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  • Agricultural Sector and Marketing Reforms – eNAM, Model APMC Act, Eco Survey Reco, etc.

    Issues with the MSP in the age of surplus production

    The author analyses the inefficiencies in the MSP regime while comparing it with the sugar sector and the milk sector. The recent agri-reform in the opinion of the author could help to make the Indian agriculture more efficient.

    MSP system Vs. Market-driven system

    • MSP regime was the creation of the era of scarcity in the mid-1960s.
    • Indian agriculture has, since then, turned the corner from scarcity to surplus.
    • In a surplus economy, unless we make agriculture demand-driven, the MSP route can spell financial disaster.
    • This transition is about changing the pricing mix — how much of it should be state-supported and how much market-driven.
    • The new laws are trying to increase the relative role of markets without dismantling the MSP system.
    • Currently, no system is perfect, be it the one based on MSP or that led by the markets, but the MSP system is much more costly and inefficient.
    • The market-led system will be more sustainable provided we can “get the markets right”.

    Issues with the MSP

    • A perusal of the MSP dominated system of rice and wheat shows that the stocks with the government are way above the buffer stock norms.
    • The economic cost (to FCI) of procured rice comes to about Rs 37/kg and that of wheat is around Rs 27/kg.
    • No wonder, market prices of rice and wheat are much lower than the economic cost incurred by the FCI.
    • So, grain stocks with the FCI cannot be exported without a subsidy[i.e. export below the cost], which invites WTO’s objections.
    • The FCI’s burden is touching Rs 3 lakh crore which is not reflected in the Central budget as the FCI is asked to borrow more and more.
    • The FCI can reduce costs if it uses policy instruments like “put options”.

    2 Lessons: from sugarcane and milk pricing

    1) Populism resulted in making sugar industry globally non-competitive

    • In the case of sugarcane, the government announces a “fair and remunerative price” (FRP) [not MSP]to be paid by sugar factories [not paid by the Government].
    • While some states like Uttar Pradesh announces its own “state advised price” (SAP).
    • The sheer populism of SAP has resulted in cane arrears amounting to more than Rs 8,000 crore, with large surpluses of sugar that can’t be exported.
    • This sector has, consequently, become globally non-competitive.
    • Unless sugarcane pricing follows the C Rangarajan Committee’s recommendations the problems of the sugar sector will not go away.

    2) Success story of milk sector

    • In the case of milk co-operatives, pricing is done by the company in consultation with milk federations.
    • It is more in the nature of a contract price.
    • It competes with private companies, be it Nestle, Hatsun or Schreiber Dynamix dairies.
    • The milk sector has been growing at a rate two to three times higher than rice, wheat and sugarcane.
    • Today, India is the largest producer of milk — 187 million tonnes annually.

    So, how the recent reforms will help the farmers

    •  As a result of changes in farm laws in the next three to five years companies will be encouraged to build efficient supply lines somewhat on the lines of milk.
    • These supply lines — be it with farmers producer organisations (FPOs) or through aggregators — will, of course, be created in states where these companies find the right investment climate.
    • These companies will help raise productivity, similar to what has happened in the poultry sector.
    • Milk and poultry don’t have MSP and farmers do not have to go through the mandi system paying high commissions, market fees and cess.

    Conclusion

    The pricing system has its limits in raising farmers’ incomes. More sustainable solutions lie in augmenting productivity, diversifying to high-value crops, and shifting people out of agriculture to high productivity jobs elsewhere, the recent reforms are the steps in this direction.


    Back2Basic: What is MSP

    • Minimum Support Price (MSP) is a form of market intervention by the Government of India to insure agricultural producers against any sharp fall in farm prices.
    • The minimum support prices are announced by the Government of India at the beginning of the sowing season for certain crops on the basis of the recommendations of the Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices (CACP).
    • The minimum support prices are a guarantee price for their produce from the Government.
    • The major objectives are to support the farmers from distress sales and to procure food grains for public distribution.
    • In case the market price for the commodity falls below the announced minimum price due to bumper production and glut in the market, government agencies purchase the entire quantity offered by the farmers at the announced minimum price.

    What are ‘put options’

    • Put options give holders of the option the right, but not the obligation, to sell a specified amount of an underlying security at a specified price within a specified time frame.
    • Put options are available on a wide range of assets, including stocks, indexes, commodities, and currencies.
    • Put option prices are impacted by changes in the price of the underlying asset, the option strike price, time decay, interest rates, and volatility.
    • Put options increase in value as the underlying asset falls in price, as volatility of the underlying asset price increases, and as interest rates decline.
    • They lose value as the underlying asset increases in price, as volatility of the underlying asset price decreases, as interest rates rise, and as the time to expiration nears.

     

  • RTI – CIC, RTI Backlog, etc.

    15 Years of Right to Information

    Fifteen years after the Right to Information (RTI) Act came into force; more than 2.2 lakh cases are pending at the Central and State Information Commissions, which are the final courts of appeal under the transparency law.

    Try this question:

    Q.“RTI is a tool for empowering ordinary citizens and changing the culture of governance in India.” Discuss.

    Right to Information

    • RTI is an act of the parliament which sets out the rules and procedures regarding citizens’ right to information.
    • It replaced the former Freedom of Information Act, 2002.
    • Under the provisions of RTI Act, any citizen of India may request information from a “public authority” (a body of Government or “instrumentality of State”) which is required to reply expeditiously or within 30.
    • In case of the matter involving a petitioner’s life and liberty, the information has to be provided within 48 hours.
    • The Act also requires every public authority to computerize their records for wide dissemination and to proactively publish certain categories of information so that the citizens need minimum recourse to request for information formally.

    Governing of RTI

    The Right to information in India is governed by two major bodies:

    1. Central Information Commission (CIC) – Chief Information commissioner who heads all the central departments and ministries- with their own public information officers (PIO)s. CICs are directly under the President of India.
    2. State Information Commissions (SIC)– State Public Information Officers or SPIOs head over all the state department and ministries. The SPIO office is directly under the corresponding State Governor.
    • State and CIC are independent bodies and CIC has no jurisdiction over the SIC.

    Fundamental status of RTI

    • RTI is a fundamental right for every citizen of India.
    • Since RTI, is implicit in the Right to Freedom of Speech and Expression under Article 19 of the Indian Constitution, it is an implied fundamental right.

    Limitation to RTI

    • Information disclosure in India is restricted by the Official Secrets Act 1923 and various other special laws, which the new RTI Act relaxes.
    • RTI has proven to be very useful but is also counteracted by the Whistle Blowers Protection Act, 2011.
  • Innovations in Biotechnology and Medical Sciences

    FELUDA test for Covid-19

    Union Health Ministry will soon roll out the FELUDA paper strip test for SARS-CoV-2 diagnosis.

    Try this PYQ:

    Q.What is Cas9 protein that is often mentioned in news?

    (a) A molecular scissors used in targeted gene editing

    (b) A biosensor used in the accurate detection of pathogens in patients

    (c) A gene that makes plants pest-resistant

    (d) A herbicidal substance synthesized in genetically modified crops

    FELUDA test

    • FELUDA is the acronym for FNCAS9 Editor Linked Uniform Detection Assay.
    • It uses indigenously developed CRISPR gene-editing technology to identify and target the genetic material of SARS-CoV2, the virus that causes Covid-19.
    • According to CSIR, the test matches accuracy levels of RT-PCR tests, considered the gold standard in the diagnosis of Covid-19, has a quicker turnaround time and requires less expensive equipment.
    • It is also the world’s first diagnostic test to deploy a specially adapted Cas9 protein to successfully detect the virus.

    How does it work?

    • The Feluda test is similar to a pregnancy test strip that will just change colour upon detection of the virus and can be used in a simple pathological lab.
    • The Cas9 protein is bar-coded to interact with the SARS-CoV2 sequence in the patient’s genetic material.
    • The Cas9-SARS-CoV2 complex is then put on the paper strip, where using two lines (one control, one test) makes it possible to determine if the test sample was infected.

    Back2Basics: CRISPR technology

    • CRISPR is a short form for Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats.
    • It is a gene-editing technology and finds its use in correcting genetic defects and treating and preventing the spread of diseases.
    • The technology can detect specific sequences of DNA within a gene and uses an enzyme functioning as molecular scissors to snip it.
    • It also allows researchers to easily alter DNA sequences and modify gene function.
    • Moreover, the technology can also be configured for detection of multiple other pathogens in the future.
  • Coastal Zones Management and Regulations

    8 Indian beaches accorded ‘Blue Flag’ tag

    Eight Indian beaches have got an International Blue Flag Certification, said Union Minister of Environment, Forest and Climate Change.

    Note the beaches and their respective states. They can be asked in the ”match the pairs” type questions.

    Citation needed: *As of now, there are 13 Blue flag awarded beaches in India a/c to wikipedia. But Blue Flag website would provide exact figures (which yet to update the official numbers).

    Which are these beaches?

    1. Shivrajpur (Dwarka-Gujarat)
    2. Ghoghla (Diu)
    3. Kasarkod [NOT Kasargod which is in Kerala] and Padubidri (Karnataka)
    4. Kappad (Kerala)
    5. Rushikonda (AP)
    6. Golden Beach (Odisha) and
    7. Radhanagar (A&N Islands)

    Blue Flag Beaches

    • The ‘Blue Flag’ beach is an ‘eco-tourism model’ and marks out beaches as providing tourists and beachgoers clean and hygienic bathing water, facilities/amenities, a safe and healthy environment, and sustainable development of the area.
    • The certification is accorded by the Denmark-based Foundation for Environment Education.
    • It started in France in 1985 and has been implemented in Europe since 1987, and in areas outside Europe since 2001 when South Africa joined.
    • It has 33 stringent criteria under four major heads for the beaches, that is, (i) Environmental Education and Information (ii) Bathing Water Quality (iii) Environment Management and Conservation and (iv) Safety and Services.
  • Tourism Sector

    Skal International Asia Area (SIAA)

    The UT of Jammu and Kashmir has won the bid to host the 50th annual Skal International Asia Area (SIAA) Congress in 2021 during the annual general meeting recently against four other cities.

    Note: Skal International is not an affiliate of the United Nations. This is where a prelims  question can pull a nerve.

    Skal International

    • Skal International is a professional organization of tourism leaders around the world, promoting global tourism and friendship.
    • It is a Spain-based tourism body with 15,000 members and 150 chapters across the world.
    • The word Skal comes from Scandinavia and has a long tradition. The “Skal” is a bowl containing a welcome drink that is offered to visitors when entering a home.
    • Its members, the industry’s managers and executives meet at local, national, regional and international levels to discuss and pursue topics of common interest.
    • It is the only international group uniting all branches of the travel and tourism industry.
  • Gravitational Wave Observations

    What is Raychaudhuri Equation?

    The Raychaudhuri Equation in General Relativity, derived by Raychaudhuri is in the spotlight after 2020 Physics Nobel was awarded to Penrose for throwing light on Black Holes.

    Try this MCQ:

    Q.The Raychaudhuri Equation is sometimes seen in news is related to:

    Artificial Intelligence/Cloud Computing/Quantum Mechanics/Space Sciences

    What is Raychaudhuri Equation?

    • Raychaudhuri (1923–2005) was an Indian physicist, known for his research in general relativity and cosmology.
    • In general relativity, the Raychaudhuri equation is a fundamental result describing the motion of nearby bits of matter.
    • It was discovered independently by the Indian physicist Amal Kumar Raychaudhuri and the Soviet physicist Lev Landau.
    • The equation offers a simple and general validation of our intuitive expectation that gravitation should be a universal attractive force between any two bits of mass-energy in general relativity, as it is in Newton’s theory of gravitation.
  • New Species of Plants and Animals Discovered

    Species in news: Aenigmachanna Gollum

    Scientists have discovered a new family of bony fish from the Western Ghats and named it Aenigmachannidae.

    A stand-alone species being mentioned in the news for the first time (and that too from Southern India) find their way into the prelims. Make special note here. Usually, note the species and its habitat location (IUCN status if available), in the purview of a generic prelims question.

    Aenigmachannidae

    • Aenigmachanna Gollum has a surprisingly large number of primitive characters, and detailed molecular phylogenetic analyses including of its Mitochondrial DNA suggested an ancient separation from Channidae.
    • Many such species were earlier found in the aquifers of Kerala.
    • Many of these species are blind, pigment-less, and have peculiar morphological characters that are otherwise not seen in species occurring in surface waters.

    Significance of the discovery

    • The presence of two unique endemic families of freshwater fish in a small region like Kerala is unparalleled and indicates the exceptional diversity and endemicity of fishes in this part of the world.
    • The members of Aenigmachannidae are “living fossils” and comprise an ancient Gondwanan lineage that survived the break-up of the supercontinent and the northward drift of the Indian subcontinent.
  • Road and Highway Safety – National Road Safety Policy, Good Samaritans, etc.

    [pib] Bharatmala Pariyojana

    A total of 322 projects in a length of 12,413 km have been awarded under Bharatmala Pariyojana. Further, 2921 Km has been constructed under the Project till the date.

    Try this PYQ:

    Q.Consider the following pairs:

    National Highway: Cities connected

    1. NH 4: Chennai and Hyderabad
    2. NH 6: Mumbai and Kolkata
    3. NH 15: Ahmedabad and Jodhpur

    Which of the above pairs is/are correctly matched?

    (a) 1 and 2 only

    (b) 3 only

    (c) 1, 2 and 3

    (d) None

    Bharatmala Pariyojana

    • It is a centrally-sponsored and funded the Road and Highways project.
    • It is an umbrella program for the highways sector that focuses on optimizing the efficiency of freight and passenger movement across the country by bridging critical infrastructure.
    • The total investment for 83,677 km committed new highways is estimated at ₹5.35 lakh crore making it the single largest outlay for a government road construction scheme.
    • It works for the development of Economic Corridors, Inter Corridors and Feeder Routes, National Corridor Efficiency Improvement, Border and International connectivity roads, Coastal and Port connectivity roads and Green-field expressways.
    • The ambitious umbrella programme has subsumed all existing Highway Projects including the flagship National Highways Development Project (NHDP), launched in 1998.
  • Economic Indicators and Various Reports On It- GDP, FD, EODB, WIR etc

    RBI shifts focus on bond market to transmit policy signals

    The article analyses the implications of the recently concluded MPC meeting and predicts the trends for the future.

    Highlights of the MPC meeting

    • In the October meeting of the monetary policy committee (MPC), repo rate were kept unchanged at 4%, with a continuation of an accommodative stance.
    • It chose to ignore elevated levels of CPI inflation as transitory and maintaining focus on supporting growth.
    • It appears that the MPC would maintain a status quo on rates through this fiscal year.
    • The scope for further easing is anyways limited to 0.50%, as any more easing may affect household financial savings and endanger financial stability.

    Ensuring the rate transmission

    • With unchanged repo rates, the focus of the liquidity measures announced by the RBI is to further improve transmission of previous rate cuts across a spectrum of market rates and other instruments.
    • The RBI Governor assured market participants that the large supply of government bonds in the second half along with a likely pick-up in credit demand, would be accommodated through open market purchases of government bonds.

    Reducing the cost of borrowing

    • The RBI may have to buy bonds worth 1,000 to 1,500 billion in these operations over 2HFY21 keeping pressure on yields [which affects interest rates].
    • In a related move, to reduce the cost of borrowings for state governments, the RBI for the first time will buy state government bonds, as a special case for this year.

    Other measures

    • The extension of enhanced Held to Maturity (HTM) limit of banks on their government bonds portfolio to March 2022.
    • A new on-tap targeted LTRO window was announced, for banks to borrow up to 1,000 billion from the RBI at a floating rate linked to the repo rate, and invest in corporate paper issued by specific sectors and to provide loans to them.
    • In effect, the aim of the central bank is to ensure that lower policy rates determined by the macro-economic fundamentals, are reflected in lower cost of borrowings for the Centre, states and corporates.

    Containing inflation

    • Inflation outlook for this fiscal and projections for next year indicate that CPI inflation would ease, from an average of 6.8% in Q2 to 4.5% in Q4 and 4.1% by Q4FY22.
    • Headline inflation is expected to fall, as supply conditions normalize with progressive unlocking and another year of bumper farm output helps pull down food inflation.
    • Higher fuel taxes and import duties are expected to provide an upward push though.
    • Effective supply management will therefore be crucial in controlling food inflation and ensuring that it does not turn persistent and feeds into non-food inflation.

    Conclusion

    • The role of monetary policy in the is limited and the RBI focus will remain on improving transmission of policy signals through banking, bond and credit market channels.

    Back2Basics: LTRO

    • Long-Term Repo Operation (LTRO) was introduced by the Reserve Bank in February, 2020.
    • Through this policy, the central bank would provide liquidity support to commercial banks for a period of 1 to 3 years at the current repo rate, and would accept government securities as collateral in return.
    • This is in contrast to the other measures it was providing such as Liquidity Adjustment Facility (LAF) and Marginal Standing Facility (MSF) which provide cash to banks for a period of 1 to 28 days only.
  • Urban Transformation – Smart Cities, AMRUT, etc.

    Redefining cities

    The article the need for liberal and realistic definition of the ‘urban’ area in the next Census and mention the implications of such change.

    2 ways to define urban areas

    1) Statutory town

    • These towns are defined by state governments and place India’s urbanisation rate at 26.7%.
    • A statutory town includes all places with a municipality, corporation, cantonment board or notified town area committee.

    2) Census-based criteria

    • Census adopts three criteria to define what is urban.
    • The three criteria are:
    • i) a minimum population of 5,000;
    • ii) at least 75% of the male main working population engaged in non-agricultural pursuits, and
    • iii) a density of population of at least 400 persons per sq km
    • This, coupled with statutory towns, pegs India’s urbanisation rate at 31%.
    • Total number of towns (state and census) stands at 7,933, together constituting a 377-mn population.

    Why there is a need for changing the definition of ‘urban’

    • There is growing evidence—mostly from satellite imagery—that India is way more urban than the 2011 Census estimate.
    • This is quite plausible because there is a large sum of money allocated for rural development, and it is in the interest of state governments to under-represent urbanisation.
    • Besides, the Census’s stringent definition was first carved out in 1961 which do not reflect the realities of the 21st century.
    • India won’t be alone in changing these definitions for Census 2021.
    • Many countries, such as China, Iran, the UK, among others, have changed the definition of ‘urban’ from one census to another.

    Getting the right picture of urbanisation

    •  A more liberal and realistic definition in the upcoming census will present the actual picture of urbanisation.
    • For instance, if we just use the population density criteria like 37 other countries, with the 400 people per sq km threshold, we will add around 500 mn people to the urban share of the population.
    • This pegs the urbanisation rate at over 70%!

    What will be its implications?

    • First, the budgetary allocation will reflect the reality and scales will balance between rural and urban areas.
    • Second, the urban areas will not be governed through rural governance structures of Panchayati Raj Institutions.
    • Third basic urban infrastructure like sewerage networks, fire services, building regulations, high-density housing, transit-oriented development, piped drinking water supply.
    • Fourth, these newly defined urban areas could act as a new source of revenue for funding local infrastructure development.
    • This would ease pressure on state finances.
    • Lastly, the rethink of urban definition would have an impact on the regional and national economy.
    • These newly defined urban areas will open them to new infrastructure such as railway lines, discom services, highway connectivity, creation of higher education institutes which will together increase the connectivity and resource capability at the local level.
    • This will not only boost the local economy but also ease pressure on bigger cities and help in cluster level development.

    Conclusion

    A rethink of urban definition in Census 2021, particularly with some degrowth in urban areas due to Covid, will bode well for India for coming decades in more ways than one.


    Source:-

    https://www.financialexpress.com/opinion/redefining-cities-a-new-urban-consensus/2102154/

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