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  • “Yellow Line” Strategy (Israel)  

    Why in the News?

    • Israel has extended its “Yellow Line” buffer zone strategy from the Gaza Strip to southern Lebanon during ongoing conflict dynamics.

    What is the “Yellow Line”

    • A military demarcation and deployment boundary
    • Divides territory into:
      • Israeli-controlled zone
      • Local (Palestinian/Lebanese) areas
    • Marked physically by:
      • Concrete bollards
      • Tall poles at regular intervals

    Origin

    • First introduced in: October 2025 (Gaza conflict)
    • Later extended to: Southern Lebanon
    [2018] The term “two-state solution” is sometimes mentioned in the news in the context of the affairs of: 
    (a) China 
    (b) Israel 
    (c) Iraq 
    (d) Yemen
  • [20th April 2026] The Hindu OpED: Differentiating welfare and development

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2023] “Development and welfare schemes for the vulnerable, by its nature, are discriminatory in approach.” Do you agree? Give reasons for your answer.
    Linkage: The PYQ targets GS-2 (Social Justice) and tests understanding of welfare vs development, equity vs equality, and policy design for vulnerable groups. It links directly to Capability Approach, justifies “discrimination” as equity-driven targeting to expand real freedoms and reduce capability deprivation.

    Mentor’s Comment

    There is rising competitive populism across Indian states, where free electricity, loan waivers, and cash transfers are increasingly shaping electoral outcomes. This marks a sharp shift from earlier development-led narratives focused on infrastructure and growth. The concern is significant because such policies risk straining public finances while failing to build long-term economic capacity. The debate is critical as India aims for sustained high growth while managing inequality and welfare demands.

    What is Welfare and Development with respect to political landscape in India?

    Welfare in the Political Landscape: Welfare involves state intervention to ensure the economic and social well-being of citizens, particularly the vulnerable. It is about redistribution and social security. 

    1. Scholarly Definition: A welfare state is a government that takes “key role in the protection and promotion of economic and social well-being of its citizens,” based on “equality of opportunity” and “equitable distribution of wealth“. According to T.H. Marshall (1950), it is a synthesis of democracy, welfare, and capitalism.

    Indian Context & Examples:

    1. Food Security: The Targeted Public Distribution System (TPDS) and the National Food Security Act, 2013, supply subsidized food grains to low-income families.
    2. Employment Guarantee: The MGNREGA provides a legal right to 100 days of wage employment in rural areas.
    3. Health Security: Free or subsidized health insurance programs (like the Ayushman Bharat scheme).
    4. Social Safety Net: Old age pensions and subsidies for cooking fuel (Ujjwala Yojana). 

    Development in the Political Landscape

    Development denotes a broader, long-term process of structural transformation involving sustained economic growth, improved productivity, and expanded human capabilities. 

    1. Scholarly Definition: Development is “the process of growth, or changing from one condition to another,” which aims to “improve the quality of life” through infrastructure, education, and modern technologies. It is a process that “expands human capabilities and freedoms,” shifting the focus from just GDP growth to human-centric improvements.

    Indian Context & Examples:

    1. Infrastructure: The construction of national highways, metro rail networks in cities, and rural road connectivity.
    2. Financial Inclusion & Technology: The implementation of Aadhaar and the JAN-DHAN accounts to facilitate direct benefit transfers.
    3. Digital Transformation: Schemes promoting internet connectivity in villages and digitalization of government services.
    4. Education: The National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 aiming for universal access and improved learning outcomes. 

    Why is there a conceptual confusion between welfare and development?

    Conceptual confusion between welfare and development persists because, while they differ fundamentally in purpose and time horizon, they are often conflated in political, academic, and practical settings, especially in democratic contexts. 

    1. Political Conflation (Populism vs. Growth): Political actors often blur the distinction to achieve immediate electoral gains.
      1. Narrative Shift: “Development” is frequently used as a slogan to signal structural growth, but it is often replaced in practice by welfare schemes that offer immediate, tangible benefits to voters.
      2. Patron-Client Politics: Welfare schemes (e.g., cash transfers, subsidies) are often designed as “freebies” that create a patron-client relationship, where voters view the government as a benefactor rather than an agent of structural transformation.
      3. Thin Line Between Freebies and Growth: Political campaigns, particularly in India (e.g., in Andhra Pradesh or West Bengal), often promise high-end infrastructure (development) alongside extensive subsidies (welfare), treating them as the same goal
    2. Overlap in Practice: In policy implementation, the boundaries between the two are frequently blurred.
      1. Simultaneous Implementation: Governments often run large-scale social protection programs alongside aggressive infrastructure development, making them difficult for the public to differentiate.
      2. Developmental Welfare: Certain welfare schemes can serve a development purpose. For instance, nutrition support (welfare) or job guarantees (MGNREGA) can build human capital or community assets (development), making it hard to classify them strictly as one or the other.
      3. The “Dependent” Trap: When welfare focuses purely on consumption (handouts) rather than capacity building, it can lead to “dependency,” where beneficiaries lack the motivation or skills to become independent, thus hindering long-term development. 
    3. Time Horizon Difference: Welfare operates in short-term consumption space, while development unfolds over decades through structural change.
      1. Short-Term vs. Long-Term: Welfare operates in the immediate consumption space (e.g., food security, basic income), aiming to alleviate immediate poverty. Development unfolds over decades through structural change, increased productivity, and enhanced human capabilities.
      2. Consumption vs. Production: Welfare is often about distributing existing resources (redistribution), while development focuses on expanding the total “economic pie” through investment and infrastructure. 

    In summary, the confusion arises when populist, short-term welfare promises are packaged and marketed as long-term development strategies. This creates a scenario where immediate social protection is mistaken for structural economic transformation.

    How do welfare and development differ in objectives and outcomes?

    1. Welfare Orientation: Ensures immediate relief through redistribution; includes food security, income support, and access to basic services.
    2. Development Orientation: Ensures sustained economic growth, productivity, and institutional strengthening over time.
    3. Outcome Nature: Welfare produces short-term consumption gains; development generates durable capacity expansion.
    4. Capability Enhancement: Welfare reduces vulnerability; development expands human capabilities (education, health, skills).

    Why can excessive welfare distort development outcomes?

    1. Fiscal Constraints: Expands subsidy burden, limiting capital expenditure on infrastructure and public goods.
      1. In India, several states have seen their fiscal space shrink, with committed expenditures (salaries, pensions, interest, and subsidies) consuming over 80% of revenue receipts, leaving very little for developmental capital spending. In 2021-22, Punjab spent over 25% of its revenue expenditure on explicit subsidies
    2. Crowding Out Effect: Reduces investment in productive sectors due to excessive redistribution.
      1. Example: If the government heavily funds food or energy subsidies (e.g., agricultural electricity subsidies), it crowds out private investment in more efficient, technology-driven sectors. 
    3. Incentive Distortion: Weakens work incentives and productivity if poorly designed.
      1. Example: The PM-Kisan scheme in India costs over ₹63,500 crore annually. Critics argue it acts as a “sop” that keeps people in low-productivity subsistence farming rather than encouraging the structural transformation of labor towards higher-productivity urban sectors
    4. Leakages and Exclusion: Poor targeting leads to inefficiencies and reduced impact.
      1. Example: Studies on Public Distribution Systems (PDS) in India have historically shown significant leakages (sometimes up to 30% or more), where subsidized grains intended for the poor are diverted to the open market. Similarly, free electricity often disproportionately benefits wealthier farmers who have land and pump sets, rather than landless laborers. 

    Why is development inherently a long-term structural process?

    1. Incremental Transformation: Involves gradual changes in economic structures, governance, and institutions.
    2. Institutional Capacity: Strengthens rules, norms, and administrative systems over time.
    3. Human Capital Formation: Requires sustained investments in education, health, and technology adoption.
    4. Capability Approach: Expands freedoms and opportunities, as emphasized in development theory.
    Capability ApproachDefinition: Defines development as expansion of human freedoms and choices, not just income growth.Focus: Prioritises capabilities (real opportunities) over mere resources.Key Concepts:Capabilities vs Functionings:Capabilities: Potential opportunities (e.g., ability to be educated)Functionings: Achieved outcomes (e.g., being educated)Beyond GDP: Measures development through quality of life and choices, not just economic output.Conversion Factors: Recognises variation in how individuals convert resources into outcomes due to social, personal, environmental factorsCore Pillars:Human Agency: Individuals as active agents, not passive beneficiariesEquity: Equal access to opportunitiesFreedom Expansion: Removal of constraints (poverty, ill-health, exclusion)

    What are the dangers of welfare populism?

    1. Short-Termism: Prioritises electoral gains over economic capacity building.
    2. Fiscal Stress: Leads to unsustainable public debt and deficits.
    3. Consumption Bias: Encourages immediate consumption instead of productive investment.
    4. Substitution Effect: Replaces development policies with populist transfers rather than complementing them.

    Can welfare and development be complementary?

    1. Well-Designed Welfare: Enhances human capital; e.g., nutrition, employment guarantees.
    2. Capability Enhancement: Supports productivity by reducing vulnerability.
    3. Inclusive Growth: Ensures that growth benefits are widely shared.
    4. Policy Integration: Aligns welfare schemes with long-term development goals.

    Conclusion

    The policy challenge lies not in choosing between welfare and development but in designing a coherent framework where welfare complements structural transformation. Sustainable development requires balancing immediate relief with long-term capacity creation.

  • How altered mosquitoes could reshape malaria control

    Why in the News?

    A major breakthrough has emerged in malaria control as genetically modified mosquitoes, using CRISPR-Cas9, have been shown for the first time in real-world conditions to block malaria parasites, not just in laboratories. This marks a decisive shift from the traditional strategy of killing mosquitoes (through insecticides and nets) to biologically altering them so they cannot transmit disease.

    What explains the shift from mosquito eradication to genetic modification?

    The shift from traditional mosquito eradication to genetic modification (GM) is driven by the declining effectiveness of chemical insecticides, the rise of widespread insecticide resistance, and the need for more targeted, environmentally friendly, and sustainable solutions to curb diseases like malaria, dengue, and Zika. While past eradication efforts focused on widespread pesticide spraying (e.g., DDT) and environmental manipulation, these methods proved unsustainable, costly, and ecologically harmful, often leading to rapid population rebounds

    1. Resistance crisis: Insecticide resistance in mosquitoes and drug resistance in parasites reduces effectiveness of conventional methods.
    2. Behavioral Adaptation: Mosquitoes have changed their behaviors, such as biting outdoors or earlier in the day, reducing the effectiveness of traditional indoor-targeted insecticide treatments.
    3. Limited sustainability: Bed nets and spraying require continuous intervention; not self-propagating.
    4. Targeted Precision: Genetic modification, particularly CRISPR-Cas9 gene drives, allows researchers to target specific mosquito species (e.g., Aedes aegypti or Anopheles gambiae) without harming other beneficial insects.
    5. Scientific innovation: CRISPR-based gene editing allows targeted modification of mosquito genomes.
    6. Outcome shift: Focus moves from killing vectors to interrupting disease transmission cycle.

    How do gene drives alter inheritance patterns in mosquitoes?

    Gene drives alter inheritance in mosquitoes by using CRISPR-Cas9 to force a specific genetic trait to be inherited by nearly all offspring (up to 100%), overriding the standard 50% Mendelian inheritance rate. The drive cuts the wild-type chromosome, forcing the cell to repair it using the drive-carrying chromosome as a template, ensuring the modification spreads rapidly through populations.

    1. The “Homing” Mechanism: A gene drive, containing instructions for both a desired trait and an enzyme (Cas9), is inserted into a mosquito’s chromosome. In germline cells, this enzyme cuts the corresponding location on the homologous chromosome (the one without the drive).
    2. Conversion to Homozygosity: The mosquito’s DNA repair machinery, specifically homology-directed repair (HDR), fills the gap by copying the drive-containing sequence into the cut chromosome. This converts a heterozygote (one copy) into a homozygote (two copies), guaranteeing that all sperm or eggs produced carry the alteration.
    3. Biased inheritance: Ensures >50% inheritance; often exceeds 90% transmission rate.
    4. Rapid spread: Trait propagates through wild populations within few generations.
    5. Example: Modified genes preventing malaria parasite survival spread across mosquito populations.

    What evidence establishes real-world effectiveness of modified mosquitoes?

    Malaria still kills over half a million people annually, mostly in sub-Saharan Africa, and existing methods are faltering due to rising insecticide resistance and drug resistance. A Nature-published study demonstrated that modified mosquitoes can suppress parasites circulating in endemic African settings, while gene drives can spread traits to over 90% of offspring, making this a potentially transformative, scalable solution rather than a localized intervention.

    1. Field-linked validation: Study showed suppression of malaria parasites in endemic African regions, not just lab conditions.
    2. Nature publication: Confirms scientific credibility and peer-reviewed validation.
    3. Transmission blocking: Parasites severely impaired in mosquito salivary glands, preventing human infection.
    4. Population Suppression in Large-Scale Simulators: In “near-natural” cage trials, gene-drive systems targeting the doublesex fertility gene completely collapsed Anopheles gambiae populations within 7 to 11 generations. These trials showed nearly 100% inheritance bias, meaning almost all offspring carried the modification.
    5. Success Against Real-World Parasites: Recent research in Tanzania demonstrated that modified mosquitoes could block 90% or more of Plasmodium falciparum parasites taken from naturally infected children. This proves the technology works against diverse wild strains rather than just laboratory cultures.

    What are the competing approaches: population suppression vs modification?

    1. Population suppression:
      1. Gene targeting; Mechanism: Targets genes essential for survival or reproduction (e.g., disrupting the doublesex gene).
      2. Outcome: Collapse of mosquito populations within few generations.
      3. Examples: CRISPR-based drives causing female infertility (targeting doublesex or miR-184).
      4. Advantages/Disadvantages: Highly effective at breaking transmission cycles, similar to insecticides. However, it may cause significant disruption to ecosystems by eliminating a species. 
    2. Population modification:
      1. Mechanism(Gene insertion): Inserts “cargo” genes that do not kill the mosquito but instead render them unable to transmit the malaria parasite (anti-Plasmodium genes).
      2. Outcome: Lower ecological risk; avoids species extinction.
      3. Examples: Inserting genes that produce antibodies against Plasmodium parasites in the mosquito’s gut.
      4. Advantages/Disadvantages: Lower ecological risk as it avoids species extinction, but is technically more challenging to develop and might face faster evolution of resistance in the parasite
    3. Comparison and Policy Preference
      1. Policy Preference: While both are being evaluated, there is increasing support for population modification due to concerns about the long-term ecological consequences of permanently removing a species from an environment.
      2. Safety Measures: “Split drives” (dividing Cas9 and guide RNA) are being developed for both methods to make the interventions more controllable, localized, and potentially reversible.

    What are the ecological and ethical concerns surrounding gene drives?

    1. Ecological risk: Potential unintended effects on food chains and ecosystems.
    2. Niche Replacement: Removing a major vector could open a niche for secondary, less-understood vectors to take over.
    3. Horizontal Gene Transfer: There is a concern that engineered genetic material could transfer to non-target species (horizontal gene transfer).
    4. Irreversibility: Self-propagating drives may be difficult to control once released.
    5. Ethical concerns:
      1. Transboundary Impacts without Consent: Mosquitoes do not respect political borders. A gene drive released in one country could spread to neighboring nations that did not approve the release.
      2. Consent and Community Engagement: It is difficult to obtain informed consent from every individual in an affected community. Ethical issues arise when a trial affects people who are not actively enrolled in the study.
      3. Governance Gaps: Existing regulations for Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) are often inadequate for self-propagating gene drives.
      4. Playing God” and Naturalness: Concerns exist regarding the ethical limits of human power in modifying entire species and altering natural ecosystems. 

    What are the scientific and operational challenges ahead?

    1. Parasite diversity: Multiple malaria strains may require different genetic strategies.
    2. Resistance evolution: Parasites may adapt to modified mosquitoes.
    3. Regulatory gaps: Need for biosafety frameworks in endemic countries.
    4. Capacity building: Study shows gene engineering can be done locally, enhancing scientific infrastructure.

    Can gene drives replace existing malaria control strategies?

    1. Complementary role: Not a standalone solution.
    2. Integrated approach: Requires continued use of bed nets, medicines, vaccines, and surveillance.
    3. Public health systems: Strengthening healthcare delivery remains essential.
    4. Outcome: Gene drives act as an additional tool in malaria elimination.

    Conclusion

    Genetically modified mosquitoes represent a transformative approach to malaria control by targeting transmission rather than vector elimination. While promising, the technology requires robust regulatory frameworks, ethical consensus, and integration with existing public health strategies to ensure safe and effective deployment.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2021] What are the research and developmental achievements in applied biotechnology? How will these achievements help to uplift the poorer sections of society?

    Linkage: It directly relates to gene editing (CRISPR) in mosquitoes as a biotech advancement for malaria control. It shows how biotechnology improves public health outcomes, especially for vulnerable populations in endemic regions.

  • Deceptively benign: On retail inflation, oil-import-dependency

    Why in the News?

    India’s March inflation data presents a deceptive stability, with CPI at 3.4% (within RBI’s tolerance band), yet WPI surged to a 38-month high of 3.88%, revealing hidden inflationary pressures. The divergence between CPI and WPI, driven by fuel costs, rupee depreciation (2.5–3%), and global disruptions like the U.S.-Israel-Iran conflict, marks a sharp shift from earlier trends of synchronized inflation. This raises concerns of imported inflation and emerging stagflation risks, making it a significant macroeconomic warning.

    What is imported inflation?

    Imported inflation is a general rise in prices within a country caused by increasing costs of imported goods, services, or raw materials. It occurs when global commodity prices rise or a nation’s currency depreciates, making foreign purchases more expensive. This often leads to higher production costs for domestic manufacturers and increased prices for consumers.

    Primary Drivers in India

    1. Currency Depreciation: When the Indian Rupee weakens against the US Dollar, it takes more rupees to buy the same amount of foreign goods, directly increasing their “landed cost”.
    2. Global Commodity Prices: Surges in international prices for crude oil (which India imports ~85% of) or edible oils (60% imported) lead to higher local costs for fuel, transport, and food.
    3. Global Supply Chain Disruptions: Geopolitical conflicts, such as the Israel-Iran-US war, Russia-Ukraine war or West Asia tensions, can cause shortages and drive up the price of critical inputs.

    Current Impact (as of April 2026)

    1. Rising Contribution: According to SBI Research, imported inflation reached 6.49% in March 2026, contributing approximately 43% to India’s overall inflation rate.
    2. Regional Variance: Some states, like Telangana, have seen imported inflation exceed 12%, while others like Kerala and Uttar Pradesh hover around 7.5%. 

    What is the divergence between the Wholesale Price Index (WPI) and the Consumer Price Index (CPI)?

    The divergence between the Wholesale Price Index (WPI) and the Consumer Price Index (CPI) occurs when the prices paid by manufacturers for bulk goods move at a different rate than the retail prices paid by consumers. As of March 2026, India’s WPI has surged to a 38-month high of 3.88%, while retail CPI remains lower at 3.4%. 

    Meaning of the Divergence

    1. Producer vs. Consumer View: WPI measures “factory-gate” inflation (what businesses pay), whereas CPI measures the “cost of living” (what households pay).
    2. Supply-Side Pressure: A higher WPI indicates that production costs, such as raw materials and energy, are rising rapidly, even if those costs haven’t fully reached the end consumer yet.

    Reasons for the Gap

    The primary cause of the current gap is the different “baskets” of goods and services each index tracks: 

    1. Energy & Fuel Sensitivity: WPI gives a much higher weight (~13.2%) to Fuel & Power compared to CPI (~6.8%). Recent surges in global crude oil prices (up nearly 50% month-on-month due to West Asia tensions) hit the WPI immediately.
    2. Manufacturing vs. Food:
      1. WPI: Heavily weighted toward manufactured products (64.2%), which are sensitive to global commodity prices like chemicals and metals.
      2. CPI: Heavily weighted toward food and beverages (~45% in the old series; 36.75% in the new 2024 series). In March 2026, wholesale food inflation remained steady at 1.8%, keeping CPI lower despite the spike in fuel.
    3. Services Exclusion: WPI excludes the services sector (education, health, transport), while these form a significant part of the CPI basket.
    4. New CPI Base Year: MoSPI recently rebased the CPI to 2024 (released Feb 2026), updating consumption weights to reflect modern habits, while WPI still uses the 2011-12 base year.

    Why does CPI appear benign while underlying inflation pressures rise?

    1. CPI Stability: Reflects moderate retail inflation at 3.4% in March, within RBI’s 4-6% tolerance band, masking deeper issues.
    2. WPI Surge: Increased from 2.4% (Feb) to 3.88% (March), indicating rising input costs.
    3. Core-WPI vs. Core-CPI Divergence: While core inflation (excluding food and fuel) remained relatively steady in CPI, “Core-WPI” (non-food manufactured items) has accelerated to a 41-month high of 3.7%, signaling that factory-gate pressures are high and may eventually impact consumer prices in the coming months.
    4. Government Interventions and Rupee Impact: Government controls on food prices (like selling “Bharat” brand items) and a 2.5-3% fall in the rupee have created mixed pressures. Import costs have risen, pushing up WPI, while retail prices (CPI) stay relatively stable due to government intervention.
    5. Muted Transmission: Food prices show limited increase (CFPI from ~3.4% to ~3.8%), delaying retail inflation impact.

    How does fossil fuel dependence amplify imported inflation?

    1. Dollar-denominated Trade: Crude oil and gas priced in dollars, exposing India to currency fluctuations.
    2. Rupee Depreciation: Declined by 2.5-3%, increasing import costs across sectors.
    3. Input Cost Inflation: Raises prices of fertilizers, plastics, petrochemicals, affecting pharmaceuticals, textiles, automobiles.
    4. Energy Dependence:  High reliance on imported oil increases vulnerability to global shocks.

    What role do global geopolitical disruptions play in inflation?

    1. Supply Chain Disruptions: Triggered by U.S.-Israel-Iran conflict, affecting fuel supply.
    2. Global Price Transmission: Increased crude prices transmit inflation across economies.
    3. War-induced Trade Impact: Decline in exports (3-4% YoY) and imports (5-6% YoY) reflects supply-side constraints.

    Why is inflation currently suppressed despite rising costs?

    1. Corporate Absorption: Firms temporarily absorb rising input costs, compressing margins.
    2. Domestic Redirection: Exporters (especially MSMEs) shift output to domestic markets.
    3. Supply Gluts: Increased domestic supply delays price rise.
    4. Policy Relaxations: Allow greater domestic sales from export-oriented units.

    Does this trend indicate emerging stagflation risks?

    1. Delayed Inflation Surge: Cost pressures likely to pass through eventually.
    2. Growth Slowdown: IMF projects India’s FY27 growth at ~6.2%, indicating moderation.
    3. Stagflation Indicators: Combination of rising inflation + slowing growth.
    4. RBI Concerns: Acknowledges vulnerability from imported inflation.

    Why is energy transition critical for macroeconomic stability?

    1. Structural Vulnerability: Oil-import dependence exposes economy to external shocks.
    2. Renewable Shift: Reduces exposure to volatile global fuel markets.
    3. Inflation Control: Limits cost-push inflation from energy imports.
    4. Strategic Autonomy: Enhances long-term economic resilience.

    Conclusion

    India’s current inflation scenario reflects a temporary calm masking structural risks. The divergence between CPI and WPI signals latent inflationary pressures driven by external vulnerabilities. Addressing fossil fuel dependence is essential to ensure long-term macroeconomic stability.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2024] What are the causes of persistent high food inflation in India? Comment on the effectiveness of the monetary policy of the RBI to control this type of inflation.

    Linkage: The PYQ directly links to inflation dynamics (CPI vs WPI, cost-push factors like fuel, imports, rupee depreciation). It tests understanding of policy limitations when inflation is supply-driven/imported, as discussed in the article.

  • Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) in India

    Why in the News?

    • CSR spending by listed companies rose by 23% in FY25, reaching about ₹22,212 crore, driven by strong profit growth.

    What is CSR

    • Corporate Social Responsibility refers to:
      • Companies investing in social, environmental, and developmental activities
    • Mandated under:
      • Companies Act, 2013 (effective April 2014)

    CSR Legal Framework

    Mandatory Requirement

    • Eligible companies must spend: At least 2% of average net profits (last 3 years)

    Applicability Criteria

    Applies to companies with:

    • Net worth ≥ ₹500 crore
    • Turnover ≥ ₹1,000 crore
    • Net profit ≥ ₹5 crore

    Key Trends (FY25)

    • CSR spending: ₹22,212 crore (up 23%)
    • Companies spending CSR: 98% compliance
    • Increase due to: Higher corporate profits

    Sector-wise Allocation

    • Highest spending: Education
    • Second: Healthcare
    • Low spending:
      • Slum development
      • Disaster management
      • Armed forces welfare
    [2024] With reference to Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) rules in India, consider the following statements: 
    1. CSR rules specify that expenditures that benefit the company directly or its employees will not be considered as CSR activities. 
    2. CSR rules do not specify minimum spending on CSR activities. 
    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
  • Women in the Economy: Rising Participation, Low Leadership  

    Why in the News?

    • Female participation in India’s workforce is rising, but representation in leadership roles remains low, raising concerns for inclusive growth.

    Key Trends

    Rising Female Labour Force Participation (LFPR)

    • Female LFPR:
      • 2022: 33.9%
      • 2025: 40%
    • Still below:
      • Global average: 49%
      • Brazil: 53%
      • Vietnam: 69%

    Why Female Participation Matters

    • According to the World Bank: India needs ~8% growth to become developed by 2047
    • Low female participation: Major constraint to growth

    Economic Impact

    • Study (2018): Constituencies with women legislators: +1.8% higher economic performance

    Women in Leadership (Major Concern)

    1. Academia

    • IITs: Female faculty ~14%
    • IIMs: Range: 19% to 31%
    • Professors (India overall): ~29.5%

    2. Business & Corporate Sector

    • Female-owned establishments: ~27%
    • Women in leadership roles: Only 13 women per 100 men

    3. Corporate Boards

    • Many firms: Only 1–2 women directors
    • Women board chairpersons:
      • BSE 200: ~7%
      • NSE 500: ~5%
    • Indicates token representation

    Note: 

    • The BSE 200 is a stock market index on the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) in India, comprising 200 of the largest, most liquid, and highly traded companies across various sectors.
    • The Nifty 500 is a broad-based stock market index representing the top 500 companies listed on the National Stock Exchange of India (NSE) based on market capitalization and average daily turnover.
    [2024] Consider the following statements regarding ‘Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam’ : 
    1. Provisions will come into effect from 18th Lok Sabha. 
    2. This will be in force for 15 years after becoming an Act. 
    3. There are provisions for the reservation of seats for Scheduled Castes Women within the quota reserved for the Scheduled Castes. 
    Which of the statements given above are correct? 
    [A] 1, 2 and 3 [B] 1 and 2 only [C] 2 and 3 only [D] 1 and 3 only
  • OCI Card Extension to 6th Generation in Sri Lanka  

    Why in the News?

    • India extended OCI card eligibility to the 6th generation of the Indian-origin community in Sri Lanka.
    • Announced during the visit of C. P. Radhakrishnan.

    What is OCI (Overseas Citizen of India)

    • A form of long-term visa status for persons of Indian origin
    • Not full citizenship, but provides:
      • Multiple-entry lifelong visa
      • Exemption from police reporting
      • Parity with NRIs in certain fields

    Key Update

    • Earlier eligibility: Up to 4th generation
    • Now extended to: 5th and 6th generation (Sri Lanka specific)
    • Based on documents issued by Sri Lankan authorities

    How “Generation” is counted

    It is counted family-wise (lineage):

    • 1st generation → Person born in India (original ancestor)
    • 2nd generation → Child of that person
    • 3rd generation → Grandchild
    • 4th generation → Great-grandchild
    • 5th generation → Next generation after that
    • 6th generation → Further descendant

    Significance

    1. Diaspora Outreach

    • Benefits: Indian-origin Tamil community (~7% of Sri Lanka population)
    • Strengthens cultural and historical ties

    2. India–Sri Lanka Relations

    • Reinforces: Neighbourhood First Policy
    • Builds goodwill and trust

    3. Strategic Diplomacy

    • India positioning as: First responder in region
    • Seen in: 2022 Sri Lankan economic crisis support
    [2021] With reference to India, consider the following statements: 
    1. There is only one citizenship and one domicile. 
    2. A Citizen by birth only can become the Head of State. 
    3. A foreigner once granted the citizenship cannot be deprived of it under any circumstance. 
    Which of the statements given above is/are correct? 
    [A] 1 only [B] 2 only [C] 1 and 3 [D] 2 and 3
  • 🔴[UPSC Webinar for 2027] By Surabhi Yadav, AIR 14, UPSC CSE 25 | How to Brainstorm High Quality Answers for UPSC | Join on 19th April at 7PM

    🔴[UPSC Webinar for 2027] By Surabhi Yadav, AIR 14, UPSC CSE 25 | How to Brainstorm High Quality Answers for UPSC | Join on 19th April at 7PM

    Register for the session


    Read about Webinar


    Do you struggle to generate points while writing answers?
    Does your mind go blank even when you’ve studied the topic?

    Learn how to think before you write with me as I break down the art of brainstorming high quality answers for UPSC.

    Surabhi Yadav, AIR 14, UPSC CSE 25

    What I’ll cover in this session:

    1. Why Most Aspirants Struggle with Brainstorming

    Why knowledge doesn’t automatically convert into answers

    The “blank mind” problem in the exam hall

    Passive reading vs active thinking


    2. The Right Way to Brainstorm Answers

    Structuring thoughts within 30–40 seconds

    How to decode the demand of the question

    Using frameworks (dimensions, stakeholders, keywords)


    3. Building Depth in Your Answers

    Using examples, data, and case studies effectively

    How to add multi-dimensional points quickly

    Linking static content with current affairs


    4. From Thinking to Writing Efficiently

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  • [18th April 2026] The Hindu Op-ED: Why women’s reservation cannot wait any longer 

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2019] The reservation of seats for women in the institutions of local self-government has had a limited impact on the patriarchal character of the Indian Political Process.” Comment.Linkage: The PYQ examines effectiveness of women’s reservation in transforming patriarchal politics at grassroots. It highlights that despite limitations, PRI experience validates reservation as a necessary structural reform, supporting extension to Parliament and Assemblies.

    Mentor’s Comment

    The Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, 2026, also known as the Women’s Reservation Amendment Bill, failed to pass in the Lok Sabha on April 17, 2026, after falling short of the required two-thirds majority. The bill sought to introduce one-third reservation for women in the Lok Sabha and State Assemblies, but failed to pass as 298 MPs voted in favour and 230 against. This comes amid a stark contradiction: women constitute nearly 50% of the population and show equal or higher voter turnout, yet hold only ~14-15% seats in Parliament and ~9% in State Assemblies. The widening gap between political participation and actual representation reflects a structural democratic deficit rather than a transitional issue.

    Why does high female participation not translate into representation?

    1. Participation-Representation Gap: Women voters show equal or higher turnout but remain underrepresented in legislatures.
    2. Data Evidence: ~14-15% in Parliament; ~9% in State Assemblies; ~50% population share.
    3. Structural Disconnect: Electoral engagement does not ensure access to decision-making power.
    4. Candidate-Level Exclusion: High turnout does not translate into proportional ticket distribution by parties.
    5. Institutional Bias: Electoral systems and political hierarchies favor entrenched male dominance.

    What structural barriers restrict women’s political entry?

    1. Party Gatekeeping: Political parties nominate fewer women candidates.
    2. Resource Constraints: Electoral politics requires funding, networks, and social capital, where women face disadvantages.
    3. Cultural Norms: Social expectations and safety concerns limit political participation.
    4. Cycle of Exclusion: Low representation perpetuates future exclusion in candidate selection.
    5. Violence and Intimidation: Gender-based political violence discourages participation.

    Does reservation compromise merit or correct systemic bias?

    1. Myth of Meritocracy: Existing system is influenced by privilege and networks, not pure merit.
    2. Corrective Mechanism: Reservation addresses historical exclusion and structural inequalities.
    3. Institutional Intervention: Acts as a catalyst, not a permanent solution.
    4. Level Playing Field: Enables fair competition by offsetting structural disadvantages.
    5. Evidence from PRIs: Demonstrates capable leadership outcomes under reservation.

    What lessons emerge from local governance (Panchayati Raj)?

    1. Transformational Impact: Reservation increased women’s participation and leadership effectiveness.
    2. Policy Shift: Women leaders prioritized health, education, sanitation, and welfare.
    3. Pipeline Creation: Encouraged future leadership among women and normalized public roles.
    4. Evidence-Based Success: Demonstrates feasibility and positive governance outcomes.
    5. Social Change: Reduced gender biases and increased community acceptance of women leaders.

    Why is the State-Parliament gap particularly concerning?

    1. Grassroots Deficit: ~9% representation indicates deeper structural barriers at local legislative levels.
    2. Policy Impact: State governments directly influence key sectors like health, law and order, education.
    3. Democratic Legitimacy: Underrepresentation weakens inclusivity and trust in governance.
    4. Leadership Pipeline Gap: Weak state-level representation disrupts progression to national politics.
    5. Regional Disparities: Variation across states reflects uneven political inclusion.

    Why can voluntary political reforms not solve the issue?

    1. Ineffective Promises: Political parties have historically failed to increase women candidates voluntarily.
    2. Stagnant Representation: No significant increase despite repeated commitments.
    3. Structural Solution Needed: Reservation ensures enforceable representation.
    4. Electoral Incentives: Parties prioritize winnability perceptions over inclusivity.
    5. Lack of Accountability: No binding mechanism to enforce gender parity.

    How does women’s reservation deepen democracy?

    1. Decision-Making Inclusion: Moves beyond voting rights to governance participation.
      1. Breaks the “Old Boys’ Club”: It disrupts historical power monopolies, ensuring that governance isn’t just for the people, but truly by a representative cross-section of the people.
    2. Legitimacy Enhancement: Reflects diversity in policymaking bodies. It prioritises “invisible” issues. Women in office often champion “soft” infrastructure, like sanitation, clean water, and maternal health, that are frequently overlooked but are fundamental to public welfare.
    3. Developmental Gains: Gender-inclusive governance improves social indicators and policy outcomes.
    4. Substantive Representation: Ensures women-centric issues receive policy attention.
    5. Institutional Balance: Strengthens democratic fairness and representational justice.

    What are the consequences of delaying implementation?

    1. Widening Gap: Faster social progress vs slower institutional adaptation. Female literacy, education, and workforce aspirations have improved significantly, but political institutions have not adapted proportionately.
    2. Disengagement Risk: Women voters may lose trust in political systems.
    3. Democratic Deficit: Representation imbalance undermines institutional credibility.
    4. Policy Blind Spots: Women-centric issues remain under-prioritized.
    5. Global Lag: India falls behind global standards on gender representation.
      1. India ranks around 140+ in global women’s parliamentary representation (IPU data), far behind many developing nations.
      2. Rwanda Model: Rwanda has ~60% women in Parliament, the highest globally due to constitutional reservation.
      3. Nordic Countries: Nations like Sweden, Norway, Finland maintain 40-45% representation through strong party-level quotas.
      4. Neighbourhood Comparison: Countries like Nepal (~33%) and Bangladesh (~20%+) outperform India despite similar socio-economic contexts.
      5. Global Average Benchmark: The world average is ~26-27%, significantly higher than India’s ~14-15%, highlighting a clear lag.

    Conclusion

    Women’s reservation is not an issue of fairness alone. It ensures institutional balance, democratic legitimacy, and effective governance outcomes. Delay perpetuates structural inequality.

  • LPG demand softens, moving to normalcy amid summer onset

    Why in the News?

    India is witnessing a sharp normalization in LPG demand after an unprecedented spike, triggered by panic buying during the West Asia crisis. Daily bookings, which surged to 89 lakh (March peak), have now fallen below 50 lakh, marking a significant correction. This is critical because LPG, highly import-dependent (~60%), was the worst affected fuel due to disruption in the Strait of Hormuz. This exposed India’s energy vulnerability. The easing demand has reduced pressure on supplies, averting a potential crisis.

    Why did LPG demand surge abnormally in recent months?

    1. Panic Buying: Triggered by the West Asia crisis; consumers feared supply disruptions and this led to hoarding and black marketing.
    2. Booking Spike: Daily LPG bookings crossed 50 lakh consistently in March, peaking at 89 lakh (March 13).
    3. Supply Shock Perception: Strait of Hormuz disruption impacted global supply chains, amplifying uncertainty.
    4. Import Dependency Fear: High reliance on imports (~60%) heightened public anxiety about availability.
    5. Information Asymmetry: Lack of clear communication in early phase intensified rumours and speculative demand.

    Why is LPG demand now softening during summer?

    1. Seasonal Variation: LPG demand declines in summer as heating needs reduce; winter sees dual usage (cooking + heating).
    2. Demand Normalisation: Bookings now stabilised at 46-50 lakh/day, indicating return to baseline consumption.
    3. Behavioural Correction: Panic-driven consumption patterns have subsided with improved supply confidence.
    4. Supply Assurance: Government and Oil Marketing Companies (OMCs) communication restored trust in availability.
    5. Reduced Stockpiling: Households have already accumulated excess cylinders, lowering fresh demand.

    How vulnerable is India’s LPG supply chain?

    1. Import Dependence: India imports ~60% of LPG requirements.
    2. Geographic Concentration: 90% of imports routed via Strait of Hormuz, a critical chokepoint.
    3. Supply Disruption Impact: Around 54% of LPG supplies were effectively disrupted during the peak crisis phase.
    4. Limited Strategic Reserves: Inadequate buffer storage capacity to absorb sudden shocks.
    5. Logistical Bottlenecks: Dependence on maritime routes exposes supply to shipping delays and geopolitical risks.

    How has India managed to stabilise LPG supplies?

    1. Diversification of Imports: Increased procurement from non-West Asian suppliers.
    2. Domestic Production Boost: Production fluctuating between 46,000-50,000 tonnes/day (~58-63% of domestic demand).
    3. Logistics Stabilisation: Continuous procurement and restored shipping flows ensured supply continuity.
    4. Commercial Supply Recovery: LPG availability restored to 70% of commercial demand (~8,200 tonnes).
    5. Policy Coordination: Inter-ministerial coordination ensured timely decisions on imports and distribution.

    What is the current supply-demand balance situation?

    1. Demand Reduction: Lower bookings reduced pressure on supply chains.
    2. Import Requirement Drop: Net imports reduced to 30 TMT, indicating improved domestic sufficiency.
    3. Stable Household Supply: OMCs maintaining supply at pre-conflict level (>50 lakh cylinders/day).
    4. No Shortage Reports: No “dry-out” situations reported across regions.
    5. Improved Supply Buffer: Better alignment between domestic production and consumption needs.

    What structural issues does this episode highlight?

    1. Energy Security Risk: Overdependence on a single region exposes India to geopolitical shocks.
    2. Infrastructure Constraints: Limited storage and diversification capacity.
    3. Market Behaviour Issues: Panic buying and hoarding distort demand-supply equilibrium.
    4. Policy Gaps: Need for stronger demand-side management and crisis communication frameworks.
    5. Supply Chain Fragility: Heavy reliance on external routes and suppliers limits resilience.

    Conclusion

    The episode reflects a temporary demand distortion driven by geopolitical shocks, now corrected through seasonal trends and supply-side adjustments. However, it underscores the structural vulnerability of India’s LPG ecosystem, necessitating diversification, domestic capacity expansion, and demand-side regulation.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2022] Do you think India will meet 50 percent of its energy needs from renewable energy by 2030? Justify your answer. How will the shift of subsidies from fossil fuels to renewables help achieve the above objective? Explain

    Linkage: The PYQ tests India’s energy security, transition strategy, and subsidy rationalisation in achieving climate and sustainability targets. It highlights overdependence on imported fossil fuels (LPG ~60%), reinforcing the need for renewables to reduce geopolitical vulnerability and supply shocks.

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