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

Search results for: “”

  • Poshan Tracker

    Why in News?

    The Ministry of Women and Child Development (MoWCD) highlighted the achievements of the Poshan Tracker, India’s real time nutrition monitoring platform under Mission Poshan 2.0.

    What is Poshan Tracker?

    • Mobile based application launched in March 2021.
    • Developed by MoWCD with the National e-Governance Division (NeGD).
    • Digital backbone of POSHAN Abhiyaan.
    • Enables real time monitoring of nutrition, beneficiaries, and Anganwadi services.

    About POSHAN Abhiyaan

    • Launched on 8 March 2018.
    • India’s flagship National Nutrition Mission.
    • In 2021, merged with Anganwadi Services and Scheme for Adolescent Girls under Mission Saksham Anganwadi and Poshan 2.0.

    Key Features

    • Aadhaar based beneficiary authentication.
    • Facial Recognition System (FRS) for service verification.
    • Digital home visit scheduler.
    • Poshan Calculator based on WHO Child Growth Standards.
    • Tracks stunting, wasting, underweight, SAM, MAM, and obesity.
    • Provides ECCE learning content and Poshan Helpline (1515).

    Achievements (May 2026)

    • Covers 28 States and 8 UTs.
    • 8.93 crore beneficiaries registered.
    • 7.7 crore children tracked through Aadhaar authenticated database.
    • 6.3 crore children (0 to 5 years) monitored for growth (about 94% coverage).
    • 5.5 crore beneficiaries received Supplementary Nutrition for at least 15 days.

    Significance

    • Enables evidence based nutrition governance.
    • Reduces leakages and duplicate beneficiaries.
    • Strengthens Anganwadi service delivery.
    • Supports Digital India and Viksit Bharat.

    Prelims Facts

    • POSHAN Abhiyaan: 2018.
    • Poshan Tracker: March 2021.
    • Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Women and Child Development.
    • Uses WHO Child Growth Standards.
    • Operates under Mission Saksham Anganwadi and Poshan 2.0.

    [2023] Consider the following statements in the context of interventions being undertaken under Anaemia Mukt Bharat Strategy:
    1. It provides prophylactic calcium supplementation for pre-school children, adolescents and pregnant women.
    2. It runs a campaign for delayed cord clamping at the time of child- birth.
    3. It provides for periodic deworming to children and adolescents.
    4. It addresses non-nutritional causes of anaemia in endemic pockets with special focus on malaria, hemoglobinopathies and fluorosis.
    How many of the statements given above are correct?

    [A] Only one

    [B] Only two

    [C] Only three

    [D] All four

  • AISHE 2023-24: India’s Higher Education Enrolment Reaches 4.5 Crore

    Why in News?

    The Ministry of Education has released the All India Survey on Higher Education (AISHE) 2022-23 and 2023-24, showing that India’s higher education enrolment has reached 4.5 crore, reflecting significant improvements in access, gender parity, and participation of socially disadvantaged groups.

    Key Highlights

    • Total higher education enrolment reached 4.5 crore in 2023-24.
    • Enrolment increased by 31.5% from 3.42 crore in 2014-15.
    • Data was collected from 59,533 Higher Education Institutions (HEIs).
    • Institutional participation in the survey exceeded 90%.

    Gender Parity

    • Gender Parity Index (GPI) stood at 1.08 in 2023-24.
    • Female participation has remained higher than male participation for seven consecutive years.
    • Gross Enrolment Ratio (GER): Overall GER: 30, and Female GER: 31.2
    • Female teachers increased to 7.78 lakh, constituting 44.9% of the total teaching workforce.

    Inclusion of Marginalised Communities

    • Scheduled Castes (SC): Enrolment increased by 51.4% since 2014-15. Total enrolment reached 69.72 lakh. GER increased from 18.9 to 27.8.
    • Scheduled Tribes (ST):Enrolment increased by 75.7%. Total enrolment reached 28.83 lakh. GER increased from 13.5 to 22.8.
    • Other Backward Classes (OBC): Enrolment increased by 60.2%. Student strength rose from 1.13 crore to 1.80 crore.

    STEM Education

    • STEM enrolment crossed 1.02 crore students.
    • Female share in STEM increased from 38.4% in 2014-15 to 44% in 2023-24.
    • Total teachers in higher education increased to 17.32 lakh.

    About AISHE

    • All India Survey on Higher Education (AISHE) was launched in 2011 by the Ministry of Education.
    • It is India’s primary database on higher education.
    • Covers: Universities, Colleges, and Standalone institutions
    • Collects information on: Student enrolment, Teachers, Infrastructure, Courses, Examination results, and Finance
    • Data is self-reported by institutions through an online Data Capture Format (DCF) portal.
    • The Ministry conducts validation and scrutiny, while data accuracy is the responsibility of the participating institutions.

    Key Indicators Used in AISHE

    • Gross Enrolment Ratio (GER): Percentage of students enrolled in higher education compared to the total population in the 18 to 23 years age group.
    • Gender Parity Index (GPI): Ratio of female GER to male GER. GPI = 1 indicates equal participation. GPI > 1 indicates higher female participation.

    [2017] What is the aim of the programme ‘Unnat Bharat Abhiyan’?

    [a] Achieving 100% literacy by promoting collaboration between voluntary organizations and government’s education system and local communities.

    [b] Connecting institutions of higher education with local communities to address development challenges through appropriate technologies.

    [c] Strengthening India’s scientific research institutions in order to make India a scientific and technological power.

    [d] Developing human capital by allocating special funds for health care and education of rural and urban poor, and organizing skill development programmes and vocational training for them.

    1. India and Indonesia Launch Joint Restoration Project at Prambanan Temple

      Why in News?

      India and Indonesia have launched a joint conservation and restoration project at the Prambanan Temple Complex, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in Yogyakarta, Indonesia, during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Indonesia.

      Key Highlights

      • Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto jointly inaugurated the restoration project.
      • The project aims to conserve and restore the historic Prambanan Temple Complex.
      • The Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) is the lead agency from the Indian side.
      • The initiative reflects the deep civilisational, cultural, and historical ties between India and Indonesia.
      • It also strengthens bilateral cooperation in heritage conservation and cultural diplomacy.

      About Prambanan Temple

      • Located in Yogyakarta, Indonesia.
      • Built in the 9th century CE during the Mataram Kingdom.
      • It is the largest Hindu temple complex in Indonesia and one of the largest in Southeast Asia.
      • Dedicated to the Trimurti: Brahma (Creator), Vishnu (Preserver), and Shiva (Destroyer)
      • The tallest temple is dedicated to Lord Shiva, standing about 47 metres high.
      • The temple walls depict episodes from the Ramayana and Bhagavata Purana.
      • Designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1991.

      Architectural Features

      • Built in the classical Hindu temple architecture style.
      • Constructed mainly using andesite stone.
      • Characterised by tall, pointed towers and intricate stone carvings.
      • The temple complex originally consisted of 240 temples, though many are now in ruins.

      Archaeological Survey of India (ASI)

      • Established in 1861 by Alexander Cunningham.
      • Functions under the Ministry of Culture.
      • Responsible for:
        • Conservation of protected monuments and archaeological sites.
        • Archaeological excavations.
        • Preservation of cultural heritage.
        • Maintenance of ancient monuments under the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Sites and Remains Act, 1958.

      Significance of the Project

      • Reinforces India’s cultural diplomacy under the Act East Policy.
      • Highlights the spread of Indian civilisation, Hinduism, Buddhism, and Sanskrit culture in Southeast Asia.
      • Promotes cooperation in heritage conservation, tourism, and archaeological research.
      • Strengthens the India-Indonesia Comprehensive Strategic Partnership.

      [2025] Who among the following led a successful military campaign against the kingdom of Srivijaya, the powerful maritime State, which ruled the Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, Java and the neighbouring islands?

      [A] Amoghavarsha (Rashtrakuta)

      [B] Prataparudra (Kakatiya)

      [C] Rajendra 1 (Chola)

      [D] Vishnuvardhana (Hoysala)

    2. DRDO Successfully Tests Pinaka Long Range Guided Rocket

      Why in News?

      The Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) successfully conducted a flight test of the Pinaka Long Range Guided Rocket (LRGR) from the Integrated Test Range (ITR), Chandipur, Odisha. The test validated its user defined minimum strike range of 60 km and demonstrated high precision strike capability.

      Key Highlights

      • Successfully validated the minimum strike range of 60 km.
      • The rocket executed all planned in flight manoeuvres and accurately hit the designated target.
      • It followed the predicted trajectory with high precision.
      • Launched from an in service Pinaka launcher, demonstrating compatibility with multiple Pinaka rocket variants.
      • This enhances operational flexibility for the Indian Army.

      Development

      • Designed by the Armament Research and Development Establishment (ARDE), Pune.
      • Developed in collaboration with the High Energy Materials Research Laboratory (HEMRL), Pune.
      • Supported by the Defence Research and Development Laboratory (DRDL), Hyderabad and Research Centre Imarat (RCI), Hyderabad.
      • Flight trial coordinated by the Integrated Test Range (ITR) and Proof and Experimental Establishment (PXE), Chandipur.

      About Pinaka Rocket System

      • Pinaka is an indigenously developed Multi Barrel Rocket Launcher (MBRL).
      • Developed by DRDO for the Indian Army.
      • Named after Lord Shiva’s bow, Pinaka.
      • Provides rapid, high volume artillery fire against enemy positions.
      • Mounted on a high mobility vehicle.
      • Can fire 12 rockets in about 44 seconds.
      • Suitable for: Area suppression, Counter battery fire, Destruction of troop concentrations, and Neutralising enemy logistics and command centres

      Pinaka Variants

      • Pinaka Mk I: Range of about 37 to 40 km.
      • Guided Pinaka: Precision guided rocket with a range of about 75 km.
      • Pinaka Enhanced Range (ER): Range of about 90 km.
      • Pinaka Long Range Guided Rocket (LRGR): Maximum range of about 120 km, while the latest test validated a user defined strike range of 60 km.

      [2023] Consider the following statements
      1. Ballistic missiles are jet-propelled at subsonic speeds throughout their fights, while cruise missiles are rocket-powered only in the initial phase of fight.
      2. Agni-V is a medium-range supersonic cruise missile, while BrahMos is a solid-fuelled intercontinental ballistic missile.
      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

    3. [8th July 2026] The Hindu OpED: Beyond three C’s, the new lexicon of India-Australia ties

      PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2024] Discuss the geopolitical and geostrategic importance of Maldives for India with a focus on global trade and energy flows. Further also discuss how this relationship affects India’s maritime security and regional stability amidst international competition.
      Linkage: The PYQ tests India’s strategic maritime partnerships in the Indo-Pacific, focusing on trade routes, energy security, maritime security and regional geopolitics. The article similarly examines how India-Australia cooperation strengthens Indo-Pacific stability through maritime security, critical minerals, resilient supply chains and defence collaboration amid growing geopolitical competition.

      Mentor’s Comment

      The Prime Minister of India undertook his third visit to Australia this week, three years after the India-Australia relationship was elevated to a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership. The visit brings into focus whether the relationship’s description as having entered “T20 mode” is matched by delivered outcomes across trade, defence, energy and education, or whether institutional follow-through still trails the rhetoric of an expanding partnership.

      Why has trade and investment become the anchor of the India-Australia relationship?

      1. Duty-free market access: All Indian exports to Australia now have duty-free access under the Economic Cooperation and Trade Agreement (ECTA), benefiting textiles, pharmaceuticals, chemicals, engineering goods, gems and jewellery.
      2. Reciprocal preferential access: Preferential access to 90% of Australia’s trade value has facilitated Australian exports of critical minerals, resources, wool, avocados and macadamia to India.
      3. Trade growth target: Both countries share the ambition to raise bilateral trade from $33 billion in 2025 towards $100 billion by 2030.
      4. Rising cumulative investment: Two-way cumulative investment is approaching $50 billion.
      5. Australian capital inflow into India: Australia’s AirTrunk has announced plans to invest $30 billion by 2030 to develop digital infrastructure and AI-ready data centres in India.
      6. Indian capital inflow into Australia: Perdaman Chemicals & Fertilizers, founded by an Indian entrepreneur, is building Australia’s largest urea plant in western Australia at a cost of $4.5 billion, with over 98% of the plant’s modules manufactured in India.

      Why is defence now the fastest-growing pillar of India-Australia cooperation?

      1. Reliability signal through visits: Australia’s Deputy Prime Minister and Defence Minister Richard Marles chose India for his first foreign tour in both terms of the Albanese government.
      2. First Indian Defence Minister visit in 12 years: Defence Minister Rajnath Singh visited Australia last year, the first visit by an Indian Defence Minister to the country in 12 years.
      3. Institutionalised senior-level exchange: Regular leadership and senior-level exchanges now involve all three Services of both countries.
      4. Joint military exercises: Participation in bilateral and multilateral exercises such as AUSINDEX, Malabar and Talisman Sabre builds operational understanding, particularly in the maritime domain.
      5. Emerging defence-industry cooperation: Growing opportunities exist for defence-industry cooperation in cyber, AI and drone technologies, linked to India’s expanding ship-building capabilities.

      How is the energy partnership positioning India-Australia ties for the clean transition and India’s civil nuclear ambitions?

      1. Institutional architecture for renewables: The India-Australia Renewable Energy Partnership is implemented through a Solar Taskforce and a Green Hydrogen Task Force, guided at the ministerial level.
      2. Scope of clean-energy cooperation: India’s renewable energy targets create potential for cooperation across critical minerals and materials, manufacturing, laboratory research, commercial-scale deployment, industrial use and solar rooftops.
      3. Uranium exports still pending: Australian media reports suggest arrangements for future Australian uranium exports to India might be finalised shortly; this outcome is reported as prospective, not concluded.
      4. Conditional boost to civil nuclear programme: If uranium export arrangements are finalised, India’s civil nuclear programme would receive a significant boost, as would Australia’s uranium export sector.

      How is the education and skills partnership building human capital linkages between India and Australia?

      1. Scale of student mobility: More than one lakh Indian students are currently enrolled in Australia.
      2. Reverse flow of education access: World-class and affordable Australian education is now available within India itself through campuses of a growing number of Australian universities.
      3. Joint research priority areas: Collaboration spans advanced computing, energy, health care, and space and defence research, building both intellectual assets and researcher networks.
      4. Visa-linked employment pathways: Specific visa programmes have created new avenues for educated Indian youth seeking employment in Australia, though many await better utilisation.
      5. Vocational skill transfer: Australia’s leadership in vocational skills is being tapped in areas such as solar rooftop installation and mining, including in Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh and Odisha, to help meet Australia’s workforce shortfall through temporary Indian worker assignments.

      What role are sport and the diaspora beginning to play in India-Australia ties?

      1. Sport as a new priority pillar: A focused, broad-based sport strategy can extend cooperation into education, training, medicine, goods, infrastructure and event organisation.
      2. Anchor events on the calendar: Commonwealth Games 2030 and the Brisbane Olympics 2032 provide near-term platforms for this cooperation.
      3. Diaspora as a living bridge: The Indian diaspora in Australia now exceeds ten lakh and is described as a “living bridge” between the two countries.
      4. Traditional sport as soft power: Indian traditional sports such as kabaddi and kho kho are gaining popularity in Australia beyond the diaspora community itself.

      How does India-Australia cooperation use minilateral groupings to counter concentrated global supply chains?

      1. India-Indonesia-Australia trilateral: Named as one format through which shared Indo-Pacific values are being extended into a three-country cooperative arrangement.
      2. India-France-Australia trilateral: A second trilateral format extending India-Australia convergence to a European Indo-Pacific stakeholder.
      3. Australia-Canada-India Technology and Innovation Partnership: Launched in November 2025, this is the newest mechanism, explicitly framed around technology and innovation cooperation.
      4. India-Japan-Australia Supply Chain Resilience Initiative: A grouping specifically designed to build resilience in supply chains among the three partners.
      5. Possible India-Australia-UAE triad: Flagged as a prospective, not yet finalised, arrangement.
      6. Stated purpose across groupings: These mechanisms are positioned to counter supply-chain disruptions and market dominance and distortions in critical minerals, rare earths, semiconductors and new technologies, an implicit reference to concentrated Chinese supply in these sectors.
      7. Broader multilateral fora: The shared vision of a free, open, safe, peaceful and prosperous Indo-Pacific is also pursued through the Quad and the Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA), alongside outreach to Pacific Island Countries on education, health, technology, fintech, capacity building and disaster relief.

      Does the expanding lexicon of cooperation reflect delivered outcomes, or does institutional follow-through still lag the rhetoric?

      1. Framing has outpaced institutionalisation before verification: The relationship’s description has moved from three Cs (Commonwealth, Cricket, Curry) to three Ds (Democracy, Diaspora, Dosti) to now Development, Defence and two Es (Energy, Education), a rapid expansion of vocabulary describing the partnership.
      2. Conditional commitments remain unresolved: The uranium export arrangement is reported only as something that “might be finalised shortly,” not as a concluded outcome.
      3. The newest mechanisms are barely operational: The Australia-Canada-India Technology and Innovation Partnership was launched only in November 2025, meaning its delivery record does not yet exist.
      4. Visa pathways await utilisation: Employment-linked visa programmes are explicitly described as awaiting “better utilisation,” indicating a gap between design and uptake.
      5. Personal chemistry substitutes for institutional depth: The article closes by crediting individual leader chemistry and Australian PM Albanese’s personal India connection for progressing ties, suggesting personality-driven momentum rather than fully institutionalised delivery mechanisms.

      Conclusion

      The India-Australia partnership has evolved from a civilisational shorthand of three Cs and three Ds into a substantive, multi-domain strategic partnership spanning trade, defence, energy, education and sport. This expansion is driven significantly by shared concern over China’s dominance in critical mineral and technology supply chains, and is expressed through an expanding lattice of minilateral groupings such as the Australia-Canada-India Technology and Innovation Partnership and the India-Japan-Australia Supply Chain Resilience Initiative. Several headline commitments, however, remain conditional or newly launched, uranium exports are still only expected to be finalised, and the newest technology partnership has no delivery track record yet. Sustaining momentum requires converting these in-principle understandings into binding, delivered outcomes across each of the identified pillars, rather than relying on leader-level chemistry to carry the relationship forward.

    4. On the method of caste enumeration

      Why in the News?

      The pre-test for the second phase of Census 2027 began on July 6, 2026, in 16 States and Union Territories, using an “open column” for respondents to record their caste. The outcome of this pre-test will decide the final methodology for India’s first statutory caste enumeration since 1931.

      What has changed in this pre-test, and why does its outcome carry more weight than the 2011 exercise?

      1. Pre-test scope: The rehearsal for the second phase of Census ran in 16 States and Union Territories from July 6 to July 20, 2026, and included an open column for respondents to record their caste.
      2. Statutory shift: Unlike the 2011 Socio Economic and Caste Census (SECC), which was conducted outside the purview of the Census Act, caste in 2027 will be enumerated within the second and final phase of the Census itself, giving the count statutory backing.
      3. Methodology still open: Census officials stated that the final caste enumeration methodology will be prepared based on feedback from this pre-test, not fixed in advance.
      4. Historical gap: Caste-wise population, other than Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, has not been enumerated in independent India since the 1931 Census.
      5. Limited rehearsal access: Self-enumeration was permitted, with the portal accessible only from July 1 to 5, and only in the specific area undergoing the rehearsal.

      Why did the government finally agree to caste enumeration after years of resistance?

      1. Reversal in position: The BJP-led NDA government, after repeatedly opposing caste enumeration, announced on April 30, 2025, that caste would be counted during Population Census 2027.
      2. Opposition pressure: The Congress had consistently demanded a full caste count prior to this announcement.
      3. Coalition pressure: Some NDA allies also pushed for caste enumeration, adding pressure from within the ruling coalition.
      4. State-level precedent: Bihar’s 2022-23 caste-based survey demonstrated a working alternative model and added political momentum for a national exercise.

      Does repeating the open-column method risk reproducing the same unreliable outcome the government itself rejected?

      1. Scale of past failure: The 2011 SECC’s open-column method returned over 46 lakh distinct “caste names,” compared to only 4,147 recorded in the 1931 Census.
      2. Cause of inflation: Respondents recorded surnames or sub-castes as separate categories. For example, “Gupta” and “Agarwal” were recorded separately instead of under the common Baniya caste.
      3. Government’s own admission: In a 2021 Supreme Court affidavit, the Union government stated that the caste count “cannot be exponentially high” through genuine sub-caste bifurcation alone, and that SECC data cannot be relied on for reservation in education, employment, or local body elections.
      4. Method repeated despite the admission: The 2026 pre-test uses the identical open-ended caste column. Officials describe the method as “not final.”
      5. Structured alternative already exists: Current government data lists about 2,650 OBCs on the Central List, 1,170 Scheduled Castes, and 890 Scheduled Tribes — a far smaller, curated framework similar to the list-based model Bihar used, but not yet adopted for the national pre-test.

      What concerns have been raised about the process, and how has the government responded?

      1. Demand for consultation: Opposition parties have sought wider stakeholder consultation before the caste Census is finalised.
      2. Parliamentary question: On December 2, 2025, a Member of Parliament asked in the Lok Sabha whether the government would publish the draft Census questions for public and representative input, and whether it would consider best practices from state-level caste surveys.
      3. Government’s stated process: Minister of State for Home responded that draft questionnaires are field pre-tested before finalisation, consistent with over 150 years of Census practice that incorporates past learnings and stakeholder input.
      4. Repeated deferral through 2025: The government stated multiple times through 2025 that the final caste questionnaire had not been settled.
      5. Notification timeline unresolved: Parliament was informed in February 2026 that caste-related questions would be notified only before the commencement of the second Census phase, leaving the methodology undecided even as the pre-test proceeds.

      5. Why has the Census itself not just the caste count been delayed for over a decade?

      1. Two-phase structure: The Population Census is conducted in two phases, Houselisting and Housing Operations (HLO), and Population Enumeration, spanning over 11 months.
      2. Overdue cycle: The last Census was completed in 2011; the next was constitutionally due in 2021.
      3. Pandemic disruption: The first phase, due to begin April 1, 2020, was delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic that surfaced in India around March 2020.
      4. Unexplained continued delay: Pandemic-related restrictions had ended by 2022, but the government did not specify reasons for the delay beyond that point.
      5. Announced timeline: On June 4, 2025, the government announced that the Population Census, combined with caste enumeration, would be conducted in two phases by February 28, 2027, with the reference date and time of the headcount fixed at 12 a.m., March 1, 2027.

      Conclusion

      The 2027 Census will give caste enumeration statutory backing for the first time, closing the ambiguity that surrounded the unreleased 2011 SECC. The ongoing pre-test’s use of the same open-ended, self-declared caste column risks reproducing the unreliable, exponentially inflated caste count the government itself flagged before the Supreme Court in 2021. Whether the final methodology adopts a curated caste list, as Bihar’s survey did, or persists with the open column, will determine whether the resulting data is usable for its stated purpose of informing reservation, education, and employment policy. The government’s promise to notify questions only before the second phase begins leaves this central design choice unresolved even as the exercise proceeds.

      PYQ Relevance

      [UPSC 2020] Has caste lost its relevance in understanding the multicultural Indian Society? Elaborate your answer with illustrations.

      Linkage: The PYQ directly evaluates the contemporary relevance of caste. The decision to include caste in the 2027 Census itself reflects the continued administrative, political and socio-economic significance of caste in policymaking and governance. 

    5. How India’s life insurance sector funds government expenditure

      Why in the News?

      LIC’s March 2025 regulatory filings and RBI/IRDAI data confirm that life insurers collectively hold close to a quarter of India’s outstanding central government dated securities, a share that has remained stable even as total sovereign debt expanded by around 40 per cent in three years. This scale of sovereign financing has never featured in budget speeches or parliamentary debate, even as three regulatory interventions between 2023 and 2024 compressed new insurance business and, with it, the household savings pipeline that feeds this funding base.

      Why do life insurers function as a stable, counter-cyclical source of financing for government debt?

      1. Long-duration liability match: Life insurance policies carry tenures of twenty to forty years. Government securities are the only asset class that absorbs funds of this scale at matching tenures without distorting the market.
      2. Counter-cyclical behaviour: Insurers buy and hold securities. They do not exit when oil prices rise or when a geopolitical event triggers reassessment of emerging-market exposure, unlike foreign portfolio investors (FPIs).
      3. Reduced rollover risk: A steady domestic base of long-horizon holders lowers the risk that maturing government debt cannot be refinanced on favourable terms.
      4. Lower borrowing costs: Stable demand across the maturity spectrum moderates the government’s overall cost of borrowing.
      5. Structural, not discretionary: This behaviour is not a policy choice. It is the structural consequence of insurers writing long-duration promises to millions of policyholders.

      How large and entrenched is LIC’s role as a financier of the sovereign?

      1. Sector concentration: LIC carries the dominant share of the insurance sector’s sovereign exposure, a consequence of its scale, its predominantly participating product mix, and the duration of its in-force book.
      2. Regulatory filing confirmation: LIC’s Form L-26 filing with IRDAI (March 2025) shows sovereign paper accounts for nearly 63 per cent of its non-linked policyholder corpus, well above the regulatory minimum.
      3. Absolute scale: LIC’s March 2025 IRDAI filings show ₹20.2 lakh crore held in central government securities alone, and ₹32.3 lakh crore in total government and government-guaranteed securities across all funds.
      4. Single largest holder: These figures make LIC the single largest institutional holder of Indian government debt. LIC holds approximately 19 per cent of all outstanding central government dated securities (RBI Public Debt Management Quarterly Report, FY24).
      5. Official systemic recognition: IRDAI designates LIC a Domestic Systemically Important Insurer (D-SII) every year, meaning its distress would cause significant dislocation in the financial system.
      6. Private insurers’ limited but rising role: Private insurers, with a higher share of unit-linked and shorter-tenure products, contribute a smaller fraction of sovereign holdings today. Their sovereign allocation will rise as they deepen traditional, longer-duration offerings.

      Does global practice confirm that insurers hold sovereign debt because of liability structure rather than regulatory mandate?

      1. Japan: Japanese insurers are cited among the largest holders of the government’s long-dated securities. The source gives no institution-level detail.
      2. United Kingdom: UK insurers are similarly cited as large holders of long-dated government securities. No institutional specifics are given.
      3. South Korea: South Korean insurers are cited as large holders of long-dated sovereign debt. No further detail is provided.
      4. Claimed common driver: The source attributes this pattern across all three jurisdictions to liability-profile demand rather than regulatory mandate, and states India’s insurance sector is following the same path.

      Why could recent regulatory actions on the insurance sector pose a longer-term risk to the sovereign borrowing programme?

      1. Declining penetration: India’s life insurance penetration stood at 2.7 per cent of GDP in FY25, a third consecutive annual decline from a pandemic-era peak of 3.2 per cent, and below the global life insurance average of 3.0 per cent.
      2. Three simultaneous interventions: Between 2023 and 2024, regulators restructured distribution economics, imposed taxation on certain high-value policies, and mandated product repricing.
      3. Cumulative effect exceeded individual impact: Each intervention was defensible in isolation. Their simultaneous effect compressed new business across the sector.
      4. Sector currently recovering: New business has begun recovering after this compression episode.
      5. Deferred risk to sovereign funding: Compression of new business diverts household savings away from insurance-linked government debt purchases toward shorter-duration instruments elsewhere.
      6. Lagged visibility: This effect on the sovereign borrowing programme may not be visible in the short term. It would surface over a decade.

      Why has insurance’s role as a sovereign financier remained absent from public policy discourse despite its scale?

      1. Asymmetric policy attention: Banking receives policy attention in proportion to its systemic importance. Insurance, holding close to a quarter of outstanding central government dated securities, does not receive comparable attention.
      2. Discourse framed only around households: The case for deeper insurance penetration is made almost entirely in the language of household financial protection — the uninsured family, inadequate sum assured, mis-selling, or unsettled claims.
      3. Missing fiscal-stability framing: A parallel case, framed in the language of sovereign fiscal stability, has not been fully articulated in public policy discourse.
      4. Consequence for regulatory design: Regulatory interventions aimed narrowly at consumer protection did not account for their cumulative effect on the sovereign funding base.

      Conclusion

      Life insurers, led by LIC, function as India’s most stable institutional financiers of government debt, holding close to a quarter of outstanding central government securities through structurally long-duration, counter-cyclical demand. This sovereign-financing function has never entered public policy discourse, which frames insurance regulation almost exclusively around household protection. Regulatory interventions between 2023 and 2024 that compressed new insurance business exposed this gap, since their cumulative fiscal-stability cost went unweighed at the time. Insurance regulation must begin accounting for its sovereign-funding dimension alongside consumer protection, or the effect will surface only years later as higher government borrowing costs.

      PYQ Relevance

      [UPSC 2019] The public expenditure management is a challenge to the Government of India in the context of budget making during the post-liberalization period. Clarify it.

      Linkage: The PYQ examines fiscal management and financing of government expenditure. The article shows that India’s life insurance sector acts as a major domestic financier of government borrowing by channelising long-term household savings into government securities, thereby strengthening fiscal stability and reducing dependence on volatile capital flows.

    6. Mission Drishti Loses Communication After Solar Storm

      Why in News?

      Mission Drishti, developed by Bengaluru based GalaxEye, lost communication after a geomagnetic solar storm affected the satellite during the Launch and Early Orbit Phase (LEOP).

      Key Highlights

      • Launched on 3 May 2026 aboard SpaceX Falcon 9 from Vandenberg, California.
      • World’s first OptoSAR satellite, combining optical imaging and Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR).
      • India’s largest privately developed Earth observation satellite.
      • Radiation from the solar storm likely affected a critical onboard system, causing communication loss.
      • Recovery efforts are ongoing, but chances of recovery are currently low.

      What is OptoSAR?

      • Integrates optical cameras with Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR).
      • Provides high-resolution imaging in all weather conditions, including through clouds and at night.
      • Useful for disaster management, agriculture, defence, mapping, and environmental monitoring.

      Significance

      • Validated several indigenous satellite technologies and mission operations.
      • Strengthens India’s private space ecosystem.
      • Lessons from the mission will improve future spacecraft reliability.
      • GalaxEye plans to launch two next-generation OptoSAR satellites within the next 24 months.

      [2022] If a major solar storm (solar flare) reaches the Earth, which of the following are the possible effects on the Earth?:
      1. GPS and navigation systems could fail.
      2. Tsunamis could occur at equatorial regions.
      3. Power grids could be damaged.
      4. Intense auroras could occur over much of the Earth.
      5. Forest fires could take place over much of the planet.
      6. Orbits of the satellites could be disturbed
      7. Shortwave radio communication of the aircraft flying over polar regions could be interrupted.
      Select the correct answer using the code given below;

      [A] 1, 2, 4 and 5 only

      [B] 2, 3, 5, 6 and 7 only

      [C] 1, 3, 4, 6 and 7 only

      [D] 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 and

    7. IoT Based Smart Health Tracker for Himalayan Yaks

      Why in News?

      Scientists have developed an Internet of Things (IoT) based smart system to monitor the health, movement, and stress of high altitude yaks in the Himalayan region.

      Key Highlights

      • Developed by scientists from ICAR National Research Centre on Yak (NRC-Y), Dirang (Arunachal Pradesh) and Assam Don Bosco University.
      • The device is attached to a collar worn by the yak.
      • Features:
        • Geo-fencing to track movement.
        • Real time health monitoring.
        • Early prediction of stress and illness.
      • Helps monitor livestock in remote border areas where physical surveillance is difficult.

      Significance

      • Improves yak health and productivity.
      • Supports the livelihoods of Himalayan pastoral communities (Brokpas).
      • Reduces livestock loss and enables timely veterinary intervention.
      • Demonstrates the use of IoT in precision livestock farming.

      Prelims Facts

      • Scientific name: Bos grunniens
      • Known as the “Ship of the Himalayas.”
      • Found above 8,000 feet.
      • India has about 58,000 yaks (20th Livestock Census), with nearly half in Ladakh; others are found in Arunachal Pradesh, Sikkim, Himachal Pradesh, and Uttarakhand.

      [2018] When the alarm of your smartphone rings in the morning, you wake up and tap it to stop the alarm which causes your geyser to be switched on automatically. The smart mirror in your bathroom shows the day’s weather and also indicates the level of water in your overhead tank. After you take some groceries from your refrigerator for making breakfast, it recognises the shortage of stock in it and places an order for the supply of fresh grocery items. When you step’ out of your house and lock the door, all lights, fans, geysers and AC machines get switched off automatically. On your way to office, your car warns you about traffic congestion ahead and suggests an alternative route, and if you are late for a meeting, it sends a message to your office accordingly. In the context of emerging communication technologies, which one of the following terms best applies to the above scenario?

      [A] Border Gateway Protocol

      [B] Internet of Things

      [C] Internet Protocol

      [D] Virtual Private Network

    8. Index of Services Production (ISP)

      Why in News?

      The Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) released the report of the Technical Advisory Committee (TAC) on compiling the Index of Services Production (ISP) with base year 2024-25. The trial ISP series will be released on 14 July 2026.

      Key Highlights

      • ISP will be India’s first monthly indicator to measure short-term performance of the services sector.
      • Services contribute about 53% of India’s Gross Value Added (GVA).
      • It will complement the Index of Industrial Production (IIP).

      Data Sources

      • GST aggregated data for market-based services.
      • Administrative data from Railways, Aviation, Banking and Insurance.
      • ASISSE data for Health and Education.

      Technical Features

      • Base Year: 2024-25
      • Index Type: Laspeyres Volume Index
      • Classification: 2-digit NIC 2025
      • Weights: Gross Value Added (GVA)
      • Release: Monthly, within 60 days of the reference month.

      Significance

      • Provides a high-frequency indicator for the services sector.
      • Improves economic policymaking and monitoring.
      • Enhances India’s statistical system using GST-based data.

      [2020] With reference to the international trade of India at present, which of the following statements is/are correct?

      1. India’s merchandise exports are less than its merchandise imports.
      2.India’s imports of iron and steel, chemicals, fertilisers and machinery have decreased in recent years.
      3.India’s exports of services are more than its imports of services.
      4.India suffers from an overall trade/current account deficit.
      Select the correct answer using the code given below:
      a) 1 and 2 only
      b) 2 and 4 only
      c) 3 only
      d) 1, 3 and 4 only