💥UPSC 2026, 2027 UAP Mentorship November Batch
November 2025
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Nuclear Diplomacy and Disarmament

Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organisation (CTBTO)

Why in the News?

China has rejected President Trump’s claim of secret nuclear tests, reaffirming its commitment to the CTBT amid renewed U.S. calls for nuclear testing and revived Cold War–style tensions.

About Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization (CTBTO):

  • Establishment: Formed in 1996 under the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) to build and operate a verification regime ensuring compliance with the global ban on nuclear explosions.
  • Headquarters: Vienna, Austria.
  • Mandate: To monitor adherence to the CTBT through a global verification system capable of detecting any nuclear test anywhere in the world.
  • Verification System: Operates the International Monitoring System (IMS) with 337 facilities, including seismic, hydroacoustic, infrasound, and radionuclide stations to detect underground, underwater, or atmospheric nuclear tests.
  • Data Centre: The International Data Centre (IDC) analyses and distributes real-time data to member states, providing early warning of suspicious activities.
  • Preparatory Commission: Functions until the CTBT formally enters into force, maintaining operational readiness and supporting states’ verification capabilities.
  • Scientific Applications: The IMS also contributes to tsunami warning systems, atmospheric research, and disaster response, reinforcing the CTBTO’s global utility beyond disarmament.

Back2Basics: How are CTBT and NPT related?

  • Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) and the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) are closely linked pillars of the global nuclear arms control regime:
    1. Shared Goal: Both aim to prevent nuclear proliferation and promote disarmament.
    2. Scope Difference: The NPT focuses on stopping the spread of nuclear weapons and promoting peaceful nuclear use; the CTBT bans all nuclear explosions for any purpose.
    3. Chronological Link: The NPT (1970) came first, creating the legal framework for non-proliferation; the CTBT (1996) built on it by prohibiting testing, reinforcing the NPT’s disarmament pillar.
    4. Verification and Compliance: The CTBT adds technical verification through the International Monitoring System, complementing NPT’s safeguards under the IAEA.
    5. Disarmament Pathway: Ratification of the CTBT is often viewed as a key step toward fulfilling Article VI of the NPT, which obliges nuclear powers to pursue disarmament.

Status of the Treaty and Ratification Gap:

  • Adoption: It was adopted by the UN General Assembly in 1996 and opened for signature on September 24, 1996.
  • Membership: As of 2025, 187 states have signed and 178 have ratified the treaty.
  • Enforcement: It will become legally binding only after 44 specific “Annex 2” states, those with nuclear technology at the time ratify it.
  • Pending Ratifications: Eight critical states have not ratified the treaty- China, Egypt, Iran, Israel, and the United States (signatories but unratified), and India, Pakistan, and North Korea (non-signatories).
  • Recent Setback: In 2023, Russia revoked its ratification, though it continues to observe a testing moratorium, weakening the treaty’s political momentum.
  • Global Compliance: Despite legal limbo, a de facto moratorium on nuclear testing has largely held since the 1990s; only North Korea has violated it with tests since 2006.
  • Significance: The CTBT remains a cornerstone of the global non-proliferation regime, its verification network providing both deterrence and transparency even without formal legal enforcement.
[UPSC 2015] Consider the following countries:

1.  China 2. France 3. India 4. Israel 5. Pakistan

Which among the above are Nuclear Weapons States as recognized by the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, commonly known as Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT)?

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

 

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Parliament – Sessions, Procedures, Motions, Committees etc

Sessions of the Parliament

Why in the News?

The Winter Session of Parliament will be held from December 1 to 19, 2025.

About Parliamentary Sessions:

  • Parliamentary Sessions are formal periods when the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha meet to legislate, deliberate, and hold the government accountable.
  • Each session has several sittings for debates, questions, and lawmaking. Under Article 85(1), the President must summon both Houses so that not more than six months elapse between two sessions.
  • Types of Sessions:
    1. Budget Session (Feb–Mar): Begins with the President’s Address; includes Union Budget presentation and debate.
    2. Monsoon Session (Jul–Aug): Focuses on legislative work and national issues.
    3. Winter Session (Nov–Dec): Reviews policies, finalises pending legislation.
    4. Special Session: Called for urgent or commemorative matters (e.g., emergencies or milestones).

Key Terms Related to Sessions:

  • Summoning (Art. 85(1)): President summons Parliament on Cabinet Committee advice; at least two sessions yearly, with ≤ six-month gap.
  • Adjournment: Temporary suspension of a sitting; business resumes when House reassembles.
  • Adjournment Sine Die: Ends a sitting without fixing a date for the next meeting; followed by presidential prorogation.
  • Prorogation (Art. 85(2)(a)): Formal end of a session by the President; pending bills do not lapse.
  • Dissolution (Art. 85(2)(b)): Ends the Lok Sabha’s tenure; triggers new elections; pending bills in Lok Sabha lapse.
  • Recess: Period between the prorogation of one session and the start of the next.
  • Lame Duck Session: Last session of an outgoing Lok Sabha before the new one forms.
  • Quorum (Art. 100): Minimum attendance for business—55 in Lok Sabha, 25 in Rajya Sabha.
  • Voting (Art. 100):
    • Voice Vote: Members respond “Aye”/“No.”
    • Division Vote: Contested results recorded electronically.
    • Casting Vote: Presiding officer’s tie-breaking vote.
[UPSC 2024] With reference to the Parliament of India, consider the following statements:

1. Prorogation of a House by the President of India does not require the advice of the Council of Ministers.

2. Prorogation of a House is generally done after the House is adjourned sine die, but there is no bar to the President of India proroguing the House which is in session.

3. Dissolution of the Lok Sabha is done by the President of India who, save in exceptional circumstances, does so on the advice of the Council of Ministers.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

Options: (a) 1 only (b) 1 and 2 (c) 2 and 3* (d) 3 only

 

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Climate Change Negotiations – UNFCCC, COP, Other Conventions and Protocols

India to join Tropical Forest Forever Facility (TFFF) as an ‘Observer’

Why in the News?

At the Leaders’ Summit in Belem, Brazil, preceding the COP30, India has announced its decision to join the Tropical Forest Forever Facility (TFFF) as an Observer.

About Tropical Forest Forever Facility (TFFF):

  • What is it: A global blended-finance mechanism rewarding Tropical Forest Countries (TFCs) for conserving intact forests through annual conservation-linked payments.
  • Payment Design: Provides $4 per hectare annually for protected forest area, with deductions for deforestation or ecosystem degradation verified via satellite data.
  • Institutional Setup: Managed by a TFFF Secretariat (policy and oversight) and a Tropical Forest Investment Fund (TFIF) (financial operations and investment management).
  • Investment Model: The TFIF channels sponsor contributions into sovereign, corporate, green, and blue bonds, explicitly excluding fossil fuel industries.
  • Community Allocation: 20% of total payments earmarked for Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities (IPLCs) to support sustainable livelihoods and rights-based forest governance.
  • Monitoring Mechanism: Conservation outcomes tracked via satellite and third-party verification systems ensuring full transparency and performance-based accountability.
  • Financial Sustainability: Operates as a budget-neutral model, where investment returns fund long-term conservation payments rather than temporary grants.
  • Initial Pledges: Founding commitments include Brazil ($1 bn), Indonesia ($1 bn), Norway ($3 bn over 10 years), Colombia ($250 mn), Netherlands ($5 mn), Portugal (€1 mn); France, China, and UAE have expressed political support.

Relation to REDD+ Framework:

  • REDD+ Genesis: Launched in 2008 under the UNFCCC, REDD+ stands for Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation Plus, providing result-based payments for verified emission reductions.
  • Core Difference: While REDD+ rewards verified carbon reductions, TFFF offers annual standing forest payments, maintaining steady conservation incentives.
  • Approach: REDD+ focuses on carbon metrics and offset markets, whereas TFFF bypasses carbon dependency, offering investment-backed, non-offset finance.
  • Objectives Alignment: Both aim to promote sustainable forest management, biodiversity conservation, and enhanced carbon stock in developing nations.
  • Institutional Partners: REDD+ is jointly administered by FAO, UNDP, UNEP, and implemented in 65+ countries; TFFF aligns with these frameworks through transparency and inclusivity principles.
  • Added Value: TFFF strengthens long-term financial resilience of conservation efforts by combining public and private investments with community-centric benefit-sharing.

India’s Role and Climate Record:

  • Emission Reduction Record: From 2005–2020, India cut emission intensity by 36%, achieving 50% non-fossil installed power capacity ahead of 2030 goals.
  • Carbon Sink Achievement: Between 2005–2021, India added 2.29 billion tonnes CO equivalent through expanded forest and tree cover.
  • NDC Commitments: India’s updated Nationally Determined Contribution (to 2035) targets deeper emission cuts and enhanced carbon sink creation.
  • Strategic Importance: Strengthens South–South cooperation and India’s advocacy for equitable climate responsibility within global negotiations.
[UPSC 2025] Which one of the following launched the ‘Nature Solutions Finance Hub for Asia and the Pacific’?

(a) The Asian Development Bank (ADB)*

(b) The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB)

(c) The New Development Bank (NDB)

(d) The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD)

 

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Historical and Archaeological Findings in News

Piprahwa Relics of Buddha

Why in the News?

The sacred Piprahwa relics of Lord Buddha have reached Thimphu, Bhutan, as a goodwill gift from India for the Global Peace Prayer Festival (GPPF).

About the Piprahwa Relics:

  • Discovery: Unearthed in 1898 by William Claxton Peppe, a British engineer, at Piprahwa (Siddharthnagar, Uttar Pradesh), near the Nepal border.
  • Historical Significance: Identified as ancient Kapilavastu, capital of the Shakya republic, where Prince Siddhartha (Buddha) lived before renunciation.
  • Findings at the Site: A buried stupa yielded a large stone coffer containing:
    • Bone fragments believed to be Buddha’s relics
    • Caskets made of soapstone and crystal
    • A sandstone coffer
    • Over 1,800 ornaments: pearls, rubies, sapphires, gold sheets
  • Legal Custody:
    • The British Crown claimed the relics under the Indian Treasure Trove Act, 1878.
    • Most artifacts were transferred to the Indian Museum, Kolkata.

Stupas with Buddha’s Relics:

  • After the Buddha’s death (Mahaparinirvana), his cremated relics were divided among 8 kingdoms and a Brahmin named Drona, who coordinated their distribution.
  • Each recipient built a Stupa to enshrine their share of the relics, creating important pilgrimage sites and early centers of Buddhist worship.
  • The 9 stupas were in Rajagriha, Vaishali, Kapilavastu, Allakappa, Ramagrama, Vethadipa, Pava, Kushinagar, and Pippalivana.
  • Emperor Ashoka (3rd century BCE) redistributed the relics from these stupas into thousands of new stupas across his empire.
  • The stupa at Ramagrama is unique because it is believed to remain untouched and still holds the original relics.
  • A typical early Buddhist stupa included a hemispherical mound (anda), a square railing (harmika), a central pillar (yashti) with umbrellas (chatra), and a path for circumambulation (pradakshinapatha).
[UPSC 2023] With reference to ancient India, consider the following statements:

1. The concept of Stupa is Buddhist in origin.

2. Stupa was generally a repository of relics.

3. Stupa was a votive and commemorative structure in Buddhist tradition. How many of the statements given above are correct?

Options: (a) Only one (b) Only two* (c) All three (d) None

 

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Direct Benefits Transfers

Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana  (PMUY)

Why in the News?

New Delhi CM has announced expanding Ujjwala Yojana to families using traditional stoves or coal heaters to improve air quality and promote clean cooking.

About Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (PMUY):

  • Overview: Introduced in 2016 by the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas to provide clean cooking fuel (LPG) to poor and rural households.
  • Objective: Replace traditional cooking fuels like firewood, dung, and coal with LPG, improving women’s health, reducing indoor pollution, and promoting clean energy.
  • Target and Beneficiaries: Initially aimed to provide 8 crore LPG connections to deprived households by March 2020, with each connection issued in the name of an adult woman from the household.
  • Financial Support: Government provides ₹1,600 per connection, covering the security deposit, first refill, and stove (hotplate)– all free of cost.
  • Subsidy Entitlement: Beneficiaries eligible for up to 12 LPG cylinder subsidies per year (each of 14.2 kg).
  • Eligibility Criteria:
    • Adult woman from a poor household without an existing LPG connection.
    • Must belong to SECC 2011, SC/ST, PMAY, AAY, Forest Dweller, Most Backward Class, or Tea/Ex-Tea Garden Tribe categories.
    • Others can apply under “poor household” category by submitting a 14-point self-declaration.
  • Application Process: Available both online and offline through oil marketing companies.
  • Ujjwala 2.0: Announced in August 2021 to expand coverage by 1 crore new LPG connection, especially targeting migrant workers and urban poor.
    • Financial Assistance: Continued ₹1,600 per connection support with a free stove and first gas cylinder; subsequent refills paid by users.

Achievements:

  • LPG Coverage Growth: Expanded national LPG coverage from 62% (2016) to 99.8% (April 2021).
  • Employment Generation: Created ~1 lakh jobs in the LPG distribution and logistics network.
  • COVID-19 Relief: Provided 14 crore free refills to PMUY households under the Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Package (PMGKP).
  • Environmental Impact: Significant decline in biomass stove dependence, improving air quality and reducing household emissions.

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Electoral Reforms In India

[8th November 2025] The Hindu Op-ed: A wider SIR has momentum but it is still a test case

PYQ Relevance

[UPSC 2024] Examine the need for electoral reforms as suggested by various committees with particular reference to the “One Nation-One Election” principle.

Linkage: The Special Intensive Revision (SIR) ensures clean, verified, and inclusive voter rolls, a prerequisite for implementing “One Nation-One Election”. Both aim to reduce electoral fragmentation and enhance institutional credibility in India’s democracy.

Mentor’s Comment

The Election Commission of India (ECI) has initiated the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls across multiple States and Union Territories, the first such nationwide exercise after 21 years. This is a technical yet politically sensitive process, central to the integrity of India’s democratic machinery. The SIR’s rollout tests administrative preparedness, inclusivity, and transparency ahead of major elections, including those in Bihar. This article decodes the why, what, and how of the SIR, examining its implications for governance, political participation, and electoral legitimacy, all crucial themes for UPSC GS Paper II (Polity & Governance).

Why in the News

The Election Commission of India launched the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) on November 4, 2025, across nine States and three Union Territories, following its implementation in Bihar. This is the first SIR in 21 years and only the ninth in India’s 75-year electoral history.

It marks a significant institutional reform aimed at updating 51 crore voter records of nearly half of India’s electorate across 321 constituencies and 1,843 Assembly segments. Given that the Bihar SIR was a test case plagued by logistical, legal, and political complexities, the pan-India rollout serves as a stress test for India’s electoral infrastructure and citizen inclusion mechanisms.

Introduction

The Special Intensive Revision (SIR) represents the most comprehensive voter list update since the early 2000s. It aims to eliminate duplications, include new electors, and ensure clean, verified rolls before upcoming elections. However, the process faces challenges related to citizenship verification, migration, and state-level customisation, revealing both the strengths and vulnerabilities of India’s electoral architecture.

What is the Special Intensive Revision (SIR)?

  1. Definition: A systematic, state-wise verification and revision of electoral rolls conducted by the Election Commission of India (ECI).
  2. Objective: To ensure accuracy, transparency, and inclusivity in voter registration, enabling free and fair elections.
  3. Scale: Covers 51 crore electors across 321 constituencies involving 5.33 lakh polling stations and 7.64 lakh booth-level agents.
  4. Timeline: Draft roll on December 9, 2025; final roll on February 7, 2026.
  5. Precedent: First SIR in 21 years, after the last comprehensive revision in 2004.

Why Was a Nationwide SIR Needed?

  1. Electoral Gaps: Regular annual updates failed to address mass migration, duplication, and exclusion errors.
  2. Bihar Experience: The Bihar SIR revealed outdated rolls, multiple entries, and dead voters, pushing ECI to extend the process nationwide.
  3. Inclusivity Goals: To bring marginalised and mobile populations (e.g., migrants, first-time voters) into the democratic fold.
  4. Supreme Court Concerns: Emphasised the need for ‘clean and transparent’ electoral rolls as foundational to electoral legitimacy.

How is the SIR Different from Regular Roll Revision?

  1. Depth of Verification: Involves door-to-door enumeration and mandatory document verification.
  2. Decentralised Accountability: Booth Level Officers (BLOs) given fixed time frames for inclusion/exclusion decisions.
  3. Transparency Mandate: The term ‘document’ must be entered for each elector to ensure traceability.
  4. Technological Integration: ECI uses data analytics and cross-verification to detect duplication or absence.
  5. Flexibility: Though standardised nationally, procedures vary by State due to differing local challenges and citizenship laws (e.g., Assam).

How Does the SIR Strengthen Electoral Legitimacy?

  1. Authenticity of Rolls: Builds a citizen-owned voter base, verified through both local and digital checks.
  2. Political Party Engagement: Booth-level agents of political parties ensure collective scrutiny and confidence in the system.
  3. Institutional Collaboration: States are required to provide dedicated staff and avoid officer transfers during the process.
  4. Error Minimisation: Reduction in ‘zero appeals’ cases, i.e., disputes over wrongful exclusions/inclusions.
  5. Legal Sanction: Backed by Supreme Court validation, strengthening constitutional trust in the ECI.

What Are the Remaining Challenges?

  1. State-Specific Complexities: Tamil Nadu, Kerala, and West Bengal express concerns over exclusion of eligible voters.
  2. Administrative Burden: Requires massive coordination across 21,000+ officers and State governments.
  3. Social Sensitivities: Citizenship verification in Assam and border districts remains politically charged.
  4. Public Trust Deficit: Needs sustained communication to avoid alienation of first-time or marginalised voters.
  5. Past Precedent: The Bihar experience showed that data errors and delayed grievance redress erode legitimacy.

Conclusion

The Special Intensive Revision marks a transformative shift in India’s electoral administration. While it reflects institutional momentum and transparency, its success depends on ground-level execution, inter-state coordination, and public confidence. The SIR is both a logistical challenge and a democratic opportunity, a crucial test for the ECI’s credibility in ensuring a clean, inclusive, and verifiable electoral base.

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Climate Change Negotiations – UNFCCC, COP, Other Conventions and Protocols

Climate change is driven by human need and greed

Introduction

Climate change has long been discussed in terms of rising temperatures and carbon emissions, but historian Sunil Amrith reframes it as a moral and historical crisis. His work The Burning Earth explores how human ambition, industrialisation, and inequality have shaped the Anthropocene. The interview highlights that solving the crisis requires not just technology, but a transformation in values, governance, and global justice.

Central Ideas and Dimensions

  1. Human Ambition and the Roots of the Climate Crisis
    1. Moral Dimension: Amrith draws from Mahatma Gandhi’s dictum, “The world has enough for everyone’s need but not enough for everyone’s greed.” Industrialisation, driven by greed rather than necessity, transformed humanity’s relationship with nature.
    2. Historical Continuity: Post-industrial societies viewed nature as a source of endless exploitation; colonised nations inherited these extractive systems.
    3. Colonial Legacy: European colonial powers intensified extraction in Asia and Africa, embedding global inequalities in resource use and emissions.
  2. Industrialisation and Technological Faith: A Limited Solution
    1. Technological Optimism: Many assume industrial progress can “fix” climate problems through innovation and decarbonisation.
    2. Historical Warning: Industrialisation was never morally neutral; it was driven by moral ambition and economic expansion.
    3. Inequality in Transition: The Global South is now being asked to decarbonise rapidly despite having contributed less to historical emissions.
    4. Example: The ‘Green Transition’ narrative often benefits rich economies while transferring economic burdens to poorer ones.
  3. Climate Change as a Political, not Merely Technical, Problem
    1. Political Process: Climate negotiations are shaped by historical responsibility and inequality in emission shares.
    2. Distribution of Responsibility: Developed countries hold disproportionate responsibility, yet developing countries bear heavier adaptation costs.
    3. Injustice of Geography: Those least responsible like communities in the Global South face the worst climate impacts.
    4. Global Debate: The question of who should pay and who should adapt is as pressing as the question of how to reduce emissions.
  4. Humanities and the Ethics of Climate Discourse
    1. Beyond Science: Amrith calls for humanities’ involvement, history, anthropology, and moral philosophy, to interpret climate change as a human story.
    2. Changing Relationship with Nature: Understanding industrialisation’s moral and emotional roots can help reshape our relationship with the planet.
    3. Broader Lens: Integrating social, cultural, and ethical frameworks prevents oversimplified “technological salvation” narratives.
  5. The Limits of Techno-fixes and the Role of Human Values
    1. Bill Gates’ View: Technology can solve climate change even if temperatures rise by 1.5°C.
    2. Amrith’s Counterpoint: Even if emissions stopped tomorrow, warming would continue due to locked-in carbon cycles.
    3. Moral Reorientation: Sustainable future demands restraint, compassion, and fairness, not mere efficiency or profit.
    4. Systemic Realisation: Human welfare, not human power, should guide policy; prosperity cannot be measured by GDP alone.

Conclusion

Amrith’s argument reframes the climate crisis as a mirror to human civilization reflecting not just carbon levels, but our collective morality. The path ahead demands ethical reawakening, equitable governance, and historical responsibility, not just green technology. Climate change is not a scientific failure; it is a civilizational test of whether humanity can outgrow its own greed.

PYQ Relevance

[UPSC 2017] ‘Climate Change’ is a global problem. How India will be affected by climate change? How Himalayan and coastal states of India will be affected by climate change?
Linkage: Climate change is a recurring UPSC theme in GS 3 and Essays. This article adds depth by linking human greed and moral failure to India’s climate vulnerability, especially in Himalayan and coastal regions.

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Goods and Services Tax (GST)

Where states stand on revenue collections, before and after GST

Introduction

Introduced in 2017, the Goods and Services Tax (GST) replaced multiple indirect taxes at both Central and State levels, including excise duty, service tax, and VAT, creating a unified national tax framework. The recent data released by the Central Government for October 2025 indicates a 4.6% year-on-year increase in total revenue collection to ₹1,95,936 crore. However, the state-wise analysis has revealed an emerging concern: while some states have achieved strong revenue growth, others are struggling to reach even pre-GST revenue-to-GDP ratios.

Why in the News

The latest data on GST revenue collection highlights contrasting fiscal trajectories across Indian states. Despite record-high GST collections nationally, several states’ tax-to-GDP ratios remain lower than before 2017, indicating a possible erosion of state fiscal autonomy. The issue has gained attention because:

  1. Sixteen states and Union Territories now earn a smaller share of revenue from GST than pre-GST taxes.
  2. The aggregate revenue from subsumed taxes has declined from 6.1% of GDP in 2015-16 to 5.5% in 2023-24.
  3. The average GST-to-GDP ratio over the past seven years is 2.6%, below the pre-GST average of 2.8%.
  4. This reversal is significant as it questions the efficacy of India’s largest tax reform and the viability of fiscal federalism under GST.

How did GST Change the Tax Landscape?

  1. Unified Tax Framework: GST subsumed indirect taxes such as excise duty, VAT, and service tax under a single national structure, simplifying compliance.
  2. Revenue Flow Shift: Revenue previously collected by states under independent taxes now flows through a shared GST mechanism, altering fiscal control.
  3. Increased Central Dependence: States became dependent on GST compensation cess and Centre’s transfers for revenue stability, altering fiscal autonomy.
  4. Short-term Gains: Initially, GST led to better compliance and formalization, resulting in short-term revenue surges.

How Are States Performing After GST?

  1. Diverse Outcomes: According to PRS Legislative Research, state-level GST revenues continue to trail the pre-GST levels as a share of GSDP.
  2. Declining Tax-to-GDP Ratio: Aggregate revenue from subsumed taxes fell from 6.1% (2015-16) to 5.5% (2023-24).
  3. Below-Average GST Performance: The seven-year average GST-to-GDP ratio (2.6%) is lower than the pre-GST average (2.8%).
  4. Top Performers: Maharashtra, Karnataka, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, and Haryana have shown robust post-GST growth in tax collection.
  5. Lagging States: J&K, Punjab, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, and Odisha recorded revenue decline from subsumed taxes as a percentage of GSDP.

Which States Have Been Worst Affected?

  1. Northeastern States: Mizoram, Nagaland, Sikkim, Meghalaya, and Manipur saw an improvement in tax-to-GSDP ratios.
  2. Northern and Central States: Jammu & Kashmir, Punjab, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, and Odisha saw a decline in subsumed tax revenues.
  3. Urban-Rural Divide: Industrial and service-oriented states benefited, while agrarian and resource-dependent states witnessed fiscal compression.
  4. GST Compensation End: After 2022, when the GST compensation guarantee ended, fiscal stress intensified for states heavily reliant on the compensation mechanism.

What Does the Data Reveal About Fiscal Federalism?

  1. Centre-State Revenue Imbalance: 20 out of 36 states/UTs now collect less than 40% of their revenue from GST, deepening fiscal asymmetry.
  2. Medium-term Fiscal Impact: The 15th Finance Commission projected a GST-to-GDP ratio of 7%, but current data reflects underperformance.
  3. Long-term Fiscal Risks: Declining state revenue autonomy may affect social spending and capital expenditure, widening regional disparities.
  4. Compliance Inefficiency: Multiple tax slabs, refund delays, and compliance burdens continue to affect smaller states’ GST efficiency.

Conclusion

The GST has achieved its unification objective but has not yet ensured revenue equity across states. While high-compliance, industrial states have benefited, smaller and agrarian states remain fiscally strained. The data underscores the need for recalibrating the GST architecture, simplifying slabs, improving IT infrastructure, and enhancing fiscal transfers, to align with the spirit of cooperative federalism and fiscal balance.

PYQ Relevance

[UPSC 2019] Enumerate the indirect taxes which have been subsumed in the Goods and Services Tax (GST) in India. Also, comment on the revenue implications of the GST introduced in India since July 2017.

Linkage: It evaluates the impact of GST on Centre-State revenue balance and indirect tax structure post-2017.

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[pib] National Social Assistance Programme (NSAP)

Why in the News?

PIB has provided an update regarding the progress of National Social Assistance Programme (NSAP).

About National Social Assistance Programme (NSAP):

  • Overview: Launched on 15 August 1995, NSAP is a Centrally Sponsored Scheme under the Ministry of Rural Development.
  • Objective: To provides financial and food security to individuals living below the poverty line (BPL), fulfilling the Directive Principles of State Policy (Article 41) by supporting the elderly, widows, persons with disabilities, and families suffering the loss of a breadwinner.
  • Coverage: It operates across rural and urban India, covering over 3.09 crore beneficiaries.
  • Components of NSAP:
    1. Indira Gandhi National Old Age Pension Scheme (IGNOAPS): Provides ₹200/month to citizens aged 60–79 and ₹500/month to those 80+, with States adding top-up support.
    2. Indira Gandhi National Widow Pension Scheme (IGNWPS): Offers ₹300/month to widows aged 40–79 and ₹500/month for those 80+.
    3. Indira Gandhi National Disability Pension Scheme (IGNDPS): Extends ₹300/month to persons aged 18–79 with severe disabilities; ₹500/month for those 80+.
    4. National Family Benefit Scheme (NFBS): Grants a one-time ₹20,000 to BPL families on the death of a breadwinner aged 18–59.
    5. Annapurna Scheme: Supplies 10 kg of free food grains/month to senior citizens eligible for IGNOAPS but not receiving pension.

Implementation and Monitoring Framework:

  • Selection: Eligible beneficiaries identified by Gram Panchayats and Urban Local Bodies.
  • Disbursement: About 94% through Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) to bank or post office accounts; cash-at-doorstep allowed in special cases.
  • Monitoring: Each State/UT appoints a Nodal Secretary; quarterly progress reports are mandatory, and failure to submit can lead to withholding of funds.
  • Transparency Measures: Integration with Public Financial Management System (PFMS) ensures real-time tracking, Aadhaar linkage, and prevention of duplication.

Recent Update (2024–25):

  • NSAP disbursed funds of ₹6,143.92 crore (IGNOAPS), ₹2,150.03 crore (IGNWPS), ₹243.74 crore (IGNDPS), and ₹394.29 crore (NFBS & Annapurna).
  • 2.5 crore+ beneficiaries have Aadhaar-linked accounts ensuring transparent payments.
  • Budget for 2025–26: ₹9,652 crore, with IGNOAPS receiving the largest share (₹6,645.9 crore).
  • Digital Life Certification (DLC) mobile app launched in July 2025, enabling Aadhaar-based verification and reducing manual procedures.
  • The programme continues to serve as a core pillar of India’s social safety net, enhancing welfare delivery and inclusion through digitisation, DBT, and Aadhaar authentication.

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Electoral Reforms In India

Disclosure of Election Finance

Why in the News?

A recent report by the Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR) revealed that over half of registered unrecognised political parties (RUPPs) linked to Bihar have failed to comply with mandatory financial disclosure norms for FY 2023–24.

Key Findings of ADR Report:

  • Non-Compliance: Over 59% of registered unrecognised political parties (RUPPs) linked to Bihar failed to file either their audit reports or donation statements for FY 2023–24, violating Election Commission of India (ECI) norms.
  • Scope: Of 275 RUPPs reviewed, 184 were from Bihar and 91 from other states. Only 67 parties (24.36%) disclosed both audit and contribution reports.

Political Funding in India:

  • Overview: Political funding refers to financial resources raised by political parties or candidates to sustain organisational operations and election campaigns.
  • Purpose: Ensures participation in democratic processes, electoral competitiveness, and mass outreach.
  • Sources of Funding:
    • Individuals: Citizens contribute voluntarily; deductions under Section 80GGB (Income Tax Act).
    • Corporates: Donations governed by Section 182 (Companies Act, 2013).
    • State Support: Indirect subsidies (media access, tax exemption) allowed; direct funding prohibited.
    • Electoral Trusts (2013): Channel corporate contributions transparently.
    • Electoral Bonds (2018): Introduced donor anonymity; struck down by Supreme Court (2024) for violating transparency and citizens’ right to information.

Legal Framework for Political Funding:

  • Representation of the People Act, 1951 (RPA): Governs election conduct, contributions, and maintenance of accounts.
  • Income Tax Act, 1961:
    • Section 13A: Exempts tax only for parties maintaining audited accounts and disclosing donations.
    • Section 80GGB/GGC: Offers tax benefits to individual and corporate donors.
  • Companies Act, 2013:
    • Section 182: Limits corporate donations to 7.5% of average net profits of the last three years.
    • Mandates annual disclosure of political contributions.
  • Election Commission Guidelines: Mandate submission of audited accounts and contribution reports above ₹20,000.

Mechanisms Governing Political Funding Disclosure:

  • Disclosure Requirements:
    • Under Section 29C (RPA, 1951): Political parties must disclose donations above ₹20,000 to the ECI annually.
    • Under Sections 77–78 (RPA, 1951): Candidates must submit true election expenditure accounts within 90 days (Lok Sabha) or 75 days (Assembly).
    • Violations invite disqualification up to three years (Section 10A).
  • Transparency Gaps:
    • Over 60% of party income from “unknown sources”, mainly due to inadequate enforcement and loopholes.
    • Frequent delays, incomplete disclosures, and absence of independent audits persist.
  • Judicial Oversight:
    • Supreme Court judgments (e.g., PUCL v. Union, 2003) and 2024 ruling on Electoral Bonds strengthened citizens’ right to know funding sources.
  • Reform Recommendations:
    • Bring political parties under the Right to Information (RTI) Act.
    • Lower disclosure threshold from ₹20,000 to ₹2,000.
    • Establish National Election Fund for equitable, state-audited funding.
    • Ensure real-time digital reporting and independent third-party audits.
[UPSC 2021] Which one of the following effects of the creation of black money in India has been the main cause of worry to the Government of India?

Options: (a) Diversion of resources to the purchase of real estate and investment in luxury housing

(b) Investment in unproductive activities and purchase of precious stones, jewelry, gold, etc.

(c) Large donations to political parties and the growth of regionalism

(d) Loss of revenue to the State Exchequer due to tax evasion*

 

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Wildlife Conservation Efforts

Panel seeks higher protection for Rhesus Macaque under Wildlife Act

Why in the News?

The Standing Committee of the National Board for Wildlife (SC-NBWL) chaired by Union Environment Minister has recommended reinstating the Rhesus Macaque (Macaca mulatta) under Schedule II of the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972.

rhesus

Back2Basics: Schedule II of the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972

  • Objective: Provides legal protection to species requiring conservation monitoring but not critically endangered.
  • Protection Scope: Hunting, capture, or trade prohibited except under extraordinary conditions such as disease or threat to human life.
  • Legal Provision: Section 11 authorises Chief Wildlife Wardens to grant permissions for justified exceptions.
  • Penalties: Imprisonment up to 3 years, or fine up to ₹25,000, or both; slightly lower than Schedule I provisions.
  • Species Included: Assamese macaque, Indian fox, Himalayan black bear, Indian cobra, large Indian civet, etc.
  • Distinction from Schedule I: Offers near-equivalent protection but allows limited regulation and control measures.
  • Authority: Central Government empowered under Section 61 to amend species inclusion or exclusion

About Rhesus Macaque:

  • Scientific Name: Macaca mulatta, a species of Old World monkey native to South, Central, and Southeast Asia.
  • Distribution: Widest-ranging non-human primate, found in India, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, China, and Afghanistan.
  • Physical Traits: Brown or grey fur; body length 47–53 cm, tail 20–23 cm, weight 5–8 kg; strong sexual dimorphism.
  • Habitat: Highly adaptable; lives in forests, grasslands, riverine zones, agricultural lands, and even urban settlements.
  • Behaviour: Diurnal, semi-terrestrial, and social; organised in matrilineal troops (20–200 members) with complex vocal and gestural communication.
  • Diet: Omnivorous, feeds on fruits, seeds, roots, cereals, and occasionally invertebrates; uses cheek pouches for temporary food storage.
  • IUCN Status: Least Concern, due to wide distribution and high adaptability.
  • Legal Reclassification: Previously listed under Schedule II of the WPA, 1972, offering stringent protection against hunting, cruelty, illegal trade, and exploitation. After the 2022 amendments, it was shifted to Schedule IV (mid-level protection category with lesser punishments).
  • Scientific Relevance: Extensively used in biomedical research, instrumental in developing polio, rabies, smallpox vaccines, and in HIV/AIDS and neuroscience studies.
  • Human Conflict: Increasing crop raids, urban aggression, and food theft; declared vermin in Himachal Pradesh (2019) for selective culling in non-forest zones.

How is the Culling of Vermin allowed in India?

  • Definition: Animals declared harmful or nuisance-causing, legally permitted for hunting to safeguard life, crops, or property.
  • Legal Provision: Section 62 of the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972 empowers the Central Government to declare species (excluding Schedule I) as vermin for specific regions and timeframes.
  • Earlier Classification: Schedule V (pre-2022) listed vermins such as rats, fruit bats, and common crows.
  • 2022 Amendment: Schedule V removed; Centre can now issue direct notifications declaring vermin status.
  • Declaration Process:
    • State government submits request citing local damage or risk.
    • MoEFCC evaluates ecological and administrative justification.
    • Centre issues notification for specified region and duration.
  • Examples:
    • Wild boar (Uttarakhand, Kerala, Goa)
    • Nilgai (Bihar, Uttar Pradesh)
    • Rhesus macaque (Himachal Pradesh, 2019)
    • Fruit bats and crows (select farming regions)
  • Legal Consequence: Once notified, the species loses protection, and hunting incurs no penalty during the declared period.
  • Ecological and Ethical Concerns: Risks of ecosystem imbalance and animal cruelty; experts advocate contraception, relocation, and scientific management instead.
[UPSC 2022] If a particular plant species is placed under Schedule VI of the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972, what is the implication?
Options: (a) A licence is required to cultivate that plant. *
(b) Such a plant cannot be cultivated under any circumstances.
(c) It is a Genetically Modified crop plant.
(d) Such a plant is invasive and harmful to the ecosystem.

 

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Foreign Policy Watch: United Nations

Bangladesh’s accession to the UN Water Convention

Why in the News?

In 2025, Bangladesh became the first South Asian nation to join the UN Water Convention (Convention on the Protection and Use of Transboundary Watercourses and International Lakes).

About UN Water Convention:

  • Overview: Convention on the Protection and Use of Transboundary Watercourses and International Lakes, adopted in Helsinki (1992) and enforced in 1996 under the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE).
  • Globalisation: Originally regional (Europe, Central Asia); opened to all UN Member States in 2016 after a 2013 amendment, becoming a global treaty for transboundary water governance.
  • Objective: Promotes sustainable management of shared water resources and conflict prevention through cooperative mechanisms.
  • Key Goals: Implements SDG-6 (Clean Water and Sanitation) and SDG-16 (Peace, Justice, and Strong Institutions) via equitable water sharing and joint management.
  • Obligations for Parties:
    • Prevent and reduce transboundary pollution and unsustainable extraction.
    • Use shared waters equitably and reasonably.
    • Coordinate national and transboundary water management policies.
    • Establish joint bodies or commissions for shared basins.
  • Institutional Mechanism: Managed by the UNECE Secretariat, which organises meetings, facilitates implementation, and promotes basin-level cooperation among signatories.
  • Legal Character: Functions as a framework convention, complementing rather than replacing bilateral treaties (e.g., Indus Waters Treaty, Ganga Treaty).
  • Significance: Serves as a legal and institutional mechanism for Integrated Water Resource Management (IWRM), regional peacebuilding, and climate-resilient governance.
  • Related Instruments: Inspired the UN Watercourses Convention (1997); both operate in complementary scopes within international water law.

Why did Bangladesh join (2025):

  • First in South Asia: Became the first South Asian nation to ratify the Convention amid escalating water stress and climate vulnerability.
  • Hydrological Dependence: Over 90% of river inflows come from outside Bangladesh, mainly India and China, making Dhaka highly vulnerable to upstream interventions.
  • Upstream Projects: Concerns over China’s Motuo Hydropower Project (Yarlung Tsangpo/Brahmaputra) and India’s unresolved Teesta water-sharing dispute drove the decision.
  • Environmental Risks: 60% of population exposed to floods; half live in drought-prone areas, heightening need for cooperative governance.
  • Legal Context: Bangladesh’s 2019 High Court ruling granting rivers legal personhood reinforced its institutional focus on water rights.
  • Strategic Motivation: Seeks global legal recourse, access to data-sharing mechanisms, and international funding for climate adaptation and water security.

Implications for India:

  • Shift from Bilateralism: India prefers bilateral river treaties (e.g., Indus, Ganga). Bangladesh’s multilateral engagement introduces scope for third-party mediation, contrary to India’s stance.
  • Ganga Treaty Renewal (2026): Bangladesh may invoke “equitable utilisation” to seek a higher share of Ganga waters under Convention norms.
  • Teesta River Pressure: The stalled Teesta agreement could face renewed international pressure, citing fairness and sustainability principles.
  • Regional Domino Effect: Likely to motivate Nepal and Bhutan to join, potentially transforming South Asia’s hydro-diplomatic architecture.
  • Strategic Concerns: Bangladesh’s simultaneous trilateral cooperation with China and Pakistan raises apprehensions of a Beijing-influenced hydro-bloc.

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What is Animal Birth Control (ABC) Program?

Why in the News?

The Supreme Court has ordered all States and Union Territories to remove stray dogs from public areas and relocate them to shelters after sterilisation and vaccination under the Animal Birth Control Rules, 2023.

About Animal Birth Control (ABC) Program:

  • Purpose: Humane, scientifically proven method to control stray dog populations and reduce rabies.
  • Legal Basis: First under Animal Birth Control (Dogs) Rules, 2001 (under the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, 1960); updated as Animal Birth Control Rules, 2023.
  • Development: Created with support from the World Health Organization (WHO).
  • Core Method: “Catch–sterilise–vaccinate–release” model; prohibits relocation or culling.
  • Implementation: Managed by municipalities, municipal corporations, and panchayats.
  • Authorisation: Only organisations recognised by the Animal Welfare Board of India (AWBI) can conduct programs.
  • Animal Birth Control Rules, 2023:
    • Implemented to comply with Supreme Court guidelines in Writ Petition No. 691 of 2009.
    • Assigns responsibility to local bodies (municipalities, corporations, panchayats) to conduct ABC programs for sterilisation and immunisation of stray dogs.
    • Prohibits relocation of stray dogs as a means of population control; instead, they must be sterilised and returned to the same area.
    • Only organisations recognised by the Animal Welfare Board of India (AWBI) can conduct ABC programs.

Key Features:

  • Sterilisation Target: Minimum 70% of stray dogs in an area within one reproductive cycle (~6 months).
  • Focus: Female sterilisation at a 70:30 female-to-male ratio.
  • Rabies Control: Mandatory rabies vaccination (ABC–ARV) for every sterilised dog.
  • Infrastructure: Kennels, veterinary facilities, vehicles, and hygienic shelters required.
  • Recordkeeping: Detailed records for catching, surgery, vaccination, and release.
  • Monitoring: State and local committees ensure compliance and handle complaints.
  • Legal Protection: Mass relocation or killing prohibited under the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (PCA) Act, 1960.
[UPSC 2010] Consider the following statements:

1. Every individual in the population is equally susceptible host for Swine Flu.

2. Antibiotics have no role in the primary treatment of Swine Flu

3.To prevent the future spread of Swine Flu in the epidemic area, the swine (pigs) must all be culled.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

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

 

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Forest Conservation Efforts – NFP, Western Ghats, etc.

Senna spectabilis removed from 1,963 hectares of land in Mudumalai TR

Why in the News?

The Tamil Nadu Forest Department has successfully removed Senna spectabilis, a highly invasive tree species, from 1,963 hectares of the Mudumalai Tiger Reserve (MTR).

Senna spectabilis removed from 1,963 hectares of land in Mudumalai TR

Mudumalai Tiger Reserve

  • Location: Situated in Nilgiris District, Tamil Nadu, at the tri-junction of Tamil Nadu, Kerala, and Karnataka.
  • Area: Covers 321 sq. km, forming part of the Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve, India’s first biosphere reserve.
  • Terrain: Undulating landscape ranging from 960–1266 m elevation.
  • Rivers: The Moyar River flows through the reserve, supporting rich biodiversity.
  • Vegetation: Includes evergreen, moist and dry deciduous forests, teak, bamboo, and grasslands (vayals).
  • Flora: Contains wild relatives of cultivated plants like rice, turmeric, and ginger.
  • Fauna: Home to tigers, elephants, gaurs, sambars, leopards, blackbucks, wild dogs, and 8% of India’s bird species.
  • Boundaries: Shares borders with Bandipur Tiger Reserve (Karnataka) and Wayanad Wildlife Sanctuary (Kerala).
  • Cultural Note: The Oscar-winning documentary “The Elephant Whisperers” was filmed at the Theppakadu Elephant Camp inside MTR.

About Senna spectabilis:

  • Origin: A fast-growing deciduous tree native to tropical America, introduced in India as an ornamental and shade plant.
  • Issues: Reaches 15–20 metres, produces thousands of seeds annually, spreading rapidly.
  • Invasive Impact: Dense canopy suppresses native trees and grasses, causes food scarcity for herbivores, and reduces biodiversity.
  • IUCN Status: Listed as ‘Least Concern’ but ecologically harmful in Indian forests.

How was the eradication achieved?

  • Method: Threefold strategy- debarking mature trees, uprooting saplings with weed pullers, and mechanically clearing seedlings.
  • Duration: Large trees dry up in about 18 months after debarking.
  • Post-Removal Use: Felled trees used for paper production.
  • Objective: Restore native flora, improve wildlife forage, and ensure long-term ecosystem recovery.
[UPSC 2018] Why is a plant called Prosopis juliflora often mentioned in news?

Options: (a) Its extract is widely used in cosmetics.

(b) It tends to reduce the biodiversity in the area in which it grows. *

(c) Its extract is used in the synthesis of pesticides.

(d) None of the above.

 

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[7th November 2025] The Hindu Oped: Redraw welfare architecture, place a UBI in the centre

PYQ Relevance

[UPSC 2015] In what way could replacement of price subsidy with Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) change the scenario of subsidies in India? Discuss.

Linkage: The shift from price subsidies to Direct Benefit Transfers (DBT) improved efficiency and targeting in welfare delivery. Universal Basic Income (UBI) is the next step in this evolution, moving from targeted transfers to universal, unconditional income support that ensures inclusion and economic stability.

Mentor’s Comment

As automation, artificial intelligence, and widening inequality reshape global economies, India faces an urgent need to rethink its welfare model. Universal Basic Income (UBI) , once dismissed as utopian, is emerging as a viable economic tool to balance growth with inclusion, stabilize consumption, and future-proof citizens against technology-driven disruptions.

Introduction and Why in the News

India’s wealth gap is at a 75-year high, and technological transformation is outpacing job creation. The article argues that a Universal Basic Income could act as a stabilizer for an economy characterized by automation-led job loss, consumption inequality, and welfare fragmentation. UBI thus represents both an economic necessity and moral evolution, a reform that can ensure social security while sustaining demand in an AI-driven economy.

Understanding UBI in the Economic Context

  1. Concept: A periodic, unconditional cash transfer to all citizens, regardless of income or employment.
  2. Economic Foundation: Acts as a floor for consumption and stabilizer of demand during economic downturns.
  3. Rationale in India: Addresses inefficiencies, leakages, and exclusions in existing welfare subsidies and improves fiscal targeting through direct transfers.
  4. Global Relevance: Countries like Finland, Kenya, and Iran have experimented with variants of basic income to address automation shocks and inequality.

Why India Needs a New Welfare Model

  • Automation and Jobless Growth:
    1. India’s labour-intensive sectors are losing relevance as AI and robotics replace routine work.
    2. A 2023 McKinsey Report estimates 40-45% of Indian jobs risk automation by 2030.
    3. Consumption Inequality: The top 10% hold over 40% of total income, weakening demand from lower strata, a key factor behind India’s K-shaped recovery post-COVID.
  • Fragmented Welfare Spending:
    1. Over 950 central schemes exist; only 20% reach intended beneficiaries (NITI Aayog, 2022).
    2. Rationalizing and merging subsidies could free 1-2% of GDP, enough to fund a phased UBI.

Fiscal Feasibility and Implementation Models

  1. Budgetary Realignment: A UBI costing ₹7,500 per person annually = ~1% of GDP, fiscally manageable by pruning inefficient subsidies.
  2. Digital Readiness: India’s JAM Trinity (Jan Dhan-Aadhaar-Mobile) enables transparent Direct Benefit Transfers (DBT) to 450+ million beneficiaries.
  3. Phased Approach:
    • Start with vulnerable groups (elderly, women, informal workers) and expand gradually.
    • Link with automation tax or digital economy levy to ensure sustainability.
  4. Behavioral Economics View: Unconditional transfers improve human capital investment (nutrition, education) without creating disincentive to work, proven in Madhya Pradesh SEWA UBI Pilot, 2013.

UBI as an Economic Stabilizer

  1. Counter-Cyclical Tool: Maintains aggregate demand in economic slowdowns; ensures liquidity among lower-income households.
  2. Productivity Boost: Financial security allows workers to upskill and pursue entrepreneurial ventures instead of insecure subsistence jobs.
  3. Gender Dividend: Recognizes unpaid care work and enhances female labour participation, a major economic multiplier.
  4. Rural Resilience: Ensures income continuity against climate shocks, agrarian distress, and market failures.

Challenges in Adopting UBI

  1. Fiscal Trade-offs: High recurring costs could strain the fiscal deficit if not balanced by rationalization of subsidies.
  2. Inflationary Pressure: Sudden increase in liquidity may spike prices unless accompanied by supply-side reforms.
  3. Exclusion Risks via Aadhaar/DBT: Digital divide and authentication errors can replicate old exclusion patterns.
  4. Political Economy Resistance: Targeted benefits create patronage networks; universalization dilutes control, making reform politically sensitive.

Global Insights for India

Country Nature of UBI Trial Lessons
Finland (2017-18) €560/month for unemployed Improved well-being, not joblessness
Kenya Cash transfer for 12 years Increased small business formation
Iran (2010) Universal transfer replacing subsidies Reduced poverty without fiscal collapse
Brazil (Bolsa Família) Conditional transfer, near-universal Boosted literacy, health, consumption

India can blend these experiences into a hybrid model: quasi-universal, fiscally prudent, and tech-enabled.

Conclusion

A Universal Basic Income is no longer a moral luxury, it is an economic inevitability in a future where automation, inequality, and climate shocks converge. By realigning subsidies and leveraging digital infrastructure, India can embed economic dignity into fiscal policy. UBI is not about welfare dependency, it is about stabilizing markets through empowered citizens.

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Surrogacy in India

The Second Issue: On Surrogacy for a Second Child

Introduction

The Surrogacy (Regulation) Act, 2021 stipulates that an “intending couple” is eligible for surrogacy only if they do not have any surviving child, biological, adopted or via surrogacy, except where the child is physically or mentally challenged or has a life-threatening disorder.A petition has been filed before the Supreme Court by a couple facing secondary infertility who seek to use surrogacy to have a second child. Their argument: the law’s restriction interferes with the reproductive choices of citizens and treats primary and secondary infertility differently.

What is the law’s objective and rationale

  1. Objective of the Act: The primary stated purpose is to prohibit commercial surrogacy, regulate fertility and surrogacy clinics, and protect surrogate mothers and children born through surrogacy.
  2. Eligibility restriction: Section 4(iii)(C)(II) mandates the ‘no surviving child’ condition for an intending couple.
  3. Rationale for restriction: The government’s position is that the use of another woman’s body for surrogacy demands strict regulation; therefore, limiting eligibility helps prevent exploitation and commercialization.
  4. Court’s interim view: The Supreme Court has indicated the restriction appears “reasonable” but is examining whether the ban on surrogacy for couples with a surviving child amounts to a violation of reproductive choice.

How does the law differentiate primary and secondary infertility

  1. Secondary infertility defined: In this context, it refers to couples unable to conceive or carry a pregnancy to term despite having borne a child naturally earlier.
  2. Law’s silence on distinction: The Act does not expressly differentiate between primary and secondary infertility in defining “infertility” for eligibility. The petitioners argue the statute uses “infertility” generically and should be read to include secondary infertility.
  3. Effect of the distinction: As a result of the clause, a couple with one surviving (healthy) child is barred from surrogacy for a second child, even if they face medical infertility. The petition argues this amounts to unreasonable discrimination.

Why is this matter significant now?

  1. Reproductive autonomy at stake: The case raises the question whether reproductive choice including whether and how many children to have falls under the fundamental right to privacy and reproductive autonomy (Article 21).
  2. Scale of the issue: Secondary infertility affects a substantial number of couples; the law’s bar effectively restricts access to surrogacy for many intending parents. The article emphasises that restricting access solely because a couple already has a child may not align with the law’s stated objective.
  3. Precedents of regulation being diluted: The Court recently relaxed age restrictions for couples who had frozen embryos prior to the law’s enactment, signalling willingness to interpret surrogacy law expansively.
  4. Contradiction with other family-related rights: There is no law in India capping the number of children a person may have naturally; yet, the surrogacy law imposes a “one-child existing” rule. This invites scrutiny of rational basis for differentiation.

What are the potential implications of a broader interpretation”

  1. Facilitating access: A more expansive reading allowing surrogacy for intending parents would align the law with reproductive autonomy and reduce arbitrary differentiation.
  2. Safeguard against exploitation: The law can maintain its core safeguards against commercialisation and exploitation while enabling access for medically infertile couples seeking a second child.
  3. Policy coherence: It would harmonise the surrogacy statute’s eligibility norms with the lack of statutory restriction on the number of natural children and prevent unjust exclusion of couples.
  4. Legal precedent: A favourable interpretation could open up examination of other eligibility criteria under the Act (such as age or marital status) in light of constitutional rights.

What are the counter-arguments and concerns?

  1. Risk of commercial surrogacy revival: Critics argue liberalising eligibility may inadvertently open doors to exploitation of surrogate mothers and a resurgence of commercial surrogacy in disguised form.
  2. Resource and monitoring constraints: Greater eligibility implies more oversight burden on regulatory infrastructure (ART clinics, surrogacy boards, monitoring of insurance/compensation).
  3. State interest in regulation: The restriction can be defended as within the State’s margin of appreciation to regulate surrogacy in public interest, preserving dignity of women and children.
  4. Potential slippery slope: Expanding eligibility might raise questions about single individuals, LGBTQ+ couples or live-in partners accessing surrogacy, aspects the law currently restricts.

Conclusion

The surrogacy debate in India reflects the evolving tension between state regulation and personal autonomy. While the law rightly seeks to prevent exploitation and commercialisation, it must not overlook the constitutional promise of reproductive freedom and equality. A more inclusive, rights-based interpretation, sensitive to medical realities like secondary infertility, would uphold both ethical safeguards and individual dignity, aligning the law with India’s vision of gender justice and compassionate governance.

Value Addition: Surrogacy Law in India

Legal Framework:

Surrogacy (Regulation) Act, 2021

  • Objective: Regulate surrogacy procedures, prohibit commercial surrogacy, and ensure ethical practices in assisted reproduction.
  • Type allowed: Only altruistic surrogacy (no monetary compensation except medical expenses and insurance).
    • Assisted Reproductive Technology (Regulation) Act, 2021
  • Objective: Regulate ART clinics and banks; maintain records, screening, and ethical standards for gamete donation and IVF processes.
  • Together, these Acts create a twin legal framework governing all forms of medically assisted reproduction in India.

Key Provisions of the Surrogacy (Regulation) Act, 2021

  1. Eligibility of intending couple:
    • Must be Indian citizens, legally married, and aged:
      • Husband: 26–55 years
      • Wife: 23–50 years
    • Must possess a certificate of infertility from a District Medical Board.
    • Must not have any surviving child (biological, adopted, or through surrogacy), except if the child is mentally/physically challenged or suffers a life-threatening disorder.
  2. Eligibility of surrogate mother:
    • Must be a married woman with a child of her own.
    • Age limit: 25–35 years.
    • Can act as a surrogate only once in her lifetime.
    • Must be a close relative of the intending couple.
    • Must obtain a certificate of medical and psychological fitness.
  3. National and State Surrogacy Boards: Oversee implementation, formulate policies, and ensure ethical compliance.
  4. Penal provisions:
    • Commercial surrogacy, sale/purchase of human embryos, and exploitation of surrogate mothers attract imprisonment up to 10 years and fine up to ₹10 lakh.

Objectives and Rationale

  1. Prevent commercial exploitation: Protects poor women from being coerced into surrogacy for financial gain.
  2. Ensure child welfare: Guarantees the child’s legal status and parentage from birth.
  3. Promote ethical medical practices: Prevents unregulated fertility clinics and misuse of technology.
  4. Align with constitutional morality: Balances individual reproductive rights with social ethics and public health considerations.

Judicial and Policy Developments

  1. SC observations (2023–2025):
    • Examining secondary infertility cases to test whether barring surrogacy for a second child violates reproductive autonomy under Article 21.
    • Previously allowed age relaxation for couples with frozen embryos prior to enactment of the Act.
  2. Delhi High Court (2023): Directed the government to reconsider rules preventing single women or widows from accessing surrogacy, citing discrimination concerns.
  3. Policy evolution: Shift from the 2015 ban on foreign commercial surrogacy to a 2021 framework permitting only altruistic domestic surrogacy.

PYQ Relevance

[UPSC 2023] Explain the constitutional perspectives of Gender Justice with the help of relevant constitutional provisions and case laws.

Linkage: This question is key as it tests understanding of Articles 14, 15 and 21 on women’s equality and autonomy. This is central to debates like the Surrogacy Act 2021, which restricts reproductive choice and raises issues of bodily rights and gender justice.

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Electoral Reforms In India

Why the nomination process needs reform

Introduction

The Representation of the People Act (RPA), 1951, empowers the Election Commission of India (ECI) and returning officers to scrutinize nominations to ensure candidates meet legal qualifications. However, excessive procedural formalism has made nomination scrutiny a potential chokepoint where even minor clerical errors can disqualify legitimate contenders. This procedural rigidity, instead of filtering unqualified candidates, has evolved into a tool of exclusion, undermining electoral fairness and the voter’s right to choice, a core tenet of representative democracy.

Why is the Nomination Process in News?

A young woman from Darda Nagar Haveli recently had her nomination for a municipal election rejected without hearing or clarification, sparking outrage. The issue resonates nationally because it reveals how India’s nomination process. Once a procedural safeguard now functions as a gatekeeping mechanism, often silencing genuine candidates on technical grounds. This marks a sharp contrast with the intended democratic spirit of the RPA and represents a major procedural failure in the electoral framework.

How Does India’s Nomination Process Work?

  1. Legal Framework: Governed by Section 33 to 36 of the RPA, 1951.
  2. Returning Officer’s Power: The RO decides on validity; their decision is final at the nomination stage.
  3. Grounds for Rejection: Nomination can be rejected for “defective or incomplete declaration,” even if trivial.
  4. Judicial Context: The Resurgence India v. Election Commission (2014) case held that a wrong declaration is disqualifiable, but an incomplete one is not. Yet, in practice, both are often treated alike.

What Are the Problems in the Existing Process?

  1. Excessive Proceduralism
    • Focus on compliance over intent: The system overemphasizes technical correctness of forms rather than substantive eligibility.
    • Example: Minor errors like mismatched affidavits, late filings, or missing entries in Form 26 (assets/liabilities) can lead to disqualification.
  2. Discretionary Power and Arbitrary Rejection
    • Unilateral authority: ROs can reject nominations without appeal or review, creating room for bias or manipulation.
    • Violation of Article 326: Denies both the candidate’s right to contest and the voter’s right to choose.
  3. Delay and Lack of Rectification
    • No correction window: Candidates have no opportunity to correct clerical errors before rejection.
    • Contrast: Countries like the UK and Canada allow rectification before the final list is published.
  4. Facilitation vs Filtration
    • Wrong design philosophy: The nomination process should facilitate participation, not filter out candidates on hyper-technical grounds.
    • Outcome: Bureaucratic compliance is rewarded over democratic legitimacy.

How Have Other Democracies Addressed This?

  1. UK Model: Allows candidates to correct nomination papers within a defined time.
  2. Canada: Uses a post-scrutiny correction period to avoid unjust disqualifications.
  3. United States: Courts can overturn wrongful exclusions promptly through expedited hearings.

These systems treat nomination scrutiny as an inclusive process ensuring access, not exclusion, emphasizing facilitation over filtration.

What Can Be Done to Reform the Process?

  1. Institutional Reform
    • Independent Review Mechanism: Introduce an appeal or review system within 24 hours for rejected nominations.
    • Digital Scrutiny System: Online form submissions and auto-validation to reduce human error and bias.
  2. Procedural Reforms
    • Correction Period: Allow 48-hour correction for minor defects, akin to GST return rectifications.
    • Uniform Scrutiny Guidelines: Draft model SOPs by the Election Commission for all states.
  3. Accountability Reforms
    • Recordable Decisions: ROs must record written reasons for rejections; such records should be reviewable by the ECI.
    • Transparency Measures: Make all nominations, scrutiny notes, and rejections publicly available online.

Conclusion

India’s electoral democracy must evolve from a bureaucratic to a participatory model. The nomination process, meant to protect electoral integrity, should not become an instrument of disenfranchisement. Reform should focus on substantive eligibility, procedural fairness, and digital transparency. This ensures that every qualified citizen has a fair opportunity to contest preserving the spirit of democracy envisioned in the Constitution.

PYQ Relevance

[UPSC 2017] To enhance the quality of democracy in India, the Election Commission of India has proposed electoral reforms in 2016. What are the suggested reforms and how far are they significant to make democracy successful?

Linkage: Electoral reforms in specific and Election Commission in particular is a recurring theme in UPSC mains exam. This 2017 PYQ covers procedural and legal reforms including nomination scrutiny, transparency in funding, and fair competition.

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Electoral Reforms In India

Right to Vote NOT same as Freedom of Voting: Centre

Why in the News?

The Union Government has submitted before the Supreme Court that the ‘right to vote’ is distinct from the ‘freedom of voting’.

About the Case and Centre’s Affidavit:

  • Petition: Filed by Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy and the Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR).
  • Context: Concerns Section 53(2) of the Representation of the People Act (RPA), 1951, which allows uncontested candidates to be declared elected without polling.
  • Core Challenge: Argues that uncontested elections deny voters the right to dissent through NOTA, violating Article 19(1)(a) of the Constitution.
  • Centre’s Argument: Draws a distinction between the “Right to Vote” (statutory) and “Freedom of Voting” (fundamental right).
  • Legal Basis:
    • Right to Vote – Granted by Section 62 of RPA, 1951, subject to statutory limits.
    • Freedom of Voting – A form of free expression under Article 19(1)(a), as held in PUCL v. Union of India (2003).
  • Government’s Position: The freedom of voting exists only when a poll occurs; in uncontested elections, no poll means no expressive act under Article 19.

Legal Reasoning by the Government:

  • Poll Dependency: Freedom of voting arises only during active polling; without a poll, no expressive right is engaged.
  • Statutory Framework:
    • Section 53(1) – Poll required when candidates exceed seats.
    • Sections 53(2) & 53(3) – If candidates ≤ seats, no poll needed; candidate declared elected.
  • NOTA’s Legal Status: NOTA is not a “candidate” under Section 79(b); it is merely an expression option, not an electoral participant.
  • Administrative Rationale: Holding polls solely to include NOTA would waste resources and delay electoral outcomes.
  • EC’s View: The Election Commission concurred, treating NOTA as a candidate would need legislative amendment.
  • Empirical Data: Only 9 uncontested elections since 1951, making such instances rare exceptions in Indian democracy.

About Right to Vote in India:

  • Overview: It is also known as suffrage, allows citizens to elect their representatives in democratic institutions.
  • Constitutional Basis: Guaranteed under Article 326 of the Constitution of India, which provides for universal adult franchise.
  • Eligibility: Every citizen of India aged 18 and above is entitled to vote, unless disqualified by law.
  • Supervision: Organised and overseen by the Election Commission of India.
  • Supporting Laws:
    • Representation of the People Act, 1950: Defines voter eligibility and grounds for disqualification.
    • Representation of the People Act, 1951: Governs the procedures for conducting elections.
  • Current Legal Status: : It is legally a statutory right.
  • Constitutional Context: It is shaped by constitutional provisions but does not hold the status of a fundamental right.

Judicial Interpretation:

  • N.P. Ponnuswami v. Returning Officer (1952): Declared the Right to Vote as a statutory right.
  • Jyoti Basu v. Debi Ghosal (1982): Reiterated that the Right to Vote is neither a fundamental right nor a common law right.
  • People’s Union for Civil Liberties v. Union of India (2003): Recognised the Right to Vote as at least a constitutional right.
  • Kuldip Nayar v. Union of India (2006): Held that the Right to Vote continues to be a statutory right.
  • Raj Bala v. State of Haryana (2015): Recognised the Right to Vote as a constitutional right.
  • Anoop Baranwal v. Union of India (2023):
    • Majority View: Right to Vote is a statutory right.
    • Dissenting Opinion by Justice Ajay Rastogi:
      • Linked the Right to Vote with the freedom of speech and expression under Article 19(1)(a).
      • Considered it essential to free and fair elections and thus part of the basic structure of the Constitution.

Back2Basics: Other Types of Rights in India

Description Enforceability
Natural Rights Inherent and inalienable rights (e.g., life, liberty); not directly enforceable unless linked to fundamental rights. Indirectly through Fundamental Rights
Fundamental Rights Guaranteed under Part III of the Constitution (e.g., right to equality, speech, life). Enforceable in Supreme Court under Article 32
Constitutional Rights Rights given in the Constitution but outside Part III (e.g., property, trade). Enforceable under Article 226 via High Courts
Statutory Rights Granted by ordinary laws (e.g., MGNREGA, Forest Rights Act, Food Security Act). Enforceable as per respective legislations

 

[UPSC 2017] Right to vote and to be elected in India is a:

Options: (a) Fundamental Right (b) Natural Right (c) Constitutional Right* (d) Legal Right

 

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CAG plans to create two new cadres for more centralisation

Why in the News?

The Comptroller and Auditor General of India approved two new Indian Audit and Accounts Department (IA&AD) cadres, the Central Revenue Audit and Central Expenditure Audit, effective from 1 January 2026.

About the New Cadres:

  • Objective: Designed to build deeper professional expertise in auditing Central receipts and expenditures, streamline manpower management, and reduce dependence on regional deployments.
    1. Central Revenue Audit (CRA): Focuses on auditing Central Government revenues, including direct taxes, indirect taxes, customs, excise, and non-tax receipts. It ensures compliance, accuracy, and transparency in revenue administration.
    2. Central Expenditure Audit (CEA): Concentrates on auditing Central Government expenditures, assessing legality, efficiency, and prudence in public spending across ministries and departments.
  • Impact: The reform consolidates around 4,000 audit professionals (out of a total CAG strength of ~42,000), improving manpower flexibility, domain expertise, and data-driven audit capabilities.
  • Significance: Marks a major shift toward centralised auditing, ensuring a uniform approach to the examination of national finances and reinforcing accountability in public administration.

About the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) of India:

  • Overview: Established under Article 148, the CAG heads the Indian Audit and Accounts Department (IA&AD) and acts as guardian of public finance.
  • Legal Framework: Functions under the CAG (Duties, Powers and Conditions of Service) Act, 1971, amended in 1976, 1984, and 1987.
  • Appointment & Tenure:
    • Appointed by the President under warrant and seal.
    • Tenure – Six years or until age 65, whichever earlier.
    • Removal – Same as a Supreme Court judge, requiring special majority in Parliament.
  • Independence Safeguards:
    • Salary and expenses charged on the Consolidated Fund of India.
    • No reappointment to government posts after retirement.
    • No minister can defend the CAG in Parliament.
  • Duties & Powers:
    • Audits Consolidated Funds of the Union, States, and UTs.
    • Examines PSUs, autonomous bodies, and grant-in-aid institutions.
    • Submits reports to the President, later examined by the Public Accounts Committee (PAC).
  • Role & Importance: Serves as the watchdog of public finance, conducting regulatory and propriety audits to ensure legality and efficiency in expenditure.
  • International Role: Currently the External Auditor for IAEA (2022–2027) and FAO (2020–2025), enhancing India’s global audit leadership.
[UPSC 2012] In India, other than ensuring that public funds are used efficiently and for intended purpose, what is the importance of the office of the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG)?

1. CAG exercises exchequer control on behalf of the Parliament when the President of India declares national emergency/financial emergency

2. CAG reports on the execution of projects or programmes by the ministries are discussed by the Public Accounts Committee.

3. Information from CAG reports can be used by investigating agencies to press charges against those who have violated the law while managing public finances.

4. While dealing with the audit and accounting of government companies, CAG has certain judicial powers for prosecuting those who violate the law.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

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

 

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State of Food and Agriculture Report, 2025

Why in the News?

The State of Food and Agriculture (SOFA) Report 2025, released by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) on 3 November 2025, highlights the alarming global impact of human-induced land degradation.

About the SOFA Report:

  • Goal: Aims to help governments design sustainable land management and food security policies.
  • Publication: Released annually by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations as one of its flagship analytical reports.
  • Focus (2025 Edition): Examines human-induced land degradation and its effects on agricultural productivity, poverty, and ecosystem stability.
  • Analytical Scope: Integrates soil data, land use patterns, crop yields, and socioeconomic indicators to identify global vulnerability hotspots.

Key Global Findings (2025):

  • Population Exposure: Around 1.7 billion people live in land-degraded regions with declining agricultural output.
  • Deforestation Drivers: Agricultural expansion remains the cause of nearly 90% of global forest loss.
  • Land Use Trends (2001–2023): Global agricultural land shrank by 78 mha (–2%); cropland increased by 78 mha, while pastures declined by 151 mha.
  • Land Abandonment: About 3.6 mha of cropland is abandoned annually due to soil degradation.
  • Restoration Potential: Reversing 10% of degraded cropland could feed 154 million people yearly; restoring abandoned land could feed 476 million.
  • Vulnerability Hotspots: Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia face the highest overlap of degradation, poverty, and child malnutrition.
  • Farm Structure Inequality: Small farms (<2 ha) constitute 85% of all farms but hold only 9% of farmland; large farms (>1,000 ha) control nearly 50% of it.
  • Degradation Masking: Large farms offset degradation through high input use, while smallholders face disproportionate yield losses.

India-specific Insights:

  • Overview: India among countries with highest yield losses due to human-driven land degradation.
  • Regional Impact: Eastern and southern India worst affected owing to dense population and intensive cropping.
  • Major Causes: Include soil erosion, nutrient depletion, deforestation, and over-irrigation.
  • FAO Recommendations:
    • Scale up sustainable land management, soil health, and watershed programs.
    • Promote precision farming, agroforestry, and organic inputs for soil restoration.
    • Strengthen smallholder resilience through credit, technology, and market access.
    • Integrate land restoration with national missions like PM-KUSUM and PMKSY for long-term sustainability.
[UPSC 2024] Consider the following statements:

1. India is a member of the International Grains Council.

2. The country needs to be a member of the International Grains Council for exporting or importing rice and wheat.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

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

 

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