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Type: Explained

These Newscards correspond to the explained section of various newspapers. They become immensely important for both prelims and mains and special attention needs to be paid to them

  • On the method of caste enumeration

    Why in the News?

    The pre-test for the second phase of Census 2027 began on July 6, 2026, in 16 States and Union Territories, using an “open column” for respondents to record their caste. The outcome of this pre-test will decide the final methodology for India’s first statutory caste enumeration since 1931.

    What has changed in this pre-test, and why does its outcome carry more weight than the 2011 exercise?

    1. Pre-test scope: The rehearsal for the second phase of Census ran in 16 States and Union Territories from July 6 to July 20, 2026, and included an open column for respondents to record their caste.
    2. Statutory shift: Unlike the 2011 Socio Economic and Caste Census (SECC), which was conducted outside the purview of the Census Act, caste in 2027 will be enumerated within the second and final phase of the Census itself, giving the count statutory backing.
    3. Methodology still open: Census officials stated that the final caste enumeration methodology will be prepared based on feedback from this pre-test, not fixed in advance.
    4. Historical gap: Caste-wise population, other than Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, has not been enumerated in independent India since the 1931 Census.
    5. Limited rehearsal access: Self-enumeration was permitted, with the portal accessible only from July 1 to 5, and only in the specific area undergoing the rehearsal.

    Why did the government finally agree to caste enumeration after years of resistance?

    1. Reversal in position: The BJP-led NDA government, after repeatedly opposing caste enumeration, announced on April 30, 2025, that caste would be counted during Population Census 2027.
    2. Opposition pressure: The Congress had consistently demanded a full caste count prior to this announcement.
    3. Coalition pressure: Some NDA allies also pushed for caste enumeration, adding pressure from within the ruling coalition.
    4. State-level precedent: Bihar’s 2022-23 caste-based survey demonstrated a working alternative model and added political momentum for a national exercise.

    Does repeating the open-column method risk reproducing the same unreliable outcome the government itself rejected?

    1. Scale of past failure: The 2011 SECC’s open-column method returned over 46 lakh distinct “caste names,” compared to only 4,147 recorded in the 1931 Census.
    2. Cause of inflation: Respondents recorded surnames or sub-castes as separate categories. For example, “Gupta” and “Agarwal” were recorded separately instead of under the common Baniya caste.
    3. Government’s own admission: In a 2021 Supreme Court affidavit, the Union government stated that the caste count “cannot be exponentially high” through genuine sub-caste bifurcation alone, and that SECC data cannot be relied on for reservation in education, employment, or local body elections.
    4. Method repeated despite the admission: The 2026 pre-test uses the identical open-ended caste column. Officials describe the method as “not final.”
    5. Structured alternative already exists: Current government data lists about 2,650 OBCs on the Central List, 1,170 Scheduled Castes, and 890 Scheduled Tribes — a far smaller, curated framework similar to the list-based model Bihar used, but not yet adopted for the national pre-test.

    What concerns have been raised about the process, and how has the government responded?

    1. Demand for consultation: Opposition parties have sought wider stakeholder consultation before the caste Census is finalised.
    2. Parliamentary question: On December 2, 2025, a Member of Parliament asked in the Lok Sabha whether the government would publish the draft Census questions for public and representative input, and whether it would consider best practices from state-level caste surveys.
    3. Government’s stated process: Minister of State for Home responded that draft questionnaires are field pre-tested before finalisation, consistent with over 150 years of Census practice that incorporates past learnings and stakeholder input.
    4. Repeated deferral through 2025: The government stated multiple times through 2025 that the final caste questionnaire had not been settled.
    5. Notification timeline unresolved: Parliament was informed in February 2026 that caste-related questions would be notified only before the commencement of the second Census phase, leaving the methodology undecided even as the pre-test proceeds.

    5. Why has the Census itself not just the caste count been delayed for over a decade?

    1. Two-phase structure: The Population Census is conducted in two phases, Houselisting and Housing Operations (HLO), and Population Enumeration, spanning over 11 months.
    2. Overdue cycle: The last Census was completed in 2011; the next was constitutionally due in 2021.
    3. Pandemic disruption: The first phase, due to begin April 1, 2020, was delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic that surfaced in India around March 2020.
    4. Unexplained continued delay: Pandemic-related restrictions had ended by 2022, but the government did not specify reasons for the delay beyond that point.
    5. Announced timeline: On June 4, 2025, the government announced that the Population Census, combined with caste enumeration, would be conducted in two phases by February 28, 2027, with the reference date and time of the headcount fixed at 12 a.m., March 1, 2027.

    Conclusion

    The 2027 Census will give caste enumeration statutory backing for the first time, closing the ambiguity that surrounded the unreleased 2011 SECC. The ongoing pre-test’s use of the same open-ended, self-declared caste column risks reproducing the unreliable, exponentially inflated caste count the government itself flagged before the Supreme Court in 2021. Whether the final methodology adopts a curated caste list, as Bihar’s survey did, or persists with the open column, will determine whether the resulting data is usable for its stated purpose of informing reservation, education, and employment policy. The government’s promise to notify questions only before the second phase begins leaves this central design choice unresolved even as the exercise proceeds.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2020] Has caste lost its relevance in understanding the multicultural Indian Society? Elaborate your answer with illustrations.

    Linkage: The PYQ directly evaluates the contemporary relevance of caste. The decision to include caste in the 2027 Census itself reflects the continued administrative, political and socio-economic significance of caste in policymaking and governance. 

  • How India’s life insurance sector funds government expenditure

    Why in the News?

    LIC’s March 2025 regulatory filings and RBI/IRDAI data confirm that life insurers collectively hold close to a quarter of India’s outstanding central government dated securities, a share that has remained stable even as total sovereign debt expanded by around 40 per cent in three years. This scale of sovereign financing has never featured in budget speeches or parliamentary debate, even as three regulatory interventions between 2023 and 2024 compressed new insurance business and, with it, the household savings pipeline that feeds this funding base.

    Why do life insurers function as a stable, counter-cyclical source of financing for government debt?

    1. Long-duration liability match: Life insurance policies carry tenures of twenty to forty years. Government securities are the only asset class that absorbs funds of this scale at matching tenures without distorting the market.
    2. Counter-cyclical behaviour: Insurers buy and hold securities. They do not exit when oil prices rise or when a geopolitical event triggers reassessment of emerging-market exposure, unlike foreign portfolio investors (FPIs).
    3. Reduced rollover risk: A steady domestic base of long-horizon holders lowers the risk that maturing government debt cannot be refinanced on favourable terms.
    4. Lower borrowing costs: Stable demand across the maturity spectrum moderates the government’s overall cost of borrowing.
    5. Structural, not discretionary: This behaviour is not a policy choice. It is the structural consequence of insurers writing long-duration promises to millions of policyholders.

    How large and entrenched is LIC’s role as a financier of the sovereign?

    1. Sector concentration: LIC carries the dominant share of the insurance sector’s sovereign exposure, a consequence of its scale, its predominantly participating product mix, and the duration of its in-force book.
    2. Regulatory filing confirmation: LIC’s Form L-26 filing with IRDAI (March 2025) shows sovereign paper accounts for nearly 63 per cent of its non-linked policyholder corpus, well above the regulatory minimum.
    3. Absolute scale: LIC’s March 2025 IRDAI filings show ₹20.2 lakh crore held in central government securities alone, and ₹32.3 lakh crore in total government and government-guaranteed securities across all funds.
    4. Single largest holder: These figures make LIC the single largest institutional holder of Indian government debt. LIC holds approximately 19 per cent of all outstanding central government dated securities (RBI Public Debt Management Quarterly Report, FY24).
    5. Official systemic recognition: IRDAI designates LIC a Domestic Systemically Important Insurer (D-SII) every year, meaning its distress would cause significant dislocation in the financial system.
    6. Private insurers’ limited but rising role: Private insurers, with a higher share of unit-linked and shorter-tenure products, contribute a smaller fraction of sovereign holdings today. Their sovereign allocation will rise as they deepen traditional, longer-duration offerings.

    Does global practice confirm that insurers hold sovereign debt because of liability structure rather than regulatory mandate?

    1. Japan: Japanese insurers are cited among the largest holders of the government’s long-dated securities. The source gives no institution-level detail.
    2. United Kingdom: UK insurers are similarly cited as large holders of long-dated government securities. No institutional specifics are given.
    3. South Korea: South Korean insurers are cited as large holders of long-dated sovereign debt. No further detail is provided.
    4. Claimed common driver: The source attributes this pattern across all three jurisdictions to liability-profile demand rather than regulatory mandate, and states India’s insurance sector is following the same path.

    Why could recent regulatory actions on the insurance sector pose a longer-term risk to the sovereign borrowing programme?

    1. Declining penetration: India’s life insurance penetration stood at 2.7 per cent of GDP in FY25, a third consecutive annual decline from a pandemic-era peak of 3.2 per cent, and below the global life insurance average of 3.0 per cent.
    2. Three simultaneous interventions: Between 2023 and 2024, regulators restructured distribution economics, imposed taxation on certain high-value policies, and mandated product repricing.
    3. Cumulative effect exceeded individual impact: Each intervention was defensible in isolation. Their simultaneous effect compressed new business across the sector.
    4. Sector currently recovering: New business has begun recovering after this compression episode.
    5. Deferred risk to sovereign funding: Compression of new business diverts household savings away from insurance-linked government debt purchases toward shorter-duration instruments elsewhere.
    6. Lagged visibility: This effect on the sovereign borrowing programme may not be visible in the short term. It would surface over a decade.

    Why has insurance’s role as a sovereign financier remained absent from public policy discourse despite its scale?

    1. Asymmetric policy attention: Banking receives policy attention in proportion to its systemic importance. Insurance, holding close to a quarter of outstanding central government dated securities, does not receive comparable attention.
    2. Discourse framed only around households: The case for deeper insurance penetration is made almost entirely in the language of household financial protection — the uninsured family, inadequate sum assured, mis-selling, or unsettled claims.
    3. Missing fiscal-stability framing: A parallel case, framed in the language of sovereign fiscal stability, has not been fully articulated in public policy discourse.
    4. Consequence for regulatory design: Regulatory interventions aimed narrowly at consumer protection did not account for their cumulative effect on the sovereign funding base.

    Conclusion

    Life insurers, led by LIC, function as India’s most stable institutional financiers of government debt, holding close to a quarter of outstanding central government securities through structurally long-duration, counter-cyclical demand. This sovereign-financing function has never entered public policy discourse, which frames insurance regulation almost exclusively around household protection. Regulatory interventions between 2023 and 2024 that compressed new insurance business exposed this gap, since their cumulative fiscal-stability cost went unweighed at the time. Insurance regulation must begin accounting for its sovereign-funding dimension alongside consumer protection, or the effect will surface only years later as higher government borrowing costs.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2019] The public expenditure management is a challenge to the Government of India in the context of budget making during the post-liberalization period. Clarify it.

    Linkage: The PYQ examines fiscal management and financing of government expenditure. The article shows that India’s life insurance sector acts as a major domestic financier of government borrowing by channelising long-term household savings into government securities, thereby strengthening fiscal stability and reducing dependence on volatile capital flows.

  • Will El Niño Weaken India’s Economy

    Why in the News?

    India’s monsoon has opened with a 40% rainfall deficit in June, and the India Meteorological Department has forecast a second consecutive below-normal month in July. The forecast has revived concern that a potential “super” El Niño could damage agricultural output, rural income, and food prices. India enters this season on the back of record 2024-25 foodgrain output, which is what a poor monsoon now puts at risk.

    How does a weak monsoon transmit into the broader economy beyond agriculture?

    1. Three transmission channels: A weak monsoon damages the economy through lower agricultural output, reduced rural income, and rising food prices.
    2. Cropping pattern shift: Farmers are shifting toward pulses and away from maize and vegetables. Pulses need less water and cost less to cultivate.
    3. Irrigation-linked decision-making: Planting decisions also depend on irrigation access, MSP levels, procurement support, and market conditions.
    4. Rural non-farm contraction: Non-traded rural services such as construction contract when agricultural income falls.
    5. Early economic signals: Two-wheeler and tractor sales weaken first. Real estate demand in smaller towns and cities follows.
    6. Export exposure: Agriculture exports grew at a CAGR of 8.2% between fiscals 2020 and 2025, contributing 12% of India’s core exports. A weak kharif season threatens this growth.

    Why does a weak monsoon strain macro-fiscal and external balances even before the shortfall materialises?

    1. Fertiliser subsidy commitment: The Union Cabinet approved a ₹41,533 crore Nutrient-Based Subsidy (NBS: a fixed per-nutrient, rather than per-product, fertiliser subsidy) for phosphatic and potassic fertilisers for the kharif season, covering 28 grades.
    2. Import and buffer-stock risk: A shortfall in kharif output will force the government to release buffer stocks and import commodities. This widens the Current Account Deficit (CAD: the gap between a country’s foreign exchange outflows and inflows on the current account) and pressures the rupee.
    3. Compounding supply shock: Pest pressure and fertiliser input constraints linked to the Iran conflict are adding to cost pressure ahead of the monsoon outcome.
    4. Growth cost estimate: A combined El Niño-plus-drought scenario may shave 20 to 65 basis points off GDP growth, according to Kotak Mutual Fund.
    5. RBI’s growth-inflation warning: The Reserve Bank of India’s June bulletin flagged that an adverse south-west monsoon could weigh on the domestic growth-inflation outlook.

    Why did the 2009 and 2015 El Niño years produce such different economic outcomes despite similar monsoon failure?

    1. El Niño as an imperfect predictor: Six of the eleven below-normal or deficient monsoon years since 2000 were classified as El Niño years by the IMD. Five of these six saw deficient rainfall.
    2. 2009-10 outcome: Two consecutive years of rainfall stress, combined with all-India irrigation cover below 45%, contracted crop GVA (Gross Value Added: a sector’s contribution to national output, net of input costs) by 2.5% and 3.2% in fiscals 2009 and 2010. Inflation entered double digits.
    3. 2014-15 output impact: El Niño intensified from weak to strong across these two years. Crop GVA contracted again in both years.
    4. 2014-15 price impact: Food inflation stayed muted in 2015. This differed sharply from the double-digit inflation of 2009-10.
    5. Explanation for the divergence: Proactive food management, restrained MSP hikes, and a global commodity price slump kept 2015 inflation low.
    6. What the comparison establishes: Policy response, not rainfall severity alone, determines whether an El Niño year turns into an inflation crisis.

    How exposed is India’s irrigation and storage system to a second successive weak monsoon?

    1. Vulnerable districts: 315 districts have been flagged as vulnerable to a poor monsoon. Of these, 111 districts across 12 States are of primary concern for poor irrigation facilities.
    2. Reservoir storage shortfall: Storage across the 166 reservoirs monitored by the Central Water Commission stood at 47.725 BCM (Billion Cubic Metres) on July 2. This is below both the year-ago level of 78.077 BCM and the normal level of 48.402 BCM for this time of year.
    3. Current buffer, limited margin: The present storage position can meet requirements. A second consecutive weak monsoon would strain it.
    4. Structural irrigation gap: All-India average irrigation cover remains below 45%, the same constraint that contributed to the 2009-10 GVA contraction.

    Should India replace crop insurance with ex-ante risk reduction as its primary drought response?

    1. Limits of crop insurance: Crop insurance compensates farmers after a monsoon failure. It does not reduce their underlying exposure to rainfall variability.
    2. Ex-ante alternative: Ex-ante risk reduction requires sustained public investment in irrigation infrastructure rather than compensation after the event.
    3. Seed access gap: Drought-resistant, high-yielding seed varieties are necessary. Farmers who need them most lack access to them.
    4. Investment shortfall: Public investment in irrigation and seed access has been inadequate. This explains why agricultural disaster preparedness remains poor.

    Conclusion

    A weak monsoon does not automatically translate into an economic crisis. The 2009 and 2015 El Niño years show that policy response, not rainfall alone, determines the scale of the damage. India’s current toolkit remains weighted toward reactive measures, crop insurance, buffer stock release, price management, rather than ex-ante investment in irrigation and drought-resistant seed. Until public investment shifts from compensating farmers after a bad monsoon to reducing their exposure to it, each El Niño year will continue to test the same vulnerabilities: rainfed districts, thin irrigation cover, and reservoirs running below normal.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2023] Discuss the consequences of climate change on the food security in tropical countries.

    Linkage: The PYQ assesses the relationship between climate variability, agriculture and food security. El Niño-induced rainfall deficits directly threaten crop production, food security, rural livelihoods and agricultural sustainability, making this PYQ conceptually relevant.

  • Ethanol Blending in Fuel: Why the Road Ahead Is Bumpy

    Why in the News?

    India completed its transition to 20% ethanol blending in petrol (E20) five years ahead of the original 2030 target, and the government is now preparing to push blending levels further, toward E25 and E85. The rapid rollout has exposed a gap between the state’s energy-security and farm-sector goals and the mileage loss, damage risk, and lack of fuel choice absorbed by vehicle owners.

    Why is India accelerating ethanol blending well ahead of its own timeline?

    1. Target compression: The shift from E10 to E20 was originally planned over eight years to 2030. It was completed in three years.
    2. Energy security motive: The main reason for pushing blends beyond E20 is to lower India’s dependence on fuel imports and to build domestic ethanol production capacity.
    3. Agricultural lobby pressure: Sugarcane growers, concentrated in Maharashtra and Uttar Pradesh, are sitting on significant surplus capacity. This lobby is pushing hard for higher mandated blending to absorb that surplus.
    4. Muted resistance from oil companies: Indian Oil and Bharat Petroleum face operational challenges from rising blend levels. Both companies are mostly state-owned. They are unlikely to protest the mandate.

    What technical costs does higher ethanol blending impose on vehicles designed for lower blends?

    1. Fuel economy loss: Ethanol has a lower calorific value than petrol. Calorific value is the energy released per unit of fuel burned. A litre of ethanol carries substantially less energy than a litre of petrol. This produces roughly 30% lower mileage.
    2. Corrosion risk: E20 fuel can damage fuel-system parts in internal combustion engine vehicles, especially older ones. The cause is ethanol’s hygroscopic nature. Hygroscopy is the property of a substance to absorb and retain water molecules from its surroundings.
    3. Absence of consumer choice: Vehicle owners in India cannot currently select a different fuel blend at the pump. The higher blend is mandatory for all buyers regardless of their vehicle’s compatibility.
    4. Cold-start difficulty: Ethanol burns at a higher temperature than petrol. This makes higher-blend vehicles harder to start on winter mornings.
    5. Non-linear performance decline: A 10% ethanol blend made little difference to a car’s performance. Any blend above E10 is said to impact operations, and the decline does not scale evenly as the blend percentage rises.

    What does the government’s own technical assessment show, and what gap remains?

    1. Study mandate: The government commissioned the Automotive Research Association of India (ARAI) to study E20’s impact on fuel-system materials, through laboratory immersion testing of eight metals, six elastomers, and four plastics.
    2. Corrosion finding: E20’s impact on the metals tested was found insignificant, based on corrosion rates, compared with the E10 baseline.
    3. Elastomer finding: Polychloroprene and fluoroelastomer performed similar to or better than E10 across most tested properties, including tensile strength and volume change.
    4. Evidence gap: No conclusive studies exist on the long-term impact of blended fuel on vehicles not compliant with the higher blend.
    5. Flagged risk despite reassurance: ARAI flagged that E20 could still affect engine life, rubber parts, valves, and piston heads, even where the headline corrosion findings were favourable.

    What additional adjustments will the shift to E25 and E85 require?

    1. Engineering revalidation: The E25 transition requires fresh work on engine calibration, fuel-system durability, corrosion resistance, and material compatibility.
    2. Retesting of vehicles on road: Car makers must run new tests to assess how the higher ethanol blend affects vehicles already in use.
    3. Recertification for new vehicles: Manufacturers must recalibrate engines and redo certification and homologation for emissions. Homologation is the official certification process confirming a vehicle meets prescribed standards, since current vehicles are homologated only for E20.
    4. Flex-fuel economics: A parallel plan proposes E85 for flex-fuel vehicles. E85 will cost roughly Rs 20 per litre less than E20, even though it delivers a fuel-efficiency loss of over 25% compared with E20.
    5. Government reassurance on pace: Government sources indicate that blends beyond E20 will not be pushed through in a hurry, and that adequate lead time will be given to vehicles and oil companies to adapt.

    Does the ethanol programme resolve the cost of India’s energy transition, or simply relocate it onto the consumer?

    1. Consumer as sole cost-bearer in E10-to-E20 shift: The brunt of the mileage drop from the E10 to E20 transition was borne entirely by the motorist, without compensation from the state or industry.
    2. Rising vehicle costs: Vehicle prices are likely to rise as automakers re-engineer for higher blends. This added cost will also be passed on to the consumer.
    3. Uncompensated damage risk for old vehicles: For older vehicles, the question of damage from the higher ethanol mix is left entirely to the consumer, according to a representative of an auto manufacturing association.
    4. No structural check on the mandate: Oil marketing companies are mostly state-owned and unlikely to resist blend increases even where they face operational challenges. This removes one of the usual sources of pushback against a rapid mandate.
    5. Asymmetric distribution of gains and costs: Energy security gains and farm-sector gains accrue to the state and the agricultural lobby. Mileage loss and damage risk accrue to individual vehicle owners.

    Conclusion

    India met its ethanol blending target years ahead of schedule to cut fuel-import dependence and to absorb sugarcane surplus for the farm lobby. The transition’s costs — lower mileage, corrosion-related wear, and a mandatory blend with no consumer choice at the pump — fell on vehicle owners without compensation or adequate prior warning. The planned move to E25 and E85 risks repeating this pattern unless the government builds in cost-sharing mechanisms, consumer choice, and sufficient lead time for automakers before mandating higher blends.

    PYQ Relevance

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

    Linkage: The PYQ tests India’s clean energy transition and policy measures for reducing fossil fuel dependence. Ethanol blending is a major component of India’s energy transition strategy aimed at reducing crude oil imports, lowering emissions, and diversifying transport fuels.

  • The real crisis in Indian fisheries

    Why in the News?

    The Government of India released its latest ocean fisheries assessment on February 11, 2026, claiming most marine fish stocks are sustainable, based on CMFRI data showing 91.1% of evaluated stocks in good health. This optimistic reading is contested by the FAO’s more cautious country profile and by fisheries scientists, who argue the deeper crisis lies in the continuing destruction of India’s inshore benthic ecosystem, not in aggregate stock numbers.

    Why does the government’s claim of largely sustainable marine fisheries not hold up to scrutiny?

    1. Landing-data methodology: CMFRI estimates fish stock availability from what fishers catch. It does not directly assess fish populations at sea.
    2. Catch data as a weak proxy: Catch volume cannot reliably indicate how much aquatic life remains in the sea. Finding shells on a beach does not predict the shell count underwater.
    3. FAO’s contrasting assessment: The FAO’s India country profile states marine fisheries production has plateaued. Most major stocks are already fully exploited.
    4. Unregulated capacity growth: The FAO links this plateau to unregulated fishing access. This access created overcapacity among medium and small trawlers competing for shrinking resources.
    5. Undisclosed procedures: CMFRI’s methodology for classifying stocks as sustainable is not made public. This limits independent verification.
    6. Possible strategic bias: Competitive pressure to match China’s fisheries output may be shaping how India presents its stock data.

    Is overfishing really the central problem facing India’s fisheries?

    1. Reframing the crisis: The more pressing concern is the decline of the inshore benthic environment. Benthic environment, the ecological zone at the seabed where bottom-dwelling organisms live.
    2. Expert consensus on destruction: Fisheries scientists and policymakers have described the inshore fishing environment as destroyed over the past year.
    3. Where productivity concentrates: India’s continental shelf is narrow across most of the coastline. This makes inshore waters the most productive fishing zone.
    4. Overlap of protective zones: Territorial waters within 12 nautical miles largely overlap with this continental shelf. These waters support the breeding of commercially valuable species such as shrimp.
    5. Ground-level testimony: Fishers along the Tamil Nadu coast report consistent declines in catch. Many previously common species have disappeared.

    What is driving the destruction of India’s inshore fishing grounds?

    1. Disrupted nutrient flow: Dams on major rivers block land-based nutrients from reaching the sea. This weakens the coastal food chain.
    2. Mangrove loss: Ongoing destruction of mangroves removes critical breeding habitat for fish.
    3. Multi-source pollution: Industrial, agricultural, and urban pollution enters the sea. This degrades inshore water quality.
    4. Mechanised trawling’s foreign origins: Semi-industrial trawling was introduced to India from abroad around 1960. It has since expanded on a large scale.
    5. Uncontrolled fleet growth: India now operates 64,414 mechanised fishing vessels. There are no restrictions on new entries.
    6. Technological escalation: Existing vessels are being retrofitted with more powerful Chinese engines. This increases their catch capacity further.
    7. Continuous seabed disturbance: Trawlers plough the inshore seabed continuously. This causes a decline in all animal and plant life in heavily trawled zones.

    What limited external reference points does the article offer on managing trawling pressure?

    1. Assessment method abroad: Other fishing nations reportedly rely on direct at-sea stock assessments rather than catch data alone. The article does not name specific countries or institutions.
    2. China as competitive pressure, not model: China is referenced only as a competitor whose fisheries growth may be biasing India’s reporting. It is not presented as an institutional example.
    3. Palk Bay as cross-border conflict: Indian mechanised trawlers cross into Sri Lankan waters in the Palk Bay. This shows domestic overcapacity exporting itself as a bilateral fisheries conflict.

    Why do existing rules meant to protect inshore waters fail in practice?

    1. Toothless zone restriction: Mechanised boats are barred from fishing within 5 nautical miles of shore. This restriction lacks enforcement.
    2. Limited seasonal relief: A two-month annual ban on mechanised boat fishing allows some stock rejuvenation. It does not address year-round degradation.
    3. Patrol capacity gap: Coastal states lack sufficient staff and craft to monitor and enforce inshore fishing boundaries.
    4. Exclusion of fishers from governance: Governments have kept fishers out of management roles. This removes a source of on-ground enforcement and information.
    5. Competing fleets pushed outward: Both small-scale and mechanised fishers are being forced toward offshore and deep-sea zones as inshore waters degrade.

    Does redirecting fishers toward deep-sea fishing resolve the crisis in India’s fisheries?

    1. Government’s proposed shift: The government is encouraging fishers to move toward deep-sea fishing. It views this as untapped potential.
    2. FAO’s caution on deep-sea potential: The FAO estimates deep-sea fishing can deliver only a marginal increase in output. It is not a transformative gain.
    3. New costs imposed on fishers: Shifting to distant waters requires fishers to bear higher fuel and technology expenses.
    4. Root problem left unaddressed: The shift avoids confronting marine pollution and unregulated mechanised trawling. These remain the actual drivers of inshore decline.
    5. Political economy obstacle: Mechanised boat fishers wield disproportionate numeric and political influence. This obstructs reform of inshore management.

    Conclusion

    The government’s sustainability claim rests on landing data, not direct stock assessments, and says nothing about the condition of the inshore seabed itself. The actual crisis lies in the continuing degradation of inshore fishing grounds, driven by an unregulated and politically entrenched mechanised trawling fleet that existing laws cannot enforce against. Redirecting fishers toward deep-sea fishing does not resolve this; it relocates the burden while leaving inshore governance unreformed. Genuine sustainability requires stronger coastal governance, enforceable trawling limits, and empirical assessment of the benthic environment itself.

  • AI is rehsaping warfare: How can India keep pace

    Why in the News?

    Recent operations in Ukraine, Venezuela and Iran show AI-fused targeting, autonomous drone swarms and machine-speed strikes compressing engagement timelines and deciding outcomes. This convergence is shifting the basis of military power from hardware inventory to software velocity, exposing India’s defence establishment as structurally unprepared for the shift from a weapons-manufacturing model to a software-enterprise model.

    Why is algorithmic precision replacing hardware mass as the decisive factor in war?

    1. Simultaneous convergence: AI, autonomy and algorithmic precision are advancing together, not in sequence. Their combined effect multiplies battlefield lethality rather than adding to it.
    2. Historic scale of disruption: The deployment of software at unprecedented speed and scale in combat is being compared to a Manhattan Project moment. It marks a comparable inflection point to the arrival of gunpowder and nuclear weapons.
    3. Inverted innovation cycle: Software in combat theatres is updated every three weeks. New hardware is fielded only every three months. The traditional hardware-leads-software model has reversed.
    4. Institutional identity under strain: The Ministry of Defence has functioned as a platform and weapons factory. This shift requires it to function as a software enterprise instead.

    What do recent conflicts and defence-tech ventures reveal about AI-driven warfare?

    1. Ukraine (Delta platform): Delta fuses radar imagery, satellite feeds and social media data into one stream. It links to a drone inventory to form a “kill web” that compresses detection-to-neutralisation time to a couple of minutes.
    2. Ukraine (drone battlefield economy): Ukraine is procuring eight million drones this year, more than the artillery shells it fired last year. These platforms range from 25 km tactical close air support to 2,500 km strategic strike.
    3. Venezuela (US use of Anthropic’s Claude): American forces used the commercial AI model Claude to track the movements of ousted president Nicolás Maduro. This intelligence was synchronised with electronic attacks, cyber exploits and a Delta Force heliborne assault to capture him.
    4. Iran (machine-speed targeting): Targeting packages generated at machine, not human, speed enabled strikes that eliminated almost the entire Iranian military leadership within minutes on a single morning.
    5. United States (Anduril’s YFQ-44A Fury): A defence-tech startup, not a legacy defence prime, built this AI-powered unmanned fighter jet. It is designed to operate independently or team with crewed aircraft, showing that defence innovation is migrating toward agile startups.

    What competitive and structural pressures complicate India’s adaptation to this shift?

    1. Chinese software threat: A tool named Mythos functions as a virtual cyber-nuke capable of disabling an adversary’s operating system. This shows offensive capability has moved beyond kinetic weapons into software itself.
    2. Chinese hardware race: Huawei is pursuing 1.4 nanometre transistor density by 2031 to challenge Nvidia’s 4 nanometre Blackwell chips. This targets the compute layer that underpins AI-driven weapons systems.
    3. Speed as a structural constraint: A three-week software cycle against a three-month hardware cycle cannot be matched by an organisation built around multi-year procurement timelines.
    4. Institutional inertia as the central obstacle: The Ministry of Defence’s identity as a weapons and platform manufacturer conflicts directly with the software-enterprise model this warfare paradigm demands. Resolving this conflict is the precondition for everything else.

    What sovereign pathways can India adopt to close this gap?

    1. Sovereign data fusion: India must urgently build its own AI-enabled data analytics platform in the manner of Delta, rather than depend on external systems.
    2. Autonomous coordination software: Software must independently coordinate drone swarms, identify objects of interest, distinguish civilian aircraft and birds from combat platforms, and direct shooters to destroy targets.
    3. Drone inventory at scale: India should build a diverse drone inventory with a target of five million units by 2028.
    4. Counter-drone kill webs: Laser and microwave counter-drone systems paired with drone-hunting teams should establish AI-enabled kill webs along the LoC and LAC.
    5. Space-based ISR: India should crowd low-earth orbit space to transition from persistent surveillance to offensive intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance.
    6. Budget reallocation: At least 40% of the roughly Rs 2 lakh crore modernisation budget for 2027 should go to technological solutions rather than conventional hardware.

    Conclusion

    The decisive factor in modern warfare is shifting from hardware inventory to algorithmic velocity. Whoever controls faster AI-driven sense-decide-strike cycles gains advantage regardless of platform numbers. India cannot depend on borrowed or externally controlled AI and autonomy systems in a live conflict; it must build sovereign capability across data platforms, autonomous software, drone and counter-drone infrastructure, and space-based ISR. This requires the Ministry of Defence to transform from a weapons-manufacturing body into a software enterprise, a cultural and structural shift whose outcome remains untested.

    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: The PYQ examines the transformative applications of Artificial Intelligence (AI), its strategic implications, and the challenges arising from its deployment. The article extends AI’s application from the civilian domain to warfare, highlighting how AI-enabled autonomous systems, algorithmic warfare, and human-machine teaming are redefining military strategy, deterrence, and national security.

  • Insurance regulator likely to tighten commission norms

    Why in the News?

    IRDAI is working on a disclosure framework and a possible commission cap for insurance intermediaries, using powers granted by the January 2026 amendment to the Insurance Act. The move exposes a tension between commission-driven competition for distribution access and policyholder protection, since insurers with largely similar products have long competed on payouts to intermediaries rather than on price. Gross commission outgo across the industry crossed Rs 1 lakh crore in FY25, with the commission expense ratio for non-life insurers rising from 6.21% to 6.86% in one year.

    What twin-track regulatory response has IRDAI designed for insurance intermediaries?

    1. Disclosure threshold: Intermediaries whose commission income exceeds a prescribed threshold must file detailed annual disclosures with the regulator.
    2. Scope of disclosure: Required disclosures cover commission earnings, related-party transactions, profits from operations, and dividend repatriation to promoters or parent entities.
    3. Public accountability mechanism: Intermediaries must publish this information on their own websites, not only file it with the regulator.
    4. Parallel price-control track: IRDAI is separately drafting a proposal to cap commission payouts by insurers to distributors.
    5. Legal basis: The commission cap is enabled by the January 2026 amendment to the Insurance Act, which for the first time empowered IRDAI to prescribe commission ceilings.
    6. Sectoral range today: In the non-life segment, commission to brokers currently ranges from 2.5% to 10%, illustrated by the example of a $20 billion fleet airline paying $30 million in annual premium.

    Why has commission-driven competition persisted despite calls for policyholder-centric conduct?

    1. Product homogeneity: Insurers offer products broadly similar in coverage and pricing, which removes price and product design as competitive levers.
    2. Commission as the substitute lever: Intermediaries decide which products to distribute based on commission structures and incentive payouts rather than product merit.
    3. Distribution-channel competition: Insurers compete for access to intermediaries, not for the end policyholder, inverting the intended direction of market discipline.
    4. Renewal-commission bias: Intermediaries favour products generating recurring renewal commissions, which skews recommendations toward insurer payout structures rather than policyholder need.
    5. Persistence of mis-selling: Mis-selling and under-cutting by insurers to secure business continue despite existing disclosure and conduct norms.
    6. Digital paradox: Digital platforms, web aggregators and insurtech firms lower customer acquisition costs and raise price transparency, yet this has intensified rather than reduced competition for distribution access.

    What does the scale of commission expenditure reveal about the distribution model?

    1. Cross-industry threshold breached: Total commission paid by 26 life and 28 non-life insurers crossed the Rs 1 lakh crore mark in FY25.
    2. Non-life sector breakdown: Public sector general insurers paid Rs 9,335 crore, private general insurers Rs 30,498 crore, standalone health insurers Rs 7,365 crore, and specialised insurers Rs 67 crore in commission for 2024-25.
    3. Non-life aggregate: These four segments cumulatively totalled Rs 47,266 crore in gross commission expense for the entire non-life insurance industry.
    4. Life insurance outlay: Life insurers paid Rs 60,800 crore in commission during 2024-25, exceeding the entire non-life industry’s commission outgo.
    5. Rising commission expense ratio: The commission expense ratio, measured as commission expenses as a percentage of premium, rose from 6.21% in 2023-24 to 6.86% in 2024-25 for non-life insurers.
    6. Direction of the trend: The ratio moved upward in the same year IRDAI issued its consultation paper, indicating the disclosure-stage proposal has not yet altered underlying commission behaviour.

    What precondition is missing for a commission cap to correct mis-selling rather than relocate it?

    1. Non-cash incentive channels: Insurers currently offer performance-linked incentives and other commercial benefits alongside commission, none of which a commission cap alone would touch.
    2. Undefined enforcement mechanism: The consultation paper details disclosure content but does not specify how breaches of a future commission ceiling would be monitored or penalised.
    3. Distribution-channel dependence unaddressed: A cap constrains payout levels but does not remove insurers’ underlying dependence on intermediaries to reach policyholders in a product-homogeneous market.
    4. Threshold design gap: The disclosure obligation applies only above a prescribed commission-income threshold, leaving intermediaries below that threshold outside the enhanced-disclosure regime.
    5. No linkage to policyholder outcomes: The proposed framework tracks intermediary earnings and related-party transactions but does not tie disclosure or caps to policyholder complaints or mis-selling data.

    Will a commission cap eliminate the incentive to mis-sell or merely shift it to non-commission channels?

    1. Incentive substitution risk: Insurers can replace capped commissions with performance-linked incentives, trips, or other non-cash benefits to retain intermediary loyalty.
    2. Disclosure without a cap has not worked: The consultation paper preceded the cap proposal by weeks, and the commission expense ratio still rose in the same reporting year.
    3. Cap without enforcement detail: IRDAI has not yet formally proposed a cap, and the reported draft carries no disclosed enforcement architecture.
    4. Underlying driver untouched: Product homogeneity, the root cause of commission-based competition, is not addressed by either disclosure or a cap.
    5. Segment disruption acknowledged: The article itself notes a commission cap “could disrupt the segment,” indicating the regulator anticipates displacement effects on distribution economics rather than a clean resolution.

    Conclusion

    IRDAI’s shift from disclosure norms to a commission cap signals that transparency alone has not corrected commission-driven mis-selling in a market where product homogeneity leaves commission as the primary competitive lever. Unless the cap is paired with enforcement against non-cash incentive substitutes, it risks displacing rather than eliminating the underlying incentive to compete for distribution access at the policyholder’s expense.

  • Antibiotics to creams: The perils of combination meds

    Why in the News?

    The government has banned 16 fixed-dose combination (FDC) drugs, including antibiotic and dermatological formulations, for lacking scientific justification. The ban exposes that many combinations survived in the market for years on commercial convenience rather than clinical evidence. This exposed patients to unnecessary risk and worsening antimicrobial resistance.

    What triggered the ban on 16 fixed-dose combination drugs?

    1. Scope of the ban: The government banned 16 FDC drugs, covering antibiotic combinations and dermatological products containing aloe vera and other herbal ingredients.
    2. Stated ground for the ban: The banned products lack scientific justification for their claimed amplified benefit.
    3. Definition of the underlying problem: An FDC is irrational when its ingredients have no scientifically established rationale for being combined in a single product.
    4. Test for rationality: Each component must contribute meaningfully to the intended therapeutic effect, have compatible pharmacological properties, and demonstrate additional clinical benefit compared to using the medicines individually.
    5. Evidentiary gap: In many banned cases, no clinical trial evidence supports the combination.

    Why does a combination drug’s long presence in the market not establish its scientific validity?

    1. Central tension: Longevity in the market does not establish scientific validity.
    2. Case in point: Many banned dermatological combinations contained aloe vera extracts, vitamin E, jojoba oil, olive oil, tea tree oil, and other moisturising or herbal components, sold for years despite lacking evidence.
    3. The real question: Whether combining these ingredients produces a measurable clinical benefit compared with using them individually.
    4. Evidentiary standard: Robust scientific evidence demonstrating superior efficacy is lacking for many such products.
    5. Illustrative failure: Combination creams pairing a steroid and an antifungal give temporary relief from itching and redness because the steroid suppresses the skin’s local immune response, but this same suppression allows the underlying fungal infection to worsen, spread, or become resistant to treatment.
    6. Governance root cause: In the pre-reform period, thousands of FDCs were approved by state licensing authorities without central review, exploiting a regulatory loophole in the Drugs & Cosmetics Act. 

    What do specific banned combinations reveal about irrational drug design?

    1. Amoxicillin + serratiopeptidase: Serratiopeptidase is acid-labile, meaning it degrades in the stomach before reaching the bloodstream.
    2. No demonstrated benefit: No evidence shows that adequate therapeutic concentrations of serratiopeptidase reach infected tissues.
    3. No trial support: No peer-reviewed randomised controlled trial has shown that adding serratiopeptidase improves bacterial clearance, increases cure rates, or reduces the antibiotic dose required.
    4. Norflox TZ (norfloxacin + tinidazole): Tinidazole is pointless for purely bacterial diarrhoea; norfloxacin provides zero benefit for amoebic dysentery. Patients rarely have both infections simultaneously, yet exposure to both drugs unnecessarily promotes bacterial resistance.
    5. Augmentin 625 (amoxicillin + clavulanic acid): Clavulanic acid blocks the enzyme that resistant bacteria use to destroy amoxicillin, but is useless if the infecting bacteria are not resistant.
    6. Guideline recognition: No major treatment guideline currently recommends serratiopeptidase as an antibiotic adjunct for managing infections.

    What does global regulatory practice show about evaluating combination drugs?

    1. United States: All FDCs require a new drug application supported by clinical evidence of superiority or convenience over the individual components.
    2. World Health Organization: The WHO explicitly cautions against irrational FDCs; only combinations on its essential medicines list are treated as evidence-based.
    3. European Union: FDCs undergo full scientific review and can be justified only with supporting clinical data.
    4. India (pre-reform): Thousands of FDCs were approved by state licensing authorities without central review, exploiting a loophole in the Drugs & Cosmetics Act.
    5. India (post-2016): Around 6,000 FDCs were reviewed by a central committee, and bans have been initiated in phases since.

    How do irrational antibiotic combinations contribute to antimicrobial resistance?

    1. Marketing effect: When combinations are marketed as more effective without sufficient evidence, they encourage unnecessary and prolonged antibiotic use.
    2. Exposure pathway: This increases antibiotic exposure in the community and creates selective pressure on bacteria.
    3. Resistance mechanism: Selective pressure allows resistant organisms to survive and multiply.
    4. Policy implication: From a public health perspective, antibiotic use should be as targeted and evidence-based as possible.
    5. Scale of the underlying problem: AMR is a growing public health problem because bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites no longer respond to the medicines designed to kill them.

    What risks do patients face from irrational FDCs?

    1. Unnecessary drug exposure: Patients face an increased possibility of adverse effects, drug interactions, and allergic reactions.
    2. Dose inflexibility: Fixed combinations make it difficult for doctors to adjust the dose of individual ingredients to a patient’s needs.
    3. Titration failure: If a doctor wants to increase the dose of one medication, this cannot be done without also increasing the other.
    4. Diagnostic masking: Combination drugs can mask an underlying complication, reducing precision in treatment.

    What should patients, doctors, and pharmacists do now that these products are banned?

    1. Patient understanding: A medicine with multiple ingredients is not necessarily more effective than a targeted treatment.
    2. Preferred alternative: A simpler medicine supported by strong evidence is often the safer and more effective option.
    3. Continuity of care: Patients using banned products should consult their doctor about alternatives; stopping an irrational FDC does not mean stopping treatment.
    4. Doctor’s role: The focus should be on de-escalating patients to rational therapies supported by evidence.
    5. Pharmacist’s role: Pharmacists should track the regulator’s list of banned FDCs, flag irrational prescriptions, and educate patients on available alternatives.
    6. Related caution- vitamins and probiotics with antibiotics: There is no definitive evidence that pairing them with antibiotics is indispensable; probiotics may be advised case-by-case, and vitamins are generally unnecessary for a short antibiotic course except in vulnerable groups.

    Conclusion

    A drug combination’s survival in the market does not establish its scientific validity; irrational FDCs persisted because regulatory review was historically weak, not because evidence supported them. Regulatory decisions on combination drugs must rest on clinical trial evidence and risk-benefit assessment rather than duration of commercial availability. Continuous post-marketing surveillance is needed to identify and withdraw irrational combinations before they further entrench antimicrobial resistance.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2013] What do you understand by Fixed Dose Drug Combinations (FDCs)? Discuss their merits and demerits.

    Linkage: The PYQ asks for a direct conceptual and evaluative treatment of FDCs. The article supplies current, case-specific demerits (Norflox TZ, Augmentin 625, serratiopeptidase, dermatological creams) that can update and substantiate this answer.

  • Sanae Takaichi’s visit: What India and Japan can do to boost their business ties 

    Why in the News?

    Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s visit has renewed attention on India-Japan business ties. The visit exposes a gap between the two countries’ strong strategic partnership and a narrow, underperforming business relationship. Only 1,500 Japanese companies operate in India against 6,000 in Thailand; 1% of them generate over half the business.

    Why does India-Japan’s business relationship underperform despite a flourishing strategic partnership?

    1. Company presence gap: India hosts about 1,500 Japanese companies. Thailand hosts 6,000.
    2. Business concentration: Just 1% of Japan’s firms in India generate over half of all India-Japan business.
    3. Sectoral narrowness: Most of this business comes from one sector, automobiles. Suzuki Motor Corporation’s early entry in the 1980s built this base.
    4. Partnership-business mismatch: The bilateral strategic partnership is strong. The business relationship remains narrow and concentrated.

    What does the contrast between Japanese and Western MNC practices in India reveal about the real barrier to attracting Indian talent?

    1. Leadership exclusion: Indians almost never head the India operations of Japanese multinationals. Global leadership roles remain closed to them.
    2. Western contrast: Western multinationals have recruited top Indian talent for decades. They offer the same career opportunities as any other employee.
    3. Merit-based promotion: Western firms promote Indian staff using globally-benchmarked merit. They deploy this talent worldwide.
    4. Compliance over capability: Japanese firms base local hiring decisions on a compliant attitude. They prioritise this over the capability needed to win in a competitive market.
    5. Talent attraction failure: This practice causes Japanese companies to rarely attract quality Indian talent. Reform within Japanese corporations is the stated solution.

    Why is Japanese corporate engagement with India changing now?

    1. Rising commitment volume: More Japanese companies than ever are now working to do business in India.
    2. Stability driver: Indian economic growth remains steady amid global challenges. India offers relative stability in an uncertain world.
    3. Staff quality shift: A small number of top Japanese corporations now send their most capable staff to explore Indian opportunities. This marks a shift from earlier practice.
    4. Sectoral diversification: New investment has moved into real estate, technology startups and steelmaking, beyond the traditional automobile base.
    5. Political momentum: Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi has brought support to Indo-Japanese clean energy partnerships. Results from these efforts will show in the coming years.

    What must Japanese firms do differently to succeed in India?

    1. Localise offerings: Success in India requires products and services suited to Indian conditions, priced competitively and produced at scale. Maruti Suzuki and Reliance’s Jio telecom service illustrate this approach.
    2. Avoid rigid transplantation: Firms that insist on traditional Japanese methods for product design or customer response speed lose out to more nimble competitors, including Indian ones.
    3. Build Indo-Japanese teams: Perseverance and resilience remain necessary but insufficient. Firms need adaptability and strong joint Indo-Japanese teams.
    4. Move beyond the China playbook: Many Japanese corporations expect India to ‘package’ inputs the way China does, ready industrial plots, contractors, trained workers, vendor bases and seamless logistics. India does not yet offer this readiness.
    5. Reform local hiring: Local hiring decisions should target the capability needed to win in a competitive market, not a compliant attitude.
    6. Empower local management: Success requires challenging entrenched cost structures, fixing inefficient business processes, and pushing Tokyo-based mid-level managers outside their comfort zone.

    What must Indian companies and institutions do to deepen ties with Japan?

    1. Deepen investor support: Governments and industry bodies already market India to Japan. Deeper, more active support for first-time Japanese investors in select sectors is needed.
    2. Build support structures: Partnerships using all available capabilities, not government agencies alone, should create structures that deliver results on the ground.
    3. Establish Japan presence: Corporate India rarely maintains an office or even a part-time local advisor in Tokyo, even among its biggest firms.
    4. Close the understanding gap: This absence creates a lack of understanding of the Japanese mindset and of how business can be developed in Japan.
    5. Move beyond old models: Indian companies still seek old-fashioned collaborations or technology transfers in exchange for market access through bureaucratic navigation.
    6. Reframe India’s value: This transactional approach undersells India’s image, achievements and potential.

    What ultimately earns Japanese trust and investment beyond profit calculations?

    1. Behaviour over profit: Japanese firms weigh the people they will work with more heavily than the prospect of high profit or growth.
    2. Trust markers: Listening, developing shared understanding, honouring commitments, and letting achievements speak are the behaviours Japanese firms respect.
    3. Reciprocal opportunity: Indian corporations can bring their products and services to Japan, or jointly to third countries.
    4. R&D partnership potential: Partnerships with Japanese firms can strengthen Indian firms’ research and development and other capabilities.
    5. R&D spend gap: Japanese firms spend over 4% of revenue on research and development on average. Indian firms spend under 1%.
    6. Structural implication: This gap explains why Japan remains a top global economy despite a smaller population and fewer natural resources than India.

    Conclusion

    India-Japan business ties remain shallow relative to a strong strategic partnership. Japanese corporations rarely give Indian staff global leadership roles. Indian firms still seek market access through old-style technology transfers rather than sustained engagement. Closing this gap needs talent reform inside Japanese corporations and trust-based strategic engagement from Indian firms in Japan.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2019] The time has come for India and Japan to build a strong contemporary relationship, one involving global and strategic partnership that will have a great significance for Asia and the world as a whole.’ Comment.

    Linkage: The PYQ tests India’s bilateral relations with Japan, focusing on the strategic, economic and Indo-Pacific dimensions of the partnership. The article argues that the next phase of the India-Japan partnership should be driven by stronger business, investment, technology and private-sector collaboration, complementing the existing strategic relationship.

  • How temples deal with donations

    Why in the News?

    Allegations of embezzlement of offerings and donations at the Ram Janmabhoomi Temple in Ayodhya have brought temple donation-handling systems under scrutiny. The episode has revealed that the Ram Temple trust operates without the statutory audit and oversight structures that govern India’s other major temples. The Ram Temple Construction Committee has sought a professional CEO while the Vishwa Hindu Parishad has demanded that temples across India be freed from government control.

    Why has the Ram Temple donations controversy exposed a broader gap in temple financial oversight?

    1. Trigger: Allegations of embezzlement of offerings and donations surfaced at the Ram Janmabhoomi Temple in Ayodhya. The allegations brought the temple’s donation-handling process into public scrutiny.
    2. Scale of the sector: India has no official count of Hindu temples. Estimates put the number at around 10 lakh.
    3. Common donation chain: Most major temples follow a similar process. Offerings are removed from donation boxes. They are then moved to counting centres for segregation, counting, and recording. Verified collections are deposited into designated bank accounts under CCTV surveillance.
    4. Unaccounted donations: Most temples are small shrines maintained by local communities or hereditary priests. A large share of cash and in-kind donations at these temples remains unaccounted for.
    5. Scale of major temple donations: Tirupati received ₹1,880 crore in annual donations, followed by Vaishno Devi at ₹230 crore, the Ram Temple at ₹150 crore, Siddhivinayak at ₹100 crore, Kashi Vishwanath at ₹80 crore, and Puri Jagannath at ₹18 crore.

    How does the Ram Temple’s donation-handling and governance framework differ institutionally from India’s other major temples?

    1. Ram Temple: The Shri Ram Janmabhoomi Teerth Kshetra Trust manages donations through a trust deed, a private legal instrument creating and governing a trust, without dedicated statutory backing. No dedicated state statute governs the temple’s administration.
    2. Tirupati: The Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanams operates under the Andhra Pradesh Charitable and Hindu Religious Institutions and Endowments Act. Its ‘Parakamani‘ system segregates finance, vigilance, and banking functions among separate personnel groups.
    3. Puri Jagannath: The Shri Jagannath Temple Act governs the temple. Hundis are sealed before and after opening, and entries are recorded in statutory forms.
    4. Vaishno Devi: The Jammu and Kashmir Shri Mata Vaishno Devi Shrine Act governs the shrine. A Shrine Board, not individual trustees, opens donation boxes through dedicated finance and security departments.
    5. Siddhivinayak: A Maharashtra law governs the temple’s trust. The main hundi is opened weekly in the presence of an executive officer, a trustee, a bank representative, and an auditor.
    6. Kashi Vishwanath: The Uttar Pradesh Shri Kashi Vishwanath Temple Act governs the temple. A Sub-Divisional Magistrate supervises the opening of its 56 donation boxes.
    7. Key distinction: Unlike these temples, the Ram Temple trust is not subject to mandatory financial audit by the state or central government. Several of its key office-bearers have long-standing associations with the RSS or its affiliates.

    Does statutory governance guarantee that temple donations remain free of controversy?

    1. Tirupati: The temple has tightened access controls, vigilance, and surveillance over the years after instances of theft involving employees and volunteers.
    2. Puri Jagannath: The Ratna Bhandar dispute centred on the custody and inventory of temple valuables. It led to court-directed scrutiny and fresh inventories.
    3. Kashi Vishwanath: Efforts have increasingly focused on routing donations through official channels. This shifts donations away from direct offerings to priests.
    4. Siddhivinayak: The temple has periodically faced scrutiny over governance and financial management.
    5. Implication: Institutional safeguards at older temples were built over time, not overnight. The Ram Temple’s current gap reflects its early stage of institutional development, not a unique failure.

    What traditions of temple management operate independent of statutory government frameworks?

    1. Family management: Temples are often managed by hereditary priest lineages known as pandas or pujaris. Offerings, donations, and ritual responsibilities traditionally belong to these families. Control rotates when multiple families are involved.
    2. Family management example: The Udupi Sri Krishna Mutt in Karnataka is administered by eight monasteries called the Ashta Mathas, founded by the 13th-century saint Madhvacharya. Each matha manages the mutt for two years. The next cycle for a matha comes only after 16 years.
    3. Mahant system: A single spiritual head, called a mahant, a spiritual head holding administrative and successor-nominating authority over a math, holds prime authority over temple assets, offerings, and administration. He typically appoints or nominates his successor.
    4. Mahant system example: The Gorakhnath Math in Gorakhpur is headed by Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath. He was appointed by the late Mahant Avaidyanath. Similar successor-based systems operate in the Shankaracharya mathas.
    5. Akhada system: Akhadas are autonomous organisations of sadhus that function as collective bodies with elected or consensus-based heads. They are also called Panchayati Akhadas, self-governing collectives of sadhus functioning through elected or consensus-based heads.
    6. Akhada system role: Akhadas appoint priests, oversee rituals, and control donations. They are prioritised for the holy dip at the Mahakumbh according to their relative status.

    Why has the Ram Temple donations controversy revived the debate over the extent of state control over religious institutions?

    1. Colonial origin of state control: The British introduced the Religious Endowments Act in 1863. It handed control of temples to committees set up under the Act, but the government retained influence through other legal provisions.
    2. Statutory blueprint: The Madras Hindu Religious Endowments Act, 1925 empowered provincial governments to legislate on endowments. Its powers expanded over time to include oversight and takeover of temple management. It became the blueprint for later state laws after Independence.
    3. Constitutional basis: Article 25(2) (The constitutional provision allowing the state to regulate secular activities linked to religious practice) empowers the state to regulate or restrict any economic, financial, political, or other secular activity associated with religious practice. This provision is the basis for state legislation governing temple endowments.
    4. Asymmetry across religions: Muslim and Christian institutions are managed through community-run boards or trusts. Statutory government-linked frameworks of the kind that govern major Hindu temples do not apply to them in the same way.
    5. Rival demands: The Ram Temple Construction Committee has proposed appointing a CEO to manage trust affairs. The Vishwa Hindu Parishad has instead called for temples across the country to be freed from government control.

    Conclusion

    The Ram Temple donations controversy stems from a specific institutional gap. The temple is governed by a trust deed, not a dedicated statute, and is not subject to mandatory financial audit. Bringing it under a statutory or audit framework similar to other major temples would close this specific gap. It would not by itself guarantee immunity from future controversy, since statutorily governed temples such as Tirupati, Puri, Kashi Vishwanath, and Siddhivinayak have all faced their own governance disputes. The unresolved question is political: whether India moves toward greater statutory oversight of temples or toward the Vishwa Hindu Parishad’s demand to free them from government control altogether.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2024] Public charitable trusts have the potential to make India’s development more inclusive as they relate to certain vital public issues. Comment.

    Relevance: The PYQ tests the role of religious and charitable trusts in governance, public welfare, accountability, and inclusive development. The article examines how major temple trusts manage donations, institutional governance, transparency mechanisms, and the extent of state regulation, making it a direct case study of public charitable trusts in India.