapon at a pre-determined altitude and speed, using the aircraft’s kinetic energy to initiate a controlled glide rather than a direct free fall.
Foldable wings deploy immediately after release, generating aerodynamic lift and extending the weapon’s range well beyond that of ordinary gravity bombs.
The onboard navigation computer integrates INS and satellite inputs to make real-time corrections, ensuring accurate engagement of designated targets.
Since TARA does not use a rocket motor, it remains lighter, cheaper, and easier to mass-produce than conventional missile systems.
Strategic Significance
Stand-Off Strike Capability
TARA enables IAF aircraft to strike targets from outside enemy air defence envelopes, significantly improving aircraft survivability and reducing operational risk during contested missions.
Cost-Effective Precision
Existing inventories of unguided bombs can be upgraded into precision-guided weapons, avoiding the high cost and long development cycle associated with new missile systems.
Rapid Inventory Expansion
Modular integration allows India to quickly scale up its stockpile of precision munitions, a decisive advantage in prolonged or high-intensity conflicts.
Defence Indigenisation
Indigenous development and production reduce dependence on foreign suppliers and strengthen India’s strategic autonomy under Atmanirbhar Bharat.
Operational Advantages
TARA enhances strike accuracy, reducing collateral damage and improving effectiveness against high-value targets such as radar sites, logistics hubs, and fortified infrastructure.
Compatibility with multiple fighter aircraft allows operational flexibility across the IAF’s diverse fleet.
Low-cost design supports large-scale deployment, ensuring adequate stocks during extended military operations.
Indigenous production ensures faster replenishment and better maintenance support during wartime.
Development and Deployment Path
The maiden trial off the Odisha coast validated the weapon’s core glide and guidance functions, representing a major milestone in India’s precision strike programme.
Further developmental and user trials will assess guidance accuracy, reliability, and performance under varied operational and climatic conditions.
Once inducted, TARA will become a key element of the IAF’s stand-off precision strike doctrine.
Challenges
Guidance accuracy must be proven across diverse weather, terrain, and electronic warfare environments before full operational induction.
Satellite navigation dependence creates vulnerability to jamming and spoofing by technologically advanced adversaries.
Platform integration across different aircraft types requires extensive avionics adaptation and certification.
Production scalability depends on robust domestic supply chains and sustained participation by private industry.
Operational training and doctrine must evolve to exploit stand-off precision strike capabilities effectively.
Way Forward
Complete comprehensive developmental and user trials to validate performance under realistic combat conditions.
Integrate anti-jamming technologies and multi-source navigation to enhance resilience in contested environments.
Expand compatibility with a wider range of aircraft and bomb classes.
Strengthen public-private partnerships for rapid and cost-effective mass production.
Explore exports to friendly nations seeking affordable precision-guided munitions.
Prelims Pointers
TARA = Tactical Advanced Range Augmentation.
Developed by Research Centre Imarat (DRDO), Hyderabad.
Compatible with 250–500 kg warheads.
Uses INS + satellite navigation.
Comparable in concept to Joint Direct Attack Munition.
Mains Enrichment
Ready-to-Use Introductions
“Precision-guided munitions have become force multipliers in modern air warfare, combining accuracy, survivability, and cost-effectiveness.”
“TARA reflects India’s transition from import dependence to indigenous innovation in advanced military technologies.”
Conclusion Frameworks
“TARA demonstrates how indigenous technology can enhance deterrence while reducing strategic dependence on imports.”
“Affordable precision strike capabilities are indispensable to India’s pursuit of strategic autonomy and credible air power.”
ASUSE 2025: India’s Unincorporated Sector Expands, But Earnings Remain Low
Why in News?
The National Statistical Office released the Annual Survey of Unincorporated Sector Enterprises (ASUSE) 2025, showing strong growth in small informal businesses but persistently low incomes, weak productivity, and limited financial resilience.
Issue in Brief
India added 5.8 million new unincorporated non-agricultural enterprises and created 7.45 million jobs in 2025, yet average value generated per worker remained only ₹1.6 lakh annually (about ₹440/day), highlighting the problem of low-productivity employment.
Relevance
GS Paper III (Economy): Informal sector, employment, MSMEs, productivity.
GS Paper II (Governance): Financial inclusion, social security.
Practice Question
Q. “India’s employment challenge is increasingly about the quality and productivity of jobs rather than job creation alone.” Discuss in the context of ASUSE 2025 findings. (250 words)
Static Background & Basics
What is the Unincorporated Sector?
Unincorporated enterprises are small businesses not registered as companies under corporate law. They include kirana shops, repair units, household manufacturing, street services, and self-employed establishments operating largely in the informal economy.
What is ASUSE?
The Annual Survey of Unincorporated Sector Enterprises, conducted by the National Statistical Office, provides data on employment, productivity, debt, and earnings in non-agricultural informal enterprises.
Importance of Informal Sector
India’s informal sector contributes nearly half of national output and employs a majority of the workforce, making it central to livelihoods, consumption demand, and inclusive growth.
Key Findings of ASUSE 2025
Total unincorporated non-agricultural enterprises increased from 73.4 million to 79.2 million, indicating the addition of 5.8 million new businesses in one year.
Employment rose to 128.1 million, compared to about 120.6 million in 2023–24, resulting in the creation of 7.45 million additional jobs.
Average Gross Value Added (GVA) per establishment stood at ₹2.5 lakh annually, equal to around ₹20,800 per month.
Average GVA per worker was ₹1.6 lakh annually, or approximately ₹13,300 per month and ₹440 per day.
Average annual emoluments of hired workers ranged between ₹1.4–1.5 lakh, translating to roughly ₹12,000–13,000 per month.
Average outstanding debt per establishment was ₹42,776, reflecting small-scale and constrained financing.
Significance of the Findings
Employment Absorption
The sector acts as India’s principal employment shock absorber when formal job creation is insufficient, especially for migrants, women, and low-skilled workers.
Entrepreneurial Dynamism
Rapid enterprise formation reflects resilience and self-employment orientation, but also indicates that many individuals enter business due to lack of stable wage opportunities.
Inclusive Growth Indicator
Growth in rural and urban informal enterprises suggests broad-based economic participation, though not necessarily rising prosperity.
Structural Interpretation
Distress Entrepreneurship
Many new enterprises are “necessity-driven” rather than innovation-led, arising because workers cannot find secure formal jobs with adequate wages and social protection.
Low Productivity Trap
Limited capital, poor technology adoption, and fragmented markets keep enterprises trapped in subsistence-level operations with little scope for scaling.
Working Poverty
Even full-time work generates incomes close to or below statutory minimum wages in many states, underscoring the persistence of vulnerable employment.
Economic Implications
Consumption Constraint
Low earnings restrict household purchasing power, weakening aggregate demand and limiting the multiplier effects of economic growth.
Credit and Investment Bottlenecks
Small loan sizes constrain mechanisation, digitalisation, and market expansion, perpetuating low returns and stagnant productivity.
Fiscal and Social Security Pressure
Large informal employment increases demand for public support in health, pensions, and insurance due to absence of employer-provided benefits.
Challenges
Low labour productivity keeps enterprise incomes modest, with most establishments generating only subsistence-level value addition despite high work intensity.
Limited access to formal credit restricts investment in machinery, technology, and market expansion, preventing businesses from achieving economies of scale.
Absence of social security exposes workers to health shocks, income volatility, and old-age insecurity, reinforcing intergenerational vulnerability.
Weak market integration reduces bargaining power and keeps enterprises dependent on local demand and informal supply chains.
Distress-driven self-employment often masks disguised unemployment rather than reflecting sustainable entrepreneurship and innovation.
Way Forward
Strengthen Micro Units Development and Refinance Agency and credit guarantee mechanisms to provide larger, affordable, collateral-free loans to viable micro enterprises.
Expand digital onboarding through Open Network for Digital Commerce and e-commerce platforms to improve market access and price realisation.
Integrate informal workers into pension, insurance, and health systems such as e-Shram and Jan Suraksha schemes.
Promote skilling, bookkeeping, and technology adoption to raise productivity and facilitate graduation into formal MSMEs.
Simplify compliance and incentivise formalisation through lower transaction costs and targeted tax support.
Prelims Pointers
ASUSE is conducted by the National Statistical Office.
It covers non-agricultural unincorporated enterprises.
Gross Value Added (GVA) = value of output minus intermediate consumption.
Informal enterprises are generally outside corporate registration frameworks.
Mains Enrichment
Ready-to-Use Introductions
“India’s employment story increasingly reflects a paradox of expanding work opportunities without commensurate improvements in earnings and productivity.”
“The informal sector remains the backbone of livelihoods, but not yet the foundation of prosperity.”
Conclusion Frameworks
“The challenge is not merely to create more enterprises, but to enable micro enterprises to become engines of productivity and dignified livelihoods.”
“India’s path to inclusive growth lies in transforming survival entrepreneurship into sustainable and scalable economic activity.”
Explained: Why PM Modi asked Indians to avoid buying gold for a year and what it means for prices
Why in News?
Prime Minister Narendra Modi urged citizens to temporarily reduce discretionary purchases of gold and non-essential foreign travel to conserve foreign exchange amid elevated crude oil prices and geopolitical tensions in West Asia.
Issue in Brief
India imports over 90% of its gold demand and around 80–85% of crude oil needs. When both prices rise simultaneously, the current account deficit (CAD) widens, putting pressure on the rupee, inflation, and foreign exchange reserves.
Relevance
GS Paper III (Economy): Current Account Deficit, forex reserves, inflation, external sector.
GS Paper III (Inclusive Growth): Household savings and financial behaviour.
Practice Question
Q. “India’s strong household preference for gold has important macroeconomic consequences.” Discuss in the context of the Prime Minister’s appeal to reduce gold purchases. (250 words)
Static Background & Basics
India and Gold
India is among the world’s largest gold consumers, importing roughly 700–800 tonnes annually. Gold serves cultural, investment, and precautionary purposes, especially in households with limited access to formal financial instruments.
Current Account Deficit (CAD)
CAD arises when imports of goods, services, and transfers exceed exports and inflows. Large imports of non-productive assets such as gold increase the deficit without directly expanding productive capacity.
Foreign Exchange Reserves
The Reserve Bank of India maintains reserves to stabilise the rupee, finance imports, and absorb external shocks. Persistent CAD and currency intervention can reduce reserve buffers.
Key Data and Trends
Gold imports in 2025–26 reached an all-time high of $71.98 billion, up from $58 billion in 2024–25.
India’s trade deficit widened to $333.2 billion in 2025–26.
Forex reserves declined from $728.5 billion (February 2026 peak) to $690.7 billion in early May 2026.
Gold accounts for a significant share of India’s non-oil import bill.
Why Gold Imports Matter ?
Pressure on External Balance
Gold is largely a store of value rather than a productive input. High imports increase the import bill, worsen CAD, and intensify pressure on the rupee during periods of global uncertainty.
Exchange Rate Impact
Greater dollar demand to finance imports can weaken the rupee, making oil, fertilisers, electronics, and other imports more expensive.
Inflationary Consequences
Rupee depreciation raises imported inflation and can complicate monetary policy by forcing tighter interest rates.
Economic Logic Behind the Appeal
Conserving Foreign Exchange
Temporary moderation in gold purchases can reduce demand for imported bullion and help preserve foreign exchange during periods of elevated crude prices and geopolitical stress.
Reducing Vulnerability
Lower discretionary imports improve macroeconomic resilience by narrowing the trade deficit and strengthening external-sector stability.
Behavioural Signalling
The appeal serves as a public call for economic prudence, similar to past efforts encouraging energy conservation and domestic savings.
Impact on Gold Prices and Markets
Short-Term Demand Effect
Jewellery demand may soften temporarily, especially for discretionary purchases, affecting listed jewellers and bullion sentiment.
Long-Term Structural Demand
Gold remains deeply embedded in Indian savings behaviour, cultural practices, and portfolio diversification. Long-term demand is unlikely to disappear.
Price Drivers
Global prices depend more on central bank buying, US interest rates, inflation expectations, and geopolitical risk than on any single domestic advisory.
Broader Policy Context
Gold Monetisation and Financialisation
Successive governments have promoted alternatives such as Sovereign Gold Bonds and Gold Monetisation Schemes to reduce dependence on physical imports.
Household Savings Diversification
Encouraging mutual funds, pensions, insurance, and digital financial assets can channel savings toward productive investment.
Challenges
Gold performs social and financial roles, especially for women and households with limited trust in formal institutions, making behavioural change gradual.
Past schemes to monetise idle gold have seen limited uptake due to design complexity, low awareness, and cultural preference for holding physical gold.
Restricting imports too aggressively may increase smuggling and informal market activity, reducing regulatory effectiveness and tax compliance.
Temporary moderation in jewellery demand can affect employment in gems and jewellery, a sector with significant export and labour linkages.
Way Forward
Strengthen financial literacy and promote diversified savings instruments such as pensions, mutual funds, and insurance products.
Improve the attractiveness and accessibility of gold-linked financial products to reduce demand for imported physical gold.
Enhance export competitiveness and domestic manufacturing to offset import pressures structurally.
Maintain prudent macroeconomic management through reserve accumulation, energy diversification, and inflation control.
Encourage voluntary moderation rather than coercive restrictions to preserve market confidence and consumer autonomy.
Prelims Pointers
CAD measures the gap between foreign exchange earnings and payments.
India imports over 90% of domestic gold demand.
Reserve Bank of India manages forex reserves and intervenes in currency markets.
Gold imports affect the trade balance but do not directly increase productive capacity.
Mains Enrichment
Ready-to-Use Introductions
“India’s enduring preference for gold has cultural roots but also significant macroeconomic consequences.”
“When global oil and gold prices rise together, external-sector pressures become a major policy concern.”
Conclusion Frameworks
“Moderating gold imports is not about discouraging savings, but about redirecting savings toward productive and resilient economic growth.”
“A balanced strategy combining cultural sensitivity and financial innovation can reduce external vulnerability while preserving household security.”