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Mar 18, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

Content Celebrating the Power of Vaccines 10,000 Farmer Producer Organisations (FPOs) Celebrating the Power of Vaccines Why in News ? India celebrated National Vaccination Day (16 March), highlighting achievements of Universal Immunisation Programme (UIP) and reaffirming commitment towards near-universal immunisation coverage and disease elimination. Launch of HPV vaccination campaign (1.15 crore girls target) and indigenous Td vaccine (55 lakh doses) marks expansion of India’s preventive healthcare architecture and self-reliance in vaccine manufacturing. Relevance GS 1 (Society & Human Development): Health indicators (IMR/MMR decline), demographic dividend, gender equity (HPV vaccination), social inclusion (zero-dose children) GS 2 (Polity & Governance): Right to health under Article 21, Directive Principles (Art 47), UIP implementation, cooperative federalism, last-mile delivery via ASHA/Anganwadi Practice Question Q. Vaccination programmes in India reflect the convergence of governance efficiency, economic rationality, and social justice. Critically analyse. (15 Marks) Significance of Vaccination   Governance / Administrative Dimension Universal Immunisation Programme (UIP) is among the largest globally, covering 2.9 crore pregnant women and 2.54 crore newborns annually, reflecting scale, administrative capacity, and institutional depth in public health delivery. Implementation through NRHM/NHM framework, supported by ASHA, Anganwadi workers, ensures last-mile outreach, community mobilisation, and reduction of exclusion errors in immunisation coverage across rural and urban areas. Mission Indradhanush (2015 onwards) targeted left-out populations, vaccinating 5.46 crore children and 1.32 crore pregnant women, showcasing convergence-driven governance model for improving immunisation equity. Constitutional / Policy Dimension Article 21 (Right to Life) interpreted by Supreme Court includes right to health, making immunisation a constitutional obligation of the State under welfare governance framework. Directive Principles (Article 47) mandate improvement of public health, guiding policies like UIP, Mission Indradhanush, and digital health initiatives aligned with welfare state philosophy. Reflects cooperative federalism, where Union ensures policy, funding, procurement, while States manage implementation and outreach, ensuring contextual adaptation of immunisation strategies. Economic Dimension Vaccination yields high economic returns; WHO estimates $1 investment generates ~$44 returns, through reduced disease burden, increased productivity, and lower healthcare expenditure. Reduces Out-of-Pocket Expenditure (OOPE) on preventable diseases, thereby preventing impoverishment and supporting inclusive growth, especially among vulnerable and low-income populations. Strengthens human capital formation, ensuring healthier workforce participation, improved cognitive development in children, and long-term demographic dividend realisation. Social Dimension Vaccination significantly reduces Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) and Maternal Mortality Ratio (MMR), contributing to improved survival outcomes and better quality of life indicators. Promotes gender equity, as seen in HPV vaccination targeting adolescent girls, addressing cervical cancer burden and advancing women’s health rights. Focus on zero-dose children (0.06%) highlights commitment to inclusivity, ensuring no child is left behind in access to essential public health services. Environmental / Health Security Dimension Immunisation acts as a critical tool for epidemic prevention, reducing incidence of communicable diseases such as measles, Japanese Encephalitis, and tuberculosis. Strengthens pandemic preparedness, as demonstrated during COVID-19 vaccination (200+ crore doses), showcasing India’s capacity for rapid, large-scale health interventions. Supports One Health approach, reducing zoonotic disease risks and contributing to global health security frameworks. Science & Technology Dimension Digital platforms like eVIN (cold chain monitoring), CoWIN (220 crore doses managed), and U-WIN (lifecycle immunisation tracking) enhance transparency, efficiency, and real-time governance. India’s position as ‘Pharmacy of the World’ (60% global vaccine supply) reflects strong biotechnology ecosystem and global leadership in vaccine manufacturing. Indigenous vaccine development (e.g., Td vaccine 2026) strengthens Atmanirbhar Bharat, reducing import dependence and ensuring supply security. Universal Immunisation Programme UIP (1985) provides free vaccination against 12 vaccine-preventable diseases, targeting pregnant women, infants, children, and adolescents through a structured national immunisation schedule. Massive infrastructure includes 30,000 cold chain points, 1.06 lakh storage units, and 1.3 crore annual immunisation sessions, ensuring vaccine potency and last-mile delivery across diverse geographies. Continuous expansion through addition of vaccines like IPV, Rotavirus, MR, PCV, and recent HPV and Td vaccines, reflects adaptive and evolving immunisation policy framework. Achievements & Data Evidence Full immunisation coverage increased from 62% (2015) to 98.4% (2026), indicating successful policy implementation and improved healthcare accessibility. Reduction in zero-dose children from 0.11% (2023) to 0.06% (2024) highlights effective targeting of vulnerable and hard-to-reach populations. Disease milestones include smallpox eradication (1977), polio elimination (2014 certification), and maternal & neonatal tetanus elimination, reflecting long-term success of vaccination strategies. Challenges Persistent regional and socio-economic disparities in immunisation coverage, especially in urban slums, tribal areas, and migratory populations, indicate inequity despite high aggregate coverage levels. Rising vaccine hesitancy due to misinformation, cultural beliefs, and trust deficits poses significant challenge to achieving universal and sustained immunisation outcomes. Infrastructure gaps in cold chain maintenance and workforce capacity, particularly in remote areas, affect vaccine quality and delivery efficiency. Digital divide limits effectiveness of platforms like U-WIN, especially in areas with low digital literacy or connectivity constraints. Expanding vaccine basket increases financial burden on public health system, raising concerns about long-term sustainability of free universal immunisation. Way Forward Transition towards life-cycle immunisation model, expanding coverage to adults and elderly, including vaccines for HPV, influenza, and tuberculosis, ensuring comprehensive preventive healthcare. Adopt data-driven targeting using AI and digital tools to identify zero-dose clusters and optimise resource allocation for improving equity in immunisation coverage. Strengthen last-mile delivery systems through capacity building, better incentives for ASHA workers, and deployment of mobile vaccination units in remote regions. Integrate U-WIN with Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission, enabling seamless health records, improved monitoring, and policy-level decision-making based on real-time data. Promote vaccine R&D and indigenous innovation, including next-generation platforms like mRNA vaccines, through public-private partnerships and increased health sector investments. Prelims Pointers UIP launched in 1985, covers 12 diseases with free vaccination. Mission Indradhanush (2015) aims for 90%+ coverage. eVIN → cold chain, CoWIN → COVID vaccination, U-WIN → routine immunisation. HPV vaccine prevents cervical cancer, JE vaccine limited to endemic districts. 10,000 Farmer Producer Organisations (FPOs) Why in News ? Government achieved milestone of 10,000 FPOs registered (as on 1st March 2026) under Central Sector Scheme, marking a major institutional reform in farmer collectivisation and agri-market integration. Notably, 1175 FPOs are 100% women-led, with 23.55 lakh women farmers enrolled, highlighting gender inclusion and empowerment in agricultural value chains. Relevance GS 2 (Governance & Polity): Institutional reform in agriculture, Central Sector Scheme implementation, role of CBBOs, cooperative federalism in agri-marketing reforms GS 3 (Economy & Agriculture): Farmer income enhancement, agri-value chain integration, economies of scale, market reforms, agri-entrepreneurship, food security Practice Question Q. Farmer Producer Organisations (FPOs) represent a shift from subsistence agriculture to market-oriented farming. Analyse their role in enhancing farmers’ income and discuss the challenges in ensuring their sustainability. (15 Marks) Rationale Behind FPO Scheme Economic Dimension Indian agriculture is dominated by small and marginal farmers (≈86%), leading to fragmented landholdings, low economies of scale, and weak market bargaining power. FPOs enable aggregation of produce and inputs, reducing transaction costs, improving price realisation, and facilitating integration with processing, storage, and export markets. Governance / Institutional Dimension FPOs act as formal farmer institutions, bridging gap between farmers and markets, and enabling efficient implementation of schemes like PMFBY, e-NAM, and MSP procurement systems. Central Sector Scheme ensures uniform support, capacity building, and financial assistance, strengthening institutional ecosystem for farmer collectivisation across states. Social / Equity Dimension Promotion of 1175 women-led FPOs with 23.55 lakh women farmers enhances gender inclusion, decision-making power, and financial independence in rural areas. FPOs help reduce rural inequality, enabling marginalised groups to access markets, credit, and technology collectively rather than individually. Food Security & Sustainability Dimension Aggregation through FPOs promotes efficient input use, better crop planning, and diversification, contributing to sustainable agricultural practices and food system resilience. Facilitates adoption of climate-resilient agriculture, organic farming, and resource-efficient practices through collective knowledge dissemination and extension services. Key Features of FPO Scheme Central Sector Scheme (2020) aims to form and promote 10,000 FPOs, providing financial, technical, and managerial support for a period of 5 years. Each FPO is supported by Cluster-Based Business Organisations (CBBOs) for handholding, capacity building, and ensuring business viability and professional management. Financial assistance includes equity grant (up to ₹15 lakh) and credit guarantee support (up to ₹2 crore), enabling access to institutional finance. FPOs function as producer-owned companies/cooperatives, engaged in input procurement, aggregation, processing, marketing, and value addition activities. Significance of FPOs Economic Empowerment of Farmers Enhances farmers’ bargaining power and price discovery, reducing dependence on intermediaries and ensuring better share in consumer price realisation. Strengthening Value Chains Enables integration into agri-value chains, including storage, logistics, processing, branding, and exports, thereby increasing farmers’ income beyond primary production. Women Empowerment Women-led FPOs promote financial inclusion, leadership roles, and livelihood diversification, contributing to gender equality and rural socio-economic transformation. Institutional Reform in Agriculture Represents shift from subsidy-driven agriculture → institution-driven agriculture, focusing on collective action, entrepreneurship, and market orientation. Boost to Rural Economy Generates non-farm employment opportunities in logistics, processing, and marketing, contributing to rural industrialisation and economic diversification. Challenges / Concerns Capacity & Professional Management Gaps Many FPOs lack managerial skills, business expertise, and governance structures, affecting operational efficiency and long-term sustainability. Limited Access to Credit Despite schemes, FPOs face difficulty in accessing institutional finance, due to lack of collateral, credit history, and risk perception by banks. Weak Market Linkages Inadequate integration with markets, processors, and exporters limits FPOs’ ability to realise full value of aggregation and scale advantages. Regional Imbalances Uneven distribution of FPOs across states leads to regional disparities, with weaker penetration in eastern and northeastern regions. Sustainability Concerns Dependence on government support raises concerns about financial viability post handholding period, questioning long-term sustainability of FPOs. Way Forward Strengthening Institutional Capacity Provide continuous training, professional management support, and governance frameworks to ensure FPOs function as sustainable business enterprises rather than subsidy-dependent entities. Improving Credit Access Expand credit guarantee schemes, fintech solutions, and customised financial products, enabling easier and affordable access to institutional finance for FPOs. Enhancing Market Linkages Integrate FPOs with e-NAM, agri-startups, food processing industries, and export markets, ensuring better price realisation and diversified income streams. Promoting Women-Led FPOs Provide targeted incentives, capacity building, and market support to women-led FPOs, strengthening gender-inclusive agricultural growth. Leveraging Technology Use digital platforms, AI-based advisories, and supply chain tracking systems, improving efficiency, transparency, and competitiveness of FPO operations. Prelims Pointers 10,000 FPO Scheme → Central Sector Scheme (2020) Equity Grant: ₹15 lakh, Credit Guarantee: ₹2 crore CBBOs provide handholding support 1175 women FPOs, 23.55 lakh women farmers (2026 data)

Mar 18, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Content Parents, companies must act against social media harms A bit of a blur over India’s new carbon credit plan Parents, companies must act against social media harms Why in News ? Editorial highlights growing concern over social media-driven mental health crisis among adolescents, backed by global evidence and Indian trends. India-specific policy momentum: Karnataka (2026) proposed ban under 16, Andhra Pradesh exploring restrictions, and Economic Survey 2025–26 recommending age limits. Relevance GS 2 (Governance & Polity): Regulation of digital platforms (IT Rules 2021, DPDP Act 2023), Centre–State jurisdiction issues, child protection laws, digital governance GS 3 (Science & Technology / Internal Security): Algorithmic harms, dark patterns, cyberbullying, online exploitation, platform accountability Practice Question Q. Social media platforms are increasingly being held responsible for adverse mental health outcomes among adolescents. Discuss the need for a balanced regulatory framework in India. (15 Marks) Nature of the Problem  Mental Health Crisis among Youth Heavy social media use linked to 2–3 times higher risk of self-harm and suicidal ideation (global research cited in editorial), reflecting serious psychological externalities. India shows rising vulnerability with 1.71 lakh suicides (NCRB 2022), with 15–29 age group most affected, indicating broader youth distress ecosystem. Economic Survey 2025–26 flags increasing anxiety, sleep disorders, and reduced attention spans among youth due to excessive screen time. Social Validation & Behavioural Pressure Editorial highlights adolescents’ dependence on “likes and engagement”, reinforced by Indian study showing ~50% adolescents feel distressed over low engagement. Peer pressure drives early adoption; ASER 2024 shows ~90% adolescents (14–16) have smartphone access, making digital participation almost unavoidable. Neurodevelopmental Vulnerability Editorial stresses that prefrontal cortex (decision-making centre) is underdeveloped in adolescents, limiting ability to resist addictive design features. This aligns with scientific evidence (NIH) that impulse control matures in late adolescence, making early exposure risky in India’s high-access environment. Platform Design & Algorithmic Harms Social media platforms rely on algorithms, endless scrolling, and notifications, intentionally designed to maximise engagement rather than user well-being (editorial core argument). Indian policy discussions (Karnataka consultations, 2026) identified “dark patterns” contributing to addiction, reduced academic performance, and behavioural issues. Safety & Exploitation Risks Editorial flags technology-facilitated child sexual exploitation (~300 million globally), indicating severe online safety risks. In India, rising cases of cyberbullying and online abuse (NCRB cybercrime data trends) highlight weak child protection mechanisms in digital spaces. Core Argument of the Editorial (Responsibility Framework) Limitations of Parental Responsibility Editorial argues parents alone cannot regulate exposure due to peer pressure and lack of digital literacy, especially in India where rapid digital adoption outpaces awareness. Indian context: Parents often enable device use for convenience, as noted in Karnataka policy consultations (2026), weakening informal regulation. Corporate Accountability Platforms profit from engagement (e.g., advertising-driven models dominating Big Tech revenues), yet fail to integrate safety-by-design mechanisms proactively. Editorial emphasises that safeguards are reactive rather than preventive, placing disproportionate burden on children and families. Role of Government Editorial supports raising minimum age (13 → 16 years) as a behavioural reset mechanism, now reflected in Karnataka’s policy proposal (2026). Governments must enforce: algorithmic transparency age-appropriate design platform accountability standards Indian Policy Developments  Karnataka Model (2026) Proposed ban on social media for children under 16, citing mental health concerns, addiction, and academic decline among students. Reflects shift from laissez-faire digital access → protective regulatory approach, making Karnataka a policy pioneer in India. Andhra Pradesh Approach (2026) Proposed restriction under 13 with graded access (13–16), indicating a more nuanced regulatory model balancing access and safety. National-Level Signals Economic Survey 2025–26 recommends age-based restrictions and regulation of addictive platform features, marking formal recognition of digital harms. Growing discourse for national policy on child digital safety, indicating transition toward structured governance. Key Issues  Reactive Governance Model Platforms introduce safeguards only after harm (editorial insight), similar to global cases like Instagram reforms post internal reports (Facebook Files 2021). Enforcement Constraints Age restrictions difficult to implement due to lack of robust age verification systems in India, enabling easy circumvention through fake accounts. Federal & Legal Issues Digital regulation falls under Union List (IT Act domain), raising constitutional questions over state-level bans like Karnataka’s intervention. Risk of Digital Exclusion Blanket bans may restrict access to educational resources (YouTube learning, digital classrooms), especially for disadvantaged students. Gender & Social Inequality Risk of widening gender digital divide (female internet usage ~33% vs male ~57%), if families disproportionately restrict girls’ access. Way Forward  Safety-by-Design Regulation Mandate platforms to integrate default privacy, time limits, and content moderation, shifting burden from users to companies as emphasised in editorial. Algorithmic Transparency Require disclosure and audit of recommendation systems, ensuring harmful content is not amplified for engagement gains. National Child Digital Safety Framework Enact comprehensive law integrating IT Rules + DPDP Act, specifically targeting child protection, age verification, and platform liability. Graded Access Model Adopt tiered access (as proposed by Andhra Pradesh) instead of blanket bans, balancing protection with access to digital opportunities. Digital Literacy & Behavioural Change Expand PMGDISHA + school curriculum integration, enabling parents and children to understand risks and adopt responsible usage practices. Multi-Stakeholder Governance Collaboration between government, tech companies, schools, and civil society, ensuring holistic and sustainable digital ecosystem. Prelims Pointers  IT Rules 2021 → intermediary obligations DPDP Act 2023 → parental consent for minors ASER 2024 → ~90% adolescents have smartphone access Economic Survey 2025–26 → digital addiction concerns Karnataka 2026 → social media restriction under 16 Conclusion The editorial underscores a critical shift: social media harms are systemic, not individual failures, rooted in platform design and governance gaps. India’s response, as seen in Karnataka and policy debates, must evolve into a balanced, child-centric digital governance model, ensuring technology empowers rather than harms the next generation. A bit of a blur over India’s new carbon credit plan Why in News ? Union Budget 2026 allocated ₹20,000 crore for a “carbon credit programme”, primarily aimed at Carbon Capture, Utilisation and Storage (CCUS) in heavy industries. Confusion emerged as media narratives linked the scheme to farmer carbon credits, despite official alignment with DST CCUS Roadmap (Dec 2025) focusing on industrial sectors. Relevance GS 1 (Geography & Environment): Climate change mitigation, land-based carbon sequestration (carbon farming), sustainable agriculture GS 2 (Governance & International Relations): Climate policy, Paris Agreement commitments, policy coordination issues, global trade implications (EU CBAM) Practice Question Q. India’s carbon credit programme reflects a dual challenge of industrial decarbonisation and agricultural sustainability. Analyse the policy gaps and suggest a balanced approach. (15 Marks) Core Policy Reality: CCUS for Industrial Decarbonisation Targeting Hard-to-Abate Sectors CCUS focuses on power, steel, cement, refineries, chemicals, identified as “hard-to-abate” sectors due to process emissions difficult to eliminate. These sectors face EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) risks, making decarbonisation essential for export competitiveness. Scale & Climate Imperative India emits ~2.9 billion tonnes CO₂ annually, with a significant share from industrial sectors, necessitating carbon capture technologies. DST roadmap targets 750 million tonnes CO₂ capture annually by 2050, indicating long-term strategic commitment. Budget 2026 Objective ₹20,000 crore allocation aims to bridge gap between pilot projects and commercial deployment, scaling CCUS technologies across industries. Forms part of India’s Net Zero 2070 pathway, integrating climate policy with industrial growth. Why Agriculture is NOT Part of This Scheme ? Nature of Agricultural Emissions Agriculture emits methane (livestock) and nitrous oxide (fertilisers), which are diffuse and biologically generated, unlike concentrated industrial emissions. Technical Limitation of CCUS CCUS works on point-source capture (chimneys, flue gases), making it unsuitable for dispersed farm emissions across millions of small holdings. Separate Framework: Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) Agriculture contributes through soil carbon sequestration, agroforestry, biochar, classified under CDR, not CCUS, requiring different policy tools. Source of Confusion: “Farmer Carbon Credit Narrative” Misinterpretation of Budget Language Use of generic term “carbon credit programme” created expectation that farmers will directly benefit, despite scheme being industrial-focused. Existing Voluntary Carbon Market Trends India is developing carbon market under Energy Conservation Act 2022, expected to begin trading carbon certificates by 2026. Emerging Farmer-Based Models Private and state-level pilots already allow farmers to earn through soil carbon projects and sustainable practices, reinforcing perception of a national scheme. Media Amplification Articles highlighting “farms as climate solutions” blurred distinction between industrial CCUS funding and agricultural carbon markets, intensifying confusion. Significance of CCUS Programme Industrial Competitiveness Helps Indian exports comply with global carbon standards (EU CBAM), preventing trade disadvantages for carbon-intensive sectors. Energy Transition Realism Allows continued use of coal-dependent infrastructure, which will remain significant in India’s energy mix, while reducing emissions. Technology & Innovation Push Encourages indigenous CCUS R&D and deployment, strengthening India’s clean-tech ecosystem and global positioning. Strategic Climate Policy Integrates climate goals with economic growth, balancing development needs with emission reduction commitments under Paris Agreement. Parallel Opportunity: Carbon Farming in India Huge Land-Based Potential India has ~140 million hectares of agricultural land (FAO), offering massive scope for carbon sequestration through soil and biomass. Income Diversification for Farmers Carbon farming can create additional income streams beyond MSP and crops, especially via FPO-based aggregation models. Policy Alignment Schemes like Natural Farming Mission, PM-PRANAM already promote low-carbon agriculture, which can be integrated into carbon markets. Global Market Opportunity Voluntary carbon market projected to grow rapidly, with India poised to become a major supplier of nature-based carbon credits. Challenges Policy Communication Failure Ambiguity in Budget terminology led to misaligned expectations among farmers and stakeholders, highlighting governance communication gap. High Cost of CCUS CCUS remains capital-intensive, requiring large-scale subsidies and technological breakthroughs for commercial viability. Absence of Agricultural Carbon Framework India lacks robust MRV (Measurement, Reporting, Verification) systems for soil carbon, limiting credibility of farmer carbon credits. Institutional Fragmentation Climate governance spread across DST, MoEFCC, Agriculture Ministry, leading to lack of coordinated approach between industrial and agricultural decarbonisation. Equity Concerns Current scheme benefits large industries, while small farmers remain outside formal carbon market ecosystem, raising distributive justice concerns. Way Forward Dual Climate Strategy Clearly separate CCUS (industrial emissions reduction) and CDR (agriculture-based sequestration) with dedicated schemes and funding streams. Operationalise Indian Carbon Market Fast-track implementation of domestic carbon trading system (Energy Conservation Act 2022) with inclusion of agriculture sector. Dedicated Carbon Farming Scheme Launch national programme for farmers integrating soil health cards, FPOs, and digital MRV systems, ensuring direct income benefits. Strengthen MRV & Digital Systems Use satellite monitoring, AI tools, and blockchain for credible measurement of carbon sequestration and transparent credit issuance. Public-Private Partnerships Encourage collaboration between government, agri-tech firms, and FPOs to scale farmer participation in carbon markets. Prelims Pointers CCUS → industrial carbon capture (point-source) CDR → carbon removal (soil, forests) DST CCUS Roadmap 2025 → industrial sectors focus ₹20,000 crore (Budget 2026) → CCUS funding Energy Conservation Act 2022 → carbon market framework Conclusion Budget 2026 clearly prioritises CCUS-led industrial decarbonisation, supported by DST roadmap and global competitiveness concerns. However, the farmer carbon credit narrative reflects a real but separate opportunity, requiring dedicated policy and institutional backing. India’s success lies in clearly demarcating and simultaneously advancing both ‘smokestack’ and ‘soil’ strategies, ensuring inclusive and sustainable climate action.

Mar 18, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Content Poisoned promise: India among four major contributors to global pesticide toxicity There is a dragon atop Iran’s Mount Damavand. Here is how its legend is connected to a story from the Rig Veda Supreme Court strikes down age cap on maternity leave for adoptive mothers Government clears 23 institutions to set up ‘quantum labs’ Sahitya Akademi announces literary awards for 2025 The fate of the Washington Consensus, once talisman On scientific collaborations in BRICS Why Transgender Protection (Amendment) Bill 2026 has attracted criticism Poisoned promise: India among four major contributors to global pesticide toxicity Why in News ? A 2026 study (journal Science, University of Kaiserslautern-Landau) shows rising global pesticide toxicity, with India among top contributors. India’s Indo-Gangetic plains and intensive agriculture regions show toxicity levels above global average, raising environmental and health concerns. Relevance GS 1 (Geography & Environment): Biodiversity loss (pollinators, soil organisms), agro-ecosystem degradation, regional hotspots (Indo-Gangetic plains) GS 3 (Economy & Environment): Sustainable agriculture, input-intensive farming crisis, food security vs ecological sustainability, climate-resilient agriculture Practice Question Q. Rising pesticide toxicity in India reflects deeper structural issues in agricultural practices and governance. Examine the causes and suggest sustainable solutions. (15 Marks) Nature of the Problem Environmental / Biodiversity Dimension Study finds India, China, Brazil, and USA contribute 53–68% of global pesticide toxicity, indicating concentration of ecological risk in major agricultural economies. Toxicity impacts pollinators, fish, soil organisms, and arthropods, with insect populations declining globally at ~6.4% annually (Science, 2026). In India, Indo-Gangetic plains, Punjab, Haryana, Maharashtra, Telangana show toxicity levels above global average, threatening agro-ecosystem stability. Agricultural Practices Dimension India’s pesticide consumption increased from 57,353 tonnes (2014-15) to 67,221 tonnes (2024-25) (~20% rise), indicating intensification of chemical-based farming. High toxicity linked to crops like cotton, rice, and sugarcane, with cotton contributing disproportionately due to pest intensity despite smaller acreage. Dominance of few high-toxicity chemicals (20 pesticides contributing >90% toxicity burden) reflects skewed pesticide usage patterns. Human Health Dimension Exposure to pesticides linked to neurological disorders, cancers, and endocrine disruption, as recognised by WHO and FAO studies. Regions with intensive pesticide use show higher incidence of chronic diseases, indicating public health externalities. Economic Dimension Farmers trapped in input-intensive agriculture model, leading to rising costs of pesticides and reduced profitability. Overuse reduces soil fertility and productivity in long run, undermining sustainability of agricultural growth. Governance / Legal Dimension Current framework under Insecticides Act 1968 (to be replaced by Pesticide Management Bill 2025) focuses on safety but lacks strong biodiversity safeguards. Lack of integration between Biological Diversity Act 2002 and pesticide regulation, creating policy silos (as highlighted by PAN India experts). Global Commitments Dimension Under CBD COP15 (2022), countries committed to reduce pesticide risk by 50% by 2030, using Total Applied Toxicity (TAT) metric (adopted at COP16, 2025). Study shows most countries, including India, are not on track, with toxicity trends worsening rather than declining. Key Drivers of Rising Toxicity Shift from Volume to Toxicity Even where pesticide volume stabilises, toxicity increases due to more harmful chemicals, indicating qualitative deterioration (Science study). High-Risk Chemical Classes Organophosphates and pyrethroids dominate aquatic toxicity, while neonicotinoids severely affect pollinators, contributing to biodiversity loss. Herbicide Intensification High-volume chemicals like glyphosate (~518,000 tonnes globally) and paraquat (~44,000 tonnes) significantly contribute to plant and ecosystem toxicity. Weak Extension & Awareness Farmers lack access to scientific pest management knowledge, leading to overuse and misuse of pesticides. Challenges Policy Fragmentation Separation between agriculture policy and biodiversity conservation (NBA vs Agriculture Ministry) prevents holistic regulation of pesticide impacts. Weak Regulatory Standards Draft Pesticide Management Bill 2025 uses broad language (“minimise risk”) without enforceable standards or mandatory biodiversity assessments. Lack of Data Integration Absence of TAT-based monitoring system in India limits ability to assess real ecological impact of pesticide use. Technological & Institutional Gaps Limited adoption of precision agriculture and biological pest control, especially among small and marginal farmers (~86% holdings). Market & Incentive Failure Subsidies and market structures favour chemical-intensive farming, discouraging transition to sustainable alternatives. Way Forward Adopt TAT Framework in India Integrate Total Applied Toxicity (CBD COP16) into national policy for measuring pesticide impact beyond volume metrics. Integrate Biodiversity into Regulation Mandate biodiversity impact assessment (via National Biodiversity Authority) for pesticide approval, renewal, and phase-out decisions. Promote Sustainable Alternatives Scale up Integrated Pest Management (IPM), biological control agents, and natural farming (National Mission on Natural Farming). Strengthen Pesticide Management Bill Introduce strict regulatory thresholds, accountability mechanisms, and inter-ministerial coordination in upcoming legislation. Precision Agriculture & Technology Use AI, drones, and satellite-based advisories to optimise pesticide use and reduce over-application. Farmer Incentives & Behavioural Change Link schemes like PM-PRANAM with reduced pesticide usage and incentivise eco-friendly practices through FPOs. Prelims Pointers TAT (Total Applied Toxicity) → adopted at CBD COP16 (2025) CBD COP15 (2022) → target to reduce pesticide risk by 50% by 2030 Pesticide Management Bill 2025 → to replace Insecticides Act 1968 Neonicotinoids → pollinator toxicity Organophosphates → aquatic toxicity There is a dragon atop Iran’s Mount Damavand. Here is how its legend is connected to a story from the Rig Veda Why in News ? Renewed focus on India–Iran civilisational links amid geopolitical developments, with scholarly attention on mythological parallels between Vedic and Zoroastrian traditions. Article highlights Azi Dahaka (Iranian myth) and Vṛtra (Vedic myth) as symbolic narratives of cosmic struggle and order restoration. Relevance GS 1 (Ancient History & Culture): Indo-European origins, Vedic–Avestan linkages, comparative mythology, concept of Ṛta vs Asha GS 2 (International Relations): Civilisational diplomacy (India–Iran), cultural soft power, historical linkages shaping modern relations Practice Question Q. Mythological parallels between the Rig Veda and Avesta highlight shared civilisational roots of India and Iran. Analyse their significance in understanding ancient societies and contemporary cultural diplomacy. (15 Marks) Core Civilisational Linkages Indo-European Cultural Origins Both Vedic Indians and ancient Iranians belonged to Indo-European linguistic-cultural group, explaining similarities in language (Sanskrit–Avestan) and mythological motifs. Scholars note parallels between Rig Veda (~1500 BCE) and Avesta (~1200–1000 BCE), indicating shared cultural heritage before geographical divergence. Concept of Cosmic Order Vedic concept of Ṛta (cosmic order) parallels Asha in Zoroastrianism, both representing universal law, morality, and balance in nature and society. Mythological battles (Indra vs Vṛtra; Oraētaona vs Azi Dahaka) symbolise restoration of order from chaos, central to both traditions. Dragon-Slaying Myth Motif In Rig Veda, Indra slays Vṛtra, releasing seven rivers (RV X.8.8-9), symbolising fertility and life. In Avesta, Azi Dahaka is defeated by Θraētaona, restoring balance and preventing destruction. Similar myths exist across Indo-European cultures (Greek Zeus vs Typhon), indicating shared proto-myth (~3000 BCE origin hypothesis). Ecological & Anthropological Interpretation Water-Centric Civilisations Indo-Iranian societies depended on rivers like Saraswati (India) and Oxus/Amu Darya (Central Asia), making water central to survival and mythology. Dragon (serpent) symbol often associated with blocking water or causing drought, reflecting ecological anxieties of early agrarian societies. Symbolism of Fertility & Agriculture Release of waters in Vedic myth leads to fertility (cows symbolising abundance), linking mythology with agricultural cycles. Iranian myths similarly connect dragon-slaying with restoration of life, crops, and societal order. Natural Phenomena Interpretation Mount Damavand (Iran), an active volcano (last eruption ~7300 years ago), is linked to myth of imprisoned dragon, reflecting geological memory encoded in folklore. Cultural Continuity & Evolution Zoroastrianism & Indian Parallels Zoroastrian deities like Vāiiu (wind god) resemble Vedic Vayu, showing continuity in religious concepts. Fire worship (Agni in Vedas; Atar in Zoroastrianism) reflects shared ritual traditions. Shahnameh as Cultural Preservation Ferdowsi’s Shahnameh (~10th century CE, 50,000 couplets) preserved pre-Islamic Iranian myths, similar to how Puranas preserved Vedic traditions in India. Story of Zahhak (Azi Dahaka) and Faridun reflects resistance against tyranny and cultural continuity, even after Arab conquest (7th century CE). Indo-Iranian Identity Linkages Genetic and cultural studies show links between Indo-Iranians and present communities (e.g., Yaghnobis, Pamiris), reinforcing shared ancestry narratives. Broader Significance  Cultural Diplomacy & Soft Power Shared heritage strengthens India–Iran civilisational diplomacy, complementing modern ties (e.g., Chabahar Port cooperation). Comparative Mythology as Academic Tool Study of myths helps understand early human societies, ecological dependencies, and evolution of belief systems, relevant for anthropology and history. Philosophical Insights Universal theme of good vs evil, order vs chaos reflects ethical frameworks underlying ancient societies and modern governance ideals. Continuity of Tradition Demonstrates how cultures preserve identity through oral traditions, epics, and texts, even amid political and religious transformations. Critical Analysis Myth vs Historical Reality While myths provide cultural insights, they must not be interpreted as literal history, requiring careful academic distinction. Selective Interpretation Risks Overemphasis on similarities may ignore distinct developments in Indian and Iranian traditions post-divergence (e.g., Zoroastrian dualism vs Vedic pluralism). Limited Public Awareness Despite strong links, India–Iran civilisational connections remain underexplored in mainstream discourse, limiting their potential in cultural diplomacy. Way Forward Promote Comparative Civilisational Studies Encourage research on Indo-Iranian linkages in universities (ICHR, ICCR initiatives) to deepen academic understanding. Cultural Diplomacy Initiatives Use shared heritage for India–Iran cultural exchanges, museum collaborations, and joint heritage projects. Integrate into Education Include comparative mythology and Indo-European studies in curricula to enhance awareness of global cultural linkages. Digital Preservation Digitise texts like Rig Veda, Avesta, Shahnameh, ensuring accessibility and preservation of shared heritage. Prelims Pointers Rig Veda → Indra vs Vṛtra Avesta → Azi Dahaka myth Shahnameh → Ferdowsi, 10th century CE Mount Damavand → highest peak in Iran (5609 m) Ṛta vs Asha → cosmic order concepts Conclusion The tale of Azi Dahaka and Vṛtra is more than mythology—it represents shared civilisational consciousness rooted in ecology, ethics, and survival. Recognising such linkages helps position India not just as a nation-state, but as part of a larger interconnected civilisational continuum. Supreme Court strikes down age cap on maternity leave for adoptive mothers Why in News ? In Hamsaanandini Nanduri v. Union of India (2026), Supreme Court struck down Section 60(4) of Social Security Code 2020, which restricted maternity leave for adoptive mothers to children below 3 months. Court granted 12 weeks maternity leave irrespective of child’s age, and urged government to introduce paternity leave as social security benefit. Relevance GS 1 (Society): Changing family structures, recognition of adoptive motherhood, gender roles in caregiving GS 2 (Polity & Governance): Article 14 & 21 interpretation, judicial activism, social security law (Social Security Code 2020), welfare state Practice Question Q. The Supreme Court’s ruling on maternity leave for adoptive mothers marks a shift towards inclusive social security. Discuss its constitutional basis and socio-economic implications. (15 Marks) Constitutional & Legal Dimensions Violation of Article 14 (Equality) Court held classification based on child’s age (<3 months) lacks rational nexus with objective of maternity benefits, thus violating reasonable classification test under Article 14. Majority of adoptions occur beyond 3 months due to CARA procedures, making provision discriminatory against most adoptive mothers. Expansion of Article 21 (Right to Life & Dignity) Court recognised adoption as part of reproductive autonomy under Article 21, equating it with biological motherhood. Emphasised that childcare, bonding, and emotional adjustment are central to dignity and family life, not childbirth alone. Interpretation of Social Security Code 2020 Struck down restrictive reading of Section 60(4) and reinterpreted it to grant 12 weeks leave to all adoptive and commissioning mothers. Aligns with welfare intent of Maternity Benefit Act 1961 (amended 2017), which expanded leave to 26 weeks for biological mothers. Governance & Policy Dimensions Gap in Adoption Ecosystem Court noted practical issue: due to legal adoption procedures (CARA guidelines), children are rarely adopted before 3 months, making earlier provision “illusory”. Child-Centric Policy Approach Judgment prioritises best interests of child, aligning with UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC), to which India is a signatory. Recognises need for bonding period and psychological integration irrespective of child’s age. Recognition of Diverse Family Structures Expands state recognition beyond traditional families, including adoptive and commissioning mothers (surrogacy cases under Surrogacy Act 2021). Social & Ethical Dimensions Redefining Motherhood Court emphasised that motherhood is not limited to childbirth, but includes caregiving, nurturing, and emotional labour, reflecting evolving societal norms. Gender Equality & Care Economy By urging paternity leave, Court highlights unequal burden of caregiving on women, consistent with Time Use Survey 2019 showing women spend ~5x more time in unpaid care work. Inclusion & Non-Discrimination Earlier provision excluded adoptive mothers of older children, creating hierarchy between biological and adoptive motherhood, now corrected. Economic Dimension Workforce Participation Better maternity benefits improve female labour force participation (FLFP ~37% in 2023-24, PLFS) by supporting work-life balance. Corporate & Social Security Implications Expanding benefits may increase employer compliance costs, but enhances human capital retention and productivity. Criticisms Absence of Paternity Leave Law India lacks statutory paternity leave in private sector; only 15 days for central government employees, reflecting policy gap. Implementation Challenges Informal sector (over 90% workforce) remains outside formal maternity benefits, limiting real impact of judgment. Limited Coverage of Social Security Code Social Security Code 2020 yet to be fully implemented, raising concerns over uniform enforcement of benefits. Employer Resistance Private sector concerns over cost burden and compliance, especially for MSMEs, may affect implementation. Way Forward Enact Paternity Leave Law Introduce statutory paternity leave (2–4 weeks minimum) as recommended by SC, aligning with global practices (ILO standards). Universalise Social Security Extend maternity and parental benefits to informal sector workers via schemes like e-Shram and PMMVY expansion. Gender-Neutral Care Policy Move towards parental leave model instead of gender-specific benefits, promoting shared caregiving responsibilities. Strengthen Adoption Ecosystem Simplify and expedite CARA procedures, reducing delays and improving child welfare outcomes. Corporate Incentives Provide tax incentives/subsidies to employers for compliance, reducing resistance and promoting inclusive workplace policies. Prelims Pointers Social Security Code 2020 → Section 60(4) Maternity Benefit Act 1961 (Amended 2017) → 26 weeks leave CARA (Central Adoption Resource Authority) → adoption regulation Surrogacy Act 2021 → commissioning mothers Article 14 & 21 → equality and dignity Conclusion Frameworks Rights-Based Approach: “Ensuring equal maternity benefits for adoptive mothers reinforces constitutional guarantees of equality and dignity in family life.” Gender Justice Approach: “True gender equality in caregiving requires moving beyond maternity benefits to inclusive parental leave frameworks.” Conclusion The judgment corrects a structural inequity in social security law, affirming that motherhood is defined by care, not biology. It opens the path toward inclusive, child-centric, and gender-equitable family policies, but requires legislative follow-up, especially on paternity leave and universal coverage. Government clears 23 institutions to set up ‘quantum labs’ Why in News ? Government approved 23 quantum teaching labs across institutions, with 100 more proposals under evaluation, indicating expansion of India’s quantum ecosystem (DST, March 2026). NQM targets development of 50–1,000 qubit quantum computers, satellite-based secure communication, and quantum sensors, marking India’s entry into next-gen computing race. Relevance GS 2 (Governance): Science policy, institutional coordination (DST, NRF), strategic technology governance GS 3 (Science & Technology / Security): Quantum computing, quantum communication (QKD), national security, innovation ecosystem Practice Question Q. India’s National Quantum Mission aims to position the country in the global race for next-generation technologies. Evaluate its strategic significance and challenges. (15 Marks) Core Features of National Quantum Mission Financial & Institutional Framework NQM approved with ₹6003.65 crore (2023–2031), implemented by Department of Science & Technology (DST) to create national quantum ecosystem. Establishment of quantum hubs, teaching labs (23 approved), and NRF-linked research funding, strengthening academia–industry collaboration. Quantum Computing Targets Aim to develop intermediate-scale quantum computers (50–1,000 qubits), enabling complex computations beyond classical systems. Current global benchmark: IBM (1000+ qubit roadmap) and China’s superconducting quantum processors, highlighting competitive gap India seeks to bridge. Quantum Communication Focus on satellite-based Quantum Key Distribution (QKD) for ultra-secure communication, resistant to hacking even by quantum computers. Builds on ISRO’s progress, including quantum communication experiments (2022 free-space QKD test). Quantum Sensing & Materials Development of high-precision quantum sensors for applications in navigation, defence, geology, and medical imaging. Advanced materials research to enable quantum devices and superconducting systems. Significance of NQM Strategic & National Security Dimension Quantum communication enables unhackable encryption, critical for defence and intelligence, especially amid cyber warfare threats. Applications in navigation systems (GPS-independent) benefit Indian Navy and defence operations (context: planned navigation satellite launch 2026). Economic & Industrial Dimension Quantum computing expected to revolutionise sectors like drug discovery, finance, logistics, and AI, with global market projected to reach $90 billion by 2040 (BCG estimates). Enhances India’s position in high-tech manufacturing and semiconductor ecosystem. Scientific & Innovation Ecosystem Establishment of quantum labs (23 approved, 100 under review) builds skilled workforce and research capacity. Integration with Anusandhan National Research Foundation (NRF) strengthens funding and interdisciplinary research. Global Competitiveness India currently lags behind: USA → National Quantum Initiative (2018) China → $10 billion quantum programme NQM helps India avoid technological dependence and strategic vulnerability. Challenges Technological Lag India lacks advanced infrastructure compared to US (Google, IBM quantum systems) and China (quantum satellite Micius). Skilled Manpower Deficit Limited pool of quantum physicists, engineers, and interdisciplinary experts, necessitating large-scale capacity building. High Cost & Complexity Quantum technologies require cryogenic systems, precision engineering, and high R&D investment, increasing cost barriers. Institutional Coordination Issues Multiple agencies (DST, ISRO, DRDO, academia) require strong coordination to avoid duplication and inefficiency. Private Sector Participation Limited involvement of Indian startups and industry compared to global players like IBM, Google, Alibaba, slowing innovation ecosystem. Way Forward Strengthen Human Capital Expand quantum labs, fellowships, and interdisciplinary courses, integrating physics, computer science, and engineering. Public-Private Partnerships Encourage collaboration with startups and industry (e.g., Indian deep-tech firms) for faster innovation and commercialization. Global Collaboration Partner with EU, US, and Japan quantum programmes, leveraging technology transfer and research collaboration. Focus on Niche Areas Prioritise areas like quantum communication and sensing, where India has comparative advantage over full-scale quantum computing. Policy & Regulatory Framework Develop national quantum strategy with cybersecurity, export controls, and ethical guidelines, ensuring responsible deployment. Prelims Pointers NQM (2023–31) → ₹6003.65 crore Qubit → basic unit of quantum information QKD → Quantum Key Distribution 23 quantum labs approved (2026) DST → nodal agency  Conclusion NQM represents a forward-looking investment in frontier technology, aiming to bridge India’s gap with global leaders in quantum science. Its success depends on skilled manpower, institutional coordination, and industry participation, ensuring India transitions from technology adopter to technology leader. Sahitya Akademi announces literary awards for 2025 Why in News ? Sahitya Akademi Awards 2025 announced for 24 recognised languages, after a delay due to Union Ministry of Culture’s directive on restructuring process (Dec 2025). Awards include 8 poetry, 4 novels, 6 short stories, 2 essays, 1 literary criticism, 1 autobiography, 2 memoirs, reflecting diversity of literary forms. Relevance GS 1 (Art & Culture): Literary diversity, linguistic plurality, preservation of regional languages GS 2 (Governance): Autonomy of cultural institutions, state oversight vs independence, cultural policy Practice Question Q. The functioning of cultural institutions like the Sahitya Akademi raises questions about autonomy and accountability. Critically examine. (15 Marks) About Sahitya Akademi  Institutional Framework Established in 1954, Sahitya Akademi is India’s National Academy of Letters, promoting literature across 24 recognised languages (including English, Sanskrit, and tribal languages like Santali). Functions as an autonomous body under Ministry of Culture, alongside Sangeet Natak Akademi and Lalit Kala Akademi. Award Structure Annual awards recognise outstanding literary works, selected by expert jury panels, ensuring peer-reviewed credibility. Award includes ₹1 lakh, copper plaque, and shawl, symbolising national recognition. Key Highlights of Sahitya Akademi Awards 2025 Diversity of Literary Genres Awards distributed across genres: Poetry (8 awards) Novels (4) Short stories (6) Memoirs (2), essays (2), criticism (1), autobiography (1) Reflects broad literary ecosystem, moving beyond traditional fiction to include critical and autobiographical writing. Linguistic Diversity Winners span 24 Indian languages, including Hindi (Mamta Kalia), English (Navtej Sarna), Tamil (Sa Tamilselvan), Telugu (Nandini Sidha Reddy). Inclusion of Santali, Manipuri, Rajasthani, Sindhi reflects commitment to linguistic inclusivity and preservation of regional literature. Representation of Contemporary Themes Works include memoirs, literary criticism, and modern narratives, indicating shift toward personal histories, social critique, and evolving literary discourse. Governance & Institutional Issues Delay due to Government Intervention Awards announcement delayed after Ministry of Culture directive (Dec 2025) mandating prior approval for restructuring of awards process. Indicates increasing administrative oversight over autonomous cultural bodies. Autonomy vs Accountability Debate Sahitya Akademi is designed as autonomous institution, but MoU (July 2025) requires consultation with Ministry for major decisions. Raises concerns about erosion of institutional independence, affecting credibility of cultural recognition systems. Broader Governance Context Similar oversight applied to NSD, Sangeet Natak Akademi, Lalit Kala Akademi, indicating systemic trend in cultural governance. Significance of Sahitya Akademi Awards Cultural Integration Promotes unity in diversity, recognising literature across languages and regions, strengthening national cultural identity. Preservation of Linguistic Heritage Supports endangered and regional languages like Santali and Manipuri, aligning with Eighth Schedule expansion debates. Encouragement of Literary Excellence Provides national platform for authors, encouraging creative writing, critical thought, and intellectual discourse. Soft Power & Cultural Diplomacy Indian literature contributes to global cultural presence, with authors like Rabindranath Tagore (Nobel laureate) setting precedent for literary diplomacy. Challenges Politicisation of Cultural Institutions Government intervention raises concerns about bias, censorship, or influence, potentially undermining credibility of awards. Delayed Announcements 2025 awards announced after 3-month delay, affecting institutional reputation and predictability of processes. Limited Public Engagement Despite diversity, awards often remain confined to literary circles, with limited outreach to wider audience. Language Hierarchies Perception that dominant languages (Hindi, English) receive more visibility compared to tribal and regional languages. Way Forward Strengthen Institutional Autonomy Ensure clear boundaries between Ministry oversight and Akademi independence, preserving credibility of award process. Transparent Selection Process Publish jury criteria, evaluation process, and timelines, enhancing trust and accountability. Promote Regional Literature Increase translation initiatives (e.g., Sahitya Akademi Translation Programme) to expand readership across languages. Digital Outreach Use digital platforms, e-books, and literary festivals to make award-winning works accessible to wider audience. Cultural Policy Reform Develop comprehensive framework balancing autonomy, accountability, and cultural promotion, aligning with constitutional values. Prelims Pointers Sahitya Akademi → established 1954 Recognises 24 languages Award includes ₹1 lakh + plaque + shawl Works selected by jury panels Autonomous body under Ministry of Culture Conclusion Sahitya Akademi Awards 2025 reaffirm India’s literary diversity and creative vitality, while also exposing governance challenges in cultural institutions. Ensuring institutional autonomy, transparency, and inclusivity will be key to sustaining the Akademi’s role as the custodian of India’s literary heritage. The fate of the Washington Consensus, once talisman  Why in News ? Article argues that Washington Consensus (WC) — based on liberalisation, privatisation, deregulation (LPG) — is no longer relevant in a multipolar, digital, and geopolitically fragmented world (2025–26 context). Global shift toward protectionism, industrial policy, and state intervention seen in US tariffs (Trump-era revival), EU subsidies, China’s state-led model. Relevance GS 2 (International Relations): Global economic governance, IMF–World Bank role, multipolarity GS 3 (Economy): Liberalisation, industrial policy, inequality, globalisation vs protectionism Practice Question Q. The decline of the Washington Consensus reflects changing realities of the global economic order. Analyse with reference to emerging development models. (15 Marks) What was the Washington Consensus?  Core Principles (John Williamson, 1989) Ten policy prescriptions including fiscal discipline, tax reforms, trade liberalisation, FDI openness, privatisation, deregulation, and property rights protection. Promoted by IMF, World Bank, and US Treasury, especially during Latin American debt crisis (1980s). Ideological Foundations Rooted in Reaganomics (USA) and Thatcherism (UK), emphasising free markets and minimal state intervention. Operationalised through Structural Adjustment Programmes (SAPs) imposed on developing countries. Legacy & Outcomes  Mixed Economic Outcomes Some success stories: Chile (1980s reforms) East Asian economies (partial adoption with state control) Failures: Latin America debt crises (1980s–90s) Post-Soviet transitions → inequality, economic collapse (World Bank studies) Financial Instability Asian Financial Crisis (1997) exposed risks of capital account liberalisation without regulatory capacity. Global Financial Crisis (2008) highlighted dangers of excess deregulation in financial markets. Rising Inequality IMF later acknowledged (2016 report) that neoliberal policies increased inequality, contradicting earlier “trickle-down growth” assumption. Policy Space Constraints WTO rules like TRIPS and TRIMs limited developing countries’ ability to pursue industrial policy and subsidies. Contradiction: Countries like South Korea, Taiwan, Japan industrialised using state intervention, not WC prescriptions. Why Washington Consensus is Obsolete Today ? Multipolar World Order Rise of China, India, Global South challenges US-led economic order, reducing dominance of WC institutions. Geopolitics & Economic Nationalism Revival of tariffs and subsidies (US CHIPS Act 2022, EU Green Deal subsidies) shows shift toward strategic protectionism. Supply chains reoriented for national security (China+1 strategy, friend-shoring). Digital Economy Transformation WC did not anticipate AI, digital trade, data governance, now central to economic policy (India’s Digital Public Infrastructure model). Climate & Sustainability Imperatives Need for green subsidies, carbon policies, climate finance, contradicting WC’s minimal state intervention approach. Social Equity & Welfare Growing focus on inequality, social safety nets, redistribution, especially after COVID-19 (global fiscal stimulus > $10 trillion, IMF). Emerging Alternatives   Post-Washington Consensus Emphasises: State intervention + market efficiency Social safety nets Inclusive growth Example: India’s welfare + growth model (DBT, PLI schemes, infrastructure push). Beijing Consensus Model Based on: State-led industrial policy Gradual liberalisation Authoritarian governance with economic focus Example: China’s rise to world’s second-largest economy (GDP ~$18 trillion, 2025 IMF). Pragmatic Eclecticism (Current Reality) Countries adopt hybrid models: Markets + state intervention Trade openness + strategic protectionism Growth + redistribution India’s Perspective India’s Departure from Pure WC 1991 reforms adopted LPG model, but India retained: Public sector role (PSUs, welfare schemes) Industrial policy (PLI schemes, Make in India) Current Policy Mix Combines: Fiscal prudence (FRBM framework) State intervention (₹10 lakh crore infra push, Union Budget) Digital governance (UPI, Aadhaar) Strategic Autonomy India balances: Global integration (FTAs) Domestic protection (tariffs, Atmanirbhar Bharat) Challenges of New Paradigm Risk of Protectionism Excessive tariffs may reduce efficiency and global trade integration, as seen in WTO stagnation (Doha Round failure). Policy Uncertainty Absence of clear consensus leads to fragmented global economic order, increasing unpredictability for developing countries. Inequality & Governance Issues Even new models risk elite capture and uneven redistribution, requiring strong institutions. Way Forward Context-Specific Policy Framework Move away from one-size-fits-all models toward country-specific development strategies, aligned with institutional capacity. Balanced State-Market Approach Combine: Market efficiency Strategic state intervention Strong regulatory institutions Focus on Human Capital Invest in education, healthcare, and skilling, as seen in East Asian success models. Climate & Digital Integration Develop policies for green growth, AI governance, and digital trade, addressing 21st-century challenges. Reform Global Institutions Strengthen IMF, World Bank, WTO reforms, ensuring greater voice for Global South (India, Africa). Prelims Pointers Washington Consensus → 1989, John Williamson SAPs → IMF/World Bank reforms TRIPS/TRIMs → WTO agreements Asian Financial Crisis → 1997 Global Financial Crisis → 2008 Conclusion The Washington Consensus is not entirely irrelevant, but its universalist, rigid application has lost credibility in today’s complex global landscape. The emerging paradigm is one of pragmatic pluralism, where nations design policies suited to their economic, political, and technological realities, marking the end of a single dominant economic doctrine. On scientific collaborations in BRICS Why in News ? BRICS emerging as a key platform for Science, Technology & Innovation (STI) cooperation amid techno-nationalism, sanctions, and export controls (2020s). Expansion to BRICS+ (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Egypt, Iran, Ethiopia, Indonesia) enhances Global South collaboration but raises coordination challenges. Relevance GS 2 (International Relations): BRICS+, global governance, South-South cooperation, New Development Bank GS 3 (Science & Technology / Economy): Innovation ecosystems, AI governance, R&D collaboration, digital public goods Practice Question Q. BRICS cooperation in science and technology represents an emerging alternative innovation ecosystem for the Global South. Discuss its potential and limitations. (15 Marks) Institutional & Policy Framework Evolution of STI Cooperation STI formally recognised in 2011, strengthened via 2015 MoU, making it a core pillar of BRICS cooperation. BRICS Action Plan for Innovation (2017–2020) institutionalised collaboration via STIEP Working Group focusing on entrepreneurship, tech transfer, and incubation. Key Institutional Mechanisms Annual STI Ministerial Meetings approve joint research agendas and funding priorities. National agencies (India: CSIR, DBT) coordinate calls, reflecting decentralised yet coordinated model. Emerging Platforms BRICS Technology Transfer Centre (TTC) → facilitates cross-border commercialisation of technologies. iBRICS, BRICS Institute of Future Networks → focus on ICT, AI, and digital ecosystems. Key Areas of Cooperation Frontier Technologies Focus areas include AI, High-Performance Computing (HPC), advanced materials, ICT, and space cooperation (2021 agreement). Development-Oriented Research Shift toward energy, water, health, environment, especially post-COVID, prioritising public health, vaccines, and digital health systems. AI Governance BRICS 2025 AI Declaration elevates AI as central pillar, advocating inclusive, development-oriented governance, countering Western tech dominance. Significance of BRICS STI Alternative to Western Tech Hegemony Provides Global South platform against US-led tech restrictions and export controls (e.g., semiconductor bans on China). Resource & Demographic Advantage BRICS accounts for: ~40% global population Significant share of global GDP (~30% PPP) Enables scale in innovation, data economy, and resource-based technologies. Development Finance Linkages Through New Development Bank (NDB), supports innovation-led infrastructure and sustainable development projects. Challenges Low R&D Investment Except China, BRICS countries have low GERD (<1% of GDP for India) compared to South Korea (~4.8%), indicating innovation gap. Institutional Weakness Lack of permanent secretariat or central funding mechanism, with rotating presidency limiting long-term continuity. Uneven Participation New BRICS+ members show limited engagement (only Egypt & Iran joined recent calls), reflecting integration challenges. Limited Mega-Science Projects Areas like ocean research, polar science, particle physics lag due to high capital and coordination requirements. Heterogeneity of Members Wide differences in economic development and scientific capacity hinder consensus-building (as noted by Irina Dezhina). Way Forward Establish Permanent STI Secretariat Modelled on EU Horizon Programme, to manage funding, evaluation, and long-term projects. Scale Mega-Science Projects Launch flagship projects in climate tech, space, biotech, enhancing global scientific relevance. Increase R&D Investment Target GERD ≥2% of GDP, especially for India and emerging BRICS members. Strengthen South-South Collaboration Promote paired collaborations (India–Brazil, China–South Africa) for focused outcomes. Focus on AI & Digital Public Goods Leverage India’s Digital Public Infrastructure (UPI, Aadhaar) as model for Global South tech cooperation. Prelims Pointers BRICS+ expansion (2023–25) NDB → Shanghai HQ STIEP → innovation working group GERD (India ~0.7% GDP) AI Declaration 2025 (BRICS) Conclusion BRICS STI cooperation has moved from symbolic collaboration to strategic innovation partnership, but requires institutional deepening and funding scale-up to become globally transformative. BRICS – Basics Formation & Members BRIC coined in 2001 (Jim O’Neill, Goldman Sachs); formal grouping in 2009 (Yekaterinburg Summit), with South Africa added in 2010 → BRICS. Current Members (Expanded BRICS+) Core: Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa New entrants (2023–25): Saudi Arabia, UAE, Iran, Egypt, Ethiopia, Indonesia Objectives Promote multipolar world order, reducing Western dominance (US-led institutions). Enhance cooperation in economy, trade, development finance, and global governance reforms. Key Features Represents: ~40–45% global population ~30% global GDP (PPP basis) Major players in energy, minerals, agriculture, and manufacturing. Why Transgender Protection (Amendment) Bill 2026 has attracted criticism Source : The Indian Express Why in News ? Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) (Amendment) Bill, 2026 criticised for removing self-identification of gender and introducing mandatory medical certification. Seen as a rollback of Supreme Court’s NALSA (2014) judgment, triggering protests by LGBTQ+ groups across India. Relevance GS 1 (Society): Gender identity, social inclusion, marginalised communities GS 2 (Polity & Governance): NALSA judgment (2014), Articles 14 & 21, rights-based vs regulatory approach Practice Question Q. The Transgender Persons (Amendment) Bill, 2026 raises concerns about the balance between state regulation and individual autonomy. Critically examine. (15 Marks) Constitutional & Legal Dimensions Violation of NALSA Judgment (2014) In National Legal Services Authority v. Union of India (2014), SC recognised right to self-identify gender as part of Article 21 (dignity and autonomy). Amendment removes self-perceived gender identity, contradicting SC’s recognition of “third gender” and self-identification rights. Article 14 (Equality) Concerns Mandatory medical certification creates unequal treatment, as cisgender individuals do not require such validation for identity recognition. Excludes groups like trans men and non-binary persons, violating reasonable classification principle. Article 21 (Right to Dignity & Privacy) Medical verification intrudes into bodily autonomy and privacy, recognised in Puttaswamy judgment (2017). Pathologises identity, undermining dignity of transgender persons. Conflict with International Norms Violates Yogyakarta Principles (2006) which affirm self-determined gender identity as a human right. Contradicts India’s obligations under ICCPR and UN Human Rights frameworks. Governance & Administrative Dimensions Shift to Medicalised Bureaucracy Requires certification by medical boards, increasing dependence on state-controlled institutions. Risks delays, corruption, and exclusion due to limited healthcare access in India (rural–urban divide). Implementation Challenges India lacks adequate gender-sensitive healthcare infrastructure, making certification process impractical for many. Could exclude economically weaker transgender persons (~90% informal workforce, community estimates). Graded Punishments Provision Bill introduces graded penalties for crimes (abduction, forced labour, exploitation), strengthening protection framework. However, activists argue criminal provisions cannot compensate for denial of identity rights. Social & Ethical Dimensions Erasure of Identity Narrow definition excludes: Trans men Non-binary persons assigned female at birth Leads to identity invisibilisation, affecting access to welfare schemes and legal recognition. Pathologisation of Gender Medical certification treats transgender identity as a “condition” requiring validation, reinforcing stigma. Activists term it “transpathia”, reversing progress toward de-medicalisation of gender identity. Impact on Marginalised Communities Transgender community already faces: High unemployment (~90% informal sector) Limited education access (literacy ~56%, Census 2011) Additional barriers worsen social exclusion and vulnerability. Economic Dimension Access to Welfare & Employment Identity recognition is prerequisite for: Reservation policies (as per NALSA) Government schemes (SMILE scheme, scholarships) Medical certification may delay or deny access, affecting economic empowerment. Key Criticisms Rollback of Hard-Won Rights Removes self-identification, core achievement of NALSA judgment, seen as constitutional regression. Exclusionary Definition Narrow definition ignores diverse gender identities, especially modern non-binary expressions. Accessibility Issues Medical certification is costly, inaccessible, and bureaucratic, disproportionately affecting poor and rural trans persons. Overemphasis on Control Shifts focus from empowerment → regulation, undermining trust between state and community. Way Forward Restore Self-Identification Principle Align law with NALSA (2014) by reinstating self-perceived gender identity without medical requirement. Inclusive Definition Expand definition to include trans men, non-binary persons, and diverse gender identities, ensuring inclusivity. Strengthen Welfare Framework Improve schemes like SMILE (Support for Marginalised Individuals for Livelihood and Enterprise) for socio-economic upliftment. Sensitisation & Institutional Reform Train medical boards, police, and administrators to reduce discrimination and improve service delivery. Gender-Neutral Policy Approach Move toward rights-based, dignity-centric framework, integrating transgender rights into broader social justice policies. Prelims Pointers NALSA v. Union of India (2014) → right to self-identification Transgender Persons Act 2019 → definition includes intersex, genderqueer, sociocultural identities Puttaswamy (2017) → right to privacy Yogyakarta Principles (2006) → gender identity rights Conclusion The Amendment Bill, 2026 risks reversing progressive jurisprudence by undermining self-identification and imposing medical barriers. Ensuring inclusive, rights-based, and dignity-centric legal frameworks is essential for advancing substantive equality for transgender persons in India.