PIB Analysis 16 June 2026 Contents01 Ease of Living: Twelve Years of Saturation-Based Welfare (2014–2026) Government of India 12-Year Review · Housing, Amenities, Energy, Finance, Transport & Governance GS 1GS 2GS 3 02 Panchayats at the Grassroots: 12 Years of Decentralisation Reforms Ministry of Panchayati Raj · Capacity, SVAMITVA, Fiscal Devolution & AI Governance GS 2GS 3 03 New WPI & Producer Price Index Series (Base Year 2022–23) Office of the Economic Adviser, DPIIT · Transition from WPI to PPI GS 3 Article 01 Article 01 Ease of Living: Twelve Years of Saturation-Based Welfare (2014–2026) Government of India — "Ease of Living: India's Journey of Inclusive Progress" · 15 June 2026 Relevance: GS 2 (governance, welfare schemes for vulnerable sections, social justice) · GS 3 (inclusive growth, infrastructure, energy security) · GS 1 (society, urbanisation). GS 1GS 2GS 3 Key Data at a Glance 98 lakhPMAY-Urban houses completed (vs 8 lakh during 2005–14) 3.05 crPMAY-Gramin houses completed; 75% women-owned or joint 81.94%rural tap-water coverage, June 2026 (16.72% at JJM launch, 2019) 532 GWinstalled power capacity, March 2026 (248 GW in 2014) 58 crPMJDY bank accounts; over ₹3 lakh cr in deposits 1,46,572 kmNational Highways, March 2026 (+61% since FY14) Issue in Brief A government note marks 12 years (2014–2026) of governance, framing a shift from scheme-by-scheme delivery to saturation-based "Ease of Living" across housing, water, energy, finance and transport. The unifying frame is Antyodaya within Viksit Bharat@2047 — measuring progress by household-level access to amenities rather than aggregate growth alone. Static Background "Ease of Living" is the citizen-welfare counterpart to "Ease of Doing Business" — it tracks quality-of-life access (shelter, water, power, mobility) rather than GDP alone. Constitutional anchor: the Directive Principles — Articles 38, 39 and 47 (welfare, equitable resources, standard of living) — though non-justiciable, guide such welfare delivery. The JAM Trinity (Jan Dhan + Aadhaar + Mobile) is the digital backbone enabling leakage-free Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT), now spanning 327 schemes. Launch anchors for revision: SBM & PMJDY 2014, PMAY-U & AMRUT & PMMY 2015, PMAY-G & PMUY 2016, SAUBHAGYA 2017, JJM 2019. Key Dimensions — Housing & Basic Amenities PMAY: pucca homes for EWS/LIG/MIG; PMAY-U 2.0 (2024) gives up to ₹2.5 lakh under Beneficiary-Led Construction, with mandatory female ownership or co-ownership. Jal Jeevan Mission (Har Ghar Jal): rural tap connections rose from 3.23 cr (16.72%) in 2019 to 15.86 cr (81.94%) by June 2026; extended to Dec 2028 under JJM 2.0. Swachh Bharat Mission: rural sanitation 39% (2014) to 100% ODF (2019); WHO estimated ~3 lakh fewer diarrhoeal deaths in 2019 versus 2014. AMRUT 2.0 (2021): expanded from 500 cities to all 4,800 statutory towns with a ₹2.99 lakh cr outlay. Key Dimensions — Energy Access & Clean Power Installed capacity doubled from 248 GW (2014) to 532 GW (2026); renewables 274.69 GW (over 50%) — India is 3rd globally in clean-energy capacity. Rural supply rose from 12.5 to 22.6 hours/day; the national energy shortage fell 4.2% to 0.03% — reliability, not just access. SAUBHAGYA (2017): free last-mile connections to ~2.86 cr homes. PM Surya Ghar (2024): rooftop solar, 300 free units/month, ~40 lakh homes by May 2026. PMUY: 10.57 cr LPG connections; UJALA: 37 cr LED bulbs saving ₹19,153 cr annually for households. Key Dimensions — Financial Inclusion PMJDY (2014): the world's largest inclusion drive — 58 cr accounts, over ₹3 lakh cr deposits, and 40.60 cr RuPay cards with accident insurance. DBT transferred ₹6.9 lakh cr in FY 2024–25 across 327 schemes, routed through Jan Dhan accounts. PMMY (2015): collateral-free micro-credit — 57.7 cr loans worth ₹40 lakh cr; 66% to women; the Tarun Plus ceiling rose to ₹20 lakh (FY25). Key Dimensions — Connectivity & Governance Transport: NH grew 91,287 km to 1,46,572 km; metro 248 km to 1,155 km (26 cities, 3rd-largest globally); rail electrification 20% to 99.6%; Kavach train-protection deployed. UDAN (2016): operational airports rose from 74 (2014) to 165 (2026), carrying 1.64 cr passengers on regional routes. Jan Vishwas Acts (2023, 2026): decriminalise minor offences — the 2026 Act covers 784 provisions across 79 Acts, decriminalising 717. PM GatiShakti (2021): GIS-based integrated infrastructure planning, 58 Ministries onboarded; MyGov — 60 mn users for participatory governance. Critical Analysis — Strengths The saturation model backed by JAM-enabled DBT reduces leakage and shifts welfare from targeted discretion toward near-universal entitlement. Gendered design — female ownership in PMAY, 66% of MUDRA loans to women, and 9 cr women freed from water-fetching — embeds equity into delivery, not just rhetoric. Convergence of physical (roads, power, water) and financial (Jan Dhan, MUDRA) infrastructure produces compounding ease-of-living gains. Critical Analysis — Structural Questions The note is a government self-assessment reporting mainly output/coverage metrics (houses, connections, km) rather than independently audited outcomes. Figures like LPG coverage at 107.2% reflect connections issued (a ratio exceeding 100%), not sustained refill usage — affordability needs separate verification. Asset durability and O&M — working tap connections, toilet usage, road and metro upkeep — remain the binding constraint beyond one-time creation. Headline saturation can mask quality-of-service gaps (supply reliability, peri-urban service deficits) that persist for end users. Way Forward Institute third-party / CAG outcome audits and publish functionality-based dashboards (working tap connections, not just installations). Shift budgeting from asset creation to lifecycle operation and maintenance for water, sanitation, roads and metros. Strengthen affordability for sustained use (LPG refills, electricity bills) so access converts to actual consumption. Deepen municipal finance and ULB capacity to sustain urban ease-of-living investments. Prelims Pointers JAM Trinity: Jan Dhan + Aadhaar + Mobile; enables DBT, which covers 327 schemes (₹6.9 lakh cr in FY25). PMAY-U 2.0 (2024): up to ₹2.5 lakh under Beneficiary-Led Construction; female ownership/co-ownership mandatory. JJM: goal "Har Ghar Jal"; launched 2019; JJM 2.0 extends coverage to December 2028. SAUBHAGYA (2017): last-mile electrification; PM Surya Ghar (2024) — rooftop solar, up to 300 free units/month. Jan Vishwas Act, 2026: decriminalises minor offences — 784 provisions across 79 central Acts. PM GatiShakti (2021): GIS-based National Master Plan for integrated infrastructure; 58 Ministries onboarded. Practice Mains Question "Ease of Living" has emerged as the citizen-facing counterpart to "Ease of Doing Business" in India's governance model. Examine how saturation-based welfare delivery has reshaped quality of life since 2014, and assess the challenges in sustaining these gains. GS Paper 2 · 250 words · 15 marks Practice MCQs Q1. Consider the following statements: (1) The JAM Trinity comprises Jan Dhan, Aadhaar and Mobile. (2) PMAY-U 2.0 mandates that a female member be the owner or co-owner of the house. (3) The Jal Jeevan Mission was launched in 2014. Which are correct? A) 1 and 2 onlyB) 2 and 3 onlyC) 1 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3 Q2. Match List I (Scheme) with List II (Focus): A. SAUBHAGYA · B. PM Surya Ghar · C. PMUY // 1. Rooftop solar (2024) · 2. Last-mile electricity connections (2017) · 3. Clean LPG connections (2016). Choose the correct match: A) A-2, B-1, C-3B) A-1, B-2, C-3C) A-3, B-1, C-2D) A-2, B-3, C-1 Q3. (Assertion–Reasoning) Assertion (A): Renewable energy now forms more than half of India's installed power capacity. Reason (R): Rapid solar and wind additions have made India the 3rd-largest clean-energy producer globally. A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of AB) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of AC) A is true, R is falseD) A is false, R is true Article 02 Article 02 Panchayats at the Grassroots: 12 Years of Decentralisation Reforms Ministry of Panchayati Raj — "Building Viksit Bharat from Ground Up" · 15 June 2026 Relevance: GS 2 (devolution of powers and finances to local levels, local self-government, Finance Commission) · GS 3 (rural development, e-governance, technology in governance). GS 2GS 3 Key Data at a Glance 3.18 crSVAMITVA property cards issued across 1.92 lakh villages 4.10 crPanchayat representatives & functionaries trained (RGSA) ₹4.35 lakh cr16th Finance Commission grant to RLBs (≈84% jump) ₹2.82 lakh cr15th FC grants released (94.98% of allocation) 33.55 lakhwomen elected representatives trained (FY23–FY26) ₹3.16 lakh cronline transactions via e-GramSwaraj–PFMS integration Issue in Brief A government review marks 12 years of strengthening Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs) as units of self-government — spanning capacity, digital governance, fiscal devolution and inclusion. Headline markers: ~3.18 cr SVAMITVA property cards, 4.10 cr representatives trained, and an ~84% jump in Rural Local Body grants under the 16th Finance Commission. Static Background — The Constitutional Frame The 73rd Constitutional Amendment Act, 1992 gave PRIs constitutional status, creating a three-tier system (village, intermediate, district) for states above 20 lakh population. Part IX and the Eleventh Schedule list 29 subjects for devolution; Article 243G empowers states to devolve the "3 Fs" — funds, functions and functionaries. Article 243-I mandates a State Finance Commission every five years; Article 280 tasks the Union Finance Commission with recommending local-body grants. The PESA Act, 1996 extends Panchayat provisions to Fifth Schedule (Scheduled) areas, vesting Gram Sabhas with control over local resources and customs. Key Dimensions — Capacity Building (RGSA) Rashtriya Gram Swaraj Abhiyan (2018–19; revamped 2022–23): trained 4.10 cr elected reps and functionaries across 2.70 lakh PRIs — an unparalleled outreach. It is the backbone for women leaders (33.55 lakh trained, FY23–FY26), PESA training and governance skilling. Infrastructure: 25,100+ Gram Panchayat buildings and 61,000+ computers; Gram Panchayat Development Plans institutionalised across 2.55 lakh GPs. Key Dimensions — Digital Governance SVAMITVA (2020): drone-based survey of inhabited (abadi) land — 3.18 cr property cards reduce disputes, unlock institutional credit and raise Panchayat revenue. e-GramSwaraj: digitised planning, budgeting and accounting; 2.59 lakh Panchayats onboarded; PFMS integration enabled ₹3.16 lakh cr in online transactions. Meri Panchayat App: 1 cr+ downloads, giving residents access to works, meetings and public-asset information. Key Dimensions — Fiscal Devolution & AI 15th Finance Commission (2020–26): ₹2.82 lakh cr (94.98%) released to RLBs — the highest-ever release rate; 16th FC recommends ₹4,35,236 cr (~84% higher). SAMARTH Panchayat Portal and the Atmanirbhar Panchayat Program build Own Source Revenue (OSR) tools — assessment, demand and collection — for fiscal autonomy. Panchayat Advancement Index (2025): benchmarks 2.59 lakh GPs against the 9 Localised SDG themes; SabhaSaar (2025) auto-generates Gram Sabha minutes in 23 languages. Key Dimensions — Tribal, Women & Youth PESA implementation strengthened via tribal-language manuals, a PESA-GPDP Portal, a Centre of Excellence and the country's first PESA Ranking framework. Sashakt Panchayat-Netri Abhiyan (2025) and 744 Model Women-Friendly GPs advance women-led local governance and safety. Model Youth Gram Sabha (Oct 2025): simulated proceedings in schools, engaging ~29,000 students across 819 residential schools, aligned with NEP 2020. Critical Analysis — Strengths SVAMITVA converts informal occupancy into bankable titles — a structural fix linking property formalisation to rural credit and Panchayat revenue. The 16th FC's ~84% grant jump signals genuine fiscal deepening, easing PRIs' chronic dependence on tied transfers. AI and digital tools (SabhaSaar, PAI, Meri Panchayat) embed transparency and multilingual accessibility into grassroots proceedings. Critical Analysis — Structural Questions Training scale (4.10 cr) measures reach, not capability uptake; functional devolution of the "3 Fs" remains uneven across states. Finance Commission grants are largely tied/conditional; Own Source Revenue stays weak, keeping PRIs transfer-dependent. Functionary vacancies, irregular State Finance Commissions and incomplete activity mapping blur accountability for self-governance. Digital and AI tools help only where Gram Sabha vitality is real — minutes generation does not by itself ensure deliberative participation. Way Forward Operationalise OSR via SAMARTH and property-tax reform so SVAMITVA titles translate into recurring local revenue. Mandate timely, empowered State Finance Commissions and complete activity mapping of the 29 Eleventh-Schedule subjects. Move from training volume to certified competency with continuous handholding of functionaries. Strengthen the Gram Sabha as the genuine accountability forum, not merely a record-keeping exercise. Prelims Pointers 73rd CAA (1992): constitutional status to PRIs; Eleventh Schedule lists 29 subjects; Article 243G enables devolution. Finance Commissions: State FC every 5 years (Art. 243-I); Union FC recommends local-body grants (Art. 280). SVAMITVA (2020): drone survey of inhabited rural land; issues property cards; Ministry of Panchayati Raj with Survey of India. PESA Act, 1996: Panchayat provisions for Fifth Schedule areas; empowers Gram Sabhas over local resources. RGSA: capacity-building of PRIs; e-GramSwaraj is the Panchayat planning, accounting and finance portal. PAI: assesses GPs against 9 Localised SDG themes; SabhaSaar — AI-generated Gram Sabha minutes in 23 languages. Practice Mains Question Genuine devolution to Panchayati Raj Institutions requires functions, funds and functionaries to move together. In light of recent reforms, examine the progress made and the gaps that remain in making Panchayats effective institutions of self-government. GS Paper 2 · 250 words · 15 marks Practice MCQs Q1. Consider the following statements regarding SVAMITVA: (1) It uses drone-based surveys of inhabited rural areas. (2) It is implemented by the Ministry of Rural Development. (3) Property cards under it can improve access to institutional credit. Which are correct? A) 1 and 2 onlyB) 1 and 3 onlyC) 2 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3 Q2. Match List I (Initiative) with List II (Function): A. e-GramSwaraj · B. SabhaSaar · C. PAI // 1. AI-generated Gram Sabha minutes · 2. Panchayat planning & accounting platform · 3. Performance index against Localised SDGs. Choose the correct match: A) A-2, B-1, C-3B) A-1, B-3, C-2C) A-3, B-1, C-2D) A-2, B-3, C-1 Q3. (Assertion–Reasoning) Assertion (A): The 73rd Amendment alone has not guaranteed effective self-governance by Panchayats. Reason (R): The actual devolution of funds, functions and functionaries to PRIs varies significantly across States. A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of AB) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of AC) A is true, R is falseD) A is false, R is true Article 03 Article 03 New WPI & Producer Price Index Series (Base Year 2022–23) Office of the Economic Adviser, DPIIT · Ministry of Commerce & Industry · 15 June 2026 Relevance: GS 3 (Indian economy — inflation, price indices, mobilisation of resources, government statistics and economic indicators). GS 3 Key Data at a Glance 2022–23new WPI base year (replaces 2011–12) 957items in the new WPI basket (up from 697) 9.68%WPI inflation (YoY), May 2026 (8.26% in April) 7services covered by the new Service PPI (Phase I) 30.33%Fuel & Power inflation, May 2026 (key driver) 24.99%weight of the WPI Food Index Issue in Brief DPIIT's Office of the Economic Adviser released a revised Wholesale Price Index (WPI) with base year 2022–23, replacing the 2011–12 series, alongside new Producer Price Indices (PPI). This begins India's transition from WPI to PPI — aligned with IMF advice and advanced-economy practice; WPI will run only five more years before discontinuation. Static Background — What is the WPI? WPI measures average change in wholesale (bulk, pre-retail) prices of goods; it excludes services and is compiled by the Office of the Economic Adviser, DPIIT. It differs from the Consumer Price Index (CPI) — compiled by NSO/MoSPI, tracking retail prices — which is the RBI's headline anchor for monetary policy. A base-year revision (here 2011–12 to 2022–23) periodically updates the basket and weights to reflect the current structure of the economy. A Producer Price Index (PPI) measures price change from the producer's/seller's perspective, covers services, and is the global standard used by most advanced economies. Key Dimensions — New WPI Features Items expanded 697 to 957, widening commodity coverage of the index. Energy realignment: Solar, Wind and Nuclear electricity added; Crude Petroleum & Natural Gas moved from "Primary Articles" to "Fuel & Power" for coherent energy-price tracking. Weighting shift: weights now use Gross Value of Output (GVO) instead of Net Traded Value — better reflecting domestic production over trade flows. Methodology upgrades: short-term price formulation, and Targeted Mean Imputation replacing the Carry Forward method for missing data. Key Dimensions — Producer Price Indices Three PPIs introduced (base 2022–23): Output PPI, a trial Input PPI (manufacturing only, experimental from March 2026), and a Service PPI for seven services. The seven Service PPIs: Banking, Securities Transaction, Insurance, Pension Fund Management, Railways, Air (Passenger) and Telecom. Output and Input PPI together show how input-cost inflation passes through to output prices; weights are drawn from the Supply & Use Table (SUT) of National Accounts. WPI, Output PPI and Service PPI use Basic Price; the trial Input PPI uses Purchaser's Price (since industries buy inputs from the market). Key Dimensions — May 2026 Print & Transition WPI inflation rose to 9.68% (May 2026) from 8.26% (April), led by Fuel & Power (30.33%), Mineral Oils, Crude, Chemicals and Basic Metals. WPI Food Index inflation was 4.49% (May) versus 3.11% (April). WPI will be released for five years alongside PPI, then discontinued — giving users of price-escalation clauses time to migrate to PPI. Linking factors connect old and new series but are unreliable at granular levels owing to basket changes — users are advised caution. Critical Analysis — Strengths Aligns India with IMF guidance and global practice; PPI's services coverage fixes the WPI's key blind spot of excluding services. GVO-based weights plus added renewable and nuclear electricity make the index a more accurate mirror of the current production economy. A parallel five-year run of WPI and PPI gives contractual and analytical users an orderly transition rather than a disruptive switch. Critical Analysis — Structural Questions The Service PPI covers only seven services with no assigned overall weights, so it does not yet represent the full services sector as a headline measure. The trial Input PPI is experimental (manufacturing only); data quality and stakeholder feedback are still being tested. The 2022–23 base year may carry some pandemic-recovery distortions, requiring care when interpreting trends across the break. Index discontinuation and unreliable granular linking factors complicate long-run time-series comparisons. Way Forward Expand Service PPI coverage toward a comprehensive, weighted services index over successive phases. Stabilise and validate the trial Input PPI before formal adoption, using stakeholder feedback. Issue clear user guidance on linking and continuity to protect contracts and research dependent on the old series. Coordinate WPI/PPI, CPI and National Accounts deflators into a coherent national price-statistics architecture. Prelims Pointers WPI: wholesale price changes; compiled by the Office of the Economic Adviser, DPIIT (M/o Commerce & Industry); excludes services. Base year: revised to 2022–23 from 2011–12; items increased from 697 to 957. CPI vs WPI: CPI (retail, NSO/MoSPI) is the RBI's policy anchor; WPI is wholesale, by DPIIT. PPI: producer-side price index; covers services; global best practice; backed by IMF. Service PPI (7): Banking, Securities, Insurance, Pension Funds, Railways, Air (Passenger), Telecom. Weights: now from Gross Value of Output (GVO) and the Supply & Use Table (SUT) of National Accounts. Practice Mains Question India is transitioning from the Wholesale Price Index to a Producer Price Index in line with global practice. Examine the rationale behind this shift and the challenges in adopting the PPI as a primary measure of producer-level inflation. GS Paper 3 · 250 words · 15 marks Practice MCQs Q1. Consider the following statements regarding the Wholesale Price Index (WPI): (1) It is compiled by the National Statistical Office. (2) It excludes services from its scope. (3) The new series has shifted the base year to 2022–23. Which are correct? A) 1 and 2 onlyB) 2 and 3 onlyC) 1 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3 Q2. Match List I (Index) with List II (Feature): A. CPI · B. WPI · C. Service PPI // 1. Covers seven services (Banking, Telecom, etc.) · 2. Retail prices; RBI's policy anchor · 3. Wholesale prices; excludes services. Choose the correct match: A) A-2, B-3, C-1B) A-1, B-3, C-2C) A-3, B-2, C-1D) A-2, B-1, C-3 Q3. (Odd one out) Which of the following services is NOT among the seven covered by the new Service Producer Price Index? A) BankingB) InsuranceC) HealthcareD) Telecom