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

Search results for: “”

  • [24th June 2026] The Hindu OpED: India’s next challenge — from invention to global scale

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2025] “India aims to become a semiconductor manufacturing hub. What are the challenges faced by the semiconductor industry in India? Mention the salient features of the India Semiconductor Mission”
    Linkage: The PYQ is directly linked to the India Semiconductor Mission as a key initiative for building integrated manufacturing ecosystems (similar to TSMC) to achieve global industrial leadership

    Mentor Comment

    This article highlights the shift from “innovation-led growth” to “innovation-led global leadership.” For UPSC, do not restrict the discussion to R&D or startups. Link it with Atmanirbhar Bharat, Make in India, Startup India, India Semiconductor Mission, National Quantum Mission, IndiaAI Mission, Digital Public Infrastructure (UPI, Aadhaar, ONDC), Ease of Doing Business, and Industrial Policy.

    Why in the News?

    India is launching major technology missions in semiconductors, artificial intelligence, quantum computing, and space. India’s prior experience with early-mover technologies — semiconductors in the 1970s, indigenous computing in the 1980s, and the Simputer in 1998 — shows a consistent pattern of abandoning innovations before they reach global commercial scale.

    Why has early technological leadership repeatedly failed to produce globally dominant Indian industries?

    • SCL and the semiconductor gap: India established Semiconductor Complex Limited (SCL) in the 1970s, but limited capital, small manufacturing scale, inconsistent policies, and a public sector focus prevented the creation of a competitive semiconductor ecosystem.
    • ECIL and the strategic-commercial divide: Established in 1967, ECIL developed indigenous computers and control systems under technology embargoes. However, its emphasis on strategic self reliance rather than market competition limited industrial expansion.
    • Simputer and ecosystem constraints: The Simputer (1998) anticipated many smartphone features, but inadequate venture capital, weak component supply chains, limited software platforms, and a small consumer market prevented global scaling.
    • Structural pattern: The recurring challenge was not a lack of innovation but weak commercialisation, insufficient capital mobilisation, and underdeveloped innovation ecosystems.
    • Apple as a counterfactual: Apple converted a similar computing vision into a global technology leader through integrated hardware, software, and supply chain capabilities, highlighting the scaling infrastructure India lacked.

    Where has India demonstrated successful technology scaling, and what conditions enabled it?

    • Pharmaceuticals: India emerged as the “pharmacy of the world” and a leading vaccine producer through process innovation, cost efficiency, and export orientation.
    • Supercomputing (PARAM): The PARAM programme showed that sustained public investment with clear performance goals can build globally recognised indigenous capabilities.
    • Aadhaar and UPI: Built for nationwide scale, these digital public infrastructures transformed identity and payments, promoted financial inclusion, and became global models.
    • Scaling mechanism: Success came when technologies were designed for mass adoption rather than limited institutional use, creating ecosystems that generated industries and global impact.
    • Frugal innovation advantage: Missions like Chandrayaan and Mangalyaan proved that cost effective engineering can deliver world class outcomes, offering a strong model for future AI, semiconductor, and quantum technologies.

    What do international examples reveal about the institutional conditions required to convert technological invention into dominant industries?

    • Taiwan (TSMC): Taiwan created a dedicated semiconductor foundry model backed by sustained state industrial policy, long-term capital, and export-orientation from the outset. TSMC now holds over 50% of the global foundry market — built on the same window India identified in the 1970s.
    • South Korea (Samsung): South Korea used state-directed credit, mandatory technology transfer conditions in foreign investment, and chaebol-scale domestic investment to build Samsung’s semiconductor and electronics empire. Strategic intent was matched with commercial ambition.
    • United States (AI and space commercialisation): The US transitioned defence and research investments into commercial platforms through procurement policy, deep venture capital markets, and university-industry linkages. NASA’s Commercial Crew Programme is an example of public mission enabling private scaling.
    • The common design feature: In each case, the state defined a commercial outcome — not only a technical capability — as the measure of success. Public funding was structured to de-risk private investment rather than substitute for it.
    • Limitation of the comparison: These examples developed within large domestic or allied-market demand bases. India’s scaling challenge is to build global demand for Indian-origin platforms, which requires a different export and partnership strategy.

    What institutional and policy conditions must India establish for the current technology missions to produce globally competitive enterprises rather than repeating the earlier pattern?

    • Redefine the success metric: Public technology missions must measure success by commercial market share and global deployment, not by indigenous capability certificates or pilot completions.
    • Capital architecture: Venture capital, patient institutional capital, and public de-risking mechanisms must operate together. Scientific excellence funded without a commercialisation pathway reproduces institutional silos.
    • Ecosystem design from day one: Supply chains, software platforms, developer communities, and consumer or enterprise markets must be designed into missions at inception, not added after technical milestones are achieved.
    • Mandate commercial accountability in public institutions: Institutions such as C-DAC, ISRO’s commercial arm, and any new semiconductor entity must carry explicit commercial performance obligations alongside strategic mandates.
    • Quantum and healthcare applications: For quantum computing, the competitive advantage lies in reducing infrastructure costs and developing practical applications in drug discovery, materials science, and climate modelling domains, where India has existing scientific depth.

    Conclusion

    India’s technology history does not reveal a failure of scientific capability. It reveals a consistent failure to build the commercial ecosystems, capital structures, and institutional mandates required to scale invention into globally competitive industries. The countries that will lead the next technological era may not be those that invent first. They will be those that scale fastest. India’s current missions in AI, semiconductors, quantum computing, and space represent a second opportunity to claim the leadership positions it identified and then vacated in earlier technology cycles. Seizing that opportunity requires replacing the measure of self-reliance — from technical capability achieved to global market position built.

  • Centre Tightens FCRA Rules for NGOs

    Why in News?

    The Union Government amended the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Rules, 2011, introducing stricter norms for NGOs receiving foreign funds under the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act (FCRA), 2010.

    New Registration Requirements

    • NGOs must register under one or more of five categories: Social, Economic, Educational, Cultural, and Religious
    • Must specify: Exact purpose of foreign contribution. State/UT-wise area of operation.
    • Separate fee payable for each category and each State/UT.

    Enhanced Disclosure

    • NGOs must disclose: Websites, Social media accounts, Publications (books, magazines, newspaper articles), and Annual activities and geographical scope.

    Expanded Definition of “Key Functionary”

    • Now includes: Office-bearers, Directors, Trustees, Partners, Karta/Head of Hindu Undivided Family (HUF), Governing body members, and Any person controlling or managing the organization.

    Restrictions

    • NGOs with foreign nationals (except Persons of Indian Origin) as key functionaries will generally not be eligible unless specifically permitted by the Central Government.
    • Educational and cultural activities must remain strictly non-political.
    • Religious activities exclude proselytisation.

    Penalties

    • Minimum fine: ₹1 lakh.
    • Misuse of foreign funds or use for unapproved purposes/States: 30% of the amount involved or ₹1 lakh, whichever is higher.
    • Similar penalties for Excess administrative expenditure, Speculative investments, and Unauthorized receipt or utilization of foreign contributions.

    Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act, 2010 (FCRA)

    • Regulates acceptance and utilization of foreign contributions and hospitality by individuals, associations, and NGOs.
    • Administered by the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA).
    • Objectives: Ensure foreign funds do not adversely affect Sovereignty and integrity of India, National security, Public interest, and Democratic institutions

    [2021] At the national level, which ministry is the modal agency to ensure effective implementation of the scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act, 2006?

    [A] Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change

    [B] Ministry of Panchayati Raj

    [C] Ministry of Rural Development

    [D] Ministry of Tribal Affairs

  • NITI Aayog Trade Watch Quarterly (Q4 FY 2025-26)

    Why in News?

    NITI Aayog released the 8th edition of “Trade Watch Quarterly” (Jan-Mar 2026), highlighting India’s trade performance and focusing on the pharmaceutical sector.

    India’s Trade Performance

    • Total merchandise and services trade: $1.84 trillion in FY 2025-26 (↑5.4% YoY).
    • Exports: Grew by 4.2%.
    • Imports: Grew by 6.5%.
    • Services exports: Increased by 9.0%, maintaining a strong services surplus.
    • India remained the 8th largest services exporter in 2025.
    • Services exports recorded a CAGR of 10.3% (2015-2025), higher than the global average.

    Pharmaceutical Sector

    • Global pharmaceutical and API market estimated at $1.3 trillion (2025).
    • India’s pharmaceutical and API exports reached $35.8 billion.
    • India is a leading supplier of Generic medicines, Vaccines, and Essential therapeutics

    Challenges

    • Export basket remains concentrated in generic formulations and retail medicaments.
    • Limited presence in biologics, biosimilars, immunologicals, and advanced therapeutics.
    • Continued dependence on imported Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (APIs) and intermediates, especially from China.

    Leading Pharmaceutical States

    • Telangana, Gujarat, and Maharashtra
    • These states lead in production, exports, and integration into global pharmaceutical value chains.

    Way Forward

    • Expand into high-value pharmaceutical segments.
    • Strengthen domestic API manufacturing.
    • Increase investments in R&D, technology, and skill development.
    • Improve regulatory efficiency and market access.

    Active Pharmaceutical Ingredient (API)

    • The biologically active component of a medicine responsible for its therapeutic effect.
    • APIs are combined with excipients to produce the final dosage form.

    Biologics

    • Medicines produced from living organisms or biological processes.
    • Examples include monoclonal antibodies, vaccines, and recombinant proteins.

    [2021] With reference to international trade of India, which of the following statements are correct:
    1.The Top 3 export destinations of India are – USA, UAE, China.
    2.The Top 3 exports from India include – Petroleum Products, Drug Formulations, Agricultural Products.
    3.Agricultural exports have consistently risen from 2016-17 to 2021-22.
    4.India’s merchandise exports are less than its merchandise imports.
    Select the correct code from the options given below:

    [A] 1 and 4

    [B] 1 and 3

    [C] 2 and 4

    [D] 1, 2, 3 and 4

  • VOC Port: Model for Green Maritime Growth

    Why in News?

    Union Minister Sarbananda Sonowal highlighted V. O. Chidambaranar Port Authority as a model for sustainable maritime development, releasing its first Sustainability Report and launching several green and digital initiatives.

    Key Highlights

    • Net carbon emissions reduced by 45%.
    • Renewable energy offsets nearly 94% of the port’s energy consumption equivalent.
    • Carbon intensity per tonne of cargo reduced by nearly 50% over the last four years.
    • Recognized as a Scope-2 Emission Free Port for its transition to clean energy.

    Green Hydrogen Initiative

    • Hosts India’s first Green Hydrogen pilot project at a major port.
    • Featured in an Indian Institute of Management Calcutta case study titled “The Hydrogen Pivot”.

    Education & Innovation

    • Kendriya Vidyalaya, VOC Port commenced academic activities for the 2026-27 session.
    • MoU signed with Gati Shakti Vishwavidyalaya for Maritime logistics research, Skill development, Sustainable port operations, and Centre of Excellence in Maritime Logistics & Port Management.

    Digital Transformation

    • Launched PortGPT, making VOC Port the first major port in India to introduce an enterprise-grade generative AI mobile application for Operational efficiency, Knowledge management, and Data-driven decision-making.

    Scope-2 Emissions

    • Indirect greenhouse gas emissions from purchased electricity, steam, heating, or cooling consumed by an organization.
    • Defined under the Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Protocol.

    Green Hydrogen

    • Produced through electrolysis of water using renewable energy.
    • Emits zero carbon dioxide during production.
    • Key pillar of India’s National Green Hydrogen Mission.

    [2023] Consider the following pairs :
    Port—–Well known as
    1.Kamarajar Port—-First major port in India registered as a company
    2.Mundra Port—–Largest privately owned port in India
    3.Visakhapatnam—-Largest container port in India

    [A] Only one pair

    [B] Only two pairs

    [C] All three pairs

    [D] None of the pairs

  • CPGRAMS 46th Monthly Report (May 2026)

    Why in the news?

    The Department of Administrative Reforms and Public Grievances (DARPG) released the 46th CPGRAMS Monthly Report for States/UTs, highlighting public grievance redressal performance and capacity-building initiatives.

    Public Grievance Redressal

    • Public Grievances (PG) received: 85,900
    • PG cases redressed: 84,365
    • Total pending cases (31 May 2026): 2,13,190
    • 22 States/UTs have more than 1,000 pending grievances.

    State Performance

    • Highest disposals:
      • Uttar Pradesh: 27,030 cases
      • Maharashtra: 9,476 cases

    User Participation

    • New CPGRAMS users registered: 65,174
    • Registrations from Uttar Pradesh: 11,365
    • Feedback collected by Call Centre:78,830
      • From States/UTs: 32,283

    Common Service Centres (CSCs)

    • CPGRAMS integrated with 5 lakh+ CSCs and 2.5 lakh Village Level Entrepreneurs (VLEs).
    • 8,562 grievances registered through CSCs during May 2026.

    Sevottam Scheme

    • FY 2022-23 to FY 2026-27 (till May): 1,175 training programmes conducted and 38,693 officers trained.
    • New Initiative: Samadhan Didi, an AI-enabled Voice Chatbot, launched on 30 May 2026 to improve digital public grievance redressal.

    CPGRAMS (Centralized Public Grievance Redress and Monitoring System)

    • An online platform for citizens to lodge grievances against Central Ministries, Departments, and States/UTs.
    • Developed and managed by DARPG.
    • Enables tracking, monitoring, and time-bound disposal of grievances.
    • Sevottam Scheme: A quality management framework aimed at improving Citizen charters, Public grievance redressal, and Service delivery excellence

    [2021] With reference to the Union Government, consider the following statements:
    1. N. Gopalaswamy Iyengar Committee suggested that a minister and a secretary be designated solely for pursuing the subject of administrative reform and promoting it.
    2. In 1970, the Department of Personnel was constituted on the recommendation of the Administrative Reforms Commission, 1966, and this was placed under the Prime Minister’s charge.
    Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

    [A] 1 only

    [B] 2 only

    [C] Both 1 and 2

    [D] Neither 1 nor 2

  • [23rd June 2026] The Hindu OpED: The challenge of India’s digital sovereignty

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2024] Describe the context and salient features of the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023
    Linkage: Data sovereignty is a critical pillar of digital sovereignty, aimed at keeping sensitive information under domestic jurisdiction and protecting it from foreign access. 

    Mentor’s Comment

    Digital sovereignty is no longer limited to data localization; it encompasses control over digital infrastructure, cloud services, semiconductors, AI, software, and defence technologies. For UPSC, link this topic with Atmanirbhar Bharat, Digital Public Infrastructure (UPI, Aadhaar, ONDC), National Security, Semiconductor Mission, AI governance, cyber security, and strategic autonomy. A balanced answer should advocate indigenous innovation, higher R&D spending, private sector participation, and trusted international partnerships rather than complete technological isolation.

    Why in the News?

    Recent incidents, including the compromise of Indian CCTV networks through foreign software, the denial of digital services to Nayara Energy due to EU sanctions, and India’s growing focus on semiconductor manufacturing, indigenous digital platforms, and trusted technology partnerships such as Pax Silica, have renewed the debate on India’s digital sovereignty and technological self reliance.

    What is digital sovereignty? 

    Digital sovereignty is a nation’s ability to control its digital infrastructure, data, technologies, and critical digital services without undue dependence on foreign entities.

    Why is it important for India?

    • Strategic Autonomy: Ensures independent decision making in technology and security. Eg: Indigenous UPI and RuPay payment systems.
    • National Security: Protects critical infrastructure from external interference. Eg: Reducing reliance on foreign cloud platforms for defence data.
    • Data Sovereignty: Keeps sensitive data under domestic jurisdiction. Eg: Government authentication and cloud services hosted on Indian platforms.
    • Economic Competitiveness: Promotes innovation and domestic digital industries. Eg: India’s semiconductor ecosystem and digital public infrastructure.

    Why does dependence on foreign digital infrastructure pose risks?

    • National Security Risk: Foreign entities may compromise critical infrastructure. Eg: CCTV networks allegedly compromised through EseeCloud software.
    • External Sovereign Control: Foreign governments can influence technology providers. Eg: Microsoft’s denial of services to Nayara Energy following EU sanctions.
    • Data Security: Sensitive information may become accessible to foreign jurisdictions. Eg: Cloud companies compelled to share data with home governments.
    • Defence Vulnerability: Software controlled abroad may affect military capabilities. Eg: GPS restrictions during the 1999 Kargil conflict.
    • Economic Disruption: Suspension of digital services can halt business operations. Eg: Loss of access to corporate email and collaboration platforms.

    How can India strengthen its digital sovereignty?

    • Indigenous Innovation: Develop domestic digital infrastructure and technologies. Eg: UPI, RuPay, NavIC, Zoho adoption in government systems.
    • Private Sector Participation: Encourage competitive domestic technology development. Eg: Private sector involvement in the Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA).
    • Semiconductor Ecosystem: Build domestic chip manufacturing capabilities. Eg: Micron’s ATMP facility in Sanand.
    • Trusted International Partnerships: Develop technologies through strategic collaborations. Eg: BrahMos missile programme and Pax Silica initiative.
    • Higher R&D Investment: Strengthen innovation capacity and technological leadership. Eg: Increasing R&D expenditure beyond the current 0.74% of GDP.

    Which global practices can India adopt for digital sovereignty?

    • Sovereign Digital Platforms: Develop domestic alternatives for government services. Eg: France replacing Microsoft Teams and Zoom with a sovereign platform.
    • Independent Cloud Infrastructure: Reduce reliance on foreign cloud providers. Eg: European Union’s sovereign cloud initiatives.
    • Localization of Critical Software: Promote indigenous productivity and enterprise software. Eg: Germany, Denmark, and the Netherlands exploring domestic alternatives.
    • Trusted Technology Partnerships: Build technology ecosystems with like minded nations. Eg: Pax Silica initiative on AI and supply chain security.
    • Public Private Innovation Model: Government support with private sector execution. Eg: U.S. defence production and procurement model.

    What are the implications of enhancing India’s digital sovereignty?

    • Strategic Autonomy: Reduces dependence on foreign powers for critical technologies. Eg: NavIC providing indigenous satellite navigation.
    • National Security: Improves resilience against cyber threats and external coercion. Eg: Indigenous defence software and secure cloud infrastructure.
    • Economic Growth: Strengthens domestic digital industries and high value manufacturing. Eg: Expansion of the semiconductor and AI ecosystem.
    • Technological Leadership: Encourages innovation and global competitiveness. Eg: Success of Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) such as UPI.
    • Resilient Supply Chains: Minimizes disruptions from geopolitical tensions and sanctions. Eg: Diversified technology partnerships through Micron and Pax Silica.
    • Global Influence: Positions India as a trusted technology and digital governance leader. Eg: Export of India’s DPI model to partner countries.

    Conclusion

    Digital sovereignty is the cornerstone of India’s technological security, economic resilience, and strategic autonomy. By strengthening indigenous innovation, investing in R&D, promoting public private collaboration, and building trusted global partnerships, India can reduce external vulnerabilities and emerge as a secure, self reliant, and globally competitive digital power in an increasingly technology driven world.

  • No one should own the law: why government standards should be public

    Why in the News?

    The issue is in the news following a proposal under the Jan Vishwas framework to centrally publish all government edicts and treat any non publicly accessible edict as null and void. The debate has also gained attention after the Indian Roads Congress (IRC) issued a takedown notice against the public sharing of its road safety standards, raising questions about whether government standards and safety regulations should be freely accessible as part of the law and public knowledge.

    What are government edicts? 

    Government Edicts: Government edicts are legally binding instruments issued by the State, including laws, rules, regulations, notifications, circulars, guidelines, standards, SOPs, and government orders that govern citizens and institutions.

    Why should they be public?

    • Rule of Law: Citizens cannot obey laws they cannot access. Eg: Public access to Indian Roads Congress (IRC) standards.
    • Legal Transparency: Prevents hidden or “shadow” regulations. Eg: Central publication of government notifications.
    • Democratic Accountability: Enables public scrutiny of government actions. Eg: Citizens reviewing road safety standards.
    • Access to Justice: Ensures equal knowledge of legal obligations. Eg: MSMEs accessing compliance standards without barriers.
    • Citizen Empowerment: Creates an informed citizenry and participatory governance. Eg: Engineers and researchers using public standards.

    Why is public access to safety standards important for democracy?

    • Public Safety: Open standards improve compliance and reduce risks. Eg: Helmet and building safety standards.
    • Right to Information: Citizens have a right to know rules affecting their lives. Eg: Free access to drinking water quality standards.
    • Transparency: Prevents arbitrary enforcement of technical regulations. Eg: Publicly available road construction norms.
    • Ease of Doing Business: Reduces compliance costs for businesses. Eg: MSMEs accessing manufacturing standards.
    • Inclusive Governance: Eliminates information asymmetry. Eg: Contractors and citizens following the same safety norms.

    How can the Jan Vishwas framework improve legal transparency?

    • Centralized Repository: All government edicts available on one digital platform. Eg: Expansion of India Code.
    • Removal of Shadow Instruments: Makes regulations, circulars, guidelines, and SOPs publicly accessible. Eg: Publishing notifications and standards.
    • Null and Void Principle: Unpublished edicts should have no legal force. Eg: Citizens cannot be penalized under inaccessible rules.
    • Digital Governance: Creates searchable and regularly updated legal databases. Eg: Online repository of standards and regulations.
    • Regulatory Certainty: Improves predictability and compliance. Eg: Uniform interpretation of safety standards.

    Which global practices can India adopt for open government standards?

    • Open Government Doctrine: Laws belong to the public domain. Eg: U.S. Supreme Court principle, “No one should own the law.”
    • Public Interest Access: Mandatory safety standards should be freely accessible. Eg: European Union constitutional jurisprudence.
    • Open Licensing: Government information can be reused without restrictions. Eg: UK Open Government Licence.
    • Works of Government Policy: Government publications should not be subject to restrictive copyright. Eg: U.S. federal government works are in the public domain.
    • Digital Legal Repository: Ensures centralized access to legal materials. Eg: Government portals providing free legal documents.

    What are the implications of making government standards freely accessible?

    • Strengthened Rule of Law: Ensures equal access to legal obligations. Eg: Public availability of BIS and IRC standards.
    • Improved Public Safety: Promotes better implementation of technical standards. Eg: Compliance with building and road safety norms.
    • Economic Growth: Lowers compliance costs and encourages innovation. Eg: Support for Make in India and MSMEs.
    • Greater Transparency and Accountability: Reduces regulatory opacity. Eg: Open access to government notifications and guidelines.
    • Enhanced Democratic Participation: Creates informed stakeholders. Eg: Researchers, civil society, and courts using open government standards.
    • Knowledge as a Public Good: Publicly funded information should benefit everyone. Eg: BIS making Indian Standards freely available online.

    Conclusion

    Government edicts and mandatory safety standards are public goods that form the foundation of the rule of law, transparency, and democratic accountability. Ensuring their free and universal accessibility through the Jan Vishwas framework can strengthen legal certainty, public safety, ease of doing business, and citizen empowerment, reaffirming the principle that “no one should own the law.”

  • April 2026 Net FDI at Nearly 5-Year High

    Why in News?

    India’s Net Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) rose to $6.6 billion in April 2026, the highest level since May 2021, driven by a sharp increase in gross FDI inflows.

    Key Highlights

    • Net FDI: $6.6 billion in April 2026, up from $917 million in March 2026.
    • Gross FDI Inflows:$15.3 billion, the highest since at least March 2021.
      • Increased 65% year-on-year.
      • Increased 131% over March 2026.
    • April inflows alone accounted for over 16% of total FDI received in FY 2025-26.

    Major Source Countries

    • Japan, Singapore, and Mauritius
    • Together accounted for more than 75% of FDI inflows.

    Outward FDI

    • Gross outflows: $8.7 billion (up 13.7% YoY).
    • Outward FDI by Indian companies: $4.8 billion, the highest on record since at least March 2021.
    • Around 80% of outward FDI was directed to United States and Cayman Islands
    • Major sectors Financial and insurance services, Business services, and Manufacturing

    Significance

    • Marks a strong recovery after six consecutive months of negative net FDI up to February 2026.
    • Reflects renewed investor confidence and stronger capital inflows into the Indian economy.

    Foreign Direct Investment (FDI)

    • Investment by a foreign entity in a business located in another country with a lasting interest and management control (generally 10% or more equity ownership).
    • Includes Greenfield investments, Brownfield investments, and Reinvested earnings

    FDI vs FPI

    • FDI: Long-term investment with management control.
    • FPI (Foreign Portfolio Investment): Investment in financial assets without management control; generally more volatile.

    [2021] Consider the following:
    1. Foreign currency convertible bonds
    2. Foreign institutional investment with certain conditions
    3. Global depository receipts
    4. Non-resident external deposits
    Which of the above can be included in Foreign Direct Investments?

    [A] 1, 2 and 3

    [B] 3 only

    [C] 2 and 4

    [D] 1 and 4

  • Indian Telecom Services Performance Indicator Report (Jan-Mar 2026)

    Why in News?

    TRAI released the Indian Telecom Services Performance Indicator Report for the quarter ending 31 March 2026, highlighting growth in telecom, internet, broadband, DTH, and broadcasting sectors.

    Telecom

    • Total telephone subscribers: 1,330.58 million (↑1.87% QoQ).
    • Tele-density:93.26%: Urban: 151.47% and Rural: 60.46%
    • Private operators’ market share: 92.32%.

    Internet & Broadband

    • Internet subscribers: 1,092.79 million (↑6.24% QoQ).
    • Broadband subscribers: 1,065.88 million.
    • Wireless internet: 1,046.26 million.
    • Wired internet: 46.54 million.
    • Internet penetration: 76.59 per 100 population.

    Wireless Services

    • Wireless (Mobile + FWA) subscribers: 1,282.33 million.
    • Wireless (Mobile) subscribers: 1,265.73 million.
    • 5G FWA subscribers: 16.61 million.
    • Average wireless data usage: 26.70 GB/subscriber/month.

    Revenue & Usage

    • Monthly Wireless ARPU: ₹196.04.
    • Minutes of Usage (MOU): 1,017 minutes/subscriber/month.
    • Adjusted Gross Revenue (AGR): ₹86,716 crore.

    Broadcasting

    • Private satellite TV channels: 917
    • Pay TV channels: 342
    • Private FM channels: 390 across 120 cities
    • Pay DTH subscribers: 49.05 million
    • Community Radio Stations: 564.

    Prelims Pointer

    • TRAI is a statutory body established under the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India Act, 1997.
    • It regulates telecom services, ensures consumer protection, promotes competition, and recommends licensing and spectrum policies.
    • Tele-density = Number of telephone connections per 100 population.

    [2019] With reference to communications technologies, what is/are the difference/differences between LTE (Long-Term Evolution) and VoLTE (Voice over Long-Term Evolution)?
    1. LTE is commonly marketed as 3G and VoLTE is commonly marketed as advanced 3G.
    2. LTE is data-only technology and VoLTE is voice-only technology.
    Select the correct answer using the code given below.

    [A] 1 only

    [B] 2 only

    [C] Both 1 and 2

    [D] Neither 1 nor 2

  • India’s Emerging Technology Ecosystem

    Why in the news?

    The Government highlighted India’s progress in AI, semiconductors, quantum technologies, supercomputing, cloud computing, blockchain, and biotechnology as key pillars of Viksit Bharat 2047.

    Digital India

    • Internet connections: 25.15 crore (2014) → 102.86 crore (2026).
    • Broadband: 6.1 crore → 99.56 crore.
    • 5G services cover 99.9% of districts.
    • Data cost reduced from ₹269/GB to ₹8-10/GB.

    Supercomputing

    • National Supercomputing Mission (2015): ₹4,500 crore.
    • 38 supercomputers with 47 petaflops capacity.
    • Indigenous PARAM Rudra series developed.

    Semiconductor Ecosystem

    • Semicon India Programme (2021): ₹76,000 crore.
    • ISM 2.0 (2026-27): ₹1,000 crore.
    • 12 projects worth ₹1.64 lakh crore approved.
    • DLI Scheme: 24 companies supported; 7 chips fabricated.

    National Quantum Mission

    • Approved in 2023 with ₹6,003.65 crore.
    • Focus: Quantum Computing, Communication, Sensing, Materials.
    • 1,000 km secure quantum communication network demonstrated.
    • India’s first Quantum Valley coming up in Amaravati.

    IndiaAI Mission

    • Approved in 2024 with ₹10,300+ crore.
    • 38,000+ GPUs common computing facility.
    • AI Kosh: 12,115 datasets and 306 AI models.
    • Around 89% of new startups use AI.

    Cloud Computing

    • MeghRaj: Government cloud platform.
    • 2,323 government departments using MeghRaj (2026).

    Blockchain

    • National Blockchain Framework (2021).
    • 3 crore+ property documents verified through blockchain.
    • Supports Vishvasya Blockchain Stack and Digital Rupee (e₹) pilots.

    Biotechnology

    • Sector size: USD 190 billion (2026).
    • 94 BioNEST incubators across 25 States/UTs.
    • Key initiatives: National Biopharma Mission, BioE3 Policy.

    Research & Skilling

    • ANRF (2024) operationalized.
    • RDI Scheme (2025): ₹1 lakh crore corpus.
    • FutureSkills PRIME: 27.53 lakh registrations.
    • Chips to Startup (C2S): Targets 85,000 semiconductor professionals.

    Global Technology Indicators

    • Global Innovation Index: Rank 81 (2015) → 38 (2025).
    • 2,100+ Global Capability Centres (GCCs) employing 2.36 million professionals.
    • India AI Impact Summit 2026: Declaration adopted by 92 countries.

    [2022] Which one of the following is the context in which the term “qubit” is mentioned?

    [A] Cloud Services

    [B] Quantum Computing

    [C] Visible Light Communication Technologies

    [D] Wireless Communication Technologies