💥Join UPSC 2027,2028 Mentorship (July Batch) + XFactor Notes & Microthemes PDF

GS Paper: GS2

  • Police action on illegal rat-hole coal mining after court directions

    Why in the News?

    Police in Meghalaya have been directed by the judiciary to identify and act against owners of illegal rat hole coal mines, following repeated mining accidents and continued violations despite a long standing ban.

    What is Rat Hole Coal Mining?

    • Rat hole mining is a primitive and hazardous method of coal extraction where miners dig narrow horizontal or vertical tunnels, often just large enough for a person to crawl through.
    • This practice is mainly found in parts of Meghalaya due to unique land ownership patterns.

    Judicial Background

    • The National Green Tribunal banned rat hole coal mining in 2014. The ban was imposed due to
      • Severe environmental damage
      • Frequent loss of lives
      • Absence of safety standards

    Why Does Illegal Mining Continue?

    • Coal bearing land is often privately or community owned
    • Weak enforcement and local political economy
    • High demand for coal and informal labour
    • Difficult terrain and limited monitoring capacity
    [2018] How is the National Green Tribunal (NGT) different from the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB)? 1. The NGT has been established by an Act whereas the CPCB has been created by an executive order of the Government

    2. The NGT provides environmental justice and helps reduce the burden of litigation in the higher courts whereas the CPCB promotes cleanliness of streams and wells, and aims to improve the quality of air in the country. 

    Which of the statements given above is/are correct? 

    (a) 1 only (b) 2 only (c) Both 1 and 2 (d) Neither 1 nor 2

  • 16th Finance Commission proposal to scrap Revenue Deficit Grants

    Why in the News?

    Some States have raised concerns over indications that the Sixteenth Finance Commission may recommend phasing out or scrapping Revenue Deficit Grants (RDG), arguing that it could adversely impact fiscally weaker States.

    What are Revenue Deficit Grants?

    • Revenue Deficit Grants are statutory transfers recommended by the Finance Commission to States whose revenue expenditure exceeds revenue receipts even after tax devolution.
    • Their objective is to ensure that States can meet basic administrative and social sector expenditure without resorting to excessive borrowing.

    Constitutional Basis

    • Provided under Article 275 of the Constitution
    • Grants are charged on the Consolidated Fund of India

    Why are Revenue Deficit Grants Given?

    • To correct vertical fiscal imbalance between Centre and States
    • To support States with weak revenue raising capacity
    • To ensure minimum standards of public services across States
    • To prevent revenue deficits from crowding out capital expenditure

    What is the Proposal of the 16th Finance Commission?

    • Move towards eliminating revenue deficits rather than financing them
    • Encourage States to undertake fiscal discipline and tax reforms
    • Shift focus from revenue support to performance based and capital linked transfers
    • Reduce long term dependence of States on unconditional grants

    Concerns Raised by States

    • Hill and special category States depend heavily on RDG
    • Post GST regime has reduced States’ fiscal flexibility
    • Fear of widening inter State fiscal disparities
    • Risk of increased borrowing and debt stress

    Significance for Fiscal Federalism

    • Tests the balance between fiscal autonomy and fiscal responsibility
    • Reflects shift from entitlement based transfers to outcome based federalism
    • Could redefine the nature of Centre State financial relations
    [2025] Which of the following statements with regard to recommendations of the 15th Finance Commission of India are correct? I. It has recommended grants of ₹4,800 crores from the year 2022–23 to 2025–26 for incentivizing States to enhance educational outcomes

    II. 45% of the net proceeds of Union taxes are to be shared with States

    III. ₹45,000 crores are to be kept as performance-based incentive for all States for carrying out agricultural reforms

    IV. It reintroduced tax effort criteria to reward fiscal performance.

  • India and Malaysia sign pacts to expand ties

    Why in the News?

    India and Malaysia signed multiple agreements to expand bilateral cooperation in trade, defence, energy, semiconductors, digital technologies, and local currency trade settlement during the visit of the Indian Prime Minister to Malaysia.

    Key Agreements and Outcomes

    • 11 agreements and MoUs signed covering trade, defence, energy, advanced manufacturing, and semiconductors
    • Framework pact for semiconductor cooperation, including supply chains and manufacturing ecosystems
    • Agreement to promote local currency trade settlement using Indian Rupee and Malaysian Ringgit
    • Expansion of cooperation in counter-terrorism, intelligence sharing, and maritime security
    • Decision to establish an Indian Consulate General in Malaysia
    • Malaysia reiterated support for India’s permanent membership in a reformed UNSC

    Strategic and Economic Significance

    Indo-Pacific and ASEAN

    • Reinforces India’s Indo-Pacific vision
    • Emphasises ASEAN centrality, especially the role of ASEAN

    Trade and Economy

    • Local currency settlement reduces dependence on US dollar
    • Supports India’s push for internationalisation of the Rupee
    • Boosts trade resilience amid global financial volatility

    Technology and Energy

    • Semiconductor cooperation supports India’s electronics manufacturing goals
    • Energy collaboration aligns with clean energy transition and energy security

    Defence and Security Dimension

    • Strengthening defence ties in the maritime domain
    • Cooperation in counter-terrorism with emphasis on zero tolerance and no double standards
    • Enhances stability in the Indo-Pacific sea lanes
    [2011] With reference to “Look East Policy” of India, consider the following statements: 

    1. India wants to establish itself as an important regional player in East Asian affairs. 

    2. India wants to plug the vacuum created by the termination of the Cold War. 

    3. India wants to restore the historical and cultural ties with its neighbours in Southeast and East Asia. 

    Which of the statements given above is/are correct? 

    (a) 1 only (b) 1 and 3 only (c) 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3

  • [7th January 2026] The Hindu OpED: Hop-on, hop-off- the state of climate governance

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2018] In what ways would the ongoing US-Iran Nuclear Pact Controversy affect the national interest of India? How should India respond to this situation?

    Linkage: It falls under GS II-Effect of policies and politics of developed countries on India’s interests, focusing on sanctions, energy security, strategic autonomy, and West Asia stability. Iran’s unrest and economic collapse show how the U.S.-Iran nuclear dispute disrupts regional stability and directly affects India’s energy security and connectivity interests.

    Mentor’s Comment

    Iran is witnessing its most serious internal crisis since the 2022-23 unrest, marked by economic collapse, mass protests, and renewed geopolitical pressure. The current phase of instability is unfolding in the immediate aftermath of a brief but intense war with Israel and amid heightened U.S. coercive posturing. This editorial examines how domestic economic fragility, external pressures, and governance constraints have converged to place Iran at a critical crossroads. Here repression risks deepening instability, and reform coupled with global re-engagement remains the only viable exit.

    Why in the News?

    Iran is facing its largest nationwide protests since the 2022-23 Mahsa Amini unrest, triggered initially by a strike by Tehran shopkeepers on December 28 against the sharp collapse of the Iranian rial. What makes this moment significant is the convergence of economic freefall, post-war vulnerability, and overt foreign signalling, including claims by Israel’s Mossad of field-level presence and explicit U.S. threats of force. At least 12 protest-related deaths have been reported within a week, underscoring the scale and volatility of the crisis.

    Introduction

    Iran’s current unrest is not an episodic protest cycle but a manifestation of structural economic decay and political rigidity. The collapse of the rial, runaway food inflation, declining oil revenues, and daily power outages have eroded regime legitimacy. While President Masoud Pezeshkian has signalled limited social relaxation, especially on morality policing, his administration remains constrained on economic reform and national security. The state’s reliance on repression and attribution of unrest to foreign interference risks aggravating an already combustible situation.

    What triggered the current wave of protests?

    1. Currency Collapse: Sharp fall in the Iranian rial since the June 2025 war directly affected traders and households, triggering the initial strike.
    2. Economic Shock Transmission: Trader unrest rapidly expanded into nationwide protests, indicating deep-rooted economic distress beyond urban commercial classes.
    3. Continuity with Past Unrest: Represents the largest mobilization since the Mahsa Amini-led protests of 2022-23, signalling unresolved grievances.

    How severe is Iran’s current economic crisis?

    1. Food Inflation: Reached 64% in October, the second highest globally after South Sudan, indicating acute cost-of-living stress.
    2. Currency Devaluation: Rial has lost 60% of its value since the June 2025 war, eroding savings and purchasing power.
    3. Oil Export Decline: 2025 oil exports fell by ~7% compared to the 2024 average, tightening fiscal space.
    4. Energy Shortages: Daily power outages have become routine, reflecting infrastructure stress and governance failure.

    How is post-war geopolitics amplifying domestic instability?

    1. War Aftermath: The unrest comes six months after a 12-day Iran-Israel war, which already strained Iran’s economy and security apparatus.
    2. Israeli Signalling: Mossad publicly claimed operational presence “in the field” with protesters, intensifying regime paranoia.
    3. U.S. Threat Posture: U.S. President Donald Trump warned on January 2 that the U.S. was “locked and loaded” to use force if protesters were killed.
    4. External Pressure Effect: Foreign threats have reinforced regime defensiveness while worsening civilian suffering.

    How is the Iranian state responding internally?

    1. Repression: Security warnings against “rioters” and reported deaths indicate reliance on coercive control.
    2. Limited Social Relaxation: President Pezeshkian has relaxed morality police enforcement, signalling tactical social easing.
    3. Economic Paralysis: The President admitted in December that the government was “stuck” and incapable of performing “miracles”.
    4. Blame Externalisation: Default regime response continues to attribute crises to foreign interference.

    Why is repression proving counterproductive?

    1. Cycle of Crisis: Economic deterioration combined with repression is reinforcing instability rather than restoring order.
    2. Public Anger Reservoir: Years of shrinking economic opportunity and erosion of political and personal freedoms have accumulated latent discontent.
    3. Ideological Fatigue: Religion and nationalism are no longer sufficient buffers against economic hardship.
    4. Legitimacy Erosion: Persistent hardship weakens the regime’s social contract and coercive credibility.

    What path does the editorial suggest forward?

    1. Domestic Reform: Calls for tackling corruption and initiating meaningful economic reform.
    2. Empowering Moderates: Urges external actors to engage and empower President Pezeshkian, not undermine him.
    3. Re-engagement with the World: Emphasises that isolation and coercion deepen instability.
    4. Strategic Restraint: Warns against threats issued on Israel’s behalf, which harden regime paranoia.

    Value Addition: Regional and Global Political Impact of Iran’s Imbroglio

    Impact on the Middle East

    1. Regional Power Balance: Weakens Iran’s capacity to project influence across Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and Yemen, altering the regional balance vis-à-vis Israel and Gulf Arab states.
    2. Proxy Network Stress: Economic strain constrains Iran’s ability to sustain allied non-state actors, increasing volatility and fragmentation within proxy theatres.
    3. Escalation Risks: External pressure combined with internal unrest raises incentives for diversionary foreign policy actions, heightening conflict risks in the Gulf and Levant.
    4. Israel-Iran Confrontation: Mossad’s public signalling and Iran’s internal vulnerability increase the likelihood of covert and overt escalatory cycles.
    5. Gulf Security Architecture: Reinforces security anxieties among Gulf Cooperation Council states, accelerating defence alignment and external security dependence.

    Impact on India

    1. Energy Security: Iran’s instability and sanctions-related disruptions affect global oil supply dynamics, exposing India to price volatility and import uncertainty.
    2. Connectivity Projects: Political instability undermines strategic projects such as Chabahar port, affecting India’s access to Afghanistan and Central Asia.
    3. Strategic Autonomy: Intensified U.S.-Iran tensions constrain India’s diplomatic space, complicating balanced engagement with West Asia, Israel, and the U.S.
    4. Diaspora and Trade: Regional instability increases risks for Indian diaspora, remittances, and trade flows across the Gulf region.
    5. Regional Stability Interest: Sustained unrest weakens India’s vision of a stable West Asia essential for economic and maritime security.

    Impact on the Global Order

    1. Sanctions Fatigue: Highlights the limits of coercive economic tools, demonstrating how prolonged sanctions can erode civilian welfare without political moderation.
    2. Norms of Intervention: U.S. threats of force linked to internal unrest blur lines between humanitarian concern and strategic coercion.
    3. Energy Markets: Iran-related instability contributes to structural volatility in global energy markets, affecting inflation and growth worldwide.
    4. Multipolar Contestation: Iran’s crisis becomes another arena for great-power signalling, deepening geopolitical fragmentation.
    5. Authoritarian Resilience Debate: Raises questions about the sustainability of repression-led governance under prolonged economic stress.

    Conclusion

    Iran’s current unrest reflects a convergence of economic collapse, governance rigidity, and external pressure. Continued reliance on repression and isolation risks deepening internal instability and regional spillovers. Sustainable stability lies in economic reform, political accommodation, and calibrated international re-engagement rather than coercive containment.

  • India-US interim trade pact

    Why in the News?

    India and the US agreed on an Interim Trade Agreement (ITA) framework aimed at reciprocal tariff rationalisation and preferential market access. This ITA framework will serve as a precursor to a comprehensive Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA).This marks a departure from earlier phases marked by tariff escalations, export control measures, and digital trade disagreements.

    The US reduced tariffs on Indian goods from 50% to 18%. India committed to eliminate or reduce tariffs on all US industrial goods and multiple agricultural products. For the first time, India secured expanded access to advanced GPUs without export restrictions similar to those imposed on China earlier.

    What Does the Interim Trade Framework Contain?

    1. Interim Agreement Framework: Establishes reciprocal and mutually beneficial trade structure pending full BTA finalisation.
    2. Tariff Rationalisation: US applies 18% reciprocal tariff on many Indian goods including textiles, leather, footwear, plastics, chemicals and machinery.
    3. Industrial Tariff Reduction by India: Eliminates or reduces tariffs on all US industrial goods.
    4. Agricultural Access: Reduces tariffs on US products such as dried distillers’ grains, red sorghum, tree nuts, fresh and processed fruits, soybean oil, wine and spirits.
    5. Energy Procurement Shift: India agrees to halt or significantly reduce the purchase of Russian crude oil and pivot energy procurement toward the US and other sources, a major diplomatic concession tied to tariff reduction.
    6. Non-Tariff Barrier Resolution: Addresses import licensing delays and standards issues affecting US medical devices, ICT goods and agricultural products within six months.
    7. Rules of Origin Clause: Ensures trade benefits accrue primarily to Indian and US producers.

    How Does the Deal Restructure Tariff Architecture?

    1. US Tariff Reduction: Reduces tariff from 50% to 18% on several Indian goods.
    2. Removal of Tariffs on Indian Exports: Eliminates tariffs on generic pharmaceuticals, gems, diamonds, aircraft and aircraft parts.
    3. National Security Tariff Relief: Lifts tariffs imposed under US national security laws on aircraft components.
    4. Auto Parts Quota: Provides India preferential quota for auto parts at lower tariff rates.
    5. Pharmaceutical Negotiations: Provides “negotiated outcomes” subject to separate US tariff investigation into generic drugs.

    What Is a Graphics Processing Unit (GPU) and Why Is It Central to the Deal?

    Graphics Processing Unit (GPU): A specialised electronic processor designed to perform parallel computations at high speed. Originally developed for rendering graphics, GPUs are now essential for Artificial Intelligence (AI), machine learning models, data analytics, and large-scale computing operations.

    1. AI Compute Infrastructure: AI models require massive parallel processing; GPUs enable this computational capability.
    2. IndiaAI Mission Context: IndiaAI Mission has total outlay of Rs 10,370 crore; allocation reduced from Rs 2,000 crore to Rs 1,000 crore in 2026-27.
    3. Installed GPU Capacity: Around 40,000 GPUs installed; considered insufficient compared to leading US AI firms.
    4. Export Control Contrast: Previous US administration imposed export restrictions; India now escapes restrictions similar to those imposed on China.

    How Does the Agreement Transform Data Centre Infrastructure?

    1. Tax Holiday Until 2047: Provides income tax exemption for foreign companies establishing data centres in India.
    2. US Negotiation Demand: Addresses US demands for tax breaks, affordable land, energy, water, and duty exemptions.
    3. Major Investments Announced:
      1. Google: $15 billion investment for 1GW data centre (with Adani Group).
      2. Microsoft: $17.5 billion investment focused on AI data centres.
      3. Amazon: $35 billion investment over five years.
    4. Projected Investment Potential: Government estimates up to $200 billion in data centre investments.
    5. Market Size: Current valuation $10 billion; revenue $1.2 billion in FY24.
    6. Capacity Expansion: 795 MW additional capacity by 2027; total projected capacity 1.8 GW.

    What Are the Implications for Electronics Manufacturing and Exports?

    1. Electronics Exports: Rs 3.27 lakh crore (~$38 billion) in 2024-25; US largest export destination.
    2. Employment: More than two million direct jobs across Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Uttar Pradesh and Maharashtra.
    3. Bilateral Trade Potential: Industry projects electronics trade could reach $100 billion.
    4. Production-Linked Incentive (PLI) Scheme: Strengthens smartphone manufacturing ecosystem.
    5. Apple Supply Chain: India accounts for nearly one-fourth of global iPhone production, after China.
    6. Tariff Stability: Reduces uncertainty after previous 25% tariff threat on India-made iPhones.

    How Does the Deal Reflect Strategic Realignment?

    1. Energy Procurement Commitment: India to purchase $500 billion worth of US goods over five years including energy, aircraft, precious metals, technology products and coking coal.
    2. Supply Chain Cooperation: Addresses non-market practices of third countries.
    3. Digital Trade Rules: Commits to remove digital trade barriers and create structured digital governance framework.
    4. China Factor: Gains momentum amid global supply chain diversification and strategic competition.

    Significance for India

    1. Export Competitiveness: Improves price advantage of Indian goods in the US market by lowering tariff barriers.
    2. Electronics and Manufacturing Boost: Strengthens Production-Linked Incentive (PLI)-driven exports, especially smartphones and components.
    3. Technology Access: Facilitates smoother access to advanced technologies including Graphics Processing Units (GPUs) critical for Artificial Intelligence (AI).
    4. Supply Chain Integration: Positions India as a trusted alternative manufacturing hub amid global diversification away from China.
    5. Strategic Leverage: Deepens economic alignment with the US, strengthening India’s Indo-Pacific positioning.

    Significance for the United States (US)

    1. Expanded Market Access: Secures reduced tariffs on US industrial and agricultural exports to India.
    2. Energy Export Growth: Enhances US crude oil and energy product exports to India.
    3. Technology Export Expansion: Increases demand for US-made GPUs and data centre infrastructure equipment.
    4. Supply Chain Diversification: Strengthens alternative production base outside China through India.
    5. Geostrategic Consolidation: Reinforces India as a key economic and strategic partner in US global strategy.

    Conclusion

    The India-United States Interim Trade Agreement (ITA) marks a shift from tariff disputes to structured economic alignment. By combining tariff rationalization, technology access including Graphics Processing Units (GPUs), data centre investments, and energy cooperation, it integrates trade with strategic objectives. Its long-term impact will depend on effective implementation and progress toward a comprehensive Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA).

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2019] ‘What introduces friction into the ties between India and the United States is that Washington is still unable to find for India a position in its global strategy, which would satisfy India’s National self-esteem and ambitions’. Explain with suitable examples. 

    Linkage: This PYQ tests India-US bilateral relations focusing on strategic autonomy, power asymmetry, and friction arising from alignment expectations. The Interim Trade Agreement (ITA) reduces structural friction through tariff rationalization, technology access, and energy realignment, signalling greater strategic accommodation.

  • Disqualification of MLAs and Speaker’s Powers 

    Why in the news?

    The Supreme Court of India has given a final three week deadline to the Telangana Legislative Assembly Speaker to decide the remaining disqualification petitions against MLAs elected on BRS tickets who later joined the Congress. The Court warned that failure to comply would invite contempt proceedings.

    What is the issue?

    • Disqualification petitions were filed against 10 MLAs under the anti defection law
    • Allegation is defection from Bharat Rashtra Samiti to Congress after elections
    • Speaker rejected 7 petitions in December 2025
    • One more petition has since been decided
    • Remaining petitions are still pending

    Supreme Court directions so far

    • Matter pending before SC since December 2024
    • July 31, 2025 order directed Speaker to decide all petitions within three months
    • Non compliance led to contempt petitions
    • January 16, 2026 hearing granted two weeks extension
    • February 2026 order gives last chance of three weeks with contempt warning

    Legal and constitutional basis

    • Anti defection law is contained in the Tenth Schedule
    • Speaker of the Legislative Assembly is the adjudicating authority
    • Speaker’s decisions are subject to judicial review
    • Power of contempt flows from Articles 129 and 142 of the Constitution
    [2022] With reference to anti-defection law in India, consider the following statements: 1. The law specifies that a nominated legislator cannot join any political party within six months of being appointed to the House. 

    2. The law does not provide any time-frame within which the presiding officer has to decide a defection case. 

    Which of the statements given above is/are correct? 

    (a) 1 only (b) 2 only (c) Both 1 and 2 (d) Neither 1 nor 2

  • India’s Russia challenge- balance old ties, new reality

    Why in the News?

    India’s Russia policy gained attention after Donald Trump claimed India had agreed to stop buying Russian oil. The statement contrasts with India’s consistent position that its energy purchases are guided by national interest. The issue is significant because:

    1. India sharply increased Russian crude imports after February 2022.
    2. Russia became a major supplier despite Western sanctions.
    3. The US publicly questioned India’s oil strategy.
    4. The matter intersects energy security and defence dependence.

    The episode marks a diplomatic inflection point. India’s balancing strategy is now under public scrutiny at the highest political level in the United States.

    How Have India-Russia Relations Historically Evolved?

    1. Cold War Strategic Alignment: India deepened defence cooperation with the Soviet Union in the 1970s when the US tilted towards Pakistan.
    2. Defence Industrial Dependence: India became dependent on Soviet-origin military equipment.
    3. Post-1991 Continuity: After the Soviet Union’s collapse, defence cooperation continued despite Russia’s internal transition.
    4. High Defence Exposure: Around 60-70% of India’s military platforms are of Russian origin.

    What Changed After the Ukraine War?

    1. Western Sanctions Regime: The US and European countries imposed sanctions on Moscow after February 2022.
    2. Discounted Russian Crude: Russia offered oil at reduced prices.
    3. Import Surge: India’s Russian oil imports rose from about 2% of total imports before February 2022 to nearly 35% thereafter.
    4. Trade Expansion: Bilateral trade increased significantly due to energy flows.
    5. Energy Inflation Cushion: Discounted crude helped manage inflationary pressures.

    What Is the Oil Question and Why Is It Sensitive?

    1. Energy Security Imperative: India imports a large share of its crude oil requirements.
    2. Price Sensitivity: Crude price volatility directly affects inflation and fiscal stability.
    3. Government Position: India maintained that purchases were not politically motivated but commercially driven.
    4. Strategic Signalling: Trump’s claim introduced political overtones to an economic decision.

    How Has Russia Responded?

    1. High-Level Engagement: President Putin maintained communication with Indian leadership.
    2. Understanding India’s Position: Russia reportedly acknowledged India’s balancing strategy.
    3. Continuation of Defence Ties: Defence cooperation remains intact.
    4. Expectation of Stability: Moscow expects India to continue engagement despite Western pressure.

    Conclusion

    India’s Russia policy reflects continuity in strategic pragmatism. Energy imperatives and defence dependencies constrain abrupt shifts. The episode highlights the structural challenges of navigating a polarized global order while preserving national interest.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2020] What is the significance of Indo-US defence deals over Indo-Russian defence deals? Discuss with reference to stability in the Indo-Pacific region.

    Linkage: The question examines India’s strategic balancing between major powers. The Russia oil issue and defence ties show how India is balancing between the US and Russia. This balancing directly affects Indo-Pacific stability and India’s strategic autonomy.

  • Bharat Taxi 

    Why in the News?

    Union Minister for Home Affairs and Cooperation Amit Shah launched Bharat Taxi, India’s first cooperative based ride hailing platform, on 5 February 2026.

    About Bharat Taxi

    • India’s first cooperative led ride hailing platform
    • Registered under the Multi-State Cooperative Societies Act, 2002
    • Established on 6 June 2025
    • Conceptualised under the Ministry of Cooperation

    Core Philosophy

    • Drivers are called sarathis and are owners of the platform
    • Principle of sarathi hi malik meaning driver is the owner
    • Designed to free drivers from aggregator driven and commission based models

    Operational Model

    • Zero commission for drivers
    • Surge free pricing for passengers
    • Profits distributed directly to drivers
    • No exclusivity clause allowing drivers to work on other platforms

    Driver Welfare Measures

    • Personal accident insurance cover of ₹5 lakh
    • Family health insurance cover of ₹5 lakh
    • Retirement savings support
    • Dedicated driver support centres at seven locations in Delhi
    • Rapid emergency assistance and verified ride data

    Women Empowerment Initiative

    • Bike Didi programme for women drivers
    • Over 150 women drivers enrolled so far
    [2021] With reference to casual workers employed in India, consider the following statements: 1. All casual workers are entitled to Employees Provident Fund coverage

    2. All casual workers are entitled to regular working hours and overtime payment

    3. The government can, by notification, specify that an establishment or industry shall pay wages only through its bank account

    Which of the above statements are correct? 

    (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 1 and 3 only (d) 1, 2, and 3

  • AI Workplace Automation and Tech Stock Crash 

    Why in the News?

    Global technology stocks fell sharply in early February 2026 after Anthropic launched an AI driven workplace automation suite, triggering fears that artificial intelligence could replace traditional software platforms and IT services.

    What Triggered the Selloff

    • Anthropic launched new workplace automation tools for its AI agent Claude
    • Tools can independently perform tasks in legal, sales, marketing, finance and data analysis
    • AI agents can now bypass traditional Software as a Service platforms
    • Investors feared large scale disruption of the global software and IT services industry

    Market Impact

    • United States
      • S&P 500 fell about 0.8 percent
      • Nasdaq Composite declined over 1.4 percent
      • Major technology firms like Microsoft, Meta Platforms and Nvidia saw sharp losses
      • SaaS firms such as Salesforce and ServiceNow fell significantly
    • India
      • Nifty IT index dropped nearly 3 percent
      • Major IT firms including Infosys, Tata Consultancy Services, HCLTech, Wipro declined sharply

    Why Indian IT Is Vulnerable

    • Indian IT model depends on service based outsourcing
    • AI tools can automate contract review, compliance, customer support and data processing
    • Reduced dependence on human intensive IT services threatens revenue streams

    Economic Survey Link

    • Economic Survey 2025–26 warned about concentration of AI data and compute
    • Highlighted risks of technological dependence and loss of comparative advantage
    • Called for rapid adaptation to sustain India’s IT competitiveness
    [2020] With the present state of development, Artificial Intelligence can effectively do which of the following? 1. Bring down electricity consumption in industrial units 

    2. Create meaningful short stories and songs 

    3. Disease diagnosis 

    4. Text-to-Speech Conversion 

    5. Wireless transmission of electrical energy 

    Select the correct answer using the code given below: 

    (a) 1, 2, 3 and 5 only (b) 1, 3 and 4 only (c) 2, 4 and 5 only (d) 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5

  • BRICS Centre for Industrial Competencies (BCIC) 

    Why in the News?

    India joined the BRICS Centre for Industrial Competencies (BCIC) on 4 February 2026 at an event organised by the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade in New Delhi.

    About BCIC

    • BCIC is a one stop integrated support platform for manufacturing companies and MSMEs across BRICS countries
    • It focuses on strengthening Industry 4.0 competencies
    • Launched in partnership with United Nations Industrial Development Organization

    India’s Participation

    • India’s participation formalised through a Trust Fund Agreement
    • Agreement signed between Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade and UNIDO
    • BCIC engagement aligns with India’s manufacturing and MSME competitiveness goals

    India Centre for BRICS Industrial Competencies

    • National Productivity Council designated as India Centre for BCIC
    • NPC operates under policy guidance of DPIIT
    • Receives technical support from UNIDO
    • Responsible for capacity building, productivity enhancement and advanced manufacturing adoption

    Key Stakeholders Involved

    • DPIIT under Ministry of Commerce and Industry
    • Ministry of MSME
    • Ministry of External Affairs
    • Industry partner Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry

    Significance for Prelims

    • Strengthens India’s role in BRICS industrial cooperation
    • Supports MSMEs in adopting Industry 4.0 technologies
    • Enhances global manufacturing competitiveness
    • Example of international institutional collaboration in industrial policy
    [2025] Consider the following statements with regard to BRICS: I. The 16th BRICS Summit was held under the Chairship of Russia in Kazan

    II. Indonesia has become a full member of BRICS

    III. The theme of the 16th BRICS Summit was Strengthening Multiculturalism for Just Global Development and Security. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? 

    (a) I and II (b) II and III (c) I and III (d) I only