May 2021
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Need for West Asia’s diplomatic resets

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much

Mains level: Paper 2- Factors driving engagement among West Asian countries

The article highlights the unprecedented engagement among the countries of West Asia even among the rivals and explains its significance.

New diplomatic engagements in West Asia

  • Recently, there have been interactions between senior Saudi and Iranian officials, the first since diplomatic ties were broken in January 2016.
  • Following the removal of the diplomatic and economic blockade on Qatar that was imposed by Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt, Doha has made efforts to mend ties with both Saudi Arabia and Egypt, in tandem with similar initiatives of its doctrinal and political ally, Turkey.
  • On May 5, Turkey and Egypt had their first diplomatic meeting in Cairo after they had broken diplomatic ties in 2013.
  • The two countries, on opposite sides on almost all regional issues, are now exploring how to address their differences.

Driving force behind these engagements

  • The driving force behind these unprecedented engagements is the advent of the Biden administration at the helm of politics in the United States.
  • He has taken a tough line on Saudi Arabia, scrutinising its human rights record and opposition to the war in Yemen.
  • Besides concerns in West Asian capitals, the broader message is that the U.S. is now likely to be less engaged with the region’s quarrels.
  • These signals of new U.S. policies have occurred even as the novel coronavirus pandemic is devastating West Asia.
  • Finally, one major factor is the recognition that the ongoing regional conflicts, in Syria, Yemen and Libya, despite the massive death and destruction, have yielded no military outcome and now demand fresh diplomatic approaches.

Long way to go in resolving differences

  • Egypt remains uneasy about Turkey’s ties with the Brotherhood and its regional ambitions.
  • Saudi Arabia has similar concerns about Turkey’s doctrinal affiliations and its relations with Iran.
  • There are difficulties in reshaping Saudi-Iran relations as well.
  • Iran may ease the pressure on the kingdom in Yemen and gradually yield ground in Iraq.
  • However, Syria will test their diplomatic skills as they explore how to accommodate their competing strategic interests in that devastated country.

Historic period for West Asian diplomacy

  • This is truly a historic period for West Asian diplomacy.
  • The major states are displaying unprecedented self-confidence in pursuing initiatives without the involvement of western powers that have dominated regional affairs for at least a couple of centuries.
  • This has left a pervasive sense of insecurity across West Asia and made the countries dependent on western alliances to ensure their interests.
  • This has left a pervasive sense of insecurity across West Asia and made the countries dependent on western alliances to ensure their interests.

Role for India

  • Given that regional contentions are inter-connected, third-party facilitators will be needed to promote mutual confidence and prepare the ground for a comprehensive regional security arrangement.
  • This will bring together regional and external states with a stake in West Asia security.
  • This arrangement will have provisions for participating states to uphold regional peace and promote mutually beneficial cooperation in energy, economic and logistical connectivity areas.
  • Given its close ties with all the regional states, India is well-placed to build an association of like-minded states — Japan, Russia, South Korea — to shape and pursue such an initiative for West Asian peace.

Conclusion

These new diplomatic engagements with erstwhile rivals could in time overturn existing regional alignments and possibly end ongoing conflicts.

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Intellectual Property Rights in India

India should walk the talk on TRIPS waiver

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: TRIPS

Mains level: Paper 3- TRIPS waiver and India's stand

The article highlights the variance in India’s stand on intellectual property rights waiver for Covid related drugs on the international level and domestic level. 

Removing the IPR barrier

  • When the pandemic hit the globe, India and South Africa piloted the proposal to waive key provisions of the Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) agreement on COVID-19 vaccines, drugs, therapeutics, and related technologies.
  • The core idea is that IPRs such as patents should not become barriers in scaling up production of medical products essential to combat COVID-19.
  • The TRIPS waiver proposal, now backed by the U.S. would give immunity to member countries from a legal challenge at the WTO if their domestic IPR laws suspend or do not enforce IP protection on COVID-19 medical products.
  • Member countries of the World Trade Organization (WTO) are under an obligation to ensure that their domestic intellectual property rights (IPR) laws conform to the requirements of the TRIPS agreement.

No use of compulsory licencing in India

  • The existing flexibilities under the Patents Act of 1970, such as compulsory licences, which are consistent with the TRIPS agreement, can be used to increase the supply of COVID-19 medical products.
  • However, despite the nudging by the judiciary and others, the government inexplicably hasn’t made use of compulsory licences in the pandemic.
  • While issuing compulsory licences for COVID-19 vaccines in the absence of technology transfer is easier said than done, they can be used to augment the supply of drugs and other therapeutics.
  • For instance, there are demands that compulsory licences be issued for drugs such as Remdesivir to augment supply.
  • Natco, an Indian pharmaceutical company, has requested a compulsory licence under Section 92 of the Patents Act for Baricitinib, a COVID-19 drug.
  • This is ironic because India has historically played a leading role in mainstreaming TRIPS flexibilities like the compulsory licence at the WTO.
  • The Central government, in an affidavit filed before the Supreme Court, states that the main constraint in boosting the production of drugs like Remdesivir is the unavailability of raw materials and essential inputs.
  • The affidavit further states, “it is presumptuous to assume that the patent holder will not agree to more voluntary licences”.

Issues with the government’s stand

  •  If that is the real bottleneck, and not IPR-related legal hurdles, why is India pushing for a TRIPS waiver at the WTO?
  • The first step in advocating for the removal of IPR-related impediments at the WTO is to make use of the existing lawful means.
  • Therefore, the government’s stand before the Supreme Court is not only contradictory with India’s position at the WTO but also severely undermines it.

Way forward

  • To make its TRIPS waiver stand convincing, the government needs to make aggressive use of Sections 92 and 100 of the Patents Act to license all patents necessary to make COVID-19 medical products.
  • The government should not only transfer Covaxin’s technology to domestic pharmaceutical companies, to boost national supplies, but also offer it to foreign corporations. 
  •  By unlocking its vaccine technical know-how to the world, India would demonstrate its resolve to walk the talk on the TRIPS waiver.

Conclusion

India must take a consistent stand on IPRs on COVID-19 medical products internationally and domestically.

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

Why has Indian manufacturing been losing jobs since 2016?

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not Much

Mains level: Unemployment issues in India

The State of Working India (SWI) 2021 has documented the impact of one year of Covid-19 in India, on jobs, incomes, inequality, and poverty.

Highlights of the SWI 2021

  • The SWI 2021 showed that the pandemic had forced people out of their formal jobs into casual work, and led to a severe decline in incomes.
  • There is a sudden increase in poverty over the past year.
  • Maharashtra, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh, and Delhi, contributed disproportionately to job losses.
  • Unsurprisingly, these are also the states that suffered the maximum Covid caseload.

Labour Participation Rate (LPR) is the ratio of the labour force to the population greater than 15 years of age. It is defined as the section of working population in the age group of 16-64 in the economy currently employed or seeking employment.

Worsened with COVID

  • It pointed to an ailment of the Indian economy that has not only been a longstanding one but also one that has gotten worse over the past few years even without the help of Covid.
  • Agriculture, mines, manufacturing, real estate and construction, financial services, non-financial services, and public administrative services sectors account for 99% of total employment in India.
  • The number of people employed in the manufacturing sector of the economy has come down from 51 million to 27 million — that is, almost halving in the space of just four years!
  • For instance, the number of people employed in agriculture is going up.
  • Equally disheartening is that employment in non-financial services (such as providing education and entertainment industry etc.) has fallen sharply.

Why are these trends worrisome?

  • It is important to understand that traditionally Indian policymakers have been of the view that the manufacturing sector is our best hope to soak up the surplus-labour otherwise employed in agriculture.
  • Manufacturing is well suited because it can make use of the millions of poorly educated Indian youth, unlike the services sector, which often requires better education and skill levels.
  • For the longest time, India has struggled to get its manufacturing industries to create a growing bank of jobs.
  • But, and this is what the CMIE data shows, what is happening in the past 4-5 years is that far from soaking up excess labour from other sectors of the economy, manufacturing is actually letting go of workers.

Return to Agriculture

  • India has seen a hike in the number of people “employed” in agriculture over the past year.
  • This is nothing but disguised unemployment.
  • Essentially, labourers and workers are returning to their rural homes in the absence of jobs either in manufacturing or services.

Why is Indian manufacturing failing to create jobs?

  • On the face of it, every past government has come out with a policy to boost manufacturing jobs. But still, the situation is getting worse.
  • There are different ways to look at this question.
  1. One is to look at why manufacturing has struggled to create as many jobs in the past
  2. The second is to look at the specific reasons why manufacturing has been bleeding jobs, instead of creating them, since 2016-17.

Let’s tackle the historical question first.

  • If one looks at any of the sectors in the economy — agriculture, industry, services — starting a manufacturing unit requires the highest amount of fixed investment upfront (relative to the output that may be generated later).
  • In other words, it is a big commitment on the part of an entrepreneur to put up a huge amount of money without necessarily knowing how it will all pan out.
  • What has traditionally made this truly risky is the highly extractive nature of governments.
  • In simpler terms, far too often governments have been corrupt, with officials and politicians extracting bribes.

Less focus on manufacturing goods

  • As regards the demand for manufacturing goods, experts point out that Indians have always consumed relatively less of manufacturing goods and relatively more of food and services.

There are two possible reasons for this.

  1. One, most Indians are quite poor and hence most of the income is spent on food.
  2. Two, repairs and maintenance are a very high part of our consumption choice.
  • In other words, when Indians buy a manufactured product — say a refrigerator — they tend to use it for much longer than in developed countries.

Core of the problem

  • The trouble lies with policymakers repeatedly neglecting the labour-intensive industries.
  • Since the second five year plan, the P C Mahalanobis strategy was to gain self-reliance by investing in capital intensive industries so that India does not have to import machines etc. from other countries.
  • The hope was that the demand from Indian consumers will make the domestic industry viable.
  • But Indian domestic demand was quite anaemic due to poverty levels.

Other policy lacunas

  • As against the capital intensive industries, which were involved in making heavy machines, the labour-intensive ones (such as leather, handicrafts, textiles etc.) were reserved for the small-scale industry framework.
  • But while the labour-intensive manufacturing firms could not match the capital-intensive firms in terms of GDP value or growth of output, they did have a distinct advantage of creating more jobs.
  • But, by treating them as small-scale industries, policies held back their growth.
  • Moreover, India did not push for integrating its labour-intensive manufacturing in the global supply chains by aggressively following exports.
  • Instead, the idea was to substitute imports in the name of self-reliance.

What has happened since 2016-17?

  • Things have become worse over the past five odd years despite the Indian government unveiling its ambitious Make in India (MII) initiative and the latest Production-Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme.
  • For one India is repeating the same mistakes with MII and PLI schemes.
  • They are again aimed more at capital intensive manufacturing, not labour intensive ones.
  • Moreover, India is reverting to the protectionist approach, aimed at self-reliance, yet again in recent years.
  • Further, much like in the past, this time, too, the domestic demand is weak for aggressively boosting labour-intensive industries aimed at capturing the export markets.

Conclusion

  • The growing rift in the fortunes of informal and formal manufacturing could be the reason why India is seeing such a massive decline in manufacturing jobs.
  • The government has tried its level best to push for greater formalization but it has often been accused of not understanding the nature and functioning of India’s informal economy.

Way forward

  • For the same level of employment, formality is good.
  • But if there is a trade-off between formality and employment generation, choosing formality may not be so beneficial. And this trade-off appears to be quite sharp in India.
  • Indian manufacturing is still at best hope for creating new jobs and soaking up excess unskilled labour through better infrastructure and easier regulatory support — to create millions of new jobs.

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Coronavirus – Disease, Medical Sciences Involved & Preventive Measures

ICMR drops Plasma Therapy for COVID-19

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Convalescent Plasma Therapy

Mains level: Not Much

The use of convalescent plasma has been dropped from the recommended treatment guidelines for COVID-19, according to an advisory from the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR).

Q.What is convalescent plasma therapy and what are the issues involved in its adoption?

Convalescent Plasma Therapy

  • The therapy seeks to make use of the antibodies developed in the recovered patient against the coronavirus.
  • The whole blood or plasma from such people is taken, and the plasma is then injected into critically ill patients so that the antibodies are transferred and boost their fight against the virus.
  • A COVID-19 patient usually develops primary immunity against the virus in 10-14 days.
  • Therefore, if the plasma is injected at an early stage, it can possibly help fight the virus and prevent severe illness.

How often has it been used in the past?

  • This therapy is no new wonder. It has been used several times.
  • The US used plasma of recovered patients to treat patients of Spanish flu (1918-1920).
  • In 2014, the WHO released guidelines to treat Ebola patients with convalescent whole blood and plasma.
  • In 2015, plasma was used for treating MERS patients.

How is it done?

  • The process to infuse plasma in a patient can be completed quickly.
  • It only requires standard blood collection practices and extraction of plasma.
  • If whole blood is donated (350-450 ml), a blood fractionation process is used to separate the plasma.
  • Otherwise, a special machine called aphaeresis machine can be used to extract the plasma directly from the donor.
  • While blood is indeed extracted from the donor, the aphaeresis machine separates and extracts the plasma using a plasma kit, and the remaining blood components are returned into the donor’s body.

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Climate Change Impact on India and World – International Reports, Key Observations, etc.

Places in news: Leang Sakapao Caves

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Leang Sakapao Caves

Mains level: Not Much

Researchers have reported that Pleistocene-era rock paintings dating back to 45,000-20,000 years ago in cave sites in southern Sulawesi, on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi, are weathering at an alarming rate.

Have you ever found the mention of ‘Altamira Caves’ in your NCERTs?

Leang Sakapao Caves

  • This cave art of Sulawesi is much older than the prehistoric cave art of Europe.
  • The artwork in the area includes what is believed to be the world’s oldest hand stencil (almost 40,000 years ago), created by pressing the hand on a cave wall and spraying wet red-mulberry pigments over it.
  • A nearby cave features the world’s oldest depiction of an animal, a warty pig painted on the wall 45,500 years ago.

Impact of climate change

  • The artwork made with pigments was decaying due to a process known as haloclasty, which is triggered by the growth of salt crystals due to repeated changes in temperature and humidity.
  • This is caused by alternating wet and dry weather in the region.
  • Indonesia has also experienced several natural disasters in recent years, which have quickened the process of deterioration.

Note:

Mark all islands of the Indonesian Archipelago in your Atlas.

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Foreign Policy Watch: India-Iran

Farzad B Gas Field

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Farzad B Gas Field

Mains level: Not Much

Iran gave the Farzad B gas field to a domestic gas producer in a setback move to India.

Farzad B Gas Field

  • Farzad-B is an off-shore natural gas field 20 kilometres off Farsi Island in Iran.
  • The gas field was discovered in 2008 by a consortium of three Indian companies, led by the state-owned ONGC Videsh with a 40% stake; the other companies were Indian Oil Corporation (40%) and Oil India (20%).

Deal soured after US sanctions

  • Negotiations between the consortium and the National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) to develop the gas field stalled due to secondary sanctions against Iran by the US and the European Union in the early 2010s.
  • Following the lifting of sanctions after the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action was signed in July 2015 the consortium was close to an agreement to invest $US5 billion to develop the gas field.
  • After the United States withdrawal from the JCPOA in May 2018, and the reinstatement of U.S. sanctions against Iran, the negotiations between the consortium and NIOC broke down.

Consider the question “Balancing the contrasts has been the basis of India’s relations with Iran. Comment.”

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