💥UPSC 2027,2028 Mentorship (April Batch) + Access XFactor Notes & Microthemes PDF

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  • 🔴[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

    Avoiding overthinking and under-writing

    How toppers convert rough ideas into structured answers

    Managing time pressure during Mains



    Good answers are not written, they are first thought clearly.
    Master the thinking process, and writing becomes effortless.

    Join us, for a 45 minute live Zoom session on 19th April at 7PM.

    See you in masterclass.



    It will be a 45 minute session, post which we will open up the floor for all kinds of queries which a beginner must have. No questions are taboo and Arvind sir is known to be patiently solving all your doubts.

    Join us for a Zoom session on 19th April at 7 PM. This session is a must attend for you If you are attempting UPSC for the first time or have attempted earlier and now preparing for 2027, then it is going to be a valuable session for you too.

    See you in the session”

    Register for the session for a complete in-depth UPSC Prep


    In this Civilsdaily masterclass, you will get:

    1. A 45-minute deep dive on how to plan your UPSC strategy from the start to the end.
    2. How do first-attempt IAS Rankers get the most out of their one year prep?
    3. Insider tips that only the top IAS and IPS rankers know and apply to get rank.

    By the end, you’ll have razor-sharp clarity and a clear path to crack UPSC with confidence and near-perfect certainty. 

    Join UPSC session on 19th April, at 7 PM

    (Don’t wait—the next webinar/session won’t be until End April’ 26)



    These masterclasses are packed with value. They are conducted in private with a closed community. We rarely open these webinars for everyone for free. This time we are keeping it for 300 seats only.

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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.

  • How a strait blockade blew lid off worker’s discontent

    Why in the News?

    A seemingly routine blockade of a shipping strait triggered widespread industrial unrest across major manufacturing hubs like Manesar, Noida, and Ghaziabad, exposing deep-rooted worker dissatisfaction. The scale is significant: over 2,500 km away, a global disruption translated into local wage protests, highlighting the fragile linkage between global supply shocks and domestic labour distress. The data reveals a persistent and rising trend of wage complaints, peaking at 4,240 cases in 2023-24, indicating systemic failure in wage enforcement despite legal frameworks.

    How did a global disruption trigger local labour unrest?

    1. Global Supply Shock: Blockade of a key shipping strait disrupted supply chains, raising input costs.
    2. Cost Transmission: Increased LPG cylinder prices directly impacted workers’ cost of living.
    3. Local Impact: Workers in industrial hubs faced real wage erosion, triggering protests.
    4. Supply Chain Disruptions: Delays in raw material availability affected production cycles and wage payments.
    5. Global-Local Linkage: External shocks translated into domestic inflation, intensifying labour distress.

    Why is wage non-payment a persistent structural issue?

    1. Rising Complaints: Wage-related complaints increased from 2,859 (2020-21) to 4,240 (2023-24).
    2. Legal Weak Enforcement: Only 132 challans (2023-24) issued despite high complaints.
    3. Partial Redressal: Full salary paid in only 2,451 cases (2023-24), indicating gaps in enforcement.
    4. Informalisation and Lack of Evidence: Approximately 92% of India’s labour force is unorganised. Many workers lack formal contracts or digital payment records, making it difficult to prove wage theft in quasi-judicial forums.
    5. Economic Pressures on Employers: Shocks such as the COVID-19 pandemic and GST transition disproportionately affected MSMEs, who are the primary employers of unskilled labor.
    6. Institutional Capacity Issues: Labour departments face limitations in inspection and grievance redressal.

    How has inflation worsened worker vulnerability?

    1. Wage-Inflation Gap: Wage growth at 3.9% (2025) vs inflation at 5.4% (2023-24).
      1. This wage-inflation mismatch means that even if a worker receives a nominal raise, their ability to afford the same basket of goods has actually declined.
    2. Declining Real Income: Workers’ purchasing power reduced significantly. Recent analysis indicates that when adjusted for inflation, wages for regular salaried workers in India have essentially remained stagnant since 2019.
    3. Essential Costs Surge: LPG price rise disproportionately impacted urban informal workers. For urban informal workers, the sharp rise in rents and transport costs further tightens this consumption stress.
    4. Consumption Stress: Higher spending on essentials, reduced savings and financial security.
    5. Urban Cost Pressure: Rising rents, transport, and food costs intensified worker distress.

    Why is the informal sector at the centre of unrest?

    1. Dominant Workforce: Large share employed in unincorporated, non-agricultural enterprises.
    2. Wage Stagnation Amid Inflation: Annual nominal wage growth for informal workers fell to 3.9% in 2025, a sharp decline from 13% in the 2023-24 period. This slow growth fails to keep pace with the rising costs of essentials like housing, food, and LPG.
    3. Job Losses: Employment fell to 74.5 lakh (2025) from 1.1 crore (2024).
      1. Massive Job Volatility: While the sector added 1.1 crore jobs in 2024, job creation slowed by 32% in 2025, adding only 74.5 lakh positions. Unincorporated manufacturing, in particular, saw a contraction of 4.7% in mid-2025.
    4. Structural Disconnect (The “Dwarfism” Paradox): Approximately 86% of informal enterprises are “Own Account Enterprises” (one-person operations) that lack access to formal credit and technology. This keeps them in a cycle of low productivity and high vulnerability to shocks like trade disputes or policy shifts.
    5. Lack of Social Security: Absence of formal contracts and benefits increases vulnerability.
    6. Precarious Employment: High job insecurity and irregular income patterns fuel dissatisfaction.

    What role did policy expectations and misinformation play?

    1. WhatsApp Forwards: Claims of rising minimum wages created expectations.
      1. Viral messages regarding a rumored ₹20,000 flat minimum wage under the new Labour Codes triggered widespread expectations and subsequent anger when they didn’t materialize.
    2. Delayed Implementation: Wage hikes under Labour Codes not immediately realized.
    3. Expectation-Reality Gap: Triggered frustration among workers.
    4. Information Asymmetry: Lack of clear official communication created confusion.
    5. Policy Credibility Issues: Delay in execution reduced trust in government announcements.

    How have working conditions aggravated the crisis beyond wages?

    Working conditions have turned the wage crisis into a broader human rights issue by treating labor as an expendable resource. When workers are forced to work longer for no extra pay in unsafe environments, the “real cost” of their labor increases while their “real income” vanishes.

    1. Excess Working Hours: Workers report 10-12 hours/day vs official 8 hours.
    2. The Overtime Pay “Ghost”: Despite clear mandates in the Factories Act for double wages for overtime, enforcement is nearly non-existent. In 2023-24, the discrepancy between reported extra hours and actual payroll records highlights a massive “hidden” wage theft.
    3. Safety Concerns: Lack of workplace safety and basic facilities highlighted.
    4. Workplace Exploitation: Reports of ill-treatment and denial of dignity at workplace.
    5. Regulatory Blind Spots: Labour inspections have largely shifted toward “self-certification” or “web-based random inspections.” This reduced physical oversight allows employers in small-scale factories and services to bypass safety and hour regulations with minimal risk of being caught.

    Why did protests spread geographically and sectorally?

    1. The “Demonstration Effect”: A massive 35% minimum wage hike in Haryana (April 2026) acted as a catalyst. Workers in neighbouring Noida (Uttar Pradesh), earning nearly ₹4,000-₹6,000 less for similar industrial work, mobilized to demand parity, leading to city-wide unrest.
    2. Spillover Effect: Protests that began in major hubs like Manesar quickly moved to Faridabad, Noida, Ghaziabad, and Panipat. This was fueled by workers observing successful wage notifications in adjacent districts or states, creating a chain reaction across the National Capital Region (NCR) and beyond.
    3. Union Unity: The Bharat Bandh (February 12, 2026) saw an estimated 300 million participants across 600 districts. This was led by a joint forum of 10 Central Trade Unions and the Samyukt Kisan Morcha (SKM), linking industrial labor issues with agrarian distress.
    4. Multi-Sector Involvement: In Noida, the movement transitioned from a purely industrial strike to a broader labor rights movement when domestic workers joined factory laborers to protest extreme income inequality and lack of dignity at the workplace
    5. Common Grievances: Wage insecurity, inflation pressure, poor conditions.
    6. Network Mobilisation: Worker networks and unions facilitated rapid spread.
    7. Regional Pattern: Similar protests observed earlier in Bawal, Bihar, and Panipat.

    Conclusion

    Labour unrest reflects structural imbalances in wage growth, enforcement, and working conditions. Addressing these requires synchronized policy action on wages, inflation, and labour rights.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2024] Discuss the merits and demerits of the four ‘Labour Codes’ in the context of labour market reforms in India. What has been the progress so far in this regard?”

    Linkage: The PYQ tests labour reforms, wage regulation, and enforcement gaps in India’s labour market (GS-3 Economy). It is directly linked to the article’s issues of delayed Labour Code implementation, wage insecurity, and rising industrial unrest.

  • Marine Heatwaves (MHWs) 

    Why in the News?

    • A recent study shows that tropical cyclones passing over marine heatwaves become far more destructive, leading to about 60% more billion-dollar disasters due to rapid intensification.

    What are Marine Heatwaves

    • A prolonged period of unusually high sea surface temperature
    • Duration: Days to months
    • Temperature anomaly: Typically 1°C to 3°C above normal

    Key Characteristics

    • Region-specific phenomenon
    • Defined by: Duration, Intensity, and Spatial extent

    Causes of Marine Heatwaves

    1. Climate Change

    • Oceans absorb over 90% of excess heat
    • Raises baseline temperature

    2. Weakening Winds

    • Less: Evaporation and Vertical mixing

    3. Ocean Stratification

    • Warm water trapped at surface
    • No mixing with cooler deep water

    4. Ocean Currents

    • Transport warm water to new regions

    5. Climate Oscillations

    • Example: El Niño
    • Raises sea surface temperatures
    [2020] With reference to Ocean Mean Temperature (OMT), which of the following statements is/are correct? 
    1 OMT is measured up to a depth of 26°C isotherm which is 129 meters in the southwestern Indian Ocean during January — March. 
    2 OMT collected during January – March can be used in assessing whether the amount of rainfall in monsoon will be less or more than a certain long-term mean. 
    Select the correct answer using the code given below: 
    a) 1 only 
    b) 2 only 
    c) Both 1 and 2 
    d) Neither 1 nor 2
  • Bank Nationalisation in India  

    Why in the News?

    • The 55th anniversary of bank nationalisation (1969) has revived debate on its long-term economic impact.

    What is Bank Nationalisation

    • Transfer of private banks into government ownership
    • Objective:
      • Align banking with national development goals
      • Move control of finance to the public sector

    Phases of Nationalisation

    Phase 1 (1955)

    • Nationalisation of Imperial Bank of India
    • Converted into: State Bank of India

    Phase 2 (1969)

    • 14 major banks nationalised
    • Criteria: Deposits ≥ ₹50 crore
    • Led by: Indira Gandhi
    • Covered about 85–90% of banking sector

    Phase 3 (1980)

    • 6 more banks nationalised
    • Increased state control over banking

    Objectives

    • Expand banking in Rural and semi-urban areas
    • Provide credit to: Agriculture, Small industries, and Weaker sections
    • Reduce: Concentration of wealth
    • Support: Planned economic development
    [2018] Consider the following events: 
    1 The first democratically elected communist party government formed in a State in India. 
    2 India’s then largest bank, ‘Imperial Bank of India’, was renamed ‘State Bank of India’. 
    3 Air India was nationalised and became the national carrier. 
    4 Goa became a part of independent India. 
    Which of the following is the correct chronological sequence of the above events? 
    a) 4 – 1 – 2 – 3
    b) 3 – 2 – 1 – 4
    c) 4 – 2 – 1 – 3
    d) 3 – 1 – 2 – 4
  • Why India Slipped to 6th Largest Economy

    Why in the News

    • According to the International Monetary Fund World Economic Outlook (2026), India slipped to the 6th-largest economy, with the United Kingdom and Japan overtaking it.

    Latest GDP Rankings (2026)

    • USA: ~$32.3 trillion
    • China: ~$20.8 trillion
    • Germany, Japan, UK, India: ~around $4 trillion range
    • Recently, India has now ranked 6th

    Key Reason: How the IMF Calculates GDP

    • IMF ranking depends on:
      • GDP in local currency
      • Exchange rate (currency vs US dollar)
    • Both factors worsened for India

    Reasons for India’s Decline

    1. Revision of GDP Data

    • New base year introduced
    • GDP revised downward:
      • ₹357 trillion → ₹345 trillion
    • Earlier estimates were overstated

    2. Rupee Depreciation

    • Indian rupee weakened against US dollar
    • Dollar also weakened against: Pound and Yen
    • Double impact:
      • India’s GDP falls in dollar terms
      • UK & Japan appear stronger

    3. Dollar-Based Ranking Effect

    • Even if real growth continues:
      • Dollar conversion reduces ranking
    • Example: India GDP revised: $4.1 trillion → $3.9 trillion

    Why the UK & Japan Overtook India

    • Stronger currencies (pound, yen)
    • India’s GDP revision downward
    • Exchange rate disadvantage

    Important Concept

    Nominal GDP vs Real Strength

    • IMF rankings use: Nominal GDP (in USD)
    • Not: Purchasing Power Parity (PPP)
    • India still ranks 3rd in PPP terms

    Future Outlook

    • IMF projection:
      • India likely to regain 4th position by 2027
      • May become 3rd largest by ~2031

    Key Insight

    • Top 2 economies (US & China) are far ahead
    • Next 4 economies (Germany, Japan, UK, India):
      • Very close (~$4 trillion range)
    • Small changes in exchange rate can change rankings
    [2019] Consider the following statements:
    1. Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) exchange rates are calculated by comparing the prices of the same basket of goods and services in different countries
    2. In terms of PPP dollars, India is the sixth largest economy in the world.
    Which of the statement given above is/are correct?
    [A] 1 only [B] 2 only [C] Both 1 and 2 [D] Neither 1 nor 2
  • Freedom of Conscience vs Religion  

    Why in the News?

    • The Supreme Court of India raised a key question during the Sabarimala review case:
      • Should judges rise above personal religious beliefs while deciding constitutional matters?

    Core Issue

    • Whether judges must separate personal religion from constitutional duty
    • Debate on:
      • Freedom of conscience vs religious practices
      • Scope of judicial review over religion

    Constitutional Provisions Involved

    Article 25

    • Freedom of: Conscience, Profession, practice and propagation of religion

    Article 26

    • Right of religious denominations to: Manage their own affairs

    Key Observations by the Court

    1. Judges and Personal Beliefs

    • Judges must:
      • Rise above personal religious views
      • Apply constitutional principles objectively

    2. Conscience vs Religion

    • Question raised: Is conscience broader than religion?
    • Suggestion: Conscience may not be limited to religion

    3. Internal vs External Dimension

    • Freedom of conscience: Internal belief system
    • Freedom of religion: External expression of belief

    Legal Interpretation Emerging

    • Article 25 contains:
      • Two distinct rights: Freedom of conscience and Freedom to practice religion
    • These are related but not identical

    Key Argument (Rajeev Dhavan)

    • Judges act under the Constitution, not personal faith
    • Freedom of conscience: Broader and independent right

    Important Concept

    Freedom of Conscience

    • Right to: Hold beliefs
      • Think independently
    • Does not necessarily require: Religious expression
    [2017] Which one of the following objectives is not embodied in the Preamble to the Constitution of India?
    (a) Liberty of thought
    (b) Economic liberty
    (c) Liberty of expression
    (d) Liberty of belief
  • Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, 2026 Defeated  

    Why in the News?

    • The Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, 2026 was defeated in Lok Sabha after failing to secure the required special majority.

    Voting Outcome

    • Votes in favour: 298
    • Votes against: 230
    • Required (2/3rd majority): 352
    • Result: Bill failed

    What the Bill Proposed

    • Increase Lok Sabha strength:
      • From 543 → ~850 seats
    • Delimitation based on:
      • 2011 Census
    • Enable:
      • 33% women’s reservation
    • Linked Bills:
      • Delimitation Bill
      • Union Territories Laws Amendment Bill

    Aftermath

    • Government:
      • Withdrew related delimitation Bills
    • Debate continues on:
      • Women’s reservation
      • Electoral restructuring

    Key Issues in Debate

    1. Women’s Reservation Linkage

    • Government: Wanted reservation after delimitation
    • Opposition: Demanded immediate implementation without delimitation

    2. Federal Concerns

    • Fear among some States: Loss of representation
    • Debate over: North–South balance

    3. Delimitation Controversy

    • Based on: Latest population data
    • Raises concern: Impact on states with lower population growth

    Government’s Argument

    • Based on principle: One person, one vote, one value
    • Concern: Unequal constituency sizes due to 1971 freeze

    Constitutional Requirement

    • Constitutional Amendment Bill needs:
      • Special majority
      • Two-thirds of members present and voting
    [2022] Consider the following statements: 
    1. A bill amending the Constitution requires a prior recommendation of the Président of India.
    2. When a Constitution Amendment Bill is presented to the President of India, it is obligatory for the President of India to give his/her assent.
    3. A Constitution Amendment Bill must be passed by both the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha by a special majority and there is no provision for joint sitting.
    Which of the statements given above are correct?
    [A] 1 and 2 only [B] 2 and 3 only [C] 1 and 3 only [D] 1, 2 and 3
  • [17th April 2026] The Hindu OpED: India’s rural models are shaping development diplomacy

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2020] Micro-Finance as an anti-poverty vaccine is aimed at asset creation and income security of the rural poor in India.” Evaluate the role of Self Help Groups in achieving the twin objectives along with empowering women in rural India.Linkage: The PYQ directly links to NRLM’s SHG-based model, which ensures financial inclusion, women empowerment, and livelihood generation at scale. It forms the core foundation of India’s development diplomacy, as this SHG model is now being replicated globally, especially in Africa.

    Mentor’s Comment

    India’s National Rural Livelihood Mission (NRLM) is gaining international traction as multiple African nations actively explore its Self Help Group (SHG)-based model. This marks a shift from traditional aid to replicable grassroots development frameworks. This is significant because India is no longer merely a recipient or donor of development assistance but an exporter of institutional models. This is backed by striking achievements, 10 crore households reached, 90 lakh SHGs mobilised, and women earning over ₹1 lakh annually

    What is National Rural Livelihoods Mission (NRLM)?

    Also now known as Deendayal Antyodaya Yojana-NRLM (DAY-NRLM), it is a flagship poverty alleviation program run by the Ministry of Rural Development, Government of India. It aims to reduce rural poverty by mobilizing poor households into Self-Help Groups (SHGs), providing them with financial support, skills training, and sustainable livelihood options, primarily focusing on empowering rural women. 

    Key Aspects of DAY-NRLM:

    1. Objective: To empower at least one woman from each of the 10 crore+ rural poor households through SHGs, enabling them to improve their livelihoods and break out of poverty.

    Core Approach:

    1. Social Mobilization: Organizing rural poor into Self-Help Groups (SHGs) and their federations.
    2. Financial Inclusion: Providing revolving funds, community investment funds, and facilitating bank linkages to SHGs (often at 7% interest, with an additional 3% subsidy for timely repayment).
    3. Livelihood Promotion: Supporting both farm-based (e.g., agriculture, livestock) and non-farm activities, including skill development and entrepreneurship.

    Key Components:

    1. Mahila Kisan Sashaktikaran Pariyojana (MKSP): Empowers women farmers.
    2. Start-up Village Entrepreneurship Programme (SVEP): Supports rural start-ups.
    3. Aajeevika Skills: Imparts vocational skills for job placement.
    4. Implementation: It operates as a centrally sponsored program funded 75:25 by the Centre and States (90:10 for North Eastern states).
    5. Target Group: Identified through a process called Participatory Identification of Poor (PIP), which ranks households based on vulnerability

    How has NRLM transformed rural livelihoods in India at scale?

    1. Scale Expansion: Covers 742 districts and 10 crore households, demonstrating unprecedented outreach in poverty alleviation.
    2. Institutional Formation: Mobilised over 90 lakh SHGs, creating federated community institutions at village and cluster levels.
    3. Income Enhancement: Women SHG members earn ₹1,00,000+ annually, indicating sustained livelihood generation.
    4. Financial Inclusion: Over 50 million women accessed bank credit, improving formal financial participation.
    5. Local Economy Impact: Accounts for 60% of local government expenditure, integrating SHGs into governance structures.

    Why is the SHG-based model gaining global attention, especially in Africa?

    1. Contextual Relevance: Aligns with large informal economies in Africa where micro-enterprises dominate.
    2. Women Empowerment: Focus on collective agency resonates with gender-based development strategies.
    3. Low-Cost Governance: Operates through community-led systems, reducing dependence on state-heavy structures.
    4. Scalability: Demonstrates ability to scale from village to national level without losing efficiency.
    5. Case Evidence: African nations (Ethiopia, Tanzania, Malawi, Kenya, Rwanda) engaging in knowledge exchanges and field visits.

    How does India’s development diplomacy differ from traditional models?

    1. Shift in Approach: Moves from financial aid and technical assistance to institutional model sharing.
    2. South-South Cooperation: Promotes peer learning rather than top-down Western templates.
    3. Capacity Building: Focuses on training missions, exposure visits, and institutional linkages.
    4. Knowledge Platforms: Establishment of Livelihoods Knowledge Exchange Platforms ensures continuous engagement.
    5. Outcome Orientation: Ensures long-term community capacity instead of short-term project outputs.

    What structural strengths make NRLM a globally replicable model?

    1. Social Mobilisation: Builds trust-based networks through SHGs, enhancing participation.
    2. Institutional Architecture: Creates federated structures ensuring decentralised governance.
    3. Financial Discipline: Encourages credit linkage and repayment systems, ensuring sustainability.
    4. Skill Development: Integrates livelihood training and entrepreneurship support.
    5. Governance Integration: Embeds SHGs into local governance systems, ensuring accountability.

    What challenges may limit global adaptation of the NRLM model?

    1. Contextual Variations: Differences in political systems and social structures may affect replication.
    2. State Capacity Constraints: Weak administrative systems in some countries may limit scaling.
    3. Cultural Barriers: Variations in gender norms may hinder women-led participation.
    4. Financial Ecosystem Gaps: Limited banking penetration in some regions affects credit linkage.
    5. Sustainability Risks: Requires long-term commitment, not short project cycles.

    How is India institutionalising this emerging development diplomacy?

    1. Policy Integration: Embeds livelihood models within India’s development cooperation framework.
    2. Cross-border Engagement: Facilitates training, exposure visits, and pilot projects.
    3. Digital Collaboration: Promotes digital governance and financial inclusion tools.
    4. Long-term Partnerships: Expands into multi-year collaborations with African governments.
    5. Global Positioning: Positions India as a leader in grassroots development innovation.

    Conclusion

    India’s NRLM-led development diplomacy reflects a paradigm shift from resource transfer to knowledge transfer, rooted in grassroots realities. Its success lies in scalability, inclusivity, and sustainability, positioning India as a norm entrepreneur in global development discourse.

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