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  • [27th April 2026] The Hindu OpED: Summer as a source of income shock for gig workers

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2024] What is disaster resilience? How is it determined? Describe various elements of a resilience framework.Linkage: The PYQ is directly relevant as heatwaves represent a climate-induced disaster, where resilience must include income security and labour protection, not just survival. The article highlights gaps in India’s resilience framework by showing how gig workers remain excluded from economic and institutional preparedness systems.

    Mentor’s Comment

    India is experiencing more frequent and prolonged heatwaves, with recorded heat-related mortality in 2022. Simultaneously, the gig economy is expanding rapidly, 7.7 million workers (2020-21) projected to reach 23 million by 2029-30 (NITI Aayog). This creates a convergence where climate risk intersects with informal labour vulnerability; exposing gig workers to both health risks and income shocks.

    Why are heatwaves emerging as an income shock for gig workers?

    1. Income dependency: Earnings depend on trips/orders completed; reduced mobility lowers income.
    2. Heat-induced productivity loss: High temperatures slow movement and increase fatigue.
    3. Absence of paid leave: Gig workers lack paid leave; logging off results in immediate income loss.
    4. Health risks: Dehydration, heat exhaustion, long-term stress increase during peak hours.
    5. Structural vulnerability: Gig workers cannot “work from home,” unlike salaried employees.

    How has climate risk for labour been historically mischaracterized?

    1. Medical framing: Heat treated primarily as a public health emergency, not an economic issue.
    2. Policy limitation: Heat Action Plans focus on mortality reduction, not income protection.
    3. Behavioural advisories: Recommendations (stay indoors, reduce activity) unrealistic for gig workers.
    4. Neglect of informal sector: Assumption that individuals can adjust behaviour independently.

    Why does current preparedness remain inadequate for gig workers?

    1. Infrastructure mismatch: Cooling centres, water kiosks not designed for mobile workers.
    2. Fragmented governance:
      1. Health departments focus on illness
      2. Disaster agencies focus on emergency response
      3. Labour departments lack clarity on gig worker status
    3. Platform exclusion: Digital platforms not integrated into climate preparedness frameworks.
    4. Gender dimension: Women gig workers face additional unpaid care burdens and safety risks.

    How does extreme heat exacerbate economic inequality and labour precarity?

    1. Income volatility: Heat reduces working hours and this leads to a direct fall in earnings.
    2. Lack of social protection: Absence of insurance, wage guarantees, or compensation.
    3. Urban dependence: Cities rely on gig workers for essential services (food, medicines).
    4. Risk transfer: Platforms shift operational risks to workers without safety nets.

    What policy gaps hinder effective climate-labour integration?

    1. Regulatory ambiguity: Gig workers classified outside traditional labour protections.
    2. Limited labour codes applicability: Social security provisions remain weakly implemented.
    3. Platform accountability gap: No binding obligations for heat-responsive work design.
    4. Weak inter-agency coordination: Lack of integrated climate-labour governance framework.

    What measures can enhance resilience for gig workers?

    1. Labour recognition: Heat treated as labour and productivity issue.
    2. Workplace safeguards: Rest breaks, shaded areas, hydration facilities mandated.
    3. Income protection mechanisms: Insurance, wage compensation, integration with welfare schemes.
    4. Platform responsibility:
      1. Flexible performance metrics
      2. Reduced delivery pressure during peak heat
    5. Institutional coordination: Collaboration among labour, urban, disaster management, and platform regulators.

    Why is rethinking resilience critical in the gig economy context?

    1. Urban system dependence: Essential goods delivery depends on the gig workforce.
    2. Climate risk absorption: Gig workers act as buffers for systemic shocks.
    3. Resilience definition: Must include safe working conditions + stable income, not just survival.

    Conclusion

    Climate adaptation in India remains incomplete without integrating labour and income dimensions. Gig workers represent a critical but vulnerable workforce. Policy must shift from reactive health responses to proactive economic safeguards, ensuring both livelihood security and climate resilience.

  • Why below average-rains don’t rule out flood threats

    Why in the News?

    India’s monsoon narrative is undergoing a structural shift: even below-average seasonal rainfall (92% of normal) no longer guarantees safety from floods. The real concern is the sharp rise in short-duration, high-intensity rainfall events, with extreme rainfall incidents increasing to 181 in 2024 (from 160 in 2023). This marks a decisive break from earlier patterns where floods were linked to overall excess rainfall.

    Why do below-average monsoons no longer reduce flood risks?

    1. Rainfall variability: Seasonal averages conceal intra-seasonal fluctuations, allowing extreme events despite overall deficit rainfall.
    2. Short-duration intensity: Rainfall now occurs in short, intense bursts, increasing runoff and flood risk.
    3. Historical evidence: Major disasters (e.g., 2015 Chennai floods, 2018 Kerala floods, 2023 Himachal floods) occurred even in relatively normal or deficit rainfall years.

    How has the frequency and intensity of extreme rainfall changed over time?

    1. Rising frequency: Extreme rainfall events increased from ~89 (2016) to 181 (2024).
    2. Threshold revision: IMD reduced extreme rainfall threshold from 244.5 mm to 204.5 mm (2016), reflecting changing climate patterns.
    3. Spatial spread: Events are now geographically widespread, affecting both coastal and inland regions.

    What explains the increasing unpredictability of rainfall patterns?

    1. Climate change impact: Warmer atmosphere holds more moisture, leading to intense precipitation events.
    2. Chaotic weather systems: Small initial changes lead to large deviations, limiting forecast accuracy.
    3. Forecast limitations: Even with improved models, predicting exact rainfall intensity (250 mm vs 500 mm) remains difficult.

    Why are Indian cities increasingly vulnerable to rainfall-induced disasters?

    1. Urban flooding: Cities like Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, Bengaluru face repeated flooding due to poor drainage systems.
    2. Unplanned development: Construction on floodplains, wetlands, and water bodies reduces natural absorption capacity.
    3. Population density: High-density urban clusters amplify economic and human losses.

    What role do past disasters play in understanding current risks?

    1. Disaster clustering: India has experienced at least one major rainfall disaster every year since 2013 (e.g., Kedarnath 2013, Uttarakhand 2021, Assam 2022).
    2. Record-breaking events:
      1. Jammu & Kashmir (2014): Highest rainfall in 100 years.
      2. Kerala (2018): Worst floods in a century.
    3. Trend shift: Disasters are no longer rare but structural features of the monsoon system.

    How has the nature of rainfall-related disasters evolved?

    1. From scarcity to extremes: Earlier focus on rainfall deficiency has shifted to extreme variability.
    2. Urban-centric risks: Flooding increasingly affects urban agglomerations rather than only rural areas.
    3. Economic consequences: States spent over 55% of disaster expenditure on floods (2019-2023), indicating high fiscal burden.

    Conclusion

    India’s monsoon is no longer defined by total rainfall but by distribution, intensity, and timing. The growing disconnect between seasonal averages and disaster outcomes highlights the urgent need for climate-resilient urban planning, improved forecasting systems, and adaptive governance frameworks. The challenge lies not in managing scarcity alone, but in navigating climate-induced volatility.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2020] Account for the huge flooding of million cities in India including the smart ones like Hyderabad and Pune. Suggest lasting remedial measures

    Linkage: Increasing extreme rainfall events despite normal/below-normal monsoon directly explain rising urban flooding trends in Indian cities. This PYQ links climatology (monsoon variability) with urban geography issues, making it relevant for both Mains (GS1/GS3) and Prelims (extreme rainfall, IMD classification).

  • Rupee depreciation and its impact on investments

    Why in the News?

    The issue of rupee depreciation has gained renewed attention due to a sharp and sustained fall in the Indian Rupee (INR) against the US Dollar, with the currency weakening from ₹85.53 (March 31, 2025) to ₹92.76 (March 30, 2026). This is a notable 8.45% depreciation, and even 10.73% from intermediate peaks. This is significant because it reflects macroeconomic stress combined with global volatility, particularly rising crude oil prices and foreign investor outflows.

    How does rupee depreciation impact equity investments?

    1. Limited Direct Impact: Exchange rate fluctuations do not directly affect domestic equity investments if earnings are INR-based.
    2. Sentiment Effect: Currency weakness negatively affects investor confidence due to macroeconomic uncertainty.
    3. Multiple Drivers: Market corrections arise from FPI outflows, crude oil prices, and global cues, not just currency depreciation.

    Why is rupee depreciation more harmful to debt investments?

    1. Imported Inflation: Weak currency raises the cost of imports like crude oil, increasing inflation.
    2. Interest Rate Sensitivity: Higher inflation leads to higher interest rates, reducing bond prices.
    3. Example: Rising crude prices denominated in USD increase landed cost-inflation rises-bond yields rise and finally bond prices fall.

    What is the role of RBI projections in assessing currency impact?

    1. Inflation Projection: RBI projects 4.6% inflation for 2026-27, indicating moderate inflation expectations.
    2. Policy Assumptions: Includes crude oil at $85/barrel and exchange rate at ₹94/USD.
    3. Market Stability Signal: Suggests depreciation is partly already factored into macroeconomic planning.

    Can gold act as an effective hedge against rupee depreciation?

    1. Currency Hedge: Gold prices rise in INR when rupee weakens, as it is priced in USD.
    2. Historical Trend: A significant portion of gold price rise in India is due to currency depreciation.
    3. Portfolio Allocation: Recommended allocation is 10-15%, as gold is not a primary growth asset.

    How can investors benefit from global diversification during depreciation?

    1. Currency Advantage: Investments in foreign assets gain when INR depreciates.
    2. Conversion Benefit: Investment in USD assets appreciates in INR terms during redemption.
    3. Investment Routes:
      1. Mutual Funds: International funds available in India
      2. Direct Investment: Through Liberalized Remittance Scheme (LRS)

    How does rupee depreciation affect household expenses?

    1. Inflation Impact: Reduced purchasing power due to rising prices.
    2. Imported Goods: Costlier fuel, electronics, and foreign services.
    3. Limited Control: Domestic inflation due to global factors remains beyond individual control.

    Conclusion

    Rupee depreciation is not inherently negative but becomes problematic when it fuels inflation and destabilizes investment returns. While equity markets absorb the shock through multiple factors, debt markets and consumption are more vulnerable. Strategic diversification, moderate gold allocation, and global exposure can mitigate risks.

    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: Rupee depreciation increases imported inflation, which contributes to persistent food inflation in India. The article explains exchange rate pass-through and highlights the RBI’s inflation projection of 4.6%, indicating the role of monetary policy in managing inflationary pressures.

  • Hindu Kush Himalaya (HKH) 

    Why in the News?

    • A report by the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development highlights a record 27% decline in snow persistence in the HKH region.
    • Indicates accelerating climate change impacts on Asian water systems.

    About Hindu Kush Himalaya (HKH)

    • A vast mountain system extending about 3,500 km
    • Spans 8 countries: Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, China, India, Nepal, Myanmar, and Pakistan.

    Why Called “Third Pole”?

    • Largest ice reserves outside Arctic and Antarctic
    • Critical for:
      • Global climate regulation
      • Freshwater supply

    Major Rivers Originating from HKH

    • Indus
    • Ganga
    • Brahmaputra
    • Amu Darya
    • Mekong
    • Yangtze
    • Yellow River
    • Irrawaddy
    • Salween
    • Tarim
    [2012] When you travel in Himalayas, you will see the following: 
    1 Deep gorges 
    2 U-turn river courses 
    3 Parallel mountain ranges 
    4 Steep gradients causing land sliding 
    Which of the above can be said to be the evidence for Himalayas being young fold mountains? 
    (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 1, 2 and 4 only (c) 3 and 4 only (d) 1, 2, 3 and 4
  • Right to Safe Roads as a Part of Right to Life: Supreme Court Judgment

    Why in the News?

    In a significant expansion of fundamental rights, the Supreme Court of India ruled in August 2025 that access to safe, motorable, and well-maintained roads is an integral part of the Right to Life under Article 21 of the Constitution.

    Key Legal Pronouncements

    The Bench, comprising Justices J.B. Pardiwala and R. Mahadevan, linked the quality of infrastructure to constitutional guarantees:

    • Article 21 (Right to Life): The Court held that “life” is not merely physical existence but includes the right to live with dignity, which is hindered by poor and unsafe road conditions.
    • Article 19(1)(d): The right to move freely throughout the territory of India is a basic right. The Court noted that this right becomes “illusory” if the state fails to provide motorable roads.
    • State Responsibility: The judgment explicitly stated that it is the mandatory responsibility of the State to develop and maintain roads under its control.

    Case Background

    The ruling emerged from a dispute between Umri Pooph Pratappur (UPP) Tollways Private Limited and the Madhya Pradesh Road Development Corporation Limited (MPRDC).

    • The Project: A ‘Build, Operate, and Transfer’ (BOT) agreement for a 43.7-km road project in Madhya Pradesh worth ₹73.68 crore.
    • The Shift: While the case was a commercial dispute over a concession agreement, the Court used the platform to emphasize the public interest aspect of infrastructure.
    [2019] Which Article of the Constitution of India safeguards one’s right to marry the person of one’s choice? 
    (a) Article 19  
    (b) Article 21  
    (c) Article 25  
    (d) Article 29
  • India’s Nuclear & Wind Energy Progress  

    Why in the News?

    • Prime Minister Narendra Modi highlighted:
      • Fast Breeder Reactor (FBR) achieving criticality
      • India becoming 4th largest in wind energy capacity
      • Call for participation in Census 2027

    Fast Breeder Reactor (FBR) 

    • Location: Kalpakkam, Tamil Nadu
    • Achievement: Criticality attained

    What is Criticality?

    • Stage where: Self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction begins
    • Indicates: Reactor becomes operational

    Significance of FBR

    • Uses: Plutonium-based fuel
    • Converts: Fertile material → Fissile fuel
    • Advantages:
      • Efficient fuel use
      • Supports India’s 3-stage nuclear programme
    • Built with: Indigenous technology

    Wind Energy  

    • Installed capacity: 56 GW+
    • Global rank: 4th in world

    Leading States

    • Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, and Rajasthan
    [2023] Consider the following statements: 
    Statement-I: India, despite having uranium deposits, depends on coal for most of its electricity production. 
    Statement-II: Uranium, enriched to the extent of at least 60%, is required for the production of electricity. 
    Which one of the following is correct in respect of the above statements? 
    (a) Both Statement-I and Statement-II are correct and Statement-II is the correct explanation for Statement-I 
    (b) Both Statement-I and Statement-II are correct and Statement-II is not the correct explanation for Statement-I 
    (c) Statement-I is correct but Statement-II is incorrect 
    (d) Statement-I is incorrect but Statement-II is correct
  • Thrissur Pooram 2026: Cultural Splendour Amidst Tragedy

    Why in the News?

    On April 26, 2026, the historic Thrissur Pooram was celebrated at the Thekkinkadu Maidan in Kerala. However, this edition was notably scaled-down and held without its signature fireworks display (Vedikettu) following a tragic accident at Mundathikode earlier in the month that claimed 15 lives.

    About Thrissur Pooram

    • One of the grandest temple festivals of Kerala
    • Held at: Sree Vadakkunnathan Temple
    • Venue: Thekkinkadu Maidan
    [2014] Consider the following pairs: 
    1 Garba : Gujarat 
    2 Mohiniattam : Odisha 
    3 Yakshagana : Karnataka 
    Which of the pairs given above is / are correctly matched? 
    a) 1 only b) 2 and 3 only c) 1 and 3 only d) 1, 2 and 3
  • Resumption of Centre-Ladakh Talks (May 2026)

    Why in the News?

    Following a prolonged stalemate and violent unrest in 2025, the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) is set to resume formal talks with Ladakh’s civil society groups on May 22, 2026. This coincides with Union Home Minister Amit Shah’s visit to the region for the Buddha Purnima holy relics exposition.

    Core Demands of Ladakh (UPSC Focus)

    The dialogue involves two major socio-political groupings: the Leh Apex Body (LAB) and the Kargil Democratic Alliance (KDA). Their “Four-Point Agenda” includes:

    1. Statehood for Ladakh: Transition from a Union Territory (UT) to a full-fledged State.
    2. Sixth Schedule Inclusion: Granting constitutional safeguards under Article 244 to protect land, employment, and cultural identity.
    3. Exclusive Public Service Commission (PSC): A dedicated recruitment body for Ladakh to ensure local preference in government jobs.
    4. Enhanced Parliamentary Representation: Increasing the number of Lok Sabha seats from one to two (one each for Leh and Kargil).

    Significance of the Sixth Schedule

    The Sixth Schedule provides for the administration of tribal areas through Autonomous District Councils (ADCs).

    • Powers: ADCs have legislative, judicial, and administrative autonomy to make laws on land, forests, water, and social customs.
    • Current Status: Currently applies to tribal areas in four Northeastern states: Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, and Mizoram (AMTM).
    • Ladakh’s Argument: Over 90% of Ladakh’s population is tribal, making it a fit candidate for these safeguards to prevent demographic changes and environmental degradation.
    [2015] The provisions in the Fifth Schedule and Sixth Schedule in the Constitution of India are made in order to: 
    (a) protect the interests of Scheduled Tribes 
    (b) determine the boundaries between States 
    (c) determine the powers, authority and responsibilities of Panchayats 
    (d) protect the interests of all border States
  • [25th April 2026] The Hindu OpED: The crisis of urban electoral disenfranchisement

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2024] Examine the need for electoral reforms as suggested by various committees with particular reference to ‘one nation-one election’ principleLinkage: This question directly links to electoral roll integrity, voter inclusion, and institutional reforms, which are central to the issue of urban disenfranchisement. The article provides contemporary evidence (mass deletions, SIR flaws) that strengthens answers on why electoral reforms are urgently needed in India’s democracy

    Mentor’s Comment

    There is a deepening crisis of urban electoral disenfranchisement in India. This has been triggered by the recent Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls, where mass deletions of voters, especially urban poor, migrants, and informal workers, have come to light. This is significant because it marks a shift from inclusion (universal adult franchise) to exclusion through bureaucratic processes, The scale is alarming, Patna saw 16.5 lakh deletions, Ghaziabad ~36.67%, Lucknow ~30.88%, and Mumbai ~14 lakh deletions with 50% from informal housing, indicating a systemic pattern rather than isolated errors.

    Why is universal adult franchise weakening in urban India?

    1. Systematic disenfranchisement: Urban voters increasingly excluded through SIR processes; reflects erosion of the constitutional promise of “one person, one vote.”
    2. Urban marginalisation: Poor, migrants, minorities face structural exclusion; example, large-scale deletions in cities like Patna, Lucknow, Ghaziabad.
    3. Demographic mismatch: Rapid urban population growth not matched by electoral inclusion; table shows low voter ratios despite rising population.

    How does the SIR process contribute to exclusion?

    1. Bureaucratic enumeration: Relies on documentation and verification; excludes those lacking stable residence proof.
    2. Limited outreach: Focuses on verification over registration; discourages new voter inclusion.
    3. Data evidence: Patna (16.5 lakh deletions), Ghaziabad (36.67%), Mumbai (14 lakh deletions) indicate systemic filtering.

    Why are migrants and the urban poor disproportionately affected?

    1. High mobility: Migrants frequently change residences; fail documentation requirements.
    2. Informal settlements: ~40% of urban population lives in slums; lack formal address proof.
    3. Dual burden: Unable to register + higher probability of deletion; example, Kolkata (25.62% deletions in unorganised workers).

    Does electoral secrecy face new challenges in urban settings?

    1. Booth-level disclosure risk: Small booth sizes enable inference of voting patterns.
    2. Technological vulnerability: Electronic voting systems may reveal demographic voting trends.
    3. Urban concentration: Tight clusters make secrecy harder compared to dispersed rural booths.

    Is there evidence of selective filtration in electoral rolls?

    1. Selective exclusion: Groups perceived as politically inconvenient may be filtered out.
    2. Documentation bias: Rigid criteria disproportionately impact working-class populations.
    3. Case evidence: Lucknow (30.88%), Ghaziabad (36.67%) deletions linked to migrant workforce mobility.

    How does urbanisation intensify electoral challenges?

    1. Migration-driven growth: Continuous inflow disrupts stable voter registration systems.
    2. Administrative lag: Electoral systems based on static populations fail dynamic urban contexts.
    3. Comparative gap: Rural areas show relatively stable rolls vs volatile urban deletions.

    Conclusion

    Urban electoral disenfranchisement represents a structural contradiction between constitutional ideals and administrative practices. If left unaddressed, it risks weakening democratic legitimacy, particularly in rapidly urbanising India. Electoral reforms must shift from documentation-centric exclusion to inclusion-oriented governance, ensuring that mobility does not become a ground for loss of citizenship rights.

  • The Goldilocks period that wasn’t for the economy

    Why in the News?

    India’s so-called “Goldilocks period” of high growth, low inflation, and macro stability has come under sharp scrutiny after GDP back-series revisions (2022-23 base year) revealed that earlier estimates overstated economic performance. Coupled with global shocks (US-Iran tensions, rupee depreciation, energy vulnerabilities) and declining long-term growth rates, the narrative shifts from optimism to concern. The striking reality is that real GDP growth has slowed structurally (approx. 6.2% over 12 years to <5.5% in recent years), challenging India’s aspiration to become a developed economy.

    Was India truly in a “Goldilocks” phase of economic growth?

    The “Goldilocks” narrative, describing an economy that is “not too hot, not too cold, but just right”, has been a central theme in recent Indian macroeconomic assessments, but it remains a subject of intense debate between official reporting and critical economic analysis. 

    The “Goldilocks” Case (Official Perspective)

    1. Goldilocks assumption: Suggested optimal macroeconomic conditions (high growth, low inflation, low unemployment).
    2. High Real Growth: Real GDP growth for FY2024 was recorded at 7.6%, with projections for FY2026 reaching as high as 7.4% in advanced estimates.
    3. Subdued Inflation: Headline Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation fell from 4.8% in May 2024 to a projected 2% by early 2026, creating a low-inflation environment rarely seen alongside high growth.
    4. Macro-Stability: Stable corporate earnings, peaking interest rates, and resilient foreign exchange reserves (over $618 billion in early 2024) have bolstered the image of a well-balanced economy. 

    Evidence of an “Illusion” (Counter-Arguments)

    1. The “Base Effect” Trap: The high growth seen in 2021-22 and 2022-23 was largely a statistical rebound from the massive -5.8% to -7.7% contraction during the 2020 pandemic. This created a “temporary high” rather than a sustainable structural shift
    2. GDP Revision “Shrinkage“: Revisions to the GDP base year (from 2011-12 to 2022-23) revealed that the Indian economy was smaller in absolute terms than previously believed, and back-series data showed that growth between 2004-2014 was consistently over-estimated
    3. Stagnant Real Wages: While nominal GDP grew, real wages for agricultural and non-farm rural workers reportedly dropped by over 1.3% annually between 2019 and 2025, suggesting the “Goldilocks” benefits were not reaching the masses.
    4. Food Inflation Disparity: Headline inflation numbers are often pulled down by “core” metrics, but food inflation (the primary expense for low-income households) has remained volatile, reaching over 10% in late 2024. 

    How has GDP revision altered India’s economic narrative?

    1. GDP recalibration: New base year (2022-23) revised past estimates downward, indicating overestimation earlier.
    2. Economic size impact: India’s GDP appears smaller than previously calculated.
    3. Policy implication: Growth trajectory reassessment becomes necessary for fiscal and developmental planning.

    Is India’s growth structurally decelerating over time?

    1. Nominal GDP slowdown:
      1. >10% CAGR (2014-2026)
      2. ~9.5% CAGR (last 7 years)
    2. Real GDP trend:
      1. ~6.2% CAGR (12 years)
      2. <5.5% CAGR (last 7 years)
    3. Historical comparison: ~7% CAGR (22 years), indicates clear deceleration trend.
    4. Conclusion: Growth momentum is weakening structurally, not cyclically.

    What domestic economic weaknesses persist?

    1. Corporate earnings stagnation: Reflects weak private sector dynamism.
    2. Investment gap: Low foreign capital inflows indicate investor hesitation.
    3. Currency pressure: Rupee depreciation vs USD signals external vulnerability.
    4. Energy dependence: Heavy reliance on Strait of Hormuz imports exposes India to geopolitical shocks.

    How do global shocks amplify India’s economic vulnerability?

    1. Geopolitical tensions: US-Iran conflict raises energy price risks.
    2. Currency fluctuations: Rupee weakening affects import costs and inflation.
    3. Comparative decline: Japan and UK overtaking India in GDP terms highlights relative slowdown.
    4. Inflation risk: External shocks may trigger imported inflation.

    Why is short-term high growth misleading for policymaking?

    1. Low base effect: Post-pandemic growth inflates recent growth rates artificially.
    2. Cherry-picking risk: Ignoring long-term trends leads to misguided optimism.
    3. Policy distortion: May result in delayed structural reforms.

    What reforms are necessary to correct the growth trajectory?

    1. Structural reforms: Focus on productivity, manufacturing, and exports.
    2. Domestic demand boost: Enhance consumption and employment generation.
    3. Investment climate: Improve ease of doing business and investor confidence
    4. Energy diversification: Reduce external dependence on oil imports.

    Conclusion

    India’s economic reality reflects structural deceleration masked by short-term recovery trends. The revised GDP data dismantles the “Goldilocks” narrative and underscores the urgency of deep structural reforms, investment revival, and macroeconomic resilience to sustain long-term growth.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2021] Do you agree that the Indian economy has recently experienced V-shaped recovery? Give reasons in support of your answer.

    Linkage: The PYQ questions the “Goldilocks/V-shaped growth narrative” by highlighting low base effect and overstated growth trends. It directly links to the article’s argument of structural slowdown vs short-term recovery illusion due to GDP revisions.

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