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  • All India Free Open Test on April 10th – Evaluate your Preparation before it’s too Late || Get Free Strategy Call After Test|| Hurry Up & Register Now

    All India Free Open Test on April 10th – Evaluate your Preparation before it’s too Late || Get Free Strategy Call After Test|| Hurry Up & Register Now

    First Nikaalo Prelims Open Test was an eye opener for many by highlighting your weak spots. Knowing WEAK AREAS in early stage of preparation can give you time to improve upon them. Hence, as promised we are conducting the 2nd All India Open Prelims Test under our mission Nikaalo Prelims 2022.

    GET READY TO EXPERIENCE THE COMPLETE EXAMINATION PATTERN!

    We are conducting both GENERAL STUDIES and CSAT test with high quality UPSC level questions along with Test Discussion.


    Click here to join Nikaalo Prelims Civilsdaily IAS Official space to Participate in the test discussion.

    Test date: 10th April 2022, Sunday

    TIME:

    GS 1: 9:30 am

    GS 2: 2:30 pm

    How our Prelims Test will help you?

    We at Civilsdaily understand the nuances of setting a paper. Through five cases explaining five questions, we’ll try to give you an idea about the varied difficulty level of prelims questions.

    These questions have been taken from the first test of Nikaalo Prelims All India Open Mock Test 2020 about Government Schemes and Policies.   

    CASE 1 – The oldest trick in the book. 

    DELIBERATELY CHANGING NAMES TO CONFUSE YOU. BE IT SCHEMES OR CONCEPTS. UPSC IS WELL KNOWN TO FLIP NAMES OF SIMILAR-SOUNDING SCHEMES AND CONCEPTS. LOOK AT THIS QUESTION. 

    Ques. Which of the following are the result areas of  STRIVE

    1. Improved performance of ITI.
    2. Improved and Broadened Apprenticeship Training.
    3. India International Skill Centers 

    Select the  correct answer from the  codes given below:

    a. 1 and 2 only

    b. 2 and 3 only

    c. 1 and 3 only

    d. 1 only

    Correct answer- 1 and 2 only

    In the above question, STRIVE has been used for SANKALP.  Both of them were announced at the same time for boosting Skill India Mission. It is very easy to get confused mark a wrong answer.

    CASE 2: Misleading names

    A LOT OF TIMES ESPECIALLY IN MATCH THE FOLLOWING TYPE OF QUESTIONS MISLEADING NAMES ARE USED. 

    Ques. Consider the following pairs:

       Schemes                          Objectives

    1. NIDHI: nurturing ideas and innovations into successful startups.
    2. SATYAM: rejuvenate research in yoga and meditation.
    3. MANAK: to help build a critical human resource pool for strengthening and increasing the research & development base.

    Which of the pairs given above are correctly matched?

    a. 1 and 2 only

    b. 2 and 3 only

    c. 1 and 2 only

    d. 1, 2 and 3

    Correct answer: 1, 2 and 3

    Misleading yet important names of initiatives under Ministry of Science and Technology have been used here. All pairs are correctly matched but it is very easy to get confused. 

    CASE 3: Are you rooted in society?

    UPSC has been playing with the expenditure figures and other such facts. It is done not only for the sole reason of checking your rote memory, but the ability to think in-depth about the issues faced by various sections. 

    Ques. With reference to ‘Kisan Urja Suraksha evam Utthaan Mahabhiyan (KUSUM) Scheme’, consider the following statements:

    1. The scheme provides for the installation of grid-connected solar power plants each of capacity up to 2 MW in the rural areas.
    2. The farmers will have to spend 50% of the total expenditure to acquire and install solar pumps.

    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

    Correct answer: 1 only

    A very important scheme. The farmers have to tolerate only 10% of the total expenditure to acquire and install solar pumps. The Central Govt. will provide 60% cost while the remaining 30% will be taken care of by bank as credit. One must understand the inability of Indian farmers to spend 50% on solar pumps. This would have helped in eliminating options also.

    CASE 4: Going international.

    INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION AND AID IN OUR SCHEMES AND POLICIES ARE RELEVANT. IF YOU EVER READ ABOUT THEM, KNOW THAT THE ISSUE IS OF CRITICAL IMPORTANCE FOR THE GOVERNMENT AND SOCIETY.

    Ques. With reference to Atal Bhujal Yojana, consider the following statements:

    1. It is a Centrally Sponsored Scheme with funding pattern of 50:50 between Government of India and states.
    2. This scheme is approved by the World Bank.

    Which of the following statements given above is/are correct?

    a. 1 only

    b. 2 only

    c. Both 1 and 2

    d. Neither 1 nor 2

    Correct answer: 2 only

    Here the Government of India’s collaboration with World Bank makes it important. Half of the financial contribution is from the World Bank in this initiative.

    Students must not ignore the contribution of international institutions especially if it is of such overwhelming nature.

    CASE 5: Core of the core

    YOU SHOULD BE ABLE TO REMEMBER THE BARE MINIMUM. THERE IS NO OTHER WAY IN SUCH QUESTIONS. YOU EITHER KNOW THEM OR YOU DON’T.

    Ques. Which of the following are the components of the National Social Assistance Programme (NSAP)?

    1. National Family Benefit Scheme (NFBS) 
    2. Annapurna.
    3. Indira Gandhi National Widow Pension Scheme (IGNWPS)

    Select the correct answer from the codes given below:

    a. 1 and 3

    b. 2 and 3

    c. 3 only

    d. 1, 2, and 3

    Correct answer: 1, 2 and 3

    The National Social Assistance Programme (NSAP) which came into effect from 15th August 1995, represents a significant step towards the fulfilment of the Directive Principles in Article 41 of the Constitution.

    It is a very important scheme under Ministry of Rural Development. Students are supposed to do flagship schemes of various ministries.

    WHAT IS NIKAALO PRELIMS?

    Mission Nikaalo prelims is a free fast-paced revision sequence to brush up your concepts for prelims. Major pillars of the programs are:

    1. Prelims SPOTLIGHT

    This initiative is meant to help you revise details and facts that can be asked in prelims. They are simplified, synthesized and prepared using most authentic sources. These can easily slip your mind or you can easily confuse these. Continuous Revision for the same is required. The themes picked up in the spotlight are not random but after analyzing and scrutinizing the PYQs of several years. Dare you to miss the updates!

    1. Static Subject Revision and Tests 

    Coverage and Relevance are the 2 Pillars of our Tests. Practicing tests is crucial part of Prelims preparation.

    3. Nikaalo Prelims Discussion on Civilsdaily IAS Official space

    All material, notes and doubt sessions will take place on Civilsdaily IAS Official Space.

    Click here to join Nikaalo Prelims Civilsdaily IAS Official space.

  • Who are Denotified Tribes (DNTs)?

    A standing committee of Parliament, tabled last week, has criticised the functioning of the development programme for de-notified, nomadic and semi-nomadic tribes.

    Who are de-notified, nomadic and semi-nomadic tribes?

    • These are communities who are the most vulnerable and deprived.
    • Denotified tribes (DNTs) are communities that were ‘notified’ as being ‘born criminal’ during the British regime under a series of laws starting with the Criminal Tribes Act of 1871.
    • They mostly belong to the medieval period Banjaras.
    • Nomadic and semi-nomadic communities are defined as those who move from one place to another rather than living at one place all the time.

    What is the history of deprivation faced by these communities?

    • This has a long history, first during colonial rule, and then in independent India.
    • These communities are largely politically ‘quiet’ — they do not place their demands concretely before the government for they lack vocal leadership and also lack the patronage of a national leader.
    • Many commissions and committees constituted since Independence have referred to the problems of these communities. These include the:
    1. Criminal Tribes Inquiry Committee, 1947 constituted in the United Provinces (now Uttar Pradesh)
    2. Ananthasayanam Ayyangar Committee in 1949 (it was based on the report of this committee the Criminal Tribes Act was repealed)
    3. Kaka Kalelkar Commission (also called first OBC Commission) constituted in 1953
    4. In 1965, an Advisory Committee constituted for revision of the SC and ST list under the chairmanship of B N Lokur referred to denotified tribes
    5. The B P Mandal Commission constituted in 1980 also made some recommendations on the issue

    Policy measures for DNTs

    • A National Commission for De-notified, Nomadic and Semi-Nomadic Tribes (NCDNT) was constituted in 2006 by the then government.
    • It was headed by Balkrishna Sidram Renke and submitted its report in June 2008.
    • It said that it is an irony that these tribes somehow escaped the attention of our Constitution makers and thus got deprived of the Constitutional support unlike SCs and STs.
    • The Renke commission estimated their population at around 10.74 crore based on Census 2001.
    • A new Commission constituted in February 2014 to prepare a state-wise list, which submitted its report on January 8, 2018, identified 1,262 communities as de-notified, nomadic and semi-nomadic.
    • Much recently, the Minister of Social Justice and Empowerment launched the Scheme for Economic Empowerment of De-notified, Nomadic, and Semi Nomadic Communities (SEED).

    Why in news now?

    • While a number of these tribes are categorised under SC, ST and OBC, many are not.
    • The standing committee report in Parliament has cited a statement by the Secretary, Department of Social Justice and Empowerment, that 269 DNT communities are not covered under any reserved categories.
    • These communities are frequently left out because they are less visible and difficult to reach.

    What is DWBDNC, and what is its role?

    • The DWBDNC stands for the Scheme for welfare of Denotified, Nomadic and Semi Nomadic communities (DWBDNC).
    • The commission report submitted in 2018 had recommended the setting of up a permanent commission for these communities.
    • But since most DNTs are covered under SC, ST or OBC, the government felt setting up a permanent commission, which would deal with redress of grievances.
    • The government therefore set up the DWBDNCs under the Societies Registration Act, 1860 under the aegis of Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment.

    The Idate Commission

    • The DWBDNC was constituted on February 21, 2019 under the chairmanship of Bhiku Ramji Idate.
    • Also, a committee has been set up by the NITI Aayog to complete the process of identification of the de-notified, nomadic and semi-nomadic communities (DNCs).
    • Ethnographic studies of DNCs are being conducted by the Anthropological Survey of India, with a budget of Rs 2.26 crore sanctioned.
    • On March 30, 2022 the DoPT issued an advertisement for the recruitment of consultants in the DWBDNC.

     

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  • SC to hear plea against Electoral Bonds Scheme

    The CJI N will soon take up a long-pending challenge against the government’s electoral bonds scheme.

    What are Electoral Bonds?

    • Electoral bonds are banking instruments that can be purchased by any citizen or company to make donations to political parties, without the donor’s identity being disclosed.
    • It is like a promissory note that can be bought by any Indian citizen or company incorporated in India from select branches of State Bank of India.
    • The citizen or corporate can then donate the same to any eligible political party of his/her choice.
    • An individual or party will be allowed to purchase these bonds digitally or through cheque.

    About the scheme

    • A citizen of India or a body incorporated in India will be eligible to purchase the bond
    • Such bonds can be purchased for any value in multiples of ₹1,000, ₹10,000, ₹10 lakh, and ₹1 crore from any of the specified branches of the State Bank of India
    • The purchaser will be allowed to buy electoral bonds only on due fulfillment of all the extant KYC norms and by making payment from a bank account
    • The bonds will have a life of 15 days (15 days time has been prescribed for the bonds to ensure that they do not become a parallel currency).
    • Donors who contribute less than ₹20,000 to political parties through purchase of electoral bonds need not provide their identity details, such as Permanent Account Number (PAN).

    Objective of the scheme

    • Transparency in political funding: To ensure that the funds being collected by the political parties is accounted money or clean money.

    Who can redeem such bonds?

    • The Electoral Bonds shall be encashed by an eligible Political Party only through a Bank account with the Authorized Bank.
    • Only the Political Parties registered under Section 29A of the Representation of the People Act, 1951 (43 of 1951) and which secured not less than one per cent of the votes polled in the last General Election to the Lok Sabha or the State Legislative Assembly, shall be eligible to receive the Electoral Bonds.

    Restrictions that are done away

    • Earlier, no foreign company could donate to any political party under the Companies Act
    • A firm could donate a maximum of 7.5 per cent of its average three year net profit as political donations according to Section 182 of the Companies Act.
    • As per the same section of the Act, companies had to disclose details of their political donations in their annual statement of accounts.
    • The government moved an amendment in the Finance Bill to ensure that this proviso would not be applicable to companies in case of electoral bonds.
    • Thus, Indian, foreign and even shell companies can now donate to political parties without having to inform anyone of the contribution.

    Issues with the Scheme

    • Opaque funding: While the identity of the donor is captured, it is not revealed to the party or public. So transparency is not enhanced for the voter.
    • No IT break: Also income tax breaks may not be available for donations through electoral bonds. This pushes the donor to choose between remaining anonymous and saving on taxes.
    • No anonymity for donors: The privacy of the donor is compromised as the bank will know their identity.
    • Differential benefits: These bonds will help any party that is in power because the government can know who donated what money and to whom.
    • Unlimited donations: The electoral bonds scheme and amendments in the Finance Act of 2017 allows for “unlimited donations from individuals and foreign companies to political parties without any record of the sources of funding”.

    Way ahead

    • The worries over the electoral bond scheme, however, go beyond its patent unconstitutionality.
    • The concern about the possibility of misuse of funds is very pertinent.
    • The EC has been demanding that a law be passed to make political parties liable to get their accounts audited by an auditor from a panel suggested by the CAG or EC. This should get prominence.
    • Another feasible option is to establish a National Election Fund to which all donations could be directed.
    • This would take care of the imaginary fear of political reprisal of the donors.

     

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  • Recombinant Variants of SARS-CoV-2

    The World Health Organization (WHO) has flagged the emergence of a new variant of the SARS-CoV-2 virus — the XE recombinant.

    How are variants created?

    • SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, is an RNA virus which evolves by accumulating genetic errors in its genome.
    • These errors are produced when the virus infects a person and makes copies of itself inside the host’s cells.
    • These errors (otherwise called mutations) are therefore a by-product of replication of SARS-CoV-2 inside the cell and may be carried forward as the virus continues to infect people.
    • When viruses having a specific set of errors or mutations infect a number of people, this forms a cluster of infections descending from a common parental virus genome and is known as a lineage or a variant of the virus.

    Who name these variants?

    • The PANGO network, an open global consortium of researchers from across the world, provides a system for naming different lineages of SARS-CoV-2.
    • Pangolin was developed to implement the dynamic nomenclature of SARS-CoV-2 lineages, known as the Pango nomenclature.
    • These variants or lineages are widely followed by epidemiologists for tracking the evolution of SARS-CoV-2.

    What is a recombinant variant?

    • Apart from the errors in the virus genome, another process through which a virus increases its genetic diversity is recombination.
    • Recombination occurs when, in extremely rare situations, two different lineages of the virus co-infect the same cell in the host and exchange fragments of their individual genomes.
    • This generates a descendent variant having mutations that occurred in both the original lineages of the virus.
    • Recombination of lineages happens in a variety of other viruses, including those that cause influenza, as well as other coronaviruses.
    • Such recombination events occur typically in situations where two or more lineages of SARS-CoV-2 may be co-circulating in a certain region during the same time period.
    • This co-circulation of lineages provides an opportunity for recombination to occur between these two lineages of SARS-CoV-2.

    How many recombinant viruses have been detected?

    • While recombination events are not frequently observed for the SARS-CoV-2 virus, multiple recombinant lineages have been designated during the pandemic.
    • The recombinant lineages are annotated by PANGO with an ‘X’ followed by an alphabet which indicates the order of discovery.
    • Some previously detected and designated lineages include XA, a recombinant of B.1.1.7 (Alpha) and B.1.177 detected in the U.K., lineage XB detected in the U.S., and lineage XC detected in Japan, which is a recombinant of B.1.1.7 (Alpha) and AY.29 sublineage of Delta.
    • Three new recombinant lineages of SARS-CoV-2 have been recently designated by the PANGO network and are being monitored — XD, XE, and XF.
    • Although currently present in a very low proportion of genomes in the U.K., early data from the country show evidence of community transmission of XF.

    Are recombinant variants more deadly?

    • Although recombination has been detected in SARS-CoV-2, it has not yet impacted public health in a unique way.
    • There is little evidence to suggest that recombinant lineages have a varied clinical outcome compared to the currently dominant Omicron variant.
    • It is certain at this point in time that more data will be needed to ascertain the impact of these lineages on the epidemiology of COVID-19.

    What are the methods through which recombinants are identified?

    • Identifying and tracking recombinant lineages for SARS-CoV-2 is a challenging task.
    • This would require specialised tools and the availability of primary (or raw) data for genome sequences as similar variant combinations could also arise from inadvertent errors in sequencing or analysis as well as contamination of sequencing experiments.
    • A cluster of recombinant genomes can be designated a lineage name by the PANGO network if it can be confirmed that samples in the cluster have a common origin and descend from two individual lineages of SARS-CoV-2.
    • Additionally, there should be at least 5 genomes in the public domain belonging to the cluster, indicating an ongoing transmission of the lineage.
    • Furthermore, screening the sequencing data of these samples should show no signs of contamination and meet the definition of a recombinant.

    Way ahead

    • Since recombinations are extremely rare occurrences, it is unclear how and why the viruses recombine.
    • It is, therefore, important to track the recombination of SARS-CoV-2 lineages because it may lead to the generation of a viral lineage that is better at infecting people or transmitting from host to host.
    • Monitoring circulating SARS-CoV-2 genomes for evidence of recombination will help gain a better understanding of the ongoing evolution of SARS-CoV-2.
    • It will also provide information if a more “concerning” variant of the virus were to emerge.

     

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  • India condemns atrocities in Bucha, Ukraine

    India condemned the killing of civilians in Bucha, Ukraine, at the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) calling for an independent UN inquiry. (However India abstained from blaming Russia for the civilian deaths.)

    Note: Such events are of least GS importance. However, one must recognize the severity of such massacres and the imprint that it left on entire humanity. Yes, it is not India’s war, but it is no mean activity for a military superpower to march and annexe a small neighbour.  This topic holds much importance for personality test.

    Bucha massacre

    • The grimmest discoveries have been made in a Kyiv suburb called Bucha, a town located about 25 km to the northwest of the capital.
    • More than 300 bodies have been found in the town, some with their hands bound, flesh burned, and shot in the back of the head.
    • Satellite images now available show streets strewn with corpses, and many of the bodies seen by journalists in the past couple of days appear to have lain in the open for weeks.
    • The reports and pictures of corpses wearing civilian clothes, some clutching shopping bags, suggest that ordinary citizens were murdered without provocation, as they went about their daily business.

    A no lesser holocaust event

    • The discoveries have drawn comparisons with the killings of civilians in this area during World War II.
    • It reminds of the First Battle of Kyiv (part of Hitler’s Operation Barbarossa against the Soviet Union that began in June 1941) and the Second Battle of Kyiv (November-December 1943).
    • The Red (Soviet) Army started to push back the Germans from Ukraine, the area around the Ukrainian capital, including Bucha.
    • It saw the “Holocaust by bullets” during which an estimated 1.5 million people, mostly Jews, were shot dead at close range.

    A genocide or war crimes?

    • War crimes are defined as “grave breaches” of the Geneva Conventions, agreements signed after World War II that laid down international humanitarian laws during war time.
    • Deliberately targeting civilians amounts to a war crime.
    • The International Criminal Court (ICC) at The Hague has already opened an investigation into possible war crimes by Russia.
    • The investigation could in theory target even Putin. But it will be difficult to bring Russian defendants to trial or to prove intent.
    • Russia does not recognise the ICC and will likely not cooperate with the investigation.
    • The crimes of genocide are defined by the United Nations Genocide Convention of December 1948.
    • It includes acts “committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group”. Genocide is seen as the gravest and most serious of all crimes against humanity.

     

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  • Prelims Spotlight: Important Keywords Regarding Budgeting, Fiscal Policy, and Taxation

     
    6th Apr 2022

    Dear Aspirants,

    This Spotlight is a part of our Mission Nikaalo Prelims-2022

    Session Details

    Morning 12 PM  – Prelims Spotlight Session

    Evening 06:30  PM  – TIKDAM/MCQs Session

    Noon 03:00 PM – CSAT Google Meet Session

    Evening 08 PM  – Tests on Alternate Days

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    Annual financial statement:

    The Union Budget is the annual financial statement that contains the government’s revenue and expenditure for a fiscal year.

    It may also include planned sales volumes and revenues, resource quantities, costs and expenses, assets, liabilities and cash flows.

    The statement details the revenues from all sources, and expenditure on all activities that the government will undertake for the fiscal year. The fiscal year is calculated from 1 April-31 March.

    Under Article 112 of the Constitution, the government has to present a statement of estimated revenue and expenditure for every fiscal. This statement is called the annual financial statement. This document is divided into three sections: For each of these funds, the central government is required to present a statement of revenue and expenditure.

    1. Consolidated Fund:

    The Consolidated Fund of India, created under Article 266 of the Indian Constitution, includes the revenues received by the government and expenses made by it.

    All the revenue that the government receives through direct (income tax, corporation tax etc.) or indirect tax (Goods and Services Tax or GST) go into the Consolidated Fund of India.

    Revenue from non-tax sources like dividends, profits from the PSUs, and income from general services also contribute to the fund. Recoveries of loans, earnings from disinvestment and repayment of debts issued by the Centre also contribute to the fund.

    Howeverno money can be withdrawn for meeting expenses until the government gets the approval of the Parliament. Examples of expenditure include wages, salaries and pension of government employees, and other fixed costs. The repayment of debts incurred by the government is also done through the Consolidated Fund of India.

    The Consolidated Fund of India is divided into five parts:

    • Revenue account – receipts,
    • Revenue account – disbursements,
    • Capital account – receipts,
    • Capital account – disbursements, and
    • Disbursements ‘charged’ on the Consolidated Fund of India.

    Disbursements ‘charged’ on the Consolidated Fund of India is a special category within the Consolidated Fund of India which is not put to vote in the Parliament.

    This means whatever comes under this category need to be paid, whether the Budget is passed or not.

    The salary and allowances of the President, speaker and deputy speaker of the Lok Sabha, chairman and deputy chairman of the Rajya Sabha, salaries and allowances of Supreme Court judges, pensions of Supreme Court and High Court judges come under this category.

    2.Contingency fund:

    Like the Consolidated Fund of India, the Contingency Fund of India constitutes a part of the annual financial statement.

    Established under Article 267(1) of the Indian Constitution, the fund is maintained by the ministry of finance on behalf of the President of India.

    As the name suggests, the Contingency Fund of India is an account maintained for meeting expenses during any unforeseen emergencies.

    Parliamentary approval for such unforeseen expenditure is obtained, ex- post-facto, and an equivalent amount is drawn from the Consolidated Fund of India to recoup the Contingency Fund after such ex-post-facto approval.

    3. Public account.

    Article 266 of the Constitution defines the Public Account as being those funds that are received on behalf of the Government of India.

    Money held by the government in a trust — such as in the case of Provident Funds, Small Savings collections, income of government set apart for expenditure on specific objects like road development, primary education, reserve/special Funds, etc — are kept in the Public Account.

    Public Account funds do not belong to the government and have to be finally paid back to the persons and authorities that deposited them.

    Parliamentary authorisation for such payments is not required.

    However, when money is withdrawn from the Consolidated Fund with the approval of Parliament and kept in the Public Account for expenditure for a specific purpose, it is submitted for a vote in Parliament.

    Appropriation bill

    Appropriation Bill is a money bill that allows the government to withdraw funds from the Consolidated Fund of India to meet its expenses during the course of a financial year.

    As per Article 114 of the Constitution, the government can withdraw money from the Consolidated Fund only after receiving approval from Parliament.

    To put it simply, the Finance Bill contains provisions on financing the expenditure of the government, and Appropriation Bill specifies the quantum and purpose for withdrawing money.

    Vote-on-account

    The Constitution says that no money can be withdrawn by the government from the Consolidated Fund of India except under appropriation made by law.

    For that, an appropriation bill is passed during the Budget process.

    However, the appropriation bill may take time to pass through the Parliament and become a law. Meanwhile, the government would need permission to spend even a single penny from April 1 when the new financial year starts.

    Vote on the account is the permission to withdraw money from the Consolidated Fund of India in that period, usually two months.

    Vote on the account is a formality and requires no debate. When elections are scheduled a few months into the new financial year, the government seeks vote on account for four months. Essentially, vote on account is the interim permission of the parliament to the government to spend money.

    Corporation tax:

    Corporation tax is a direct tax imposed on the net income or profit that enterprises make from their businesses. Companies, both public and privately registered in India under the Companies Act 1956, are liable to pay corporation tax. This tax is levied at a specific rate according to the provisions of the Income Tax Act, 1961.

    Fringe benefits tax (FBT):
    The taxation of perquisites – or fringe benefits – provided by an employer to his employees, in addition to the cash salary or wages paid, is fringe benefits tax. It was introduced in Budget 2005-06. The government felt many companies were disguising perquisites such as club facilities as ordinary business expenses, which escaped taxation altogether. Employers have to now pay FBT on a percentage of the expense incurred on such perquisites.

    Direct Tax:

    A direct tax is paid directly by an individual or organization to the imposing entity. A taxpayer, for example, pays direct taxes to the government for different purposes, including real property tax, personal property tax, income tax, or taxes on assets. Direct taxes are based on the ability-to-pay principle. This economic principle states that those who have more resources or earn a higher income should pay more taxes.

    Indirect Tax
    In the case of indirect taxes, the incidence of tax is usually not on the person who pays the tax. These are largely taxes on expenditure and include Customs, excise and service tax.

    Indirect taxes are considered regressive, the burden on the rich and the poor is alike. That is why governments strive to raise a higher proportion of taxes through direct taxes. Moving on, we come to the next important receipt item in the revenue account, non-tax revenue.

    Non-tax revenue:

    Other than taxation being a primary source of income, the government also earns a recurring income, which is called non-tax revenue. While sources of tax revenue are few, the sources of non-tax revenue are many, with the number of collections per source. Although there are many sources of non-tax revenue, the amount per source is much less than that for tax revenue.

    For example, when citizens use services offered by the government, they pay bills, which are categorised as non-tax revenue, as the government provides infrastructure support to implement the services. Non-tax revenue also includes the interest collected by the government on the loans or funds offered to states.

    Grants-in-aid and contributions
    The third receipt item in the revenue account is relatively small grants-in-aid and contributions. These are in the nature of pure transfers to the government without any repayment obligation.
    These include expense incurred on organs of state such as Parliament, judiciary and elections. A substantial amount goes into administering fiscal services such as tax collection. The biggest item is the interest payment on loans taken by the government. Defence and other services like police also get a sizeable share. Having looked at receipts and expenditure on revenue account we come to an important item, the difference between the two, the revenue deficit.

    Revenue deficit:

    Revenue deficit arises when the government’s revenue expenditure exceeds the total revenue receipts.

    Revenue deficit includes those transactions that have a direct impact on a government’s current income and expenditure. This represents that the government’s own earnings are not sufficient to meet the day-to-day operations of its departments. Revenue deficit turns into borrowings when the government spends more than what it earns and has to resort to the external borrowings.

                   Revenue Deficit= Total revenue receipts – Total revenue expenditure.

    Revenue Deficit deals only with the government’s revenue receipts and revenue expenditures.

    Note that revenue receipts are receipts which neither create liability nor lead to a reduction in assets.

    It is further divided into two heads:

    • Receipt from Tax (Direct Tax,  Indirect Tax)
    • Receipts from Non-Tax Revenue

    Revenue Expenditure is referred to as the expenditure that does not result in the creation of assets reduction of liabilities. It is further divided into two types

    • Plan revenue expenditure
    • Non-plan revenue expenditure

    Fiscal Deficit:
    The fiscal deficit is defined as an excess of total budget expenditure over total budget receipts excluding borrowings during a fiscal year. In simple words, it is the amount of borrowing the government has to resort to meet its expenses. A large deficit means a large amount of borrowing. The fiscal deficit is a measure of how much the government needs to borrow from the market to meet its expenditure when its resources are inadequate.

    Primary deficit:

    Primary deficit is defined as a fiscal deficit of current year minus interest payments on previous borrowings.

             Primary deficit= Fiscal deficit – Interest payment on the previous borrowing

    In other words, whereas fiscal deficit indicates borrowing requirement inclusive of interest payment, the primary deficit indicates borrowing requirement exclusive of interest payment (i.e., amount of loan).

    We have seen that borrowing requirement of the government includes not only accumulated debt, but also interest payment on the debt. If we deduct ‘interest payment on debt’ from borrowing, the balance is called the primary deficit.

    Public debt:

    Public debt receipts and public debt disbursals are borrowings and repayments during the year, respectively. The difference is the net accretion to the public debt. Public debt can be split into internal (money borrowed within the country) and external (funds borrowed from non-Indian sources). Internal debt comprises treasury bills, market stabilisation schemes, ways and means advance, and securities against small savings.

    Ways and means advance (WMA):

    One of RBI’s roles is to serve as banker to both central and state governments. In this capacity, RBI provides temporary support to tide over mismatches in their receipts and payments in the form of ways and means advances.

    CESS:
    This is an additional levy on the basic tax liability. Governments resort to cess for meeting specific expenditure.

    Dividend distribution tax:

    A dividend is a return given by a company to its shareholders out of the profits earned by the company in a particular year. Dividend constitutes income in the hands of the shareholders which ideally should be subject to income tax.

    However, the income tax laws in India provided for an exemption of the dividend income received from Indian companies by the investors by levying a tax called the Dividend Distribution Tax (DDT) on the company paying the dividend. This tax has been abolished in the 2020-21 budget.

    FRBM Act 2003:

    The Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management Act (FRBM Act), 2003, establishes financial discipline to reduce the fiscal deficit.

    What are the objectives of the FRBM Act?

    The FRBM Act aims to introduce transparency in India’s fiscal management systems. The Act’s long-term objective is for India to achieve fiscal stability and to give the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) flexibility to deal with inflation in India. The FRBM Act was enacted to introduce a more equitable distribution of India’s debt over the years.

    Key features of the FRBM Act

    The FRBM Act made it mandatory for the government to place the following along with the Union Budget documents in Parliament annually:

    1. Medium Term Fiscal Policy Statement

    2. Macroeconomic Framework Statement

    3. Fiscal Policy Strategy Statement

    The FRBM Act proposed that revenue deficit, fiscal deficit, tax revenue and the total outstanding liabilities be projected as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP) in the medium-term fiscal policy statement.

    Fiscal Performance Index (FPI)

    • The composite FPI developed by CII is an innovative tool using multiple indicators to examine the quality of Budgets at the Central and State levels.
    • The index has been constructed using UNDP’s Human Development Index methodology which comprises six components for holistic assessment of the quality of government budgets, subsidies, pensions and defence in GDP
    • Quality of capital expenditure: measured by the share of capital expenditure (other than defence) in GDP
    • Quality of revenue: the ratio of net tax revenue to GDP (own tax revenue in case of States)
    • Degree of fiscal prudence I: fiscal deficit to GDP
    • Degree of fiscal prudence II: revenue deficit to GDP and
    • Debt index: Change in debt and guarantees to GDP

    Other measures of FPI

    • As per the new index, expenditure on infrastructure, education, healthcare and other social sectors can be considered beneficial for economic growth.

    Sabka Vishwas-Legacy Dispute Resolution Scheme

    • This Scheme is introduced to resolve and settle legacy cases of the Central Excise and Service Tax.
    • The proposed scheme would cover all the past disputes of taxes which may have got subsumed in GST; namely Central Excise, Service Tax and Cesses.
    • The Government expects the Scheme to be availed by a large number of taxpayers for closing their pending disputes relating to legacy Service Tax and Central Excise cases that are now subsumed under GST so they can focus on GST.
    • The Scheme is, especially, tailored to free a large number of small taxpayers of their pending disputes with the tax administration.

    Components of the Scheme

    • The two main components of the Scheme are dispute resolution and amnesty.
    • The dispute resolution component is aimed at liquidating the legacy cases of Central Excise and Service Tax that are subsumed in GST and are pending in litigation at various forums.
    • The amnesty component of the Scheme offers an oppor­tunity to the taxpayers to pay the outstanding tax and be free of any other consequence under the law.
    • The most attractive aspect of the Scheme is that it provides substantial relief in the tax dues for all categories of cases as well as full waiver of interest, fine, penalty,
    • In all these cases, there would be no other liability of interest, fine or penalty. There is also a complete amnesty from prosecution.

    Direct Tax Code:

    • The Direct Tax Code (DTC) is an attempt by the Govern­ment of India to simplify the direct tax laws in India.
    • It will revise, consolidate and simplify the structure of direct tax laws in India into a single legislation.
    • When implemented, it will replace the Income-tax Act, 1961 (ITA), and other direct tax legislation like the Wealth Tax Act, 1957.
    • The task force was constituted by the government to frame draft legislation for this proposed DTC in November 2017 and review the existing Income Tax Act.

    Direct Tax:

    • These are the taxes, paid directly to the government by the taxpayer. Under the direct tax system, the incidence and impact of taxation fall on the same entity, which cannot be transferred to another person.
    • It is termed as a progressive tax because the proportion of tax liability rises as an individual or entity’s income increases.
    • Examples- Income tax, corporate tax, Dividend Distri­bution Tax, Capital Gain Tax, Security Transaction Tax.
    • The system of Direct taxation is governed by the Cen­tral Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT). It is a part of the Department of Revenue in the Ministry of Finance.

    Corporate Tax

    • A corporate tax also popularly known as the company tax or the corporation tax is the tax levied on the capital or income of corporations or analogous legal entities.
    • In most countries, such taxes are levied at the national level, and a tax that is similar to that imposed at the na­tional level could be imposed at the local or state levels.
    • The taxes could also be termed as capital tax or income tax.
    • Generally, Partnership firms are not taxed at the entity level.
    • In most of nations, the corporations functioning in a country are taxed for the income from that country.
    • Many countries tax all income of corporations incorpo­rated in the country or those deemed to be resident for tax purposes in the country.
    • The income of the company that is to be taxed is computed similarly to the taxable income for individuals.
    • Tax is generally imposed on net profits.
    • In India, companies, both private and public which are registered in India under the Companies Act 1956, are liable to pay corporate tax.

    Securities transaction tax (STT)

    • Sale of any asset (shares, property) results in loss or profit. Depending on the time the asset is held, such profits and losses are categorised as long-term or short-term capital gain/loss.
    • In Budget 2004-05, the government abolished long-term capital gains tax on shares (tax on profits made on the sale of shares held for more than a year) and replaced it with STT.
    • It is a kind of turnover tax where the investor has to pay a small tax on the total consideration paid/received in a share transaction.

    Banking cash transaction tax (BCTT)

    • Introduced in Budget 2005-06, BCTT is a small tax on cash withdrawal from bank exceeding a particular amount in a single day.
    • The basic idea is to curb the black economy and generate a record of big cash transactions

    Cess

    • This is an additional levy on the basic tax liability Governments resort to cess for meeting specific expenditure. For instance, both corporate and individual income is at present subject to an education cess of 2%.
    • In the last Budget, the government had imposed another 1% cess – secondary and higher education cess on income tax – to finance secondary and higher education.

    Countervailing Duties (CVD)

    • Countervailing duty is a tax imposed on imports, over and above the basic import duty CVD is at par with the excise duty paid by the domestic manufacturers of similar goods
    • This ensures a level playing field between imported goods and locally-produced ones.
    • An exemption from CVD places the domestic industry at the disadvantage and over long run discourages investments in affected sectors.

    Export Duty

    • This is a tax levied on exports. In most instances, the object is not revenue, but to discourage exports of certain items.
    • In the last Budget, for instance, the government imposed an export duty of Rs 300 per metric tonne on the export of iron ores and concentrates and Rs 2,000 per metric tonne on the export of chrome ores and concentrates.

    Pass-through Status

    • A pass-through status helps avoid double taxation. Mutual funds, for instance, enjoy pass-through status.
    • The income earned by the funds is tax-free. Since mutual funds’ income is distributed to the unit-holders, who are in turn taxed on their income from such investments any taxation of mutual funds would amount to double taxation.
    • Essentially, it means the income is merely passing through the mutual funds and, therefore, should not be taxed.
    • The government allows venture funds in some sectors pass-through status to encourage investments in start-ups.

  • Missed Sajal Sir’s Webinar? Don’t Worry. Register and Get Webinar Video over email ||Target Prelims 2022 – Last 60 days Plan to clear prelims || Free Webinar by Mentors of 400 UPSC-CSE Toppers, Sajal Sir ||

    Missed Sajal Sir’s Webinar? Don’t Worry. Register and Get Webinar Video over email ||Target Prelims 2022 – Last 60 days Plan to clear prelims || Free Webinar by Mentors of 400 UPSC-CSE Toppers, Sajal Sir ||

    No more just the reading of your standard NCERTs is sufficient to clear prelims. Prelims is becoming more Dynamic Year by Year. From 5 lakh plus students making it to roughly 10,000 students for mains stage is not an easy task.

    LAST 60 DAYS

    60 days is an apt time to not only prepare but clear prelims. Many veterans/topper who appear for prelims shift to PRELIMS MODE in the last 60 days.

    This is because 60 days period comfortably allows to finish your one last static revisions of all subject, also cover current affairs revisions and write mocks. Few days less than 60, just adds on to add mental pressure, which can compromise your preparation.

    Prelims is the most trickiest stage in UPSC Examination. Last 60 days is surely a DO OR DIE situation.

    KEY TAKEAWAYS FROM THIS WEBINAR:

    1. Know about essentials which should be part of your timetable in the next 60 days. How to make a perfect timetable in the last 60 days?


    2. Every day counts and each subject counts! How much time should be devoted to each subject? Let the experts tell you!


    3. 20, 30, 40 or 60 tests! How many tests are enough before prelims? Is there a magic number?


    4. Not just do’s but one should be aware about the don’t as well. What mistakes one needs to avoid in last 60 days?


    5. Revision is the most important part of UPSC preparation. Know about 5R Revision plan.


    6. Time test Elimination techniques for prelims. How to use Tikdam/Logical reasoning to score extra 25 marks?


    7. Confused between 2 options because they sound very similar. Know how to maximize efficiency while solving question?


    8. Last few days is not about making long notes. Discuss the process of making micro notes in last 60 days.

    Webinar Details

    Prelims question papers have become more or less like a game of Sudoko. Except, in Sudoko you can solve the puzzle at your leisure and over here you are limited by 2 hours. We hope this webinar will help all 2022 aspirants implement the suggestions of Sajal sir

    Date: 04 April 2022 (Monday)

    Time: 7 P.M.

    About Sajal Sir

    Sajal Singh has the distinction be being 2017 topper of GS Mains. He has appeared for interview 3 times. Over 400 students have emerged as toppers under Sajal Sirs mentorship in the last 7 years.

    Thank you messages from students who cleared Mains 2021 under the mentorship of Sajal sir

    Last Minute Mentorship can help you a long way
    Gratitude for Mains mentorship
    Appearing in Interview 2021

    Testimonials from our 2020 Toppers

    AIR 14, 2020
  • Unlocking the potential of green hydrogen

    Context

    The ongoing tensions between Russia and Ukraine have led to the prices of crude oil shooting to $130/barrel. Green hydrogen is an emerging option that will help reduce India’s vulnerability to such price shocks.

    Four deficiencies in Renewable Energy Technologies

    • 1] Intermittent nature of RE: RE can only be generated intermittently.
    • Battery technology cannot store electricity at a grid scale.
    • 2] Financial viability: There are question marks on the financial viability of green power.
    • In India, renewable electricity is a replacement for coal-based power, the cheapest form of energy.
    • That’s a big constraint on its viability.
    • Moreover, the customers of this power – the state distribution companies – are collectively insolvent.
    • A business cannot prosper if its primary customers are not financially viable.
    • 3] Batteries are not suitable for heavy trucks: While electric cars and two-wheelers get a lot of visibility, much of India’s oil is burnt in heavy trucks.
    • Lithium batteries are not viable for trucks.
    • 4] Critical minerals: Electric vehicles require large quantities of lithium and cobalt that India lacks.
    • These minerals also have very concentrated supply chains that are vulnerable to disruptions.
    • Large-scale investments in electric vehicles may create unsustainable dependencies for the country.

    Is green hydrogen a solution?

    • Intermittent hydrogen in the energy mix can help circumvent some of these problems.
    • Hydrogen is an important industrial gas and is used on a large scale in petroleum refining, steel, and fertiliser production.
    • As of now, the hydrogen used in these industries is grey hydrogen, produced from natural gas.
    • Green hydrogen produced using renewable energy can be blended with grey hydrogen.
    • This will allow the creation of a substantial green hydrogen production capacity, without the risk that it may become a stranded asset.
    • Creating this hydrogen capacity will provide experience in handling the gas at a large scale and the challenges involved.
    • Blending with CNG: To widen the use of green hydrogen, it can be blended with compressed natural gas (CNG), widely used as a fuel for vehicles in Delhi, Mumbai and some other cities.
    • This will partly offset the need for imported natural gas and also help flag off the challenges of creating and distributing hydrogen at a national level.
    • By bringing down the price of green hydrogen sufficiently, India can help unlock some stranded assets.
    • The country has close to 25,000 megawatts of gas-fired power generation capacity that operates at a very low-capacity utilisation level. The high price of natural gas reduces the viability of such electricity.
    • These plants could use hydrogen blended with natural gas. Hydrogen should, however, be used to generate electricity after it has served its utility in other avenue.

    Way forward

    • To catalyse a hydrogen economy, India needs some specialist players to execute projects as well as finance them.
    • Participation of private players: Apart from government-backed players, the hydrogen economy will need private sector participation.
    • India’s start-up sector, with over 75 unicorns, is perhaps the most vibrant part of the country’s economy currently.
    • This ecosystem has been enabled by a mix of factors, including the presence of entrepreneurs with ideas and investors who are willing to back up these ideas
    • Creation of refueling network: One challenge of using new transport fuels, whether CNG or electric vehicles, is the creation of large-scale refuelling networks.
    • Bringing hydrogen vehicles on the road too soon will require the creation of yet another set of infrastructure.
    • Building fleets of hydrogen-fueled vehicles for gated infrastructure can be a good starting point.
    • Airports, ports and warehouses, for instance, use a large number of vehicles such as forklifts, cranes, trucks, tractors and passenger vehicles.

    Conclusion

    The government’s Green Hydrogen Policy sends the right signals about its intent. It now needs to ensure that investment can freely come into this space.

    UPSC 2022 countdown has begun! Get your personal guidance plan now! (Click here)

  • Starting Today [FEW SEATS LEFT & MOST AWAITED] Intensive Prelims Revision Program 2022|| LAUNCHING ON APRIL 05TH ||  60-Days Revision-Focused  Program for All UPSC-CSE Aspirants

    Starting Today [FEW SEATS LEFT & MOST AWAITED] Intensive Prelims Revision Program 2022|| LAUNCHING ON APRIL 05TH || 60-Days Revision-Focused Program for All UPSC-CSE Aspirants

    Can You Take The Challlenge of Completing 40 Full Length Tests in 60 Days Along With Revising 1.5 Years of Current Affairs? Santosh Gupta Sir, who has cleared prelims 6 times will help you out.

    Are you ready for Prelims-2022 in the next 60 days? If not, what’s stopping you? What’s making you wish if you had an extra 3-4 months to refine your preparation?

    Is it because you are stuck at a certain marks range like the 80-90s in your mock test series? Do you feel time is too short right now to improve your marks? But do you know, these 60+ days are more than enough for you to score above 130+ in Prelims 2022? Santosh Gupta sir is here for you.

    The next 60 days can make or break your UPSC-CSE dreams. Either, you might score 90-100 marks and  NOT qualify for Prelims or you can get 120-130+ and start preparing for Mains.

    Super-25 60 Day Revision Program Details

    Start Date

    April 05, 2022

    Three Main Pillars of Super-25 Revision Program

    This program is 100% useful for those aspirants who have already completed their prelims preparation and are worried of how would they do a final revision of all the 8 subjects in 8 weeks time. Those who want to solve atleast one 3-hour prelims test everyday, get on a call with their mentor and learn how to make effective micro-notes will find this program useful.

    The program is well-organised with a fixed schedule of tests, notes, and mentorship call as per student’s request. Super-25 Prelims Revision program eliminates the last minute clutter of UPSC preparation.

    See the source image

    1.  Covers 1500 high probable topics from Current Affairs and Static portions.

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    Faculty of Super-25

    Core Faculty of Civilsdaily, who have cleared UPSC Prelims 6 times and attended interview multiple times Sajal sir, Sudhanshu sir, Sukanya ma’am, Birendra sir and Santosh sir) will cover 1500 high probable topics with combined experience of 30 Prelims success. 

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    The Budget and Economy Survey of 2022 will be discussed in detail. Every concept under it will be taught so that the student gains clarity. Probable questions from this portions will also be discussed. 

    30 Revision Classes with Strategy sessions by Santosh Gupta sir on most probable topics for Prelims 2022. 

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  • Human Migration: Reasons & Impact

    Context

    Repeated surveys have found that the incomes of migrant households continue to be lower than pre-pandemic levels, even after returning to cities.

    Lack of policy for migrants

    • In the wake of a nationwide lockdown, India was left shocked by the plight of migrant workers walking hundreds of kilometres.
    • They became the focus of large-scale relief efforts by governments and civil society alike.
    • The Government ramped up the One Nation One Ration Card (ONORC) project, announced the Affordable Rental Housing Complexes (ARHC) scheme, set up the e-Shram portal and began to draft a migration policy.
    •  Despite this, a cohesive migration policy guidance remains elusive.
    • Contribution of migrant workers: Today, a third of the nation’s workforce is mobile.
    • Migrants fuel critical sectors such as manufacturing, construction, hospitality, logistics and commercial agriculture.
    • Despite clear economic and humanitarian reasoning to bring migrants back into the policy discourse, the current policy scenario is at best fragmented and at worst waning.

    Structural constraints

    1] Politicisation of issue and fragmented policy response

    •  Migration is a highly politicised phenomenon in India.
    • ‘Destination States’ experience a tension between economic needs, which require migrant labour, and political needs, which promote nativist policies that impose domicile restrictions on employment and social security.
    • On the flip side, the ‘sending States’ are highly motivated to serve their “own people” because they vote in their source villages.
    • This fragmented policy response to internal migration follows from State-specific calculations.
    • Development policy in India has bet big on rural development as an antidote to migration.
    • This widespread ‘sedentary bias’ continues to influence policy even though migration is an important pathway for impoverished marginalised rural households to find economic security (and social emancipation).

    2] Categorisation challenge

    • Migrants are a perennially fuzzy category in policy discourse, located inside two larger categories: the unorganised worker and the urban poor.
    • Even the e-Shram portal, which has made impressive progress in registering unorganised workers, has been unable to accurately distinguish and target migrants.
    • Policy interventions in major urban destinations continue to conflate the urban poor with low-income migrants.
    • Hence, slum development continues as the primary medium for alleviating migrant concerns, while in reality, most migrants live on worksites that are entirely out of the policy gaze.

    3] Gaps in the data

    • Migration policy discourse is seemingly paralysed by the now well-acknowledged failure of official datasets to capture the actual scale and the frequency of internal migration in India.
    •  Data systems designed to periodically record only one spatial location have posed great challenges to welfare delivery for up to 500 million people who are part of multi-locational migrant households.
    • The novel coronavirus pandemic has placed a sharp focus on problems such as educating and vaccinating those children who accompany their migrant parents, or ensuring that migrant women avail maternity benefits at multiple locations.

    Way forward: Strategic policy guidance by Centre and a platform for inter-State coordination

    • Policy in India often emerges from the ground up, taking decades to cement into national law and standard practice.
    • We have seen this in education and food security.
    • State’s initiatives: In migration too, many States have initiated data projects that can track migrants and generate dynamic real-time data that aid welfare delivery.
    • Maharashtra’s Migration Tracking System (MTS), Chhattisgarh’s State Migrant Workers Policy is premised on registering migrant workers at source and tracking them through phone-based outreach systems.
    • Multisectoral approach: There is further need for multisectoral approaches underpinned by a strategic convergence across government departments and initiatives.
    • Odisha’s Planning and Convergence Department, which offers an institutional mechanism for inter-departmental coordination, is one possible model.
    • Important role of the Centre:  State-level political economy constraints make the Centre’s role particularly crucial in addressing issues of inter-State migrant workers at ‘destination States’.
    • The NITI Aayog’s Draft Policy on Migrant Workers is a positive step forward.

    Conclusion

    Strategic initiatives to provide migrants safety nets regardless of location as well as bolster their ability to migrate safely and affordably must keep up the momentum toward migrant-supportive policy.

    UPSC 2022 countdown has begun! Get your personal guidance plan now! (Click here)

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