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Health Sector – UHC, National Health Policy, Family Planning, Health Insurance, etc.

ASHA workers earn WHO’s global plaudits

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: ASHA

Mains level: Contribution of ASHAs in primary healthcare in rural areas

The country’s frontline health workers or ASHAs (accredited social health activists) were one of the six recipients of the WHO’s Global Health Leaders Award 2022 which recognises leadership, contribution to the advance of global health and commitment to regional health issues.

Who are ASHA workers?

  • ASHA workers are volunteers from within the community who are trained to provide information and aid people in accessing benefits of various healthcare schemes of the government.
  • The role of these community health volunteers under the National Rural Health Mission (NRHM) was first established in 2005.
  • They act as a bridge connecting marginalised communities with facilities such as primary health centres, sub-centres and district hospitals.

Genesis & evolution

  • The ASHA programme was based on Chhattisgarh’s successful Mitanin programme, in which a Community Worker looks after 50 households.
  • The ASHA was to be a local resident, looking after 200 households.
  • The programme had a very robust thrust on the stage-wise development of capacity in selected areas of public health.
  • Many states tried to incrementally develop the ASHA from a Community Worker to a Community Health Worker, and even to an Auxiliary Nurse Midwife (ANM)/ General Nurse and Midwife (GNM), or a Public Health Nurse.

Qualifications for ASHA Workers

  • ASHAs are primarily married, widowed, or divorced women between the ages of 25 and 45 years from within the community.
  • They must have good communication and leadership skills; should be literate with formal education up to Class 8, as per the programme guidelines.

How many ASHAs are there across the country?

  • The aim is to have one ASHA for every 1,000 persons or per habitation in hilly, tribal or other sparsely populated areas.
  • There are around 10.4 lakh ASHA workers across the country, with the largest workforces in states with high populations – Uttar Pradesh (1.63 lakh), Bihar (89,437), and Madhya Pradesh (77,531).
  • Goa is the only state with no such workers, as per the latest National Health Mission data available from September 2019.

What do ASHA workers do?

  • They go door-to-door in their designated areas creating awareness about basic nutrition, hygiene practices, and the health services available.
  • They focus primarily on ensuring that pregnant women undergo ante-natal check-up, maintain nutrition during pregnancy, deliver at a healthcare facility, and provide post-birth training on breast-feeding and complementary nutrition of children.
  • They also counsel women about contraceptives and sexually transmitted infections.
  • ASHA workers are also tasked with ensuring and motivating children to get immunised.
  • Other than mother and child care, ASHA workers also provide medicines daily to TB patients under directly observed treatment of the national programme.
  • They are also tasked with screening for infections like malaria during the season.
  • They also provide basic medicines and therapies to people under their jurisdiction such as oral rehydration solution, chloroquine for malaria, iron folic acid tablets to prevent anaemia etc.
  • Now, they also get people tested and get their reports for non-communicable diseases.
  • The health volunteers are also tasked with informing their respective primary health centre about any births or deaths in their designated areas.

How much are ASHA workers paid?

  • Since they are considered “volunteers/activists”, governments are not obligated to pay them a salary. And, most states don’t.
  • Their income depends on incentives under various schemes that are provided when they, for example, ensure an institutional delivery or when they get a child immunised.
  • All this adds up to only between Rs 6,000 to Rs 8,000 a month.
  • Her work is so tailored that it does not interfere with her normal livelihood.

Success of the ASHAs

  • It is a programme that has done well across the country.
  • In a way, it became a programme that allowed a local woman to develop into a skilled health worker.
  • Overall, it created a new cadre of incrementally skilled local health workers who were paid based on performance.
  • The ASHAs are widely respected as they brought basic health services to the doorstep of households.
  • Since then ASHA continues to enjoy the confidence of the community.

Challenges to ASHAs

  • The ASHAs faced a range of challenges: Where to stay in a hospital? How to manage mobility? How to tackle safety issues?
  • There have been challenges with regard to the performance-based compensation. In many states, the payout is low, and often delayed.
  • It has a problem of responsibility and accountability without fair compensation.
  • There is a strong argument to grant permanence to some of these positions with a reasonable compensation as sustaining motivation.
  • Ideally, an ASHA should be able to make more than the salary of a government employee, with opportunities for moving up the skill ladder in the formal primary health care system as an ANM/ GNM or a Public Health Nurse.

Way forward

  • The incremental development of a local resident woman is an important factor in human resource engagement in community-linked sectors.
  • It is equally important to ensure that compensation for performance is timely and adequate.
  • Upgrading skill sets and providing easy access to credit and finance will ensure a sustainable opportunity to earn a respectable living while serving the community.
  • Strengthening access to health insurance, credit for consumption and livelihood needs at reasonable rates, and coverage under pro-poor public welfare programmes will contribute to ASHAs emerging as even stronger agents of change.

 

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Parliament – Sessions, Procedures, Motions, Committees etc

Centre reconstitutes Inter-State Council (ISC)

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Inter-State Council (ISC)

Mains level: Read the attached story

The Inter-State Council, which works to promote and support cooperative federalism in the country, has been reconstituted with PM Modi as Chairman and CMs of all States and six Union Ministers as members.

What is Inter-State Council (ISC)?

Genesis of ISC

  • The Constitution of India in Article 263, provides for the establishment of Inter-State Council (ISC).
  • The objective of the ISC is to discuss or investigate policies, subjects of common interest, and disputes among states.

Temporary or permanent?

  • The articles says that ISC may be established “if at any time it appears to the President that the public interests would be served by the establishment of a Council”.
  • Therefore, the constitution itself did not establish the ISC, because it was not considered necessary at the time the constitution was being framed, but kept the option for its establishment open.

Establishment as permanent body

  • This option was exercised in 1990.
  • The ISC was established as a permanent body on 28 May 1990 by a presidential order on the recommendation of the Sarkaria Commission.
  • It had recommended that a permanent Inter-State Council called the Inter-Governmental Council (IGC) should be set up under Article 263.
  • It cannot be dissolved and re-established.
  • Therefore, the current status of ISC is that of a permanent constitutional body.

Aims of the ISC

  • Decentralisation of powers to the states as much as possible
  • More transfer of financial resources to the states
  • Arrangements for devolution in such a way that the states can fulfil their obligations
  • Advancement of loans to states should be related to as ‘the productive principle’
  • Deployment of Central Armed Police Forces in the states either on their request or otherwise

Composition

The Inter-State Council composes of the following members:

  • Prime Minister, Chairman.
  • Chief Ministers of all states.
  • Chief Ministers of the union territories having legislative assemblies.
  • Administrators of the union territories not having legislative assemblies.
  • 6 Union Cabinet Ministers, including Home Minister, to be nominated by the Prime Minister.
  • Governors of the states being administered under President’s rule.

Standing Committee

  • Home Minister, Chairman
  • 5 Union Cabinet Ministers
  • 9 Chief Ministers

 

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Foreign Policy Watch: India-United States

Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity (IPEF)

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity (IPEF)

Mains level: Economic expansion of QUAD

India has signalled its readiness to be part of a new economic initiative led Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity (IPEF) by the US for the region.

What is IPEF?

  • The grouping, which includes seven out of 10 members of the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN), all four Quad countries, and New Zealand, represents about 40% of global GDP.
  • The negotiations for the IPEF are expected to centre around four main pillars, including trade, supply chain resiliency, clean energy and decarbonisation, and taxes and anti-corruption measures.
  • Countries would have to sign up to all of the components within a module, but do not have to participate in all modules.
  • The “fair and resilient trade” module will be led by the US Trade Representative and include digital, labor, and environment issues, with some binding commitments.
  • The IPEF seeks to strengthen economic partnership amongst participating countries with the objective of enhancing resilience, sustainability, inclusiveness, economic growth, fairness, and competitiveness in the Indo-Pacific region.

Features of IPEF

  • US officials made it clear that the IPEF would not be a “free trade agreement”, nor are countries expected to discuss reducing tariffs or increasing market access.
  • The IPEF will not include market access commitments such as lowering tariff barriers,
  • In that sense, the IPEF would not seek to replace the 11-nation CPTPP (Trans-Pacific Partnership) that the US quit in 2017, or the RCEP, which China, and all of the other IPEF countries (minus the US) are a part of.
  • Three ASEAN countries considered closer to China — Myanmar, Cambodia and Laos — are not members of the IPEF.

Four pillars of IPEF

  1. Trade that will include digital economy and emerging technology, labour commitments, the environment, trade facilitation, transparency and good regulatory practices, and corporate accountability, standards on cross-border data flows and data localisations;
  2. Supply chain resiliency to develop “a first-of-its-kind supply chain agreement” that would anticipate and prevent disruptions;
  3. Clean energy and decarbonisation that will include agreements on “high-ambition commitments” such as renewable energy targets, carbon removal purchasing commitments, energy efficiency standards, and new measures to combat methane emissions; and
  4. Tax and anti-corruption, with commitments to enact and enforce “effective tax, anti-money laundering, anti-bribery schemes in line with [American] values”.

Reasons for creation of IPEF

  • The IPEF is also seen as a means by which the US is trying to regain credibility in the region after former President Donald Trump pulled out of the Trans Pacific Partnership TPP).
  • Since then, there has been concern over the absence of a credible US economic and trade strategy to counter China’s economic influence in the region.
  • China is an influential member of the TPP, and has sought membership of its successor agreement Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement on Trans Pacific Partnership.
  • It is also in the 14-member Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, of which the US is not a member (India withdrew from RCEP).
  • The Biden Administration is projecting IPEF as the new US vehicle for re-engagement with East Asia and South East Asia.

 

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Urban Floods

Devastation in Dima Hasao and its after-effects

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: NA

Mains level: Flash floods

Disaster struck Dima Hasao, central Assam’s hill district, in mid-May after incessant heavy rainfall.

Impacts of the disaster

  • The 170 km railway line connecting Lumding in the Brahmaputra Valley’s Hojai district and Badarpur in the Barak Valley’s Karimganj district was severely affected.
  • The Assam government and Railway Ministry’s assessments said the district suffered a loss of more than ₹1,000 crore, but ecologists say the damage could be irreversibly higher.

How severe has the rain been in Assam?

  • Assam is used to floods, sometimes even four times a year, resultant landslides and erosion.
  • But the pre-monsoon showers this year have been particularly severe on Dima Hasao, one of three hill districts in the State.
  • Landslips have claimed four lives and damaged roads.
  • The impact has been most severe on the arterial railway, which was breached at 58 locations leaving the track hanging in several places.
  • The disruption of train services, unlikely to be restored soon, has cut off the flood-hit Barak Valley, parts of Manipur, Mizoram and Tripura.

Why is the railway in focus post-disaster?

  • Dima Hasao straddles the Barail, a tertiary mountain range between the Brahmaputra and Barak River basins.
  • The district is on the Dauki fault (the prone-to-earthquakes geological fractures between two blocks of rocks) straddling Bangladesh and parts of the northeast.
  • British engineers were said to have factored in the fragility of the hills to build the railway line over 16 years by 1899.
  • The end result was an engineering marvel 221 km long over several bridges and through 37 tunnels, laid along the safer sections of the hills.

A faulty experiment

  • A project to convert the metre gauge track to broad gauge was undertaken in 1996 but the work was completed only by March 2015 because of geotechnical constraints and extremist groups.
  • The broad-gauge track was realigned to be straighter, but a 2009-10 audit report revealed that the project had been undertaken without proper planning and visualisation of the soil strata behaviour.
  • The report gave the example of the disaster-prone Tunnel 10 on the realigned track that was pegged 8 meters below the bed of a nearby stream.

Is only the railway at fault?

  • There is a general consensus that other factors have contributed to the situation Dima Hasao is in today.
  • Roads in the district, specifically the four-lane Saurashtra-Silchar (largest Barak Valley town) East-West Corridor, have been realigned or deviated from the old ones that were planned around rivers and largely weathered the conditions.
  • The arterial roads build over the past 20 years often cave in and get washed away by floods or blocked by landslides.
  • Shortened cycles of jhum or shifting cultivation on the hill slopes and unregulated mining have accentuated the “man-made disaster”.
  • Massive extraction of river stone, illegal mining of coal and smuggling of forest timbe has led to the disaster.
  • These activities have increased water current besides weakening either side of riverbanks.

How vital are the rail and highway through Dima Hasao?

  • Meghalaya aside, Dima Hasao is the geographical link to a vast region comprising southern Assam’s Barak Valley, parts of Manipur, Mizoram and Tripura.
  • Moreover, this track is vital for India’s Look East policy that envisages shipping goods to and from Bangladesh’s Chittagong port via Tripura’s border points at Akhaura and Sabroom.
  • These are the last railway station near the Feni River that serves as the India-Bangladesh border.

 

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Food Procurement and Distribution – PDS & NFSA, Shanta Kumar Committee, FCI restructuring, Buffer stock, etc.

Government lacking a coherent policy of food security

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much

Mains level: Paper 3- Need for coherent policy of food security

Context

The Government of India announced a sudden ban on export of wheat on May 13, 2022, a few days after Prime Minister Narendra Modi had stated that “at a time when the world is facing a shortage of wheat, the farmers of India have stepped forward to feed the world”.

What led to the sudden wheat export ban?

  • Low public procurement: The sudden turnaround in the export policy appears to be on account of fears that low public procurement would affect domestic food security.
  • This summer, procurement of wheat by the Food Corporation of India (FCI) has been very low.
  • Last year, the FCI and other agencies procured 43.34 million tonnes of wheat.
  • For the current season, procurement has only been 17.8 million tonnes, as of May 10, 2022.
  • Given the low levels of procurement, the Government has reduced the procurement target for the current season from 44.4 to 19.5 million tonnes.
  • Low production: While wheat production this year has been lower than estimated on account of high heat and other factors in March, there is not a big shortfall in production relative to previous years.
  • Wheat production was 103.6 million tonnes in 2018-19, 107.8 million tonnes in 2019-20, and 109.5 million tonnes in 2020-21.
  • The most recent estimate of production for 2021-22, revised downwards from the earlier estimate, is 105.

Public procurement in India

  • The system of public procurement has been in place since the mid-1960s, and has been the backbone of food policy in India.
  • As part of the liberalisation policy, many other economists suggested that food stocks be run down in India and that needs of food security be met through world trade and the Chicago futures market.

Need for effective PDS

  • Higher than buffer stock norm: Stocks of wheat in the central pool as of April 30, 2022 were 30.3 million tonnes, much lower than the 52.5 million tonnes of last year, but comfortably higher than buffer stock norms.
  • While the Government procurement in this marketing season has been lower than the previous two years, the stock position so far is similar to 2019, when we had 35.8 million tonnes of stock in April.
  • An important role in pandemic: In the two COVID-19 years (2020-21 and 2021-22), the Public Distribution System (PDS) played a stellar role, and, its role showed the wisdom of not dismantling it.
  • Total offtake of rice and wheat was 102.3 million tonnes in 2021-22 when distribution through the PDS and other welfare schemes is combined.
  • It is essential that the PDS and open market operations be used to cool down food price inflation.
  •  While most States have high inflation rates, States with better PDS, such as Kerala and Tamil Nadu, have low inflation rates.

Way forward

  • Provide remunerative prices: To promote production, a key aspect of food policy in India has been to provide remunerative prices to farmers.
  • As is well known, after the reports of the National Commission on Farmers, the announced minimum support price (MSP) for wheat has often been inadequate to cover costs of cultivation for several regions and classes of farmers, especially if comprehensive costs (or Cost C2) are taken as the base. 
  • Over the last two years, costs of production have risen sharply, one important component being the spiralling price of fuel.

Conclusion

India’s flip-flop on the export of wheat is an example of the Government lacking a coherent policy of food security.

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

Agri-exports

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much

Mains level: Paper 3- Making agri-exports sustainable

Context

In the fiscal year 2021-22 (FY22), agri-exports scaled an all-time high of $50.3 billion, registering a growth of 20 per cent over the preceding year.

What are the contributing factors?

  • The all time high agri-export was made possible largely by rising global commodity prices, but also by the favourable and aggressive export policy of the Ministry of Commerce and its various export promotion agencies like APEDA, MPEDA, and commodity boards.
  • Sustainability issue: From a strategic point of view, an important question that arises is how sustainable is this growth in agri-exports, given India’s resource endowments and the country’s domestic needs?
  • To answer this question rationally, let us first look at the composition of agri-exports.

Composition of agri-exports

  • Among the several agri-commodities exported in FY22, rice ranks first with exports of $9.6 billion in value (with 21.2 million metric tonnes (MMT) in quantity).
  • It is followed by marine products worth $7.7 billion (1.4 MMT), sugar worth $4.6 billion (10.4 MMT), spices worth $3.9 billion (1.4 MMT) and bovine (buffalo) meat worth $3.3 billion (1.18 MMT) (see figure).
  • Concerns with Rice and Sugar: Of these, two commodities, rice and sugar, are water guzzlers and serious thought should be given to their global competitiveness and environmental sustainability.

Competitiveness and environmental sustainability concerns with Sugar and Rice cultivation

  • India’s exports of 21 MMT constituted 41 per cent of a global rice market of 51.3 MMT.
  • Low export price: When most of the other commodity prices were surging in global markets, the price of rice (Thailand supplies 25 per cent) collapsed by about 13 per cent from $484/tonne in April 2021 to $429/tonne in April 2022, largely due to India’s massive exports.
  • This means that India had to export a greater quantity of rice to get the same amount of dollars.
  • In trade theory, it is a classic case for levying the optimal export tax of 5 to 10 per cent.
  • Optimal export: India should optimally not go beyond 12 to 15 MMT of rice exports, else the marginal revenue from exports will keep falling.
  • Subsidised water: Taking an average of about 4,000 litres of water per kg of rice, and assuming that half of this percolates into groundwater, exporting 21MMT of rice would mean the virtual export of 42 billion cubic meters (m3) of water.
  • Sugar is another water guzzler, whose exports touched 10.4 MMT in FY22.
  • Subsidies crossing WTO limits: It was backed partly by subsidies (including export subsidy) that crossed the 10 per cent limit mandated by the World Trade Organisation, bringing India into a dispute with other sugar exporting countries at the WTO.
  • However, from a sustainability point of view, we must note that exporting one kg of sugar amounts to roughly exporting 2,000 litres of virtual water.
  • That means in FY22, India exported at least 20 billion m3 of water through sugar exports.
  • So, by exporting 21 MMT of rice and 10 MMT of sugar in FY22, India exported at least 62 billion cubic meters of virtual water.
  • Much of this water is extracted from groundwater — as is being done in much of the Punjab and Haryana belt (for rice), where the water table is receding by 9.2 metres and 7 metres over the last two decades (2000-19), and in Maharashtra and Uttar Pradesh for sugar.
  • This can lead to a water disaster. 
  • Anthropogenic methane emission: Rice production systems are among the most important sources of anthropogenic methane emissions, contributing to 17.5 per cent of GHG emissions generated from agriculture (2021).
  •  This is all because of the distortionary policies of free power and highly-subsidised fertilisers, especially urea.

Way forward: Support farmers smartly

  • AWD and DSR: Innovative farming practices such as alternate wetting drying (AWD), direct seeded rice (DSR) that can save up to 25-30 per cent water and micro-irrigation that can save up to 50 per cent irrigation water, could be game-changing technologies in reducing the crop’s carbon footprint.
  • Switching to other crops: The real solution lies in incentivising the farmers to switch some of the area under rice and sugar cultivation to other, less water-guzzling crops.
  • Haryana has come up with two schemes, Mera Pani, Meri Virasat and Kheti Khaali, Fir Bhi Khushali.
  • A closer evaluation of non-basmati rice exports brings out another interesting fact.
  • The unit value of these exports was just $354/tonne, which is below the MSP of rice ($390/tonne).
  • One possibility is that a substantial part of the supplies through the PDS and PM Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana (PMGKAY) are leaking out and swelling rice exports.
  • Introduce the option of direct cash transfer: From a policy angle, it may be high time to introduce the option of direct cash transfers in lieu of almost free grains under the PDS and PMGKAY.
  • This will help plug leakages as well as save costs.

Conclusion

The best way to tackle this upcoming environmental disaster would be to support farmers smartly, by giving them aggregate input subsidy support on a per hectare basis and freeing up the input prices of fertilisers and power to be determined by market forces and their costs of production.

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Modern Indian History-Events and Personalities

250th birth anniversary of Raja Ram Mohan Roy

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Raja Ram Mohun Roy

Mains level: His contributions

One of the most influential social and religious reformers of the 19th century, Ram Mohan Roy, born on May 22, 1772 in what was then Bengal Presidency’s Radhanagar in Hooghly district, would have turned 250 years today.

Raja Ram Mohan Roy (1772-1833)

Early life

  • Born into a prosperous upper-caste Brahmin family, Roy grew up within the framework of orthodox caste practices of his time.
  • Child-marriage, polygamy and dowry were prevalent among the higher castes and he had himself been married more than once in his childhood.
  • The family’s affluence had also made the best in education accessible to him.
  • The waning of the Mughals and the ascendancy of the East India Company in Bengal towards the end of the 18th century was also the time when Roy was slowly coming into his own.

Academics

  • Roy knew Bengali and Persian, but also Arabic, Sanskrit, and later, English.
  • His exposure to the literature and culture of each of these languages bred in him a scepticism towards religious dogmas and social strictures.
  • He spent considerable time studying the Vedas and the Upanishads, but also religious texts of Islam and Christianity.

Religious belief

  • He was particularly intrigued by the Unitarian faction of Christianity and was drawn by the precepts of monotheism that, he believed, lay at the core of all religious texts.
  • He wrote extensive tracts on various matters of theology, polity and human rights, and translated and made accessible Sanskrit texts into Bengali.
  • Rammohun did not quite make a distinction between the religious and the secular. He believed religion to be the site of all fundamental changes.
  • What he fought was not religion but what he believed to be its perversion.

Roy, the first among liberals

  • Even though British consolidation of power was still at a nascent stage in India at the time, Roy could sense that change was afoot.
  • Confident about the strength of his heritage and open to imbibing from other cultures what he believed were ameliorative practices, Roy was among India’s first liberals.
  • He was simultaneously interested in religion, politics, law and jurisprudence, commerce and agrarian enterprise, Constitutions and civic rights, the unjust treatment of women and the appalling condition of the Indian poor.

Establishment of Atmiya Sabha

  • In 1814, he started the Atmiya Sabha (Society of Friends), to nurture philosophical discussions on the idea of monotheism in Vedanta.
  • It aimed to campaign against idolatry, casteism, child marriage and other social ills.
  • The Atmiya Sabha would make way for the Brahmo Sabha in 1828, set up with Debendranath Tagore, Rabindranath Tagore’s father.

Abolition of Sati, educational and religious reforms

  • He campaigned for the modernisation of education, in particular the introduction of a Western curriculum, and started several educational institutions in the city.
  • In 1817, he collaborated with Scottish philanthropist David Hare to set up the Hindu College (now, Presidency University).
  • He followed it up with the Anglo-Hindu School in 1822 and, in 1830, assisted Alexander Duff to set up the General Assembly’s Institution, which later became the Scottish Church College.
  • It was his relentless advocacy alongside contemporaries such as Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar that finally led to the abolition of Sati under the governor generalship of William Bentinck in 1829.
  • Roy argued for the property rights of women, and petitioned the British for freedom of the press (in 1829 and 1830).
  • His Brahmo Sabha, that later became the Brahmo Samaj, evolved as a reaction against the upper-caste stranglehold on social customs and rituals.

Perils of non-conformism

  • Roy, who was given the title of Raja by the Mughal emperor Akbar II, was no exception to the societal enmity.
  • Roy was also often attacked by his own countrymen who felt threatened by his reformist agenda, and by British reformers and functionaries, whose views differed from his.

Conclusion

  • Roy’s work in the sphere of women’s emancipation, modernising education and seeking changes to religious orthodoxy finds new relevance in this time.
  • He was among the first Indians to gain recognition in the UK and in America for his radical thoughts.
  • Roy was unquestionably the first person on the subcontinent to seriously engage with the challenges posed by modernity to traditional social structures and ways of being.
  • Rabindranath Tagore called him a ‘Bharatpathik’ by which he meant to say that Rammohun combined in his person the underlying spirit of Indic civilisation, its spirit of pluralism, tolerance and a cosmic respect for all forms of life.

 

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Soil Health Management – NMSA, Soil Health Card, etc.

Hyper-accumulator Plants for Soil Detox

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Phytoremediation, hyperaccumulators

Mains level: Soil Health Management

A study published in the JNKVV (Jawaharlal Nehru Krishi Vishwavidyalaya) research journal concluded that heavy metal pollution of soil is “emerging at a speedy rate” in India due to industrialisation.

How does soil get contaminated?

  • Soil contamination can happen due to a variety of reasons, including manufacturing, mineral extraction, accidental spills, illegal dumping, leaking underground storage tanks, pesticide and fertiliser use etc.
  • These toxic heavy metals are then absorbed by food crops and other plants before they eventually make their way into our food chain, directly affecting human life along with ecology.

Detoxing the soil

  • Many technologies have emerged to remediate this soil pollution.
  • But these methods have been deemed lacking in terms of sustainability as they come with a large cost and have adverse effects themselves.

Novel technique: Hyperaccumulators

  • Turning toward more sustainable and eco-friendly technologies, scientists have developed methods of “Phytoremediation”.
  • It is a remediation method that uses living organisms like plants, microalgae, and seaweeds.
  • One particular way to remove toxic heavy metals from the soil includes the use of “hyperaccumulator” plants that absorb these substances from the soil.

What are hyperaccumulator plants?

  • Phytoremediation refers to the usage of “hyperaccumulator” plants to absorb the toxic materials present in the soil and accumulate in their living tissue.
  • Most plants do sometimes accumulate toxic substances.
  • Hyperaccumulators have the unusual ability to absorb hundreds or thousands of times greater amounts of these substances than is normal for most plants.
  • Most discovered hyperaccumulator plants typically accumulate nickel and occur on soils that are rich in nickel, cobalt and in some cases, manganese.

Where are they found?

  • These hyperaccumulator species have been discovered in many parts of the world.
  • They include the Mediterranean region (mainly plants of the genus Alyssum), tropical outcrops in Brazi, Cuba, New Caledonia (French territory) and Southeast Asia (mainly plants of the genus Phyllanthus).

How can they be used to remove toxic metals from the soil?

  • Suitable plant species can be used to ‘pick up’ the pollutants from the soil through their roots and transport them to their stem, leaves and other parts.
  • After this, these plants can be harvested and either disposed or even used to extract these toxic metals from the plant.
  • This process can be used to remove metals like silver, cadmium, cobalt, chromium, copper, mercury, manganese, molybdenum, nickel, lead and zinc; metalloids such as arsenic and selenium; some radionuclides; and non-metallic components such as boron.
  • But it cannot be used to remove organic pollutants from the ground due to metabolic breakdown.

Advantages of phytoremediation with hyperaccumulators

  • One of the primary advantages of phytoremediation is the fact that it is quite cost-effective in comparison with other remediation methods.
  • The only major costs attached are related to crop management (planting, weed control, watering, fertilisation, pruning, fencing, harvesting etc.).
  • This method is also relatively simple and doesn’t require any new kinds of specialised technology.
  • Also, no external energy source is required since the plants grow with the help of sunlight.
  • Another important advantage of this method is that it enriches the soil with organic substances and microorganisms which can protect its chemical and biological qualities.
  • Also, while the plants are growing and accumulating toxic heavy metals, they protect the soil from erosion due to wind and water.

Limitations of hyperaccumulators

  • For all its advantages, this kind of phytoremediation with hyperaccumulators has a big drawback: it is a very slow and time-consuming process.
  • The restoration of an area with this process can take up to 10 years or more.
  • This comes with a large economic cost, proportional to the size of the area under rehabilitation.
  • The plants to conduct this rehabilitation must be carefully selected based on a large number of characteristics or they could act as an invasive species.
  • They could grow out of control and upsetting the delicate ecological balance of not just the area under rehabilitation, but also the entire region it is part of.

What can be done for their better utilization?

  • Due to this reason, scientists only propose using species that are native to the region where the phytoremediation project is undertaken.
  • This also has other benefits: these plants will already be acclimatised to the region and there will be no legal problems concerning the procurement, transport and use of seeds.

 

 

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Innovations in Sciences, IT, Computers, Robotics and Nanotechnology

What are Artificial Intelligence (AI) Chips?

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: AI chips

Mains level: Read the attached story

Market leader Nvidia recently announced its H100 GPU (graphics processing unit), which is said to be one of the world’s largest and most powerful Artificial Intelligence (AI) accelerators, packed with 80 billion transistors.

What are AI chips?

  • AI chips are built with specific architecture and have integrated AI acceleration to support deep learning-based applications.
  • These chips, with their hardware architectures and complementary packaging, memory, storage and interconnect technologies, make it possible to infuse AI into a broad spectrum of applications.
  • There are different types of AI chips such as application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs), field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs), central processing units (CPUs) and GPUs, designed for diverse AI applications.

What is Deep Learning?

  • Deep learning, more commonly known as active neural network (ANN) or deep neural network (DNN), is a subset of machine learning and comes under the broader umbrella of AI.
  • It combines a series of computer commands or algorithms that stimulate activity and brain structure.
  • DNNs go through a training phase, learning new capabilities from existing data.
  • DNNs can then inference, by applying these capabilities learned during deep learning training to make predictions against previously unseen data.
  • Deep learning can make the process of collecting, analysing, and interpreting enormous amounts of data faster and easier.

Utility of AI chips

  • The adoption of Artificial Intelligence (AI) chips has risen, with chipmakers designing different types of these chips to power AI applications such as:
  1. Natural language processing (NLP)
  2. Computer vision
  3. Robotics, and
  4. Network security across a wide variety of sectors, including automotive, IT, healthcare, and retail

Are they different from traditional chips?

  • When traditional chips, containing processor cores and memory, perform computational tasks, they continuously move commands and data between the two hardware components.
  • These chips, however, are not ideal for AI applications as they would not be able to handle higher computational necessities of AI workloads which have huge volumes of data.
  • Although, some of the higher-end traditional chips may be able to process certain AI applications.
  • In comparison, AI chips generally contain processor cores as well as several AI-optimised cores that are designed to work in harmony when performing computational tasks.
  • The AI cores are optimised for the demands of heterogeneous enterprise-class AI workloads with low-latency inferencing, due to close integration with the other processor cores.

What are their applications?

  • Use of AI chips for NLP applications has increased due to the rise in demand for chatbots and online channels such as Messenger, Slack, and others
  • They use NLP to analyse user messages and conversational logic.
  • Then there are chipmakers who have built AI processors designed to help customers achieve business insights at scale across banking, finance, trading, insurance applications and customer interactions.

What firms are making these chips?

  • Nvidia Corporation, Intel Corporation, IBM Corporation, Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd, Qualcomm Technologies, Inc., and Apple Inc. are some of the key players in the AI chip market.

Major breakthroughs

  • Nvidia, which dominates the market, offers a wide portfolio of AI chips including Grace CPU, H100 and its predecessor A100 GPUs.
  • It is capable of handling some of the largest AI models with billions of parameters.
  • The company claims that twenty H100 GPUs can sustain the equivalent of the entire world’s internet traffic.
  • IBM’s new AI chip, announced last year, can support financial services workloads like fraud detection, loan processing, clearing and settlement of trades, anti-money laundering and risk analysis.

Scale of global market

  • The Worldwide AI chip industry accounted for $8.02 billion in 2020.
  • It is expected to reach $194.9 billion by 2030, growing at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 37.4% from 2021 to 2030.

What can be expected in the future?

  • AI company Cerebras Systems set a new standard with its brain-scale AI solution, paving the way for more advanced solutions in the future.
  • Its CS-2, powered by the Wafer Scale Engine (WSE-2) is a single wafer-scale chip with 2.6 trillion transistors and 8,50,000 AI optimised cores.
  • The human brain contains on the order of 100 trillion synapses, the firm said, adding that a single CS-2 accelerator can support models of over 120 trillion parameters (synapse equivalents) in size.
  • Another AI chip design approach, neuromorphic computing, utilises an engineering method based on the activity of the biological brain.
  • An increase in the adoption of neuromorphic chips in the automotive industry is expected in the next few years.

 

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Police Reforms – SC directives, NPC, other committees reports

What are Look Out Circulars (LOCs)?

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Look Out Circular

Mains level: National security imperative

The Punjab and Haryana High Court has held that a Look Out Circular (LOC), which prevents one from travelling abroad, must be supplied to the person at the time of being stopped at the airport and that the reasons should be communicated to the affected party.

What is a Look Out Circular?

  • It is a notice to stop any individual wanted by the police, investigating agency or even a bank from leaving or entering the country through designated land, air and sea ports.
  • Immigration is tasked to stop any such individual against whom such a notice exists from leaving or entering the country.
  • There are 86 immigration check posts across the country.

Who can issue LOCs?

  • A large number of agencies which includes the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), Enforcement Directorate, Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DRI), Income Tax, State police and intelligence agencies are authorised to generate LOCs.
  • The officer should not be below the rank of a district magistrate or superintendent of police or a deputy secretary in the Union Government.

What are the details required to generate an LOC and who issues it?

  • According to a 2010 official memorandum of the Ministry, details such as First Information Report (FIR) number, court case number are to be mandatorily provided with name, passport number and other details.
  • The BOI under the MHA is only the executing agency.
  • They generate LOCs based on requests by different agencies.
  • Since immigration posts are manned by the BOI officials they are the first responders to execute LOCs by stopping or detaining or informing about an individual to the issuing agency.
  • The LOCs can be modified; deleted or withdrawn only at the request of the originator.
  • Further, the legal liability of the action taken by immigration authorities in pursuance of LOC rests with the originating agency.

How are banks authorized?

  • After several businessmen including liquor baron Vijay Mallya, businessmen Nirav Modi and Mehul Choksi fled the country after defaulting on loans, the MHA in 2018 brought changes to the 2010 guidelines.
  • It authorised the chairman, managing director and chief executives of all public sector banks to generate LOCs against persons who could be detrimental to economic interests of the country.

Is there any other clause under which any individual can be stopped?

  • The 2010 Ministry guidelines give sweeping powers to police and intelligence agencies to generate LOCs in “exceptional cases” without keying in complete parameters or case details.
  • This was against suspects, terrorists, anti-national elements, etc. in larger national interest.
  • After the special status of J&K under Article 370 was abrogated in 2019, LOCs were opened against several politicians, human rights activists, journalists and social activists to bar them from flying out of the country.
  • The number of persons and the crime for which they have been placed under the list is unknown.

Are individuals entitled to any remedial measures?

  • Many citizens have moved courts to get the LOC quashed.
  • As per norms, an LOC will stay valid for a maximum period of 12 months and if there is no fresh request from the agency then it will not be automatically revived.
  • The MHA has asserted that LOCs cannot be shown to the subject at the time of detention nor can any prior intimation be provided.
  • The Ministry recently informed the Punjab and Haryana HC that the LOC guidelines are a secret document and the same cannot be shared with the ‘accused’ or any unauthorised stakeholder.
  • It cannot be provided or shown to the subject at the time of detention by the BOI since it defeats the purpose of LOC and no accused or subject of LOC can be provided any opportunity of hearing before the issuance of the LOC.

Precedence set by the Judiciary

  • In January this year, Delhi HC quashed an LOC against a Delhi businessman generated at the instance of the Income Tax department.
  • The court said no proceedings under any penal law had been initiated against the petitioner” and the LOC was “wholly unsustainable.”
  • It said that there cannot be any unfettered control or restriction on the right to travel and that it was part of the fundamental rights.
  • Delhi HC has also asked the Director of the CBI to tender a written apology.

 

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Health Sector – UHC, National Health Policy, Family Planning, Health Insurance, etc.

India Hypertension Control Initiative (IHCI)

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: IHCI, hypertension

Mains level: Burden of NCDs in India

The IHCI project has demonstrated that blood pressure treatment and control are feasible in primary care settings in diverse health systems across various States in India.

India Hypertension Control Initiative (IHCI)

  • It is a multi-partner initiative involving the Indian Council of Medical Research, WHO-India, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, and State governments.
  • It aims to improve blood pressure control for people with hypertension.
  • The project initiated in 26 districts in 2018 has expanded to more than 100 districts by 2022.
  • More than two million patients were started on treatment and tracked to see whether they achieved BP control.

The project was built on five scalable strategies:

  1. Simple treatment protocol with three drugs was selected in consultation with the experts and non-communicable disease programme managers.
  2. Supply chain was strengthened to ensure the availability of adequate antihypertensive drugs.
  3. Patient-centric approaches were followed, such as refills for at least 30 days and assigning the patients to the closest primary health centre or health wellness centre to make follow-up easier.
  4. The focus was on building capacity of all health staff and sharing tasks such as BP measurement, documentation, and follow-up.
  5. There was minimal documentation using either paper-based or digital tools to track follow-up and BP control.

Prevalence of hypertension in India

  • Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) are the leading cause of death among adults in India.
  • One of the major drivers of heart attack and stroke is untreated high blood pressure or hypertension.
  • Hypertension is a silent killer as most patients do not have any symptoms.
  • India has more than 200 million people with hypertension, and only 14.5% of individuals with hypertension are on treatment.

Success of IHCI

  • Blood pressure treatment and control were feasibly controlled in primary care settings in diverse health systems across various States in India.
  • Before IHCI, many patients travelled to higher-level facilities such as community health centres (block level) or district hospitals in the public sector for hypertension treatment.
  • Over three years, all levels of health staff at the primary health centres and health wellness centres were trained to provide treatment and follow-up services for hypertension.
  • Nearly half (47%) of the patients under care achieved blood pressure control.
  • The BP control among people enrolled in treatment was 48% at primary health centres and 55% at the health wellness centres.

Contributing to its success: A data-driven approach

  • One of the unique contributions of the project was a data-driven approach to improving care and overall programme management.
  • The list of people who did not return for treatment was generated through a digital system or on paper by the nurse/health workers.
  • Patients were reminded either over the phone or by home visit (if feasible).
  • This strategy motivated a large number of patients to continue treatment.
  • In addition, programme managers reviewed aggregate data at the district and State levels to assess the performance of facilities in terms of follow-up and BP control.
  • Patients were provided generic antihypertensive drugs costing only ₹200 per year.
  • In addition, E-Sanjeevani, a telemedicine initiative, facilitated teleconsultations.

Back2Basics: Hypertension

  • Hypertension also known as high blood pressure (HBP), is a long-term medical condition in which the blood pressure in the arteries is persistently elevated.
  • High blood pressure usually does not cause symptoms.
  • Long-term high blood pressure, however, is a major risk factor for stroke, coronary artery disease, heart failure, atrial fibrillation, peripheral arterial disease, vision loss, chronic kidney disease, and dementia.
  • High blood pressure is classified as primary (essential) hypertension or secondary hypertension.
  • For most adults, high blood pressure is present if the resting blood pressure is persistently at or above 130/80 or 140/90 mmHg.

 

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Foreign Policy Watch: India-China

Illegal fishing by China in the Indo-Pacific

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: QUAD

Mains level: IIU fishing and related issues

In order to check China’s illegal fishing in the Indo-Pacific region, the Quadrilateral Security Alliance (Quad) has planned to launch a satellite-based surveillance initiative.

What is the news?

  • The leaders of Quad are reported to be getting ready to unveil a maritime surveillance initiative to protect exclusive economic zones in the Indo-Pacific against environmental damage.

How will the proposed maritime surveillance system work?

  • The initiative will use satellite technology to connect existing surveillance centres in India, Singapore and the Pacific.
  • This will help establish a tracking system to combat illegal, unregulated and unprotected (IUU) fishing.
  • The satellite-enabled dragnet will track IUU fishing activities from the Indian Ocean and South-east Asia to the South Pacific.
  • The idea is to monitor illicit fishing vessels that have their AIS (automatic identification system) transponders turned off to evade tracking.
  • The move by the Quad security group is also seen to be aimed at reducing the small Pacific island nations’ growing reliance on China.

Why is illegal fishing seen as such a big threat?

  • The unregulated plunder of global fishing stock poses a grave threat to the livelihood and food security of millions of people.
  • Globally, fish provide about 3.3 billion people with 20% of their average animal protein intake.
  • According to an FAO report, around 60 million people are engaged in the sector of fisheries and aquaculture.
  • While the economic loss from illegal fishing has been difficult to precisely quantify, some estimates peg it around USD 20 billion annually.

Threats posed by IUU Fishing

  • Illegal fishing has now replaced piracy as a global maritime threat.
  • In the Indo-Pacific region, like elsewhere, the collapse of fisheries can destabilise coastal nations.
  • It poses a much bigger security risk, as it can fuel human trafficking, drug crime and terror recruiting.

Why is China in the dock?

  • The 2021 IUU Fishing Index, which maps 152 coastal countries, ranked China as the worst offender.
  • China is considered responsible for 80% to 95% illegal fishing in the region after having overfished its own waters.
  • It, in fact, is known to incentivise illegal fishing with generous subsidies to meet its growing domestic demand.

China and distant-water fishing (DWF)

  • China’s DWF fleet has almost 17,000 vessels and is the largest in the world.
  • Vessel ownership is highly fragmented among many small companies and the fleet includes vessels registered in other jurisdictions.

Issues with Chinese IUU Fishing

  • Chinese are often accused of pillaging ocean wealth with great sophistication and with little regard for maritime boundaries.
  • China also uses them to project strategic influence and to bully fishing vessels from weaker nations.
  • China uses destructive practises such as bottom trawling and forced, bonded and slave labour and trafficked crew, alongside the widespread abuse of migrant crewmembers.

 

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Minimum Support Prices for Agricultural Produce

What is ‘Storage Gain’ in Wheat?

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Storage gain in wheat

Mains level: NA

Punjab’s state procurement agencies (SPAs) are seeking a waiver of ‘storage gain’.

What is ‘storage gain’ in wheat?

  • Wheat, considered a ‘living grain’, tends to gain some weight during storage.
  • This is known as ‘storage gain’ and it mostly happens due to absorption of moisture.
  • There are three parts of the grain — bran (outer layer rich in fibre), germ (inner layer rich in nutrients) and endosperm (bulk of the kernel which contains minerals and vitamins).
  • The moisture is mostly absorbed by the endosperm.

Who compensates whom for ‘storage gain’?

  • State procurement agencies, which purchase and store wheat at their facilities, are required to give one kg wheat extra per quintal to the Food Corporation of India (FCI).
  • While 20% of wheat, procured by the FCI and the SPAs, is moved immediately after procurement.
  • It is usually on the remaining 80%, which is moved out after July 1 every year that storage gain has to be accounted for due to longer storage duration.

 

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As Indian economy grows, Centre and states must work together

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much

Mains level: Paper 2- Tailored approach to cooperation and competition

Context

The ongoing discords between the Centre and states over issues ranging from the allocation of financial resources to fixing of GST rates has once again brought to the fore issues pertaining to our federal structure, the resolution of which is essential for the country’s growth.

Combination of cooperative and competitive spirit

  • Positive competition: It is undeniable that cooperation is key to the smooth functioning of federal design.
  • However, if it is coupled with positive competition among the states, then the overall result would be large-scale economic development across the country.
  • The competitive aspect of federalism can positively be harnessed by encouraging states to adopt each other’s best practices.
  • Exclusivity and mutualism: Indian federalism today enables the Centre and states to function with both exclusivity and mutualism.
  • Vertical and horizontal level: Cooperation between the Centre and states is required at both vertical (between Centre and states) and horizontal (among states) levels and on various fronts.
  • What does it mean? This includes fine-tuning of developmental measures for desired outcomes, development-related policy decisions, welfare measures, administrative reforms, strategic decisions, etc.

Steps in the direction of cooperation

  • Recent efforts in this direction, such as according greater leeway to states in the functioning of the NITI Aayog, frequent meetings of the prime minister with chief ministers as well as with chief secretaries and district magistrates, periodic meetings of the President of India with governors, and the functioning of “PRAGATI” to review the progress of developmental efforts have generated the requisite synergy between the Centre and states.
  • Positive efforts of states towards attracting investment can create a conducive environment for economic activities in urban and backward regions alike.
  • Healthy competition coupled with a transparent ranking system would ensure the full materialisation of the vast but least utilised potential of the federal framework.
  • Sector specific indices: In this direction, NITI Aayog’s initiatives such as launching sector-specific indices like the School Education Quality Index, Sustainable Development Goals Index, State Health Index, India Innovation Index, Composite Water Management Index, Export Competitiveness Index, etc. could prove to be a great contribution.
  • Central efforts toward synchronisation of cooperation and competition can be observed in the implementation of the 14th and 15th Finance Commission reports, which have greatly contributed to resource devolution.
  • Recent reform measures in the form of the New Labour Code and other amendments/enactments by the legislature also exhibit this trend.

Conclusion

The rising stature of the Indian economy on the world stage can only be strengthened by a tailored approach to cooperation and competition. The mandate to marry the two would inevitably be the collective responsibility of the Centre and the states. Any ideological differences between them will have to be inevitably put on the backburner for the great Indian federal structure to succeed and prosper.

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Panchayati Raj Institutions: Issues and Challenges

Structural interventions by state governments that can create higher-wage jobs

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much

Mains level: Paper 2- Structural interventions by State for creating high wage jobs

Context

The recent decision to deduct off-budget borrowings from state borrowing limits reminds chief ministers to be good policy ancestors.

Financing welfare state

  • In A Brief History of Equality, economist Thomas Piketty suggests that “the world of the early 2020s, no matter how unjust it may seem, is more egalitarian than that of 1950 or 1900, which were… more egalitarian than those of 1850 or 1780”.
  • But how the welfare state is financed matters.
  • Changes in state borrowing limits: Adjusting state borrowing limits for their off-budget borrowings leads to transparency because they are routinely breached through vehicles for schemes whose bill comes due far in the future.
  • The confiscation of future spending — interest payments crowd out expenditure and revenue expenditure crowd out capex — matters because our prosperity problem is productivity, wages, not jobs.

5 Structural interventions that can create high wage jobs

1] Reduce regulatory hurdles

  • States control 80 per cent of India’s employers’ compliance ecosystem of 67,000+ compliances, 6,500+ filings and 26,000+ criminal provisions.
  • State governments that rationalise, decriminalise, and digitise their compliance ecosystem will reap lower corruption and higher formality.

2] Fix government schools

  • The most powerful tool for social mobility and employability is free and quality school education.
  • State governments that undertake a significant overhaul of school performance management (the fear of falling and hope of rising for teachers) and governance (the allocation of decision rights around resources and hiring) will create an unfair advantage in human capital.

3] Converge education and employability

  • States should set up skill universities that create qualification modularity (between certificates, diplomas, advanced diplomas, and degrees), delivery flexibility (equate online, apprenticeships, on-site and on-campus classrooms), and pray to the one god of employers.
  • Degree apprentices innovate at the intersection of employment, employability and education.
  • State governments that remove barriers in their path will see their population of employed learners exceed full-time learners.

4] Devolution of money and power

  • Cities drive productive job creation — New York City’s GDP is higher than Russia’s.
  •  It took 70 years after 1947 for the budget of 28 states to cross the central government’s budget.
  • The combined budget of state governments now exceeds Rs 45 lakh crore, but 2.5 lakh municipalities and panchayats have a budget of only Rs 3.7 lakh crore.
  • Governments that devolve money and power from state capitals to their towns will avoid the curse of megacities and create the competition that drove China’s growth (they have 375 cities with more than a million people versus our 52).

5] Civil service reforms

  • State governments must sell their 1,500+ loss-making public sector units, cut civil service compensation to less than 40 per cent of budget spending, and replace expenditure with capex.
  • Moving from outlays to outcomes needs a new human capital regime for civil servants via seven interventions; structure, staffing, training, performance management, compensation, culture, and HR capabilities.

Shifting resources to protective and productive  version of states

  • Nobel Laureate James Buchanan said any state had three versions — the protective state (police, rule of law, defence, courts), the productive state (common goods like roads, power, health, education, etc.), and the redistributive state.
  • Too many state governments accept the status quo in the first two and “innovate” in the third version.
  • It’s time to shift resources to the first two.

Conclusion

Chief Ministers ought to create high wage jobs, and not borrow money future generations will have to repay.

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Cyber Security – CERTs, Policy, etc

SC tests phones for Pegasus Spyware

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Pegasus

Mains level: Whatsapp snooping

The Supreme Court has said its technical committee had so far received and tested 29 mobile devices suspected to be infected by Pegasus malware.

Why in news?

  • It was alleged that the government used the Israel-based spyware to snoop on journalists, parliamentarians, prominent citizens and even court staff.

What is Pegasus?

  • Pegasus is a spyware developed by NSO Group, an Israeli surveillance firm that helps spies hack into phones.
  • In 2019, when WhatsApp sued the firm in a U.S. court, the matter came to light.
  • In July 2021, Amnesty International, along with 13 media outlets across the globe released a report on how the spyware was used to snoop hundreds of individuals, including Indians.
  • While the NSO claims its spyware is sold only to governments, none of the nations have come forward to accept the claims.

Threats created by Pegasus

  • What makes Pegasus really dangerous is that it spares no aspect of a person’s identity.
  • It makes older techniques of spying seem relatively harmless.
  • It can intercept every call and SMS, read every email and monitor each messaging app.
  • Pegasus can also control the phone’s camera and microphone and has access to the device’s location data.
  • The app advertises that it can carry out “file retrieval”, which means it could access any document that a target might have stored on their phone.

Dysfunctions created

  • Privacy breach: The very existence of a surveillance system, whether under a provision of law or without it, impacts the right to privacy under Article 21 and the exercise of free speech under Article 19.
  • Curbing Dissent: It reflects a disturbing trend with regard to the use of hacking software against dissidents and adversaries. In 2019 also, Pegasus software was used to hack into HR & Dalit activists.
  • Individual safety: In the absence of privacy, the safety of journalists, especially those whose work criticizes the government, and the personal safety of their sources is jeopardised.
  • Self-Censorship: Consistent fear over espionage may grapple individuals. This may impact their ability to express, receive and discuss such ideas.
  • State-sponsored mass surveillance: The spyware coupled with AI can manipulate digital content in users’ smartphones. This in turn can polarize their opinion by the distant controllers.
  • National security: The potential misuse or proliferation has the same, if not more, ramifications as advanced nuclear technology falling into the wrong hands.

Snooping in India:  A Legality check

For Pegasus-like spyware to be used lawfully, the government would have to invoke both the IT Act and the Telegraph Act. Communication surveillance in India takes place primarily under two laws:

  1. Telegraph Act, 1885: It deals with interception of calls.
  2. Information Technology Act, 2000: It was enacted to deal with surveillance of all electronic communication, following the Supreme Court’s intervention in 1996.

Cyber security safeguards in India

  • National Cyber Security Policy: The policy was developed in 2013 to build secure and resilient cyberspace for India’s citizens and businesses.
  • Indian Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-In): The CERT-In is responsible for incident responses including analysis, forecasts, and alerts on cybersecurity issues and breaches.
  • Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C): The Central Government has rolled out a scheme for the establishment of the I4C to handle issues related to cybercrime in the country in a comprehensive and coordinated manner.
  • Budapest Convention: There also exists Budapest Convention on Cybercrime. However, India is not a signatory to this convention.

Issues over government involvement

  • It is worth asking why the government would need to hack phones and install spyware when existing laws already offer impunity for surveillance.
  • In the absence of parliamentary or judicial oversight, electronic surveillance gives the executive the power to influence both the subject of surveillance and all classes of individuals, resulting in a chilling effect on free speech.

Way forward

  • The security of a device becomes one of the fundamental bedrock of maintaining user trust as society becomes more and more digitized.
  • Constituting an independent high-level inquiry with credible members and experts that can restore confidence and conduct its proceedings transparently.
  • The need for judicial oversight over surveillance systems in general, and judicial investigation into the Pegasus hacking, in particular, is very essential.

Conclusion

  • We must recognize that national security starts with securing the smartphones of every single Indian by embracing technologies such as encryption rather than deploying spyware.
  • This is a core part of our fundamental right to privacy.
  • This intrusion by spyware is not merely an infringement of the rights of the citizens of the country but also a worrying development for India’s national security apparatus.

 

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Indian Army Updates

Project WARDEC: India’s upcoming AI-powered Wargame Centre

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Project Wardec

Mains level: Not Much

The Army Training Command signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Gandhinagar-based Rashtriya Raksha University (RRU) to develop a ‘Wargame Research and Development Centre (WARDEC)’ in New Delhi.

What is Project WARDEC?

  • The project ‘WARDEC’ will be a first-of-its-kind simulation-based training centre in India that will use artificial intelligence (AI) to design virtual reality war-games.
  • The Wargame Research and Development Centre will be used by the Army to train its soldiers and test their strategies through “metaverse-enabled gameplay”.
  • The wargame models will be designed to prepare for wars as well as counter-terror and counter-insurgency operations.

Where will the centre come up and when?

  • The centre will come up in a military zone in New Delhi, confirmed RRU officials privy to the development.
  • The RRU will join hands with Tech Mahindra to develop the centre in the coming three to four months.
  • The RRU, an institute under the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA), specialises in national security and policing.
  • Located in Gandhinagar’s Lavad village, it is an “institute of national importance” – a status granted to it by an Act of Parliament.

How will these simulation exercises play out?

  • Soldiers will test their skills in the metaverse where their surroundings will be simulated using a combination of virtual reality (VR) and augmented reality (AR).
  • In metaverse, the players will get a realistic experience of the actual situation.
  • If a weapon weighing 5 kg drops or the air pressure falls, they will feel it like anyone would in a live situation, real-time.
  • The game would play out player versus player, player versus computer or even computer versus computer.

How will the centre help the Army?

  • The Army intends to use the war-game centre to train its officers in military strategies.
  • Indian Army will provide data to set the backdrop of the gameplay, so that participants get a realistic experience.
  • In Army, it is often said that the enemy can ambush you from 361 directions, where 360 sides are around the soldier, and one is above in case there is an airdrop.
  • So, wargame simulation helps the Army think of all possible scenarios.

What promise does AI-based wargame simulation hold?

  • Apart from the armed forces, the BSF, CRPF, CISF, ITBP and SSB can also use the metaverse-enabled simulation exercises for better training.
  • The use of AI can provide a totally immersive training experience as it can simulate a battlefield close to reality and map several eventualities in the probable event of a war.

How many countries use such wargaming drills?

  • Since the 9/11 attacks, use of information technology-enabled wargaming is preferred by several countries like the US, Israel, the UK to prepare for possibilities in case of terror attacks or war.
  • In March 2014, several world leaders, including former German chancellor Angela Merkel, former US president Barack Obama and Chinese president Xi Jinping had played a war simulation game.
  • It was during the Hague Summit about how to react in case of a nuclear attack.
  • In that case, the target of the nuclear attack was a fictional country named Brinia.

 

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The constitutional battle between governor and government

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much

Mains level: Paper 2- Constitutional battle between governor and the government

Context

The Supreme Court’s action in ordering the release of A G Perarivalan, a convict in the Rajiv Gandhi assassination case, has resulted in mixed reactions.

Background

  • After the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi, the assailants were tried under the notorious Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act, 1987 (TADA).
  • All 26 accused were given the death sentence by the Special Court for various offences, including under TADA (1998).
  • Fortunately, the SC held that the offences under TADA were not made out since there was no case to proceed for acts of terrorism.
  • It also modified the death penalty for 22 persons and confirmed the same only for Nalini, Perarivalan, Murugan and Santhan (1999).
  • Petition for mercy under Article 161: They petitioned the governor of Tamil Nadu for mercy under Article 161.
  • The then governor of Tamil Nadu dismissed their petition without any advice from the cabinet.
  • The Madras High Court ruled that the governor cannot exercise the power of pardon without the advice of the council of ministers.
  • The cabinet advised the governor to give reprieve only to Nalini Sriharan and rejected the case of the other three, including Perarivalan.
  • Perarivalan and the two other convicts appealed to the president with a mercy plea under Article 72. 
  •  Two successive presidents of India – K R Narayanan and APJ Abdul Kalam — did not pass any mercy orders.
  • But all of a sudden, their mercy pleas were rejected after a delay of 11 years by President Pratibha Patil.
  • When they were about to be executed, the convicts moved the Madras HC challenging the execution of the death warrant issued against them.
  • The cases were transferred to the SC, which decided that the president’s action in not considering the mercy plea within a reasonable time was improper and since the three prisoners had been on death row for 11 years, it was a fit case for commuting their sentence to life imprisonment.
  • Meanwhile, on February 19, 2014, the TN cabinet advised the governor to grant reprieve to all seven accused.
  • Once again, all of them applied for remission from the governor.
  • The state cabinet also advised the governor to grant pardon.
  • WhenPerarivalan’s mother, filed a case for parole, the court noting the inordinate delay observed: “the Governor of T N, a constitutional authority, cannot sit on the state’s recommendation on the release of all seven life convicts in the Rajiv Gandhi assassination case for so long” (July 2020).
  • The court was informed that the governor was awaiting the final report of the CBI’s Multi-Disciplinary Monitoring Agency (MDMA).

Role of MDMA

  • The role of MDMA itself came up for criticism by the SC in January 2018 and it observed that the agency did not appear to have made “much headway”.
  • The court observed that the question of reopening the case against them will not arise as they had been already convicted for murder and conspiracy.
  • Article 20(2) of the Constitution guarantees that no person can be prosecuted and punished for the same offence more than once.

Use of powers under Article 142 by the Supreme Court

  • Once again, the process of granting mercy to the seven accused began with a resolution passed by the T N Assembly on September 9, 2018.
  • On the same day, the state cabinet advised the governor to give reprieve to all seven prisoners.
  • On being compelled by the court, the governor stated that the matter was to be dealt with by the President.
  • It was at this stage the matter went back to the SC.
  • It was finally decided that the authority to grant pardon is with the governor and he is bound by the advice of the state government.
  • The court also ruled that the action of the governor in delaying the matter for more than 2.5 years was unacceptable.
  • Exercising its power under Article 142 as well as considering all the relevant circumstances, the SC ordered Perarivalan’s release.

Limitations on governor’s power

  • Giving reprieve to persons sentenced to the death penalty, even in the exercise of the plenary powers by a governor, has limitations.
  • In 1978, Parliament amended the Criminal Procedure Code and introduced Sec 433A by which in such cases, prisoners cannot be released from prison unless they had served a minimum of 14 years in prison. 

Reformatory penal system of India

  • India’s penal system is undoubtedly reformatory and not retributive.
  • The SC ruled on this issue by stating “a barbaric crime does not have to be visited with a barbaric penalty.”
  • It is also surprising that the successive governments at the Centre appeared to be guided in this case by geopolitical considerations rather than this country’s laws.

Conclusion

The question now is whether the six other prisoners will receive the same relief or will there be a confrontation between the state government and governor once again. Let us hope that wisdom prevails and the governor’s office is not manipulated for narrow political considerations.

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Health Sector – UHC, National Health Policy, Family Planning, Health Insurance, etc.

Bridging the health policy to execution chasm

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much

Mains level: Paper 2- Public health and management cadre

Context

In April this year, the Union government released a guidance document on the setting up of a ‘public health and management cadre’ (PHMC) as well as revised editions of the Indian Public Health Standards (IPHS) — for ensuring quality health care in government facilities.

Background

  • The need for a public health cadre and services in India rarely got any policy attention.
  • Limited understanding: The reason was that even among policymakers, there was limited understanding on the roles and the functions of public health specialists and the relevance of such cadres, especially at the district and sub-district levels.
  • However, the last decade and a half was eventful.
  • The initial threat of avian flu in 2005-06, the Swine flu pandemic of 2009-10; five more public health emergencies of international concern between years 2009-19; the increasing risks and regular emergence and re-emergence of of new viruses and diseases (Zika, Ebola, Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic fever, Nipah viruses, etc.) in animals and humans, resulted in increased attention on public health.
  • National Public health Act: In 2017, India’s National Health Policy 2017 proposed the formation of a public health cadre and enacting a National Public Health Act.
  • The COVID-19 pandemic changed the status quo.
  • In the absence of trained public health professionals at the policy and decision making levels, India’s pandemic response ended up becoming bureaucrat steered and clinician led.

Different cadres and its implications

  • Lack of career progression opportunities: At present, most Indian States (with exceptions such as Tamil Nadu and Odisha) have a teaching cadre (of medical college faculty members) and a specialist cadre of doctors involved in clinical services.
  • This structure does not provide similar career progression opportunities for professionals trained in public health.
  • Limited interest: It is one of the reasons for limited interest by health-care professionals to opt for public health as a career choice.
  • The outcome has been costly for society: a perennial shortage of trained public health workforce.

Public health cadre

  • The proposed public health cadre and the health management cadre have the potential to address some of these challenges.
  • With the release of guidance documents, the States have been advised to formulate an action plan, identify the cadre strengths, and fill up the vacant posts in the next six months to a year.
  • A public health workforce has a role even beyond epidemics and pandemics.
  • A trained public health workforce ensures that people receive holistic health care, of preventive and promotive services (largely in the domain of public health) as well as curative and diagnostic services (as part of medical care).

Revised version of IPHS and significance

  • This is the second revision in the IPHS, which were first released in 2007 and then revised in 2012.
  • The regular need for a revision in the IPHS is a recognition of the fact that to be meaningful, quality improvement has to be an ongoing process.
  • The development of the IPHS itself was a major step.
  • The revised IPHS is an important development but not an end itself.
  • In the 15 years since the first release of the IPHS, only a small proportion — around 15% to 20% — of government health-care facilities meets these standards. .
  • If the pace of achieving IPHS is any criteria, there is a need for more accelerated interventions.
  • Opportunities such as a revision of the IPHS should also be used for an independent assessment on how the IPHS has improved the quality of health services.

Implementation challenges

  • The effective part of implementation is interplay: policy formulation, financial allocation, and the availability of a trained workforce.
  • In this case, policy has been formulated.
  • Financial allocations: Then, though the Government’s spending on health in India is low and has increased only marginally in the last two decades; however, in the last two years, there have been a few additional — small but assured — sources of funding for public health services have become available.
  • The Fifteenth Finance Commission grant for the five-year period of 2021- 26 and the Pradhan Mantri Ayushman Bharat Health Infrastructure Mission (PM-ABHIM) allocations are available for strengthening public health services and could be used  as States embark upon implementing the PHMC and a revised IPHS.
  • Availability of trained workforce: The third aspect of effective implementation, the availability of trained workforce, is the most critical.
  • As States develop plans for setting up the PHMC, all potential challenges in securing a trained workforce should be identified and actions initiated.

Conclusion

The public health and management cadres and the revised IPHS can help India to make progress towards the NHP goal. To ensure that, State governments need to act urgently and immediately.

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Back2Basics: Indian Public Health Standards (IPHS)

  • IPHS are a set of uniform standards envisaged to improve the quality of health care delivery in the country.
  • The IPHS documents have been revised keeping in view the changing protocols of the existing programmes and introduction of new programmes especially for Non-Communicable Diseases.
  • Flexibility is allowed to suit the diverse needs of the States and regions.
  • These IPHS guidelines will act as the main driver for continuous improvement in quality and serve as the bench mark for assessing the functional status of health facilities.

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Goods and Services Tax (GST)

States have equal powers to make GST-related Laws: SC

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: GST Council

Mains level: Read the attached story

The Supreme Court has held that Union and State legislatures have equal, simultaneous and unique powers to make laws on Goods and Services Tax (GST) and the recommendations of the GST Council are not binding on them.

What is the case?

  • The apex court’s decision came while confirming a Gujarat High Court ruling that the Centre cannot levy Integrated Goods and Services Tax (IGST) on ocean freight from Indian importers.

Key takeaways of the Judgment

  • The recommendations of the GST Council are the product of a collaborative dialogue involving the Union and the States.
  • They are recommendatory in nature. They only have a persuasive value.
  • To regard them as binding would disrupt fiscal federalism when both the Union and the States are conferred equal power to legislate on GST.

Basis of the Judgment

  • The court emphasised that Article 246A of the Constitution gives the States power to make laws with respect to GST.
  • It treats the Union and the States as “equal units”.
  • It confers a simultaneous power (on Union and States) for enacting laws on GST.
  • Article 279A, in constituting the GST Council, envisions that neither the Centre nor the States are actually dependent on the other.

What are the articles added/modified to the Constitution by the GST Act?

(1) Article 246A: Special Provision for GST

  • This Article was newly inserted to give power to the Parliament and the respective State/Union Legislatures to make laws on GST respectively imposed by each of them.
  • However, the Parliament of India is given the exclusive power to make laws with respect to inter-state supplies.
  • The IGST Act deals with inter-state supplies. Thus, the power to make laws under the IGST Act will rest exclusively with the Parliament.
  • Further, the article excludes the following products from the scope of GST until a date recommended by the GST Council:
  1. Petroleum Crude
  2. High-Speed Diesel
  3. Motor Spirit
  4. Natural Gas
  5. Aviation Turbine Fuel

(2) Article 269A: Levy and Collection of GST for Inter-State Supply

  • While Article 246A gives the Parliament the exclusive power to make laws with respect to inter-state supplies.
  • The manner of distribution of revenue from such supplies between the Centre and the State is covered in Article 269A.
  • It allows the GST Council to frame rules in this regard. Import of goods or services will also be called as inter-state supplies.
  • This gives the Central Government the power to levy IGST on import transactions.
  • Import of goods was subject to Countervailing Duty (CVD) in the earlier scheme of taxation.
  • IGST levy helps a taxpayer to avail the credit of IGST paid on import along the supply chain, which was not possible before.

(3) Article 279A: GST Council

  • This Article gives power to the President to constitute a joint forum of the Centre and States called the GST Council.
  • The GST Council is an apex member committee to modify, reconcile or to procure any law or regulation based on the context of GST in India.

(4) Article 286: Restrictions on Tax Imposition

  • This was an existing article which restricted states from passing any law that allowed them to collect tax on sale or purchase of goods either outside the state or in the case of import transactions.
  • It was further amended to restrict the passing of any laws in case of services too.
  • Further, the term ‘supply’ replaces ‘sale or purchase’.

(5) Article 366: Addition of Important definitions

Article 366 was an existing article amended to include the following definitions:

  1. GST means the tax on supply of goods, services or both. It is important to note that the supply of alcoholic liquor for human consumption is excluded from the purview of GST.
  2. Services refer to anything other than goods.
  3. State includes Union Territory with legislature.

Back2Basics: GST Council

  • The GST Council is a federal body that aims to bring together states and the Centre on a common platform for the nationwide rollout of the indirect tax reform.
  • It is an apex member committee to modify, reconcile or to procure any law or regulation based on the context of goods and services tax in India.
  • The GST Council dictates tax rate, tax exemption, the due date of forms, tax laws, and tax deadlines, keeping in mind special rates and provisions for some states.
  • The predominant responsibility of the GST Council is to ensure to have one uniform tax rate for goods and services across the nation.

How is the GST Council structured?

  • The GST is governed by the GST Council. Article 279 (1) of the amended Indian Constitution states that the GST Council has to be constituted by the President within 60 days of the commencement of the Article 279A.
  • According to the article, the GST Council will be a joint forum for the Centre and the States. It consists of the following members:
  1. The Union Finance Minister will be the Chairperson
  2. As a member, the Union Minister of State will be in charge of Revenue of Finance
  3. The Minister in charge of finance or taxation or any other Minister nominated by each State government, as members.

Terms of reference

  • Article 279A (4) specifies that the Council will make recommendations to the Union and the States on the important issues related to GST, such as the goods and services will be subject or exempted from the Goods and Services Tax.
  • They lay down GST laws, principles that govern the following:
  1. Place of Supply
  2. Threshold limits
  3. GST rates on goods and services
  4. Special rates for raising additional resources during a natural calamity or disaster
  5. Special GST rates for certain States

 

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