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Type: Explained

  • Capital Markets: Challenges and Developments

    Capital flight and pressure on the rupee

    Why in the News?

    The Indian Rupee is under intense depreciatory pressure. This is driven by significant capital outflows and surging global oil prices. This situation is particularly critical because, unlike previous cycles, capital flight is occurring based on the mere expectation of future interest rate hikes in developed economies, rather than actual hikes. This “pre-emptive” exit by foreign investors, coupled with a sharp rise in LPG and petrol prices, has triggered domestic hardships and a reverse migration of workers. The scale of the problem is highlighted by the fact that even without a formal change in U.S. Federal Reserve or Bank of England rates (currently held at 3.75% since December 2025), the Indian external account is facing a “taper tantrum” style exodus. This threatens the stability of India’s post-pandemic recovery and widening the Current Account Deficit to unsustainable levels.

    How do global geopolitical shifts trigger domestic capital flight?

    1. Geopolitical Hostilities: Promotes risk-aversion among foreign investors due to conflict in the Persian Gulf and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.
    2. Capital Outflows: Leads to the liquidation of Indian assets as investors seek “safe haven” currencies, primarily the U.S. Dollar.
    3. Currency Weakening: Results in the depreciation of the Rupee relative to major currencies, increasing the cost of imports.

    Why is the current pressure on the rupee different from previous episodes of depreciation?

    1. Pre-emptive Capital Flight: Reflects investor withdrawal before actual foreign interest rate hikes, unlike earlier periods where monetary tightening had already occurred.
    2. Geopolitical Trigger: Emerges from uncertainty generated by hostilities in the Persian Gulf and fears regarding the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a critical oil transit route.
    3. Double Vulnerability: Combines rising oil prices and capital outflows, placing simultaneous pressure on India’s currency and external account.
    4. Sharp Contrast with Earlier Trends: Occurs despite the U.S. Federal Reserve and Bank of England not raising rates, signalling a shift toward expectation-driven financial behaviour.
    5. Domestic Spillover: Rising LPG and petrol prices have increased hardship among working households and reportedly triggered reverse migration of workers back to villages.

    Can we compare the present situation with the 2013 ‘Taper Tantrum’?

    1. Taper Tantrum Parallel: Mirrors the 2013 episode, when expectations of reduced quantitative easing by the U.S. Federal Reserve caused sharp capital withdrawals from emerging markets.
    2. Expectation-Driven Exit: Demonstrates how the mere anticipation of tighter monetary policy, rather than actual policy implementation, can trigger capital outflows.
    3. Historical Similarity: Repeats a pattern where global financial sentiment rapidly alters investor behaviour in emerging economies.
    4. Critical Difference: Current outflows appear to be happening even earlier, before any formal signal of rate hikes has materialised.
    5. External Account Risk: Suggests India may face stronger pressure if future rate increases actually occur.

    Why does capital flight create pressure on the rupee?

    1. Capital Outflows: Foreign investors reduce holdings in Indian financial assets during periods of uncertainty. This reduces demand for the rupee and increases demand for foreign currencies.
    2. Exchange Rate Depreciation: Reduced foreign capital inflows weaken the rupee because investors convert rupee-denominated assets into dollars and other reserve currencies.
    3. Interest Rate Differential: Investment decisions depend on comparative returns between India and advanced economies. Higher expected returns abroad reduce the attractiveness of emerging markets.
    4. External Vulnerability: India remains vulnerable due to dependence on foreign capital to finance its current account deficit.

    How does capital flight occur through interest rate differentials?

    1. Interest Rate Differential: Determines investor preference based on comparative returns between Indian assets and foreign financial markets.
    2. Return Calculation: Requires Indian investments to compensate investors for inflation risk and currency depreciation risk in addition to nominal returns.
    3. Foreign Monetary Tightening: Encourages investors to reduce holdings of Indian assets if foreign rates rise and returns abroad become relatively attractive.
    4. Currency Depreciation: Occurs when foreign investors liquidate rupee-denominated assets and convert holdings into stronger reserve currencies such as the U.S. Dollar.
    5. Emerging Market Vulnerability: Exposes economies like India because dependence on external capital increases sensitivity to global financial conditions.

    How are geopolitical tensions in West Asia aggravating India’s external vulnerabilities?

    1. Strait of Hormuz Risk: Closure concerns regarding the Strait of Hormuz have heightened uncertainty because nearly one-third of global seaborne crude oil passes through the route.
    2. Crude Oil Prices: Rising oil prices increase India’s import bill because India imports nearly 85% of its crude oil requirement.
    3. Current Account Deficit (CAD): Higher oil imports widen the CAD by increasing expenditure on imports relative to exports.
    4. Inflationary Pressure: Expensive crude increases fuel and transport costs, thereby raising inflation across sectors.
    5. Investor Sentiment: Global uncertainty encourages investors to shift capital toward safer assets such as U.S. treasury securities.

    How does monetary policy uncertainty complicate exchange rate management?

    1. Inflation Persistence: Prolonged geopolitical conflict increases energy prices, thereby sustaining inflation.
    2. Central Bank Dilemma: Monetary authorities face a trade-off between controlling inflation and supporting growth.
    3. Interest Rate Transmission: Higher interest rates strengthen currency attractiveness but may slow economic growth.
    4. Policy Signalling: Ambiguity regarding future global monetary policy creates volatility in exchange rate markets.
    5. Example:  U.S. Federal Reserve: Delayed response to inflation after the pandemic contributed to uncertainty regarding future tightening.

    Why are current policy responses insufficient to address structural vulnerabilities?

    1. Moral Suasion: Appeals to reduce gold and petroleum consumption may temporarily reduce import demand but do not resolve structural imbalances.
    2. Import Duties: Increase in import duties on gold seeks to reduce non-essential imports and conserve foreign exchange.
    3. RBI Intervention: Restrictions on certain foreign exchange derivative contracts aim to reduce excessive currency speculation.
    4. Structural Limitation: Temporary measures cannot fully offset persistent vulnerabilities arising from oil dependence and foreign capital reliance.
    5. External Dependence: Rising foreign interest rates may intensify pressure on India despite domestic interventions.

    What are the long-term implications for India’s macroeconomic stability?

    1. Exchange Rate Volatility: Persistent rupee depreciation increases import costs and external debt burden.
    2. Inflation Risk: Imported inflation weakens household purchasing power and increases cost of living.
    3. Growth Concerns: High interest rates to stabilize the rupee may reduce investment and economic expansion.
    4. External Sector Stress: Wider current account deficits may weaken investor confidence.
    5. Financial Stability: Sudden capital outflows increase volatility in equity and bond markets.

    Conclusion

    India’s current external sector stress reflects more than routine rupee depreciation. The combination of geopolitical uncertainty, rising oil prices, and expectation-driven capital flight has exposed underlying vulnerabilities in the economy. Temporary measures such as derivative restrictions and gold import duties may moderate immediate pressures, but sustained stability requires reducing structural dependence on imported energy and volatile foreign capital.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2018] How would the recent phenomena of protectionism and currency manipulations in world trade affect macroeconomic stability of India?

    Linkage: The PYQ tests understanding of how global trade distortions (protectionism, currency depreciation/manipulation) affect India’s macroeconomic stability, capital flows, inflation, exports, and exchange rate management. It is directly linked because the article discusses how global uncertainty and anticipated foreign monetary tightening are weakening the rupee through capital flight

  • Trade Sector Updates – Falling Exports, TIES, MEIS, Foreign Trade Policy, etc.

    Behind government ban on sugar exports: Iran war, El Nino

    Why in the News?

    India has moved sugar from the “restricted” category to the “prohibited” category till September 2026, effectively banning exports at a time when global prices remain attractive. The decision marks a sharp shift from India’s recent role as a major sugar exporter, with shipments touching nearly 11 million tonnes annually. This is due to the fears of domestic shortages due to a weak monsoon risk from El Niño and fertiliser disruptions arising from the Iran-West Asia conflict.

    Why has India prohibited sugar exports despite adequate domestic stocks?

    1. Stock Preservation: Ensures sufficient domestic sugar availability amid uncertainty. India expects 279 lakh tonnes of production against 280 lakh tonnes of domestic consumption, leaving little surplus.
    2. Closing Stocks: Prevents depletion of reserves. Sugar closing stocks are projected at only 42.53 lakh tonnes, the lowest since 2016-17, compared to 143.33 lakh tonnes in 2018-19.
    3. Export Curtailment: Restricts outward shipments to avoid shortages. India exported nearly 11 million tonnes in earlier years, but exports for 2025-26 are estimated at only 6.5 lakh tonnes.
    4. Inflation Management: Reduces risk of food inflation. The government already faces pressure from fuel and fertilizer inflation, making sugar price volatility politically sensitive.
    5. Policy Shift: Reflects stronger precautionary intervention. Sugar has moved from the “restricted” category to “prohibited category”, representing a more stringent control regime.

    How can El Niño affect India’s sugar economy?

    1. Monsoon Disruption: Alters rainfall distribution. El Niño, caused by abnormal warming of the eastern equatorial Pacific Ocean, weakens monsoon circulation and raises risks of rainfall deficiency.
    2. Sugarcane Vulnerability: Affects water-intensive crops disproportionately. Sugarcane requires high water availability and remains sensitive to rainfall stress.
    3. Crop Timing: Creates risks for recently planted crops.
      1. In Uttar Pradesh, sugarcane planted during February-April 2025 will mature in 11-12 months, making it dependent on monsoon conditions.
      2. Nearly 75% sugarcane in Maharashtra belongs to the pre-season crop, planted between July-December, making rainfall variability significant.
    4. Climate Forecast: Increases uncertainty for agricultural planning. Global climate models indicate a 50% probability of El Niño conditions emerging during the second half of 2025.

    How has the Iran conflict influenced India’s sugar policy?

    1. Fertiliser Supply Risks and Production CostsInput Disruptions: 
      1. Sugarcane requires high doses of urea. Disruptions to Gulf-based supply chains, where 63% of India’s nitrogen fertilizer imports (urea/ammonia) originate, threaten to create shortages during the sowing season.
      2. Rising Costs: War risk insurance and higher freight rates have significantly increased the cost of imported raw materials for fertilizers, potentially lowering yields if farmers struggle to afford them
    2. Food Inflation Management: The government is monitoring the crisis through a special group of ministers to ensure domestic availability of sugar. This sector is  viewed as sensitive to inflation, particularly when international prices are lower than domestic ones, as noted in a March 2026 report.
    3. Geopolitical Linkage: Expands non-traditional security concerns. Agricultural decisions increasingly reflect developments in energy corridors and maritime chokepoints.

    Why are sugar stocks becoming a policy concern?

    1. Nine-Year Low: Indicates tightening domestic supply. Sugar closing stocks may decline to 42.53 lakh tonnes, the lowest in nearly a decade.
    2. Production-Consumption Gap: Limits export flexibility. Production of 279 lakh tonnes remains marginally below domestic demand of 280 lakh tonnes.
    3. Administrative Uncertainty: Raises concerns over reporting accuracy. Sugar mills file monthly P-II returns regarding stocks, but actual physical availability may vary.
    4. Precautionary Governance: Avoids crisis response later. The government seeks to prevent a sudden shortage that could force emergency imports.

    Does banning sugar exports improve food security or distort markets?

    Banning sugar exports is a double-edged policy that achieves short-term domestic stability at the cost of long-term economic efficiency. It simultaneously improves immediate food security and distorts agricultural markets.

    1. Improvement in Food Security: Ensures domestic affordability. Export restrictions shield consumers from price spikes.
      1. It shields local consumers
      2. It controls food inflation: Sugar is a key ingredient in processed foods. Controlling its price prevents a cascading inflationary effect on essential consumer goods.
      3. It ensures adequate buffer stock: Restricting exports ensures that the country maintains a reliable domestic supply, neutralizing risks from weather-induced crop failures.
    2. Depresses Farmer Income: Artificially capping domestic prices prevents sugarcane farmers and mills from profiting from lucrative global market premiums.
    3. Damages Trade Reliability: Abrupt policy shifts harm India’s reputation as a reliable global trade partner. It forces international buyers to permanently shift to competitors like Brazil or Thailand.
    4. Market Distortion: Encourages informal trade channels. Historically, excessive restrictions on commodities with high demand can incentivise smuggling.
    5. Discourages Sector Investment: Unpredictable export bans create policy uncertainty, which discourages private capital investment in modernizing refinery and storage infrastructure.

    How does the issue reflect the growing climate-geopolitics nexus in agriculture?

    The sugar crisis highlights the emerging climate-geopolitics nexus, where environmental shocks and geopolitical conflicts no longer act in isolation. Instead, they compound each other to threaten global food systems.

    1. The Multiplier Effect: Climate Shocks Meet Geopolitical Chokepoints
      1. Double Vulnerability: Extreme weather events (like erratic monsoons) shrink domestic sugar yields, while simultaneous conflicts in the Gulf disrupt the import of critical inputs like fertilizers.
      2. Chokepoint Dependency: Agriculture is bound to maritime corridors; a crisis in the Strait of Hormuz directly threatens the domestic supply of urea.
    2. From Subsidies to Security
      1. Weaponised Scarcity: Food and input supplies are increasingly used as geopolitical leverage. This forces nations to shift from open trade to defensive, protectionist policies.
      2. National Security Priority: Agricultural policies have shifted from simple farm-income management to a core pillar of national security. This is aimed to shield populations from externally driven food inflation.
    3. Institutional Overlap: The Need for Integrated Policy
      1. Breaking Silos: Managing modern agricultural stability requires synchronized actions across traditionally separate sectors:
        1. Ministry of Agriculture: Optimising crop patterns for climate resilience.
        2. Ministry of External Affairs: Securing alternative fertilizer corridors.
        3. Ministry of Commerce: Calibrating sudden, reactive export bans 

    Conclusion

    India’s sugar export ban reflects a precautionary response to converging risks from El Niño, fertiliser insecurity and inflation pressures. While the move strengthens short-term domestic food security, long-term resilience requires crop diversification, efficient water use, climate-resilient agriculture and stable trade policy.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2024] Elucidate the importance of buffer stocks for stabilizing agricultural prices in India. What are the challenges associated with the storage of buffer stock? Discuss

    Linkage: The sugar export ban directly concerns buffer stocks, domestic availability and price stabilisation, core GS-3 themes under food security and agricultural markets. India prohibited sugar exports due to concerns over declining closing stocks and possible supply disruptions from El Niño and fertiliser shortages. This reflects the role of strategic stocks in preventing inflation and ensuring food security

  • Foreign Policy Watch: India-United States

    How farm exports have grown despite US tariffs

    Why in the News?

    India’s agricultural exports recorded growth in 2025-26 despite higher tariff barriers imposed by the United States. This assumes importance because farm exports grew even when tariffs were raised sharply from 10% to 25% and then to 50% within months.

    How has India’s agricultural trade performed amid U.S. tariff pressures?

    1. Export Growth: Agricultural exports increased by 2.3% year-on-year, reaching $53.13 billion in 2025-26, marginally below the all-time high of $53.2 billion in 2022-23.
    2. Trade Resilience: Overall exports rose 0.9% to $441.7 billion, despite aggressive tariff increases by the U.S. administration.
    3. Tariff Escalation: The U.S. increased tariffs from 10% (February 10) to 25% (August 7) and later 50% (August 27), creating major trade uncertainty.
    4. Comparative Contrast: Contrary to expectations of export contraction under higher tariffs, India sustained agricultural export growth through diversification.
    5. Trade Balance: Agricultural trade surplus narrowed over time, despite remaining positive, due to increasing imports.

    Why were Indian agricultural exports able to withstand U.S. tariff shocks?

    1. Market Diversification: Exporters reduced excessive dependence on the U.S. market and expanded into Vietnam, UAE, Japan, Belgium, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Bangladesh.
    2. Commodity Diversification: Growth shifted toward high-performing sectors such as marine products, buffalo meat, coffee and basmati rice, reducing concentration risks.
    3. Demand Expansion: Alternative markets compensated for reduced U.S. demand through higher shipments.
    4. Competitive Pricing: India retained export competitiveness in labour-intensive and agro-processing sectors.
    5. Supply Flexibility: Exporters redirected shipments geographically instead of relying on one dominant market.

    How did marine products perform?

    1. Marine Exports: Marine exports grew 13.9%, crossing $8.4 billion, becoming the top-performing agricultural export.
    2. Alternative Markets: Exports expanded to China ($1.2 billion), Vietnam ($881.8 million), Japan ($408.5 million) and Belgium ($225.3 million).
    3. Frozen Shrimp Diversification: Exporters offset reduced U.S. demand through shipments to alternative destinations.

    Why did buffalo meat exports rise significantly?

    1. Export Surge: Buffalo meat exports increased 25.6%, touching a record $5.1 billion, surpassing the previous peak of $4.8 billion (2014-15).
    2. Major Markets: Key destinations included Vietnam ($740.8 million), Egypt ($656.1 million), UAE ($300.4 million) and Saudi Arabia ($317.6 million).
    3. Volume Growth: Exports rose from 1.2 lakh tonnes (2024-25) to 14.2 lakh tonnes (2025-26).

    How has India emerged as a stronger coffee exporter?

    1. Coffee Boom: Coffee exports crossed the $2 billion mark for the first time in 2025-26.
    2. Structural Driver: High global coffee prices and supply disruptions in major producers such as Brazil and Vietnam increased India’s competitiveness.
    3. Export Destinations: Major buyers included Italy, Germany, Russia, UAE and Belgium.

    What explains growth in basmati rice and processed foods?

    1. Basmati Exports: Basmati rice exports increased from $337.1 million to $285.9 million (decline in U.S. market but overall diversification sustained demand).
    2. Processed Foods: Processed fruits and vegetables exports expanded due to rising international demand.
    3. Fresh Produce: Exports of grapes, pomegranates, mangoes, bananas, onions and vegetables reached record levels.

    Why do edible oil imports remain structurally high?

    1. Import Dependence: Vegetable oil imports reached a record $19.56 billion, despite declining volumes.
    2. Domestic Deficit: India imports nearly 40% of edible oil consumption, exposing vulnerability in oilseed production.
    3. Top Imports: Major imports included palm oil, soybean oil and sunflower oil.

    Why has cotton turned from an export to an import commodity?

    1. Import Surge: Cotton imports rose due to domestic shortages and absence of new yield-enhancing technologies.
    2. Structural Weakness: Bt cotton productivity gains stagnated, affecting competitiveness.
    3. Export Decline: Cotton shifted from a traditional export commodity toward higher import dependence.

    What trends are visible in fruit and pulse imports?

    1. Fresh Fruits: Imports rose to $3.5 billion, including apples, kiwis, grapes, pears and dates.
    2. Pulses: Imports increased because of domestic supply shortfalls and consumption demand.
    3. Nutritional Demand: Rising incomes contributed to diversified food demand.

    Does India’s agricultural trade surplus remain sustainable?

    India’s agricultural trade surplus faces critical sustainability risks despite remaining positive at $12.7 billion in 2025-26.

    1. Trade Surplus: India continues to remain a net agricultural exporter.
    2. Aggressive Structural Erosion: Agricultural trade surplus declined from $27.7 billion (2013-14) to $12.7 billion (2025-26).
    3. Import Growth: Faster growth in edible oil, cotton and fruit imports reduced net gains.
      1. The Forex Drain: High-volume imports of edible oils ($19.5B) and pulses ($3.6B) create an structural annual drag of $23.1 billion.
    4. Weak Import Substitution: Domestic policy interventions have failed to scale local oilseed and pulse production to displace international imports.

    What are the broader economic and policy implications?

    1. Export Diversification: Reduces overdependence on single-country markets and strengthens trade resilience.
    2. Food Processing: Expands value-added exports and rural employment.
    3. MSP and Competitiveness: Balances domestic food security with export competitiveness.
    4. Oilseed Mission: Necessitates domestic edible oil production reforms.
    5. Technology Adoption: Requires improved cotton productivity and climate-resilient farming.
    6. Trade Diplomacy: Strengthens India’s negotiating position amid rising global protectionism.

    Conclusion

    India’s farm export resilience despite U.S. tariff escalation demonstrates the benefits of market diversification and commodity specialization. However, rising dependence on edible oils, cotton and select food imports highlights structural weaknesses in domestic agricultural productivity. A balanced strategy combining export competitiveness with import substitution and technological modernization remains essential for sustaining India’s agricultural trade surplus.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2018] How would the recent phenomena of protectionism and currency manipulations in world trade affect macroeconomic stability of India?

    Linkage: This article directly relates to global protectionism and tariff barriers, as India’s agricultural exports faced higher U.S. tariffs but remained resilient through diversification. It helps in understanding how trade shocks, export diversification and global market shifts affect India’s macroeconomic and agricultural stability.

  • Economic Indicators and Various Reports On It- GDP, FD, EODB, WIR etc

    Centre doubles import duty on gold, silver; move is criticised as retrograde

    Why in the News?

    India has doubled the effective import duty on gold and silver from nearly 9.2% to 18.4%. The decision came amid concerns over the impact of the West Asia crisis on India’s external sector and soon after the Prime Minister urged citizens to reduce gold purchases to conserve foreign exchange.

    How has the government changed the import duty structure on gold and silver?

    1. Customs Duty Revision: The government increased basic customs duty on gold and silver from 5% to 10%.
    2. AIDC Increase: The Agriculture Infrastructure and Development Cess (AIDC) increased from 1% to 5%.
    3. IGST Continuity: The Integrated Goods and Services Tax (IGST) remains 3% on the assessable value.
    4. Effective Tax Burden: The cumulative effective tax burden increased from around 9.2% to 18.4%, including customs duty, cess, insurance, freight cost, and IGST.
    5. Immediate Implementation: The revised rates came into force through official notifications issued on 13 May, without prior consultation.

    Why did the government increase import duty on precious metals?

    The government increased the import duty on gold and silver to defend India’s macroeconomic balance against external shocks by prioritizing non-discretionary resource allocations.

    1. Current Account Deficit (CAD): Reducing import volumes directly curbs the widening Current Account Deficit to keep the trade balance within sustainable limits.
    2. Foreign Exchange Conservation: India aims to preserve forex reserves and rupee stability, especially amid geopolitical uncertainty.
    3. West Asia Crisis: Regional instability threatens oil prices, logistics chains, and shipping routes, increasing vulnerability for a crude oil-import dependent economy.
    4. Import Prioritisation: The government appears to prioritise foreign exchange for essential imports such as:
      1. Crude Oil
      2. Fertilisers
      3. Industrial Raw Materials
      4. Defence Requirements
      5. Critical Technologies
      6. Capital Goods
    5. Demand Management: Gold is treated as a consumption and investment good, unlike strategic imports necessary for production.

    Why are the gems and jewellery industry opposing the decision?

    1. Export Cost Escalation: Exporters argue that expensive imported gold raises production costs, reducing competitiveness in international markets.
    2. Working Capital Blockage: Exporters now face bank guarantees of ₹28-30 lakh per kg of duty-free gold, creating liquidity stress.
    3. MSME Vulnerability: MSMEs constitute nearly 80% of Gems and Jewellery Export Promotion Council (GJEPC) membership, making the sector particularly vulnerable.
    4. Employment Risks: Higher costs could reduce export orders and employment in a labour-intensive sector.
    5. Export Disruption: Industry stakeholders warn of lower shipments during a period already marked by trade disruption due to the West Asia crisis.

    Can higher import duties reduce gold imports effectively?

    1. Historical Experience: India’s past experience indicates that higher gold tariffs often fail to proportionately reduce imports.
    2. Persistent Demand: Cultural demand for gold in India remains high due to:
      1. Marriage Expenditure
      2. Household Savings
      3. Investment Demand
      4. Inflation Hedge
    3. Price Transmission: Higher tariffs often increase domestic gold prices rather than reduce demand.
    4. Import Resilience: Despite global gold prices doubling in recent years, imports have not fallen proportionately.
    5. Limited Elasticity: Demand for gold in India demonstrates low price elasticity, limiting tariff effectiveness.

    Does a higher duty increase smuggling and informal trade?

    1. Smuggling Incentives: Large differences between domestic and international prices create incentives for illegal gold inflows.
    2. Historical Precedent: India witnessed higher gold smuggling during earlier phases of elevated import duties.
    3. Revenue Leakage: Smuggling reduces formal tax collection and weakens customs enforcement.
    4. Informal Economy Expansion: Illegal channels strengthen hawala networks and black-market transactions.
    5. Policy Trade-off: Excessively high tariffs may undermine the original objective of reducing imports.

    How important is West Asia for India’s gems and jewellery trade?

    1. Diamond Export Share: West Asia accounts for nearly 18% of India’s diamond exports during the first nine months of FY 2025-26.
    2. Import Dependence: Around 68% of India’s rough diamond imports originate from the UAE and Israel.
    3. Trade Vulnerability: Regional instability directly affects supply chains, shipping, insurance costs, and export demand.
    4. Strategic Dependence: The sector remains deeply linked to West Asian trade networks.

    What concerns have been raised regarding policy transparency?

    1. Complex Taxation Structure: Multiple amendments and notifications complicate duty calculations.
    2. Ease of Doing Business Issues: Frequent tariff changes increase compliance burdens for traders and exporters.
    3. Predictability Deficit: Sudden duty revisions reduce policy certainty for investment planning.
    4. Administrative Complexity: Multi-layered taxation may weaken transparency in customs administration.

    What are the Policy Alternatives to Import Duty Hike?

    1. Gold Monetisation Scheme (GMS): Mobilises idle household gold through bank deposits, reducing dependence on fresh imports.
    2. Sovereign Gold Bonds (SGBs): Provides gold-linked returns without physical purchase, lowering demand for imported gold.
    3. Financial Savings Alternatives: Encourages investment in mutual funds, fixed deposits, equities, and pension schemes, reducing gold dependence as a savings tool.
    4. Recycling of Domestic Gold: Strengthens refining and reuse of existing gold stock, reducing import needs.
    5. Formalisation of Gold Trade: Improves hallmarking, digital tracking, and compliance, reducing smuggling and increasing tax collection.

    Conclusion

    The increase in gold and silver import duties shows India’s effort to protect foreign exchange reserves and manage external economic pressures during global uncertainty. However, past experience suggests that very high duties on gold may increase smuggling, disrupt markets, and hurt exports. A balanced approach, combining moderate tariffs with alternatives like digital or financial gold investments, may work better in the long run.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2017] Account for the failure of the manufacturing sector in achieving the goal of labour-intensive exports rather than capital-intensive exports. Suggest measures for more labour-intensive rather than capital-intensive exports

    Linkage: The article links directly to this PYQ because the gems and jewellery sector is a labour-intensive export industry, and higher gold import duties can reduce its global competitiveness. It also highlights the challenge of balancing trade policy with export growth and MSME employment.

  • International Monetary Fund,World Bank,AIIB, ADB and India

    The toll of structural adjustments on the global south and a case for accountability

    Why in the News?

    A new paper published in BMJ Global Health (March 2026) has revived scrutiny of IMF and World Bank Structural Adjustment Programmes (SAPs), arguing that these institutions owe reparations to Global South countries for long-term socio-economic damage.

    What are Structural Adjustment Programmes (SAPs)?

    They are a set of economic mandates imposed by international financial institutions, principally the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank, on developing nations. They are imposed as a strict prerequisite for securing new loans, refinancing existing debt, or avoiding sovereign default. 

    How did Structural Adjustment Programmes emerge in the Global South?

    1. Debt Crisis: Developing countries borrowed heavily during the 1970s for industrialization and imports. Rising interest rates by the U.S. Federal Reserve in the late 1970s sharply increased repayment burdens.
    2. Dollar-Denominated Loans: Countries borrowing in U.S. dollars faced rising repayment obligations due to currency depreciation beyond domestic control.
    3. IMF-World Bank Intervention: Financial assistance became conditional upon implementing structural economic reforms aimed at restoring macroeconomic stability.
    4. Debt Leverage: Creditor institutions used debt obligations to push policy reforms in exchange for access to loans and refinancing.
    5. Historical Context: SAPs coincided with the rise of market-oriented neoliberal economic policies globally.

    What were the major components of Structural Adjustment Programmes?

    1. Fiscal Austerity: Reduced public expenditure on healthcare, education, subsidies, and social security to reduce fiscal deficits.
    2. Privatization: Transferred state-owned enterprises and public services to private ownership.
    3. Trade Liberalization: Removed trade barriers and opened domestic markets to global competition.
    4. Deregulation: Reduced industrial regulations, labour protections, and capital controls.
    5. Currency Devaluation: Encouraged export competitiveness through exchange-rate reforms.
    6. Conditional Financing: Linked access to international loans with compliance to reform packages.

    How did SAPs affect economic growth in the Global South?

    1. Growth Slowdown: Economic growth reportedly declined sharply during adjustment periods. The Global South’s average growth rate fell from nearly 3.2% before SAPs to 0.7% during the 1980s-1990s.
    2. Income Loss: Developing countries collectively lost an estimated $480 billion annually in potential national income.
    3. Latin America: Real per capita income reportedly declined by 15% after 1980, recovering to previous levels only by 2006.
    4. Sub-Saharan Africa: Income levels reportedly fell sharply before eventual recovery decades later.
    5. Industrial Weakening: Liberalization exposed domestic industries to global competition before adequate institutional preparedness.
    6. Developmental Sovereignty: Reduced state capacity to pursue independent industrial policy.

    What social consequences emerged from Structural Adjustment Programmes?

    1. Healthcare Retrenchment: Public health expenditure cuts weakened medical infrastructure and service delivery.
    2. Education Cuts: Reduced state spending constrained human capital development.
    3. Child Mortality: SAP-linked effects reportedly contributed to 56.62 additional child deaths per 1,000 births in Sub-Saharan Africa.
    4. Maternal Mortality: Around 360 additional maternal deaths per 1,00,000 births were associated with SAP-linked reforms.
    5. Excess Mortality: Nearly 3,05,000 excess infant deaths reportedly occurred between 1986-2010 relative to pre-adjustment trends.
    6. User Fees: Privatization and reduced welfare spending increased costs of essential services.
    7. Food Inflation: Currency depreciation increased food prices and reduced affordability.

    Did SAPs reinforce historical patterns of economic dependency?

    1. Neo-Colonial Continuity: Critics argue SAPs reopened developing economies to exploitative global market structures.
    2. Labour Cost Compression: Reduced labour protections lowered production costs for multinational firms.
    3. Capital Flight: Liberalized financial systems facilitated outflows of profits.
    4. Profit Repatriation: Private capital reportedly extracted profits exceeding $250 billion annually.
    5. Trade Deregulation: Wealth transfers through tax avoidance reportedly exceeded $1 trillion annually.
    6. Domestic Reinvestment Loss: Economic surpluses were diverted away from national development priorities.

    Why is there a growing demand for accountability and reparations?

    1. Institutional Responsibility: IMF and World Bank are viewed as principal architects of adjustment policies.
    2. Public Service Losses: Compensation demands focus on healthcare, education, and welfare spending losses.
    3. Counterfactual Justice: Proposals estimate damages by comparing actual outcomes with hypothetical development without SAPs.
    4. Mortality Compensation: Reparative justice arguments extend to health and mortality impacts.
    5. Governance Imbalance: The Global North controls a disproportionate share of voting power within Bretton Woods institutions.
    6. Sovereign Immunity: Legal protections restrict lawsuits against international financial institutions.

    What reforms are suggested for global financial governance?

    1. Conditionality Reform: Eliminates rigid structural adjustment requirements tied to financial assistance.
    2. Institutional Democratization: Expands policy voice of developing countries within IMF and World Bank governance.
    3. Policy Sovereignty: Ensures aid recipients retain flexibility over domestic development choices.
    4. Alternative Financing: Expands access to institutions such as the New Development Bank (BRICS Bank) and the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB).
    5. Inclusive Development: Balances macroeconomic stability with social welfare investments.

    Conclusion

    The structural adjustment debate reflects a larger tension between macroeconomic stabilization and social justice. While fiscal discipline and market reforms can support economic efficiency, externally imposed conditionalities without domestic context risk undermining welfare and developmental autonomy. Future global financial governance requires balancing economic reform with equity, democratic participation, and sovereign policy space.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2024] Examine the pattern and trend of public expenditure on social services in the post-reforms period in India. To what extent this has been in consonance with achieving the objective of inclusive growth?

    Linkage: The PYQ examines whether post-reform economic policies balanced fiscal reforms with social sector expenditure to ensure inclusive growth. IMF-World Bank structural adjustment policies are critiqued for reducing public spending on health, education and welfare. This highlights how austerity can undermine inclusive development outcomes.

  • Water Management – Institutional Reforms, Conservation Efforts, etc.

    How India is governing its water resources

    Why in the News?

    India’s water governance architecture has come into focus amid rising concerns over groundwater depletion, urban water stress, declining per-capita water availability, and climate-induced hydrological variability. The debate has gained significance because India supports nearly one-fifth of the global population with only around 4% of global freshwater resources. At the same time, nearly 600 million people face high to extreme water stress.

    Why is India facing a water paradox despite substantial rainfall?

    1. Hydrological Abundance: India receives nearly 4,000 BCM of annual rainfall, yet only about 1,100 BCM is considered usable, due to storage constraints and uneven distribution.
    2. Population Pressure: India supports nearly 20% of the world’s population while possessing only around 4% of global freshwater resources, intensifying stress.
    3. Uneven Distribution: Rainfall remains spatially and temporally concentrated, creating regional imbalances between water-rich and water-scarce regions.
    4. Storage Deficit: Limited reservoir capacity and weak rainwater harvesting reduce effective utilization of precipitation.
    5. Ecological Constraints: River degradation, catchment destruction, and wetland loss reduce water retention capacity.
      1. Wetland Degradation & Encroachment: The destruction of crucial wetlands like the Pallikaranai marshland in Chennai or the deepor Beel in Guwahati, used for urban infrastructure projects; This prevents natural rainwater storage, turning potential recharge areas into urban floodplains.
      2. River Degradation and Pollution: Rapid industrialization has severely polluted critical rivers like the Yamuna (Delhi/Agra segment) and Ganga (near Varanasi/Kanpur); This renders the surface water unfit for consumption and requiring higher water treatment costs, making the available water unusable.
      3. Catchment Destruction and Deforestation: Deforestation in the Himalayan catchment areas of the Ganga has accelerated soil erosion and reduced groundwater infiltration.
      4. Over-extraction Leading to Aquifer Degradation: Unsustainable groundwater pumping in states like Punjab and Haryana is depleting aquifers. This reduces the natural storage capacity of the soil, making the region more vulnerable to drought.

    How severe is India’s water stress and what trends indicate growing vulnerability?

    1. Water Stress: Around 600 million people face high to extreme water stress, indicating large-scale vulnerability.
    2. Declining Per Capita Availability: Annual per-capita water availability has declined from over 5,000 cubic metres after independence to nearly 1,400 cubic metres, approaching water stress thresholds.
    3. Groundwater Dependence: India has become the world’s largest groundwater extractor, accounting for nearly 25% of global groundwater extraction.
    4. Agricultural Pressure: Agriculture consumes the majority of freshwater resources, especially through inefficient flood irrigation.
      1. Total Supply Share: Agriculture consumes approximately 80% to 84% of India’s total available freshwater.
      2. Groundwater Depletion: The sector sucks up 89% of all extracted groundwater in the country. India pumps more groundwater annually than the US and the EU combined.
      3. Annual Extraction Volume: Out of nearly 239 BCM of total groundwater extracted, 208.5 BCM goes solely to agricultural activities.
    5. Urban Water Crisis: Rapid urbanization increases dependence on distant water sources, groundwater extraction, and tanker economies.

    How is India’s institutional framework governing water resources structured?

    1. Multi-Level Governance: Water governance operates through Union government, State governments, and local bodies, creating a federal framework.
    2. Ministry of Jal Shakti: Functions as the nodal authority for water resources, drinking water, and sanitation.
    3. Central Water Commission (CWC): Ensures surface water planning, river basin development, and flood management.
    4. Central Ground Water Board (CGWB): Supports groundwater assessment, aquifer mapping, and scientific management.
    5. NITI Aayog: Strengthens competitive federalism through Composite Water Management Index, improving accountability and evidence-based policymaking.
    6. State Jurisdiction: Irrigation, groundwater management, and local water supply largely remain State subjects, creating coordination challenges.

    How are national missions strengthening water governance in India?

    1. Jal Jeevan Mission (2019)
      1. Household Connectivity: Expands functional household tap water connections in rural areas.
      2. Implementation Model: Aligns central funding with state execution, improving last-mile delivery.
      3. Universal Coverage: Mission extension until 2028 supports universal access.
    2. Atal Bhujal Yojana
      1. Groundwater Sustainability: Strengthens community-based groundwater budgeting and monitoring in water-stressed regions.
      2. Participatory Governance: Encourages local stakeholder involvement in aquifer management.
    3. Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchayee Yojana (PMKSY)
      1. Micro-Irrigation: Improves water-use efficiency through drip and sprinkler irrigation.
      2. Agricultural Productivity: Supports higher productivity with lower freshwater consumption.
    4. AMRUT Mission
      1. Urban Water Infrastructure: Expands water supply networks, sewerage systems, and wastewater treatment in cities.
    5. Namami Gange Programme
      1. River Basin Restoration: Integrates pollution control, sewage treatment, ecological restoration, and river rejuvenation in the Ganga basin.

    Why does India’s federal water governance face coordination challenges?

    1. Constitutional Fragmentation: Water remains primarily a State subject, while river basins transcend political boundaries.
    2. Institutional Overlap: Multiple agencies create duplication, regulatory gaps, and administrative inefficiencies.
    3. Inter-State River Disputes: Competing demands intensify disputes over river water sharing.
    4. Data Gaps: Weak hydrological databases hinder scientific planning.
    5. Urban-Rural Competition: Competing priorities intensify allocation conflicts.

    Can a circular water economy transform India’s water future?

    A circular water economy is an economic and environmental framework that replaces the traditional, linear “take-make-dispose” approach with a closed-loop system. Instead of extracting freshwater, using it once, and discharging it as waste, a circular model focuses on reducing freshwater withdrawals, recycling wastewater, and recovering valuable by-products to keep water in circulation as long as possible.

    1. Wastewater Reuse: Expands treated wastewater recycling, reducing pressure on freshwater sources.
    2. Efficient Irrigation: Strengthens crop-water efficiency through precision irrigation.
    3. Technological Innovation: Supports smart metering, AI-based monitoring, aquifer mapping, and IoT systems.
    4. River Basin Approach: Encourages integrated watershed and river management.
    5. Community Participation: Improves accountability through decentralized governance.
    6. Climate Resilience: Strengthens adaptation to changing rainfall patterns and droughts.

    Case studies for circular water economy

    1. Wastewater Reuse: Recycling treated municipal sewage for industrial and civic purposes directly preserves premium drinking-quality freshwater for human consumption.
      1. The Chennai Metrowater Model: High-tech plants treat sewage into industrial-grade water. This recycled water is sold directly to major automotive and petrochemical clusters, saving millions of litres of freshwater daily.
      2. Surat Municipal Corporation: Surat treats domestic sewage to tertiary standards and pumps it directly to textile and diamond processing industrial areas, generating municipal revenue while ensuring a reliable water supply.
    2. Efficient Irrigation: Transitioning from wasteful flood irrigation to closed-loop, precision systems maximizes crop yield per drop of water.
      1. Gujarat Green Revolution Company: The state heavily subsidized drip and sprinkler networks. In semi-arid regions like Saurashtra, this allowed farmers to cultivate cotton and groundnuts without collapsing local water tables.
      2. Kaleshwaram Lift Irrigation Zone (Telangana): Instead of using open, evaporative canals, water is piped directly to fields and applied via automated drip lines, reducing agricultural water waste by over 40%.
    3. Technological Innovation: Deploying IoT sensors, automated meters, and data analytics cuts down on systemic water losses and illegal extraction.
      1. Bengaluru’s IoT Water Metering: Tech startups have deployed smart water meters in residential and corporate hubs. These track real-time consumption and flag leaks, reducing apartment water wastage by 20% to 35%.
      2. National Aquifer Mapping Program (NAQUIM): Advanced heliborne geophysical surveys map subsurface aquifers nationwide. This allows districts to precisely calculate sustainable extraction limits and prevent groundwater over-pumping.
    4. River Basin & Watershed Approach: Treating entire river basins and landscapes as single interconnected hydrological units prevents upstream degradation from destroying downstream supply.
      1. Hiware Bazar Transformation (Maharashtra): This drought-prone village banned water-guzzling sugarcane and deep borewells. By implementing contour trenches and bunds, they raised the local groundwater table to create a self-sustaining economy.
      2. Neeranchal National Watershed Project: Backed by the World Bank, this project applies integrated watershed frameworks across multiple states to reduce soil erosion and improve rainfall retention in natural catchments.
    5. Community Participation: Shifting water governance from centralized government bodies to local communities ensures accountability, long-term asset maintenance, and equitable sharing.
      1. Mission Kakatiya (Telangana): This program engaged village communities to de-silt and restore centuries-old traditional tanks. Local farmers used the nutrient-rich silt on their lands, boosting both crop yields and local water storage.
      2. Pani Panchayats (Odisha & Maharashtra): Democratically elected, community-led water user associations legally empower local farmers to distribute canal water equitably, resolve disputes, and maintain local infrastructure.
    6. Climate Resilience: Circular water systems insulate urban and rural populations from the unpredictable weather patterns, erratic monsoons, and prolonged droughts driven by climate change.
      1. Delhi Amrit Sarovar Initiative: The city is restoring over 250 urban lakes and water bodies. By routing treated wastewater into them, these spaces act as natural “sponges” that absorb heavy monsoon floods and recharge dry aquifers for summer use.

    Global Best Practices

    1. Israel: Demonstrates large-scale wastewater recycling and drip irrigation.
    2. Singapore: Ensures urban water resilience through NEWater recycled water systems.
    3. Australia (Murray-Darling Basin): Strengthens integrated river basin governance.

    Conclusion

    India’s water challenge increasingly reflects a governance deficit rather than absolute scarcity. Sustainable water security requires stronger federal coordination, groundwater regulation, wastewater reuse, river basin management, and community participation. Scientific planning, technological integration, and institutional accountability remain essential to transform India from a water-stressed economy into a water-secure society.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2024] The groundwater potential of the Gangetic Valley is on a serious decline. How may it affect the food security of India?

    Linkage: The question examines the link between groundwater depletion, agriculture, and food security. It helps build analytical linkage between water governance and long-term agricultural resilience.

  • FDI in Indian economy

    Why saving forex could hamper India’s growth

    Why in the News?

    The Prime Minister of India recently asked Indians to use fewer imports, like oil and fertilizers, to save the country’s foreign exchange (forex). While India has a huge “safety net” of over $640 billion in reserves, some experts are worried. They argue that cutting imports too much might actually hurt our industrial growth, since many factories depend on imported parts. The big question now is: should India focus on hoarding cash or boosting production?

    How are forex reserves linked to India’s economic growth?

    Foreign exchange (forex) reserves act as a high-speed engine and a safety net for India’s economic growth. Their link to growth is both protective (preventing crashes) and productive (enabling industrial expansion).

    1. Sustaining Industrial Output (Import Financing)
      1. Energy & Raw Materials: India imports roughly 85% of its crude oil and large quantities of fertilizers and electronics.
      2. Growth Link: Healthy reserves ensure that factories never stop running due to a lack of dollars to pay for these essential inputs. As of May 2026, India’s reserves provide an import cover of approximately 11 to 12 months, keeping industrial production stable despite global supply shocks
    2. Balance of Payments (BoP): Reflects all economic transactions between India and the rest of the world. Forex reserves increase when inflows exceed outflows through the current account and capital account.
      1. Current Account Deficit (CAD): Occurs when imports exceed exports. India generally runs a CAD because of dependence on crude oil, gold, electronics and industrial inputs.
      2. Capital Account Surplus: Compensates for CAD through Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), Foreign Portfolio Investment (FPI), external borrowings and remittances, helping maintain reserve adequacy.
    3. Stabilizing the “Price of Growth” (Rupee Stability)
      1. Controlling Inflation: When the rupee weakens, imports like oil become expensive, causing “imported inflation.”
      2. Growth Link: The RBI uses reserves to intervene in the market, selling dollars when the rupee falls too fast (as it did when the rupee crossed ₹95/$ in May 2026). This stability keeps costs predictable for businesses and protects the purchasing power of citizens.
    4. Example: India’s reserves provide an import cover of several months, unlike the 1991 Balance of Payments crisis, when reserves had fallen to levels sufficient for only weeks of imports.

    Why has conserving forex become a policy concern?

    1. Import Dependence: India imports nearly 80-85% of crude oil requirements, making oil the largest source of forex outflow.
    2. Commodity Vulnerability: Global disruptions such as the Russia-Ukraine conflict increased energy and fertilizer prices, worsening import bills.
    3. Edible Oil Imports: India depends significantly on imports of palm, soybean and sunflower oils, creating recurring pressure on forex.
    4. Fertilizer Dependence: Though food grain production is self-sufficient, agriculture remains dependent on imported fertilizer inputs.
    5. Trade Deficit Pressure: Persistent trade deficits increase vulnerability to global shocks and currency depreciation.

    Why could excessive forex conservation slow India’s growth?

    1. Consumption Compression: Reducing spending on imported goods lowers aggregate demand, affecting production and employment.
    2. Industrial Dependence on Imports: Indian manufacturing depends heavily on imported machinery, components, chemicals and intermediate goods.
    3. Multiplier Effects: Lower demand reduces business expansion, private investment and job creation.
    4. Growth Slowdown: Reduced imports of productive inputs may weaken sectors dependent on global value chains.
    5. Investment Sentiment: Weak domestic demand discourages domestic and foreign investors from expanding production.
    6. Example: Cutting imports indiscriminately may reduce economic dynamism rather than merely reducing forex outflows.

    Can India realistically replace imported goods in the short term?

    1. Crude Oil Constraint: India cannot quickly substitute imported crude because domestic energy production remains limited.
    2. Fertilizer Dependence: Natural resources required for fertilizer production, such as potash and phosphates, remain import-dependent.
    3. Intermediate Goods Dependence: Electronics, semiconductors and industrial machinery require imported components.
    4. Cost Consideration: Domestic substitutes often remain costlier or technologically inferior in the short run.
    5. Time Lag: Import substitution requires industrial capacity, technology transfer and infrastructure expansion.
    6. Example: India is food self-sufficient but still relies heavily on imported fertilizers to sustain agricultural productivity.

    What explains the relationship between the rupee and forex reserves?

    1. Currency Intervention: RBI sells dollars to stabilise the rupee during depreciation pressures.
    2. Exchange Rate Impact: Higher imports increase dollar demand, weakening the rupee.
    3. Inflation Transmission: A weaker rupee raises import costs, especially for oil, increasing inflation.
    4. Reserve Buffer: Forex reserves function as insurance against global financial shocks and capital flight.
    5. Example: RBI interventions during global volatility periods help moderate sharp exchange-rate movements.

    What should be India’s long-term strategy to manage forex sustainably?

    1. Production Enhancement: Strengthens manufacturing competitiveness through Make in India and industrial reforms.
    2. Export Diversification: Expands high-value exports in electronics, pharmaceuticals and services.
    3. Productivity Growth: Increases efficiency through technology adoption and logistics improvements.
    4. Import Rationalisation: Reduces avoidable imports while preserving productive imports.
    5. Energy Transition: Expands renewable energy and biofuel production to reduce crude oil dependence.
    6. Domestic Capability: Strengthens fertilizer, semiconductor and critical mineral ecosystems.
      1. Example: Production-linked incentive (PLI) schemes seek to reduce import dependence in sectors like electronics and solar manufacturing.

    Conclusion

    India’s forex reserves remain a critical macroeconomic buffer, but external strength cannot substitute for domestic growth momentum. Excessive emphasis on conserving forex through reduced consumption risks weakening demand, investment and productivity. A sustainable solution lies not merely in spending less foreign exchange, but in earning more through exports, higher productivity and stronger domestic production capacity.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2017] Among several factors for India’s potential growth, savings rate is the most effective one. Do you agree? What are the other factors available for growth potential?

    Linkage: The PYQ examines whether higher savings alone can drive economic growth. This is similar to the debate on conserving foreign exchange versus expanding production and investment. The article extends this logic by arguing that growth depends not only on saving forex, but also on productivity, manufacturing and demand creation

  • Air Pollution

    A new start against noise pollution

    Why in the News?

    Noise pollution has returned to focus after post-election celebrations in Tamil Nadu witnessed large-scale use of loud “whistle pods” and public processions. This has revived concerns over India’s weakest enforced environmental problem. The issue is significant because India continues to normalise excessive noise despite clear legal limits. The scale of the problem is striking: over 80% of monitoring stations under the National Ambient Noise Monitoring Network (NANMN) recorded violations in 2019.

    What are the Noise Pollution Rules in India?

    Noise pollution in India is primarily regulated by the Noise Pollution (Regulation and Control) Rules, 2000, framed under the Environment Protection Act, 1986. These rules define permissible sound levels based on the time of day and the category of the area.

    Permissible Noise Levels (in dB)

    The Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) divides areas into four zones with specific decibel limits:

    Category of Area/ZoneDay Time (6 AM – 10 PM)Night Time (10 PM – 6 AM)
    Industrial Area75 dB70 dB
    Commercial Area65 dB55 dB
    Residential Area55 dB45 dB
    Silence Zone (Silence Zones include areas within 100 metres of hospitals, educational institutions, and courts)50 dB40 dB

    Why does noise pollution remain socially tolerated despite being a major environmental hazard?

    1. Social Normalisation: Indian society treats excessive sound during celebrations, elections, festivals, weddings, and sporting events as culturally acceptable behaviour.
    2. Political Incentives: Political parties often avoid restraining supporters due to fear of electoral backlash during rallies and victory celebrations.
    3. Cultural Accommodation: State governments permit loudspeakers and nighttime exemptions for religious and cultural occasions for up to 15 days annually.
    4. Weak Public Awareness: Noise pollution receives less public attention than air pollution despite comparable health implications.
    5. Illustrative Example: Tamil Nadu witnessed large-scale use of “whistle pods” during cricket matches and political celebrations after TVK’s Assembly election performance.

    How severe is the noise pollution problem in India?

    1. NANMN Data: Over 80% of recording stations under the National Ambient Noise Monitoring Network reported violations of prescribed limits during both daytime and nighttime in 2019.
    2. Residential Violations: All 10 monitoring stations in Chennai exceeded residential nighttime thresholds of 45 decibels.
    3. Global Comparison: A 2022 UN Environment Programme report identified Moradabad (Uttar Pradesh) among the world’s highest noise-affected cities.
    4. Inadequate Monitoring: NANMN operates only 70 stations across seven metros, reflecting insufficient monitoring capacity.
    5. Urban Concentration: Higher exposure persists near airports, arterial roads, industrial areas, and dense urban settlements.

    What are the major drivers of excessive noise pollution in Indian cities?

    1. Urbanisation: Rapid expansion of cities increases vehicular traffic, construction activity, and commercial congestion.
    2. Construction Activity: Construction often continues through nighttime due to poor enforcement and unchecked permissions.
    3. Traffic Density: High traffic volume and poor urban planning increase ambient noise.
    4. Administrative Weakness: Weak policing and low institutional responsiveness reduce compliance with legal limits.
    5. Political Celebrations: Election victories, processions, and rallies frequently generate noise beyond permissible levels.
    6. Sporting Culture: Public celebrations during cricket and football events amplify temporary but intense noise exposure.
    7. Example: The vuvuzelas during the 2010 FIFA World Cup became globally criticised for rendering commentary inaudible.

    What are the public health consequences of excessive noise exposure?

    1. Hearing Loss: Sustained exposure above 85 decibels risks permanent hearing damage.
    2. Occupational Impact: World Health Organisation (WHO) attributes 16% of disabling hearing loss among adults to occupational noise exposure.
    3. Indian Burden: Approximately 6.3 crore Indians experience some degree of impaired hearing.
    4. Construction Sector Vulnerability: A Puducherry survey of 500 construction workers reported hearing impairment prevalence ranging from 13% to 49%, supported by meta-analysis of industrial workers.
    5. Cardiovascular Risks: Noise exposure elevates cortisol levels, increases endothelial dysfunction, and contributes to stress-related illnesses.
    6. Sleep Disturbance: Persistent exposure disrupts sleep quality and affects mental well-being.
    7. Cognitive Effects: Children near airports and arterial roads face impaired cognition and learning outcomes.
    8. European Evidence: Traffic noise contributes to the loss of approximately 16 lakh healthy life years annually in Western Europe.

    How effective is India’s legal and institutional framework against noise pollution?

    Noise Pollution (Regulation and Control) Rules, 2000 prescribe area-specific decibel limits and regulate loudspeaker use.

    1. Zonal Classification: Rules classify areas into industrial, commercial, residential, and silence zones.
    2. Silence Zone Protection: Areas around hospitals, educational institutions, and courts receive stricter regulation.
    3. CPCB Oversight: The Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) monitors compliance and recently proposed stronger financial penalties.
    4. Judicial Recognition: Courts have repeatedly linked excessive noise to Article 21, recognising the right to peaceful sleep and quality life.
    5. Implementation Deficit: Enforcement remains weak due to political interference, social acceptance, and poor local monitoring.

    Why does implementation remain India’s biggest challenge in tackling noise pollution?

    1. Enforcement Deficit: Local authorities rarely impose penalties despite repeated violations.
    2. Political Reluctance: Governments hesitate to regulate politically sensitive events, festivals, and public celebrations.
    3. Monitoring Gaps: Limited monitoring infrastructure restricts real-time detection and accountability.
    4. Behavioural Resistance: Public acceptance of loud celebrations weakens voluntary compliance.
    5. Institutional Fragmentation: Responsibility remains dispersed among police, municipal bodies, pollution boards, and district administrations.

    What measures can strengthen India’s response to noise pollution?

    1. Stronger Enforcement: Ensures strict penalties for repeated violations and unauthorised loudspeaker use.
    2. Technology-Based Monitoring: Facilitates real-time decibel tracking through AI-enabled sound sensors.
    3. Urban Planning: Strengthens sound-buffer zones around residential and silence areas.
    4. Behavioural Change: Encourages public awareness campaigns to alter social acceptance of loud noise.
    5. Political Accountability: Ensures equal application of rules during election campaigns and celebrations.
    6. Community Participation: Enables citizen reporting through grievance portals and mobile applications.

    Conclusion

    Noise pollution reflects a wider governance deficit where legal frameworks exist but enforcement remains weak. India requires a shift from social tolerance of excessive sound towards rights-based environmental governance that protects health, productivity, and quality of life. Effective regulation, behavioural change, and political neutrality in enforcement remain essential for ensuring citizens’ right to work, rest, and sleep in peace.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2024] Industrial pollution of river water is a significant environmental issue in India. Discuss the various mitigation measures to deal with this problem and also the government’s initiatives in this regard.

    Linkage: This PYQ reflects UPSC’s focus on environmental pollution as a governance and public health issue, not merely an ecological problem. The present article extends the same logic to noise pollution, highlighting health impacts, regulatory failure, mitigation measures, and enforcement gaps in India.

  • Waste Management – SWM Rules, EWM Rules, etc

    A decentralised solution for waste crisis

    Why in the News?

    The Union Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change has notified the Solid Waste Management (SWM) Rules, 2026, superseding the Solid Waste Management Rules, 2016. The rules have been notified under the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986.

    What are the major changes introduced under the SWM Rules, 2026?

    1. Mandatory Waste Segregation: Makes 4-way segregation at source compulsory, wet waste, dry waste, sanitary waste, and special-care waste.
    2. ‘Polluter Pays’ Principle: Allows environmental compensation/penalties for non-compliance, false reporting, forged documents, or poor waste management practices.
    3. Extended Responsibility for Bulk Generators: Introduces Extended Bulk Waste Generator Responsibility (EBWGR); entities generating 100 kg/day waste, 20,000 sq. m area, or 40,000 litres/day water use must process waste responsibly.
    4. Scientific Waste Processing: Promotes composting, bio-methanation, recycling through Material Recovery Facilities (MRFs), and waste-to-energy systems.
    5. Centralised Online Portal: Enables end-to-end digital tracking of waste generation, collection, transport, processing, landfill audits, and legacy waste remediation.
    6. Restrictions on Landfills: Limits landfilling to non-recyclable, inert, and non-energy recoverable waste, while discouraging unsegregated dumping through higher landfill fees.
    7. Legacy Waste Remediation: Mandates mapping, biomining, and bioremediation of old dumpsites with time-bound implementation.
    8. Mandatory Use of RDF: Requires industries, including cement plants, to gradually increase Refuse Derived Fuel (RDF) use from 5% to 15% over six years.
    9. Special Rules for Hilly Areas & Islands: Enables tourist user fees, decentralised wet waste processing by hotels/restaurants, and waste regulation based on local carrying capacity.
    10. Institutional Oversight: Creates Central and State-level Committees, with Chief Secretaries-led State Committees for implementation monitoring.

    Why has India’s waste crisis become a major governance challenge?

    1. Urban Waste Burden: Indian cities face plastic-clogged drains, worsening monsoon flooding and sanitation stress.
    2. Landfill Hazard: Landfills increasingly generate methane, fire incidents, and leachate contamination, creating ecological and health risks.
    3. Air Pollution: Open burning of waste contributes to deteriorating urban air quality.
    4. Rural Waste Expansion: Rural areas increasingly face plastic waste, sanitary waste, pesticide containers, e-waste, and packaged consumption debris.
    5. Ecological Emergency: Waste has evolved from a local nuisance to a national environmental problem, requiring systemic intervention.

    How do the Solid Waste Management Rules, 2026 differ from the 2016 framework?

    The Solid Waste Management (SWM) Rules, 2026, supersede the 2016 framework, shifting India from a “collect-and-dump” model to a structured circular economy focused on resource recovery. While the 2016 rules laid the foundation, the 2026 update introduces stricter enforcement, digital tracking, and expanded responsibilities.

    DimensionSWM Rules, 2016SWM Rules, 2026
    Waste segregationMandated 3-stream segregation: bio-degradable, non-biodegradable, and domestic hazardous waste.Introduces mandatory 4-stream segregation: wet waste, dry waste, sanitary waste, and special-care waste, enabling more scientific processing and recycling.
    Accountability & EnforcementLimited practical enforcement and weak penalty mechanisms.Introduces Environmental Compensation under the ‘Polluter Pays’ Principle’, with penalties for improper segregation, false reporting, forged documents, and non-compliance.
    Bulk Waste Generators (BWGs)Broad responsibility framework without clear operational thresholds.Defines BWGs through quantified thresholds (≥100 kg/day waste generation, ≥20,000 sq. m built-up area, or ≥40,000 litres/day water use) and introduces Extended Bulk Waste Generator Responsibility (EBWGR) for on-site processing or certification.
    Monitoring MechanismRelied largely on manual and fragmented reporting systems.Establishes a centralised online portal for end-to-end tracking of waste generation, collection, transport, processing, disposal, audits, and legacy waste remediation.
    Industrial Waste Use (RDF)Limited emphasis on industrial fuel substitution.Mandates gradual adoption of Refuse Derived Fuel (RDF) in industries such as cement plants, increasing substitution from 5% to 15% over six years.
    Legacy Waste DumpsitesRecognised legacy waste but lacked strict timelines.Mandates time-bound biomining and bioremediation of legacy dumpsites, with quarterly progress reporting through the digital portal.

    Does the 2026 framework undermine federalism and subsidiarity?

    1. Constitutional Basis: The Rules derive authority from the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986, enacted under Article 253, allowing Parliament to implement international obligations such as the 1972 Stockholm Declaration.
    2. Federal Concern: Subjects such as land, sanitation, public health, agriculture, and local governance largely fall within State or local domains.
    3. National Floor Principle: A minimum national standard should not become a uniform operational blueprint for all States.
    4. Subsidiarity Principle: Governance should function at the lowest competent level, moving upward only when capacity is absent.
    5. Administrative Overreach: The Rules assume central competence and local incapacity, reducing States to implementing agencies.
    6. Hayekian Insight: Nobel Laureate F.A. Hayek highlighted that effective decisions depend on local and contextual knowledge, not distant administrative command.

    Why may a uniform waste management model fail across India?

    1. Geographical Diversity: Waste systems suitable for resource-rich metros like Mumbai may fail in Himalayan pilgrimage towns, fragile slopes, coastal panchayats, tribal settlements, and low-density villages.
    2. Rural Institutional Deficit: Rural local bodies often lack sanitation engineers, waste collection systems, digital capacity, and fiscal resources.
    3. MRF Expansion Challenge: Extending Material Recovery Facilities (MRFs) to every panchayat risks creating an administratively unsustainable model.
    4. Compliance Burden: Excessive reporting requirements may shift focus from service delivery to paperwork.
    5. Megacity Exception: Cities like Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Kolkata, Chennai may require metropolitan-level integrated waste authorities.

    How does centralised digital governance create implementation concerns?

    1. Portal-Centric Governance: The Rules require Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB)-linked data uploads, audits, and central reporting modules.
    2. Dashboard Governance: Officials risk spending excessive time on compliance reporting rather than actual waste management outcomes.
    3. Blurring Accountability: Excessive centralisation may weaken local ownership and citizen accountability.
    4. Data Federalism: States should possess shared digital platforms with flexibility to customise indicators and dashboards.
    5. Capacity Building: Data systems should strengthen sub-national governance capacity, not merely discipline compliance.

    Why is democratic participation central to effective waste management?

    1. Citizen Engagement: Waste segregation depends on household participation, awareness, and behavioural change.
    2. Community Institutions: Ward committees, municipal councils, self-help groups, and resident bodies strengthen compliance.
    3. Local Reporting: Periodic waste reports should be placed before municipal councils and ward committees, not only central portals.
    4. Participatory Governance: Successful waste management requires citizen oversight alongside technical expertise.

    What alternative model can be proposed?

    By treating waste as a local resource rather than a national liability, an alternative framework shifts the focus from “disposal” to “decentralised circularity.”

    The Proposed “Polycentric Circularity” Model

    ComponentStrategic Implementation
    Differentiated GovernanceMegacities use tech-heavy AI-monitored collection, while Rural Panchayats use “Zero-Waste Village” models focusing on 100% on-site composting. 
    State-Led InnovationStates could compete on “Resource Recovery Indexes.” For example, a coastal state might pilot ocean-plastic specific rules that wouldn’t apply to a landlocked state. 
    Micro-EntrepreneurshipIntegrating Women’s Cooperatives (like the Swachh model in Pune) turns waste into a livelihood. SHGs manage ward-level dry waste collection centers, reducing transport costs. 
    Cluster-Based SharingTowns within a 30-40km radius share a single high-tech Material Recovery Facility (MRF) or Bio-methanation plant, making advanced technology financially viable for small municipalities. 
    1. Minimum Standards: The Centre should establish minimum national environmental norms.
    2. State Flexibility: States should receive autonomy to design context-sensitive waste systems.
    3. Differentiated Governance: Metropolitan authorities may govern megacities, while simplified systems may suit rural regions.
    4. Cluster-Based Facilities: Small towns can adopt shared regional waste infrastructure.
    5. Women’s Cooperatives: Waste management can integrate self-help groups and community-based models.
    6. Evidence-Based Review: A national body may periodically evaluate outcomes and revise standards based on evidence.
    7. Laboratory of Democracy: Justice Louis Brandeis’ idea (New State Ice Co. v. Liebmann, 1932) theorises that States function as “laboratories of democracy”, enabling policy experimentation.

    Conclusion

    India’s waste crisis requires a federal, differentiated, and participatory governance model rather than a uniform compliance architecture. The Solid Waste Management Rules, 2026 can strengthen environmental outcomes. But this can be done only if they balance minimum national standards with State flexibility, local accountability, fiscal support, and citizen participation. Effective waste management depends not merely on regulation, but on institutional design aligned with India’s diversity.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2018] What are the impediments in disposing the huge quantities of discarded solid wastes which are continuously being generated? How do we remove safely the toxic wastes that have been accumulating in our habitable environment?

    Linkage: The PYQ directly connects with the article’s focus on scientific waste management, segregation, landfill reduction, and safe disposal of hazardous/special-care waste under the SWM Rules, 2026. It also reflects UPSC’s emphasis on environmental governance, waste-processing mechanisms, and mitigation measures for pollution.

  • Black Money – Domestic and International Efforts

    Prevalence of fake currency till a reality post-demonetisation

    Why in the News?

    Nearly a decade after demonetisation was projected as a major strike against black money and fake currency, new NCRB and Parliamentary data show that counterfeit currency continues to circulate in India. The issue has become significant because fake ₹500 notes have sharply increased, Gujarat alone accounted for more than half of counterfeit currency seizures between 2017 and 2024, and counterfeit ₹2,000 notes rose despite being introduced after demonetisation.

    Why was demonetisation expected to curb fake currency?

    1. Currency Replacement: Demonetisation invalidated old ₹500 and ₹1,000 notes and introduced redesigned currency with enhanced security features.
    2. Financial Disruption: Intended to eliminate counterfeit stock accumulated by criminal and terror networks.
    3. Formalisation of Economy: Encouraged banking transactions and digital payments to reduce cash dependency.
    4. Security Objective: Sought to weaken terror financing channels dependent on fake Indian currency notes (FICN).
    5. Governance Goal: Intended to reduce black money circulation and illicit cash transactions.

    What do recent data reveal about counterfeit currency trends?

    1. Persistent Counterfeit Circulation: NCRB data show counterfeit currency seizures worth more than ₹54.61 crore across States.
    2. Peak Seizures in 2022: Fake currency seizures reached ₹382.6 crore, the highest level in recent years and over 85% linked to Gujarat.
    3. Sharp Rise After Demonetisation: Counterfeit ₹2,000 notes nearly doubled compared to 2017 despite being newly introduced after demonetisation.
    4. Continued Fake ₹500 Notes: Fake ₹500 notes seized in 2024 were nearly four times the level recorded in 2016.
    5. Pandemic Disruption: Currency seizures fell temporarily in 2020 (₹92 crore) during COVID-19 restrictions but later surged.
    6. Banking Detection: Banks detected counterfeit notes worth nearly ₹40.26 crore between 2020-21 and 2024-25, averaging roughly 2 lakh fake notes annually.

    Why does the rise in fake ₹500 and ₹2,000 notes matter?

    1. Security Failure: Indicates criminal networks adapted rapidly even after redesigned currency introduction.
    2. Post-Demonetisation Counterfeiting: Fake ₹2,000 notes, introduced after 2016, emerged in large numbers, questioning technological safeguards.
    3. ₹500 Dominance: Fake ₹500 notes formed a major share of seizures because the denomination remained widely used even after the withdrawal of ₹2,000 notes from circulation in May 2023.
    4. Banking Penetration: Counterfeit notes entering banks indicate that fake currency penetrated formal financial channels
    5. Economic Trust Deficit: Sustained counterfeiting weakens public confidence in cash transactions.

    Why has Gujarat emerged as the major hub of counterfeit currency seizures?

    1. High Seizure Concentration: Gujarat accounted for ₹355.72 crore, more than half of India’s total counterfeit currency seizures (2017-2024).
    2. Geographical Significance: Coastal access and trade routes may increase vulnerabilities to smuggling and organised criminal activity.
    3. Extraordinary Spike in 2022: Gujarat alone contributed to more than 85% of counterfeit currency seized nationally.
    4. Inter-State Pattern: Maharashtra and Karnataka followed Gujarat with seizures worth approximately ₹100 crore and ₹50 crore, respectively.
    5. Enforcement Question: Raises concerns regarding whether high seizures indicate stronger policing or higher counterfeit circulation.

    Has demonetisation achieved its objectives regarding fake currency?

    1. Partial Success: Immediate withdrawal disrupted counterfeit stock based on old ₹500 and ₹1,000 notes.
    2. Limited Long-Term Impact: Rising fake currency in new denominations suggests only temporary gains.
    3. Digitalisation Outcome: India witnessed growth in digital transactions, reducing some dependence on cash.
    4. Black Money Limitation: Cash-based black money adapted through alternative channels.
    5. Institutional Challenge: Persistent counterfeiting suggests the need for continuous currency security upgrades.

    What are the broader economic and security implications of counterfeit currency?

    1. Terror Financing: Fake currency supports unlawful activities and cross-border terror financing.
    2. Inflationary Distortion: Counterfeit money artificially increases cash circulation.
    3. Monetary Credibility: Reduces trust in sovereign currency and payment systems.
    4. Banking Burden: Increases costs of verification and counterfeit detection.
    5. Internal Security Threat: Strengthens organised crime and hawala networks.

    What measures can strengthen India’s anti-counterfeit framework?

    1. Currency Security Enhancement: Ensures frequent upgrades in watermarking, microprinting, and security threads.
    2. AI-Based Detection: Facilitates real-time identification of counterfeit notes in ATMs and banks.
    3. Border Surveillance: Strengthens monitoring of smuggling routes and cross-border criminal networks.
    4. Financial Intelligence Coordination: Supports coordination among RBI, NCRB, FIU-IND, DRI, NIA, and State police.
    5. Digital Payments Expansion: Reduces excessive cash dependence and counterfeit vulnerability.
    6. Public Awareness: Ensures citizen awareness regarding security features of currency notes.

    Conclusion

    The persistence of counterfeit currency despite demonetisation indicates that currency replacement alone cannot eliminate the challenge of fake money. While the 2016 exercise disrupted old counterfeit networks temporarily and accelerated digital transactions, rising seizures of fake new-series notes reveal institutional and technological gaps. A sustained strategy based on advanced currency security features, stronger inter-agency coordination, border vigilance, financial intelligence, and reduced cash dependency is necessary to protect monetary credibility and internal security.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC2022] Give out the major sources of terror funding in India and the efforts being made to curtail these sources. In the light of this, also discuss the aim and objective of the ‘No Money for Terror (NMFT)’ Conference recently held at New Delhi in November 2022.

    Linkage: Counterfeit currency is a major source of terror financing, often linked with hawala, organised crime, and cross-border networks. The article directly relates to illicit financial flows and internal security.