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Apr 21, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

Content From Margins to Mainstream India Emerges as Cradle of Jamun Evolution From Margins to Mainstream Why in News? 20 April 2026 (PIB Release) highlighted progress of the SMILE Scheme, presenting updated financial allocations, rehabilitation outcomes, and institutional expansion under the ongoing 2021–2026 implementation cycle. The update reflects a transition from fragmented welfare delivery to an integrated, convergence-based social justice framework, aligning with constitutional guarantees (Articles 14, 21) and India’s commitment to inclusive growth and SDGs. Relevance GS II (Polity & Governance) Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections (Transgender persons, homeless, beggars) Rights-based framework: Article 14 (equality), Article 21 (dignity) Role of local governance (ULBs) in service delivery Digital governance (JAM Trinity, DBT, National Portal) GS I (Society) Issues of marginalised groups: transgender community, urban poor Social exclusion, identity deprivation, stigma Practice Question “The SMILE scheme marks a transition from welfare-based assistance to a rights-based, capability-enhancing framework for marginalised communities.” Critically examine in the context of implementation challenges.(250 Words) Static Background Historically, transgender persons and individuals engaged in begging have faced systemic exclusion due to stigma, lack of identity documents, and limited access to state services, resulting in intergenerational deprivation. The Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act, 2019 provides a statutory foundation, recognising self-perceived gender identity and prohibiting discrimination in education, employment, healthcare, and public services, with penal provisions for violations. The landmark NALSA v. Union of India linked gender identity to dignity under Article 21, mandating affirmative action and welfare measures for transgender persons. Directive Principles (Articles 38, 39, 41, 46) obligate the State to promote social justice, livelihood security, and protection of vulnerable sections, forming the normative basis for schemes like SMILE. Traditional legal frameworks such as the Bombay Prevention of Begging Act, 1959 criminalised poverty; recent judicial trends have shifted towards a rehabilitative, rights-based approach. Ayushman Bharat serves as a foundational platform for universal health coverage, extended under SMILE to include gender-affirming healthcare services. Core Issue / Key Findings The scheme has a total financial outlay of ₹390 crore (2021–2026), with ₹265 crore allocated to transgender welfare and ₹125 crore to beggary rehabilitation, indicating a structured prioritisation of vulnerable groups. A 225% increase in annual allocation between 2021–22 and 2025–26 demonstrates a clear shift from pilot-scale intervention to mission-mode programme expansion. As of March 2026, 31,055 individuals engaged in begging have been identified, while only 9,935 have been rehabilitated, indicating a rehabilitation rate of approximately 32%. 21 Garima Greh shelter homes are operational across 17 states, with 3 additional homes sanctioned in August 2025, reflecting gradual institutional expansion. Under Ayushman Bharat TG Plus, each transgender beneficiary receives ₹5 lakh annual health coverage, including sex reassignment surgery, hormone therapy, and related procedures. The scheme is currently implemented in 181 cities, highlighting a predominantly urban governance approach involving Urban Local Bodies (ULBs). Overview The sharp increase in financial allocation (225%) signifies a policy shift towards mission-mode governance, where marginalised inclusion is treated as a core development priority rather than a peripheral welfare concern. The integration of transgender healthcare within SMILE directly operationalises constitutional guarantees under Article 21 and the NALSA judgment, transforming abstract rights into tangible service delivery mechanisms. The urban-centric implementation through ULBs reflects administrative practicality, yet also reveals the importance of local governance capacity in determining programme success, especially in identification, counselling, and rehabilitation processes. The relatively low rehabilitation success rate (~32%) suggests structural challenges such as floating populations, lack of permanent housing, weak follow-up systems, and socio-economic vulnerabilities leading to relapse into begging. The National Portal for Transgender Persons, combined with geotagging of facilities, demonstrates effective digital governance integration, leveraging the JAM Trinity (Jan Dhan–Aadhaar–Mobile) to enable direct benefit transfers, transparency, and real-time monitoring. However, this digital model also exposes a “documentation trap”, where beneficiaries without basic identity or permanent address struggle to access the very systems designed to include them, necessitating flexible administrative innovations. The scheme embodies a capability-enhancement approach (Amartya Sen) by linking healthcare, education, skill development, and shelter, thereby enabling long-term socio-economic independence instead of short-term relief. Convergence opportunities with schemes like PM-DAKSH and PM Vishwakarma Scheme can unlock traditional artisanal or informal skills within marginalised communities, providing culturally rooted livelihood pathways. The institutional architecture, including the National Council for Transgender Persons, Protection Cells, and State Welfare Boards, reflects an evolving governance model emphasising coordination, accountability, and rights enforcement. From a federal perspective, while SMILE is a centrally funded scheme, its outcomes depend heavily on state-level implementation capacity, leading to inter-state disparities and highlighting the role of competitive-cooperative federalism. The upcoming Census 2027 self-enumeration exercise is likely to provide accurate baseline data on transgender and homeless populations, which will be critical for designing the next phase of SMILE post-2026. In the broader democratic context, while debates on political representation (e.g., 131st Amendment discussions) are important, schemes like SMILE build the foundational socio-economic capabilities necessary for meaningful participation in governance. Challenges / Concerns / Gaps The low rehabilitation rate (~32%) indicates persistent barriers such as lack of sustained livelihood opportunities, social reintegration challenges, and risk of relapse into begging. The documentation barrier (“identity trap”) continues to exclude many eligible beneficiaries who lack basic ID or proof of residence, especially among homeless populations. The scheme’s urban-centric focus (181 cities) leads to underrepresentation of rural and semi-urban marginalisation, where vulnerabilities are often less visible but equally severe. Deep-rooted social stigma and discrimination against transgender persons limit access to employment, housing, and social acceptance, reducing the effectiveness of economic interventions. Capacity constraints in Urban Local Bodies and district administrations affect quality of implementation, monitoring, and follow-up services. Significant inter-state disparities exist in establishing Transgender Protection Cells and Welfare Boards, leading to uneven outcomes across regions. Absence of robust outcome-based indicators (such as long-term income stability, social integration, and quality of life) limits the evaluation of true programme success. Key Takeaways SMILE represents a shift from “charity-based welfare” to “citizenship-based entitlement and capability-building”, aligning with constitutional morality and human dignity principles. It is a strong example of convergent governance, integrating healthcare, education, livelihood, housing, and legal protection within a single framework. Demonstrates the importance of digital public infrastructure (JAM Trinity) in enhancing targeted delivery, transparency, and accountability in welfare schemes. Highlights federal governance challenges, where centrally funded schemes depend on state capacity and local administrative efficiency. Emphasises that future policy success depends on shifting from “rescue and rehabilitation” to “long-term social integration and behavioural change”, including public sensitisation. Prelims Pointers SMILE Scheme launchedon 12 February 2022 by the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment. It comprises two sub-schemes: Comprehensive Rehabilitation of Transgender Persons and Persons Engaged in Begging. Garima Greh refers to government-supported shelter homes for transgender persons, implemented through Community-Based Organisations. Ayushman Bharat TG Plus provides ₹5 lakh annual health coverage, including gender-affirming procedures and therapies. The National Portal for Transgender Persons is mandatory for issuing identity certificates and accessing scheme benefits. India Emerges as Cradle of Jamun Evolution Why in News? 20 April 2026 (PIB Release) reported a major palaeobotanical finding establishing India as the evolutionary cradle of Jamun (genus Syzygium), based on new fossil evidence from Early Miocene deposits. The study challenges earlier theories of Australian/Southeast Asian origin, repositioning India as a primary centre of plant diversification, with implications for biogeography, climate science, and biodiversity policy. Relevance GS I (Geography) Biogeography, Continental Drift, Gondwana Himalayan uplift and monsoon evolution GS III (Science & Tech) Palaeobotany, fossil evidence vs molecular phylogeny Interdisciplinary research (taxonomy + modelling) Practice Question Q1.Discuss the significance of fossil evidence in reconstructing evolutionary history. How does the recent Jamun study reshape India’s role in global biogeography? (250 words) Static Background Continental Drift Theory explains how India, once part of Gondwana, drifted northwards and collided with Eurasia, shaping Asian flora and fauna distribution. East Gondwana included India, Australia, Antarctica, enabling early plant evolution before continental separation. Biogeography studies spatial and temporal distribution of species, influenced by plate tectonics, climate, and evolution. Palaeobotany reconstructs ancient vegetation using fossil records, complementing molecular phylogeny (DNA-based timelines). Geological time relevance: Late Cretaceous (~80 MYA): India isolated as a drifting landmass. Eocene (~55 MYA): Tropical climate during India–Asia collision phase. Miocene (~20 MYA): Himalayan uplift influencing monsoon and vegetation patterns. Core Issue / Key Findings / Data Study led by Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeosciences establishes East Gondwanan origin (~80 MYA) of Syzygium, contradicting earlier ~51 MYA origin estimates. Discovery of 11 well-preserved fossil leaves (Early Miocene, ~20 MYA) from Kasauli Formation (Himachal Pradesh). New species identified: Syzygium paleosalicifolium, confirming continuous presence in India since Early Eocene (~55 MYA). Fossil evidence suggests dispersal pathway: India → Southeast Asia → Australia, reversing earlier models. Analysis based on 22 morphological characters, statistical validation, and comparison with global herbarium datasets. Overview The study strengthens the “Out-of-India hypothesis”, suggesting India acted as a biogeographical source region rather than a passive recipient of flora. Fossil evidence bridges the “molecular vs fossil gap”, where DNA-based timelines underestimated the antiquity of species evolution. India’s position as a “floating island” during Late Cretaceous created conditions for independent evolutionary radiation of tropical plant groups. The Kasauli Formation fossils (Miocene) coincide with Himalayan uplift, indicating adaptive expansion of species into new ecological niches shaped by orogeny. Jamun’s ecological preference for humid tropical climates makes it a proxy indicator (“palaeo-thermometer”) for reconstructing past monsoon patterns and climate conditions. Demonstrates integration of morphological taxonomy + statistical modelling + fossil re-evaluation, highlighting advancements in interdisciplinary palaeoscience research. Elevates India’s scientific contribution in global evolutionary biology and palaeogeography, aligning with Atmanirbhar Bharat in research ecosystems. Institutional significance of Department of Science and Technology support underscores state-led promotion of fundamental research. Challenges / Concerns / Gaps Fossil record incompleteness may still leave gaps in reconstructing continuous evolutionary pathways. Dating uncertainties between molecular clocks and fossil timelines require further interdisciplinary calibration. Limited geographical sampling (mainly Himalayan foothills) may not fully represent pan-India evolutionary spread. Need for high-resolution climate modelling to correlate fossil evidence with precise palaeo-climatic conditions. Insufficient public and policy integration of palaeobotanical findings into biodiversity conservation strategies. Key Takeaways Provides strong evidence for India’s central role in global plant evolution. Demonstrates importance of fossil evidence over sole reliance on molecular data in evolutionary reconstruction . Reinforces concept of India as both a “sink and source” of biodiversity, critical for ecological and conservation debates. Prelims Pointers Syzygium (Jamun) now traced to East Gondwanan origin (~80 million years ago). Kasauli Formation (Himachal Pradesh) associated with Early Miocene (~20 MYA) fossil discoveries. New fossil species: Syzygium paleosalicifolium. Study conducted by Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeosciences (BSIP) under DST. Fossil evidence shows presence in India since Early Eocene (~55 MYA). Revised dispersal route: India → Southeast Asia → Australia, reversing earlier theories.

Apr 21, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Content The price of negligence Puzzle of missing urgency around learning The price of negligence Why in News? 19 April 2026: Major explosion in fireworks unit in Virudhunagar district killed 25 workers, with subsequent blast injuring 20+ persons, exposing persistent industrial safety failures. Recurring accidents (134 deaths in 4 years) highlight systemic regulatory lapses rather than isolated incidents, raising concerns over labour safety governance and enforcement credibility. Relevance GS II (Governance & Polity) Labour safety laws, regulatory enforcement failure Centre–State–local coordination issues (PESO, District Administration) Constitutional rights: Article 21 (safe working conditions) GS III (Economy & Industry) Industrial safety, informal sector vulnerabilities Technology gap (automation vs manual hazardous processes) Practice Question Q1.“Industrial disasters in India are less accidents and more governance failures.”Critically examine with reference to recent incidents in hazardous industries. (250 words) Static Background Fireworks industry concentrated in Sivakasi region (Virudhunagar), known as “Fireworks Capital of India”, employing lakhs of workers, largely from economically weaker sections. Regulatory framework includes: Explosives Act, 1884 and Explosives Rules, 2008 governing manufacture, storage, and safety norms (shed distance, occupancy limits). Oversight by Petroleum and Explosives Safety Organisation (PESO) under DPIIT. Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code, 2020 aims to standardise workplace safety norms across sectors. Constitutional basis: Article 21 (Right to Life with dignity) includes safe working conditions; DPSPs mandate worker protection (Articles 39, 42). Core Issue & Key Findings  Violation of occupancy norms: 40 workers present vs. permitted 12, indicating blatant disregard of safety regulations. Unit operated on Sunday (declared holiday) → evidence of illegal “shadow shifts” to meet seasonal demand. Pattern of recurrent explosions disproves “accident” narrative → reflects predictable, preventable industrial disasters. Persistent gap between legal provisions (de jure) and ground enforcement (de facto). Overview The crisis reflects failure of inter-jurisdictional coordination between district authorities (licensing) and PESO (technical oversight), leading to fragmented accountability. Inspections have become ritualistic rather than substantive, indicating possible regulatory capture, where enforcement agencies fail to act against violators due to local pressures. Acute manpower shortage in inspection authorities leads to low inspection frequency and poor compliance monitoring, especially when one officer oversees hundreds of units. The presence of shadow shifts and overcrowding highlights systemic issues of informalisation and production pressure, especially before festive seasons like Diwali. The industry’s dependence on manual processes (chemical mixing of sulphur, nitrates, aluminium powder) significantly increases friction-based explosion risks, making human-intensive operations inherently unsafe. Lack of technological upgradation (automation, closed-loop systems) indicates low capital investment and resistance from small-scale units, perpetuating unsafe practices. The region’s arid climate and rain-fed agriculture create a “dependency trap”, where workers lack alternative livelihoods and are forced into hazardous employment, reducing their bargaining power. Post-disaster responses focus on ex-gratia compensation (solatium) rather than systemic prevention mechanisms, reflecting a reactive governance approach. Limited adoption of green crackers (CSIR-NEERI) shows skill gap and transition challenges, despite judicial push for safer and eco-friendly alternatives. Challenges & Concerns Weak enforcement capacity and manpower shortages undermine effectiveness of existing safety laws. Regulatory capture and corruption risks dilute inspection quality and accountability. Absence of mandatory insurance mechanisms forces reliance on ad hoc compensation after accidents. Technological inertia due to cost constraints among small manufacturers limits adoption of automation. Socio-economic vulnerability of workers sustains acceptance of unsafe conditions. Lack of real-time monitoring systems (digital inspections, audit trails) enables violations like holiday operations. Incomplete implementation of OSH Code, 2020 widens the gap between policy intent and practice. Key Takeaways Illustrates classic governance failure: strong legal framework but weak enforcement and monitoring. Highlights need for technological solutions (automation, green chemistry) in hazardous industries. Demonstrates link between climate vulnerability (arid regions) and labour exploitation. Case study of preventable disasters due to administrative negligence and systemic gaps. Prelims Pointers PESO functions under DPIIT, regulating explosives and fireworks industry. Explosives Rules, 2008 specify occupancy limits and safety distances for fireworks units. OSH Code, 2020 consolidates multiple labour laws on workplace safety and health. Sivakasi (Virudhunagar) is India’s largest fireworks manufacturing hub. Green crackers developed by CSIR-NEERI aim to reduce pollution and improve safety. Fireworks manufacturing involves highly combustible chemical mixtures, making it a hazard-prone industry. Puzzle of missing urgency around learning Context: Why in News? April 2026 discourse on education outcomes highlights persistent learning crisis despite policy push under NEP 2020, with weak field-level urgency despite ASER evidence of low FLN outcomes. Debate centres on lack of “salience” (perceived urgency), explaining why strong policy intent fails to translate into real learning gains. Relevance GS II (Governance) Education policy: National Education Policy 2020 Learning outcomes vs schooling inputs Role of state capacity and accountability GS I (Society) Human capital formation, inequality in education Social perception and behavioural aspects (salience) Practice Question Q1.“The real crisis in Indian education is not access but learning outcomes.”Critically analyse in the context of FLN initiatives. (250 words) Static Background National Education Policy 2020 identifies Foundational Literacy and Numeracy (FLN) as a national mission-critical priority. NIPUN Bharat Mission aims to achieve universal FLN by Grade 3 through structured pedagogy and administrative convergence. ASER Reports (by Pratham) consistently show learning gaps—many Grade 5 students unable to read Grade 2 texts. Constitutional basis: Article 21A (Right to Education) ensures access, but evolving jurisprudence emphasises quality learning outcomes (substantive equality). Core Issue & Key Findings Persistent gap between “schooling (enrolment, infrastructure)” and “learning (FLN outcomes)”, despite increased funding and reforms. Even in best-performing regions like Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu, reading proficiency improved from 20% to 65%, yet 35% remain non-literate, showing long-tail exclusion. Learning crisis remains “invisible” and under-recognised, unlike tangible infrastructure deficits. Weak bottom-up demand for learning outcomes, reducing accountability pressure on the system. Overview The concept of “salience” explains governance failure, where availability of resources (“hardware”) fails without societal urgency (“software”), unlike Vietnam’s high learning outcomes driven by social prioritisation. Learning suffers from “intangibility”, where decoding (reading words) is mistaken for understanding (comprehension), creating false perception of success among parents and administrators. The system is affected by power asymmetry, where children lack voice, parents lack assessment tools, and middle-class exit from public schools weakens accountability pressure. A critical conceptual gap exists between “learning to read” and “reading to learn”, with failure at Grade 3 causing cumulative learning deficits across subjects. Cognitive dissonance among officials leads to overemphasis on inputs (schools, toilets, enrolment) rather than outputs (learning outcomes), as acknowledging failure has institutional and political costs. The responsibility gap—where schooling is seen as state duty but learning is attributed to child/family—undermines systemic accountability in pedagogy, curriculum, and teacher training. The fatalism trap (belief that system is too large to reform) discourages innovation, despite proven models like Teaching at the Right Level, which show scalable improvements in FLN. The example of village-level assessments in DNH & DD demonstrates how making learning visible transforms abstract statistics into personal urgency, creating bottom-up salience and behavioural change. The learning crisis can be conceptualised as an “invisible pothole”, where absence of FLN undermines long-term human capital formation, productivity, and demographic dividend. Challenges & Concerns Low salience at community level leads to weak demand for quality education outcomes. Measurement challenges: Learning outcomes are harder to track compared to infrastructure indicators. Administrative inertia and risk aversion discourage acknowledgment of large-scale failure. Teacher capacity and pedagogy gaps hinder effective FLN delivery despite policy frameworks. Socio-economic inequalities affect home learning environments, widening achievement gaps. Limited integration of real-time assessment tools and feedback loops in school systems. Key Takeaways Highlights governance insight: policy success depends on societal salience, not just design and funding. Demonstrates shift from access-based education model → outcome-based learning paradigm. Provides case study for evidence-based policymaking and behavioural change in governance. Useful for essays on human capital, institutional failure, and education reform. Prelims Pointers NEP 2020 prioritises FLN as a national mission. NIPUN Bharat Mission targets universal FLN by Grade 3. ASER reports measure basic learning outcomes (reading, arithmetic) at household level. Teaching at the Right Level (TaRL) focuses on grouping children by learning level, not age/grade. FLN transition point: Shift from “learning to read” → “reading to learn” around Grade 3. Learning crisis persists despite near-universal enrolment in primary education.

Apr 21, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Content Civil Services Day Boko- Suwori Tribal festival  India’s forests could nearly double carbon storage by 2100, study finds There is a need to prioritise biofuel for aviation: IATA Government recognizes more than 55,200 startups during FY 2025-26 Cabinet approves proposal for creation of ‘Bharat Maritime Insurance Pool’ (BMI pool)  Tobacco as Poverty Trap Civil Services Day Context: Why in News? 21 April 2026: India observed Civil Services Day, commemorating Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel’s 1947 address, reinforcing the role of civil servants as the “steel frame of India”. The occasion highlights governance reforms, administrative accountability, and citizen-centric service delivery, alongside recognition through Prime Minister’s Awards for Excellence in Public Administration. Relevance GS II (Polity & Governance) Civil services reforms, accountability, citizen-centric governance Constitutional framework (Articles 308–323, Article 312 – AIS) GS IV (Ethics) Integrity, neutrality, empathy, public service values “Steel frame” → ethical responsibility Essay / Interview Bureaucracy in democracy Reform vs continuity in governance Practice Question Q1.“The role of civil services in India is evolving from rule-based administration to outcome-based governance.”Critically examine. (250 words) Static Background Civil Services Day traces its origin to 21 April 1947, when Patel addressed probationers at Metcalfe House, defining civil services as the backbone of India’s administrative system. First officially celebrated in 2006 at Vigyan Bhawan, New Delhi, institutionalised by Department of Administrative Reforms and Public Grievances (DARPG). Civil services derive legitimacy from constitutional provisions (Articles 308–323) governing recruitment, tenure, and safeguards. Role anchored in Weberian bureaucracy model: neutrality, permanence, meritocracy, combined with evolving focus on New Public Management (efficiency, outcomes). Linked to All India Services (IAS, IPS, IFoS) ensuring federal administrative integration under Article 312. Core Issue & Key Features Observed annually on 21 April, recognising contributions of IAS, IPS, IFS, and other civil servants in governance and policy implementation. Prime Minister’s Awards for Excellence in Public Administration reward districts/units for innovation, grievance redressal, and priority programme implementation. Serves as a platform for best practice sharing, inter-service learning, and administrative innovation diffusion. Emphasises citizen-centric governance, transparency, and accountability mechanisms in public administration. Overview Civil Services Day reinforces the transition from “rule-based administration” to “result-based governance”, aligning with modern demands of efficiency, responsiveness, and inclusivity. The concept of “steel frame” is evolving—from colonial-era control apparatus to development-oriented, welfare-driven administrative machinery. Awards system promotes competitive federalism, incentivising districts to adopt innovative governance models and outcome-based administration. Reflects shift towards evidence-based policymaking, where data-driven governance, digital platforms (e-Governance), and DBT mechanisms enhance service delivery. Highlights increasing importance of ethical governance, where civil servants must balance neutrality with empathy and accountability. Reinforces the need for lateral coordination across departments, as governance challenges (climate change, urbanisation, social justice) are increasingly multi-sectoral. Also underscores challenges of bureaucratic inertia, politicisation, and capacity constraints, necessitating continuous reforms. Challenges & Concerns  Persistent issues of bureaucratic red-tapism and procedural delays affecting service delivery outcomes. Politicisation of civil services undermining neutrality and professionalism. Capacity deficits and skill gaps in handling emerging areas like AI governance, climate policy, and digital regulation. Limited performance-based evaluation systems, with emphasis still on process compliance rather than outcomes. Weak citizen feedback loops and grievance redressal effectiveness in many regions. Stress and workload pressures affecting efficiency and ethical decision-making. Key Takeaways Civil Services Day symbolises administrative accountability, ethical governance, and citizen-centric service delivery. Illustrates evolution from colonial bureaucracy → developmental and participatory governance model. Provides examples for best practices, innovation in governance, and district-level administration. Useful for essay themes on governance, bureaucracy, and public service motivation. Prelims Pointers Civil Services Day observed on 21 April every year in India. Commemorates Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel’s 1947 address at Metcalfe House. First officially celebrated in 2006 at Vigyan Bhawan, New Delhi. Organised by DARPG (Department of Administrative Reforms and Public Grievances). Associated with Prime Minister’s Awards for Excellence in Public Administration. Linked to All India Services under Article 312 of the Constitution. Boko- Suwori Tribal festival  Context: Why in News? 21 April 2026 witnessed the celebration of the 114th Suwori Bihu Festival in Boko (Kamrup district), drawing attention to Assam’s rich syncretic tribal culture and continuity of indigenous traditions within the broader Rongali Bihu framework. The event gained prominence due to its scale of participation, traditional sports (horse/elephant races), and multi-ethnic representation, making it relevant for culture, society, and regional identity in UPSC. Relevance GS I (Art & Culture) Intangible Cultural Heritage (ICH) Tribal culture, festivals, Northeast diversity GS I (Society) Cultural integration, unity in diversity Ethnic coexistence Practice Question Q1.Discuss the role of regional festivals in preserving India’s intangible cultural heritage. Illustrate with examples from Northeast India. (250 words) Static Background Suwori Bihu is a century-old regional festival embedded within the larger Bihu cycle of Assam, particularly associated with Rongali (Bohag) Bihu, which marks the Assamese New Year and onset of the agricultural sowing season. The broader Bihu system reflects agrarian rhythms and seasonal transitions: Rongali (Bohag) → celebration, fertility, new year Kongali (Kati) → austerity and crop protection Bhogali (Magh) → harvest and feasting The festival embodies tribal–non-tribal cultural synthesis, involving communities such as Rabha, Bodo, Garo, Koch-Rajbongshi, and Gorkha, highlighting Assam’s ethnographic diversity. Falls under the domain of Intangible Cultural Heritage (ICH), characterised by oral traditions, ritual performances, and community participation, rather than monumental heritage. Core Issue & Key Features  Celebrated annually on the 7th day of Rongali Bihu, making it a post-New Year community festival consolidating regional cultural identity. The 114th edition (2026) reflects continuity of tradition for over a century, indicating strong intergenerational cultural transmission mechanisms. Key attractions include: Hana Ghora (traditional horse dance) symbolising martial and agrarian heritage Paro Bah ritual performances, rooted in local mythological traditions Traditional sports such as horse racing, elephant racing, bamboo climbing, and tug-of-war, reflecting pre-modern livelihood patterns Participation cuts across multiple ethnic groups, reinforcing shared cultural ownership rather than exclusive identity. Overview The festival represents a grassroots model of cultural federalism, where local traditions coexist within the broader national cultural framework without homogenisation. Acts as a living example of “unity in diversity”, where diverse tribes retain distinct identities while participating in a shared socio-cultural platform, strengthening social cohesion in Northeast India. The integration of rituals, dance, and indigenous sports demonstrates the inseparable link between culture, ecology, and economy, especially in agrarian societies dependent on seasonal cycles. Traditional practices such as horse and elephant races reflect historical mobility patterns, pastoral traditions, and human-animal relationships, offering insights into ethno-ecological adaptations. The festival also serves as an informal institution of knowledge transmission, where oral traditions, folklore, and community values are passed across generations without formal documentation systems. Increasing media visibility and tourism potential indicate a shift towards cultural commodification, which can enhance local livelihoods but risks diluting authenticity if not managed sustainably. From a governance perspective, such festivals highlight the need for policy support for regional cultures, aligning with cultural preservation mandates under Article 29 (protection of culture). Challenges & Concerns  Rapid urbanisation and migration threaten the continuity of traditional knowledge systems and community participation. Lack of systematic documentation and institutional archiving risks permanent loss of oral and ritual traditions. Commercialisation and tourism pressures may transform authentic practices into performative spectacles detached from original meaning. Ethical and environmental concerns related to animal-based events (elephant/horse races) may invite regulatory scrutiny. Limited policy prioritisation of regional festivals compared to mainstream national cultural narratives. Key Takeaways Demonstrates link between festivals, agriculture, and ecology, useful for interdisciplinary answers. Highlights importance of intangible cultural heritage preservation in nation-building. Useful case study for cultural federalism, identity politics, and grassroots social cohesion. Can enrich answers on “unity in diversity”, tribal traditions, and regional cultural ecosystems. Prelims Pointers Suwori Bihu Festival celebrated in Boko (Kamrup district, Assam). 114th edition held in April 2026. Observed on 7th day of Rongali (Bohag) Bihu. Famous for Hana Ghora dance and Paro Bah rituals. Includes traditional sports like horse and elephant races. Represents multi-ethnic participation (Rabha, Bodo, Garo, Koch-Rajbongshi, Gorkha). India’s forests could nearly double carbon storage by 2100, study finds Context: Why in News? A recent modelling study published in Environmental Research: Climate projects that India’s forests could nearly double their carbon storage by 2100, depending on emission scenarios. The findings diverge from official estimates of Forest Survey of India (FSI), raising concerns about methodological gaps and future forest stability under climate change. Relevance GS III (Environment & Climate Change) Carbon sinks, climate modelling Forest policy, Paris Agreement commitments GS I (Geography) Vegetation patterns, climate–ecosystem interaction Practice Question Q1.“Increased forest carbon storage does not necessarily indicate ecological health.”Critically examine with reference to recent climate studies. (250 words) Static Background Forests act as carbon sinks, absorbing atmospheric CO₂ through Photosynthesis and storing it as biomass carbon (above-ground + below-ground). India’s climate commitments under Paris Agreement include creating an additional 2.5–3 billion tonnes of CO₂ equivalent carbon sink through forests by 2030. FSI assessments rely on satellite-based forest cover mapping + inventory methods, focusing on current stock, whereas climate models project future dynamics. Key drivers of forest carbon dynamics: Precipitation (water availability) Atmospheric CO₂ concentration (fertilisation effect) Temperature and extreme events Core Issue / Key Findings / Data Forest carbon biomass projected to increase: +35% (low emissions) +62% (medium emissions) +97% (high emissions scenario) by 2100 Growth divergence becomes significant post-2050, despite similar trends till ~2030. Dry regions (Rajasthan, Gujarat, W. MP) show >60% increase, while Western Ghats & Himalayas show limited gains due to ecological saturation. Growth driven by increased rainfall + CO₂ fertilisation, with lag effect (2–4 years) in biomass response. Overview The study highlights a paradox where higher emissions → greater carbon sequestration, due to CO₂ fertilisation and increased rainfall, but this does not imply climate benefit. Increased biomass in semi-arid regions suggests climate-induced vegetation shifts, potentially altering ecosystem composition and biodiversity patterns. Ecological saturation in dense forests (Western Ghats, Himalayas) limits further carbon absorption, indicating finite carrying capacity of ecosystems. The divergence from FSI estimates underscores the gap between static measurement (present stock) and dynamic modelling (future projections). The projections exclude disturbance factors (deforestation, fires, pests, land-use change), which may reverse gains and convert forests into carbon sources. Increased biomass accumulation may also raise forest vulnerability, as heatwaves, droughts, and wildfires can trigger sudden carbon release. The findings reinforce the concept that climate change has non-linear and regionally differentiated impacts, challenging simplistic narratives of “greening”. Demonstrates importance of integrating climate science, ecology, and policy planning for long-term forest management. Challenges & Concerns  Overestimation risk due to exclusion of disturbances like wildfires, deforestation, pest outbreaks. Policy mismatch between FSI-based reporting and model-based projections. Climate extremes (heatwaves, droughts) may destabilise forest ecosystems despite biomass growth. Risk of biodiversity loss due to species composition changes in newly greening dry regions. Weak integration of forest carbon modelling into policy frameworks (NAPCC, Green India Mission). Uncertainty in long-term rainfall projections and CO₂ fertilisation effects. Key Takeaways Highlights complexity of climate–forest interactions, showing that increased carbon storage ≠ ecological health. Demonstrates need for dynamic, forward-looking forest policy rather than static assessments. Useful example of scientific modelling vs administrative data gap. Reinforces importance of climate-resilient forest management and ecosystem-based adaptation. Prelims Pointers Forest carbon storage depends on biomass accumulation via photosynthesis. CO₂ fertilisation effect can enhance plant growth under higher CO₂ levels. FSI is India’s official body for forest cover and carbon stock estimation. Western Ghats & Himalayas show ecological saturation limiting carbon growth. Semi-arid regions may show higher relative increase in vegetation under climate change. Climate models often exclude disturbance factors like fire and land-use change There is a need to prioritise biofuel for aviation: IATA Context: Why in News? Recent remarks by International Air Transport Association (IATA) emphasise that India’s Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF) transition must prioritise efficient feedstock allocation, especially ethanol, to aviation over road transport. This aligns with India’s SAF blending roadmap and global commitments under International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) for net-zero aviation emissions by 2050. Relevance GS III (Economy & Environment) Energy transition, biofuels, aviation sector Climate commitments (net-zero aviation) Practice Question Q1.Discuss the challenges in decarbonising the aviation sector. Evaluate the role of Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF). (250 words) Static Background Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF) refers to non-fossil jet fuels derived from biomass, waste oils, or synthetic processes, capable of reducing lifecycle emissions by up to 80%. Key production pathways include: Alcohol-to-Jet (AtJ) (ethanol → jet fuel) HEFA (Hydroprocessed Esters & Fatty Acids) Power-to-Liquid (synthetic fuels) Aviation is a hard-to-abate sector due to high energy density requirements, limiting electrification feasibility unlike road transport. India’s climate commitments under Paris Agreement and Long-Term Low Emission Development Strategy (LT-LEDS) emphasise low-carbon fuels and energy transition. Core Issue & Key Findings India has set SAF blending targets: 1% by 2027 2% by 2028 5% by 2030 (for international flights) India possesses ~10% of global bio-feedstock potential, yet currently utilises only ~2–3%, indicating underutilisation capacity. Global SAF feedstock availability projected: 105 million tonnes (2030) 154 million tonnes (2050) vs 500 mt global demand → significant supply gap. SAF currently costs 3–5 times more than conventional jet fuel, posing economic challenges. Overview The core policy challenge is optimal allocation of scarce biomass feedstock, where competing sectors (aviation vs road transport) demand the same resource (ethanol). Road transport has viable alternatives (EVs, hydrogen, hybrid systems), whereas aviation remains structurally dependent on liquid fuels, justifying sectoral prioritisation of ethanol for SAF. The Alcohol-to-Jet (AtJ) pathway emerges as India’s most viable route due to existing ethanol ecosystem (E20 blending programme), creating policy synergies but also competition. Lack of integrated mobility planning leads to sub-optimal outcomes, where sector-specific policies (ethanol for cars vs planes) may conflict, highlighting need for systems approach in energy transition. India’s bio-feedstock abundance (10% global share) positions it as a potential global SAF hub, but requires supply chain scaling, logistics, and policy coordination. High cost of SAF reflects early-stage technology, limited economies of scale, and feedstock constraints, necessitating state support (subsidies, viability gap funding). Without policy clarity, there is a risk of stranded investments, where aviation firms invest in SAF capacity but face ethanol shortages due to competing demand from ethanol blending in petrol. The issue underscores broader energy transition dilemma: balancing food security, fuel demand, and environmental sustainability, especially when feedstock is derived from agricultural biomass. Challenges & Concerns Feedstock competition between aviation, road transport, and other biofuel sectors. High production cost (3–5x conventional fuel) impacting airline economics and passenger fares. Lack of integrated policy framework across ministries (aviation, petroleum, agriculture). Risk of food vs fuel conflict if ethanol production expands unsustainably. Limited domestic SAF production infrastructure and technology maturity. Absence of long-term pricing and demand certainty discourages private investment. Key Takeaways  Highlights importance of sectoral prioritisation in energy transition for hard-to-abate sectors. Demonstrates need for integrated mobility and energy policy approach rather than silo-based policymaking. Illustrates trade-offs between economic feasibility, environmental sustainability, and technological constraints. Useful case for policy design, resource allocation, and sustainable development debates. Prelims Pointers SAF (Sustainable Aviation Fuel) can reduce aviation emissions significantly compared to fossil jet fuel. Alcohol-to-Jet (AtJ) is a key SAF production pathway using ethanol. India’s SAF blending targets: 1% (2027), 2% (2028), 5% (2030). IATA is a global airline association; ICAO is a UN specialised agency for aviation. Aviation sector is difficult to electrify due to high energy density requirements. SAF is currently 3–5 times more expensive than conventional aviation fuel. Government recognizes more than 55,200 startups during FY 2025-26 Context: Why in News? PIB reported that India recognised 55,200+ startups in FY 2025–26, the highest-ever annual addition since the launch of the Startup India Initiative (2016). Total recognised startups crossed 2.23 lakh, generating 23.36 lakh direct jobs, signalling deepening of India’s innovation-led growth model. Relevance GS III (Economy) Innovation, entrepreneurship, employment generation Startup ecosystem, funding mechanisms GS II (Governance) Policy design, ease of doing business Practice Question Q1.Evaluate the role of startups in driving India’s economic transformation. Highlight key challenges. (250 words) Static Background Startup India Initiative (2016) aims to build a robust entrepreneurial ecosystem, focusing on innovation, job creation, and ease of doing business. Key pillars include: Simplification and handholding (regulatory easing, self-certification) Funding support and incentives (tax exemptions, capital access) Industry-academia partnerships and incubation ecosystem Institutional architecture includes schemes like: Fund of Funds for Startups (FFS) Startup India Seed Fund Scheme (SISFS) Credit Guarantee Scheme for Startups (CGSS) Linked to Atmanirbhar Bharat, Digital India, and Make in India, positioning startups as drivers of innovation and employment. Core Issue & Key Findings 55,200+ startups recognised in FY 2025–26, marking 51.6% YoY growth, indicating accelerated entrepreneurial activity. Total recognised startups: 2.23 lakh+, generating 23.36 lakh direct jobs, reflecting labour-intensive innovation growth. Women-led participation strong: 1.07 lakh startups (~48%) have at least one woman director/partner, signalling inclusive entrepreneurship. Regional spread pan-India, with Maharashtra, Karnataka, Uttar Pradesh, Delhi, Gujarat emerging as leading hubs. Funding ecosystem: ₹7,000+ crore disbursed via FFS → ₹26,900+ crore invested in 1,420+ startups FFS 2.0 launched with ₹10,000 crore corpus Credit expansion: CGSS guarantee enhanced from ₹10 crore → ₹20 crore per borrower ₹1,250+ crore loans guaranteed (410+ loans) Innovation indicators: 19,400+ patent applications filed Patent filings rose from 2,850 → 4,480 (YoY increase) Public procurement integration: 38,600+ startups onboarded on Government e-Marketplace Overview The surge in startup recognition reflects structural shift towards innovation-driven growth, complementing India’s transition from factor-driven to knowledge-driven economy. Strong YoY growth (51.6%) indicates improved ease of doing business, digital infrastructure, and policy support, especially post-pandemic entrepreneurial expansion. High women participation (~48%) signals democratisation of entrepreneurship, contributing to gender-inclusive economic development. Expansion of FFS and CGSS reflects government’s role in de-risking private investment, addressing the “valley of death” problem in startup financing. Integration with GeM platform creates demand-side support, enabling startups to access government procurement markets, which is critical for scaling and revenue stability. Rising patent filings indicate shift from service-based startups to deep-tech and IP-driven innovation ecosystems. However, startup concentration in a few states highlights regional innovation imbalance, pointing to uneven ecosystem maturity. The policy push shows movement from startup quantity → quality (innovation, patents, scale-ups), but sustainability depends on market viability and global competitiveness. Challenges & Concerns High startup mortality rate due to funding gaps beyond early stages (Series B/C crunch). Regional disparities with Tier-2/3 cities lagging in ecosystem maturity. Limited deep-tech and manufacturing startups compared to service sector dominance. Regulatory compliance burden still persists despite simplification efforts. Dependence on government incentives rather than market-driven sustainability. Skill gaps and R&D ecosystem limitations constrain high-value innovation. Global uncertainties affecting venture capital flows and startup valuations. Key Takeaways Startup ecosystem is a key pillar of India’s economic transformation and employment generation strategy. Demonstrates public-private partnership model in innovation financing (FFS, CGSS). Highlights importance of inclusive entrepreneurship (women participation, pan-India spread). Useful example of state-led ecosystem building with market-oriented outcomes. Prelims Pointers Startup India Initiative launched on 16 January 2016. FFS operates via SEBI-registered AIFs, not direct funding to startups. CGSS provides credit guarantees, not direct loans. SISFS supports early-stage startups through incubators. GeM platform enables startups to participate in government procurement. Patent filings by startups increased significantly in FY 2025–26. Cabinet approves proposal for creation of ‘Bharat Maritime Insurance Pool’ (BMI pool)  Why in News? 18 April 2026 (PIB): Union Cabinet approved creation of the Bharat Maritime Insurance Pool (BMI Pool) with a sovereign guarantee of ₹12,980 crore, aimed at ensuring continuous, affordable maritime insurance coverage for Indian trade amid rising global volatility and geopolitical disruptions. The move is significant in the backdrop of increasing risks in key shipping routes and the withdrawal or cost escalation of insurance by foreign insurers, directly affecting India’s trade security and logistics costs. Relevance GS III (Economy & Infrastructure) Maritime trade, insurance sector, logistics Economic security, global supply chains GS II (Governance) Sovereign guarantee, strategic policy response Practice Question Q1.Discuss the significance of the Bharat Maritime Insurance Pool in enhancing India’s trade resilience. (250 words) Static Background Maritime insurance is a critical enabler of global trade, as ships cannot operate without adequate risk coverage; it protects against physical damage, cargo loss, third-party liabilities, and war-related risks. India’s trade is heavily dependent on maritime routes, with ~95% of trade by volume and ~70% by value transported via sea, making uninterrupted insurance coverage essential for economic stability and supply chain resilience. Traditionally, India has depended on global insurance systems like the International Group of Protection and Indemnity Clubs (IGP&I Clubs), which provide P&I insurance covering liabilities such as oil spills, crew injury, and collision damage. However, such dependence exposes India to external risks including sanctions, geopolitical conflicts, and premium volatility, as these global entities may withdraw or restrict coverage during crises. The concept of an insurance pool involves multiple insurers combining their financial capacity to spread risk, enhance underwriting capability, and provide coverage for large or high-risk sectors. Core Issue & Key Features The BMI Pool is backed by a sovereign guarantee of ₹12,980 crore, ensuring strong financial backing and credibility to absorb large-scale maritime risks. The pool will have a combined underwriting capacity of approximately ₹950 crore, enabling domestic insurers to issue policies collectively rather than individually bearing risk. It provides comprehensive coverage across all major maritime risk categories, including Hull & Machinery (ship damage), Cargo (goods in transit), Protection & Indemnity (third-party liabilities), and War risk (conflict-related damages). Coverage extends to Indian-flagged vessels as well as ships carrying cargo to and from Indian ports, even when passing through volatile maritime corridors such as conflict-prone sea lanes. A dedicated Governing Body will oversee the pool’s functioning, ensuring regulatory coordination, operational efficiency, and adherence to Indian maritime conditions and legal frameworks. Overview The creation of the BMI Pool represents a strategic shift towards financial sovereignty in maritime risk management, reducing India’s reliance on foreign insurers and insulating trade from external shocks such as sanctions or geopolitical tensions. By providing a sovereign guarantee, the government effectively de-risks the sector, enabling domestic insurers to expand their coverage capacity and compete with established global insurance pools. The initiative ensures continuity of maritime trade, especially during crises when foreign insurers may either withdraw coverage or impose prohibitively high premiums, thereby safeguarding supply chains and export-import flows. It contributes to cost stabilisation in logistics, as predictable insurance premiums prevent sudden spikes in shipping costs that could otherwise translate into inflationary pressures in the domestic economy. The pool also promotes development of domestic expertise in marine underwriting, claims management, actuarial science, and maritime legal frameworks, strengthening India’s financial and insurance ecosystem. Strategically, it complements India’s broader maritime ambitions (Sagarmala, Maritime India Vision 2030) and aligns with Atmanirbhar Bharat, extending self-reliance to financial and risk management domains. However, long-term success depends on robust risk assessment, actuarial accuracy, and reinsurance linkages, as sovereign backing alone cannot sustain large-scale catastrophic liabilities. Challenges & Concerns The ₹12,980 crore sovereign guarantee exposes the government to significant fiscal risk, especially in case of large maritime accidents or war-related losses. India currently has limited domestic expertise in complex marine underwriting and actuarial risk modelling, compared to established global insurance institutions. The pool will require strong reinsurance arrangements, possibly still involving global players, to manage catastrophic risks beyond domestic capacity. There is a potential risk of moral hazard, where insurers or shipping entities may rely excessively on sovereign backing and weaken risk discipline. Coordination challenges may arise among multiple insurers, regulators, and maritime stakeholders, affecting operational efficiency. Ensuring global acceptance and integration with international maritime insurance norms will be crucial for credibility and smooth functioning. Key Takeaways  The BMI Pool is a significant example of economic security through financial instruments, linking insurance, trade resilience, and geopolitics. It reflects a policy shift from external dependence to domestic capacity building in critical sectors, extending the idea of Atmanirbhar Bharat beyond manufacturing into financial services. Demonstrates the role of sovereign guarantees in enabling high-risk sectors and crowding in private participation. Serves as a case study of how non-traditional sectors like insurance can influence national security and economic stability. Prelims Pointers The Bharat Maritime Insurance Pool (BMI Pool) was approved by the Union Cabinet in April 2026. It is backed by a sovereign guarantee of ₹12,980 crore, ensuring financial stability and risk absorption. The pool provides coverage for Hull & Machinery, Cargo, Protection & Indemnity (P&I), and War risks. It reduces India’s dependence on International Group of Protection and Indemnity (IGP&I) Clubs, which dominate global marine insurance. It applies to Indian-flagged vessels and ships trading to/from India, including those transiting high-risk maritime zones. The initiative aims to ensure continuous insurance availability and stability of maritime trade under geopolitical uncertainty. Tobacco as Poverty Trap Context: Why in News? A recent study in BMJ Global Health (April 2026) shows that 20.49 million Indian households (~10.6%) could move to a higher economic class simply by quitting tobacco, reframing tobacco as a poverty and development issue, not just a health concern. The study by ICMR-National Institute of Cancer Prevention and Research and Tata Institute of Social Sciences provides national-scale evidence linking tobacco consumption with economic immobility. Relevance GS II (Health & Social Sector) Public health policy, tobacco control laws Welfare and behavioural change GS III (Economy) Poverty, human capital, inequality Practice Question Q1.“Tobacco consumption is not merely a health issue but a development challenge.”Discuss with evidence. (250 words) Static Background Tobacco is a major public health concern in India, with ~267 million users (~25% of adults), making it one of the largest tobacco-consuming countries globally. It is the leading preventable cause of death, responsible for ~1.35 million deaths annually, linked to cancers (oral, lung, oesophagus), cardiovascular diseases, and stroke. India is also the second-largest producer and consumer of tobacco, with a dominant share (~70%) in smokeless tobacco globally. Tobacco control framework includes: Cigarettes and Other Tobacco Products Act (COTPA), 2003 National Tobacco Control Programme (NTCP) WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) commitments Traditionally framed as a health issue, but increasingly recognised as a development and poverty challenge. Core Issue & Key Findings  20.49 million households (10.6%) can move up one income class by reallocating tobacco expenditure. Poorest households spend ~6.4% of monthly income on tobacco, compared to ~2% among richest, indicating regressive consumption burden. 5.62 million poorest households (12.4%) could escape their income class entirely through cessation. Rural households disproportionately affected: 17 million rural vs 3.5 million urban households could improve economic status Rural spending share: 6.6% vs 5.6% (urban) Tobacco blocks economic mobility, diverting income from nutrition, education, and healthcare. Overview Tobacco functions as a “poverty trap”, where recurrent spending on addictive products reduces household savings, investment capacity, and upward mobility. The burden is regressive, disproportionately affecting poorer households, thereby widening income inequality and social vulnerability. The study introduces a paradigm shift from “health externality” to “development constraint”, linking tobacco consumption directly with multidimensional poverty indicators. High rural impact reflects lack of awareness, weaker healthcare access, and limited financial resilience, making tobacco expenditure more damaging. Early initiation (before age 18 for ~90% users) creates long-term addiction cycles, locking individuals into lifetime economic and health disadvantages. The findings highlight the concept of “opportunity cost of consumption”, where money spent on tobacco directly reduces human capital formation (nutrition, education). Integrating tobacco control with poverty alleviation programmes can generate dual dividends: improved health outcomes and enhanced economic mobility. The study underscores that no additional fiscal resources are required, as gains come from reallocation of existing household expenditure, making it a high-impact, low-cost policy lever. Challenges & Concerns  Addiction and behavioural inertia make quitting difficult despite economic incentives. Tobacco industry influence and informal sector production (especially smokeless tobacco) hinder regulation. Weak enforcement of COTPA provisions in rural and semi-urban areas. Limited integration of tobacco cessation with welfare schemes (PDS, MGNREGA, health missions). Social and cultural acceptance of tobacco use in many regions. Lack of targeted awareness linking tobacco use to poverty, as messaging is largely health-focused. Key Takeaways Tobacco is not just a public health issue but a structural barrier to poverty reduction and human development. Demonstrates importance of behavioural economics in policy design, where consumption choices affect socio-economic outcomes. Relevant for GS II (health, welfare policies), GS III (poverty, human capital), and GS IV (ethics: responsibility towards vulnerable groups). Provides strong case for policy convergence (health + poverty + nutrition). Useful example for essay themes on development traps, inequality, and behavioural change. Prelims Pointers India has ~267 million tobacco users, one of the highest globally. Tobacco causes ~1.35 million deaths annually in India. COTPA, 2003 regulates tobacco production, sale, and advertisement. India accounts for ~70% of global smokeless tobacco consumption. Majority of users start before age 18, increasing addiction risk. Tobacco expenditure is higher as a share of income among poorer households.