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  • [10th March 2026] The Hindu OpED: The Iran war intensifies India’s strategic challenge

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2018] In what ways would the ongoing US-Iran Nuclear Pact controversy affect the national interest of India? How should India respond to this situation?Linkage: The Iran war and broader West Asian instability directly affect India’s energy security, diaspora safety, and strategic balancing between major powers. The article reflects the same theme, how geopolitical conflicts involving Iran reshape India’s foreign policy choices and regional diplomacy.

    Mentor’s Comment

    The escalating conflict involving Iran, Israel, and the United States represents a major geopolitical turning point in West Asia. Unlike previous limited confrontations, the current escalation reflects an attempt to reshape the ideological, military, and strategic balance of the region. For India, which maintains deep economic, diaspora, and energy ties with Gulf states, the crisis introduces complex strategic dilemmas. The conflict has implications for regional stability, energy security, maritime trade routes such as the Strait of Hormuz, and the evolving power rivalry between the United States, China, and Russia.

    Why is the conflict being framed as an attempt to eliminate Iran’s ideological influence?

    1. Ideological confrontation: Targets the ideological framework that drives the Iranian regime’s regional strategy rather than merely its nuclear capability.
    2. Regime change objective: Seeks weakening of the political order in Iran rather than only military deterrence.
    3. Proxy warfare network: Iran supports non-state actors such as Hezbollah, Hamas, and the Houthis, expanding its influence across Lebanon, Gaza, and Yemen.
    4. Regional destabilisation: Iranian proxies have influenced political processes in Lebanon and Yemen, demonstrating Tehran’s ability to shape regional politics indirectly.

    How has Iran expanded its asymmetric strategy in response to military pressure?

    1. Decentralised governance: Iran dispersed decision-making structures across multiple institutions anticipating targeted assassinations of leadership.
    2. Expansion of conflict geography: Conflict widened beyond U.S. bases in the Gulf to broader strategic targets.
    3. Political war dimension: Iran turned the war into a regional political confrontation, highlighting vulnerabilities of the American security system.
    4. Energy security threat: Potential disruptions in Gulf energy supplies place multiple economies at risk.

    Why do the strategic objectives of Israel and the United States diverge?

    1. Israel’s military priority: Focuses on sustained military operations to eliminate threats regardless of political fallout.
    2. American political constraints: The United States seeks a political settlement to avoid prolonged military engagement and domestic opposition.
    3. War termination dilemma: The United States cannot withdraw without stabilising the region, while Israel prioritises eliminating Iranian capabilities.

    How does the war expose weaknesses in U.S. regional strategy?

    1. Security umbrella vulnerability: Gulf states appear exposed despite American military presence.
    2. Mixed signalling: Washington alternates between escalation and de-escalation, creating uncertainty among allies.
    3. Policy inconsistency: U.S. leadership attempts quick regime change strategies similar to earlier interventions in Venezuela, Syria, and Cuba.

    How could the conflict reshape the global geopolitical balance?

    1. Strategic distraction: U.S. focus on West Asia reduces attention on Asia-Pacific security.
    2. China’s strategic opportunity: China gains space to strengthen its case regarding Taiwan.
    3. Russia’s economic benefit: Rising oil prices strengthen Russia’s war economy amid the Russia-Ukraine War.
    4. Emerging multipolar order: Regional powers such as Türkiye, Saudi Arabia, and Pakistan could gain greater strategic autonomy.

    Why does the crisis create complex diplomatic challenges for India?

    1. Energy dependence: India imports a significant share of crude oil from Gulf countries.
    2. Diaspora presence: Millions of Indian workers live across Gulf states.
    3. Regional balancing: India maintains strong relations with Israel, Iran, and Arab Gulf countries simultaneously.
    4. Strategic uncertainty: Growing rivalry between the U.S. and China constrains India’s diplomatic space.

    Conclusion

    The escalating conflict involving Iran marks a significant shift in the strategic landscape of West Asia, transforming a regional confrontation into a broader geopolitical contest involving major powers. The crisis exposes the fragility of existing security arrangements in the Gulf, threatens global energy stability, and accelerates the emergence of a multipolar regional order. For India, whose economic, energy, and diaspora interests are deeply intertwined with the region, the conflict underscores the need for a calibrated and balanced foreign policy. Maintaining strategic autonomy, strengthening diplomatic engagement with all stakeholders, safeguarding maritime and energy interests, and enhancing regional partnerships will be crucial for India to navigate the evolving geopolitical turbulence in West Asia.

  • Development means expansion of choices in Amartya Sen’s ‘capabilities approach’

    Why in the News?

    The debate on development has increasingly shifted from income growth to human freedom. This increases the relevance of the Capability Approach developed by Amartya Sen, especially in an era marked by AI-driven economic change, weakening democratic deliberation, and rising economic reductionism. According to this approach, development must be understood as an expansion of human capabilities and freedoms, rather than merely economic growth indicators such as GDP.

    What is the Capability Approach developed by Amartya Sen?

    1. The Capability Approach, articulated by Amartya Sen, redefines development as the expansion of substantive freedoms that enable individuals to lead lives they value. 
    2. The framework challenges the dominance of purely economic indicators such as GDP or per capita income, emphasizing human agency, equality of autonomy, and access to social opportunities.

    What Is the Core Idea Behind Amartya Sen’s Capability Approach?

    1. Capabilities: Represents the substantive freedoms individuals possess to lead lives they value. Unlike traditional development metrics, it focuses on opportunities available to individuals rather than economic output.
    2. Functionings: Denotes the actual achievements or states of being, such as being educated, healthy, or socially active.
    3. Freedom-centred development: Defines development as expansion of real freedoms, not merely accumulation of wealth.
    4. Human agency: Positions individuals as active agents of development rather than passive beneficiaries of economic growth.

    Why Does the Capability Approach Challenge Economic Reductionism?

    1. GDP limitations: GDP measures economic production but ignores inequality, well-being, and access to opportunities.
    2. Human-centred evaluation: Evaluates development based on education, health, autonomy, and participation rather than only income growth.
    3. Policy implications: Encourages governments to invest in social infrastructure such as education, healthcare, and democratic institutions.
    4. Intellectual influence: Inspired global frameworks such as the Human Development Index (HDI) developed by the United Nations Development Programme.

    How Did Amartya Sen’s Collaboration with Mahbub ul Haq Transform Development Measurement?

    1. Human Development paradigm: Collaboration between Amartya Sen and Mahbub ul Haq reshaped development thinking.
    2. Human Development Index: Introduced by the United Nations Development Programme to measure development through health, education, and income indicators. In 1990, the pair introduced the HDI as an alternative to GDP. The index, which Haq championed and designed, measures average achievement across three key dimensions: health (life expectancy), knowledge (education), and standard of living (income).
    3. Redefining “Poverty”: Their work transformed the definition of poverty from a simple lack of income to a broader “capability deprivation”.
    4. Policy shift: Encouraged global policy discourse to move beyond income-centric growth models.
    5. Normative foundation: Positioned human dignity and opportunity expansion as the core objective of development.
      1. Challenging Economic Consensus: The collaboration successfully challenged the World Bank-IMF consensus that focused almost exclusively on macroeconomic growth. They argued that growth is only a means to development, not the end goal itself, and that “people are the wealth of nations”

    Why Are Capabilities Often Reduced to Employability in Modern Policy Discourse?

    1. Skill-centric education: Increasing emphasis on skills for employment rather than holistic human development.
    2. Labour-market orientation: Education policies often prioritise market demand over critical thinking and civic participation.
    3. Instrumental approach: Capabilities are treated as tools for economic productivity instead of intrinsic human freedoms.
    4. Policy challenge: Requires balancing economic productivity with intellectual freedom and democratic participation.

    How Do Declining Democratic Standards Affect the Capability Framework?

    1. Erosion of critical thinking: Post-truth politics weakens reasoned debate and evidence-based policy making.
    2. Shrinking civic space: Reduces individuals’ ability to participate meaningfully in democratic governance.
    3. Institutional weakening: Declining governance standards limit the state’s ability to nurture enabling conditions for capabilities.
    4. Impact on development: Development becomes economic growth without empowerment.

    What Is the Concept of Equality of Autonomy in Sen’s Thought?

    1. Equality of autonomy: Emphasizes that individuals must have equal capability to pursue their chosen life paths.
    2. Justice framework: Links capability expansion to broader theories of justice and fairness.
    3. Institutional role: Requires both formal institutions and lived social experiences to enable human freedom.
    4. Democratic participation: Ensures individuals can think independently, reason critically, and contribute to society.

    Conclusion

    The capability approach reframes development as the expansion of human freedoms, opportunities, and agency. In a rapidly transforming world shaped by technological disruption and democratic challenges, the framework reminds policymakers that economic growth without empowerment is incomplete development. Sustainable progress requires strengthening education, public reasoning, social equity, and democratic participation, ensuring that development truly expands the choices and freedoms available to people.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2023] The crucial aspect of the development process has been the inadequate attention paid to Human Resource Development in India. Suggest measures that can address this inadequacy.

    Linkage: This question links to Amartya Sen’s Capability Approach, which views development as expansion of human capabilities through education, health, and skill formation, rather than mere GDP growth. It is also relevant to GS-2 (Social Justice) themes such as human development, poverty alleviation, and strengthening social sector outcomes.

  • Behind an early summer is a lack of winter rains

    Why in the News?

    An unusual surge in temperatures across north and north-western India during February-March has raised concerns about shifting seasonal patterns. Several regions recorded temperatures 8-13°C above normal, bringing heat-wave-like conditions weeks before the usual onset of summer. The phenomenon has been linked to deficient winter rainfall and weak Western Disturbances, which are critical for regulating winter climate in north India. 

    Why is India witnessing unusually high temperatures early this year?

    1. Temperature Anomaly: Several regions recorded temperatures 8-13°C above normal, reaching heat-wave-like conditions in February-March.
    2. Early Heat Conditions: Warm weather replaced cool winter days earlier than usual in northern and western India.
    3. Rare Occurrence: A similar situation occurred three years ago, but such an early onset of summer remains relatively uncommon.
    4. Regional Evidence:
      1. Shimla: 25.3°C (March 2026, highest recorded till March 8).
      2. Pahalgam: 22.7°C.
      3. Gulmarg: 17.2°C.
      4. Srinagar: 24.7°C.

    Climatological Significance: Heat waves are generally uncommon in high-altitude regions such as Shimla in March.

    How did weak Western Disturbances influence the winter climate?

    1. Western Disturbances: East-moving rain-bearing weather systems originating beyond Iran and drawing moisture from the Mediterranean Sea and other water bodies.
    2. Seasonal Importance: These systems normally bring winter rainfall and snowfall across northern India.
    3. Deficiency Since November 2025: Reduced frequency and intensity of Western Disturbances led to lower winter precipitation.
    4. IMD Observation: Meteorologists noted lack of wind convergence between westerly and easterly winds, reducing moisture transport into north and central India.
    5. Temperature Regulation: Winter precipitation normally moderates temperatures by maintaining soil moisture and atmospheric cooling.

    Why was the winter of 2026 considered unusually dry?

    1. Rainfall Deficit: All-India rainfall during January-February was only 16 mm, which is 60% below normal.
    2. Historical Context: February 2026 became the third driest February since 1901.
    3. Snowfall Decline: Both snowfall and rainfall remained subdued across Himalayan regions.
    4. Meteorological Cause: Persistent lack of favourable weather systems during winter months.

    How does a dry winter accelerate the onset of summer?

    1. Soil Moisture Deficit: Reduced rainfall leaves soil dry and unable to moderate temperature increases.
    2. Evaporation Mechanism: Moist soils normally evaporate moisture before heating up, delaying temperature rise.
    3. Rapid Surface Heating: Dry soils heat faster, increasing land surface temperature and accelerating summer conditions.
    4. Climate Feedback: Dry land conditions amplify regional warming and heat stress.

    What are the implications for agriculture and water resources?

    1. Impact on Rabi Crops: Sudden temperature spikes affect mustard, wheat, gram, groundnut, sesame, sorghum, and sunflower.
    2. Horticulture Stress: Crops such as potatoes and apples may suffer due to heat stress.
    3. Irrigation Demand: Farmers have been advised to increase irrigation frequency to maintain soil moisture.
    4. Water Resource Pressure: Increased irrigation demand may strain local groundwater and water reserves.

    What do temperature records indicate about changing climatic patterns?

    1. Temperature Extremes: High temperatures in Himalayan regions during early March indicate increasing climate variability.
    2. Comparison with Past Years:
      1. 2026: Shimla 25.3°C, Pahalgam 22.7°C, Gulmarg 17.2°C, Srinagar 24.7°C.
      2. 2025: Shimla 24.4°C, Pahalgam 20.4°C.
      3. 2024: Shimla 24.8°C.
    3. Climate Signal: Frequent anomalies suggest greater unpredictability in seasonal transitions.

    Conclusion

    The early onset of summer in India highlights the critical role of winter rainfall and Western Disturbances in maintaining seasonal balance. Reduced precipitation has accelerated land heating and increased agricultural vulnerability. Strengthening climate monitoring, improving irrigation management, and integrating seasonal forecasting into agricultural planning are essential to mitigate the impacts of such climatic anomalies.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2017] Climate Change’ is a global problem. How will India be affected by climate change? How will Himalayan and coastal states of India be affected?

    Linkage: The early onset of summer due to weak winter rains and Western Disturbances reflects climate variability affecting Himalayan regions, highlighting changing temperature and precipitation patterns.

  • Opposition Considers Impeachment Motion Against CEC Gyanesh Kumar

    Why in the News

    • Opposition parties, including the Indian National Congress and All India Trinamool Congress, are discussing the possibility of moving an impeachment motion against Gyanesh Kumar in Parliament.
    • Congress leader K C Venugopal stated that the entire Opposition will take a collective decision on the proposal.

    Impeachment Process of the Chief Election Commissioner (CEC)

    • The removal procedure is provided under Article 324(5) of the Constitution of India.
    • Grounds for Removal: The Chief Election Commissioner can only be removed on grounds similar to those of a Supreme Court judge, mainly: Proved misbehaviour and Incapacity.

    Step-by-Step Process

    • Notice of Motion: A removal motion must be signed by:
      • At least 100 members of the Lok Sabha, or
      • At least 50 members of the Rajya Sabha.
    • Admission of Motion
      • The motion is submitted to the Speaker of Lok Sabha or Chairman of Rajya Sabha.
      • They may accept or reject the motion.
    • Investigation: If admitted, an investigative committee is formed to examine the charges.
    • Parliamentary Voting: If the committee finds the charges valid, the motion is debated and voted upon in both Houses.
    • Special Majority Required: Removal requires:
      • Majority of total membership of the House, and
      • Two-thirds majority of members present and voting.
    • Final Removal: After both Houses pass the motion, the President of India issues the removal order.
    [2017] Consider the following statements: The Election Commission of India is a five-member body. Union Ministry of Home Affairs decides the election schedule for the conduct of both general elections and bye-elections. Election Commission resolves the disputes relating to splits/mergers of recognized political parties. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 2 only (c) 2 and 3 only (d) 3 only
  • FSI Stops AI-Based Deforestation Alerts to States

    Why in the News

    The Forest Survey of India (FSI) has stopped issuing fortnightly deforestation alerts through its AI-based Anavaran Deforestation Alert System. The portal has not been updated since November 2025.

    What was the Anavaran System?

    • An AI and satellite-based monitoring system launched in January 2024.
    • Provided deforestation alerts every 15 days to states.
    • Alerts included precise geographic coordinates where forest cover loss was detected.

    Purpose:

    • Enable quick field inspections by forest officials.
    • Improve near-real-time monitoring of deforestation.

    Technology Used

    The system used remote sensing and machine learning:

    • Google Earth Engine
    • Sentinel-2
    • Sentinel-1

    Features:

    • Optical satellite imagery (Sentinel-2).
    • Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) data from Sentinel-1 for cloudy or monsoon conditions.
    • Machine learning algorithms compared before-and-after images to detect forest loss.

    Performance of the System

    • 12,351 alerts issued between Jan 2024 and Oct 2025.
    • Average alerts per month: 561
    • Alerts increased to 1,028 per month during Nov–March, when deforestation peaks.

    Why Alerts Were Stopped

    • According to FSI officials:
      • The system was only a pilot project.
      • The government is currently reviewing feedback from states on its usefulness.
      • Active monitoring reportedly stopped in January 2026.

    Comparison with Global Systems

    • The system was considered similar to Terra‑I, used in countries like Peru. However, Anavaran had higher spatial resolution:
      • 10–20 metre resolution (Sentinel satellites)
      • Terra-I: 250 metre resolution

    Other Forest Monitoring Systems in India

    • Van Agni Portal
    • Fire alerts using satellite data have been operational since 2004.
    [2015] In which of the following activities are Indian Remote Sensing (IRS) satellites used? 1. Assessment of crop productivity 2. Locating ground water resources 3. Mineral exploration 4. Telecommunications 5. Traffic studies Select the correct answer using the code given below. (a) 1, 2 and 3 only (b) 4 and 5 only (c) 1 and 2 only (d) 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5
  • Mojtaba Khamenei Becomes Iran’s New Supreme Leader

    Why in the News

    The Assembly of Experts has appointed Mojtaba Khamenei as the new Supreme Leader of Iran following the death of former leader Ali Khamenei in a U.S.–Israeli strike.

    Key Highlights

    • Age: 57
    • Position: Third Supreme Leader of Iran.
    • Predecessors:
      1. Ruhollah Khomeini (1979–1989)
      2. Ali Khamenei (1989–2026)

    Role of the Supreme Leader in Iran

    • The Supreme Leader is the highest authority in Iran’s political system.
    • Key powers include:
      • Head of state
      • Commander-in-chief of armed forces
      • Control over the judiciary, military, and security agencies
      • Influence over foreign and defence policy
      • Ability to appoint key officials and veto decisions
    • Although Iran elects a President, the Supreme Leader holds ultimate authority.
    [2016] Which of the following is not a member of ‘Gulf Cooperation Council’? (a) Iran (b) Saudi Arabia (c) Oman (d) Kuwait
  • 250 Years of The Wealth of Nations: Adam Smith’s Lessons

    Why in the News

    The famous economics book An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations completed 250 years on March 9, 2026. The work by Adam Smith continues to influence debates on free trade, taxation, monopolies, and economic inequality.

    About The Wealth of Nations

    • Published in 1776, during the Scottish Enlightenment.
    • Considered the foundational text of classical economics.
    • Analyses the sources of national wealth, labour productivity, trade, and markets.
      • Smith is often called the “father of modern economics”.

    Key Economic Ideas of Adam Smith

    • Division of Labour: Specialisation improves productivity.
      • Example used by Smith: pin factory, where each worker performs a specific task to increase output.
    • Free Markets: Economic activity works best when individuals pursue self-interest within competitive markets.
    • The “Invisible Hand”: Individuals pursuing their own interest can unintentionally benefit society as a whole. Markets allocate resources efficiently without heavy government intervention.
    • Free Trade: Smith criticised mercantilism, the idea that countries should maximise exports and minimise imports.
    • He argued that:
    • Trade allows nations to specialise in what they produce efficiently.
    • Greater trade leads to mutual prosperity.
    [2011] What does the term “economic liberalization” refer to in the context of the Indian economy? (a) Expansion of the public sector (b) Restriction of foreign investment (c) Removal of restrictions on private sector and encouragement of free market policies (d) Increase in trade barriers
  • RBI Conducts OMO Purchase to Inject Liquidity

    Why in the News

    The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) conducted Open Market Operations (OMO) purchase of Government Securities worth ₹50,000 crore to inject liquidity into the banking system. Another tranche of ₹50,000 crore is scheduled shortly.

    Key Highlights

    • Amount purchased: ₹50,000 crore worth of Government Securities (G-Secs).
    • Total planned purchase: ₹1,00,000 crore in two tranches.
    • Maturity range of securities:
      • 6.01% G-Sec maturing 2030
      • 7.30% G-Sec maturing 2053

    Purpose:

    • Inject liquidity into the banking system.
    • Offset liquidity shortage caused by advance tax payments.
    • Ensure banks have sufficient funds for lending.

    What are Open Market Operations (OMO)?

    • Open Market Operations are a key monetary policy tool used by the RBI.
    • Definition: Buying or selling government securities in the open market to regulate money supply and liquidity.
    • If RBI buys G-Secs
      • Injects liquidity
      • Increases money supply
      • Encourages lending
    • If RBI sells G-Secs
      • Absorbs liquidity
      • Reduces money supply

    Additional Measures

    • The Government of India conducted a switch auction, buying back ₹6,309 crore of G-Secs and issuing ₹6,431 crore of new bonds.
    • These operations help manage the government’s debt maturity profile.
    [2013] In the context of Indian economy, ‘Open Market Operations’ refers to: (a) borrowing by scheduled banks from the RBI (b) lending by commercial banks to industry and trade (c) purchase and sale of government securities by the RBI (d) None of the above
  • Cheetah Population in India Crosses 50 Under Project Cheetah

    Why in the News

    A Namibian cheetah Jwala gave birth to five cubs at Kuno National Park, taking India’s total cheetah population to 53. The development is a major milestone under Project Cheetah.

    Key Highlights

    • Five cubs born to Namibian cheetah Jwala.
    • Recently, another cheetah Gamini delivered four cubs at the same park.
    • Total cheetah population in India: 53.
    • Indian-born cubs: 33.
    • Successful litters in India: 10.

    About Project Cheetah

    • Launched on 17 September 2022 by Narendra Modi.
    • Eight cheetahs were translocated from Namibia to Kuno National Park.
    • Aim: Reintroduce cheetahs in India after extinction.

    Background

    • Cheetahs became extinct in India in 1952 due to hunting and habitat loss.
    • The species is the fastest land animal.

    Objectives of the Programme

    • Restore the cheetah population in India.
    • Re-establish a functional grassland ecosystem.
    • Promote wildlife tourism and conservation awareness.
    • Improve genetic diversity and species recovery.
    [2024] Consider the following statements: Lions do not have a particular breeding season. Unlike most other big cats, cheetahs do not roar. Unlike male lions, male leopards do not proclaim their territory by scent marking.Which of the statements given above are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 1 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3
  • Silent Valley Bird Survey

    Why in the News
    A recent bird survey in Silent Valley National Park recorded 192 bird species, highlighting the park’s rich avian biodiversity.

    Key Findings

    • Survey dates: March 6 to 8, 2026
    • Organisers:
      • Kerala Forest Department
      • Malabar Natural History Society
    • Participants: About 85 birdwatchers from Kerala and Tamil Nadu.
    • Covered both core and buffer zones of the park.

    Important Observations

    • Total species recorded: 192 bird species
    • Rare migratory birds: Asian house martin and Western house martin. 

    Endemic Western Ghats species recorded:

    • Nilgiri laughingthrush
    • Black-and-orange flycatcher
    • White-bellied treepie
    • Nilgiri pipit
    • White-bellied blue flycatcher
    • Nilgiri sholakili (Nilgiri blue robin)

    About Silent Valley National Park

    • Located in Palakkad.
    • Part of the Western Ghats biodiversity hotspot.
    • Known for tropical evergreen forests and high endemism.
    [2020] With reference to India’s biodiversity, Ceylon frogmouth, Coppersmith barbet, Graychinned minivet and White-throated redstart are: (a) Birds (b) Primates (c) Reptiles (d) Amphibians
  • [9th March 2026] The Hindu OpED: One Nation, One Election – remedy worse than disease

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2017] ‘Simultaneous election to the Lok Sabha and the State Assemblies will limit the amount of time and money spent in electioneering but it will reduce the government’s accountability to the people’ Discuss.Linkage: This PYQ tests understanding of electoral reforms, parliamentary accountability, and the role of elections in ensuring democratic responsiveness within India’s parliamentary system. It directly relates to the One Nation, One Election debate, where synchronised elections may reduce costs and administrative burden but could weaken continuous democratic accountability and federal political cycles.

    Mentor’s Comment

    The debate on One Nation, One Election (ONOE) has intensified following the introduction of a constitutional amendment proposal based on the High-Level Committee report (2023-24) chaired by former President Ram Nath Kovind. The proposal suggests synchronising the election cycles of the Lok Sabha and State Assemblies through amendments to Articles 83, 172, and a new Article 82A. The issue has become significant because it proposes a fundamental restructuring of India’s electoral calendar and constitutional functioning.

    What Does the One Nation, One Election Proposal Entail?

    1. Simultaneous electoral cycle: Aligns elections for Lok Sabha and State Assemblies to a single schedule.
    2. Article 82A (Proposed): Enables the President to notify an “appointed date” aligning Assembly terms with the Lok Sabha cycle.
    3. Truncation of legislative tenure: Requires some Assemblies to end their tenure earlier to achieve synchronisation.
    4. Residual tenure rule: If a legislature dissolves early, the newly elected Assembly serves only the remaining term rather than a full five-year term.
    5. Election Commission authority: Grants the Election Commission of India (ECI) power to defer State elections if simultaneous elections are impractical.

    Does Comparative Constitutional Practice Support Simultaneous Elections?

    1. Canada: Conducts separate federal and provincial elections, maintaining independent political cycles.
    2. Australia: State legislatures have fixed four-year terms, while the House of Representatives has a maximum three-year tenure, making synchronisation structurally difficult.
    3. Germany: Stability arises from the Constructive Vote of No Confidence, not from simultaneous elections.
    4. South Africa and Indonesia: Use proportional representation systems, which distribute political power across parties and protect minority voices.
    5. United States analogy: Fixed election cycles function because the executive is insulated from legislative confidence, unlike parliamentary systems.

    How Could Simultaneous Elections Affect Parliamentary Accountability?

    1. Continuous accountability mechanism: Staggered elections maintain ongoing voter oversight of governments.
    2. Feedback loop: Elections across different states allow voters to periodically signal approval or disapproval.
    3. Democratic responsiveness: Frequent elections maintain governments’ dependence on public sentiment, a principle highlighted by James Madison in Federalist No. 52.
    4. Campaign cycles: ONOE may reduce the frequency of elections but risks weakening institutional responsiveness.

    What Problems Arise From the Concept of “Unexpired Term Elections”?

    1. Residual mandate: Newly elected legislatures serve only the remaining tenure rather than a full five-year term.
    2. Reduced electoral legitimacy: Governments formed mid-cycle may lack a fresh democratic mandate.
    3. Policy distortions: Short-term governments may prioritise populist measures rather than structural reforms.
    4. Administrative constraints: The Model Code of Conduct (MCC) and truncated tenure may weaken governance capacity.

    Does the Proposal Threaten India’s Federal Structure?

    1. Basic structure doctrine: The Supreme Court in S.R. Bommai v. The Union of India affirmed that federalism forms part of the Constitution’s basic structure.
    2. Independent constitutional identity of states: States possess autonomous political cycles and democratic rhythms.
    3. Mandate truncation risk: Aligning electoral cycles may prematurely terminate state mandates.
    4. Central discretion: Proposed Article 82A(5) enables the ECI to defer State elections without clear criteria.

    Could the Proposal Enable Constitutional Misuse?

    1. Presidential Rule extension risk: If a State government falls mid-term, elections could be deferred to maintain synchronisation.
    2. Article 356 safeguards: Currently restrict President’s Rule to one year (extendable only during emergencies with ECI certification).
    3. Governance by Governor: Deferred elections could result in prolonged governance through central authority.
    4. Judicial precedent: In NJAC Case, the Court held that constitutional validity depends on institutional design, not on assumptions of benign use.

    Is the Fiscal Argument Strong Enough to Justify the Reform?

    1. Election expenditure scale: Combined Lok Sabha and Assembly elections cost about ₹4,500 crore (0.25% of Union Budget).
    2. GDP proportion: Electoral spending accounts for roughly 0.03% of GDP.
    3. Historical data: Lok Sabha election expenditure historically ranged between 0.02-0.05% of GDP (1957-2014).
    4. Administrative flexibility: Elections conducted in phases allow the ECI to rotate EVMs, VVPATs, and security forces.
    5. Resource burden: Simultaneous elections could require significantly greater logistical capacity.

    Conclusion

    The proposal for simultaneous elections attempts to streamline electoral administration but risks distorting constitutional balance. India’s parliamentary democracy is built on continuous accountability, federal autonomy, and flexible electoral cycles. A reform that truncates mandates, centralises electoral timing, and alters democratic rhythms may weaken rather than strengthen democratic governance.

  • India’s renewable transition caught between stranded power and institutional inertia

    Why in the News?

    India’s renewable energy push is facing a major challenge as large amounts of renewable power remain unused due to grid congestion. In Rajasthan, over 4,000 MW of operational renewable capacity cannot supply electricity during peak hours despite the state having 23 GW installed capacity and only 18.9 GW evacuation margin. Even costly 765 kV transmission corridors designed for 6,000 MW are operating below 20% utilisation, highlighting serious institutional and grid management gaps as India targets 500 GW non-fossil capacity by 2030.

    Why is India facing stranded renewable power despite large transmission investments?

    1. Transmission congestion: More than 4,000 MW of renewable capacity in Rajasthan remains unable to evacuate power during peak hours due to grid bottlenecks despite being fully commissioned.
    2. Mismatch between capacity and evacuation margin: Rajasthan has approximately 23 GW of renewable capacity but only 18.9 GW evacuation margin, creating structural congestion.
    3. Underutilized transmission corridors: High-capacity 765 kV double-circuit corridors designed for about 6,000 MW evacuation are operating at only 600-1,000 MW, representing utilisation levels below 20%.
    4. High infrastructure costs: These corridors require ₹4,000-5,000 crore investment, yet deliver only a fraction of intended value due to conservative grid operation.
    5. Delayed connectivity readiness: Many commissioned renewable plants cannot inject power due to gaps in transmission infrastructure readiness.

    How does institutional conservatism affect grid operations?

    1. Grid security prioritisation: The grid operator’s mandate focuses primarily on maintaining system stability, leading to conservative operational decisions that limit utilisation of transmission assets.
    2. Absence of utilisation benchmarks: Transmission infrastructure lacks automatic utilisation benchmarks or performance review triggers, allowing persistent underutilisation.
    3. Limited accountability: Institutional frameworks do not assign clear responsibility for inefficiencies in transmission utilisation.
    4. Static security frameworks: Grid operations rely on static security rules rather than dynamic risk assessment mechanisms, restricting operational flexibility.
    5. Commercial burden on generators: Renewable generators bear the financial impact of congestion and curtailment, despite planning failures occurring elsewhere in the system.

    Why is there a structural disconnect between planning and grid operations?

    1. Planning assumptions vs operational reality: The Central Transmission Utility (CTU) plans corridors based on projected renewable capacity under General Network Access (GNA) assumptions.
    2. Mismatch in actual power flows: Transmission planning may assume 6,000 MW capacity evacuation, while operational permissions allow only about 1,000 MW of actual flow.
    3. Investment decisions based on approvals: Developers invest billions of rupees based on connectivity approvals and expected transmission timelines.
    4. Operational restrictions: When the grid becomes operational, physical infrastructure limitations prevent full capacity utilisation.
    5. Planning-operation misalignment: This creates a credibility gap between regulatory approvals and operational outcomes.

    How does the current curtailment mechanism create inequity in the power sector?

    1. Curtailment concentration: Current practices impose curtailment disproportionately on projects with Temporary General Network Access (T-GNA).
    2. Unequal risk allocation: Projects with Permanent GNA continue uninterrupted operation, while temporary access projects absorb most congestion impacts.
    3. Investment uncertainty: Developers that completed projects in good faith face unpredictable shutdowns during peak hours.
    4. Financial stress on renewable developers: Congestion leads to lost generation revenue and lower project viability.
    5. Regulatory alignment vs commercial outcome: While the policy framework aligns with regulatory categories, commercial outcomes remain inequitable across generators.

    What technological and operational solutions already exist but remain underused?

    1. Reactive power management technologies: Devices such as STATCOMs and advanced reactive-power equipment can stabilise voltage fluctuations and increase grid utilisation.
    2. Grid support equipment: Modern renewable plants increasingly include Static VAR generators and harmonic filters, enabling improved system stability.
    3. Dynamic security assessment: Advanced grid operators globally employ real-time contingency management and probabilistic risk evaluation to improve utilisation.
    4. Adaptive operational frameworks: Flexible operational protocols allow higher transmission utilisation while maintaining reliability.
    5. Global best practices: Many advanced grids have moved beyond static security frameworks to dynamic grid management systems.

    What institutional reforms are necessary to improve renewable grid integration?

    1. Expanded grid mandate: The national grid operator must balance both stability and infrastructure utilisation within safe operational limits.
    2. Performance-based evaluation: Grid performance metrics should include efficiency indicators alongside reliability indicators.
    3. Proportional curtailment mechanisms: Curtailment in constrained regions should be distributed proportionally across generators rather than targeting specific access categories.
    4. Dynamic GNA reallocation: Unused transmission capacity should be reallocated in real time through transparent operational protocols.
    5. Automatic review mechanisms: Major transmission assets should undergo automatic operational reviews if utilisation falls below expected capacity.
    6. Transparency in grid governance: Public disclosure of performance assessments can strengthen accountability and stakeholder confidence.

    Conclusion

    India’s renewable energy transition cannot succeed solely through capacity addition or infrastructure expansion. The Rajasthan example demonstrates that institutional governance, grid operation practices, and regulatory accountability are equally critical. Ensuring that transmission infrastructure operates efficiently, equitably, and transparently will determine whether India’s clean energy expansion results in actual electricity generation or stranded renewable capacity. Aligning planning, regulation, and operations is therefore essential to build a credible and resilient renewable energy system.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2022] Do you think India will meet 50 percent of its energy needs from renewable energy by 2030? Justify your answer. How will the shift of subsidies from fossil fuels to renewables help achieve the above objectives? Explain.

    Linkage: This PYQ is directly linked to India’s renewable transition challenges, including grid integration, transmission constraints, and policy reforms.

  • AI’s impact on labour market: Anthropic’s report flags high exposure 

    Why in the News?

    Artificial Intelligence is increasingly reshaping labour markets worldwide. A recent report by Anthropic shows that jobs involving digital tasks, cognitive work, and routine analysis face higher automation risks due to large language models (LLMs). This shift has implications for skills, education, and employment policies, especially for countries like India, where millions work in IT, services, and BPO sectors.

    What does the Anthropic report reveal about AI exposure in labour markets?
    The Anthropic report marks one of the first systematic attempts to measure real-world labour market exposure to AI rather than relying only on theoretical predictions.

    1. New Measurement Metric- “Observed Exposure”: Introduces a framework combining LLM technical capabilities with real-world usage data from Claude AI systems, enabling more accurate estimation of AI’s impact on jobs.
    2. High Exposure in Digital Occupations: Identifies sectors such as business and finance, management, computer science, engineering, legal services, and office administration as highly exposed to AI-driven automation.
    3. Striking Capability Statistic: Finds that LLMs are theoretically capable of performing up to 94% of tasks performed by computer and mathematics workers.
    4. Real Adoption Gap: Notes that despite this capability, Claude currently performs only about 33% of such tasks, indicating that technological potential exceeds current adoption.
    5. Declining Hiring Trends: Observes a 14% decline in hiring for younger professionals (22-25 years) in highly exposed occupations.
    6. Gender Dimension: Highlights that women constitute 54.4% of high-exposure roles compared to 38.8% of low-exposure roles, indicating potential gendered labour market impacts.
    7. Indian Context: A NITI Aayog report titled “Roadmap for Job Creation in the AI Economy” warns that over 60% of formal-sector jobs, particularly in IT services and BPO sectors employing over 6 million people, could face automation risks by 2030.

    How does the report measure AI exposure in the labour market?

    1. Observed Exposure Metric: Measures the extent to which AI is actually used in real work tasks by analysing usage patterns of Anthropic’s Claude AI model.
    2. Combination Approach: Integrates theoretical capability of LLMs with empirical usage data, creating a realistic understanding of labour market disruption.
    3. Correlation with Job Trends: Tests exposure levels against US government employment projections and unemployment survey data to identify links between AI exposure and labour market trends.
    4. Evidence-Based Findings: Establishes that higher AI exposure correlates with weaker job growth and rising job losses in certain occupations.

    Which sectors face the highest AI disruption risks?

    1. Business and Finance: AI systems can perform financial analysis, data interpretation, and report generation, increasing automation potential in financial services.
    2. Management Occupations: AI supports strategic planning, data analytics, and decision-support tools, reducing reliance on routine managerial tasks.
    3. Computer and Mathematical Jobs: LLMs show the highest capability in coding, debugging, and software documentation tasks, with theoretical capability covering 94% of such tasks.
    4. Legal Sector: AI assists in contract analysis, legal research, and document drafting, increasing exposure in legal professions.
    5. Office and Administrative Work: Routine administrative functions such as documentation, scheduling, and record management are highly susceptible to automation.

    Why are digital and knowledge-sector jobs more vulnerable than manual jobs?

    1. Digitisation of Work: Tasks performed in digital environments are easier for AI systems to replicate using algorithms and machine learning models.
    2. Routine Cognitive Tasks: AI excels in pattern recognition, data processing, and repetitive analytical tasks.
    3. Physical Constraints: Manual occupations involving physical movement, craftsmanship, or real-world interaction remain difficult for AI systems to automate.
    4. Lower AI Applicability in Manual Sectors: Industries such as construction, agriculture, protective services, and personal care show relatively lower AI exposure.

    How could AI affect employment patterns and demographics?

    1. Impact on Young Workers: Hiring in highly exposed occupations for workers aged 22-25 years has declined by 14%, suggesting reduced entry-level opportunities.
    2. Gender Disparity: Women represent 54.4% of high-exposure jobs, indicating disproportionate vulnerability in AI-driven labour market changes.
    3. Highly Educated Workforce Exposure: AI disruption is concentrated in graduate-level occupations, highlighting risks for knowledge workers rather than low-skilled labour.
    4. Occupational Polarisation: AI may lead to growth in high-skill innovation roles and low-skill manual jobs, while shrinking middle-skill occupations.

    What implications does AI disruption have for India?

    1. IT and BPO Sector Risks: Over 60% of formal-sector jobs in IT services and BPO industries may face automation pressures by 2030.
    2. Employment Scale: These sectors currently employ over 6 million people in India, making AI disruption economically significant.
    3. Stock Market Response: Shares of TCS, Wipro, and Infosys declined nearly 20% over the past year, reflecting investor concerns about AI-driven automation.
    4. Skill Gap Challenge: Limited mathematical and scientific skill levels among large segments of the population could hinder adaptation to AI-driven economies.
    5. Low R&D Investment: India’s low spending on research and development compared to the US and China reduces its capacity to lead in AI innovation.

    Can AI also create opportunities in traditional sectors?

    1. Precision Agriculture: AI-enabled analysis of satellite imagery, weather forecasts, soil data, and crop patterns enables farmers to optimise sowing and harvesting decisions.
    2. Agricultural Risk Reduction: AI systems provide early warnings about pests and diseases, improving crop protection.
    3. Resource Optimisation: AI helps farmers determine fertiliser use, irrigation requirements, and input efficiency.
    4. Policy Initiatives: The Union Budget 2026–27 proposed the Bharat-VISTAAR system (Virtually Integrated System to Access Agricultural Resources) to integrate AgriStack platforms with ICAR research data.

    Conclusion

    Artificial Intelligence is reshaping the nature of work by transforming how tasks are performed rather than simply eliminating jobs. The Anthropic report highlights that occupations involving digital and cognitive tasks face the greatest exposure to AI-driven automation. For India, where millions depend on knowledge-sector employment, the challenge lies in strengthening skills, promoting AI innovation, and ensuring that technological progress complements rather than displaces human labour.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2023] Introduce the concept of Artificial Intelligence (AI). How does AI help clinical diagnosis? Do you perceive any threat to privacy of the individual in the use of AI in healthcare?

    Linkage: This question directly relates to the applications and societal implications of AI, similar to how the article discusses AI transforming labour markets and professional work.

  • Chile Eliminates Leprosy

    Why in the News

    The World Health Organization (WHO) and the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) have officially verified Chile as the first country in the Americas and the second globally to eliminate leprosy as a public health problem.

    Leprosy (Hansen’s Disease)

    • A chronic infectious disease caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium leprae.
    • Primarily affects:
      • Skin
      • Peripheral nerves
      • Upper respiratory tract mucosa
      • Eyes
    • If untreated, it can cause permanent nerve damage and disability.

    Transmission

    • Spread through respiratory droplets from the nose and mouth of untreated patients.
    • Requires close and prolonged contact.
    • Not highly contagious.

    Incubation Period

    • Very long incubation period.
    • Average: ~5 years, but symptoms may appear up to 20 years later.

    Symptoms

    • Pale or reddish skin patches with loss of sensation
    • Numbness and nerve damage
    • Muscle weakness in hands and feet
    • Painless ulcers on soles of feet
    • Eye damage in severe cases

    Treatment

    • Multi-Drug Therapy (MDT) provided free worldwide by WHO.
    • Combination of medicines:
      • Rifampicin
      • Dapsone
      • Clofazimine
    • 100% curable if treated early.
    • Early treatment prevents disability.
    [2014] Consider the following diseases: Diphtheria  Chickenpox  Smallpox Which of the above diseases has/have been eradicated in India? (a) 1 and 2 only  (b) 3 only  (c) 1, 2 and 3 only  (d) None of the above
  • Farm Loan Waivers Return: Impact on Credit Culture

    Why in the News

    The Maharashtra government has announced a ₹35,000 crore farm loan waiver scheme, raising concerns from economists and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) about its impact on credit culture and state finances.

    Key Features of the Maharashtra Scheme

    • Total cost: ~₹35,000 crore
    • Beneficiaries: ~30 lakh farmers
      • 20 lakh non-defaulters will receive an ₹50,000 incentive for timely repayment.
    • Cost breakdown:
      • ₹20,000 crore for loan waiver of defaulters
      • ₹15,000 crore incentive for regular borrowers

    Why Governments Announce Farm Loan Waivers

    • Reduce farmers’ debt burden
    • Provide relief during agrarian distress
    • Enable farmers to restart productive investment
      • However, economists argue that such schemes often fail to provide long-term solutions.

    Major Farm Loan Waiver Schemes in India

    National Schemes

    1. Agricultural and Rural Debt Relief Scheme (ARDRS), 1990
      • Covered loans from public sector banks and regional rural banks.
      • Maximum relief ₹10,000 per farmer.
    2. Agricultural Debt Waiver and Debt Relief Scheme (ADWDRS), 2008
      • Covered banks and cooperative credit institutions.
      • Focus on small and marginal farmers (≤5 acres).

    Total spending on waivers in last 35 years: over ₹3 lakh crore.

    Trend Since 2014

    • Farm loan waivers increased significantly after 2014–15.
    • 10 states announced waivers worth about ₹2.4 lakh crore.
    • Many announcements occurred close to elections, according to RBI.

    RBI’s Concerns

    • Weakening of Credit Culture: Farmers may delay repayment expecting future waivers. Creates moral hazard in the credit system.
    • Reduced Agricultural Lending: Banks become reluctant to provide fresh loans.
    • Rise in NPAs: Agricultural sector gross NPAs reached about 8.44% (2019).
    • Fiscal Burden on States: Waiver costs can reach 0.1% to 2% of state GSDP. Payments often spread over 3–5 years, affecting budgets.
  • Khelo India Tribal Games 2026

    Why in the News

    The first-ever Khelo India Tribal Games (KITG) will be held from March 25 to April 6, 2026 in Chhattisgarh, announced by Union Sports Minister Mansukh Mandaviya.

    Key Details

    • Host Cities: Raipur, Jagdalpur, and Surguja
    • Participants: Tribal athletes from most States and Union Territories of India.

    Sports in the Games

    • Medal Sports (7): Athletics, Football, Hockey, Weightlifting, Archery, Swimming, and Wrestling. 
    • Demonstration Sports: Mallakhamb and Kabaddi

    Organising Bodies

    • Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports
    • Sports Authority of India
    • Indian Olympic Association
    • National Sports Federations and the Chhattisgarh State Organising Committee.

    Mascot

    • “Morveer”
    • Derived from “Mor” (mine/our) and “Veer” (brave) in Chhattisgarhi.
    • Symbolises pride, courage and identity of tribal communities.

    Note: A mascot is a person, animal, or object adopted by a group—such as a sports team, school, or brand—to represent them, foster a public identity, and bring good luck.

    Significance

    • First national sports event dedicated exclusively to tribal athletes.
    • Aims to identify and nurture talent from tribal regions.
    • Strengthens grassroots sports under the Khelo India Scheme.

    Prelims Pointers

    • Khelo India Scheme is a Central Sector Scheme launched in 2018.
    • The Khelo India Games were declared an “Event of National Importance” in 2020 under the Sports Broadcasting Signals Act, 2007.
    [2023] Consider the following statements in respect of the 44th Chess Olympiad, 2022: It was the first time that Chess Olympiad was held in India. The official mascot was named ‘Thambi’. The trophy for the winning team in the open section is the Vera Menchik Cup. The trophy for the winning team in the women’s section is the Hamilton-Russell Cup. How many of the statements given above are correct? (a) Only one (b) Only two (c) Only three (d) All four
  • BEL–Bellatrix Partnership to Develop VLEO Satellite Systems

    Why in the News

    India’s defence PSU Bharat Electronics Limited (BEL) and space-tech startup Bellatrix Aerospace have signed an MoU to jointly develop Very Low Earth Orbit (VLEO) satellite systems.

    What is VLEO (Very Low Earth Orbit)?

    • Altitude: About 150 km to 450 km above Earth.
    • Lower than Low Earth Orbit (LEO) satellites.
    • Satellites experience thin atmospheric drag, requiring propulsion systems to maintain orbit.

    How VLEO Satellites Work

    • At low altitude, satellites face aerodynamic drag from the upper atmosphere.
    • Advanced propulsion systems provide continuous thrust to maintain orbital position.
    • Bellatrix will use electric/green propulsion technologies for station-keeping.

    Key Features of VLEO Systems

    • High-Resolution Imaging: Closer proximity to Earth enables sub-meter imaging using smaller sensors.
    • Ultra-Low Latency Communication: Shorter signal distance enables faster data transmission and real-time communication.
    • Lower Launch Costs: Lower orbit requires less fuel to deploy satellites.
    • Reduced Space Debris: Failed satellites naturally re-enter and burn up due to atmospheric drag.

    Aim of the Partnership

    • Develop indigenous VLEO satellite platforms and payloads.
    • Provide solutions for defence and civilian applications.
    • Combine PSU manufacturing capability with startup innovation.

    Strategic Significance

    • Strengthens India’s self-reliance in space technology.
    • Enables high-resolution surveillance and intelligence gathering.
    • Useful for:
      • Border monitoring
      • Earth observation
      • Real-time communication systems.

    Prelims Pointers

    • Bharat Electronics Limited (BEL) operates under the Ministry of Defence.
    • Bellatrix Aerospace develops satellite propulsion systems.
    • VLEO satellites orbit at lower altitude than conventional Earth-observation satellites, offering improved imaging and reduced debris risk.
    [2011] An artificial satellite orbiting around the Earth does not fall down. This is so because the attraction of Earth (a) does not exist at such a distance. (b) is neutralized by the attraction of the moon. (c) provides the necessary speed for its steady motion. (d) provides the necessary acceleration for its motion

  • India Taps Alternative Crude Supplies

    Why in the News
    Due to the West Asia conflict affecting shipments through the Strait of Hormuz, India is securing crude oil from alternative sources.

    Key Points:

    • India imports about 88% of its crude oil needs; nearly half normally passes through the Strait of Hormuz.
    • Indian refiners are sourcing additional crude from:
      • United States
      • Russia
      • West Africa and Latin America.
    • Refineries have deferred maintenance shutdowns to maintain supply buffers.
    • A 30-day U.S. waiver (till April 5) allows delivery of already-loaded Russian oil cargoes to India.
    • Around 120 million barrels of Russian crude are currently in transit globally, some near India.

    Concerns:

    • Alternative routes may increase freight and insurance costs.
    • Rising oil prices could increase India’s import bill, widen the current account deficit, and pressure the rupee.
    • Every $10 rise in crude prices may raise inflation by ~20–25 basis points.
    [2011] In the context of global oil prices, “Brent crude oil” is frequently referred to in the news. What does this term imply? It is a major classification of crude oil. It is sourced from the North Sea. It does not contain sulphur. Select the correct answer using the code given below: (a) 2 only (b) 1 and 2 only (c) 1 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3
  • [7th March 2026] The Hindu OpED: Right, justice, action for India’s women farmers

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2024] Distinguish between gender equality, gender equity and women’s empowerment. Why is it important to take gender concerns into account in programme design and implementation?Linkage: The article highlights structural barriers faced by women farmers such as lack of land ownership, credit access, and institutional recognition, demonstrating why gender-sensitive policy design in agriculture and food systems is essential.

    Mentor’s Comment

    International Women’s Day 2026 coincides with the International Year of the Woman Farmer. This places a renewed global attention on the structural exclusion of women from land ownership, agricultural decision-making, and food systems governance. Despite constituting a significant share of the agricultural workforce in India, women farmers remain largely invisible in policy and institutional frameworks. There is a contradiction between women’s central role in food production and their marginal access to land, credit, technology, and nutrition security. Addressing gender inequalities in agriculture is essential for improving food security, nutrition outcomes, and climate-resilient farming systems.

    Why does the issue of women farmers demand urgent attention today?

    1. International recognition: International Women’s Day 2026 aligns with the International Year of the Woman Farmer, emphasising gender equality in global food systems.
    2. Policy-practice gap: Legal reforms providing equal inheritance rights for daughters have not translated into land ownership for women due to social norms and administrative barriers.
    3. Invisible farmers: Women who manage farms and negotiate with labourers often lack legal recognition as farmers, limiting access to credit, crop insurance, irrigation schemes, and extension services.
    4. Structural exclusion: Eligibility for government agricultural schemes remains linked to land ownership, which is largely held by men.
    5. Nutritional paradox: Women who produce food frequently lack diverse and nutritious diets, with rural diets dominated by cereals and limited access to pulses, fruits, vegetables, and animal-source foods.

    How do land ownership patterns restrict women’s participation in agriculture?

    1. Patriarchal inheritance: Land titles remain concentrated in male ownership due to patrilineal inheritance practices.
    2. Administrative barriers: Limited awareness, bureaucratic hurdles, and social resistance prevent women’s names from appearing in land records.
    3. Institutional exclusion: Lack of land titles restricts women’s access to institutional credit, crop insurance, irrigation schemes, and agricultural extension services.
    4. Weak bargaining power: Absence of legal ownership reduces women’s influence in agricultural decision-making and market negotiations.
    5. Asset deprivation: Women farmers often cultivate land without formal ownership, creating vulnerability in cases of displacement, widowhood, or marital conflict.

    Does the feminisation of agriculture translate into empowerment?

    1. Labour shift: Male migration has increased women’s role in cultivation, household food provisioning, and farm management.
    2. Workload intensification: Women experience dual burdens of productive agricultural labour and reproductive household responsibilities.
    3. Limited mechanisation: Lack of access to labour-saving technologies increases drudgery and health risks.
    4. Health consequences: Women with heavy workloads, particularly during peak agricultural seasons, face micronutrient deficiencies and health stress.
    5. Intergenerational effects: Maternal undernutrition contributes to low birth weight and poor child development outcomes.

    Why are nutrition outcomes among women farmers still poor?

    1. Cereal-dominated diets: Rural diets remain focused on rice and wheat, with limited consumption of nutrient-dense foods.
    2. Persistent anaemia: High prevalence of anaemia among women of reproductive age represents a major public health concern.
    3. Intergenerational malnutrition: Maternal undernutrition increases risks of child stunting and developmental deficits.
    4. Food security paradox: Women responsible for producing food often lack control over household nutrition choices.

    How effective are India’s food security programmes in addressing gender inequality?

    1. Food security framework: The National Food Security Act (NFSA) guarantees subsidised cereals and nutritional support for pregnant women and children.
    2. Supplementary nutrition: Nutrition programmes include maternal entitlements and supplementary feeding through Anganwadis.
    3. State innovations: Some states promote millets, fortified staples, and local foods within food distribution systems.
    4. Implementation gaps: Nutrition outcomes remain uneven due to weak programme integration and limited focus on diet diversity.
    5. Digital exclusion: Digitalisation of welfare systems can exclude women with poor connectivity, documentation gaps, or limited digital literacy.

    What structural reforms are required to strengthen women’s agricultural rights?

    1. Land rights reform: Implementation of equal inheritance laws and promotion of joint spousal land titles.
    2. Gender-sensitive governance: Ensuring gender-responsive land registration systems and inclusion of women in resource management institutions.
    3. Collective institutions: Strengthening women’s collectives and self-help groups to improve bargaining power and access to resources.
    4. Policy recognition: Adopting the National Policy for Farmers definition, which recognises farmers based on agricultural activity rather than land ownership.
    5. Data visibility: Generating gender-disaggregated agricultural data to inform policy design.

    How can women farmers drive climate-resilient agriculture and food security?

    1. Technology access: Ensuring access to climate-resilient technologies and agricultural extension services.
    2. Knowledge empowerment: Training women farmers in sustainable farming practices and resource management.
    3. Labour-saving tools: Adoption of drudgery-reducing technologies improves productivity and health outcomes.
    4. Community initiatives: Promotion of kitchen gardens, women’s seed banks, and local food planning.
    5. Institutional support: Strengthening linkages between agriculture, nutrition systems, and social protection programmes.

    Conclusion

    Achieving gender equality in agriculture requires recognition of women as farmers with full rights to land, resources, technology, and decision-making. Strengthening women’s agency in agri-food systems enhances agricultural productivity, improves household nutrition, and strengthens climate resilience. Integrating land reforms, nutrition policies, and institutional support can transform women farmers into central actors of sustainable rural development.

  • Recognizing invisible labour of care is a national priority

    Why in the News

    The issue of recognizing invisible labour of care has gained prominence due to renewed policy focus on women-led development and the care economy in India’s recent budgetary and policy initiatives. This is coinciding with International Women’s Day discussions on gender equity and economic participation. A striking indicator of change is the rise in India’s Female Labour Force Participation Rate (FLFPR) from 23.3% in 2017-18 to 41.7% in 2023-24, highlighting increasing female participation in the workforce. However, this progress coexists with a massive burden of unpaid care work carried primarily by women, which remains outside formal economic accounting. The Union Budget 2026-27 reportedly crossed ₹5 lakh crore under gender budgeting for the first time, reflecting policy recognition of women’s contribution.

    What is the invisible care economy?

    1. It refers to the massive volume of unpaid, uncounted, and undervalued labor; primarily cooking, cleaning, child care, and elder care; performed mostly by women and girls. 
    2. It acts as a “hidden” backbone of society, essential for sustaining the workforce and households but largely absent from GDP, formal economic metrics, and policy discussions.

    Why is the care economy considered the hidden foundation of national development?

    1. Social reproduction: Care work ensures the reproduction of human capital by nurturing children, supporting working adults, and maintaining social well-being.
    2. Economic multiplier: Effective care systems enable women to participate in the workforce, thereby increasing productivity and household incomes.
    3. Cultural dimension: Indian civilisation traditionally reveres Shakti, acknowledging women’s nurturing and leadership roles across social spaces.

    How has India’s policy framework shifted from welfare to women-led development?

    1. Developmental shift: Policies increasingly recognise women not merely as beneficiaries but as drivers of development.
    2. Institutional reforms: Governance frameworks incorporate gender-sensitive policy design across sectors such as health, education, and social welfare.
    3. Political recognition: Women’s contributions are acknowledged in public discourse and development planning.
    4. Leadership emphasis: The idea of women-led development has emerged as a guiding principle in policy discussions.

    What does recent data reveal about women’s workforce participation in India?

    1. FLFPR increase: India’s Female Labour Force Participation Rate rose from 23.3% in 2017-18 to 41.7% in 2023-24, indicating increasing female economic engagement.
    2. Care constraint: Despite rising participation, women continue to shoulder the majority of unpaid domestic responsibilities.
    3. Economic barrier: Lack of accessible childcare and care infrastructure limits women’s sustained participation in the workforce.
    4. Labour productivity: Supporting care services can unlock millions of economic opportunities for women.

    What policy initiatives aim to strengthen India’s care ecosystem?

    1. Gender Budgeting expansion: Gender Budget crossed ₹5 lakh crore for the first time, indicating substantial financial commitment toward women-related programmes.
    2. Caregiver skill development: Initiatives aim to train 1.5 lakh caregivers, strengthening the professional care workforce.
    3. Working women hostels: Expansion of residential facilities supports women migrating for employment.
    4. Anganwadi strengthening: Upgradation of Anganwadi centres improves early childhood care and nutrition services.
    5. Inter-sectoral convergence: Integration of health, nutrition, and childcare services improves social protection.

    How are legal reforms supporting childcare and worker welfare?

    1. Labour law reforms: The Code on Social Security strengthens social protection frameworks.
    2. Workplace welfare: The Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code improves workplace conditions and supports welfare provisions.
    3. Creche facilities: Legal frameworks encourage workplace childcare infrastructure.
    4. Social protection: Labour codes integrate worker welfare and family-support mechanisms.

    Why is the demand for formal care services increasing in India?

    1. Urbanisation: Rapid urban expansion weakens extended family support systems.
    2. Migration: Labour mobility separates families from traditional caregiving networks.
    3. Nuclear households: Smaller families reduce the availability of informal caregivers.
    4. Ageing population: Increasing life expectancy raises the demand for elderly care services.

    What policy measures are essential to strengthen the care economy in India? (Way Forward)

    1. 5R Framework for Care Economy: Adopting the Recognise – Reduce – Redistribute – Reward – Represent framework ensures a comprehensive policy approach.
      1. Recognition through time-use surveys and national accounting; 
      2. Reduction through care infrastructure like childcare centres; 
      3. Redistribution by encouraging shared household responsibilities and state-supported services; 
      4. Reward by ensuring fair wages, training, and social security for care workers;
      5. Representation by including care workers in labour dialogues and policymaking forums.
    2. Recognition through statistical accounting: Institutionalise regular Time Use Surveys and develop satellite accounts in national income accounting to measure the economic value of unpaid domestic and caregiving labour.
    3. Expansion of childcare and care infrastructure: Strengthen Anganwadi centres, promote workplace crèche facilities, and establish community-based childcare and elder-care services to reduce the unpaid care burden on women.
    4. Professionalisation and formalisation of care work: Expand care-sector skilling programmes, certify caregivers, and extend social security benefits to domestic workers, caregivers, and informal care providers.
    5. Learning from global best practices:
      1. Nordic countries (Sweden, Norway): Provide universal childcare services and gender-neutral parental leave, which significantly increases women’s labour force participation.
      2. Canada: Introduced a national affordable childcare programme, reducing childcare costs and enabling greater workforce participation among mothers.
      3. Japan: Expanded public elder-care services under its Long-Term Care Insurance system to address ageing population challenges and reduce family caregiving burdens.

    Conclusion

    Recognising and strengthening the care economy is essential for achieving inclusive and sustainable development in India. Institutional support for caregiving, through childcare infrastructure, social security, and gender-responsive policies, can transform unpaid labour into a recognised pillar of economic growth. A development model that values care work not only empowers women but also strengthens the foundations of a resilient and equitable society.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2021] Though women in post-Independent India have excelled in various fields, the social attitude towards women and feminist movement has been patriarchal.” Apart from women education and women empowerment schemes, what interventions can help change this milieu?

    Linkage: This PYQ directly relates to the care economy, unpaid domestic labour, and gender-responsive policymaking, which are central to recognising women’s invisible work in society and the economy. The article’s focus on gender budgeting, childcare infrastructure, and redistribution of care work aligns with UPSC themes of women empowerment, social justice, and inclusive development.

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