August 2020
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Monsoon Updates

Boreal Summer Intra-Seasonal Oscillation (BSISO)

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: BSISO

Mains level: Indian monsoon and its prediction

Researchers at the Indian National Centre for Ocean Information Services (INCOIS), Hyderabad have reportedly found a way to better forecast the Boreal Summer Intra-Seasonal Oscillation (BSISO).

Try this PYQ:

Q.With reference to ‘Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD)’ sometimes mentioned in the news while forecasting Indian monsoon, which of the following statements is/are correct? (CSP 2017)

  1. IOD phenomenon is characterized by a difference in sea surface temperature between tropical Western Indian Ocean and tropical Eastern Pacific Ocean.
  2. An IOD phenomenon can influence an El Nino’s impact on the monsoon.

Select the correct answer using the code given below:

(a) 1 only

(b) 2 only

(c) Both 1 and 2

(d) Neither 1 nor 2

What is BSISO?

  • The BSISO of the Asian summer monsoon (ASM) is one of the most prominent sources of short-term climate variability in the global monsoon system.
  • It is the movement of convection (heat) from the Indian Ocean to the western Pacific Ocean roughly every 10-50 days during the monsoon (June-September).
  • Compared with the related Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO) it is more complex in nature, with prominent northward propagation and variability extending much further from the equator.
  • It represents the monsoon’s ‘active’ and ‘break’ periods, in which weeks of heavy rainfall give way to brilliant sunshine before starting all over again.
  • The active phase also enhances monsoon winds and hence the surface waves.

Why predict BSISO behaviour?

  • Some phases of boreal summer intraseasonal oscillation or BSISO induce high wave activity in the north Indian Ocean and the Arabian Sea, the researchers claimed.
  • Wave forecast advisories based on the BSISO would be more useful for efficient coastal and marine management.
  • This finding has a great significance in developing seasonal and climate forecast service for waves and coastal erosion for India.

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Foreign Policy Watch: India-Pakistan

Pakistan’s new Political Map

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: NA

Mains level: India-Pakistan border disputes

Recently Pakistani PM announced a new political map of Pakistan.

Do you think that the recent launch of new political maps depicting Indian territories by Pakistan would make any difference on the international community’s stance on Kashmir?

A chain reaction

  • With this, Pakistan became the third country to launch a new political map after India and Nepal did the same.
  • India had reiterated its territorial claims in J&K, and Ladakh with the new map; this triggered a reaction from Nepal which contested Indian claims in the Kalapani region of Pithoragarh district.

What are the features of the new map?

  • The new political map of Pakistan has claimed the entire region of Jammu and Kashmir stretching all the way to the edge of Ladakh.
  • The map also claims Junagarh and Manavadar, a former princely State and territory, respectively that are part of present-day Gujarat.
  • Pakistan also claimed the entire territory and water bodies that fall in the Sir Creek region in the westernmost part of India.

Defiance of old agreements

  • The territorial claims of Pakistan are, however, of a far greater extent and challenge many of the past understandings and treaties.
  • This clearly runs counter to the Simla Agreement which treated Kashmir as a bilateral matter.
  • It leaves out a claim line at the eastern end of J&K indicating Pakistan’s willingness to make China a third party in the Kashmir issue.

How different is it from previous ones?

  • A similar map has been part of school textbooks of Pakistan for many years which highlights the territorial aspiration of Pakistan over the northern part of the subcontinent.
  • The document also maintains bits of reality on the ground as it shows the Line of Control in Kashmir in a red-dotted line.
  • The map may be used to provide legal cover for some of Islamabad’s territorial ambitions, especially in Kashmir and Sir Creek.

A Cartographical warfare

  • The map is likely to lead to changes in Pakistan’s position on territorial disputes with India.
  • By demanding the entire J&K region, Pak is changing the main features of its Kashmir discourse as it includes the Jammu region prominently.
  • The inclusion of Junagarh and Manavadar opens fundamental issues of territorial sovereignty of India.
  • Manavadar, a princely territory, joined India on February 15, 1948, and Indian troops marched into Junagarh in September that year incorporating it into Indian Territory.
  • By normalizing Islamabad’s claims over these former princely territories, Pakistan is most likely to assert its rights over the former princely State of Hyderabad as well.

What does Pakistan plan to gain by this exercise?

  • Sir Creek is a collection of water bodies that extend from the Arabian Sea deep inside the territory of Kutch and is rich in biodiversity and mangrove forests.
  • India’s position on Sir Creek is based on the Kutch arbitration case of 1966-69.
  • The new map can be used to reassert Pakistan’s claims regarding the Rann which it had lost in the arbitration conducted in Geneva.
  • India’s position regarding Sir Creek is based on the fact that the arbitration had granted the entire Rann and its marshy areas to India while leaving the solid land across the Rann to Pakistan.
  • By demanding the demarcation to shift towards the eastern bank, Pakistan appears to be going back also on the spirit of the Rann of Kutch arbitration where the overwhelming evidence of maps supported India’s claims.

Are there any claims on its western borders?

  • The map is silent about territorial claims in the west and northwest of Pakistan.
  • It indicates Islamabad’s acceptance of the Durand Line as the border with Afghanistan.
  • The reality on the ground, however, shows problems that continue to haunt Pakistan on that front as well where law and order have been difficult to maintain because of free movement of armed fighters.
  • A deadly clash between Afghan civilians and Pakistani troops near its Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province is a usual discourse.
  • The resultant situation has placed Afghan and Pakistani troops in a confrontational position.

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Agricultural Sector and Marketing Reforms – eNAM, Model APMC Act, Eco Survey Reco, etc.

Agriculture Infrastructure Fund (AIF) Scheme

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: AIF

Mains level: Economic stimulus for Agri sector

PM has launched a new financing scheme under the ₹1 lakh crore AIF.

Note the following things about AIF:

1) It is a Central Sector Scheme

2) Duration of the scheme

3)Target beneficiaries

Agriculture Infrastructure Fund (AIF)

  • It is a Central Sector Scheme meant for setting up storage and processing facilities, which will help farmers, get higher prices for their crops.
  • It will support farmers, PACS, FPOs, Agri-entrepreneurs, etc. in building community farming assets and post-harvest agriculture infrastructure.
  • These assets will enable farmers to get greater value for their produce as they will be able to store and sell at higher prices, reduce wastage and increase processing and value addition.

What exactly is the AIF?

  • The AIF is a medium – long term debt financing facility for investment in viable projects for post-harvest management infrastructure and community farming assets through interest subvention and credit guarantee.
  • The duration of the scheme shall be from FY2020 to FY2029 (10 years).
  • Under the scheme, Rs. 1 Lakh Crore will be provided by banks and financial institutions as loans with interest subvention of 3% per annum.
  • It will provide credit guarantee coverage under Credit Guarantee Fund Trust for Micro and Small Enterprises (CGTMSE) for loans up to Rs. 2 Crore.

Target beneficiaries

The beneficiaries will include farmers:

  • PACS, Marketing Cooperative Societies, FPOs, SHGs, Joint Liability Groups (JLG), Multipurpose Cooperative Societies, Agri-entrepreneurs, Startups, and Central/State agency or Local Body sponsored Public-Private Partnership Projects

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Coronavirus – Disease, Medical Sciences Involved & Preventive Measures

[pib] E-Sanjeevani Tele-Medicine Platform

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: E-Sanjeevani

Mains level: Telemedicine and its effectiveness

1.5 lakh teleconsultations were recently completed on the “eSanjeevani” and “eSanjeevani OPD” tele-medicine.

Why Telemedicine?

Telemedicine can increase the efficiency of care delivery, reduce expenses of caring for patients or transporting to another location, and can even keep patients out of the hospital.  

E-Sanjeevani Platform

  • E-Sanjeevani is a platform-independent, browser-based application facilitating both doctor-to-doctor and patient-to-doctor tele-consultations.
  • It provides the ease of accessing the health records at the comforts of one’s home.
  • The application is based on invite-system which restricts it to the actual beneficiaries of the application.
  • It has a user-friendly interface which facilitates both tech-savvy and novice doctors/users in the rural and urban environment to access the application.
  • This eSanjeevani platform has enabled two types of telemedicine services viz. Doctor-to-Doctor (eSanjeevani) and Patient-to-Doctor (eSanjeevani OPD) Tele-consultations.
  • The former is being implemented under the Ayushman Bharat Health and Wellness Centre (AB-HWCs) programme.

Services included:

The telemedicine platform hosts speciality OPDs which include:

  • Gynaecology, Psychiatry, Dermatology, ENT, Ophthalmology, antiretroviral therapy (ART) for the AIDS/HIV patients, Non-Communicable Disease (NCD) etc

With inputs from:

https://www.cdac.in/index.aspx?id=hi_pr_eSanjeevani

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Coronavirus – Economic Issues

Restructuring to cushion impact on the economy

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: MPC

Mains level: Paper 3- Impact of covid and the role of government and the central bank

“The article analyses the present scenario of the economy and impact of the steps taken by the central bank and the government.” 

Context

  • Monetary policy committee (MPC) members, through a unanimous vote, decided to keep policy rates unchanged.
  • MPC also maintained an accommodative stance.
  • This was the result of inflation hovering around 6% i.e. above the MPCs target of 4%.

Restructuring package after moratorium ends

  • Moratorium on loans ends 31 August, RBI said the way forward is a restructuring package for businesses and households.
  • Recent data released by large banks indicate that there has been a sizeable reduction in moratorium in June from 50% in April for all scheduled commercial banks (SCBs).
  • As economic activity normalizes further, the need for restructuring will be even lower.

What do the trends indicate

  • Most indicators—manufacturing and services Purchasing Managers’ Index(PMI’s) electricity output, vehicle sales, exports, imports—point to economic momentum settling at 10-15% below covid levels in the near-term.
  • The RBI’s consumer confidence survey—gauge of consumer spending—was at its lowest in May, and the one-year outlook is not promising.
  • This implies that consumption demand, especially discretionary demand, will be far lower.
  • With muted consumption, capacity utilization, which had fallen to 68.2% last December, has fallen further in the last few months.
  • Thus, investment demand is not likely to see upward momentum in the near term, even with lower interest rates.

How RBI’s intervention made the difference

  • An economic slowdown of such proportions leads to an increase in risk premium.
  • Rating upgrade to downgrade ratio of the corporate sector had fallen to 0.05 as in May from a high of 1.11 in December 2018.
  • Spread between 3-year AAA corporate bonds and sovereign bonds rose to 276 basis points on 26 March.
  • But the spread has since fallen to 50bps.
  • This was possible because of the abundant liquidity made available by RBI and credit enhancement provided by the government.

Way forward

  • RBI and the government will have to work together to revive demand.
  • Centre has already expanded its gross borrowing to ₹12 trillion.
  • Even with net tax collections at 53% of last year’s levels, the Centre has increased its spending by 13% over 2019-20.
  • The government better understand that this is the time to apply Keynesian economics.
  • Global central banks have become large buyers of sovereign debt to support the larger roles being played the governments.
  • In India, too, the Centre and states will have to spend to crowd-in private sector spending.
  • RBI’s role will be important not only as the lender of last resort but also as a buyer of government securities.
  • It has carried out its function as a central bank well, and brought a semblance of stability to financial markets.
  • It will have to do the same in the sovereign bond market.
  • More importantly, it will have to remain vigilant of impending risks to growth and inflation, and be ready to act.

Consider the question “To what extent the steps taken by the RBI and the government to stabilise the economy battered by the covid pandemic were helpful? 

 Conclusion

As India’s central bank comes towards the end of its interest rate reduction cycle, it will have to navigate the economy through financial and macroeconomic stability. The government will also have to act in tandem with the central bank in steering the economy through this storm.

Original

articles:https://www.livemint.com/opinion/columns/opinion-restructuring-to-cushion-impact-on-the-economy-11596758908360.html

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Labour, Jobs and Employment – Harmonization of labour laws, gender gap, unemployment, etc.

Importance of increasing the income of those at the bottom of income pyramid

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Marginal propensity to consume

Mains level: Paper 3- Income level and demand problem

India’s growth has been fuelled by demand which has dampened owing to various factors. One untapped source of demand could be the group which lies at the bottom of income pyramid. This article suggests the ways to increase the income of this group.

Structural demand problem

  • India’s structural demand problem predates the COVID-19 shock.
  • This problem has been compounded after lockdown as jobs have been lost and incomes have collapsed.
  • Boosting domestic demand is critical for an economic revival as external demand is likely to remain muted.
  • It is argued that India’s growth story has been driven by demand generated by those who are at the top of India’s socio-economic pyramid
  • But the demand from that section has now plateaued.

So, where the demand is going to come from?

  •  Turn to those at the bottom of the pyramid.
  • Those at the bottom of pyramid have a high marginal propensity to consume.
  • But realising the untapped demand potential of this group requires enhancing their incomes and earnings.

Division of India’s workforce

  • Periodic Labour Force Survey (2018-19) tells us that less than 10 per cent of the workforce is engaged in regular formal jobs.
  • Another 14 per cent are engaged in regular informal jobs with average monthly earnings (Rs 9,500), which is roughly equivalent to or slightly below a minimum wage.
  • The self-employed and casual workers account for 50 per cent and 24 per cent of the workforce respectively and report average earnings that are considerably below a decent minimum amount.
  • Casual workers, who are unlikely to receive work on every day of the month, are at the bottom of the employment structure.

How to increase the earning of those at the bottom of employment structure

  • Devising strategies that enhance productivity growth in the informal economy could increase their income.
  • Raising the minimum wages of the worst-off workers.
  • At present, under the Minimum Wage Act,  India has a complex set of minimum wages which offer different wages by occupation type and skill levels.
  • The Code on Wages (2019) seeks to universalise minimum wages and extend them to the unorganised sector.

Way forward

  • 1) Ensuring a decent minimum wage for those who are the bottom of the distribution — the casual labour, would be helpful in this context.
  • This will help set a higher wage floor for others engaged in low-paid work, including regular informal workers.
  • 2) It is also important that minimum wages are paid in public workfare programmes too, in particular MGNREGA works.
  • At present, MGNREGA wages are not covered under the Minimum Wages Act.
  • 3) The minimum wage can be linked to the consumption expenditure of the relatively better-off group of workers.

Consider the question “India’s growth story is scripted by demand which has been tapering off. The new source of demand could be those at the bottom of income structure. Suggest the strategies to increase the income of this group which could then translate into demand.”

Conclusion

The Indian employment challenge today cannot be seen independently of the problem of inadequate income. The above intervention will not only enable income enhancement of those in low-paid work but also add fuel to demand and growth, this time from those at the bottom of the distribution.

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Digital India Initiatives

Digital realities of India

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much

Mains level: Paper 3- Digital India and role of Google

Context

  • Google has recently announced a decision to invest $10 billion in India.
  • To put that sum in context, it is over 10 times the money set aside for 100 smart cities and almost 20 times that for Digital India.
  • Purpose of that investment is stated to be digitising India.

Digital realities of India Google must consider:

1) Contradictions

  •  India recognises the internet as a human right, and yet, has led the world in internet shutdowns.
  • Its internet speeds can be slow and variable, but its uptake of smartphones is the world’s fastest.
  • It is second only to China in internet users, app downloads and social media users.

2) Lack of access to internet

  • Only 21 per cent of women are mobile internet users, while the percentage for men is twice that number.
  • There are many societal factors that make it difficult for women and girls to enjoy full digital freedoms.
  • In rural India, where two-thirds of the country lives, just about a quarter of the population has internet access.
  • Differences in digital access mean differences in the quality of education.
  • The gaps are both digital and societal.

3) Lack of access to banks

  •  India’s workforce is mostly informal.
  • Only 22 per cent of recipients of migrant remittances have access to banks within one km, according to a report by the Centre for Digital Financial Inclusion.
  • A push from Google and its competitors could make payments and financial access more inclusive.

4) Need for special products for India

  • you mention new products for India’s unique needs, of which there are many.
  • Consider the needs in the agricultural sector alone.
  • Impac of predictive data analytics and basic artificial intelligence into Indian agriculture using readily available technologies would be huge.
  • Precision farming to improve the timing and quantity of seeding, irrigation and fertiliser usage.
  • Helping farmers get credit at lower costs and helping predict commodity prices can create $33 billion in new value annually in Indian agriculture.

5) Lack of data governance and issues with it

  • Nandan Nilekani has said, India will be data rich before it is “economically rich”.
  • With 650 million internet users, there is a lot of data richness already.
  • But this data richness exists without a forward-looking and inclusive data governance policy.
  • The experience with Aarogya Setu, provided a perfect case study on the discomfort within India because of the absence of such governance.

6) Prevalence of misinformation

  • It is essential to get a handle on the “infodemic” problem in India.
  • The situation was made far worse by the pandemic, where many of the prejudices, fears have converged.
  • Google-owned YouTube is a critical medium for spreading information, fact and fiction.
  • To its credit, YouTube removed over 8,20,000 videos in India in the first quarter of 2020.
  • This is a great start, but the bad guys will only find ways around it and Google must make deeper investments in both human and machine intelligence to stay ahead.

7) Geopolitical context

  • India is inching closer to the US corner in the tech Cold War between the US and China.
  • India-China relationship has cooled this year as a fallout from the political tensions between New Delhi and Beijing.
  • India acted against Chinese ByteDance-owned video streaming app TikTok, along with 59 mobile apps.
  • Google’s role will be important as a bargaining chip against China and the partnership with Jio.
  • This important role may help Google get some domestic leverage with Indian regulators.

8) Job creation

  • Digital technologies can create jobs.
  • For this to happen India must streamline the regulations to enhancing the country’s digital and physical foundations.
  • There is also need for developing more progressive data accessibility laws.
  • To translate into productive work, the government must invest in skill-building and education at all levels.

Consider the question “Digitising India could accelerate its progress toward development but there are certain factors which must be addressed before India could reap benefits of digitising. Examine such factors and suggest the ways to deal with the issues in digitising the country.”

Conclusion

There is a lot Google can take while working on the task of digitising India. But the above-mentioned factors will help Google chart out its journey well.

Original articles:

https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/sundar-pichai-google-education-digital-india-6544793/

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Electric and Hybrid Cars – FAME, National Electric Mobility Mission, etc.

Delhi government’s Electric Vehicle Policy

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not Much

Mains level: Electric vehicles regulation in India

Image source: TOI

The Delhi government has notified the new Electric Vehicle Policy under which it aims to make a quarter of all new vehicle registrations battery-operated by 2024 and thereby help reducing air pollution.

Try this PYQ:

Q.In the context of proposals to the use of hydrogen-enriched CNG (H-CNG) as fuel for buses in public transport, consider the following statements:

  1. The main advantage of the use of H-CNG is the elimination of carbon monoxide emissions.
  2. H-CNG as fuel reduces carbon dioxide and hydrocarbon emissions.
  3. Hydrogen up to one-fifth by volume can be blended with CNG as fuel for buses.
  4. H-CNG makes the fuel less expensive than CNG.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct? (CSP 2018)

(a) 1 only

(b) 2 and 3 only

(c) 4 only

(d) 1, 2, 3 and 4

Some key highlights of the policy are:

  • A purchase incentive of Rs 5,000 per kilowatt/hour of battery capacity (advanced battery), a maximum incentive of Rs 30,000 per vehicle for two-wheelers.
  • A purchase incentive of Rs 30,000 per vehicle (advanced battery) for e-autos.
  • A purchase incentive of Rs 30,000 per vehicle for the purchase of one e-rickshaw and e-cart. Additionally, an interest subsidy of 5 per cent on loans on vehicles with advanced battery.
  • Conversion of 50 per cent of all new stage carriage buses (all public transport vehicles with 15 seats or more) by 2022.
  • A purchase incentive of Rs 10,000 per kilowatt/hour of battery capacity (advanced battery), and maximum incentive of Rs 150,000 per vehicle to the first 1,000 e-four wheelers.
  • Complete removal of road tax and registration fee for all battery electric vehicles.

Significance of the policy

  • According to the VAHAN database of the Ministry of Road Transport and Highways, electric vehicles comprised only 3.2 per cent of the new vehicles registered in Delhi in 2019-20.
  • The proposed 25 per cent transformation of Delhi’s new-vehicle market could catalyse electric vehicle production and bring more product diversity.

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Water Management – Institutional Reforms, Conservation Efforts, etc.

Twin issues: Shrinking water bodies and floods in urban landscapes

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not Much

Mains level: Urban floods in India

This newscard is an excerpt from the original article published in the D2E.

Try this question for mains:

Q.Shrinking water bodies and floods in urban landscapes are mutually induced by each other. Analyse.

Water in urban landscapes

  • Lakes and wetlands are an important part of the urban ecosystem.
  • They perform significant environmental, social and economic functions — from being a source of drinking water and recharging groundwater to supporting biodiversity and providing livelihoods.
  • Their role becomes even more critical in the present context when cities are facing the challenge of rapid unplanned urbanisation.
  • Their numbers are declining rapidly. For example, Bangalore had 262 lakes in the 1960s; now only 10 of them hold water.

Issues with urban water bodies

  • Natural streams and watercourses, formed over thousands of years due to the forces of flowing water in the respective watersheds, have been altered because of urbanisation.
  • As a result, the flow of water has increased in proportion to the urbanisation of watersheds.
  • Ideally, natural drains should have been widened to accommodate the higher flows of stormwater.
  • But, on the contrary, they have been a victim of various unlawful activities:

(1) Pollution

  • There has been an explosive increase in the urban population without a corresponding expansion of civic facilities such as infrastructure for the disposal of waste.
  • As more people are migrating to cities, urban civic services are becoming less adequate.
  • As a result, most urban water bodies in India are suffering because of pollution. The water bodies have been turned into landfills in several cases.
  • Guwahati’s Deepor Beel, for example, is used by the municipal corporation to dump solid waste since 2006. Even the Pallikarni marshland in Chennai is used for solid waste dumping.

(2) Encroachment

  • This is another major threat to urban water bodies. As more people have been migrating to cities, the availability of land has been getting scarce.
  • Today, even a small piece of land in urban areas has a high economic value.
  • These urban water bodies are not only acknowledged for their ecosystem services but for their real estate value as well.
  • Charkop Lake in Maharashtra, Ousteri Lake in Puducherry, Deepor beel in Guwahati are well-known examples of water bodies that were encroached.

(3) Illegal mining activities

  • Illegal mining for building material such as sand and quartzite on the catchment and bed of the lake have an extremely damaging impact on the water body.
  • For example, the Jaisamand Lake in Jodhpur, once the only source of drinking water for the city, has been suffering from illegal mining in the catchment area.
  • Unmindful sand mining from the catchment of Vembanad Lake on the outskirts of Kochi has decreased the water level in the lake.

(4) Unplanned tourism activities

  • Using water bodies to attract tourists has become a threat to several urban lakes in India.
  • Tso Morari and Pongsho lakes in Ladakh have become polluted because of unplanned and unregulated tourism.
  • Another example is that of Ashtamudi Lake in Kerala’s Kollam city, which has become polluted due to spillage of oil from motorboats.

(5) Absence of administrative framework

  • The biggest challenge is the government apathy towards water bodies.
  • This can be understood from the fact that it does not even have any data on the total number of urban water bodies in the country.
  • Further, CPCB had not identified major aquatic species, birds, plants and animals that faced threat due to pollution of rivers and lakes.

Original article:

https://www.downtoearth.org.in/news/urbanisation/two-sides-of-the-same-coin-shrinking-water-bodies-and-urban-floods-72702

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International Space Agencies – Missions and Discoveries

Magnetoseismology of Sun’s Corona

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: MHG, CoMP, Corona

Mains level: Study of solar atmosphere

A group of researchers has measured the global magnetic field of the Sun’s corona for the very first time.

Try this PYQ:

The terms ‘Event Horizon’, ‘Singularity’, `String Theory’ and ‘Standard Model’ are sometimes seen in the news in the context of (CSP 2017)-

(a) Observation and understanding of the Universe

(b) Study of the solar and the lunar eclipses

(c) Placing satellites in the orbit of the Earth

(d) Origin and evolution of living organisms on the Earth

Basis of the research

  • The properties of waves depend on the medium in which they travel.
  • By measuring certain wave properties and doing a reverse calculation, some of the properties of the medium through which they have travelled can be obtained.
  • Waves can be longitudinal waves (for example, sound waves) or transverse waves (for example, ripples on a lake surface).
  • The waves that propagate through magnetic plasma are called magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) waves.
  • From the theoretical calculation, it can be shown that the properties of the transverse MHD wave are directly related to the strength of magnetic fields and the density of the corona.

How was the Magnetic Field measured?

  • The team used a technique known as coronal seismology or magnetoseismology to measure the coronal magnetic field which has been known for a few decades.
  • This method requires the measurement of the properties of magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) waves and the density of the corona simultaneously.
  • In the past, these techniques were occasionally used in small regions of the corona, or some coronal loops due to limitations of our instruments/and proper data analysis techniques.

The CoMP instrument

  • The team used the improved measurements of the Coronal Multi-channel Polarimeter (CoMP) and advanced data analysis to measure the coronal magnetic field.
  • CoMP is an instrument operated by High Altitude Observatory, of the U.S.
  • It is located at Mauna Loa Solar Observatory, near the summit of that volcano on the big island of Hawaii.

Why measure the solar magnetic field?

  • It is very important to measure the corneal magnetic fields regularly since the solar corona is highly dynamic and varies within seconds to a minute time scale. There are two main puzzles about the Sun which this advancement will help address:

(1) Coronal heating problem

  • Though the core of the Sun is at a temperature of about 15 million degrees, its outer layer, the photosphere is a mere 5700 degrees hot.
  • However, its corona or outer atmosphere, which stretches up to several million kilometres beyond its surface, is much, much hotter than the surface.
  • It is at a temperature of one million degrees or more.
  • What causes the atmosphere of the Sun (corona) to heat up again, though the surface (photosphere) is cooler than the interior? That is the question which has baffled solar physicists.
  • Popular attempts to explain this puzzle invoke the magnetic field of the corona. Hence the present work will help understand and verify these theories better.

(2) Mechanisms of eruptions of the Sun

  • The eruptions on the Sun include solar flares and coronal mass ejections.
  • These are driven by magnetic reconnections happening in the Sun’s corona.
  • Magnetic reconnection is a process where oppositely polarity magnetic field lines connect and some of the magnetic energy is converted to heat energy and also kinetic energy which leads to the generation of heating, solar flares, solar jets, etc.

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Festivals, Dances, Theatre, Literature, Art in News

Why August 7th is called National Handloom Day?

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Handloom, Swadeshi Movement

Mains level: India's handloom sector

Yesterday, August 7th was celebrated as the National Handloom Day. It was in 2015, the first National Handloom Day was celebrated.

Try this PYQ:

What was the immediate cause for the launch of the Swadeshi movement? (CSP 2010)

(a) The partition of Bengal done by Lord Curzon.

(b) A sentence of 18 months rigorous imprisonment imposed on Lokmanya Tilak.

(c) The arrest and deportation of Lala Lajpat Rai and Ajit Singh; and passing of the Punjab Colonization Bill.

(d) Death sentence pronounced on the Chapekar brothers.

Why 7th August?

  • With the partition of Bengal, the Swadeshi Movement gained strength.
  • It was on August 7, 1905, that a formal proclamation was made at the Calcutta Town Hall to boycott foreign goods and rely on Indian-made products.

What is handloom?

  • While different definitions for the word have evolved since the Handloom (Reservation and Articles for Production) Act, 1985, where ‘handloom’ meant “any loom other than power loom”, in recent years it has become more elaborate.
  • In 2012, a new definition was proposed: “Handloom means any loom other than power loom, and includes any hybrid loom on which at least one process of weaving requires manual intervention or human energy for production.”

Back2Basics: Swadeshi Movement

  • Credit to starting the Swadeshi movement goes to Baba Ram Singh Kuka of the Sikh Namdhari sect, whose revolutionary movements which heightened around 1871 and 1872.
  • It gained momentum with the partition of Bengal by the Viceroy of India, Lord Curzon in 1905 and continued up to 1911.
  • It was the most successful of the pre-Gandhian movements.
  • Its chief architects were Aurobindo Ghosh, Lokmanya Bal Gangadhar Tilak, Bipin Chandra Pal and Lala Lajpat Rai, V. O. Chidambaram Pillai, Babu Genu.
  • Swadeshi, as a strategy, was a key focus of Mahatma Gandhi, who described it as the soul of Swaraj (self-rule). It was strongest in Bengal and was also called the Vandemataram movement in India.

Important phases of the Movement

  • 1850 to 1904: developed by leaders like Dadabhai Naoroji, Gokhale, Ranade, Tilak, G. V. Joshi and Bhaswat K. Nigoni. This was also known as the First Swadeshi Movement.
  • 1905 to 1917: Began in 1905, because of the partition of Bengal ordered by Lord Curzon.
  • 1918 to 1947: Swadeshi thought shaped by Gandhi.

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Indian Army Updates

Exercise Kavkaz 2020

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Kavkaz 2020

Mains level: NA

In a resumption of bilateral and multilateral military exercises which were deferred due to coronavirus (COVID-19), India will take part in the Russian Kavkaz 2020 strategic command-post exercise next month.

Go through the list for once. UPSC may ask a match the pair type question asking exercise name and countries involved.

https://www.civilsdaily.com/prelims-spotlight-defence-exercises/

Kavkaz 2020

  • The Kavkaz 2020 is also referred to as Caucasus-2020.
  • The exercise is aimed at assessing the ability of the armed forces to ensure military security in Russia’s southwest, where serious terrorist threats persist and preparing for the strategic command-staff drills.
  • The main training grounds that will be involved are located in the Southern Military District.
  • The invitation for participation has been extended to at least 18 countries including China, Iran, Pakistan and Turkey apart from other Central Asian Republics part of the SCO.

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Agricultural Sector and Marketing Reforms – eNAM, Model APMC Act, Eco Survey Reco, etc.

[pib] First “Kisan Rail” flagged off

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Kisan Rail

Mains level: Doubling farmers income by 2022

Indian Railways introduced the first “Kisan Rail” from Devlali (Maharashtra) to Danapur (Bihar).

Try this question for mains:

Q.Discuss the role of agricultural marketing and logistics for doubling farmer’s income by 2022.

Kisan Rail

  • From Maharashtra’s Devlali to Bihar’s Danapur, the train will cover the journey of 1,519 kilometres in over 31 hours.
  • It will take stops at Nasik Road, Manmad, Jalgaon, Bhusaval, Burhanpur, Khandwa, Itarsi, Jabalpur, Satna, Katni, Manikpur, Prayagraj Chheoki, Pt. Deendayal Upadhyay Nagar and Buxar.
  • This train will help in bringing perishable agricultural products like vegetables, fruits to the market in a short period of time.
  • The train with frozen containers is expected to build a seamless national cold supply chain for perishables, inclusive of fish, meat and milk.
  • It is a step towards realizing the goal of doubling farmers’ incomes by 2022.

Other facts

  • Indian Railways have earlier run single commodity special trains like Banana Specials etc.
  • But this will be the first-ever multi-commodity trains and will carry fruits like Pomegranate, Banana, Grapes etc and vegetables like Capsicum, Cauliflower, Drumsticks, Cabbage, Onion, Chilies etc.

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Innovations in Sciences, IT, Computers, Robotics and Nanotechnology

AI integration will be at the core of the transition

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: AI

Mains level: Paper 3- AI and its applications

The article tracks the latest developments in the field of AI by the leading technology companies.

Integrating AI in the phone

  • Over the last few years, most mobile phone manufacturers have been content with design upgrades, apart from specs.
  • Samsung launched a device which has been able to integrate artificial intelligence (AI) in its phones.
  • In the case of S-Pen, Samsung demonstrated that it has been able to reduce latency between pen operation and what appears on the screen to 9 milliseconds using predictive analysis.
  • Latency is a major concern in technologies like smart cars.
  • Samsung also showcased active noise cancellation, which again uses prediction analysis to drown out ambient noises.
  • Apple’s virtual event also focused on higher integration and more uses of AI.
  • Siri has become even smarter and is increasingly being integrated with more services.
  • The camera function of Apple devices, for instance, pieces together a picture using best angles to create the perfect image.
  • Samsung and Apple now can monitor health more accurately using their smartwatches.

Future scope

  • This indicates how much further we are moving towards a future with more edge computing.
  • This computing will power technologies like a smart car.
  • Given the progress in IoT, there is a huge likelihood that those betting early on AI integration will reap the biggest rewards of the connected living market.

Consider the question “What is artificial intelligence? How it could transform the world of technology?”

Conclusion

Integration of AI in the devices we use in everyday life holds a promising future for us. India must encourage its development.


Source-

https://www.financialexpress.com/opinion/ai-integration-will-be-at-the-core-of-the-transition-to-future-technologies-such-as-smarts-cars/2047309/

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Banking Sector Reforms

Balancing the interest of lenders and borrowers

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much

Mains level: Paper 3- Problems of banks in India

The article suggests the 5 point strategy to balance the interest of borrowers and lenders. Banks hold the special significance for the country and so require special and stricter regulation.

Context

  •  COVID creates deep pain but we must resist consistently choosing borrowers over lenders.
  • We should persist with our multi-year five-pillar strategy to sustainably raise our Credit to GDP ratio from 50 per cent to 100 per cent.

Issue of lending

  • A modern economy grows by lending.
  •  But fiscal constraints or natural disasters often create temptations to disguise spending as lending.
  • The last 20 years have given three lessons:
  • 1) Giving loans is easier than getting them back.
  • Corporate credit growing from Rs 18 lakh crore in 2008 to Rs 54 lakh crore in 2014 created a Rs 12 lakh crore bad loan problem.
  • 2) Accounting fudging and restructuring would not help.
  • 3) Government banks need more than capital.
  • Government banks’ risk-weighted assets are lower than two years ago despite a Rs 2 lakh crore capital infusion.

History recommends patiently balancing financial inclusion and stability by persisting with our five-pillar strategy.

1) Bank competition

  • Raising credit availability and lowering its price needs competition-driven innovation.
  • Capital should be chasing Indian banking given its high net interest margins, high market cap to book value ratios, and massive addressable market.
  • Yet, the RBI’s on-tap licencing has few applications pending.
  • We need many more banks.

2) Private bank governance

  • Private banks are only 30 per cent of deposits but 80 per cent of bank market capitalisation.
  • Private banks are a special species with 20 times leverage, but this makes privatised gains and socialised losses possible.
  • Recent failures suggest problems with public shareholder collective action and the attention, skill, and courage of board directors.
  • Private bank governance must move from a perpetual private fiefdom to trustees that hand over in better condition to the next generation.

3) Government bank governance

  • Over 10 years, government companies have sunk from 30 per cent of India’s market capitalisation to 6 per cent.
  • Government banks mirror this decline — their 70 per cent bank deposit share translates to only 20 per cent bank market capitalisation share.
  • Many have irrational employee costs to market capitalisation ratios ex- Bank of India with 58 per cent.
  • We need only four government banks with strong governance and no tax access for capital.

4) RBI’s regulation and supervision

  • Recent failures in financial institutions reinforce the importance of statutory auditors, ethical conduct, shareholder self-interest, and risk management.
  • They also suggest a first-principles review that raises the RBI’s regulation and supervision.
  • Zero failure is impossible, but the RBI should boldly re-imagine its current mandate, structure and technology.

5) Non-bank regulatory space

  • Regulatory differences traditionally existed between banks and non-banks.
  • But progress in payments, MSME lending, and consumer credit suggest that non-banks are as important for financial inclusion.
  • They need more regulatory space and supervision.

Conclusion

We won’t test the RBI’s COVID worst-case scenario of 14.7 per cent bad loans but handling the inevitable COVID bank pain needs resisting short-termism. In the long run, we are not all dead.

Original article: https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/rbi-bank-and-the-covid-pain-india-gdp-6543101/

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Innovation Ecosystem in India

Importance of the post academic research

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much.

Mains level: Issue of Research and Development in India

Post-academic research have a direct bearing on national development. India needs to focus on it along with academic research. This article explains this issue.

Context

  • The Government of India is in the process of revisiting the Science, Technology and Innovation (STI) Policy.
  • At this stage we need to ponder the question: what kind of research should be funded?

How to measure the maturity level of a particular technology?

  • Experts have come up with frameworks and terminology to provide a comprehensive picture and avoid any value judgement.
  • One approach was proposed by NASA in the form of Technology Readiness Levels (TRL).
  • TRL-1 corresponds to observation of basic principles. Its result is publications.
  • TRL-2 corresponds to formulation of technology at the level of concepts.
  • Then the TRL framework advances to proof of concept, validation in a laboratory environment, followed by a relevant environment, and then to prototype demonstration, and ending with actual deployment.
  • An alternative is to use the terminology ‘Academic Research (AR)’, and ‘Post-Academic Research (PAR)’.
  • To provide some granularity, one can divide PAR into early-stage PAR, and late-stage PAR.
  • Late-stage PAR has to be done by large laboratories (national or those supported by industry).
  • AR and early-stage PAR can be done at higher education institutions and large laboratories.

Importance of Post-Academic Research(PAR)

  • From the perspective of national development, pursuit of AR alone, while necessary, is not sufficient.
  • AR and PAR, when pursued together and taken to their logical conclusion, will result in a product or a process,
  • Or it can also result in a better clinical practice, or a scientifically robust understanding of human health and disease, or provide inputs for a policy decision.

Issues in comparing investment in research among countries

  • 1) We cannot compare data with other countries without having correspondence between India’s data and data reported by others.
  • Countries belonging to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) report research statistics according to the Frascati Manual.
  • 2) India has to decide where to increase investment: in AR or in PAR.

Research and national development

  • Investment in research can translate into national development only through pursuit of PAR.
  • Our industry has not reached a stage where they can absorb research being done by higher education institutions.
  • This reveals that research being pursued is either not addressing national needs or is limited to AR.

Way forward

  • Judging the growth of Science-and-Technology based only on publications (e.g. research papers) provides an incomplete picture.
  • We should increasing the technology intensity of industry, which was identified as one of the goals of the STI policy issued in 2013.
  • This needs reiteration and a mechanism should be devised to monitor progress with the objective of becoming an ‘Atmanirbhar Bharat’.
  • The STI policy should emphasise PAR to ensure that investment in research results in economic growth.
  • To motivate the research community to pursue at least early-stage PAR, the reward system needs significant reorientation.
  • Academics in higher education institutions pursuing AR should pursue early-stage PAR themselves, or team up with those who are keen to pursue PAR.

Consider the question “Examine the factors that responsible for the lack of research and development in India? Also, elaborate on the importance of post-academic research in the country.”

Conclusion

These factors are sufficient to indicate that academic research is necessary, but not sufficient and we must focus on PAR adequately.

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Minority Issues – SC, ST, Dalits, OBC, Reservations, etc.

Back in news: EWS quota law

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: EWS Quota , Article 15, 16

Mains level: EWS quota and related issues

The Supreme Court has referred to a five-judge Constitution Bench a batch of petitions challenging the 103rd Constitution Amendment of 2019 that provides 10% reservation for Economically Backward Section (EWS).

Try this question for mains:

Q.What are the various constitutional challenges posed by the 103rd Constitutional Amendment Act?

What does the reference mean?

  • A reference to a larger Bench means that the legal challenge is an important one.
  • As per Article 145(3) of the Constitution, “the minimum number of Judges who are to sit for the purpose of deciding any case involving a substantial question of law as to the interpretation of this Constitution” shall be five.
  • The Supreme Court rules of 2013 also say that writ petitions that allege a violation of fundamental rights will generally be heard by a bench of two judges unless it raises substantial questions of law.
  • In that case, a five-judge bench would hear the case.
  • Laws made by Parliament are presumed to be constitutional until proven otherwise in court.
  • The SC had refused to stay the 103rd Amendment. A reference will make no difference to the operation of the EWS quota.

What is the 103rd amendment about?

  • It provides for 10% reservation in government jobs and educational institutions for EWS, by amending Articles 15 and 16 that deal with the fundamental right to equality.
  • While Article 15 prohibits discrimination on grounds of religion, race, caste, sex or place of birth, Article 16 guarantees equal opportunity in matters of public employment.
  • An additional clause was added to both provisions, giving Parliament the power to make special laws for EWS as it does for SCs, STs and OBCs.
  • The states are to notify who constitute EWS to be eligible for reservation.

Issues with the law

The SC agreed that the case involved at least three substantial questions of law, whether:

  • First, it violates the Basic Structure of the Constitution. This argument stems from the view that the special protections guaranteed to socially disadvantaged groups is part of the Basic Structure and that the 103rd Amendment departs from this by promising special protections on the sole basis of economic status.
  • Second, it violates the SC’s 1992 ruling in Indra Sawhney Case, which upheld the Mandal Report and capped reservations at 50%. In the ruling, the court held that economic backwardness cannot be the sole criterion for identifying backward class.
  • The third challenge has been of private, unaided educational institutions. They have argued that their fundamental right to practise a trade/profession is violated when the state compels them to implement its reservation policy and admit students on any criteria other than merit.

What are the government’s arguments?

  • The Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment filed counter-affidavits to defend the amendment.
  • When a law is challenged, the burden of proving it unconstitutional lies on the petitioners.
  • The government argued that under Article 46 of the Constitution, part of DPSP, it has a duty to protect the interests of economically weaker sections.

1) The very identity of the Constitution has not been altered.

2) Countering the claims about Indra Sawhney principle, the government relied on a 2008 ruling— Ashok Kumar Thakur v Union of India, in which the SC upheld the 27% quota for OBCs. Here, the court accepted that the definition of OBCs was not made on the sole criterion of caste but a mix of caste and economic factors, to prove that there need not a sole criterion for according reservation.

3) For the unaided institutions, the government argued that the Constitution allows the Parliament to place “reasonable restrictions” on the right to carry on trade.

B2BASICS

What are the significances of the EWS quota?

  • Address economic inequality: Currently, the economically weaker sections of citizens have remained excluded from attending higher educational institutions and public employment due to their financial incapacity. Therefore, the 10% quota is progressive and could address the issues of educational and income inequality in India.
  • Constitutional recognition:The proposed reservation through a constitutional amendment would give constitutional recognition to the poor from the upper castes.
  • Remove stigma associated with Reservation: It will gradually remove the stigma associated with reservation because reservation has historically been related with caste and most often the upper caste look down upon those who come through the reservation.

What are the challenges before the EWS quota?

1.Eligibility criteria:

  • Critics claim that the 8 lakh income threshold is very high and will practically cover nearly all population not already covered by reservations.
  • Notably, NSSO and IT department data shows that at least 95% of Indian families will fall within this limit.
  • Other eligibility criteria have also claimed to be flawed.

2.Sole economic criteria:

  • The Supreme Court in Indra Sawhney judgement has maintained that a backward class cannot be determined mainly with respect to the economic criterion.
  • Hence introducing reservation based on economic criteria would invite judicial scrutiny.

3.50 percent limit:

The SC has put a cap for reservations at 50% – the current proposal will exceed the limit and hence could be legally challenged.

4.Determining economic backwardness:

This is a  major challenge as there are concerns regarding the inclusion and exclusion of persons under the criteria.

5.Enforcement:

The implementation of the legislation would also be a great challenge since the states do not have the finances to enforce even the present and constitutionally mandated reservations.

Shrinking jobs:

When the government is trying to restrict its public services through the advancement of technology in the government system, providing quota in jobs will be a useless move.

6.Encouraging reservations: 

The intent of constitutional makers as originally manifested via Article 15 and 16 was to be reviewed after 10 years. However, instead of restricting the policy of positive discrimination, the government is pushing it in some or other forms.

7.Populist initiative:

When elections are near, many populists’ measures are put forward by political parties such as loan waiver, reservations, etc. Considering the low levels of political literacy and awareness among masses, political parties take leverage of the same thus impacting the socio-economic and political structure at large.

8.Lack of proofs to back the outcomes:

Even after years of reservation policy, there are no considerable pieces of evidence to support the achievements of the original intent of affirmative action. For instance, only about 4 percent each of rural Scheduled Tribe and Scheduled Caste households have a member in a government job.

9.Lack of Level Playing Field:

It has to be noted that the Upper ladder in the reserved category are mainly benefitted from the policy whereas the benefits do not reach the marginalized. It may also happen with respect to reservation based on economic criteria as well.

What is the way forward?

  • One-time usage: Make sure that beneficiaries use their reserved category status only once in their lifetime. For example, a person shall not be allowed to use the reservation for jobs if he/she has already used it for college admissions. Aadhaar can be utilized for this purpose in order to prohibit the second usage.
  • Quality of education: The government should focus on quality in addition to access. For instance, it is no use to give reservation to the poor people in college admission if the quality of the education is low = they get no job. Hence, the quality of education should be given due attention from the primary school stage itself.
  • Vocational education: should be promoted with the necessary skills and knowledge to make them industry ready.
  • Entrepreneurship: Create a spirit of entrepreneurship and make them job giver instead of a job seeker.
  • Social upliftment measures: Alternative as well as effective social upliftment measures should be adopted instead of just focussing on reservation aspect.

 

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RBI Notifications

How are inflation rate and interest rate linked?

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Monetary Policy tools

Mains level: Not Much

The Monetary Policy Committee of the RBI has decided to keep the benchmark interest rates of the economy unchanged.

Try this PYQ:

Q.Which one of the following is not the most likely measures the Government/RBI takes to stop the slide of Indian rupee? (CSP 2019)

(a) Curbing imports of non-essential goods and promoting exports

(b) Encouraging Indian borrowers to issue rupee-denominated Masala Bonds

(c) Easing conditions relating to external commercial borrowing

(d) Following an expansionary monetary policy

What is the link between growth, inflation and interest rates?

  • In a fast-growing economy, incomes go up quickly and more and more people have the money to buy the existing bunch of goods.
  • As more and more money chases the existing set of goods, prices of such goods rise.
  • In other words, inflation (which is nothing but the rate of increase in prices) spikes.

How interest rates dominate?

  • To contain inflation, a country’s central bank typically increases the interest rates in the economy.
  • By doing so, it incentivizes people to spend less and save more because saving becomes more profitable as interest rates go up.
  • As more and more people choose to save, money is sucked out of the market and inflation rate moderates.

What happens when growth rate decelerates or contracts?

  • When growth contracts or when its growth rate decelerates, people’s incomes also get hit.
  • As a result, less and less money is chasing the same quantity of goods.
  • These results in either the inflation rate decline.
  • In such situations, a central bank cuts down the interest rates so as to incentivise spending and by that route boost economic activity in the economy.
  • Lower interest rates imply that it is less profitable to keep one’s money in the bank or any similar saving instrument.
  • As a result, more and more money comes into the market, thus boosting growth and inflation.

Why has RBI not raised interest rates this quarter?

  • RBI is facing an odd situation at present: GDP is contracting even as inflation is rising.
  • This is happening because the pandemic has reduced demand, on the one hand, and disrupted supply on the other.
  • As a result, both things are happening — falling growth and rising inflation.
  • It is true that for containing inflation, RBI should raise interest rates.
  • And under normal circumstances, it would have done just that. But raising interest rates at this stage would be catastrophic for India’s GDP growth.

Risks of altering interest rates

  • If the RBI cuts the interest rate, it may be fuelling retail inflation further. It must be remembered that inflation hits the poor the hardest.
  • So, the RBI has chosen to do what many expected it to do: stay put and waits for another couple of months to figure out how growth and inflation are shaping up.

Back2Basics: Monetary Policy Committee (MPC)

  • The RBI Act, 1934 (RBI Act) was amended by the Finance Act, 2016,  to provide for a statutory and institutionalized framework for an MPC, for maintaining price stability, while keeping in mind the objective of growth.
  • The MPC is entrusted with the task of fixing the benchmark policy rate (repo rate) required to contain inflation within the specified target level.
  • The meetings of the MPC are held at least 4 times a year and it publishes its decisions after each such meeting.
  • As per the provisions of the RBI Act, out of the six members of the committee, three members are from the RBI and the other three Members of MPC are appointed by the Central Government.
  • Governor of the RBI is ex officio Chairman of the committee.

Economics | Monetary Policy Explained with Examples

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International Space Agencies – Missions and Discoveries

SN5 Starship by SpaceX

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: SN5 Starship

Mains level: Commercial crew programme by SpaceX

SpaceX has successfully test-launched its “Mars ship”, a stainless steel test vehicle called SN5, and which is a part of the Starship spacecraft.

Elon Musk’s aerospace company has been putting continuous wins on the board ever since it became the first privately funded group to put a payload in Earth orbit.

What is Starship?

  • Designed by SpaceX, Starship is a spacecraft and super-heavy booster rocket meant to act as a reusable transportation system for crew and cargo to the Earth’s orbit, Moon and Mars.
  • SpaceX has described Starship as “the world’s most powerful launch vehicle” with an ability to carry over 100 metric tonnes to the Earth’s orbit.
  • Starship has been under development since 2012 and is a part of Space X’s central mission to make interplanetary travel accessible and affordable and to become the first private company to do so.

So what all can Starship do?

  • SpaceX is planning its first cargo mission to the red planet by 2022 and by 2024, the company wants to fly four ships including two cargo and two crewed ones to Mars.
  • Once functional, the Starship spacecraft will enter Mars’ atmosphere at a speed of 7.5 km per second and will be designed to withstand multiple entries.
  • Starship is also expected to help carry large amounts of cargo to the Moon, for human spaceflight development and research.
  • Beyond the Moon, the spacecraft is being designed for carrying crew and cargo for interplanetary missions as well.

A quest for reusability

  • Therefore, the company is working on building a fleet of reusable launch vehicles, capable of carrying humans to Mars and other destinations in the solar system.
  • Reusability is at the heart of making interplanetary travel accessible.

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J&K – The issues around the state

Appointment of new Lt. Governor of the UT of J&K

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Lt. Governor and its appointment

Mains level: Administrative differences in governance of UTs

A veteran politician has been appointed as Lieutenant Governor of the Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir.

Try this PYQ:

Q.Which one of the following suggested that the Governor should be an eminent person from outside the State and should be a detached figure without intense political links or should not have taken part in politics in the recent past? (CSP 2019)

(a) First Administrative Reforms Commission (1966)

(b) Rajamannar Committee (1969)

(c) Sarkaria Commission (1983)

(d) National Commission to Review the Working of the Constitution (2000)

Office of the Lt. Governor

  • A Lt. Governor is the constitutional head of the union territories in India.
  • She/he is appointed by the President of India for a term of five years and holds office at the President’s pleasure.
  • Since the union territories of Delhi, J&K and Puducherry have a measure of self-government with an elected legislature and council of ministers, the role of the lieutenant governor there is mostly a ceremonial one, akin to that of a state’s governor.
  • In Andaman and Nicobar Islands and Ladakh however, the lieutenant governor holds more power, being both the head of state and head of government.
  • The other three UTs—Chandigarh; Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu; and Lakshadweep—are governed by an administrator.

Some related facts

  • Unlike the lieutenant governors of other territories, they are usually drawn from the IAS or IPS.
  • Lieutenant governors do not hold the same rank as a governor of a state in the list of precedence.
  • Since 1985 the Governor of Punjab has also been the ex-officio Administrator of Chandigarh.

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