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  • Democratise and empower city governments

    Context

    The “State Finances, Study of Budgets of 2021-22” report, correctly identify the role of the city governments in meeting the challenges the pandemic has thrown up, the report also points to the draining of resources.

    What the RBI report says about the role of local governments

    • The report highlights the frontline role played by the third-tier governments by implementing containment strategies, healthcare.
    • Due to this, their finances have come under severe strain, forcing them to cut down expenditures and mobilise funding from various sources.
    • Need for functional autonomy: The RBI further commented that the functional autonomy of civic bodies must increase and their governance structure strengthened.
    • Empowering financially: This could happen by ‘empowering them financially through higher resource availability.
    • The RBI did echo the recommendations of the 15th Finance Commission report on local bodies that emphasised city governance structures and financial empowerment.
    • Limited coverage of property tax: The RBI report also highlights the limited coverage of property tax and its failure in shoring up municipal corporation revenues.
    • Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) data show that India has the lowest property tax collection rate in the world — i.e., property tax to GDP ratio. 

    Issues faced by city governments

    • During the pandemic, while leaders from the Prime Minister to Chief Ministers to District Magistrate were seen taking a call on disaster mitigation strategies, city mayors were found missing.
    • The old approach of treating cities as adjuncts of State governments continues to dominate the policy paradigm.
    • The general approach towards urban empowerment has remained piecemeal in India.
    • The first intervention to understand ‘the urban’ (though there are references in the Five Year plans) and plan with a pan-Indian vision took place in the 1980s when the National Commission On Urbanisation was formed with Charles Correa as its chairperson.
    • Another important intervention was in the first half of the 1990s with the Constitution 73rd and 74th Amendments. 
    • The latter refers to urban reforms — empowering urban local bodies to perform 18 functions listed in the 12th Schedule.
    • However, there is no mention of financial empowerment.
    • The only exception to the rule has been the people’s plan model of Kerala where 40% of the State’s plan budget was for local bodies (directly) with a transfer of important subjects such as planning, etc.

    How to achieve functional autonomy for city government

    • This should happen with three F’s: the transfer of ‘functions, finances and functionaries’ to city governments.
    • There are nearly 5,000 statutory towns and an equal number of census towns in India.
    • Nearly 35% of the population lives in urban centres.
    • And, nearly two-thirds of the country’s GDP stems from cities and almost 90% of government revenue flows from urban centres.
    • Before value-added tax and other centralised taxation systems, one of the major earnings of cities used to be from octroi.
    • But this source of revenue collection was taken away by the State and the central governments.
    • Instead, finance commissions recommended grants to urban local bodies based on a formula of demographic profile. 
    • In such a situation, it is difficult for the towns to sustain their ability to perform their bare minimum functions, especially with the latest Pay Commission recommendations.
    • This has resulted in burdening people more with taxes and further privatisation/outsourcing of the services of the municipalities.
    • The often-cited example is how cities in the Scandinavian countries manage their functions well — from city planning to mobility to waste management.
    • But the truth is that a chunk of the income tax from citizens is given to city governments.
    • A committee formed by the Ministry of Housing and Urban Development to review the 74th constitutional amendment recommended that 10% of income tax collected from the cities was to be given back to them as a direct revenue grant from the central government.

    Way forward

    • 1] Cities must be treated as important centres of governance, where democratic decentralisation can bring in amazing results.
    • There will be transparency and adequate participation of the people.
    • 2] Cities should not be considered as entrepreneurship spaces where the sole driving force is to make them competitive to attract investments.
    • 3] The resources required for quantitative and qualitative data must be immediately provided to the cities to ensure a disaster risk reduction plan keeping vulnerable communities in mind.
    • 4] A piecemeal approach such as the concept of ‘smart cities’ must be shunned altogether.
    • This approach further widens the gap between different sets of people.
    • 5] Leadership in the cities must be elected for a term of five years. 
    • Likewise, the third F, i.e., functionaries, must be transferred to the cities with a permanent cadre.

    Consider the question “The functional autonomy of civic bodies must be increased and their governance structure strengthened. This could happen by ‘empowering them financially through higher resource availability’. Comment.” 

    Conclusion

    Thus, in this exercise by the RBI, the good part is that there has least been a mention of cities, with local bodies as important centres of governance.

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  • Health Sector – UHC, National Health Policy, Family Planning, Health Insurance, etc.

    National Commission for Safai Karamcharis gets 3-year extension

    The Union Cabinet has approved a three-year extension of the tenure of the National Commission for Safai Karamcharis (NCSK) that was set to end on March 31.

    About National Commission for Safai Karamcharis

    • The commission was set up in 1993 under the NCSK Act 1993 for a period of three years, which has been extended since then.
    • The NCSK Act is however ceased to have effect from February 29, 2004.
    • After that, the tenure of the NCSK has been extended as a non-statutory body from time to time through resolutions.

    Why was NCSK set up?

    • The commission helps in coming up with programmes for the welfare of sanitation workers.
    • It also monitors the implementation of the Prohibition of Employment as Manual Scavengers and their Rehabilitation Act, 2013.
    • Till December 31, 2021, 58,098 manual scavengers had been identified.

    Need for eliminating Manual Scavenging

    • Undignified life (all the 6 Fundamental Rights are compromised, directly or indirectly).
    • It directly perpetuates castism.
    • Modern, Secular India has no place for such “professions”.
    • It no way suits India’s rising global profile – ‘super power’ aspirations.
    • Women are mostly disprivileged since most manual scavengers are dalit women.

    What else needs to be done?

    • Though the government has taken many steps for the upliftment of the safai karamcharis, the deprivation suffered by them in socio-economic and educational terms is still far from being eliminated.
    • Although manual scavenging has been almost eradicated, sporadic instances of their deaths do occur.

    Way forward

    • There is a continued need to monitor the various interventions and initiatives of the government for welfare of safai Karamcharis.
    • The govt must strive to achieve the goal of complete mechanization of sewer/septic tanks cleaning in the country and rehabilitation of manual scavengers.

    Try this question from CSP 2016:

    Q.’Rashtriya Garima Abhiyaan’ is a national campaign to:

    (a) rehabilitate the homeless and destitute persons and provide them with suitable sources of livelihood

    (b) release the sex workers from their practice and provide them with alternative sources of livelihood

    (c) eradicate the practice of manual scavenging and rehabilitate the manual scavengers

    (d) release the bonded labourers from their bondage and rehabilitate them

     

    Post your answers here:

     

    Also try this question from our AWE initiative:

    Manual scavenging has been called as a worst surviving symbol of untouchability. Critically discuss the measures taken by Government to eradicate this practice? (250 W)

     

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  • Global Geological And Climatic Events

    What is the Pacific ‘Ring of Fire’?

    The Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai volcano which massively erupted lies along the Pacific ‘Ring of fire’, and is just over 60 kilometers from the island nation of Tonga.

    What is the Pacific ‘Ring of Fire’?

    • The Pacific ‘Ring of Fire’ or Pacific rim, or the Circum-Pacific Belt, is an area along the Pacific Ocean that is characterized by active volcanoes and frequent earthquakes.
    • Volcanic arcs and oceanic trenches partly encircling the Pacific Basin form the so-called Ring of Fire.
    • It is home to about 75 per cent of the world’s volcanoes – more than 450 volcanoes.
    • Also, about 90 per cent of the world’s earthquakes occur here.

    Its spread

    • Its length is over 40,000 kilometres and traces from New Zealand clockwise in an almost circular arc covering Tonga, Kermadec Islands, Indonesia.
    • It is moving up to the Philippines, Japan, and stretching eastward to the Aleutian Islands, then southward along the western coast of North America and South America.

    Seismic activity of the region

    • The area is along several tectonic plates including the Pacific plate, Philippine Plate, Juan de Fuca plate, Cocos plate, Nazca plate, and North American plate.
    • The movement of these plates or tectonic activity makes the area witness abundant earthquakes and tsunamis every year.
    • Along much of the Ring, tectonic plates move towards each other creating subduction zones.
    • One plate gets pushed down or is subducted by the other plate.
    • This is a very slow process – a movement of just one or two inches per year.
    • As this subduction happens, rocks melt, become magma and move to Earth’s surface and cause volcanic activity.

    What has happened in recent eruption in Tonga?

    • In the case of Tonga, the Pacific Plate was pushed down below the Indo-Australian Plate and Tonga plate, causing the molten rock to rise above and form the chain of volcanoes.
    • Subduction zones are also where most of the violent earthquakes on the planet occur.
    • The December 26, 2004 earthquake occurred along the subduction zone where the Indian Plate was subducted beneath the Burma plate.

     

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  • Climate Change Impact on India and World – International Reports, Key Observations, etc.

    Nusantara City: New Capital of Indonesia

    Indonesia passed a bill replacing its capital Jakarta with East Kalimantan, situated to the east of Borneo island. The new capital city of the country will be called Nusantara.

    About Nusantara

    • The New State Capital Law Bill has been drafted by a special committee set up by Widodo’s government and makes Nusantara, also called IKN, the capital of the Republic of Indonesia.
    • The transfer of the status of Jakarta as Indonesia’s capital to Nusantara, where 256,142 hectares of land has been set aside for the project, will take place in the “first semester” of 2024.
    • East Kalimantan, where the new capital will be, as per the bill is said to have a world-city vision.
    • It will be designed and managed with the objective of becoming a sustainable city in the world.

    Why is Indonesia changing its capital city?

    • The new location is very strategic – it’s in the centre of Indonesia and close to urban areas.
    • The burden Jakarta is holding right now is too heavy as the centre of governance, business, finance, trade and services.
    • Jakarta is also infamous for being the worlds’ first sinking capital city due to rising sea levels.
    • The city’s pollution levels are so bad that it has been ranking as one of the most polluted cities in the world for years.
    • Another important reason to shift the capital from Java island to Borneo island has been the growing inequality – financial and otherwise.

    Where is East Kalimantan?

    • East Kalimantan is 2,300 kilometres from Jakarta on the eastern side of Borneo island, shared by Indonesia, Malaysia and Brunei.
    • The new capital will be located in the North Penajam Paser and Kutai Kartanegara regions.
    • East Kalimantan is an area with immense water resources and habitable terrain.
    • East Kalimantan is rich in flora and fauna.

    Why Nusantara?

    • Nusantara is an old Javanese term that means ‘archipelago’.
    • Nusantara has historical, sociological, and philosophical aspects attached to the name.
    • The name would represent Indonesia as a whole and would show the potential of the nation.

    What are the other countries that have changed capitals?

    • Indonesia is not the first country to change its capital city.
    • There has been a long list of countries that have changed their capitals for various reasons. Brazil changed its capital city from Rio De Janerio to Brasilia, a more centrally-located city, in 1960.
    • In 1991, Nigeria hanged the country’s capital from Lagos to Abuja.
    • Kazakhstan moved its capital city from Almaty, which is still its commercial centre, to Nur-Sultan in 1997.
    • Myanmar changed its capital from Rangoon to Naypyidaw in 2005.

     

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  • Festivals, Dances, Theatre, Literature, Art in News

    AP govt bans Chintamani Padya Natakam: A noted Telugu folk play

    The Andhra Pradesh government has brought the curtains down on the popular Telugu play ‘Chintamani Padya Natakam’, which has enthralled people for almost 100 years.

    Chintamani Padya Natakam

    • It is a stage play penned by social reformer, writer and poet Kallakuri Narayana Rao about 100 years ago.
    • In the play, the writer explains how people neglect their families by falling prey to certain social evils.
    • It was aimed to create awareness on the Devadasi system and how the flesh trade was ruining many families at that particular period.
    • Subbisetty, Chintamani, Bilvamangaludu, Bhavani Shankaram, and Srihari are some of the characters in the play.

    Its performance

    • The play is named after the main character, Chintamani, a woman born into a family involved in the flesh trade.
    • The play focuses on how she attained salvation after repentance.
    • Subbi Shetty, a character in the play, loses his wealth to Chintamani and his character is utilised in a way that engages the audience.
    • Chintamani play is popular across the state. It has been performed at thousands of places.
    • The play continues to engage the audience even today and has become a must stage play in villages during Dasara celebrations.

    Why it got banned?

    • Began as a social sermon, this play has been increasingly going vulgar.
    • Subbi Shetty, who resembles a person of a transgender community, is used to portray the social group in a bad way.
    • Obscene dialogues are added to the play in the name of creativity.

     

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  • Wildlife Conservation Efforts

    Species in news: Swamp Deer

    The population of the vulnerable eastern swamp deer, extinct elsewhere in South Asia, has dipped (from 907 in 2018 to 868 in 2020 ) in the Kaziranga National Park and Tiger Reserve.

    Swamp Deer

    • The swamp deer also called as barasingha is a deer species distributed in the Indian subcontinent.
    • Populations in northern and central India are fragmented, and two isolated populations occur in southwestern Nepal.
    • It has been locally extinct in Pakistan and Bangladesh, and its presence is uncertain in Bhutan.
    • In Assamese, barasingha is called dolhorina; dol meaning swamp.

    Note: Swamp deers do occur in the Kanha National Park of Madhya Pradesh, in two localities in Assam, and in only 6 localities in Uttar Pradesh.

    Conservation status

    • IUCN Red List: Endangered
    • CITES: Appendix I
    • Wildlife Protection Act of 1972: Schedule I

     

    Try this PYQ:

    Q. Consider the following fauna of India:

    1. Gharial
    2. Leatherback turtle
    3. Swamp deer

    Which of the above is/are endangered?

    (a) 1 and 2 only

    (b) 3 only

    (c) 1, 2 and 3

    (d) None

     

    Post your answers here.

     

     

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  • New Species of Plants and Animals Discovered

    Species in news: Miss Kerala

    A section of aquarists and ornamental fish breeders are surprised that the Denison barb (Miss Kerala), a native freshwater fish species commonly found in parts of Karnataka and Kerala, has been included in Schedule I of the Wild Life Protection Act, 1982 (amendment bill).

    Miss Kerala

    • Miss Kerala is also known as Denison barb, red-line torpedo barb and roseline shark.
    • Its scientific name is Sahyadria denisonii.
    • The fish is featured with red and black stripes on its body.
    • It is found in the States of Kerala and Karnataka.
    • It has been listed on the IUCN Redlist as Vulnerable, in 2010.
    • This species is known to inhabit fast-flowing hill streams and is often found in rocky pools with thick vegetation along river banks.

    Why included in Schedule I of WPA?

    • Ironically, its beauty is the biggest threat to its survival, as it is highly sought-after in the international aquarium trade, constituting 60 – 65% of the total live ornamental fish exported from India.
    • Its numbers are also decreasing owing to habitat degradation due to deforestation, mining, agriculture, urban expansion and hydro-electric projects.

     

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  • Government Budgets

    What the budget needs to do

    Context

    We need to insure the most vulnerable against shocks such as Covid, but even more, we need to create good job opportunities for the unskilled. What can the budget do?

    Impact on informal economy

    • The last two quarters have seen a substantive recovery in the Indian economy.
    • Corporate profitability of our largest firms has hit a new record this year.
    • So have GST collections, another indicator of the formal economy, with an average monthly collection of Rs 1.2 trillion in the second and third quarters.
    • The glass though is half full, the informal economy was particularly badly hit by Covid and its associated lockdowns.
    • Small enterprises, retail, hospitality, and construction were all hammered.
    • These were our main source of recent employment growth.
    •  Agricultural employment has risen in the last year-and-a-half, while manufacturing and services employment has fallen — this is the opposite of development.
    •  Informal service sector jobs may not seem like great jobs to us, but they are greatly prized relative to eking out a marginal existence in agriculture.
    • We need to insure the most vulnerable against such shocks, but even more, we need to create good job opportunities for the unskilled, equip people at all levels to participate more fully in the modern economy, and systemically promote wider policies of inclusion.

    What can the budget do?

    • Create good jobs for unskilled: The way it can do so directly is through accelerating spending on infrastructure.
    • The National Infrastructure Pipeline has identified a good set of projects.
    • The government should be complimented for its intention and ambition; what we need now is implementation.
    • Labour-intensive manufacturing: Most countries developed by putting millions to work in labour-intensive manufacturing.
    • We do not have the huge firms in export-oriented labour-intensive sectors that employ millions in China, Vietnam, and Bangladesh.
    •  Bangladesh has thrived by putting millions to work in manufacturing.
    • A booming garment sector employs 4.4 million.
    • As 80 per cent of those employed in garment factories are women, Bangladesh has twice the female labour force participation ratio of India.
    • Implement labour laws: In June and September 2020, the government passed four labour laws.
    • These laws have since been left dormant.
    • The budget should announce a time frame for implementation, notification by the Union government and then by the states.
    • Investment in education and skilling:  India has among the least skilled workforces in the world.
    • Under 5 per cent of our workforce is formally skilled, compared to 96 per cent in South Korea, 75 per cent in Germany and 52 per cent in the US.
    • That is why the work of the National Skills Development Corporation is so important.
    • Can the budget specify it as an independent entity controlled and run by the private sector that is then held accountable for delivering on our skilling targets.
    • Education is even more important, especially primary education.
    • Pratham’s education reports make for sobering reading.
    • The New Education Policy has a proposal that every second standard child should be able to read and do arithmetic at the second standard level as a foundation for further education.
    • This welcome initiative must receive greater dedication and focus from both government and industry.
    • School education is a state subject, so the Union budget can at best incentivise states to do the right things, say by linking the flow of additional funds to those that demonstrate improved second standard learning outcomes.
    • As a part of CSR, many companies work actively with schools.
    • Education is already the largest single area for CSR spending, accounting for one-third of the Rs 9,000 crore spent by the top 100 companies.

    Conclusion

    Other policies for economic inclusion must go beyond social inclusion. These include measures like reducing tariffs to benefit millions of consumers instead of thousands of firms. Industrial policies that help all firms such as the ease of doing business, instead of incentivising a selected few.

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  • Preventing genocide

    Context

    Incendiary speeches at a religious assembly include calls for the genocide of Muslims in India and can be seen as part of an ongoing pattern of targeting minorities.

    Background of the convention against genocide

    • India’s role: India has signed and ratified the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide of 1948.
    • In 1946, Cuba, India and Panama co-sponsored General Assembly Resolution 96(I), which affirmed genocide as a ‘crime under international law’.
    • As a result of this resolution, a convention on the prohibition of genocide was drafted, which was passed by the General Assembly in 1948 and came into effect in 1951, with more than 150 states party to the convention presently.
    • Legal obligation: Legal obligations on states that are party to the convention include:
    • the obligation not to commit genocide,
    • to prevent genocide, and to punish genocide(Article I),
    • to enact legislation to give effect to the provisions of the convention (Article V);
    • to provide for effective penalties for those found guilty of criminal conduct (Article V); and
    • the obligation to try those charged with genocide in a competent tribunal (Article VI).

    No legislation enacted by India

    • Since signing the Genocide Convention and ratifying it, to date India has not enacted any legislation in accordance with Article VI of the Genocide Convention.
    • At the outset, India is in violation of its international obligation to criminalise genocide within its domestic law per Articles V, VI and VII, and to take all means to ensure the prevention of genocide.
    •  Indian domestic law shows that there are no comparable provisions for the prosecution of any mass crimes, least of all genocide.
    • Indian Penal Code provisions relating to rioting, unlawful assembly and ‘promoting enmity between different groups’ do not embody the basic elements of the crime of genocide, which is against a collectivity or a group, with the specific intent to cause its destruction.
    • These also do not pertain to another key aspect of the Genocide Convention – that of prevention, and creating the conditions in which such hate speech and other associated acts are not allowed to flourish.

    Significance of the Gambia’s proceedings before the ICJ against Myanmar

    •  The Gambia has initiated proceedings before the International Court of Justice (ICJ) against Myanmar on the basis of the Convention.
    • The ICJ, relying on a previous case of Belgium v. Senegal, stated, “It follows that any State party to the Genocide Convention, and not only a specially affected State, may invoke the responsibility of another State party with a view to ascertaining the alleged failure to comply with its obligations erga omnes partes, and to bring that failure to an end.”

    Conclusion

    It is more imperative than ever that international legal protections against genocide are incorporated in domestic legislation. Furthermore, the fact that India has international legal obligations under the Genocide Convention which it is not adhering to must be rectified.

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  • Economic Indicators and Various Reports On It- GDP, FD, EODB, WIR etc

    What is World Economic Forum’s Davos Agenda ’22?

    PM Modi has made a special address ahead of the theme-setting World Economic Forum (WEF) Agenda on the ‘State of the World’ at Davos.

    About World Economic Forum (WEF)

    • WEF is an international non-governmental and lobbying organisation based in Cologny, canton of Geneva, Switzerland.
    • It was founded on 24 January 1971 by German engineer and economist Klaus Schwab.
    • The foundation, which is mostly funded by its 1,000 member companies – typically global enterprises with more than five billion US dollars in turnover – as well as public subsidies.
    • It aims at improving the state of the world by engaging business, political, academic, and other leaders of society to shape global, regional, and industry agendas.

    Major reports released:

    • Engaging Tomorrow Consumer Report
    • Inclusive growth & Development Report
    • Environmental Performance Index
    • Global Competitive Index
    • Global Energy Architecture Performance Index Report
    • Global Gender Gap Report
    • Global Information Technology Report
    • Human Capital Report
    • Inclusive growth & Development Report
    • Global Risk Report
    • Travel and Tourism Competitiveness Report by WEF

    Important agenda: Davos meeting

    • The WEF is mostly known for its annual meeting at the end of January in Davos, a mountain resort in the eastern Alps region of Switzerland.
    • The meeting brings together some 3,000 paying members and selected participants – among which are investors, business leaders, political leaders, economists, celebrities and journalists.

    Why is WEF important?

    • Common platform: The WEF summit brings together the who’s-who of the political and corporate world, including heads of state, policymakers, top executives, industrialists, media personalities, and technocrats.
    • Influence global decision-making: Deliberations at the WEF influence public sector and corporate decision-making.
    • Discusses global challenges: It especially emphasizes on the issues of global importance such as poverty, social challenges, climate change, and global economic recovery.
    • Brings in all stakeholders: The heady mix of economic, corporate, and political leadership provides an ideal opportunity for finding solutions to global challenges that may emerge from time to time.

    What are the main initiatives?

    • Agenda 2022 will see the launch of other WEF initiatives meant for:
    1. Accelerating the mission to net-zero emissions
    2. Economic opportunity of nature-positive solutions
    3. Cyber resilience

    Criticisms of WEF

    • WEF has been criticized for being more of a networking hub than a nebula of intellect or a forum to find effective solutions to global issues.
    • It is also criticized for the lack of representation from varied sections of the civil society and for falling short of delivering effective solutions.

    Way forward

    • WEF sees large-scale participation of top industry, business leaders, civil society, and international organizations every year.
    • This collaboration is necessary for addressing global concerns such as climate change and pandemic management.
    • It is one of such few platform, that provides an opportunity for collaboration through comprehensive dialogue.

     

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