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Jun 12, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 12 June 2026 12 June 2026 · Legacy IAS Contents01 Panchayati Raj Initiatives Win Gold & Silver at National e-Governance Awards 2026 Ministry of Panchayati Raj · PIB, 11 June 2026 GS 2GS 3 02 Network Survey Vehicles: AI-Powered Digital Monitoring for National Highways Ministry of Road Transport & Highways · PIB, 11 June 2026 GS 3 03 12 Years of Social Justice: DoSJE Review — Scholarships, SMILE, NAMASTE & More Dept. of Social Justice & Empowerment · PIB, 11 June 2026 GS 2Essay Article 01 Article 01 Panchayati Raj Initiatives Shine at National e-Governance Awards 2026 Ministry of Panchayati Raj · PIB, 11 June 2026 Syllabus Relevance: GS 2 — Local Government, Devolution of Powers, e-Governance; GS 3 — Digital India, Technology in Governance. Relevant to questions on Panchayati Raj Institutions, 73rd Amendment, and grassroots service delivery. GS 2GS 3 29th National Conference on e-Governance, Jaipur, 1–2 July 2026. Theme: Viksit Bharat 2047: AI-Enabled, Data-Driven and Secure Digital Governance. Key Data at a Glance 4Panchayati Raj initiatives awarded out of 17 total projects ₹10LIncentive for Gold Awardees; ₹5L for Silver Awardees 1.65L+Gram Panchayats participated in NAeG 2026 from 30 States 1,355+Services delivered online by Kadepur GP to 4,300+ beneficiaries 88.55PAI 2.0 score (Grade A) of Bijoy Nagar GP — 38% improvement over PAI 1.0 194%Growth in Own Source Revenue (OSR) of Bijoy Nagar Gram Panchayat Issue in Brief National Awards for e-Governance (NAeG) 2026 recognised 4 Panchayati Raj initiatives out of 17 projects across 7 categories, highlighting the growing role of Gram Panchayats in digital governance. Awards will be conferred at the 29th National Conference on e-Governance in Jaipur, Rajasthan, on 1–2 July 2026, jointly organised by DARPG (Department of Administrative Reforms and Public Grievances), MeitY (Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology), and the Government of Rajasthan. Conference theme: "Viksit Bharat 2047: AI-Enabled, Data-Driven and Secure Digital Governance" — reflecting the government's push toward AI, data-driven decisions, and cybersecurity in public services. Distribution of awards: 10 Gold, 6 Silver, 1 Jury Award across 17 projects in 7 categories. Static Background Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs) form the third tier of governance under the 73rd Constitutional Amendment Act, 1992, which gave constitutional status to local self-government and mandated devolution of the 3Fs — Functions, Functionaries, and Funds. Article 243G of the Constitution empowers state legislatures to endow Panchayats with authority to prepare plans for economic development and social justice. The dedicated Gram Panchayat category under NAeG was introduced for the first time at NAeG 2025, following advocacy by the Ministry of Panchayati Raj to recognise online citizen service delivery at the grassroots level. NAeG 2025 saw 1.45 lakh entries from 26 States/UTs; NAeG 2026 saw 1.65 lakh+ GPs from 30 States — reflecting sustained capacity-building and digital adoption. Key Dimensions Panchayat Advancement Index (PAI) — Gold Award: The PAI is the Ministry of Panchayati Raj's flagship performance measurement tool for Gram Panchayats, assessing them on indicators aligned with the nine themes of Localised Sustainable Development Goals (LSDGs) — India's grassroots-level adaptation of the UN SDG framework. Won Gold under the category Digital Transformation by Use of Data Analytics. Kadepur Gram Panchayat, Sangli District, Maharashtra — Gold: Delivers 1,355+ services fully online through a paperless e-Office; uses 8 AI-powered applications, Blockchain-based record management, and GIS-based property geo-tagging. Notably, it is the only GP in India with formally approved policies on AI, Blockchain, Nanotechnology, Biotechnology, and Robotics. Bijoy Nagar Gram Panchayat, West Tripura — Silver: PAI 2.0 score of 88.55 (Grade A) — a 38% improvement over PAI 1.0; Own Source Revenue (OSR) grew by 194%; 100+ services online; the Gram Barta platform enables real-time voice communication with every household; achieved 100% digital literacy among women. Zilla Parishad Nandurbar, Maharashtra — Gold (District Level): Initiative e-Aarogya Dhamni deploys digital tools to extend fast, quality healthcare to tribal and remote areas of Nandurbar, a predominantly tribal (Schedule V) district — won Gold under the category District-Level Initiatives in e-Governance. Critical Analysis The rapid growth in GP participation (1.45L → 1.65L in one year) reflects sustained Ministry-led capacity building and growing digital readiness among PRIs — a positive institutional signal. Kadepur and Bijoy Nagar are outlier success stories, not yet systemic transformation; the gap between award-winning GPs and the average GP — in terms of internet access, trained staff, and fiscal autonomy — remains wide. Despite constitutional mandates, actual devolution of funds and functionaries to PRIs remains incomplete in most states; digital tools cannot substitute for absent administrative capacity. PAI is a valuable data tool, but quality of self-reported data by GPs may vary without independent verification; high PAI scores may not always fully reflect ground realities. Bijoy Nagar's 194% OSR growth is commendable but should be read with context — base OSR for most GPs is extremely low, making high percentage growth figures potentially misleading without absolute figures. AI, Blockchain, and GIS adoption at GP level — while impressive — risks deepening inequalities between tech-savvy, urban-adjacent GPs and resource-poor, remote ones without deliberate bridging support. Way Forward Scale replication models: Document Kadepur and Bijoy Nagar best practices in accessible, language-neutral formats for adaptation by GPs across India. Complete 3Fs devolution: States must accelerate genuine transfer of funds, functions, and functionaries — digital tools are only as effective as the administrative structure supporting them. Strengthen OSR frameworks: Provide GPs with legal and technical tools (e.g., property tax reform, GIS-based assessment) for sustainable revenue growth. Independent audit of PAI data: Third-party verification of PAI scores would strengthen the credibility and policy utility of the index. Digital equity focus: Target digital literacy programs — especially for women, as demonstrated at Bijoy Nagar — as a prerequisite for meaningful e-governance adoption in lagging GPs. Prelims Pointers NAeG 2026 17 projects, 7 categories; 10 Gold, 6 Silver, 1 Jury Award Gold / Silver Incentive ₹10 lakh (Gold); ₹5 lakh (Silver) — for project implementation 29th e-Governance Conference 1–2 July 2026, Jaipur; jointly by DARPG + MeitY + Govt. of Rajasthan PAI (Panchayat Advancement Index) Measures GP performance on 9 LSDG themes; Ministry of Panchayati Raj LSDGs Localised Sustainable Development Goals — India's village-level SDG framework 73rd Amendment / Article 243G Constitutional basis for PRIs; mandates 3Fs devolution GP NAeG Category Introduced for first time at NAeG 2025 e-Aarogya Dhamni ZP Nandurbar's digital health initiative for tribal areas; Gold Award 2026 Gram Barta Real-time voice communication platform used by Bijoy Nagar GP, Tripura OSR (Own Source Revenue) Key fiscal autonomy metric for GPs; Bijoy Nagar grew OSR by 194% Mains Practice Question "Digital governance initiatives at the Panchayat level, though promising, risk widening intra-rural inequalities without structural reforms." Critically examine this statement in the context of India's Panchayati Raj Institutions. GS Paper 2 · Local Government, Governance · 250 words Practice MCQ Q. Consider the following statements regarding the Panchayat Advancement Index (PAI): 1. PAI is administered by the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology. 2. It assesses Gram Panchayats on indicators aligned with Localised Sustainable Development Goals (LSDGs). 3. The number of LSDG themes used in PAI assessment is nine. Which of the above statements is/are correct? A) 1 and 2 onlyB) 2 and 3 onlyC) 1 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3 Article 02 Article 02 Network Survey Vehicles: AI-Powered Digital Monitoring for National Highways Ministry of Road Transport & Highways (MoRTH) · PIB, 11 June 2026 Syllabus Relevance: GS 3 — Infrastructure, Technology and Innovation, Road Safety, AI in Governance. Relevant to questions on NHAI, highway maintenance, and data-driven public administration. GS 3 A Network Survey Vehicle equipped with 3D laser sensors, GPS, and high-resolution cameras scans a National Highway corridor. Key Data at a Glance 300 kmSurvey coverage per day (up from 20–80 km/day earlier) 48 hrsTime for encrypted raw data transmission to central NSV centre 10 daysTime to convert raw data to actionable insights (earlier: 4–6 months) 5 ZonesExpert monitoring teams strategically deployed across India 6 monthsFrequency of NSV surveys on National Highways 2–8 laneScope: all National Highways from 2-lane to 8-lane across terrains Issue in Brief MoRTH (Ministry of Road Transport and Highways) has deployed Network Survey Vehicles (NSVs) equipped with advanced 3D laser-based systems across all states to modernise highway monitoring and maintenance. NSVs represent a decisive shift from reactive road repair to proactive, data-driven, AI-assisted highway maintenance — reducing the time from defect detection to corrective action. The initiative integrates with NHAI's AI-based Data Lake portal and includes a mobile app for field inspectors, closing the accountability loop until defects are 100% rectified. Static Background NHAI (National Highways Authority of India) is the statutory body established under the National Highways Authority of India Act, 1988, responsible for development, maintenance, and management of National Highways. India's National Highway network is one of the largest in the world; road accidents remain a major public health challenge — India accounts for a disproportionately high share of global road fatalities (WHO Global Road Safety Report). Bharatmala Pariyojana is the flagship national highway development programme driving NH expansion across India. Key Dimensions What is an NSV? A specialised vehicle fitted with laser profilers, 3D laser sensors, GPS, and high-resolution cameras that scans road surfaces for cracks, potholes, ruts, and unevenness — transforming highways into living digital maps. 3-Step Centralised Data Flow: (1) Encrypted raw data transmitted to the central NSV centre within 48 hours; (2) Expert teams in five zones monitor and report systematically; (3) Actionable insights generated within 10 days — a process that previously took 4–6 months. AI Integration via Data Lake: All NSV data is uploaded to NHAI's AI-based Data Lake portal, enabling expert teams to analyse findings quickly and take evidence-backed maintenance decisions without delay. Digital Accountability — Mobile App: Site inspectors can view NSV findings in real time, post geo-stamped photos, and track rectifications directly on-site, ensuring transparency and accountability at every step. 100% Rectification Mandate: Unlike earlier monitoring systems, the new NSV framework considers the process complete only after defects are fully rectified — road maintenance agencies are held accountable until full resolution. Coverage and Frequency: Covers 2–8 lane National Highways across diverse terrains — freight corridors, high-traffic stretches, weather-prone regions — at six-month intervals. Critical Analysis The reduction in data-to-insight time from 4–6 months to 10 days is operationally transformative — near-real-time defect detection can meaningfully reduce accident risk on highways. The 100% rectification accountability mandate addresses a long-standing governance gap where earlier systems stopped at monitoring without ensuring actual repair. Centralisation risk: Five-zone monitoring structures are positive, but over-centralisation of data analysis may create processing bottlenecks if zone teams are understaffed or under-resourced. Last-mile implementation gap: Technology at the monitoring end must be matched by adequate field capacity in road maintenance agencies — the PIB article does not address whether contractual enforcement mechanisms are in place to compel timely repairs. Transparency deficit: Digital notices to "stakeholders" are mentioned, but there is no indication of public disclosure — whether citizens can access defect-to-rectification data would be essential for genuine accountability. Limited scope: NSVs cover National Highways only; State Highways and rural roads — which carry significant traffic and record worse safety outcomes — remain outside this framework. Way Forward Extend to state highways: MoRTH should work with states under cooperative federalism to extend NSV-type monitoring to State Highway networks. Public dashboard: Make defect detection and rectification data publicly accessible to enable citizen oversight and reduce political interference in repair prioritisation. Strengthen PBMCs: Performance-Based Maintenance Contracts should legally enforce NSV-identified defects as mandatory repair obligations on highway contractors. Accident data integration: Cross-reference NSV defect maps with MoRTH accident data to prioritise repairs at high-mortality stretches first. Capacity building in zones: Ensure zonal expert teams are adequately staffed and trained so that data bottlenecks do not simply shift from technology to human processing. Prelims Pointers NSV (Network Survey Vehicle) 3D laser, GPS, cameras; scans NH surface defects NHAI Statutory body under NHAI Act, 1988; manages National Highways Coverage speed Up to 300 km/day (earlier: 20–80 km/day) Data processing time 10 days (earlier: 4–6 months); raw data sent to centre in 48 hrs Zonal monitoring 5 zones across India for expert analysis Data Lake portal NHAI's AI-based platform for highway data analysis Survey frequency Every 6 months on all 2–8 lane NHs PBMC Performance-Based Maintenance Contract — key enforcement tool Bharatmala Pariyojana Flagship NH expansion programme; context for NHAI's role Mobile App Enables real-time findings, geo-stamped photos, on-site rectification tracking Mains Practice Question "Technology-based road monitoring systems like Network Survey Vehicles are necessary but not sufficient for improving highway safety in India." Analyse the statement, highlighting the strengths of such systems and the structural gaps that need to be addressed. GS Paper 3 · Infrastructure, Technology in Governance · 250 words Practice MCQ Q. With reference to the Network Survey Vehicles (NSVs) deployed by MoRTH on National Highways, which of the following statements are correct? 1. NSVs use 3D laser sensors, GPS, and high-resolution cameras to assess road surface conditions. 2. Survey data is converted into actionable insights within 24 hours of collection. 3. All NSV data is uploaded to NHAI's AI-based Data Lake portal. 4. NSVs conduct surveys on National Highways at six-month intervals. Select the correct answer using the codes given below: A) 1, 3 and 4 onlyB) 1 and 3 onlyC) 2, 3 and 4 onlyD) 1, 2, 3 and 4 Article 03 Article 03 12 Years of Social Justice: DoSJE Review — Scholarships, SMILE, NAMASTE & More Department of Social Justice & Empowerment (DoSJE) · PIB, 11 June 2026 Syllabus Relevance: GS 2 — Welfare Schemes, Social Justice, Vulnerable Sections, Mechanisms for Weaker Sections; Essay — Empowerment and Social Change. Relevant to questions on scholarship schemes, SC/ST Act, transgender rights, manual scavenging, and DBT reforms. GS 2Essay The Department of Social Justice and Empowerment (DoSJE) released a 12-year achievement review highlighting welfare, education, and empowerment outcomes from 2014 to 2026. Key Data at a Glance 11 Cr+Total beneficiaries claimed across all schemes since 2014 ₹71,000 Cr+Total social justice spending across all schemes 6.12 CrStudents supported under Post-Matric Scholarship for SCs; ₹46,581 Cr released 1,069 LakhStudents benefited under PM-YASASVI (OBC/EBC/DNT); ₹15,555 Cr 7.26 LakhAtrocity victims supported; ₹5,012 Cr released since 2014 3.42 LakhSanitation workers covered under NAMASTE scheme Issue in Brief The Department of Social Justice and Empowerment (DoSJE) released a 12-year achievement review (2014–2026) claiming direct impact on over 11 crore beneficiaries across marginalised communities including SCs, OBCs, senior citizens, transgender persons, and sanitation workers. Total outlay highlighted: ₹71,000+ crore across multiple schemes spanning education, atrocity prevention, de-addiction, senior citizen welfare, transgender rights, SC/BC entrepreneurship, and elimination of manual scavenging. The review marks a claimed shift from basic welfare to active empowerment, anchored by Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) reforms and legislative strengthening. Static Background The Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment is the nodal ministry for welfare of Scheduled Castes (SCs), Other Backward Classes (OBCs), Economically Backward Classes (EBCs), Denotified and Nomadic Tribes (DNTs), senior citizens, and transgender persons. Key constitutional provisions: Articles 15, 16 (non-discrimination); Article 17 (abolition of untouchability); Article 46 (DPSP — educational and economic interests of weaker sections). Key legislation: SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989 (amended 2015 and 2018); Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act, 2019; Prohibition of Employment as Manual Scavengers and their Rehabilitation Act, 2013. Key Dimensions Education — DBT Scholarship Reform: Post-Matric Scholarship (PMS) for SCs — 6.12 crore students; ₹46,581.54 crore. Pre-Matric Scholarship — 2.99 crore students; ₹4,893.03 crore. Fully shifted to Aadhaar-linked DBT from FY 2021–22 to eliminate leakages. PM-YASASVI — covers OBC, EBC, and DNT communities; 1,069 lakh students; ₹15,555.53 crore in financial aid, hostel infrastructure, and premier school placements. Atrocity Prevention — SC/ST Act Strengthening: Amendments established Exclusive Special Courts and Victim Rights frameworks; raised relief amounts. ₹5,012.17 crore released supporting 7.26 lakh atrocity victims since 2014. De-Addiction — NMBA: Nasha Mukt Bharat Abhiyan (NMBA) reached 26.28 crore citizens including 9.56 crore youth through awareness campaigns with spiritual organisations and digital dashboards. Senior Citizens — AVYAY: Under Atal Vayo Abhyudaya Yojana (AVYAY), 8.53 lakh elderly persons received 46.32 lakh free assistive devices through Rashtriya Vayoshri camps. National Elderline (14567) resolved over 29 lakh calls. Transgender Persons — SMILE Scheme: SMILE (Support for Marginalised Individuals for Livelihood and Enterprise) issues legal identity certificates via a unified National Portal; 33,189 certificates issued. Garima Greh shelters operationalised. Gender-affirmation procedures integrated into Ayushman Bharat PM-JAY. SC/BC Entrepreneurship — VCF: Venture Capital Fund for Scheduled Castes (VCF-SC) and VCF-BC (Backward Classes) collectively approved ₹750 crore+ for competitive businesses, generating direct employment. Manual Scavenging Elimination — NAMASTE: NAMASTE (National Action for Mechanised Sanitation Ecosystem) deploys ₹2,383.06 crore in concessional finance for mechanisation of sewer cleaning, covering 3.42 lakh sanitation workers. Critical Analysis The shift to Aadhaar-linked DBT for scholarships from FY 2021–22 is a genuine structural improvement that reduces leakage and middlemen; however, the late transition also raises questions about pre-reform underpayments to eligible students. The "11 crore beneficiaries" figure is a cumulative, multi-scheme count across 12 years; overlap between beneficiaries and source self-reporting by the Ministry mean it requires independent verification (e.g., CAG audit, NIPFP assessment) for full credibility. Manual scavenging persists despite multiple legislative prohibitions under the Manual Scavengers Act, 2013; sewer deaths continue to be reported. NAMASTE's coverage of 3.42 lakh workers must be assessed against the actual scale of the problem, which is widely considered undercounted in official data. Transgender inclusion under SMILE is a step forward, but 33,189 certificates represent a small fraction of India's estimated transgender population; stigma, documentation barriers, and healthcare access gaps remain significant on the ground. SC/ST Act conviction rates remain very low despite increased financial relief — pointing to systemic failures in police investigation and prosecution that financial support alone cannot address. NMBA's claim of reaching 26.28 crore citizens through awareness campaigns involves a counting methodology that is difficult to independently audit — the figure should be treated with analytical caution. Way Forward CAG and parliamentary oversight: Parliament's Standing Committee on Social Justice should conduct beneficiary-level outcome audits — not just expenditure tracking — across all major schemes. Disaggregate beneficiary data: Publish scheme-wise, state-wise, and gender-disaggregated beneficiary data publicly to enable meaningful civil society accountability. Strengthen SC/ST Act enforcement: Invest in dedicated prosecution infrastructure — special public prosecutors, fast-track courts — beyond financial relief to victims. Complete manual scavenging elimination: Implement real-time sewer entry tracking, impose strict penalties on Urban Local Bodies (ULBs) permitting manual entry, and prioritise genuine rehabilitation for affected workers. Expand transgender outreach: Ground-level outreach through community organisations is essential to increase certificate uptake and healthcare access under SMILE and PM-JAY. Prelims Pointers Post-Matric Scholarship (PMS-SC) 6.12 Cr students; ₹46,581 Cr; full DBT from FY 2021–22 PM-YASASVI OBC/EBC/DNT; 1,069 lakh students; ₹15,555 Cr; hostels + premier schools AVYAY Atal Vayo Abhyudaya Yojana; senior citizen welfare; free assistive devices Elderline — 14567 National helpline for senior citizens; 29 lakh+ calls resolved SMILE Scheme Support for Marginalised Individuals for Livelihood and Enterprise; transgender persons Garima Greh Shelter homes for transgender persons; set up under SMILE NAMASTE National Action for Mechanised Sanitation Ecosystem; 3.42 lakh sanitation workers VCF-SC / VCF-BC Venture Capital Funds for SC and BC entrepreneurs; ₹750 Cr+ approved NMBA Nasha Mukt Bharat Abhiyan; de-addiction awareness; 26.28 Cr citizens reached SC/ST Act Amendments 2015 & 2018; added Exclusive Special Courts; raised relief; Victim Rights framework Mains Practice Question "Welfare schemes alone cannot achieve social justice without simultaneous strengthening of institutional accountability and enforcement mechanisms." Critically examine this statement in the context of policies for Scheduled Castes and marginalised communities in India. GS Paper 2 · Social Justice, Welfare Schemes, Governance · 250 words Practice MCQ Q. Which of the following schemes are correctly matched with their target groups? 1. SMILE — Transgender persons 2. NAMASTE — Manual scavenging / sanitation workers 3. PM-YASASVI — Scheduled Castes only 4. AVYAY (Atal Vayo Abhyudaya Yojana) — Senior citizens Select the correct answer using the codes given below: A) 1, 2 and 4 onlyB) 1 and 4 onlyC) 2 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2, 3 and 4

Jun 12, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Editorial Analysis - 12 June 2026 Legacy IAS · 12 June 2026 Contents01 Implementation Complete, But Workers Still Vulnerable Prof. Kingshuk Sarkar  ·  Labour Codes, Gig Economy, Social Security, Trade Unions GS 2 — Governance & Social JusticeGS 3 — Economy & Industrial PolicyEssay 02 FCRA Bill 2026 — Expanding State Control Over Civil Society P. Wilson, MP (Rajya Sabha)  ·  Constitutional Rights, Civil Society, Minority Institutions, Governance GS 2 — Polity, Governance & Fundamental RightsEssay — State & Civil Society Editorial 01 of 02 Article 01 Implementation Complete, But Workers Still Vulnerable Prof. Kingshuk Sarkar — Professor of Economics & Public Policy, Goa Institute of Management · The Hindu Relevance: Labour law consolidation, gig economy regulation, trade union rights, social security — core GS 2 (Governance, Social Justice) and GS 3 (Economy, Industrial Policy) topic with strong Mains, Essay, and Interview value. GS 2 — Governance & Social JusticeGS 3 — Economy & Industrial PolicyEssay — Labour & Development 1 — Issue in Brief The four Labour Codes — Code on Wages 2019, Industrial Relations Code 2020, Code on Social Security 2020, and the OSH&WC Code 2020 — were notified on 21 November 2025, completing the rules framework after nearly six years from enactment and consolidating 29 central labour laws, many over a century old, into a single national framework. The codes were intended to simplify compliance, universalise social security, and modernise the labour market — but trade unions, academics, and opposition parties have launched nationwide protests arguing the reforms tilt the balance of power decisively in favour of employers at the expense of workers. The editorial’s central argument: rules are a missed opportunity. Where the parent codes left provisions broad or open-ended, the rules had the scope to fill gaps and moderate contentious provisions — but chose silence instead, leaving critical worker protections undefined, vague, or operationally hollow. Labour is a Concurrent List subject under Schedule VII — every state must notify its own rules independently. As of late 2025, 24+ states have pre-published drafts, but key states like West Bengal have resisted and Tamil Nadu has not published rules for the Social Security Code, threatening a fragmented national implementation that undermines the reform’s core objective of uniformity. 2 — Static Background India’s pre-reform regime comprised 44 central labour laws, many dating to the colonial era — the Payment of Wages Act 1936, Minimum Wages Act 1948, Factories Act 1948, and Industrial Disputes Act 1947 — creating overlapping jurisdictions, compliance fragmentation, and a system virtually impossible to navigate for medium and small enterprises without dedicated legal teams. The Second National Commission on Labour (2002), chaired by Ravindra Varma, first formally recommended consolidation into broader codes — the direct conceptual precursor to the four-code architecture adopted after 2019, making the current reform two decades in the making rather than a hasty political exercise. Fixed-Term Employment (FTE) was first introduced centrally in 2018 for the apparel sector under the Industrial Employment (Standing Orders) Act 1946. The IR Code 2020 extended it to all sectors, making FTE a universal feature of India’s formal labour market for the first time — a structurally significant change without any safeguard on minimum tenure or renewal limits. The 50% wage rule under Section 2(y) of the Code on Wages mandates that basic wages must constitute at least 50% of total salary — a significant change boosting EPF and gratuity calculations. The national floor wage stands at ₹178 per day as notified in 2019, and has not been revised, raising questions about its adequacy given inflation since then. Under the Social Security Code 2020, aggregators (gig platform companies) must contribute 1–2% of their annual turnover, capped at 5% of total amounts paid to gig workers, into a dedicated Social Security Fund — but the Rules fail to specify the modalities for operationalising this fund, leaving this landmark provision effectively dormant. The India Employment Report 2024 notes that nearly 82% of India’s workforce engages in the informal sector and nearly 90% is informally employed — the scale of the challenge the four codes must address, and the baseline against which their success or failure as a formalisation instrument must ultimately be judged. 3 — Key Dimensions Fixed-Term Employment gap: The IR Code introduces FTE without specifying a minimum tenure or cap on renewals — creating a loophole where regular permanent positions can be perpetually converted to short-term arrangements. The Rules maintain complete silence, leaving enormous scope for employers to use FTE as a mechanism to evade permanent employment obligations. Floor wage ambiguity: The Code on Wages Rules define “floor wage” vaguely and fail to distinguish it from “minimum wage.” Without a clear framework for consultation with states and objective fixation principles, states may treat the floor as a ceiling rather than a baseline — defeating the reform’s core objective of a universal wage floor below which no worker in India should fall. Gender bias in wage formula: Rules perpetuate the convention of treating a four-member family as 3 consumption units — adult women assigned a weight of 0.8 vs. 1.0 for adult men — embedding structural gender pay discrimination directly into minimum wage determination methodology, a bias that has persisted for decades without legislative correction. Flawed hourly wage formula: Hourly wage calculated as daily wage ÷ 8 is conceptually wrong. Internationally, hourly minimum wages are determined independently of daily rates, recognising that part-time or gig workers cannot always fill a full workday. This matters especially for domestic workers and the rapidly expanding platform economy where hourly engagement is the norm rather than the exception. Gig worker scale and exclusion: NITI Aayog’s 2022 report estimates 7.7 million gig workers in India in 2020–21 — constituting 2.6% of the non-agricultural workforce — projected to reach 23.5 million by 2029–30. Yet the Social Security Code Rules make no attempt to clarify the employment relationship for this rapidly growing category or operationalise the Social Security Fund for their benefit. Gratuity insurance left undefined: The Social Security Code envisaged mandatory gratuity insurance to protect workers against employer default on gratuity payments — the Rules entirely fail to specify modalities, leaving this dormant as a legislative aspiration without the operational architecture needed to protect workers at establishments that shut down or fail. Trade union recognition threshold: IR Code Rules require 30% membership for sole union recognition — a condition absent in the parent Code itself — disadvantaging newly formed and smaller unions at a time when union density is at historic lows, and constitutionally questionable as Rules cannot create obligations not envisaged by the parent legislation. Factory and layoff threshold increases: The “factory” definition threshold raised from 10 to 20 workers (with power) and 20 to 40 workers (without power) — exempting a large number of small manufacturing units from safety and welfare regulations. The threshold for mandatory government permission before layoff, retrenchment, or closure has been raised from 100 to 300 workers — significantly reducing job security for employees in medium establishments. Contract labour ambiguity: OSH&WC Code Rules do not define activities for which contract labour may be engaged, nor distinguish core from non-core activities — a critical legal gap enabling continued informalisation of even permanent, core production functions that was a key protection under the earlier Contract Labour (Regulation and Abolition) Act 1970. 4 — Critical Analysis In favour — Compliance simplification: Consolidating 29 laws into 4 codes reduces compliance complexity for formal employers — improving ease of doing business, reducing litigation risk, and creating a more uniform national labour framework that was previously impossible for medium enterprises to navigate without large legal budgets. In favour — 50% wage rule and financial security: The 50% basic wage rule mandating basic pay at half of total salary significantly boosts EPF and gratuity calculations — improving long-term financial security for organised sector workers and correcting the previous practice of suppressing basic wages to reduce statutory contributions, even if it may marginally reduce immediate take-home pay. In favour — Statutory gig worker recognition: The Social Security Code’s creation of a dedicated Social Security Fund with aggregator contribution obligations is a historic first — India is among the first major economies to legislatively acknowledge gig workers as a distinct category deserving social protection, even if operationalisation remains incomplete. In favour — Flexible work arrangements: The four-day workweek option — allowing 12-hour daily shifts with employee agreement within the 48-hour weekly cap — aligns with evolving global workforce practices and gives employers and employees genuine flexibility absent in the older, rigid frameworks. Against — Weakened job security: Raising the layoff/retrenchment/closure permission threshold from 100 to 300 workers significantly reduces job security for employees in medium establishments — a category employing a substantial share of India’s organised workforce — without any countervailing worker protection mechanism introduced in the Rules. Against — Gig worker social security remains hollow: Despite legislative acknowledgement, the Rules provide no modalities for operationalising the Social Security Fund — meaning the 7.7 million gig workers (rising to 23.5 million by 2029–30) face continuing uncertainty about their actual entitlements, contribution mechanisms, and grievance redressal processes. Against — Union recognition threshold anomaly: The 30% union recognition threshold appears in the Rules but not the parent Code — a constitutionally questionable exercise of delegated rulemaking that effectively weakens collective bargaining without explicit legislative sanction at a time when union density in India is already declining across sectors. Against — Persistent informality gap: Social protection coverage improved from 24.4% to 48.8% between 2021–2024 (ILO/Ministry of Labour data) — yet over half the workforce remains without adequate coverage. The codes’ impact on this gap remains largely aspirational given the implementation gaps identified by the author. 5 — Way Forward Parliament should establish delegated legislation review mechanisms — with committee scrutiny of all four codes’ rules — to prevent executive rulemaking from silently weakening legislative intent, particularly on FTE duration caps, union recognition thresholds, and factory threshold definitions that affect millions of workers. Define minimum FTE tenure (not less than one year) and maximum renewal cycles (not exceeding three) through amended rules — preventing the conversion of permanent positions to perpetually renewable short-term contracts that effectively strip workers of all job security without violating the letter of the law. Overhaul the minimum wage determination methodology — eliminate the gender-weighted consumption unit formula and adopt the Supreme Court’s Workmen v. Reptakos Brett (1992) guidelines as a mandatory inflation-indexed baseline covering nutrition, education, healthcare, and recreation for all workers across sectors. Issue platform-specific notifications under the Social Security Code immediately — defining aggregator contribution structures, eligibility thresholds (90 days with one aggregator or 120 cumulative days), benefit entitlements, and grievance mechanisms for Ola, Uber, Swiggy, Zomato, and similar platforms whose combined workforce now exceeds 1 crore workers. Notify gratuity insurance modalities under the Social Security Code without further delay — specifying premium structures, eligible insurers, and enforcement mechanisms so that this critical protection against employer default on gratuity payments becomes operational rather than remaining a legislative aspiration on paper. Fast-track state-level rule notifications through Finance Commission incentives and central advisory assistance — as the concurrent list character of labour means federal resistance by key states like West Bengal and Tamil Nadu can leave workers in those states entirely unprotected under the new regime, defeating the uniformity objective of the entire consolidation exercise. 6 — Data & Key Facts 29Central labour laws consolidated into 4 codes; notified 21 November 2025 ~6 yearsGap between code enactment (2019–20) and rule notification (Nov 2025) 82%India’s workforce in informal sector (India Employment Report 2024) 7.7 MnGig workers in India, 2020–21 — 2.6% of non-agricultural workforce (NITI Aayog, 2022) 23.5 MnProjected gig workers by 2029–30 (NITI Aayog, 2022) ₹178/dayNational floor wage as notified in 2019 — unchanged since then 100 → 300Worker threshold for mandatory govt. permission before layoff / closure 0.8 vs 1.0Consumption weight of adult female vs. adult male in min. wage formula — embedded gender bias 30%Sole union recognition membership threshold — in Rules, not in parent Code Aggregator contribution (Social Security Code): Gig platform companies must contribute 1–2% of annual turnover, capped at 5% of total amounts paid to gig workers, into the Social Security Fund — but the Rules fail to specify modalities for operationalising this fund, leaving the provision on paper. e-Shram portal (Ministry of Labour): As of March 2025, over 30.68 crore unorganised workers have registered on the platform, with 53.68% being women — confirming the informal economy is not just male casual labour but also female survival work at a massive scale that the labour codes must address. Key SC judgment — Workmen v. Reptakos Brett & Co. (1992): Five components of minimum wage — food/calories, clothing, housing, fuel/lighting, and miscellaneous expenses — remain the constitutional benchmark for a “living wage” that the current gender-biased consumption unit formula fails to fully implement across the workforce. 7 — Prelims Pointers Code on Wages 2019 — replaces 4 Acts: Payment of Wages 1936, Minimum Wages 1948, Payment of Bonus 1965, Equal Remuneration 1976; introduces 50% basic wage rule and national floor wage concept Industrial Relations Code 2020 — replaces Trade Union Act 1926, Industrial Employment (Standing Orders) Act 1946, Industrial Disputes Act 1947; introduces FTE for all sectors; raises layoff threshold to 300 Social Security Code 2020 — replaces 9 Acts incl. EPF Act, ESIC Act, Gratuity Act; first statutory definition of gig/platform workers; Social Security Fund for unorganised workers; aggregator 1–2% contribution obligation OSH&WC Code 2020 — replaces 13 Acts incl. Factories Act 1948, Mines Act 1952, BOCW Act 1996; raises factory threshold to 20/40 workers; mandates health check-up for workers aged 40+ Floor wage vs. Minimum wage — floor is the national baseline (₹178/day, 2019); state minimum wages must not fall below it; conceptually distinct but Rules fail to operationalise the difference clearly Fixed-Term Employment (FTE) — proportionate benefits like permanent workers; but no minimum tenure or renewal cap in current Rules — major gap exploitable by employers across all sectors Reptakos Brett case 1992 (SC) — 5-component minimum wage: food/calories, clothing, housing, fuel & lighting, miscellaneous; constitutional benchmark for “living wage” — current formula falls short e-Shram Portal — National Database of Unorganised Workers; Aadhaar-linked Universal Account Number; 30.68 crore registered (March 2025); 53.68% women; covers gig, migrant, construction, domestic workers Exam note: Never confuse the four codes — Code on Wages (wages/bonus), IR Code (unions/disputes/FTE), Social Security Code (PF/ESI/gratuity/gig), OSH&WC Code (safety/working conditions). The IR Code replaced the Industrial Disputes Act 1947 — NOT the Code on Wages. Also note: the 30% union threshold is in the Rules, not the Code — a frequently tested distinction. 8 — Practice Mains Question “The notification of rules for the four labour codes marks implementation, not reform. The structural vulnerabilities of Indian workers remain unaddressed.” Critically examine. GS 2 + GS 3 crossover  ·  15 marks  ·  ~250 words  ·  Governance + Economy + Social Justice Intro: Six-year implementation gap and the reform’s stated objectives — consolidation, universal coverage, ease of doing business; frame the central tension between reform rhetoric and ground-level worker reality in a country where 82% of the workforce remains informal. Body 1 — What the codes deliver: Floor wage universalisation, 50% basic wage rule boosting PF/gratuity, gig worker statutory recognition for the first time globally, four-day workweek option, Social Security Fund architecture, e-Shram digital registry of 30 crore unorganised workers. Body 2 — What the rules failed to deliver: FTE tenure gap enabling permanent job conversion, gender bias in wage formula (0.8 weight), gig social security vacuum despite 7.7 million workers, 30% union threshold anomaly absent from parent code, factory/layoff threshold increases weakening protections, core/non-core contract labour ambiguity. Conclusion: Delegated legislation review, Reptakos Brett compliance in wage formula, platform-specific Social Security Fund notifications, gratuity insurance operationalisation, and fast-tracking state-level rules as the reform’s unfinished agenda requiring immediate attention. 9 — Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about India’s four Labour Codes and their Rules (notified November 2025): 1. The Industrial Relations Code 2020 raises the threshold for mandatory government permission before layoff, retrenchment, or closure from 100 to 300 workers. 2. The Code on Wages 2019 replaces five central Acts including the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947. 3. Under the Social Security Code 2020, aggregators must contribute 1–2% of annual turnover to the Social Security Fund for gig workers. 4. The 30% membership threshold for sole trade union recognition appears explicitly in the Industrial Relations Code 2020 itself. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a) 1 and 3 only(b) 1, 3 and 4 only(c) 2 and 4 only(d) 1, 2 and 3 only Editorial 02 of 02 Article 02 FCRA Bill 2026 — Expanding State Control Over Civil Society P. Wilson — Member of Parliament (Rajya Sabha) & Senior Advocate, Supreme Court of India · The Hindu Relevance: Constitutional rights (Articles 14, 19, 25, 26, 29, 30, 300A), civil society autonomy, minority institution protection, executive overreach — core GS 2 (Polity, Governance, Fundamental Rights) with strong Essay and Interview value. GS 2 — Polity & GovernanceGS 2 — Fundamental RightsEssay — State & Civil Society 1 — Issue in Brief The Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Amendment (FCRA) Bill, 2026 was introduced in the Lok Sabha on 25 March 2026 to regulate assets and funds of NGOs whose registration is cancelled, surrendered, or expires — creating a Designated Authority with sweeping powers to manage, transfer, or sell foreign-funded assets of such organisations. The Bill goes well beyond routine regulatory updating — it transforms FCRA from a foreign-funding transparency law into a comprehensive instrument of state control over NGOs, charitable trusts, religious institutions, and educational bodies, including the power to seize assets without prior judicial review or independent adjudication. As of 26 March 2026, official data confirms 21,933 organisations had already lost their FCRA licences — with cancellations ranging from procedural lapses and tax issues to broadly subjective categories such as “anti-development activities,” “undesirable activities,” and concerns about “social or religious harmony.” The 2026 Bill is not an isolated measure but the latest escalation in a pattern — the 2020 FCRA amendments had already imposed SBI-only routing, reduced admin expense ceilings from 50% to 20%, and banned sub-granting, decimating thousands of smaller NGOs. The 2026 Bill adds asset seizure powers and expanded executive discretion that critics describe as moving from oversight to overreach. 2 — Static Background The Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act, 1976 was enacted during the Emergency to prevent foreign funds from influencing Indian politics. It was replaced by FCRA 2010 under UPA, which expanded coverage to cultural, economic, and social organisations while adding registration requirements, annual return filing (Form FC-4), and MHA oversight — creating the current regulatory architecture. FCRA 2020 amendments drastically tightened the regime: all foreign contributions mandatorily routed through a designated SBI account in New Delhi; administrative expense ceiling cut from 50% to 20%; sub-granting to partner organisations entirely prohibited; suspension power expanded to 180 days during investigation — measures that together shut down thousands of smaller faith-based and charitable NGOs serving marginalised communities. According to a Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) public notice of November 2024, grounds for denial of FCRA registration/renewal include “anti-developmental activities,” “inciting malicious protests,” and “forceful religious conversions” — categories that remain broadly undefined in law, giving MHA virtually unlimited discretion to deny registration to organisations working on contested social or political issues. Article 26 of the Constitution guarantees every religious denomination the right to manage its own religious affairs and administer its property — a Fundamental Right directly threatened by the Bill’s automatic asset vesting provisions, which override denominational autonomy through purely administrative decisions without judicial process or compensation. Article 300A — though not a Fundamental Right (removed from Part III by the 44th Amendment 1978) — guarantees that no person shall be deprived of property save by authority of law, interpreted by the Supreme Court as requiring fair, just, and non-arbitrary procedure including due process before executive deprivation of property. India’s total foreign funding ecosystem under FCRA stands at over ₹20,000 crore annually. Civil society contributes an estimated 2% of India’s GDP, generates 27 lakh jobs and 34 lakh full-time volunteer equivalents — exceeding public sector employment — making aggressive FCRA enforcement a macro-level economic and social question, not merely a regulatory one. 3 — Key Dimensions Section 14B — Automatic cessation: An organisation’s FCRA registration automatically ceases not only if renewal is denied, but also if the renewal application is not filed on time or if renewal remains pending due to processing delays — meaning government-caused administrative delay can itself trigger registration lapse without any finding of misconduct, paralysing operations before any adjudication. Section 16A — Provisional vesting without judicial review: Upon cancellation, surrender, or lapse, all foreign-contribution-derived assets automatically “provisionally vest” in the government-designated authority without prior judicial review or independent adjudication. The Designated Authority can then manage, transfer, or dispose of these assets, with sale proceeds credited to the Consolidated Fund of India. Burden reversal on mixed-fund assets: If an asset is created partly from foreign and partly from domestic funds, the Bill appears to allow the entire asset to vest in the Designated Authority unless the NGO proves what portion came from domestic sources — reversing the burden of proof unfairly, potentially capturing assets built over decades using a mix of local collections, donations, and foreign contributions. Scope of asset seizure: The Bill potentially covers land, buildings, vehicles, equipment, and unspent funds — meaning that long-established convent schools, mission hospitals, orphanages, mosques, and temples built over generations using a mix of local and foreign funds could come under government control due to mere procedural non-compliance without any proven wrongdoing. Suspension and operational paralysis: Amended Section 13 bars organisations from managing their assets without prior government approval during suspension — effectively freezing all operations before any finding of guilt, creating a presumption of wrongdoing that inverts normal due process principles and can devastate ongoing service delivery to vulnerable communities. Centralised enforcement under Section 43: Revised Section 43 requires Union government approval before any state agency can investigate FCRA violations — concentrating enforcement power entirely at the Centre, reducing federal oversight, and potentially enabling selective, politically motivated action against specific organisations or communities based in states with different political alignments. Minority institution vulnerability: Christian organisations alone run thousands of schools, hospitals, orphanages, and tribal welfare bodies across Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Nagaland, Mizoram, and Meghalaya — many dependent on foreign contributions. Under Section 16A, even procedural non-compliance or government-caused renewal delays can trigger government takeover of institutions built over generations, with no judicial check before assets vest in the Designated Authority. 4 — Critical Analysis In favour — Legitimate sovereign interest: Foreign-funded organisations can serve as conduits for geopolitical influence or destabilisation — regulatory oversight of foreign contributions is practised by democracies including the US (FARA — Foreign Agents Registration Act), Australia (Foreign Influence Transparency Scheme), and Germany, making India’s regulatory interest in transparency a legitimate sovereign concern in principle. In favour — Asset protection for beneficiary communities: Asset vesting provisions may be intended to ensure that when an organisation’s registration lapses, its assets are managed by a responsible authority to protect beneficiary communities — preventing institutional limbo where assets remain frozen while services cease and vulnerable communities dependent on those services are left without support. In favour — Reduced criminal penalties: The Bill reduces the maximum imprisonment for certain FCRA offences from five years to one year — a moderating measure that reduces the severity of criminal penalties even as civil powers over assets are expanded, and one the government cites as evidence of balanced reform rather than punitive intent. Against — No judicial oversight before asset seizure: The core constitutional problem with Section 16A is precisely that it does not require judicial approval — vesting is automatic upon an administrative decision that is itself based on a vague “public interest” standard under Section 14. Permanent asset confiscation without independent adjudication violates the most basic principles of natural justice and Article 300A. Against — Self-defeating circular mechanism: The absence of clear timelines for processing FCRA registration and renewal applications creates government-caused delays that then trigger Section 14B automatic cessation — meaning the executive can effectively cancel registrations through bureaucratic inaction rather than a formal decision, with no recourse for affected organisations. Against — Constitutional violations across multiple articles: The Bill potentially violates Articles 14 (equality/arbitrariness), 19(1)(c) (freedom of association), 25 and 26 (religious freedom and denominational management), 29 and 30 (minority educational institutions), and 300A (property rights) — a constitutional challenge of unusual breadth that suggests the Bill was drafted without adequate legal scrutiny of its rights implications. Against — Chilling effect on civil society: Enhanced personal liability for office-bearers and the threat of asset seizure will deter donors, volunteers, and trustees even from fully compliant organisations — shrinking India’s associational life and the crucial role civil society plays in delivering services to the 4–8 lakh individuals per organisation who depend on NGO-provided health, education, and welfare services. 5 — Way Forward Insert mandatory timelines for FCRA registration, renewal, and cancellation proceedings — with deemed-approval provisions if government deadlines are not met — to prevent bureaucratic inaction from triggering automatic cessation under Section 14B and to restore organisational certainty in planning long-term charitable and educational activities. Replace automatic “provisional vesting” under Section 16A with judicial or quasi-judicial oversight — requiring independent tribunal approval before any asset transfer to the Designated Authority — restoring the due process standard that Article 300A and natural justice demand before any executive deprivation of institutional property. Define “public interest” grounds for FCRA cancellation with specific, objective, and exhaustive criteria — preventing the standard from operating as a discretionary catch-all susceptible to political misuse against organisations working on minority rights, tribal welfare, environmental protection, or human rights advocacy that governments may find inconvenient. Establish a dedicated FCRA Appellate Tribunal with judicial members and statutory timelines for disposal — separating adjudicative functions entirely from MHA’s enforcement functions, and restoring the institutional separation between investigation and adjudication that constitutional due process requires and that is absent in the current MHA-controlled regime. Bring FCRA enforcement within the ambit of RTI Act transparency norms — requiring public disclosure of cancellation reasons, with redactions limited to genuinely proven national security concerns — so that affected organisations can mount meaningful legal challenges rather than fighting blind administrative decisions with no knowledge of the specific grounds against them. 6 — Data & Key Facts 21,933FCRA licences cancelled as of 26 March 2026 (Amnesty International / official data) ₹20,000 Cr+India’s total annual foreign funding ecosystem under FCRA ~2% GDPCivil society’s contribution to India’s GDP (Ministry of Statistics, 2014) 27 LakhJobs generated by civil society organisations (MoSPI, 2014) 34 LakhFull-time volunteer equivalents in civil society — exceeds public sector employment 50% → 20%Admin expense ceiling reduced under FCRA 2020 amendments 47%Of surveyed NGOs are the primary employment source in their localities (survey of 515 NGOs) 5 yrs → 1 yrMax imprisonment for certain FCRA offences reduced under 2026 Bill 25 Mar 2026FCRA Amendment Bill 2026 introduced in Lok Sabha by MoS Home Affairs Nityanand Rai 4–8 lakh individuals per organisation lose access to vital services when FCRA licences are revoked — impacting child protection, immunisation, neonatal health, nutrition, early childhood education, parental involvement, youth skills development, and access to government welfare schemes in affected regions. 7 — Prelims Pointers FCRA 1976 — enacted during Emergency; prevented foreign political influence; replaced by FCRA 2010; administered by MHA under Ministry of Home Affairs FCRA 2010 — regulates foreign contributions to political parties, associations, individuals; annual return via Form FC-4; registration and prior permission categories; MHA oversight FCRA 2020 amendments — SBI New Delhi-only routing; 50%→20% admin cap; sub-granting banned; 180-day suspension power; decimated thousands of smaller NGOs FCRA 2026 Bill — Sec 14B (automatic cessation on non-renewal/pending); Sec 16A (provisional vesting without judicial review); new Chapter IIIA; Designated Authority; asset sale proceeds to Consolidated Fund Article 26 — Fundamental Right: religious denominations may manage religious affairs AND administer own property; directly threatened by automatic vesting under Section 16A without court approval Article 300A — Constitutional right (NOT Fundamental Right); no deprivation of property except by authority of law; 44th Amendment 1978 moved property from Part III to Part XII; not enforceable under Article 32 Articles 29 & 30 — Minority rights: Art 29 — conserve distinct culture/language; Art 30 — establish and administer educational institutions; both potentially violated by government takeover of minority schools/colleges/hospitals US FARA — Foreign Agents Registration Act; comparable foreign-funding transparency law; requires disclosure but does NOT allow asset seizure without judicial process — contrast with India’s proposed Section 16A Exam note: Article 300A is a constitutional right, not a Fundamental Right — it cannot be enforced under Article 32. Also remember: Section 16A’s asset vesting is automatic (no court order needed) — this is the precise constitutional criticism. Never confuse FCRA (foreign contributions, MHA) with FEMA (foreign exchange, RBI/Finance Ministry). 8 — Practice Mains Question “The FCRA Amendment Bill, 2026 raises fundamental questions about the balance between national security regulation and constitutional guarantees of civil society freedom in India.” Critically examine. GS 2  ·  15 marks  ·  ~250 words  ·  Polity + Governance + Fundamental Rights + Minority Rights Intro: FCRA’s original purpose (preventing foreign political influence, 1976 Emergency) vs. its current expanded scope (comprehensive civil society regulation); introduce the 2026 Bill as a qualitative escalation from transparency oversight to asset seizure powers affecting ₹20,000+ crore annually and 21,933 already-cancelled licences. Body 1 — Key provisions and implications: Section 14B automatic cessation on processing delays, Section 16A asset vesting without judicial review, burden reversal on mixed-fund assets, suspension paralysis under amended Section 13, centralised enforcement under revised Section 43, Designated Authority’s extraordinary discretionary powers. Body 2 — Constitutional and social concerns: Articles 14, 19(1)(c), 25, 26, 29, 30, 300A; gap in judicial oversight before asset vesting; minority institution vulnerability across Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Nagaland, Mizoram, Meghalaya; chilling effect on 27 lakh jobs and 2% GDP contribution; ICCPR Article 22 obligations on freedom of association. Conclusion: Mandatory timelines with deemed-approval, judicial oversight before asset vesting, objective “public interest” definition, FCRA Appellate Tribunal, RTI transparency for cancellation reasons — as the reform pathway aligning India’s FCRA regime with democratic norms while preserving legitimate national security oversight. 9 — Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about FCRA and the proposed 2026 Amendment Bill: 1. FCRA 2010 is administered by the Ministry of Home Affairs and replaced the original FCRA enacted in 1976. 2. The 2020 FCRA amendments reduced the administrative expense limit for foreign contributions from 50% to 20% and banned sub-granting to partner organisations. 3. Proposed Section 16A of the 2026 Bill requires mandatory judicial approval before foreign-contribution-derived assets can vest in the Designated Authority. 4. Article 300A of the Constitution guarantees the right to property as a Fundamental Right enforceable under Article 32. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only(b) 1, 2 and 3 only(c) 2 and 4 only(d) 1, 2 and 4 only

Jun 12, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Contents 12 June 2026 Report on Datasets for State Finance CommissionsGS2 SAPLING Dialogue 2026 — India's Food Processing ImperativeGS2 | GS3 India's Falling TFR and the Population Policy DebateGS1 | GS2 Contraceptive Use and Women's Reproductive Agency — NFHS-6GS1 | GS2 Ukraine War Surpasses WWI Duration — Geopolitical ImplicationsGS2 PCPNDT Act and the Supreme Court — Sex Selection and the Girl ChildGS1 | GS2 Article 01 Report on Datasets for State Finance Commissions GS Paper 2 — Panchayati Raj Institutions | Fiscal Federalism | Governance | Decentralisation Why in News The Ministry of Panchayati Raj (MoPR) released the Report of the Committee on Datasets for State Finance Commissions on 8 June 2026. Released by Chief Economic Advisor Dr. V. Anantha Nageswaran, the report maps critical data gaps constraining State Finance Commissions (SFCs) and proposes a comprehensive architecture to strengthen evidence-based fiscal devolution to Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs) and Urban Local Bodies (ULBs). Constitutional and Institutional Background State Finance Commissions are constitutional bodies established under the 73rd and 74th Constitutional Amendment Acts of 1992, which operationalised democratic decentralisation at the grassroots. Their mandate rests on three constitutional provisions: Article 243-I: Requires the Governor to constitute an SFC within one year of the 73rd Amendment, and every five years thereafter, to review the financial position of Panchayats and recommend principles for fiscal devolution. Article 243-Y: Extends the SFC's mandate to cover Municipalities and Urban Local Bodies. Article 280: Obliges the Central Finance Commission (CFC) to recommend measures to supplement resources of Panchayats and Municipalities — on the basis of SFC recommendations — creating a constitutional chain between the two tiers of fiscal recommendation. Key Findings of the Committee Structural Data Fragmentation SFCs lack consolidated accounts, and financial data across departments remains siloed, making it nearly impossible to map sectoral expenditures — sanitation, roads, street lighting — to actual service delivery outcomes. This prevents SFCs from making evidence-based devolution recommendations. Chronic Reporting Delays The 15th Finance Commission found that SFC reports were submitted with an average delay of 16 months, forcing it to rely on outdated fiscal assessments. The consequence was severe: the 16th Finance Commission found SFC reports unusable for framing central transfer recommendations — a damning institutional failure. Existing Digital Tools Underperforming eGramSwaraj Portal: Suffers from inconsistent and uneven data entry practices across states, limiting reliability. Panchayat Advancement Index (PAI 2.0): Useful for performance comparison but not yet structured for fiscal devolution — indicators are not classified by needs, performance, or backwardness. Census and SECC 2011 data: Highly outdated, reducing relevance for assessing current socio-economic conditions. CAG Audit Reports: Lack consistent Gram Panchayat-level granularity, limiting utility for localised fiscal planning. A Proposed Constitutional Amendment — Critical Signal Due to persistent structural obstacles, the 16th FC recommended amending Articles 280(3)(bb) and 280(3)(c) — effectively dropping the requirement that the CFC base its local body grant recommendations on SFC reports. This would delink the two-tier fiscal architecture that the 1992 amendments were designed to create, signalling that the constitutional chain has been broken by institutional failures on the ground. Key Recommendations Reform Domain Recommendation Data Infrastructure Establish GP-level fiscal databases; restructure PAI into "needs," "performance," and "backwardness/equity" categories; coordinate with MoSPI via LG Directory for GP-level data Institutional Architecture Create permanent SFC Cells within State Finance/Planning Departments; establish a standing peer-learning forum for SFCs Auditing & Accountability Request CAG performance audit of the 73rd Amendment's implementation across states — to assess true extent of functional, financial, and administrative devolution Budgetary Reform Mandate supplementary budget documents detailing all devolution streams (Union FC, State FC, CSS) down to individual GP level; notify uniform accounting heads Capacity Building NIRDPR to conduct training programs and revive Panchayat Statistics publication; NIPFP to develop comprehensive SFC Manual 16th Finance Commission — Key Outcomes for Local Bodies Urbanisation Premium of ₹10,000 crore: First-ever dedicated national allocation for local bodies managing the transition of census towns into urban entities — addressing peri-urban governance challenges for the first time. Performance-based Panchayat grant of ₹87,000 crore: Linked to annual growth in own-source revenues of at least 2.5%, signalling confidence in local fiscal self-reliance. Concerns The deeper problem the report surfaces is that fiscal decentralisation in India remains largely formal rather than substantive. While the constitutional framework for the third tier was created in 1992, actual devolution of the "3Fs" — Functions, Functionaries, and Funds — has been uneven, partial, and slow across most states. The proposed CAG audit is particularly significant: over three decades after the amendment, it would provide the first comprehensive assessment of how much genuine devolution has actually occurred — data that would be politically uncomfortable for many state governments. Way Forward Treat the report's recommendations as a governance reform package, not technical fixes. Strengthen the data ecosystem so SFCs can make evidence-based recommendations. Reform the constitutional link between SFC and CFC so local needs genuinely inform national resource allocation. Build institutional capacity of PRIs themselves to generate and use financial data. As Dr. Nageswaran observed: "Better data leads to better governance" — a principle that must be operationalised at every level of India's federal architecture. Conclusion Sustainable decentralisation requires three simultaneous advances: strengthening the data ecosystem so SFCs can make evidence-based recommendations; reforming the constitutional link between SFC and CFC so that local needs genuinely inform national resource allocation; and building the institutional capacity of PRIs themselves to generate and use financial data. The 16th FC's proposed constitutional amendment is a warning — not a solution. Prelims Pointers Article 243-I: Governor must constitute SFC within 1 year of 73rd Amendment commencement, and every 5 years thereafter — covers Panchayats. Article 243-Y: Extends SFC mandate to Municipalities (ULBs). Article 280(3)(bb) & (c): CFC must recommend measures to supplement PRI and ULB resources — on the basis of SFC recommendations; 16th FC proposed amending this requirement due to poor SFC data quality. 73rd and 74th CAAs, 1992: Operationalised third tier of government; created PRIs and ULBs as institutions of self-governance. 3Fs of Decentralisation: Functions, Functionaries, and Funds — devolution has been uneven across states. eGramSwaraj Portal: Digital platform for Panchayat planning, accounting, and reporting — suffers from uneven data entry. PAI (Panchayat Advancement Index) 2.0: Multi-dimensional performance index; not yet structured for fiscal devolution. NIRDPR: National Institute of Rural Development and Panchayati Raj — nodal capacity-building institution for local governance. NIPFP: National Institute of Public Finance and Policy — tasked with drafting SFC Manual; Dr. Manish Gupta (NIPFP) was a committee member. LG Directory: Local Government Directory — maintained by MoSPI; to be used for GP-level data mapping. 16th FC Panchayat grant: ₹87,000 crore — performance-linked (minimum 2.5% annual own-source revenue growth). Urbanisation Premium: ₹10,000 crore — 16th FC's first-ever dedicated allocation for peri-urban governance transitions. CAG: Comptroller and Auditor General — report recommends a performance audit of 73rd Amendment implementation; constitutional body under Article 148. Practice Mains Question "State Finance Commissions were designed as the financial backbone of India's third tier of government, yet three decades after the 73rd Constitutional Amendment, they remain largely ineffective. Critically examine the structural, institutional, and data-related challenges facing SFCs and suggest a comprehensive reform agenda to make fiscal decentralisation substantive rather than formal." GS Paper 2  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Which of the following correctly describes the constitutional obligation under Article 280 of the Constitution of India with respect to local bodies? (a)The Central Finance Commission must directly recommend grants to Panchayats without reference to State Finance Commission reports. (b)The Central Finance Commission must recommend measures to augment the Consolidated Fund of a State to supplement local body resources, on the basis of State Finance Commission recommendations. (c)The Central Finance Commission is mandated to constitute State Finance Commissions in states that have failed to do so within the prescribed period. (d)The Central Finance Commission's recommendations supersede those of State Finance Commissions in matters of local body grants. Correct Answer: (b) Article 280(3)(bb) and 280(3)(c) oblige the CFC to recommend measures to augment State Consolidated Funds for supplementing PRI and ULB resources — but critically, on the basis of SFC recommendations. This constitutional linkage is the very provision the 16th FC proposed amending, given the chronic poor quality of SFC reports. Options (a), (c), and (d) all misrepresent the constitutional arrangement. Article 02 SAPLING Dialogue 2026 — India's Food Processing Imperative GS Paper 3 — Food Processing | Agriculture | Employment | GS Paper 2 — Government Schemes Why in News The two-day SAPLING Dialogue 2026 — South Asian Policy Leadership for Improved Nutrition and Growth — concluded on 10 June 2026 in Ahmedabad, Gujarat. Jointly organised by the Ministry of Food Processing Industries (MoFPI) and the World Bank Group, the dialogue brought together approximately 200 participants from across South Asia and released MoFPI's Assessment of the Level of Food Processing in India report — confirming that India's food processing levels rose from ~10% in 2016 to ~17% in 2023. What is SAPLING? SAPLING is a multi-stakeholder platform led by the World Bank Group focused on policy reform, investment mobilisation, and agri-tech scaling across South Asia. It aligns strategically with the World Bank's AgriConnect initiative, which aims to reach 300 million farmers by 2030 through infrastructure upgrades, supply chain formalisation, and policy improvement. Its focus reflects the recognition that South Asia — home to the world's largest concentration of smallholder farmers and nutritionally vulnerable populations — requires a coordinated regional approach to food system transformation. India's Food Processing Landscape — Key Data Food processing levels: ~10% (2016) → ~17% (2023) — significant progress, but far below global benchmarks (USA: ~65%; China: ~40%). Immense untapped potential in perishable commodities — fruits, vegetables, and dairy — where value addition remains low and post-harvest losses are highest. Post-harvest losses in South Asia exceed 30% — representing both an economic and food security failure; "Farm to Factory" integration, cold chain infrastructure, and smart packaging are identified as critical solutions. The food processing sector's economic multiplier effect generates downstream value across logistics, packaging, retail, and input supply chains. India's Policy Framework for Food Processing Scheme Focus Area PM FME Scheme Formalisation of micro and informal food processing enterprises; financial, technical, and business support PLI Scheme (Food Processing) Production Linked Incentives based on incremental sales from processed food manufacturing PMKSY Pradhan Mantri Kisan Sampada Yojana — cold chain, processing clusters, backward and forward linkages Mega Food Parks Integrated food processing infrastructure hubs linked directly to farm clusters Thematic Focus Areas of SAPLING 2026 Formalisation of Informal Processors A large share of India's food processing occurs in the informal sector — small, unregistered units without access to finance, markets, or technology. Integrating these into regulated value chains is essential for quality, exports, and scale. Supply Chain and Farm-to-Factory Integration Effective integration requires not just cold chains but digital traceability, standardised grading, and last-mile logistics infrastructure from farms to processing units. Inclusive Value Chain Development Secretary Avinash Joshi specifically emphasised that food processing-led growth must deliver benefits to MSMEs, women entrepreneurs, and farmers — not just large corporate processors. This reflects the recognition that inclusive value chain development is both a policy imperative and a social equity concern. Concerns Infrastructure gaps: Cold chain coverage remains severely uneven — northeastern states and many tribal areas are critically underserved. Regulatory fragmentation: Compliance burdens across FSSAI, state licensing, and sectoral agencies disproportionately affect small processors. Credit access: Micro and small processors — particularly women-led enterprises — face persistent barriers to formal credit. Export competitiveness: Requires conformance with international food safety and traceability standards that many Indian processors cannot currently meet. Way Forward Move from celebrating aggregate processing level improvements to targeting specific commodity-wise and region-wise processing gaps, particularly in perishables. Translate SAPLING's call for a concrete action plan into time-bound investments in cold chain infrastructure, MSME formalisation, and regional supply chain integration across South Asia. Expand women's participation in food processing value chains as a cross-cutting priority across all schemes. Conclusion India has the agricultural base, demographic dividend, and growing middle-class demand to become a global food processing powerhouse. Translating this potential requires a strategic pivot: from celebrating headline processing level improvements to addressing the structural barriers — cold chain gaps, MSME credit, regulatory fragmentation — that constrain India's most nutritionally and economically significant perishable commodity sectors. Prelims Pointers SAPLING: South Asian Policy Leadership for Improved Nutrition and Growth — World Bank Group-led multi-stakeholder platform; aligned with AgriConnect initiative (300 million farmers by 2030). Note: SAPLING is led by the World Bank, not MoFPI. MoFPI: Ministry of Food Processing Industries — nodal ministry; Union Minister: Shri Chirag Paswan. India's food processing level: ~10% (2016) → ~17% (2023) — as per MoFPI's Assessment report released at SAPLING 2026. Post-harvest losses (South Asia): Over 30% — highest in perishables (fruits, vegetables, dairy). PM FME Scheme: PM Formalisation of Micro Food Processing Enterprises — financial and technical support to upgrade informal processors. PLI (Food Processing): Production Linked Incentive — incentivises incremental sales growth from processed food manufacturing. PMKSY: Pradhan Mantri Kisan Sampada Yojana — funds cold chain, processing clusters, backward-forward linkages. FSSAI: Food Safety and Standards Authority of India — regulates food safety standards; statutory body under MoHFW. Farm to Factory integration: Supply chain concept linking agricultural production directly to processing facilities — central to reducing post-harvest losses. AgriConnect: World Bank Group initiative targeting 300 million farmers by 2030 through infrastructure and policy upgrades. Practice Mains Question "India's food processing sector has grown significantly over the last decade but continues to operate well below its potential. Examine the structural barriers to growth in India's food processing industry and evaluate the effectiveness of government schemes in bridging the gap between agricultural production and value addition." GS Paper 3  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about the SAPLING initiative: 1. SAPLING is a multi-stakeholder platform led by the Ministry of Food Processing Industries, Government of India. 2. It is aligned with the World Bank Group's AgriConnect initiative, which aims to reach 300 million farmers by 2030. 3. India's food processing levels rose from approximately 10% to 17% between 2016 and 2023, as per an MoFPI report released at SAPLING Dialogue 2026. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? (a)2 only (b)2 and 3 only (c)1 and 3 only (d)1, 2, and 3 Correct Answer: (b) Statement 1 is incorrect — SAPLING is a platform led by the World Bank Group, not MoFPI. MoFPI co-organised the dialogue as a partner. Statements 2 and 3 are correct as verified from PIB releases and news coverage of the event. Article 03 India's Falling TFR and the Population Policy Debate GS Paper 1 — Population and Associated Issues | GS Paper 2 — Government Policies | Social Issues Why in News The Sample Registration System (SRS) Statistical Report 2024, published by the Office of the Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India (Ministry of Home Affairs), confirmed that India's Total Fertility Rate (TFR) has fallen to 1.9 — below the replacement level of 2.1 for the first time. Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister Chandrababu Naidu announced cash incentives of ₹30,000 (third child) and ₹40,000 (fourth child) to reverse falling fertility, triggering a national debate on whether India should incentivise larger families. Understanding the Demographic Transition The TFR is the average number of children a woman would have over her lifetime assuming she lives through her reproductive years (ages 15–49). A TFR of 2.1 is the replacement level — below which the population begins to shrink in the long run without compensating migration. India's TFR has fallen rapidly: from 5.2 in 1971 to 2.2 in 2013–15 to 1.9 in 2024. State-Level Divergence — Key Data State / Region TFR (2024) Significance Bihar 2.9 Highest among bigger states nationally Uttar Pradesh 2.6 Second highest; both above replacement Tamil Nadu, Kerala, West Bengal 1.3 Well below replacement; southern/eastern states Delhi 1.2 Lowest TFR nationally Rural India 2.1 Exactly at replacement level Urban India 1.5 Significantly below replacement Why the Debate Has Arisen Now Parliamentary Delimitation Anxiety With delimitation on the horizon, southern states that successfully controlled population growth fear losing Parliamentary seats to high-fertility northern states — creating political pressure to reverse fertility trends, however counterproductive demographers consider such efforts. Working-Age Population Concerns As fertility falls, states face a shrinking working-age population — with implications for economic output, tax base, and social security funding. However, this concern is more appropriately addressed through skill development and productivity investment than through pronatalist incentives. Demographic Anxieties Around Migration Southern states increasingly rely on migration from northern and eastern India to fill labour market vacancies — generating anxieties about cultural and political change that add political charge to the fertility debate. International Evidence on Cash Incentives Poland: Cash incentives produced only a short-term boost in birth rates, confined to lower-income demographics. Sweden and France: Tax incentives temporarily reversed fertility declines but sustaining the trend proved extremely difficult and expensive. Singapore, Japan, South Korea: Sustained pronatalist policies have largely failed to meaningfully reverse secular fertility declines — the most relevant comparators for India. The consensus in demographic research is that reversal of fertility trends is not primarily policy-driven — it is deeply rooted in socioeconomic development, cultural change, women's empowerment, and aspirational behaviour. In the Indian context, cash incentives selectively increase fertility among the most economically marginalised, changing the composition rather than simply the size of the working-age population. The Real Structural Issues — NFHS-6 Evidence 20.1% of women aged 20–24 were married before 18 nationally; 23.3% in rural areas — unchanged from NFHS-5. 6.7% of women aged 15–19 were already mothers or pregnant at survey time; 7.9% in rural areas. Low-fertility reversal in Europe is associated with ~80% female workforce participation, comprehensive parental leave, and near-elimination of the "motherhood penalty" — conditions India is far from meeting. Women's asset ownership remains limited in many states, including those now considering pronatalist policies. Federal and Political Implications The demographic divergence creates structural tensions in national resource allocation, fiscal transfers, and electoral representation. The delimitation question is particularly sensitive: if delimitation is conducted on current population data, southern states will lose parliamentary weight relative to northern states — despite having made the demographic transition that national policy encouraged for decades. There is a strong argument for compensatory fiscal mechanisms to reward states that have achieved the demographic transition. As the interviewed political scientist noted, demographic anxieties manifest across states — including in West Bengal vis-à-vis Bangladesh — and reflect labour market dynamics that cannot be resolved by fertility incentives. Migration is an economic phenomenon largely independent of fertility rates at a given stage of development. Way Forward Invest in the silver economy: Geriatric care infrastructure, pension systems, and community living for the elderly — the share of population above 60 is projected to exceed 20% by 2050. Skill-intensive development: Focus on productivity, skill development, and technology adoption rather than labour force size. Managed internal migration: Develop frameworks enabling working-age migrants from high-fertility states to fill labour market gaps in low-fertility ones — rather than inducing fertility. Address early marriage: Full implementation of the Prohibition of Child Marriage Act and sustained investment in rural secondary education for girls remain the most evidence-based interventions. Conclusion India's demographic transition is not a crisis — it is a milestone of development. The challenge is to manage it wisely: investing in an ageing population, harnessing the productivity of a smaller but potentially better-educated workforce, and addressing the structural inequities — particularly in women's reproductive agency — that drive both high fertility and demographic vulnerability. Cash incentives for larger families are neither necessary nor sufficient for this task. Prelims Pointers TFR (Total Fertility Rate): Average number of children a woman would have over her lifetime (ages 15–49); India's TFR = 1.9 (SRS 2024) — first time below replacement level. Replacement level TFR: 2.1 — level at which a population exactly replaces itself across generations. SRS (Sample Registration System): Continuous demographic data collection system; published by the Office of the Registrar General and Census Commissioner, MHA — official source of India's annual TFR data. NFHS: National Family Health Survey — conducted by MoHFW in partnership with IIPS; NFHS-6 is the latest round (2023–24). Highest TFR (2024): Bihar — 2.9; lowest nationally: Delhi — 1.2; Tamil Nadu, Kerala, West Bengal: 1.3 each. Rural TFR (2024): 2.1 (exactly at replacement); Urban TFR: 1.5. IIPS: International Institute for Population Sciences, Mumbai — conducts NFHS; deemed university under MoHFW. Delimitation: Constitutional process of redrawing parliamentary constituency boundaries based on population census data. Prohibition of Child Marriage Act, 2006: Prohibits marriage of girls below 18 and boys below 21; NFHS-6 shows 20.1% of women aged 20–24 were still married before 18. Longitudinal Ageing Study in India (LASI): India's first nationally representative longitudinal study of health, economic, and social determinants of ageing — conducted by IIPS. Practice Mains Question "India's demographic transition — marked by a TFR falling below the replacement level — presents both a challenge and an opportunity. Critically examine the social, economic, and federal implications of India's divergent fertility trends and assess whether pronatalist policies are an appropriate response." GS Paper 1  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ With reference to India's Total Fertility Rate (TFR), which one of the following pairs is correctly matched as per the SRS Statistical Report 2024? (a)Highest TFR among bigger states — Uttar Pradesh (b)Lowest TFR nationally — Tamil Nadu (c)Replacement level TFR — 2.0 (d)Source of India's official annual TFR data — Sample Registration System (SRS), published by the Office of the Registrar General and Census Commissioner Correct Answer: (d) Option (a) is incorrect — highest TFR in 2024 is Bihar (2.9), not Uttar Pradesh (2.6). Option (b) is incorrect — lowest TFR nationally is Delhi (1.2), not Tamil Nadu (1.3). Option (c) is incorrect — replacement level TFR is 2.1, not 2.0. Option (d) is correct — the SRS Statistical Report published by the Office of the Registrar General and Census Commissioner (MHA) is the official source of India's annual TFR data. Article 04 Contraceptive Use and Women's Reproductive Agency — Insights from NFHS-6 GS Paper 1 — Role and Status of Women | GS Paper 2 — Health Policy | Vulnerable Sections | Social Justice Why in News The Sixth National Family Health Survey (NFHS-6, 2023–24), released by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare in May 2026, reveals a structural paradox in India's contraceptive landscape: overall contraceptive use has increased, but the shift is away from modern reversible methods — toward either permanent sterilisation or traditional methods. This pattern constrains rather than expands women's reproductive agency. Historical Context — Contraception as Control, Not Choice India's engagement with contraception began in 1952, when it became the first country in the world to launch an official national family planning programme. For decades, this programme was driven by demographic imperatives — population control — rather than women's health and autonomy. The emergency period (1975–77) represented the most extreme manifestation, with coercive sterilisation campaigns. The structural biases embedded in health system incentives — prioritising sterilisation targets, underinvesting in reversible methods and counselling — persist today. Key NFHS-6 Findings Indicator NFHS-5 (2019–21) NFHS-6 (2023–24) Significance Overall CPR 66.7% 69.1% Rising — but composition is shifting away from quality Modern methods 56.4% 52.7% Declining — a public health concern Traditional methods 10.3% 16.4% Sharp rise — less reliable, less medically supported Female sterilisation (national) 37.9% 36.5% Marginal decline; remains dominant method Female sterilisation (rural) — 38.1% Even higher in rural areas Male sterilisation — 0.5% Negligible — stark index of gender inequality The Early Marriage–Fertility Nexus 20.1% of women aged 20–24 married before 18 nationally; 23.3% in rural areas — unchanged from NFHS-5. This is not merely a legal violation; it is a reproductive health emergency. 6.7% of women aged 15–19 were already mothers or pregnant at survey time; 7.9% in rural areas. Girls married young face a longer reproductive window, limited contraceptive awareness, less agency within the family, and elevated maternal and child health risks — including anaemia, obstetric complications, and maternal mortality. The Sterilisation Paradox — Three Intersecting Failures Policy Design For decades, health system incentives — both formal and informal — prioritised sterilisation as the cheapest "one-time solution" at scale, rather than investing in counselling, reversible method supply chains, and long-term reproductive health infrastructure. Gender Disempowerment Most women undergoing sterilisation — particularly in rural public health facilities — do not make a genuinely free, informed choice. They act within constraints of social norms, household power dynamics, and limited awareness of alternatives. Male sterilisation at 0.5% reflects a policy and social failure of deep consequence. Public Health System Inadequacy The Bilaspur tragedy of 2014 — where 13 women died following a single-day mass sterilisation drive — was not an aberration but a logical consequence of a system that treats sterilisation as a procedure to be performed at volume. Overcrowded facilities, inadequately trained staff, and an emphasis on numbers over patient safety persist across much of rural India's public health infrastructure. Towards Reproductive Agency — Policy Imperatives Address early marriage as a reproductive health crisis: Full implementation of the Prohibition of Child Marriage Act, 2006, combined with sustained investment in rural secondary education for girls — the single most evidence-based intervention available. Pivot from permanent to reversible methods: Expand access to IUDs, injectables, oral contraceptives, and condoms through strengthened community health infrastructure — ASHA worker training, supply chain reliability, and counselling capacity at sub-centre level. Eliminate the gender skew in contraceptive responsibility: Male sterilisation at 0.5% is a programmatic failure requiring targeted male engagement, community-based behaviour change communication, and equal access to vasectomy services. Urban-Rural Divide Urban women marry later, complete more schooling, have greater contraceptive options, and exercise more agency. Rural women face the inverse. Bridging this divide is central to India's obligations under Article 21 (right to life and personal liberty, including reproductive autonomy) and its commitments under the ICPD Programme of Action (1994), which enshrined reproductive rights as human rights. Way Forward Move contraceptive use from compliance to choice — a fundamental shift in the programmatic approach of India's family planning system. Invest in community-based public healthcare to deliver reversible contraceptive services at scale. Make gender skew reduction — specifically, increasing male participation in family planning — a core programmatic priority with measurable targets. Conclusion Contraception in India is no longer merely about limiting births — NFHS-6 demonstrates it is increasingly a marker of women's reproductive agency. The data's most important message is not about numbers but about structural inequity: early marriage, gender disempowerment, and an underfunded public health system that defaults to permanent solutions rather than investing in genuine reproductive choice. Addressing these structural drivers is the only sustainable path to demographic and health outcomes that serve both women and society. Prelims Pointers NFHS-6 (2023–24): Sixth National Family Health Survey; conducted by IIPS under MoHFW; released May 2026. India's family planning programme (1952): World's first official national family planning programme. Overall CPR (NFHS-6): 69.1% (up from 66.7% in NFHS-5) — but modern method use fell from 56.4% to 52.7%. Female sterilisation: 36.5% nationally; 38.1% rural (NFHS-6); remains dominant contraceptive method. Male sterilisation: 0.5% — negligible; reflects deep gender skew in contraceptive responsibility. Traditional methods rise: 10.3% → 16.4% — less reliable than modern reversible methods. Early marriage: 20.1% women aged 20–24 married before 18 nationally; 23.3% rural — unchanged from NFHS-5. Adolescent pregnancy: 6.7% of women aged 15–19 already mothers or pregnant; 7.9% rural. Bilaspur tragedy (2014): 13 women died after mass sterilisation drive in Chhattisgarh — symbol of target-driven approach's dangers. Prohibition of Child Marriage Act, 2006: Prohibits marriage of girls below 18, boys below 21. ICPD 1994: International Conference on Population and Development — Cairo; established reproductive rights as human rights; India is a signatory. ASHA workers: Accredited Social Health Activists — frontline community health workers critical to family planning delivery in rural areas. Article 21: Right to life and personal liberty — interpreted to include reproductive autonomy. Practice Mains Question "NFHS-6 data reveals that India's contraceptive landscape is shifting away from modern reversible methods, even as overall usage rises. Examine the structural, social, and health system factors driving this paradox and suggest a policy framework that centres women's reproductive agency rather than demographic targets." GS Paper 1  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Match the following NFHS-6 (2023–24) contraceptive data with the correct figures: List I (Indicator)                          List II (Figure) A. Overall contraceptive prevalence     1. 36.5% B. Female sterilisation (national)          2. 52.7% C. Modern method use                      3. 69.1% D. Traditional method use                  4. 16.4% (a)A-1, B-2, C-3, D-4 (b)A-2, B-1, C-4, D-3 (c)A-3, B-1, C-2, D-4 (d)A-3, B-4, C-1, D-2 Correct Answer: (c) A-3: Overall CPR = 69.1%; B-1: Female sterilisation = 36.5%; C-2: Modern method use = 52.7%; D-4: Traditional method use = 16.4%. All four figures are from NFHS-6 (2023–24), released by MoHFW in May 2026. Article 05 Ukraine War Surpasses WWI Duration — Geopolitical and Strategic Implications GS Paper 2 — International Relations | Effect of Developed Country Policies | Bilateral Groupings | IR Why in News On 11 June 2026, the Russia-Ukraine war reached its 1,569th day — surpassing the duration of World War I (28 July 1914 to 11 November 1918: approximately 1,568 days; 4 years, 3 months, and 14 days). What Vladimir Putin expected to conclude in days has become the longest war in modern European history — a grinding war of attrition with no end in sight, peace talks stalled, and front lines measured in yards rather than miles. The War in Context — Duration Milestones Milestone Date Reached Significance Full-scale invasion begins 24 February 2022 Russia expected capitulation within days 1,418 days 11 January 2026 Matched Soviet Union's Great Patriotic War (June 1941 – May 1945) 1,569 days 11 June 2026 Surpassed World War I (July 1914 – November 1918) ~2,192 days ~September 2028 (projected) Would equal World War II duration if war continues Parallels with World War I Positional warfare: WWI — trench warfare with static front lines. Ukraine — drone technology, extensive minefields, and fortified positions have created similarly static conditions where front lines move by yards over weeks. Transformative technology: WWI — machine guns, barbed wire, artillery, and tanks. Ukraine — FPV (First-Person-View) drones, loitering munitions, and counter-drone systems have reshaped the tactical environment. Geopolitical consequences: WWI ended empires and reshaped alliances. The Ukraine war is reshaping the post-Cold War European security architecture — accelerating NATO expansion and European defence buildups not seen in decades. French military historian Michel Goya observed: "In many respects, this war in Ukraine is the one that most closely resembles World War I." State of the Conflict — June 2026 Russian forces are pursuing a Spring-Summer 2026 offensive focused on Kostyantynivka — assessed as the main operational effort following the earlier seizures of Chasiv Yar and Toretsk. Ukraine continues its "logistics lockdown" campaign — systematic targeting of Russian supply routes, roads, railways, and fuel infrastructure up to 100+ miles from the front, alongside long-range strikes on drone manufacturing facilities inside Russia. Peace talks remain stalled. Approximately half of Ukrainians polled believe the war will not end before 2027. Ukraine's insistence on territorial integrity versus Russia's annexation claims makes a near-term negotiated settlement structurally improbable. Implications for the Rules-Based International Order NATO and European Defence The war has accelerated European defence spending, with multiple EU states crossing or committing to the 2% GDP defence threshold agreed at NATO summits. European strategic autonomy — long discussed theoretically — is being forced into practice. Global Food Security Russia and Ukraine together accounted for approximately 30% of global wheat exports and 15% of maize exports pre-war. Four years of disruption have restructured global grain trade flows, with long-term implications for food-importing nations across South Asia and Africa. UNSC Effectiveness With Russia as a P5 member and party to the conflict, the UN Security Council has been paralysed on the most consequential security issue of the decade — reinvigorating debates about UNSC reform, including India's longstanding candidacy for a permanent seat. India's Position and Stakes India has maintained a position of strategic autonomy — abstaining on key UN resolutions while engaging diplomatically with both Moscow and Kyiv. India's interests are multidimensional: continued energy imports from Russia (at heavily discounted prices post-sanctions), defence equipment dependencies on Russian systems (with active diversification underway), and the broader principle that territorial integrity and sovereignty are inviolable — a principle India defends in its own context. Prime Minister Modi's visits to both Kyiv and Moscow in 2024 positioned India as a potential peace facilitator, though the structural conditions for successful mediation do not yet exist. India's abstentions at the UNSC and UNGA reflect a calculated balancing act between competing strategic relationships. Way Forward The international community must prevent the conflict from becoming a permanently frozen war while upholding the principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity. For India, maintaining strategic autonomy while deepening engagement with peace frameworks — including through G20 and BRICS platforms — remains the most viable diplomatic posture. UNSC reform discussions must be accelerated: the paralysis on Ukraine underscores the structural failure of the P5 veto when a permanent member is itself a party to the conflict. Conclusion The Ukraine war's entry into its fifth year without resolution underscores a fundamental reality: in modern great-power conflicts, the decisive factor is strategic endurance — the ability to sustain political will, economic capacity, and military supply chains over years rather than months. For the international community, the challenge is to prevent permanent instability while upholding the principles that underpin the rules-based order — an order India has both a stake in and an opportunity to help sustain. Prelims Pointers Russia-Ukraine war (full-scale invasion): Began 24 February 2022; reached 1,569 days on 11 June 2026 — surpassing WWI's duration. WWI duration: 28 July 1914 – 11 November 1918 = ~1,568 days (4 years, 3 months, 14 days). Soviet Great Patriotic War: 22 June 1941 – 9 May 1945 = 1,418 days — matched by Ukraine war on 11 January 2026. UNSCR 2202 (2015): Endorsed the Minsk II agreements as the international framework for the Donbas conflict — the last major framework before the 2022 full-scale invasion. Minsk Agreements: Peace frameworks for the Donbas conflict — Minsk I (2014); Minsk II (2015); both collapsed with Russia's 2022 full-scale invasion. Crimea: Seized by Russia in March 2014 — not internationally recognised; UNGA Resolution 68/262 affirmed Ukraine's territorial integrity. NATO Article 5: Collective defence clause — "an attack on one is an attack on all." FPV Drones: First-Person-View kamikaze drones — transformative tactical technology in the Ukraine war, analogous to tanks in WWI. Michel Goya: French military historian and former colonel — noted parallels between the Ukraine war and WWI's positional warfare. Yaroslav Hrytsak: Ukrainian historian — noted both WWI and the Ukraine war as among the most consequential conflicts in modern European history. India's abstentions: India has abstained on key UNSC and UNGA resolutions on Ukraine — reflecting its policy of strategic autonomy. Practice Mains Question "The Russia-Ukraine war, now surpassing World War I in duration, represents not merely a bilateral conflict but a systemic challenge to the post-Cold War international order. Critically examine the war's geopolitical consequences and India's strategic choices in navigating its interests." GS Paper 2  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about the Russia-Ukraine war: 1. The full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine began on 24 February 2022. 2. On 11 June 2026, the conflict surpassed World War I in duration, reaching 1,569 days. 3. The war reached the same duration as the Soviet Union's Great Patriotic War (1,418 days) in January 2026. 4. UNSCR 2202 (2015) endorsed the Minsk II agreements as the framework for peace in Donbas. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a)1 and 2 only (b)1, 2, and 3 only (c)2, 3, and 4 only (d)1, 2, 3, and 4 Correct Answer: (d) All four statements are correct. Statements 1 and 2 are confirmed by multiple international news sources dated 11 June 2026. Statement 3 is confirmed — the 1,418-day milestone was reached on 11 January 2026, matching the Soviet Great Patriotic War's duration. Statement 4 is correct — UNSCR 2202 (2015) formally endorsed the Minsk II package of measures as the international framework for the Donbas conflict. Article 06 PCPNDT Act and the Supreme Court — Sex Selection and the Girl Child GS Paper 1 — Role and Status of Women | GS Paper 2 — Judiciary | Vulnerable Sections | Government Policies Why in News The Supreme Court of India (Bench of Justices Sanjay Karol and Prashant Kumar Mishra), in Dr. Ramesh vs State of Maharashtra, dismissed a Maharashtra doctor's appeal challenging criminal proceedings under the Pre-Conception and Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques (Prohibition of Sex Selection) Act. The Court called for strict enforcement, noting that "deep-seated patriarchal preferences towards a male child and the behind-the-curtains prevalence of sex-selection practices" continue to exist despite improvements in the national child sex ratio. About the PC&PNDT Act — Two-Phase Legislative History This two-phase history is a recurring UPSC distinction: Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques (Regulation and Prevention of Misuse) Act, 1994 (PNDT Act): The original legislation — regulated prenatal diagnostic techniques to prevent their misuse for sex determination after conception. 2003 Amendment — renamed PC&PNDT Act: Substantially amended and renamed to include sex selection before conception (through techniques like sperm sorting) — not just after. This is the current law. Key Provisions of the Act Bans prenatal sex determination, sex selection, and all associated advertisements. Regulates ultrasound and genetic testing equipment — limiting use to detecting genuine genetic abnormalities. Mandates maintenance of records (Form F) for every ultrasound procedure — the record-keeping failure at issue in the present case. Creates the "Appropriate Authority" mechanism — at national, state, and district levels — for registration, inspection, and action against violators. Imposes criminal penalties including imprisonment and fines. The Present Case — Dr. Ramesh vs State of Maharashtra The appellant doctor challenged criminal proceedings for alleged deficiencies in mandatory Form F records at his sonography centre. He contended that the Civil Surgeon was not the competent "Appropriate Authority" and that errors were merely technical and inadvertent. The Bombay High Court had declined to interfere. The Supreme Court upheld this position, emphasising that "the keeping of records is essential to the Act and its avowed purpose" and that diluting the provisions of law or letting infractions slide cannot be countenanced. Child Sex Ratio — Official Data Cited by the Court Year Child Sex Ratio (0–6 yrs) Significance 1991 945 girls per 1,000 boys Pre-PNDT Act baseline 2001 927 Sharp decline — widespread ultrasound access 2011 919 Lowest recorded — prompted stricter enforcement NFHS-5 929 at birth Partial recovery — but incomplete and uneven across states Cultural and Literary Dimensions of the Judgment The judgment is notable for its cultural references: Justice Karol cited Subhadra Kumari Chauhan's poem 'Balika ka Parichay' ("Introduction of the Girl Child") — describing a mother's joy at a daughter's birth — to articulate the Act's purpose: enabling every woman to feel that joy. The Court quoted the Manusmriti's celebrated shloka: "Yatra naryastu pujyante ramante tatra devata" — "Where women are honoured, divinity blossoms" — noting this "once much-cherished but now largely forgotten value" deserves to be reminded. The invocation of a text often cited for patriarchal prescriptions to critique patriarchy reflects the Court's effort to engage Indian cultural tradition directly. Government Schemes Referenced Beti Bachao Beti Padhao (BBBP): National campaign and scheme to improve child sex ratio and girls' education — originally launched in 100 districts with lowest sex ratios. Janani Suraksha Yojana (JSY): Safe motherhood intervention promoting institutional delivery. Ladli Lakshmi Yojana (and similar state schemes): Conditional cash transfers for girl children — creating financial incentives for families to value daughters. Concerns — Beyond Enforcement Structural Drivers of Son Preference Economic incentives: In patrilineal societies with dowry and inheritance patterns favouring male heirs, daughters are perceived as economic liabilities. The Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act, 2005 gave daughters equal coparcenary rights — but implementation and cultural acceptance remain incomplete. Patrilocal norms: Social norms requiring women to move to their husband's household mean daughters do not "stay to care for parents" — a practical concern in the absence of universal social security. Small family norm with son preference: The combination of reduced TFR with persistent son preference creates intense pressure for sex selection. Way Forward Strengthen Appropriate Authority mechanisms at district level — currently underfunded and understaffed. Make Form F compliance audits regular and systematic — the present case highlights that record-keeping lapses remain common. Address dowry and inheritance norms structurally — economic son preference cannot be eliminated through medical regulation alone. Expand BBBP beyond sex ratio at birth to address the full lifecycle disadvantage faced by girl children. Conclusion The Supreme Court's observation that sex-selection practices continue "behind the curtains" despite three decades of the Act captures the essential challenge: legal enforcement is necessary but not sufficient when the structural drivers of son preference — economic, social, and cultural — remain unaddressed. True equality for the girl child requires not just strict enforcement of the PC&PNDT Act but a transformation in the economic and social conditions that make son preference rational in the first place. Prelims Pointers PC&PNDT Act: Originally enacted as PNDT Act in 1994; amended and renamed PC&PNDT Act in 2003 to include pre-conception sex selection — a crucial UPSC distinction. Purpose: Bans prenatal sex determination, sex selection, and associated advertising; regulates ultrasound and genetic testing to detect only genuine abnormalities. Form F: Mandatory record maintained for every ultrasound procedure under the Act — deficiencies in Form F triggered proceedings in Dr. Ramesh vs State of Maharashtra. Appropriate Authority: Regulatory mechanism at national, state, and district levels — for registration and enforcement under the Act. Child sex ratio (Census): 945 (1991) → 927 (2001) → 919 (2011) — worst recorded; recovered to 929 at birth per NFHS-5. NFHS-5 sex ratio: Overall 1,020 females per 1,000 males; sex ratio at birth: 929 females per 1,000 males. Beti Bachao Beti Padhao (BBBP): Scheme launched 2015; originally focused on 100 districts with lowest sex ratios; expanded nationally. Subhadra Kumari Chauhan: Hindi poet; famous for Jhansi ki Rani and Balika ka Parichay — the latter cited in the SC judgment. Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act, 2005: Gave daughters equal coparcenary rights in ancestral property — structural reform to reduce economic basis of son preference. Case: Dr. Ramesh vs State of Maharashtra — SC dismissed challenge to PC&PNDT criminal proceedings; upheld Form F record-keeping as essential to the Act's purpose; June 2026. Practice Mains Question "The persistence of sex-selective practices in India despite three decades of the PC&PNDT Act reveals that legal enforcement, while necessary, cannot alone overcome deeply structural patriarchal norms. Critically examine the social, economic, and legal dimensions of son preference in India and suggest a comprehensive policy framework for achieving gender equity." GS Paper 1  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ With reference to the Pre-Conception and Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques (PC&PNDT) Act, which one of the following statements is correct? (a)The Act was originally enacted in 2003 to cover both pre-natal and pre-conception sex selection, and was later amended in 1994 to regulate pre-natal diagnostic techniques alone. (b)The Act as it currently stands covers only pre-natal diagnostic techniques and does not extend to pre-conception sex selection methods. (c)The Act was originally enacted as the PNDT Act in 1994 covering pre-natal diagnostic techniques, and was amended in 2003 to include pre-conception sex selection under its prohibition. (d)The Act prohibits the use of ultrasound technology entirely, as any diagnostic use could facilitate sex determination. Correct Answer: (c)