August 2020
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Mother and Child Health – Immunization Program, BPBB, PMJSY, PMMSY, etc.

PCPNDT Act and rule changes during pandemic

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much

Mains level: Paper 2-PCPNDT Act

The article deals with the issues of suspension of some requirements under PCPNDT Act. It also discusses the role judiciary played in 25-years jurisprudence around the Act.

Context

  • Last week, the Supreme Court deferred a pronouncement on the legality of the Centre’s now-lapsed controversial notification relating to the rules of the law banning sex-selective abortions.
  • The apex court similarly erred on the side of caution in June, choosing not to stay the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare’s gazette notification.

What were the changes

  • One of the rules requires a five-yearly renewal of registration of genetic laboratories, ultrasound clinics and imaging centres, subject to the fulfilment of eligibility criteria.
  • Another mandate to submit monthly records on the conduct of pregnancy-related procedures to the designated authority.
  • State governments and Union Territories are required to furnish quarterly reports to the Centre on the implementation of the law.
  • The Union Health Ministry had maintained that various procedural deadlines were relaxed in the wake of the public health crisis and that such flexibility would in no way jeopardise the larger objectives of the law.

Issues with the suspension

  • Activists saw no rationale behind the suspension of rules, since the operation of diagnostic laboratories had been declared essential services.
  • They were understandably apprehensive that the freeze would result in large-scale violations.
  • It is one thing to offer relaxation for delays in the completion of formalities via an administrative order, but altogether another to declare a freeze via a gazette notification, they argued.

Court judgements on PCPNDT Act

  • The 25-year jurisprudence around the PCPNDT legislation does not justify a casual approach on the enforcement of its various provisions.
  • The Court last year ruled that the non-maintenance of medical records as per Section 23 of the PCPNDT Act could serve as a conduit in the grave offence of foeticide.
  • In its 2016 judgment, the Supreme Court authorised the seizure of illegal equipment from clinics and the suspension of their registration as well as speedy disposal of relevant cases by the States.

Consider the question “How far has the PCPNDT Act been successful in dealing with the menace of sex-selective abortion? What are the shortcomings in the Act?”

Conclusion

Crucially, the alarming decline witnessed in recent decades in India’s sex ratio at birth calls for uncompromising adherence to public policy, more than is evident from evolving case law.

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Monetary Policy Committee Notifications

Dilemma the RBI faces

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: MPC

Mains level: Paper 3- Role of the RBI and contradictions in its functions

Limitations and contradictions in the functioning of RBI

  • The Reserve Bank of India, along with the monetary policy committee, has undertaken measures to address the fallout of the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • Their actions are guided by multiple considerations — inflation and growth management, debt management and currency management.
  • These multiple considerations have inadvertently exposed the limitations of and the inherent contradictions in the central banking framework in India.

Monetary policy functions

  • The MPC is guided by the goal of maintaining inflation at 4 plus/minus 2 per cent.
  • In its August policy, despite dire growth prospects, MPC chose to maintain the status quo.
  • This decision was driven by elevated inflation i.e. above 4 plus/minus 2 per cent. 
  • This raises the question: At the current juncture, should the MPC be driven by growth considerations or should short-term inflation concerns dominate?

Understanding the nature of current inflation

  • The current rise in inflation is driven by supply-chain dislocations owing to the lockdowns.
  • This is evident from the growing disconnect between the wholesale and consumer price index.
  • Since April, while WPI has been in negative territory, CPI has been elevated.
  • The MPC’s mandate is to deliver stable inflation over long periods of time, not just a few months.
  • Yet, it would appear as if it is more concerned about elevated inflation in the short run.
  • Equally puzzling is the refusal of MPC to provide any firm projection of future inflation.

Manager of government debt

  •  As manager of the government debt, the RBI is tasked with ensuring that the government’s borrowing programme sails through smoothly.
  • To this end, it has carried out several rounds of interventions popularly known as operation twist.
  • in operation twist government RBI intended pushing down long-term Gsec yields, and exerting upward pressure on short-term yields as a consequence.
  • In doing so, the RBI ended up doing exactly the opposite of what the MPC was trying to achieve by cutting short term rates, well before it reached the lower limit of its conventional policy response.

3) RBI’s intervention in currency markets

  • The RBI’s interventions in the currency market have constrained its ability to carry out open market operations as these would have led to further liquidity injections into the system.
  • Put differently, its debt management functions have run up against its currency management functions.
  • Underlining the complexity of all this is the talk of sterilisation — the opposite of injecting liquidity in the system.

Consider the question “RBI’s functions at the current juncture suffers from contradicting functions. Examine such contradictions in its role and suggest the ways to avoid such contradictions.”

Conclusion

The central bank must develop a clear strategy on what to do. At this juncture, there is a strong argument to look past the current spurt in inflation, and test the limits of both conventional and unconventional monetary policy. At the other end, while it may want to intervene to prevent the rupee’s appreciation, in doing so, it is constricting its debt management functions which will have its own set of consequences. There are no easy answers.

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RTI – CIC, RTI Backlog, etc.

Resurrecting the right to know

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much

Mains level: Paper 2- People's right to know

This article analyses the importance of peoples’ right to know and instrumental role judiciary played in harmonising it with the Official Secrets Act 1923.

Context

  • A High Level Committee (HLC) chaired by a retired judge of the Gauhati High Court was constituted by the Home Ministry through a gazette notification.
  • Its mandate was, among others, to recommend measures to implement Clause 6 of the Assam Accord and define “Assamese People”.
  • The HLC finalised its report by mid-February 2020 and submitted it to the Assam Chief Minister and through him to the Central government.
  • With the Central government apparently “sitting idle” over the report, the All Assam Students’ Union (AASU), which was represented in the HLC, released the report.

The right to know

  • The right to know was recognised nearly 50 years ago and is the foundational basis or the direct emanation for the right to information.
  • In State of U.P. v. Raj Narain (1975), the Supreme Court carved out a class of documents that demand protection even though their contents may not be damaging to the national interest.
  • Court held that “the people of this country are entitled to know the particulars of every public transaction in all its bearing”.
  • This view was endorsed in S.P. Gupta v. President of India (1981) and a few other decisions.
  • In Yashwant Sinha v. Central Bureau of Investigation (2019), the Supreme Court referred to the decision of the U.S. Supreme Court in New York Times v. United States (1971) wherein court declined to recognise the right of the government to restrain publication of the Pentagon Papers.
  • Our Supreme Court held that a review petition based on three documents published by The Hindu was maintainable since the provisions of the Official Secrets Act, 1923 had not been violated.
  • The SC held that there is no provision by which Parliament had vested power in the government either to restrain the publication of documents marked as secret or from placing such documents before a court.
  • Section 8(2) of the Right to Information Act, 2005 provides that a citizen can get a certified copy of a document even if the matter pertains to security or relationship with a foreign nation if a case is made out.
  • Therefore, it is clear that the right to know can be curtailed only in limited circumstances and if there is an overriding public interest.

Consider the question “Analyse the importance of citizens’ right to know and how the judiciary harmonised the peoples right to know with the Official Secrets Act 1923? “

Conclusion

We must keep in mind observation made by the Supreme Court in S.P. Gupta: “If secrecy were to be observed in the functioning of government and the processes of government were to be kept hidden from public scrutiny, it would tend to promote and encourage oppression, corruption and misuse or abuse of authority, for it would all be shrouded in the veil of secrecy without any public accountability.”

B2BASICS

Official secrets act

  • OSA has its roots in the British colonial era and was originally known as The Indian Official Secrets Act (Act XIV), 1889.
  • The act was primarily mandated to gag the voice of a large number of newspapers that came up in several languages, and were opposing the Raj’s policies, building political consciousness and facing police crackdowns and prison terms.
  • The act was amended and made more stringent in the form of The Indian Official Secrets Act, 1904, during Lord Curzon’s tenure as Viceroy of India.
  • In 1923, a newer version was notified. The Indian Official Secrets Act (Act No XIX of 1923) was extended to all matters of secrecy and confidentiality in governance in the country.
  • It was further amended after India got independence in 1951 and 1967. The act in its present form deals with two aspects — spying or espionage and disclosure of other secret information of the government.
  • Secret information can be any official code, password, sketch, plan, model, article, note, document or information. Under the act both the person communicating the information, and the person receiving the information, can be punished.

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Disasters and Disaster Management – Sendai Framework, Floods, Cyclones, etc.

PM CARES Fund is a “public charitable trust”: SC

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: PM CARES Fund

Mains level: Disaster management in India

The Supreme Court has endorsed the PM CARES Fund as a “public charitable trust” to which donors contribute voluntarily.

Try this question:

Q. The creation of PM CARES fund is violative of the provision of the Disaster Management Act, 2005. Analyse.

What is the case?

  • The petition had argued that the PM-CARES Fund was not subject to CAG audit.
  • It was not under “public scrutiny”. Contributions to it were “100% tax-free”.
  • It was accused that there was statutory fund already in existence under the Disaster Management Act of 2005 to receive contributions to finance the fight against a calamity.

About PM CARES Fund

  • The Prime Minister’s Citizen Assistance and Relief in Emergency Situations Fund (PM CARES Fund) were created on 28 March 2020 following the COVID-19 pandemic in India.
  • The fund will be used for combat, containment and relief efforts against the coronavirus outbreak and similar pandemic like situations in the future.
  • The PM is the chairman of the trust. Members will include the defence, home and finance ministers.
  • The fund will also enable micro-donations. The minimum donation accepted for the PM CARES Fund is ₹10 (14¢ US).
  • The donations will be tax-exempt and fall under corporate social responsibility.

What did the Court rule?

  • There is “no occasion” for the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) to audit a public charitable trust independent of budgetary support or government money.
  • The court said that PM-CARES is “not open” for a PIL petitioner to question the “wisdom” that created the fund in an hour of need.
  • The court dismissed the idea that the PM CARES was constituted to “circumvent” the National Disaster Response Fund (NDRF).
  • The Bench also refused to direct the transfer of funds from the PM CARES Fund to the NDRF. It said they were two separate entities.

Also read:

PM-CARES Fund

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Coronavirus – Economic Issues

Re-imagining and reinventing the Indian economy

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Atmanirbhar Bharat Abhiyan

Mains level: Economic recovery amid coronavirus pandemic

The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted the global economy and India is no different.  Besides the stimulus package totalling ₹20 lakh crore, a lot more needs to be done, however, to resuscitate the country’s growth engine.

Try this question:

Q.Economic reconstruction needs a multi-pronged strategy apart from economic stimulus. Discuss.

Need for a two-pronged strategy

  • At this critical juncture, India needs a two-pronged strategy to successfully navigate the current crisis and recover strongly thereafter.
  • First, minimise the damage caused by the COVID and clear a path to recovery and second, rebooting and re-imaging India by promptly exploiting new opportunities unleashed by evolving business scenarios.

Identifying the four major economic drivers:

  1. Big Business Houses which are a major contributor to GDP and large employment generators
  2. MSMEs which are the lifeline of the country, generating wealth for the middle class
  3. Startups which bring innovation and transformation to our country’s economy
  4. Approaching Indian Diasporas for driving foreign investments

Following suggestions by the author gives a way forward strategy to recover the economy:

  1. Tax incentivization

  • Big business houses should be supported by the government to reopen their operations by way of tax incentives or ease of procurement of raw materials or other goods and services on credit.
  • This will energize consumer demand and boost the functioning of the vendor or ancillary industry in the MSME sector (which has huge potential for job creation).
  1. Ensuring seamless credit flows considering NPAs

  • The RBI should consider Single One Time Window for restructuring business loans, as required, by all banks.
  • There is a high probability that non-performing assets are likely to rise once the prevailing moratorium is lifted by RBI.
  • The government and RBI also urgently need to assure banks, that their business decisions will not be questioned, to encourage credit flows.
  1. Calibrating Make in India

  • The ongoing distrust on Chinese manufacturing amid US-China spat can be very well garnered by India.
  • Making India a global trading hub – devise an incentive regime for companies setting up global trading operations from India.
  • The govt. should think of establishing self-contained “industrial cities” that earmark space for manufacturing, commercial, educational, residential and social infrastructure.
  • The Centre can prepare a five-year plan on getting at least 60 per cent of those companies, desiring to move manufacturing out of China to India.
  1. Encouraging sunrise sectors

  • It should also encourage sunrise sectors as part of re-imagining Indian economy such as battery manufacturing (storage systems)/ solar panel manufacturing.
  • The government can also consider giving impetus to “Deep Tech”-leveraged businesses — blockchain, robotics, AI, machine learning, augmented reality, big data analytics, cybersecurity, etc.
  1. Creating an ecosystem to boost startups

  • India is amongst the top start-up ecosystems globally. Several of them are in pre-Angel or Angel-Funding stages and are under significant pressure to stay afloat in view of a lack of adequate liquidity.
  • Start-ups not only help drive innovation but also create jobs, which will be very important going forward.
  • The government needs to provide significant support to the start-up ecosystem.
  1. Auto-sector reforms

  • The auto industry which contributes significantly to GDP (nearly 9%) deserves special treatment.
  • In addition to reducing GST rate, old vehicle scrap policy with tax incentives for creating a demand for new vehicles may be formulated.
  • There is a need to recognise the Auto Sales Industry channel partners as MSMEs.
  1. Plug-and-Play model for foreign investment

  • Maharashtra has created a turnkey ‘plug-and-play’ model for foreign investors.
  • Similarly, other States must get their act together, be it on land acquisition, labour laws and providing a social, environment and other infrastructure.
  • Land should be made available for projects with all necessary pre-clearances — at Centre’s level (including Environmental), State’s and Municipal dispensations.
  1. Labour law reforms

  • Reforms in labour laws do not only mean permission to hire and fire.
  • Leeway should be given to strictly enforce discipline within the factory premises and demand higher productivity.
  • The moves by U.P., M.P. and Gujarat are welcome signals.
  • The government should provide health insurance for migrant labourers as experimented by certain States.
  1. Encouraging Diaspora

  • Investments of NRIs and OCIs in India should be treated on par with those of Resident Indians as regards interest and dividend repatriation and management control of Indian companies.
  • It may be mentioned that the Chinese government had called on rich overseas Chinese to invest in China with minimum government control, and massive investments followed.
  • This has contributed to China’s prosperity and economic rise.
  • A similar investment boom can take place in India through NRIs and OCIs who have the resources and expertise in manufacturing and technology.
  1. Creating off-Shore investment centres

  • Off-Shore investment centres like Singapore can be opened in Mumbai where Indian domestic laws and taxation will not be applicable.
  • MNCs may route their investments into India through the Off-Shore Centre in Mumbai.
  • Foreign legal firms and banks along with domestic institutions can be invited to have a presence in the Off-Shore Centre.

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Biofuel Policy

Bioethanol Blending in Petrol

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Bio-ethanol

Mains level: Ethanol blended petrol programme

The government has set targets of 10 per cent bioethanol blending of petrol by 2022 and to raise it to 20 per cent by 2030 to curb carbon emissions and reduce India’s dependence on imported crude oil.

Try this PYQ:

Q.Given below are the names of four energy crops. Which one of them can be cultivated for ethanol?(CSP 2010)

(a) Jatropha

(b) Maize

(c) Pongamia

(d) Sunflower

What is Ethanol Blended Petrol (EBP) Program?

  • Ethanol Blended Petrol (EBP) programme was launched in January 2003 for the supply of 5% ethanol blended petrol.
  • The programme sought to promote the use of alternative and environment-friendly fuels and to reduce import dependency for energy requirements.
  • OMCs are advised to continue according to the priority of ethanol from 1) sugarcane juice/sugar/sugar syrup, 2) B-heavy molasses 3) C-heavy molasses and 4) damaged food grains/other sources.

Bio-ethanol blend in India

  • 1G and 2G bioethanol plants are set to play a key role in making bio-ethanol available for blending but face challenges in attracting investments from the private sector.
  • 1G bioethanol plants utilise sugarcane juice and molasses, byproducts in the production of sugar, as raw material, while 2G plants utilise surplus biomass and agricultural waste to produce bioethanol.
  • Currently, domestic production of bioethanol is not sufficient to meet the demand for bio-ethanol for blending with petrol at Indian Oil Marketing Companies (OMCs).
  • Sugar mills, which are the key domestic suppliers of bio-ethanol to OMCs, were only able to supply 1.9 billion litres of bio-ethanol to OMCs equating to 57.6 per cent of the total demand of 3.3 billion litres.

Hurdles in meeting the demand

  • Lack of infrastructure: Many sugar mills are best placed to produce bioethanol do not have the financial stability to invest in biofuel plants. There are also concerns among investors on the uncertainty over the price of bio-ethanol in the future.
  • Lack of raw materials: Presently there is no mechanism for depots where farmers could drop their agricultural waste. The central government should fix a price for agricultural waste to make investments in 2G bioethanol production an attractive proposition.
  • Rigid pricing mechanism: Sugars mills have to pay high prices for sugarcane set by the government even when there have been supplying gluts. The prices of both sugarcane and bio-ethanol are set by the central government.

Way ahead

  • The government should provide greater visibility on the price of bioethanol that sugar mills can expect by announcing a mechanism by which the price of bio-ethanol would be decided.
  • 2G bioethanol not only provided a clean source of energy but also help provide greater income to farmers and prevent them from having to burn agricultural waste which can be a major source of air pollution.

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Global Geological And Climatic Events

Tornado’s dynamics and its India connection

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Tornado, Cyclones difference

Mains level: Rising events of Tropical Cyclone in India

Babu ChunderSikur Chatterjee’s paper was the earliest record of a tornado’s dynamics in the history of meteorology, according to a study.

Try this PYQ:

Q. In the South Atlantic and South-Eastern Pacific regions in tropical latitudes, cyclone does not originate. What is the reason? (CSP 2015)

(a) Sea surface temperatures are low

(b) Inter-Tropical Convergence Zone seldom occurs

(c) Coriolis force is too weak

(d) Absence of land in those regions

What is a Tornado?

  • A tornado is a rapidly rotating column of air that is in contact with both the surface of the Earth and a cumulonimbus cloud or, in rare cases, the base of a cumulus cloud.
  • The windstorm is often referred to as a twister, whirlwind or cyclone winds blow counterclockwise in the Northern Hemisphere and clockwise in the Southern.
  • Tornadoes come in many shapes and sizes, and they are often visible in the form of a condensation funnel originating from the base of a cumulonimbus cloud, with a cloud of rotating debris and dust beneath it.
  • It is generally accompanied by extreme weather such as heavy downpours, hail storms, and lightning.

Who was Babu ChunderSikur Chatterjee?

  • Chatterjee was an Indian scientist employed with the Surveyor General of India during the British colonial era.
  • He was likely the first person to scientifically document a tornado’s path in 1865, a study from the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology (IITM), Pune, has claimed.
  • Chatterjee had published his findings in a journal named Proceedings of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, in a paper titled ‘Note on a whirlwind at Pundooah’, near Hooghly.
  • The paper described a tornado’s dynamics in meticulous detail and was accompanied by a sketch that mathematically depicted its scale, track and rotation.

His work

 

  • Chatterjee quantitatively mapped the entire trail of á tornado’s destruction.
  • He benefited from the rare opportunity to observe a tornado passing through a railway track where there were conveniently placed markers at predefined locations.
  • This enabled him to observe and make clear measurements of the tornado’s direction, dynamics and path.

Back2Basics

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Festivals, Dances, Theatre, Literature, Art in News

In news: Lingaraj Temple

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Temple architecture in news

Mains level: Temple Architecture of India

The Odisha government has announced to give a facelift to the 11th century Lingaraj Temple, akin to its pre-350-year structural status.

Try this PYQ:

Q. Building ‘Kalyaana Mandapas’ was a notable feature in the temple construction in the kingdom of- (CSP 2019)

(a) Chalukya

(b) Chandela

(c) Rashtrakuta

(d) Vijayanagara

About Lingaraj Temple

  • Lingaraja Temple is a temple dedicated to Shiva and is one of the oldest temples in Bhubaneswar, Odisha.
  • It represents the quintessence of the Kalinga Architecture and culminating the medieval stages of the architectural tradition at Bhubaneswar.
  • The temple is believed to be built by the kings from the Somavamsi dynasty, with later additions from the Ganga rulers.
  • It is built in the Deula style that has four components namely, vimana (structure containing the sanctum), jagamohana (assembly hall), natamandira (festival hall) and bhoga-mandapa (hall of offerings), each increasing in the height to its predecessor.

  • Bhubaneswar is called the Ekamra Kshetra as the deity of Lingaraja was originally under a mango tree (Ekamra) as noted in Ekamra Purana, a 13th-century Sanskrit treatise.
  • The temple has images of Vishnu, possibly because of the rising prominence of Jagannath sect emanating from the Ganga rulers who built the Jagannath Temple in Puri in the 12th century.

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