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

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  • CoAST India (Collaboration/Covid Action Support Group) Platform

    India Observatory has come up with a GIS-enabled dashboard called CoAST India to monitor migrants in India.

    Here, UPSC may create an illusion on:

    India Observatory – open-source database (misleading name): It may be asked in relation to some ISRO project.

    CoAST India – COVID related info (again misleading): UPSC may ask it in context to Cyclone Warning Systems.

    CoAST India

    • The platform is a map reflecting the movement of migrants in real-time on their long journeys, often on foot, along with facilities and relief organisations on their routes.
    • It is a collaboration with Anand-based Forest Ecological Security (FES) as its main nodal point.
    • It draws information from 55 organisations on the ground, mostly in villages, and aims to make such data available so that it would enable governments and small local civil society groups to be of assistance.
    • The map matches time and spatial data, on administrative facilities in the area, transportation and healthcare facilities of an area and summaries, on the fly, in real-time of people passing by.

    Features of the portal

    Four elements are sought to be brought together in this portal:

    • Location of migrants and vulnerable people, their specific needs,
    • Location of key infrastructure on the way which can double up as a rest-centre, or
    • Quarantine space and location of relief and
    • Rehabilitation providing NGOs and civil society organisations

    About India Observatory

    • The Foundation for Ecological Security (FES), an NGO working on conserving natural resources at the grassroots, has brought together a unique ecosystem of tools – open data platform India Observatory – to help understand the status of local-level resources and facilitate the action plans for conserving them.
    • The data made available on India Observatory platform has been pooled from various sources and dates as far back as the 1960s.
    • India Observatory was set up in December 2019, with FES focused on ecological issues about forests, water bodies, conservation, etc. that needed “a bird’s eye view or a satellite’s vision”.
    • It is a research unit at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE).
  • Purandara Dasa and his legacy

    The Department of Archaeology, Karnataka has commenced field research work regarding the birthplace of Purandara Dasa who is held as the father figure of Carnatic music.

    Recently there was a news on Lord Basaveshwara. Now comes the other popular saint.

    Vaishnavism and Shaivism are the two most profound strands of Bhakti Movement in Indian history. Enlist all the Bhakti Saints and their theistic philosophy and teachings. Try to spot the minute differences between them.

    Purandara Dasa

    • Purandara Dasa (1484 –1565) was a Haridasa, a renowned composer of Carnatic music, a great devotee of the Supreme Lord Krishna, a Vaishnava poet, a saint and a social reformer.
    • He was a disciple of the Dvaita philosopher-saint Vyasatirtha, and a contemporary of yet another Haridasa, Kanakadasa.
    • He was a composer, singer and one of the chief founding-proponents of South Indian classical music (Carnatic music).
    • In honour of his significant contributions to Carnatic music, he is widely referred to as the Pitamaha (lit. “father” or “grandfather”) of Carnatic music.
    • He is respected as an Avatara (incarnation) of the great sage Narada (a celestial being who is also a singer).

    Confusions over his birthplace

    • As ‘Purandara Vithala’ was the pen name of his compositions, it was widely believed that the mystic poet was born in Purandar (near Pune), Maharashtra.
    • However, many in Malnad claimed that he hailed from this region.
    • According to historians, Araga in Malnad was a buzzing commercial centre during the Vijayanagar rule, the period to which the poet belonged to.
    • Prior to his initiation to Haridasa tradition, Purandara Dasa was a rich merchant and was called as Srinivasa Nayaka.

    Back2Basics: Bhakti Movement

    • The Bhakti movement refers to the theistic devotional trend that emerged in medieval Hinduism.
    • It originated in eighth-century south India and spread northwards.
    • It swept over east and north India from the 15th century onwards, reaching its zenith between the 15th and 17th century CE.
    • It has traditionally been considered as an influential social reformation in Hinduism and provided an individual-focused alternative path to spirituality regardless of one’s birth or gender
    • The salvation which was previously considered attainable only by men of Brahmin, Kshatriya and Vaishya castes, became available to everyone.
  • Rail adukku pathiram Utensils of Tamil Nadu

    The rail adukku pathiram a traditional set of kitchen utensils in Tamil Nadu has become the gathered attention of all over the past few days.

    The traditional ‘rail adukku pathiram’ set of utensils are very unique in itself. However, one must note that it does NOT carry any GI tag and is completely out of use. Still, there is a possibility of it being asked in match the pair type questions asking – Q) Which among the following artefacts from Tamil Nadu carries a GI Tag?

    Rail adukku pathiram

    • The rail adukku pathiram consists of 14 vessels of different sizes, neatly placed in a compact manner inside the largest container.
    • The vessels were earlier used by families to carry groceries and cook food during train journeys.
    • These vessels were used to cook food for a mini-wedding. The interesting aspect is the compact size and easy to carry.
    • It has two vessels to cook vegetables, a sippal plate to boil rice, a frying pan, a sombu, a bronze pot to carry water and vessels of varying sizes to cook food.
    • Many in Tamil Nadu had forgotten about the existence of these multi-layered vessels until a video surfaced online recently.
  • Species in news: Puntius Sanctus fish

    Velankanni in Tamil Nadu has thrown up a new species of small freshwater fish.

    Last year one species from our newscard: Species in news: Hump-backed Mahseer made it into the CSP 2019.  The ‘Puntius Sanctus’ fish in the newscard creates such a vibe yet again.

    A stand-alone species being mentioned in the news for the first time (and that too from Southern India) find their way into the prelims. Make special note here.

    Q. Consider the following pairs

    Wildlife Naturally found in
    1. Blue-finned Mahseer Cauvery River
    2. Irrawaddy Dolphin Chambal River
    3. Rusty-spotted Cat Eastern Ghats

    Which of the pairs given correctly matched? (CSP 2019)

    (a) 1 and 2 only

    (b) 2 and 3 only

    (c) 1 and 3 only

    (d) 1, 2 and 3

    Puntius Sanctus

    • The silver-hued fish has been named Puntius Sanctus — ‘Sanctus’ is Latin for holy — after the popular pilgrim town.
    • Encountered in a small waterbody in Venlankanni, Puntius Sanctus is small, it grows to a length of 7 cm.
    • It found to use both as food and as an aquarium draw.
    • “The Puntius species are known locally as ‘Paral’ in Kerala and ‘Kende’ in Tamil Nadu.
  • [Burning Issue] Rise of Economic Nationalism

    “Globalization presumes sustained economic growth. Otherwise, the process loses its economic benefits and political support.”

    Paul Samuelson

    Context

    Guess what Corona virus pandemic did that even Soviet union could not? It has shown the world decaying of the capitalist system. Spread of the virus has lead to various forms of lock downs across the globe. This caused multiple problems in economic globalisation to erupt, which made each country look to the protection of its “own” economy. Now this funda of “own” economy and local over global is what we will focus upon. So stay tuned.

    Is it the end of Globalization?

    Globalization As We Know It Is Dead - Bold Business

    One of the devastating impacts of Covid-19 will be that nations are going to look even more inwards. Rather than look beyond its borders, nations will focus on their narrowly-defined national interests.

    • Reflecting on the debate on globalization, one may wonder whether the world was entering a new, uncharted territory or if Covid-19 was simply accelerating a push-back against globalization that has been taking place for some time with the rise of economic nationalism across countries.
    • Here’s a hint: Globalization has undeniably been in retreat for some years now and the coronavirus pandemic is likely to exacerbate this process.

    Dawn of Economic Nationalism

    What is Economic Nationalism?

    • Economic nationalism, also called economic patriotism and economic populism, is an ideology that favours state interventionism over other market mechanisms.
    • It connotes not only controls of external relations, but also to mobilize internal resources.
    • It tends to see international trade as zero-sum, where the goal is to derive relative gains (as opposed to mutual gains).

    What happens in a nationalist economy?

    • Economic nationalism tends to emphasize industrialization (and often aids industries with state support), due to beliefs that industry has positive spillover effects on the rest of the economy, enhances the self-sufficiency and political autonomy of the country, and is a crucial aspect in building military power.
    • It imbibes policies such as domestic control of the economy, labour, and capital formation, even if this requires the imposition of tariffs and other restrictions on the movement of labour, goods and capital.

    Its evolution – A walk into the past

    • References to economic nationalism appeared initially in the years following World War I when the international economy was subjected to high stress arising out of the economic and political dislocation inherited from the war.
    • A similar explanation of the term followed after the Second World War.
    • In this period, economic protectionism was seen as an alternative to revive damaged economies after the world war.
    • The role and status of the ‘state’ emerged to be essentially important in managing economic affairs. The Soviet Union presented a model where state planning was central.
    • Under this model where the state has been the prime facilitator of, means of production and distribution, the public, as well as the private sector, growing at the same rate.
    • This model consolidated the idea of economic nationalism against that of western inherited capitalism.

    Facets of Economic Nationalism: “ME FIRST”

    Proof that economic Nationalism existed way before the COVID era.

    1) American Protectionism

    • America First: USA remains the main proponent of economic nationalism, under the “America First” doctrine of the Trump administration.
    • US-China Tussle: Trade war had been launched through the imposition of tariffs and China’s plan for economic and technological development had been declared an existential threat to US national security.
    • It has been accompanied by a series of bans on Chinese telecom companies and the launching of a global campaign by the US to have its allies exclude the Chinese company, Huawei, from the development of 5G networks.

    2) Chinese Expansionism

    • China’s strategy is, of course, no different than the one pursued by the US.
    • Backed by its great economic and military might, China seeks to achieve the same objectives using its economic prowess and its pole position in the global manufacturing chain to achieve the said objectives.
    • The ambitious ‘Belt and Road Initiative’ is the testimony of its economic nationalism.

    3) EU contractionist tendencies

    • Brexit: Classic example of economic nationalism.
    • Europe, too is taking a turn towards economic nationalism.
    • Many EU countries have been vocal as saying “in the long term we cannot depend on Asia, on China for goods that are strategic for us, whether in the aerospace or medical sectors or in other supply chains.”

    4) India’s ‘self-reliance’ Mantra of being ‘Vocal about Local’

    • When PM romped to a massive and decisive victory in 2014, neo liberal globalists believed that India would unflinchingly embrace globalisation and undertake economic reforms.
    • Indeed, at global forums, India often batted for economic globalisation, slammed rising trade protectionism.
    • The late Arun Jaitley, in his 2018 budget, admitted to this when he made a “calibrated departure” from the decades-long policy of cutting tariff rates.
    • But there has been a bit of economic nationalism here as well.
    • The resolve to augment domestic manufacturing in India – ‘Make in India’ campaign is a case for local over global.
    • Earlier, India chickened out at the last minute from joining the 16 members RCEP agreement to protect local industry.
    • Likewise, the central government has decided that it will not buy goods or services valued less than 200 crore rupees from global companies.
    • The recent amendment of the FDI rules by India so as to discourage Chinese investment in India – something that may not be consistent with India’s WTO obligations – also smacks of protectionism.

    Why there is a rise in the popularity of Economic Nationalism?

    • Not all countries benefited equally from the economic liberalism of the 1990s. It had its winners and losers.
    • National economic recoveries, i.e., nationalistic interests, have proved out to be paramount in the worldwide pandemic.
    • Economic nationalism to some extent can provide the framework within which economic development is possibly providing a way for savings to accumulate and investment to grow.
    • Goods when made locally help to protect local entrepreneurs, reduce imports and one can attract foreign investment.

    Issues with Economic Nationalism

    • Becoming too nationalistic at the expense of one’s trading partners can be counterproductive.
    • It is an approach that creates conflict. Being more nationalistic tends to be a zero-sum game in an increasingly interdependent world economy, where countries depend on other countries for their economic and political and national security well being.
    • When companies cooperate, they can become more competitive.
    • When they are more competitive, they hire more workers, pay higher salaries, and otherwise contribute to economic growth.
    • ‘Vocal about local’ epitomizes this trade protectionism and pushes a flawed and oversimplified economic logic that domestic manufacturing can be resurrected by actively encouraging (even forcing) customers to buy products ‘made in India’.
    • However, the policy measures adopted to achieve this goal are unsound as they mark a relapse to protectionism.
    • India’s economic experience of the first four decades after independence amply demonstrates that a protectionist and a highly controlled economic model do not yield a competitive and proficient manufacturing sector.

    Analysis from India’s perspective

    The government evidently wants to strengthen local businesses and make them globally competitive so that India can become the next manufacturing hub, like China. The prime minister has perhaps taken the disruption caused by the pandemic as an opportunity to push India towards developing its manufacturing prowess and emulate China’s export-driven rise.

    Economic Nationalism – chequered past in India

    • Era of license-permit raj, umbrella of protectionism and import substitution lead to lack of competition and inefficiency in domestic businesses.
    • The economy suffered a distortion that led to eventual bankruptcy and brought India to the brink of defaulting on international debt obligations in 1991.

    Is India ready to go down that path again?

    • If localisation is an increasingly popular global policy response to the lessons taught by the pandemic, it is not clear how India may suddenly become the next manufacturing powerhouse.
    • India doesn’t already dominate global supply chains, lacks the manufacturing prowess of China and is faced with a world where countries are busy ring-fencing risks and pulling up the drawbridge.
    • The danger is that in its push towards becoming more self-reliant and promotes domestic manufacturing; India may end up taking an even more unequivocally protectionist turn.

    Some problems to solve before we head to the nationalist road

    Problem I- India’s inherent- Investment problem

    • Today, globalisation is seen from the lens of the recipients of foreign investments.
    • The receivers of foreign inflows are at the centre of things, the nuclei around which capital revolves.
    • The power of FDI destinations will grow in the near future, as MNCs try to combat the twin pressures of protectionism and localisation.
    • To achieve its ambitions, nations will simultaneously try to woo foreign investment despite the growing nationalism.
    • In fact, economic xenophobia will become the means to do so in perverted and inverse globalisation.
    • As was the case with Make in India—and now Make in Thailand and Make in Vietnam—nations will want MNCs to invest capital and introduce technology in faraway destinations.

    Problem II- Structural Reforms And Labour Lessons needed

    • To cast a ‘nationalistic’ obligation on them to boost domestic industry instead of undertaking reforms that would improve the domestic industry’s competitiveness is fallacious.
    • Moreover, to expect the world to buy goods ‘made in India’ when we close our markets to foreign goods would be like living in a fool’s paradise!
    • The coming decade will be dominated by automation, robotics, AI, 3D printing and smart techniques that will aid economic nationalism, protectionism and localisation.
    • This marks the end of the ‘Age of Industrial Revolution’, and ushers in Industry 5.0.
    • Post-crisis, nations will seek opportunities to reform and change labour as well as laws that govern it. Some, like India, will hope to please businesses at the expense of labour.
    • Recently several states increased the work hours in factories and made it easier to sack workers and more difficult to form trade unions.

    Way Forward

    • India should work to strike a balance between making itself an integral part of the global supply chain (like China) while promoting local industries and empowering small businesses so that they can compete with the world’s best.
    • The focus must be making India a very competitive nation so that our local companies, products and services are purchased by the domestic consumers as well as enthusiastically by consumers around the world.
    • One aspect of being resilient is that our local companies are as competitive as possible.
    • India’s competitiveness will be unshackled not by clamping down on imports and asking consumers to go local, buy local and promote local.
    • Rather, small businesses and local producers will become more efficient and even globally recognised in a competitive environment aided by a government that makes doing business easier.
    • Until that transformation happens the argument that we can suddenly become world-beaters by turning self-sufficient is not convincing.

    For the World to do better,

    • The rhetoric of global power cannot suddenly change to the globe of power.
    • Squeezing the global economy through individual version of protectionism is lethal at the moment.
    • The world may not spend time deliberating the merits and demerits of globalization after the pandemic is contained. But, it should work together for a common and larger objective and approach for all.
    • Only structural reforms, not the dismantling of present architecture  can do best to resolve these issues.
    • India and other developing countries should  work together to reform the present WTO structure for everyone’s  benefit and particularly for the ones which are disadvantaged.
    • The need of the hour is to explore the relationship between comparative advantage and optimal trade policy where all countries are relatively benefited.

    Conclusion

    Nationalist moves are crucial because they will allow nations to reduce dependence on exports and foreign markets, curtail imports or foreign suppliers and enhance economic nationalism through local consumption of domestic goods and services.

    But obviously we do not want trade wars. Covid has also taught us the necessity of international collaboration and co-operation. Unlike US and China, India cannot afford to pursue such obscure economic approaches. We may end up making a terrible mistake if we consider international trade to be a zero-sum game.

    Instead of turning its back on globalisation, India should play a leadership role in strengthening the international economic architecture, which populists in the West want to demolish, premised on a win-win relationship that produces mutual prosperity and global peace.

     

    Try this:

    Q. Dadabhai Naoroji was the first to realize the significance of Economic Nationalism in the early phase of nationalists awakening. Elucidate.




    References

    https://www.firstpost.com/india/is-this-government-pushing-india-back-to-the-indira-era-idea-of-economic-nationalism-will-work-only-if-backed-by-structural-reform-8377681.html

    https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2020/04/21/pers-a21.html

    https://thewire.in/political-economy/can-india-compete-with-china-in-the-post-covid-19-world https://thewire.in/economy/india-global-trade-vocal-about-local

    https://www.orfonline.org/research/post-covid-nations-will-look-inwards-india-should-look-at-neighbourhood-ex-nsa-66318/

    https://www.opindia.com/2020/05/china-australia-usa-netherlands-japan-kazakhstan-kyrgystan-economy-manufacturing-coronavirus/

    https://www.outlookindia.com/magazine/story/business-news-why-china-india-will-suffer-the-worst-economic-disaster-in-almost-a-100-years/303222

  • Person in news: Ramkinkar Baij

    Ministry of Culture’s has organised virtual tour titled “Ramkinkar Baij | Journey through silent transformation and expressions” to commemorate his 115th Birth Anniversary.

    We can expect a description based question in prelims like-

    Q. “In 1925, he made his way to Kala Bhavana, the art school at Santiniketan and was under the guidance of Nandalal Bose. Encouraged by the liberating, intellectual environment of (Tagore’s) Santiniketan, his artistic skills and intellectual horizons blossomed, thus acquiring greater depth and complexity. One of the earliest modernists in Indian art, he assimilated the idioms of the European modern visual language and yet was rooted in his own Indian ethos.”

    Who is the imminent personality discussed?

    Who was Ramkinkar Baij?

    • Ramkinkar Baij (1906-1980), one of the most seminal artists of modern India, was an iconic sculptor, painter and graphic artist.
    • He was born in Bankura, West Bengal, into a family of little economic and social standing and grew by his sheer determination into one of the most distinguished early modernists of Indian art.
    • In 1925, he made his way to Kala Bhavana, the art school at Santiniketan and was under the guidance of Nandalal Bose.
    • Encouraged by the liberating, intellectual environment of (Tagore’s) Santiniketan, his artistic skills and intellectual horizons blossomed, thus acquiring greater depth and complexity.

    His works

    • One of the earliest modernists in Indian art, he assimilated the idioms of the European modern visual language and yet was rooted in his own Indian ethos.
    • His themes were steeped in a deep sense of humanism and an instinctive understanding of the symbiotic relationship between man and nature.
    • Both in his paintings and sculptures, he pushed the limits of experimentation and ventured into the use of new materials.
    • For instance, his use of unconventional material, for the time, such as cement concrete for his monumental public sculptures set a new precedent for art practices.
    • The use of cement, laterite and mortar to model the figures, and the use of a personal style in which modern western and Indian pre-classical sculptural values were brought together was equally radical.

    Popular recognition

    • Although his work was passed over for quite a while, gradually it began to get both national and international attention.
    • He was invited to participate in the Salon des Réalités Nouvelles in 1950 and in the Salon de Mai in 1951.
    • In the national honours began to come his way one after the other.
    • In 1970, the Government of India honoured him with the Padma Bhushan for his irrefutable contribution to Indian art.
    • In 1976 he was made a Fellow of the Lalit Kala Akademi.
    • In 1976, he was conferred the honorary Doctoral Degree of ‘Desikottama’ by Visva Bharati, and in 1979 an honorary D. Litt by Rabindra Bharati University.
  • Examining role played by Civil Society and NGOs in fight against Covid-19

    Social capital is what civil societies are known as. The article highlights the valuable role played by the civil society, and NGO in the pandemic. They constitute the backbone of the collective expression of citizen  interest in a democracy. So, read about the ways in which they can contribute in dealing with destruction due to pandemic.

    Partnership with 3 key stakeholders: NGO, Private Sector, international development organisation

    • The nature and scale of the crisis which the COVID-19 pandemic has led to is unparalleled.
    • In such a scenario, solutions are unlikely to come from past experiences or best practices.
    • The biggest source of strength now is the partnerships we have built over the years.
    • The situation at hand calls for stakeholders to come together, work side by side and support each other.
    •  The fight against COVID-19 needed as many hands as were available.
    • The job was too big for the government to handle alone.
    • The strategy was to leverage vertical and horizontal partnerships: Vertical partnerships, which the stakeholders have built within their organisations and horizontal partnerships, which the government has institutionalised with stakeholders.
    • This is precisely what one of the Empowered Groups created by the government has been doing since it was formed.

    Significance of NGOs

    • The NGOs, given their deep connect with spatial and sectoral issues, were a natural partner in this endeavour.
    • There is nobody better placed than the NGOs to understand the pulse at the grassroots and engage closely with communities.
    • Around 92,000 organisations were urged to partner with district administrations and contribute to the response efforts.

    How the NGOs helped?

    • Chief Secretaries of all states were requested to engage NGOs in relief and response efforts and designate state and district nodal officers to coordinate with them.
    • The approach was to leverage the strength and reach of the local NGOs in identifying priority areas for action and avoid duplicity of efforts.
    • NGOs have been actively setting up community kitchens, creating awareness about prevention, and physical distancing, providing shelter to the homeless, the daily wage workers, supporting government efforts in setting up health camps and in deputing volunteers to deliver services to the elderly, persons with disabilities, children, and others.
    • An outstanding contribution of NGOs was in developing communication strategies in different vernaculars which went a long way in taking awareness measures to the community level.
    • Akshaya Patra, Rama Krishna Mission, Tata Trusts, Piramal Foundation, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Action Aid, International Red Cross Society, Prayas, Help-age India, SEWA, Sulabh International, Charities Aid Foundation of India, Gaudia Math, Bachpan Bachao Andolan, the Salvation Army, and Catholic Bishops’ Conference of India are some partners who have embodied the whole-of-society approach in COVID-19 response management.

    Important role played by startups

    • The crisis has brought out the best in the start-up space.
    • Many of them have risen to the occasion and accelerated the development of low cost, scalable, and quick solutions.
    • The results have been promising.
    • AgVa accelerated the development of ventilators which are low-cost, mobile, low on power consumption and require minimal training for operators.
    • Biodesign has developed a robotic product called ResperAid, which enables mechanised use of manual ventilators.
    • Kaaenaat has developed highly portable ventilators which can be used to serve two patients simultaneously and has a built-in battery, oxygen concentrator, and steriliser cabinet.
    • The products of a few non-ventilator start-ups too came to the aid of the COVID-19 fighting machinery.
    • The AI-enabled analysis of chest X-Rays developed by Qure.ai enables large-scale screening to identify potential cases.
    • GIS and geo-fencing technologies by Dronamaps enabled information cluster strategies for hotspots.
    • AI-powered online doctor consultation and telemedicine platform by Mfine connects diagnostics labs and pharmacies with doctors and patients.
    • The AI-enabled thermal imaging camera developed by Staqu facilitated large-scale screening at low cost.
    • These developments strengthen the argument that low-cost and scalable solutions designed and developed domestically must drive our country’s transformation.

    How the stakeholders operated through partnership?

    • The manner in which stakeholders have responded to the pandemic reinforces the power of partnerships.
    • In fact, they have operated through partnerships.
    • The NGO leaderships created momentum throughout their networks and delivered the much needed response.
    • They also brought to the attention of the group the problems from the grassroots.
    • Multiple agencies of international development organisations designed and executed joint response initiatives, leveraging their presence across the country.
    • The coalitions which industry organisations such as CII, FICCI, and NASSCOM have built over the years brought people and resources together, identified problems at multiple levels, channelised ideas and solutions and facilitated innovations.
    • The role played by the government has been facilitative in nature.
    • This role was based on the institutional and informal partnerships built with the three groups of stakeholders over the years.

    Adaptiveness of Indian Industry

    • Until three months ago, not a single N95 mask or personal protective equipment (PPE) was manufactured in India.
    • Today, we have 104 domestic firms making PPEs and four manufacturing N95 masks.
    • Over 2.6 lakh PPEs and two lakh N95 masks are being manufactured in India, daily.
    • Domestic manufacturing of ventilators has strengthened manifold — orders for more than 59,000 units have been placed with nine manufacturers.
    • While this shows the adaptiveness of Indian industry, the shift to domestic production must happen on a larger scale for a wider set of sectors in the long run, as envisioned by Make in India.

    Consider the question-“As facilitators, mediators, and advocates of collective articulation of citizen interest in a democracy, Civil Society and NGOs have put people before everything else during this crisis. In light of this, examine the role played by them in unparalleled crisis brought in by Covid-19 pandemic.”

    Conclusion

    Civil society, and voluntary and non-government organisations constitute the backbone of the collective articulation of citizen interest in a democracy. Surely, they can prove to be an asset in our fight against corona pandemic.

    Back2Basics: NGO

    • The World Bank defines NGOs as private organizations that pursue activities to relieve suffering, promote the interests of the poor, protect the environment, provide basic social services, or undertake community development.
    • NGOs are legally constituted organizations which operate independently from Government and are generally considered to be nonstate, nonprofit oriented groups who pursue purposes of public interest.
  • Time to evaluate and merge income support schemes

    Both States and Center have income support schemes for the farmers. Coincidentally, they both suffer from common problems such as the exclusion of tiller from the benefit and identifying the landless labourers. This article floats the idea of merging all the support schemes in favour of an umbrella scheme. So, what are the solutions and how will an umbrella scheme be more beneficial? Read to know…

    Not much ‘new cash’ in the relief package

    • On May 12, the PM announced that his government’s relief-cum-stimulus package would be Rs 20 lakh crore, almost 10 per cent of India’s GDP.
    • But when Finance Minister unveiled the package, sector by sector, many wondered where the “new cash” was?
    • So, it became clear that additional relief and stimulus in the system is just about 1 per cent of the GDPnot 10 per cent.
    • Much of the rest is directed towards increasing liquidity and deferring some loan payments, but not much additional cash.

    Cash-transfer schemes by the state governments: Chhatisgarh and other states

    • In this context, the Chhattisgarh government deserves compliments for launching the Rajiv Gandhi Kisan Nyay Yojana (RGKNY).
    • RGKNY is an income transfer scheme at Rs 10,000/acre for paddy farmers and Rs 13,000/acre for sugarcane farmers.
    • The state’s chief minister has said that the scheme will be extended to farmers of other crops — in fact, to landless labourers as well.
    • On the face of it, RGKNY will help put money directly into the hands of farmers and poor agricultural labourers.
    • In kharif 2018-19, Telangana announced a cash transfer scheme of Rs 4,000/acre, per season — this was raised to Rs 5,000/acre per season in kharif 2019-20.
    • There is a live portal that gives the details of the scheme and its progress.
    • In the rabi season of 2018-19, the Odisha government launched the KALIA scheme-Krushak Assistance for Livelihood and Income Augmentation- on a somewhat similar pattern.
    • West Bengal’s Krishak Bandhu and Jharkhand’s Mukhya Mantri Krishi Aashirwad Yojana are the other income support schemes worth mentioning.

    2 Issues with income support policies and solutions

    1. The beneficiary is not always tiller of the land

    • Ideally, the money of the policies should go to the real tiller.
    • But in large parts of the country, there is no record of tenancy.
    • The government data shows only 10 per cent tenancy in the country.
    • While several micro-level studies indicate that it could be anywhere between 25-30 per cent.
    • In fact, in many regions like the Godavari belt, it could be even more than 50 per cent.
    • It does not make much sense to put money into the accounts of absentee landlords.

    So, what is the solution to this problem?

    • 1) The best way would be to change the tenancy laws.
    • Open up land lease markets, ensuring that the owner of the land has full rights to take his land back after the expiry of the lease period.
    • The current law, favouring “land to the tiller”, is loaded against the owner.
    • As a result, much of tenancy in the country remains oral.
    • 2) In the absence of such legal changes in land lease laws, the only way forward is to fully inform the tiller that the owner has got income support.
    • And then appeal to the owner to pass on this benefit to the tiller — or adjust the land rent accordingly.
    • Information and persuasion campaigns in radio and newspapers would increase the chances of the benefits being passed on to the real tillers.

    2. Identifying the landless labourers working on the farms

    • The other issue is identifying the landless labourers working on farms.
    • Majority of them are temporary and seasonal workers.
    • And leaving the task of identification to panchayats and patwaris can open doors for large leakages and corruption.

    What is the solution to this problem?

    • There have been talks in the past for synchronising MGNREGA with farm operations.
    • The synchronising will have two benefits-
    • 1)It will contain the cost of farming.
    • 2) It will ensure that those engaged in this employment guarantee scheme do useful and productive work.
    • The legal framework of the MGNREGA scheme does allow this on farms owned by people of SC/ST communities, and on the lands of marginal farmers.

     Merging Income Support Schemes: The way forward

    • The time has come to think seriously about merging income support schemes.
    • The merger will include the PM KISAN and state-level schemes, with the MGNREGA and price-subsidy schemes — food and fertiliser subsidies given by Centre and power subsidies given by state government.
    • These schemes amount to Rs 5 lakh crore — that’s a good sum of money to start a basic income cover for poor households.
    • Markets could then be left to operate freely.
    • This approach can cover landless labourers, farmers, and poor consumers — these categories overlap.
    • Let there be an expert group to look closely into the functioning of each one of these schemes and create an umbrella scheme to take care of the poor and the needy.

    Consider the question-“Examine the issues with the income support schemes for farmers by the States as well as the Central government. Do you think that an umbrella scheme after merging all the support schemes will be helpful in overcoming such issues?”

    Conclusion

    Though income support schemes by the state government and the Centre are a welcome move, however, when one looks at the issues with these schemes an umbrella scheme after merging all the present schemes will go a long way in solving the problems which almost all these schemes face today.


    Back2Basics: PM- KISAN

    • Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi (PM-KISAN)is a Central Sector Scheme with 100% funding from the Government of India.
    • It is being implemented by the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmer’s Welfare.
    • Under the scheme, the Centre transfers an amount of Rs 6,000 per year, in three equal instalments, directly into the bank accounts of the all landholding farmers irrespective of the size of their land holdings.
    • It intends to supplement the financial needs of the Small and Marginal Farmers (SMFs) in procuring various inputs to ensure proper crop health and appropriate yields, commensurate with the anticipated farm income at the end of each crop cycle.
    • The entire responsibility of identification of beneficiary farmer families rests with the State / UT Governments.
  • What is a Parallel Universe?

    Twitter and other social media platforms are abuzz with the so-called ‘parallel universe’ that NASA has discovered. According to the claims, NASA has detected a parallel universe in Antarctica, where time runs backwards.

     

    ANITA experiment is significant for prelims. It can be asked in prelims in such match the pair questions-

    Q. Consider the following pairs :

    Terms sometimes seen in news                                Context / Topic

    1. Belle 2 experiment –                                        Artificial Intelligence

    2. Blockchain technology –                               Digital Cryptocurrency

    3. CRISPR – Cas9 –                                               Particle Physics

    Which of the pairs given above is/are correctly matched? (CSP 2018)

    (a) 1 and 3 only

    (b) 2 only

    (c) 2 and 3 only

    (d) 1, 2 and 3

    What is a Parallel Universe?

    • In quantum mechanics, a parallel universe is theorized as existing alongside our own, although undetectable.
    • The recent reports claiming that there is evidence of a parallel universe appear to be based on ANITA findings that are at least a couple of years old.
    • A science magazine had published a feature, discussing some anomalous results coming from neutrino detection experiments in Antarctica.
    • It discussed a speculative cosmological model that posits there’s an antimatter universe extending backwards from the BigBang.
    • This theorem was also proposed by famous scientist Stephens Hawking.

    What were the anomalous detections in Antarctica?

    The ANITA experiment

    • Four years ago an experiment had spotted a handful of instances of what seemed to be highly energetic neutrinos coming through the Earth.
    • It was named Antarctic Impulsive Transient Antenna (ANITA) experiment — a high-altitude helium balloon with an array of radio antennas, partially funded by NASA.
    • The telescope could spot these neutrinos coming from the space and hitting the ice sheet in Antarctica.
    • ANITA detected these particles, but instead of coming from the space, the neutrinos were found to be coming from the Earth’s surface without any source.
    • These detections happened in 2016, then again in 2018, but there was no credible explanation.
    • Physicists have been working to figure out if these results can be explained with our current models of physics or have something to do with the experimental set-up itself, or if something like the parallel universe does exist.

    Back2Basics: Neutrinos

    • A neutrino is a subatomic particle very similar to an electron.
    • But it has no electrical charge and a very small mass, which might even be zero.
    • Neutrinos are one of the most abundant particles in the universe.
    • Because they have very little interaction with matter, they are incredibly difficult to detect.

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