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  • 27 Oct 2016 | Prelims Daily: CA Questions with Tikdams & Tidbits

    Dear students,

    When you submit your answer, if possible, give some reasoning & more info. along with the ABACAA format. Elaborate on what you know. This helps the whole community to know more and learn more!


    Q.1) Consider following statements about ‘National Institute of High Security Animal Diseases (NIHSAD).

    1.NIHSAD is an independent institute established under Indian Council of Veterinary Research (ICVR).

    2.It aims at research on exotic and emerging pathogens of animals.

    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

     

    Q.2) Consider following statements in regard with ‘Ease of Doing Business report’.

    1.Ease of Doing Business report is published by World Bank.

    2.India improved its position to 130 in the World Bank Ease of Doing Business 2017 report.

    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

     

    Q.3) Consider following statements about ‘Central Advisory Board of Education (CABE)’.

    1.The Central Advisory Board of Education, the oldest and advisory body was first established in 1920.

    2.The 64th Meeting of the Central Advisory Board of Education was held under the Chairmanship of Prime Minister at New Delhi.

    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

     

    Q.4) ‘Hanuman Tok’ temple is maintained by the Indian Army, located in which of the following state?

    a) Sikkim

    b) Mizoram

    c) Bihar

    d) Assam

     

    Q.5) Recently, The one-man judicial committee on One Rank One Pension (OROP) submitted its report to the Defence Ministry. Which of the following committee was appointed on OROP.

    a) Lt. General DB Shekatkar Committee

    b) Justice Reddy Committee

    c) Dharmendra Pradhan Committee

    d) Justice Lodha Committee


    IMPORTANT STUFF: 

    1. These questions are mostly derived from our daily newscards. Reading daily news from Civilsdaily’s App (click here) or website + solving these questions will help you reinforce the basics.

    2. For a comprehensive preparation of IAS Prelims 2017 – consider joining one of the three Prelims Modules by CD – prelims.civilsdaily.com

    3. Solutions will be uploaded at 8 p.m. Click here for solutions.

    4. For attempting previous Prelims Daily Questions – Click here

    5. How to apply Tikdams? Read this, this and this

  • Indian Agriculture 104 – Everything that you need to know about Drought Management in India


    The 2015 south-west monsoon, which irrigates over half of India’s crop area, recorded a 14% deficit, while the previous year saw a 12% deficit.

    In the month of May, 2016 – Supreme Court made some very hard hitting comments on the state of drought management in India and minced no words while doing so.

    The apex court rapped state governments for showing an “ostrich-like attitude” and denying reality. Not just the state, it rapped in the Union Govt. with a follow up – “Surely, if a state government maintains an ostrich-like attitude, a disaster requires a far more proactive and nuanced response form the Union of India. Therefore, in such a state of affairs… Where does the buck stop?”

    Drought management, as you can see has assumed a very important space in our national discourse. It spans disaster management, agriculture economics, social welfare schemes and some important environmental aspects. A comprehensive understanding of drought will help you appreciate the huge machinery this bureaucracy is.

    In this continuing series on Indian Agriculture, we will take help of the recent directions given by SC to understand the core themes & build a comprehensive narrative around draught.

    source

    6 Supreme Court notes that speak about all that’s wrong with drought management in India

    Since these are SC notes (and not random opinions), you can use them to enrich your answers for IAS Mains.

    #1. The govt. has been asked to abandon the existing system and evolve a transparent, rules-based framework. There is no need to continue with colonial methods and manuals that follow a colonial legacy.

    What are the lacunae of current system? What are the hangovers of the colonial legacy that need to be undone

    #2. SC asked the centre to use modern technology for early determination of drought and take into account humanitarian factors such as migration, suicides and the plight of women and children while formulating policies.

    Begs the question – what are the far reaching – immediate and long term effects of drought?

    #3. States should be proactive in declaring drought. The judges criticized Bihar, Gujarat and Haryana for their hesitancy in acknowledging drought and failure to disclose the reality on the ground.

    Why do state show hesitancy in declaring drought? It looks counterintuitive that a state should willfully let its farmers suffer in silence. What’s the missing picture here?

    source

    #4. The court also directed the centre to be proactive rather than introducing “the concept of federalism” to delegate responsibility and saying its only role is to provide financial assistance to states.

    #5. A national plan had not been formulated even after 10 years of the Act coming into force and the centre must act immediately

    #6. The court also ordered that the existing drought management manual of 2009 be revised by the end of the year (2016).


    Drought is usually studied under 5 heads:

    1. Understanding Drought
    2. Monitoring Drought
    3. Declaring Drought – We won’t go into much details here and will answer the question on colonial legacy of declaring droughts vs. the changes SC prescribed
    4. Providing Relief – Not useful for UPSC prep. This includes steps to be taken by various agencies under centre and state. We will skip this as well
    5. Mitigating Drought

    #1. Understanding Drought

    What is Drought?

    1. There is no universally accepted definition of drought
    2. Drought occurs in all climatic regimes and is usually characterised in terms of its spatial extension, intensity and duration
    3. It is a temporary aberration (don’t confuse it with aridity, which is permanent)
    4. Being of slow-onset it is difficult to determine the beginning and end of the drought
    5. Duration may range from months to years and the core area or epicentre changes over time! Hence there is a need for close monitoring of drought indicators
    6. No single indicator or index can identify precisely the onset and severity of the event and its potential impacts; multiple indicators are more effective
    7. Impacts are generally non-structural and difficult to quantify


    Impacts of Drought – Direct & Indirect

    Impacts are complex to quantify. Why? Because water is integral to our ability to produce goods and provide services.

    Direct impacts: Usually physical / material and include reduced agricultural production. But drought is not just an agrarian crisis. When these direct impacts have multiplier effects through the economy and society, they are referred to as indirect impacts.

    Indirect impacts: A reduction in agricultural production that may result in reduced income for farmers and agribusiness, increased prices for food and timber, unemployment, reduced purchasing capacity and demand for consumption, default on agricultural loans, rural unrest, and reduction in agricultural employment leading to migration and drought relief programmes

    These direct and indirect impacts can be categorised into Economic, Environmental and Social Impacts.

    Classification of Drought

    1. Meteorological drought is defined as the deficiency of precipitation from expected or normal levels over an extended period of time
    2. Hydrological drought is defined as deficiencies in surface and subsurface water supplies leading to a lack of water for normal and specific needs
    3. Agricultural drought, usually triggered by meteorological and hydrological droughts, occurs when soil moisture and rainfall are inadequate during the crop growing season causing extreme crop stress and wilting

    But classification of drought is not this simple, either. Agricultural drought occurs after meteorological and hydrological droughts but it has further nuances to it. Think about it – different cropping patterns, water needs, and stage of crop growth will also play a big part in defining an agricultural drought, right?



    The classification of drought is difficult, so what does our Met dept. do? In 2016, the IMD (India Meteorological Department) declared an end to droughts in India!

    Since it can’t control the weather but can control language, the state forecaster India Meteorological Department (IMD) has decided to simply replace the word “drought” to describe poor rainfall with “deficient year” and “large deficient year”.


    Notice the last two rows
    Notice the last two rows
    source

    This is not just an exercise in euphemism. There was a practical problem at hand which is being solved here. There is a lot of politics involved in declaring droughts.

    IMD can only define a meteorological drought, but agricultural and hydrological droughts are different – hence, the states are best equipped to decide whether they were experiencing a drought or not. This is why the SC pulled up the states for displaying an ostrich like behavior and letting their farmers suffer.


    source

     Why Does Drought Recur in India?

    The conditions for onset of drought in India vary across agro-climatic zones.

    In the semi-arid regions, even a 400 mm rainfall would be adequate for the growth of crops, while in high rainfall regions of Assam, even an annual rainfall of 1,000 mm would create conditions for drought.

    Drought is a recurrent climatic phenomenon because:

    1. About 73% of the total annual rainfall is received in less than 100 days during the south-west monsoon and the geographic spread is uneven
    2. Around 33% of the cropped area in the country receives less than 750 mm rain annually making such areas hotspots of drought
    3. Irrigation, using groundwater aggravates the situation in the long term as groundwater withdrawal exceeds replenishment
    4. Per capita water availability in the country is steadily declining. Traditional water harvesting systems have been largely abandoned.

    At this point, let’s take a direct comment from Sunita Narain (CSE fame) on 3 things India should do:

    1. First, do everything we can to augment water resources – catch every drop of water; store it; recharge groundwater. To do this we need to build millions more structures, but this time based on planning for water and not just employment
    2. Second, revise and update the drought code. It is not as if the richer parts of the world do not have droughts but their governments respond by shutting off all non-essential water use.
    3. Third, obsessively work to secure water in all times. This means insisting on water codes for everyday India. We need to reduce water usage in all sectors – from agriculture, urban to industry

    #2. Monitoring Drought

    Monitoring and Early Warning Systems

    As drought is a slow-onset disaster, its monitoring and early warning systems are central to drought management.

    The early warning system should function at 3 levels:

    1. Receiving forecasts, early warning, and advisories from scientific institutions;
    2. Monitoring key drought indices at the National and State levels; and
    3. Developing composite index of various drought indicators


    Key Drought Indicators


    Old vs. New System for Drought Management

    Gaps in the colonial system of drought management:

    1. It emphasizes a relief-based approach and provides certain other small concessions, which do little to alleviate the distress caused by widespread crop failure
    2. It functions on the basis of a conclusive evidence of drought as derived from the crop production in a particular year, which takes a lot of time as well as prevents early and timely help to farmers
    3. It did not integrate new technologies for early warning, nor did it emphasize mitigation as an essential element of drought management

    A new approach to drought management focusses on: 

    1. State management of drought operations can make a radical difference to the impact of drought.
    2. Focus on mitigation measures – An emphasis on mitigation measures would reduce the incidence and severity of drought, improve crop production and save resources spent recurrently on relief
    3. Adopt newer technologies – Due to spectacular advances in climate forecast technologies, State Governments are in a position to outsource the forecast from many agencies other than the India Meteorological Department (IMD)
    4. Adapt to the new legal framework – The local self-governments have become more important in terms of sharing authority and responsibility (due to 73rd and 74th Constitutional amendments), and it is necessary to assign meaningful roles in drought management to this level
    5. Include employment and area development programmes in drought mitigation

    #5. Implementing Drought Mitigation Measures

    • Artificial Recharge of Ground Water

    A typical watershed development programme has several components, depending on the topography. These include – Contour Bunding, Contour Trenching, Contour Cultivation, Farm Ponds, Percolation Tanks (PT) / Spreading Basin etc.

    One of the effective measures by which groundwater recharge can be achieved, is by the construction and use of percolation tanks. The efficacy and feasibility of percolation tanks is better established in hard rock formation where the rocks are highly fractured and weathered.

    • Long-term Irrigation Management

    Integrated Basin Planning: This concept is aimed at coordinating water resources plans throughout a river basin, the most important example of which is the Tennessee Valley Authority in the USA. In India, the Damodar Valley Corporation covering the river Damodar and its tributaries in Bihar and West Bengal was modeled on the lines of the Tennessee Valley Authority.

    Inter-basin Transfer of Water: The permanent long-term solution to the drought problem may be found in the basic principles of transfer of power from surplus river basins to the areas of deficit.

    There are some success stories at regional basis under which water is transferred from one basin to another. For eg. –

    1. Indira Gandhi canal – Transfer of water from Indus basin to deserts of Rajasthan
    2. Periyar project – Transfer of water from Periyar basin to Vaigai basin
    3. Kurnool Cudappah Canal – Transfer of water from Krishna basin to Pennar basin
    • Afforestation
    • Credit & Crop Insurance

    The adverse financial impact of drought on the farmers can be mitigated through agricultural insurance. We have written about it extensively in this blog – Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana – Min Premium, Max Insurance

    Agricultural credit is largest component of Priority Sector lending targets. And you have read about Kisan Credit Cards in the first blog of this series.


    Let us know if this article helped you understand the issue better. Your comments and appreciation is the only way we can gauge the relevance of our efforts put in researching these articles.

    This was the 4th piece of the continuing series on – Indian Agricultural Economics

    This year has been a hotbed of activities and high level meetings around this core topic. Now that you have understood this in good detail – answer this question.

    “Drought is not a disaster, but a management issue”. Justify this statement. 


    References: Apart from extensive research around news articles, the mainstay of this series is the annual report of the Ministry of Agriculture to the GOI –Click to download a copy

    All articles in this series are listed here – First timers to IAS Prep? Prepare Indian Agriculture for GS Mains with me!

  • [Official] English Literature Optional | IAS Mains | Daily Initiative

    Rules of engagement for this thread

    ** Don’t top post (start a new message ) unless it is a new topic. For the same topic : hit REPLY on the message you wish to respond to. This will increase readability.

    ** We will post the questions alternatively until someone else joins. Also post and review the answers.

  • CD Test Series Students – Get ready for the Current Affairs Test on 28th

    Dear students,

    What do you need to do to solve CA questions?

    • Stay up to date with daily news – YES. In fact, we recommend that you read from our FREE android app daily to get the top 10-15 news items relevant for UPSC – Click here to download.
    • Read the news for August and September
    • Read Yojana for August and September
    • And Tikdams! The art of reading the finer details of a question

    Tikdams are not just guesses. They involve using your knowledge to make connections, instead of just using the facts you remember to tick the correct option. Click here to see they have been used to solve previous years UPSC questions.

    Here are some questions from the upcoming test – 

    Q.3) Recently, ‘Green steel technology’ was in the news. What is this technology all about?

    a) It converts cast iron into environment-friendly green steel

    b) It is simple modification in the conventional manufacturing process for steel

    c) It is new technology that can be used to generate green energy

    d) It will increase energy efficiency and sustainability of steel

    Ans. b

    Explanation: Green Steel technology controls the injection of granulated waste tyres in conventional Electric Arc Furnace (EAF) steelmaking and reduces the use of non-renewable coke

    Benefits : It reduces the cost of EAF steelmaking and reduces the environmental footprint of the industry.

    Tikdams: Option c can be easily eliminated as it only talks about green energy and not steel. Option a can also be eliminated as iron or steel by themselves are not harmful to environment, the process of making them is. By this thinking option b is most likely as the answer.

    Source: Aug 1

    https://www.civilsdaily.com/turning-waste-tyre-green-steel/

    http://www.thehindu.com/business/an-interview-veena-sahajwalla-director-centre-for-sustainable-materials-research-and-technology/article8925130.ece?homepage=true

     

    Q.5)India has decided to roll out the ‘India Business Card’ for which of the following group of countries?

    a)ASEAN

    b)G20

    c)SAARC

    d)SCO

    Ans. c

    Explanation: The business card will be only given to prominent businessmen of the 8 SAARC countries (including Pakistan).

    Tikdams: SAARC and ASEAN are regional organisations which promote trade among their members, hence answer will be one of the two.

    Source: Aug 2

    https://www.civilsdaily.com/india-readies-business-card-saarc-businessmen/

    http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/india-readies-business-card-for-saarc-businessmen/article8929863.ece

     

    Q.53) Consider following statements with reference to ‘Hague Abduction Convention’

    1.It is a multilateral treaty provides an expeditious method to return a child internationally abducted by a parent from one member country to another

    2.India recently adopted this convention as an effective way to deal with abduction cases.

    Which of the statements given above is/are correct? 

    a) 1 only

    b) 2 only

    c) Both 1 and 2

    d) Neither 1 and 2

    Ans. (a)

    Explanation: The Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction or Hague Abduction Convention is a multilateral treaty developed by the Hague Conference on Private International Law (HCCH) that provides an expeditious method to return a child internationally abducted by a parent from one member country to another.

    The Convention was concluded 25 October 1980 and entered into force between the signatories on 1 December 1983.

    The Convention was drafted to ensure the prompt return of children who have been abducted from their country of habitual residence or wrongfully retained in a contracting state not their country of habitual residence.

    Titbit: India has not adopted this convention, so it is still not party to Hague convention.

    Recently, US has urged India to join the ‘Hague Abduction Convention’ to create a more effective response to deal with such cases. Almost a hundred children born to Indian-American couples are facing an uncertain future due to the trauma of separation of their parents and the complex legal issues involved

    Source:

    www.civilsdaily.com/join-agreement-parental-abduction-u-s/

    http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/join-agreement-against-parental-abduction-us/article9023062.ece

  • 26 Oct 2016 | GS4 | So far, despite the NPT, those who were recognized as nuclear powers have not upheld their side of the bargain and disarmed. This has led to the question of whether other countries should also have a right to nuclear armament. Those that are trying to prevent these regimes gaining nuclear weapons counter that despite slow progress the NPT still applies. They are worried that weapons developed by less wealthy states are more likely to fall into the hands of terrorists, either through a lack of secure facilities or through being sold. Bring out valid arguments in favour of nuclear disarmament.

    GS4 (Case study)

    Nuclear weapons are the most destructive weapons ever developed. The right to possess these weapons is an issue of serious contention in the international community. Non-proliferation treaties exist within the United Nations, and between countries, such as between the United States and Russia. The most comprehensive, the 1968 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), consists of a pledge by current nuclear weapon states to reduce their nuclear stockpiles and achieve nuclear disarmament in return for non-nuclear weapon states not developing such weapons.

    While some countries and institutions are eager to see a reduction in nuclear weapon stockpiles, others are eagerly seeking to obtain them. North Korea recently developed their first functional nuclear weapon, and Iran is often accused of attempting to develop their own. Such countries have met with international condemnation.

    So far, despite the NPT, those who were recognized as nuclear powers have not upheld their side of the bargain and disarmed. This has led to the question of whether other countries should also have a right to nuclear armament. Those that are trying to prevent these regimes gaining nuclear weapons counter that despite slow progress the NPT still applies. They are worried that weapons developed by less wealthy states are more likely to fall into the hands of terrorists, either through a lack of secure facilities or through being sold.

    Bring out valid arguments in favour of nuclear disarmament in the light of

    (a) humanitarian issues involved.

    (a) security issues involved.


    GS4 question powered by mitrasias.com

  • 26 Oct 2016 | GS3 | What do you understand by MCLR? Why was it introduced in India? Why have we not been able to achieve perfect monetary transmission till now? What should be done to improve the situation?

    GS3 (Indian Economy)

    What do you understand by MCLR? Why was it introduced in India? Why have we not been able to achieve perfect monetary transmission till now? What should be done to improve the situation?

  • 26 Oct 2016 | GS2 | The Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Amendment Bill, 2016 passed by the Parliament is thought to be a welcome move but various concerns still persist about the child labour. In the light of the above statement, critically discuss the various amendments to Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Act.

    GS2 (Polity and Governance)

    The Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Amendment Bill, 2016 passed by the Parliament is thought to be a welcome move but various concerns still persist about the child labour. In the light of the above statement, critically discuss the various amendments to Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Act.

  • 26 Oct 2016 | GS1 | Recently the government has come with a draft bill on passive euthanasia. What is passive euthanasia? What are the concerns associated with the practice and the bill?

    GS1 (Indian Society)

    Recently the government has come with a draft bill on passive euthanasia. What is passive euthanasia? What are the concerns associated with the practice and the bill?

  • 26 Oct 2016 | Prelims Daily: CA Questions with Tikdams & Tidbits

    Dear students,

    When you submit your answer, if possible, give some reasoning & more info. along with the ABACAA format. Elaborate on what you know. This helps the whole community to know more and learn more!


    Q.1) ExoMars (Exobiology on Mars) project is joint endeavour by which of the following space agencies?

    1.European Space Agency

    2.Russian space agency(Roscosmos)

    3.NASA

    4.ISRO

    Select the correct answer using the codes given below.

    a) 1 and 3 only

    b) 2 and 3 only

    c) 3 and 4 only

    d) 1 and 2 only

     

    Q.2) Which of the following are European Free Trade Association (EFTA) members?

    1.Switzerland

    2.Iceland

    3.Norway

    4.Denmark

    5.United Kingdom

    Select the correct answer using the codes given below.

    a) 1,2, and 3 only

    b) 2 and 5 only

    c) 2,3 and 4 only

    d) 1,2,4 and 5 only

     

    Q.3) ‘Osteoporosis disease’ is related to

    a) Brain disease

    b) Bone disease

    c) Heart disease

    d) Kidney disease

     

    Q.4) Consider following statements about ‘Junko Tabei’.

    1.Junko Tabei was the first woman to scale the summit of Mount Everest

    2.She was the first woman to complete the Seven Summits by reaching the highest peaks of the seven continents.

    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

     

    Q.5) Consider following statements with reference to ‘Naropa festival of Ladakh’

    1.Naropa festival occurs once in 12 years, and is known as the “Kumbh of the Himalayas”.

    2.Naropa festival is a celebration of the birth of the Buddhist scholar-saint ‘Naropa’.

    3.Six Yogas of Naropa, are one of the fundamental pillars of the Vajrayana Buddhist tradition.

    Which of the statements given above is/are correct?  

    a) 1 and 2 only

    b) 3 only

    c) 1 and 3 only

    d) 1, 2 and 3 only


    IMPORTANT STUFF: 

    1. These questions are mostly derived from our daily newscards. Reading daily news from Civilsdaily’s App (click here) or website + solving these questions will help you reinforce the basics.

    2. For a comprehensive preparation of IAS Prelims 2017 – consider joining one of the three Prelims Modules by CD – prelims.civilsdaily.com

    3. Solutions will be uploaded at 8 p.m. Click here for solutions.

    4. For attempting previous Prelims Daily Questions – Click here

    5. How to apply Tikdams? Read this, this and this

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