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(Centralised Public Grievance Redress and Monitoring System).
• What CPGRAMS does:
• Online platform for citizens to lodge complaints
• Routes grievances to concerned ministries/states
• Tracks disposal and pendency
• Government response:
• Measures taken to reduce pendency
• Focus on time-bound disposal and monitoring
• Why it matters:
• High number reflects citizen awareness and accessibility
• Also indicates governance and service delivery gaps
takeaway
Rising grievances highlight both improved citizen access to the state and persistent gaps in public service delivery.
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(Centralised Public Grievance Redress and Monitoring System).
• What CPGRAMS does:
• Online platform for citizens to lodge complaints
• Routes grievances to concerned ministries/states
• Tracks disposal and pendency
• Government response:
• Measures taken to reduce pendency
• Focus on time-bound disposal and monitoring
• Why it matters:
• High number reflects citizen awareness and accessibility
• Also indicates governance and service delivery gaps
takeaway
Rising grievances highlight both improved citizen access to the state and persistent gaps in public service delivery.
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• India is among 47 Member States that paid their dues on time and in full.
• These countries are placed on the UN’s “honour roll”.
• What is the UN Regular Budget:
• It funds the day-to-day functioning of the UN (Secretariat, political missions, administration).
• Contributions are mandatory, not voluntary.
• Significance for India:
• Shows India’s image as a responsible and reliable global actor.
• Strengthens India’s moral and diplomatic standing in UN reforms debates.
• Supports India’s claim for a greater role in global governance (e.g., UNSC reforms).
takeaway
Timely payment of UN dues reinforces India’s credibility as a responsible stakeholder in multilateral governance.
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➡️More Money for Defence, Now Fix the Process
1. Core Message
• India has significantly increased defence spending,
• but money alone will not improve military capability unless processes are reformed.
2. What is Positive in the Budget
• Defence budget rose by 15%, reaching ~2% of GDP.
• Capital expenditure increased by over 22%, reversing years of neglect.
• Strong push for modernisation:
• Air Force: 32% hike
• Army (heavy vehicles & weapons): 30% hike
• 75% of capital procurement reserved for domestic industry, including private players.
• Defence production has risen 174% since 2014–15.
• Defence exports reached ₹23,000 crore (from ₹1,000 crore in 2014).
3. Hidden Problems Behind the Numbers
(a) Capital vs Revenue Imbalance
• Capital spending is only ~21.8% of MoD budget
(earlier it was ~28% in the late 1980s).
• Large share still goes to salaries and pensions, limiting modernisation.
(b) Bureaucracy & Delays
• Procurement system is complex and slow.
• Example:
• Project 75 submarines approved in 1997, delivery expected in 2030s.
• Rafale deal conceptualised in 1990s, realised only in 2019–20.
• Due to delays, MoD had to return ₹12,500 crore of unused capital funds in FY 2024–25.
4. R&D: The Weakest Link
• Defence R&D remains scattered and poorly coordinated.
• India’s total R&D spending: ~0.66% of GDP.
• Compare:
• Japan: ~3.7% of GDP, mostly private-sector driven.
• Private sector participation in defence R&D is minimal.
• Research often does not translate into usable military technology.
5. Strategic Blind Spot (Implicit Criticism)
• Defence budget is still seen through a “guns vs butter” lens.
• Authors argue defence should be seen as:
• A growth engine
• A driver of manufacturing, jobs, and technology
• Example:
• Indigenous shipbuilding has a 6.5× employment multiplier.
• Border Roads Organisation supports both security and development.
6. International Comparison
• Countries with lower threat levels also spend more:
• Japan: ~2.2% of GDP
• Australia & Europe increasing defence allocations
• India’s threat environment is much higher, yet spending efficiency remains weak.
7. Core Problem
India does not suffer from lack of defence funding as much as from slow procurement, weak R&D, and bureaucratic inertia.
8. Way Forward (Implicit Recommendation)
• Simplify defence procurement procedures.
• Ensure time-bound acquisition and delivery.
• Integrate and strengthen defence R&D.
• Treat defence spending as part of industrial and economic strategy, not just security.
Takeaway
Without fixing processes, higher defence budgets risk producing more paperwork than power.
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➡️Health-care Component of Budget 2026
1. Big Picture
• Budget 2026 increases health spending in absolute terms,
• but fails to raise health spending as a share of GDP, which is the real concern.
2. Key Numbers (What the data shows)
• Total health allocation: ₹1.05 lakh crore
• Increase: ~10% over last year (RE)
• But health spending is only:
• ~1.9% of total government expenditure
• ~0.26% of GDP
🔹Meaning: Spending is rising, but not fast enough compared to India’s economy.
3. What the Budget Does Well (Positive Side)
• Biopharma SHAKTI scheme (₹10,000 crore):
• Aim: Make India a global hub for biologics and biosimilars
• Clinical trials infrastructure:
• Network of 1,000 accredited trial sites
• Boosts medical R&D (long-neglected area)
• Education & Training:
• New NIPERs and modernisation of existing ones
• Training:
• 1 lakh allied health professionals
• 1.5 lakh care workers for elderly
• Affordability measures:
• Customs duty exemption on 17 cancer drugs
• Lower TCS on medical and education remittances (5% → 2%)
🔹These steps improve access, affordability and research capacity.
4. What the Budget Fails to Do (Core Criticism)
• Government had promised:
• 2.5% of GDP on health by 2025 (National Health Policy, 2017)
• Budget 2026 falls far short of this target.
• Allocation to National Health Mission (NHM) has declined.
🔹This weakens:
• Primary healthcare
• Preventive care
• Rural and public health systems
5. Federalism Concern (Hidden Issue)
• Centre is relying more on States to spend on health due to fiscal devolution.
• Risk:
• Rich States spend more
• Poor States lag behind
🔹Result: Uneven and patchy health outcomes across India.
6. Why the Budget Is Called a “Mixed Bag”
• More spending in:
• Pharmaceuticals
• Research
• Training
• Less commitment to:
• Public health systems
• GDP-linked health expenditure
• Equity across States
7. Core Takeaway
• The Budget improves how healthcare works,
• but does not sufficiently expand how much India spends on health.
conclusion
India’s health budget shows progress in quality and innovation, but weak commitment to scale and equity.
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➡️The Fading of India’s Environmental Jurisprudence
• Judiciary is increasingly prioritising development and infrastructure over ecological protection.
• Courts are relying on technical and procedural criteria (like height, paperwork, clearances)
→ instead of ecological science (groundwater, biodiversity, fragility).
• In cases like Aravalli hills, mangroves, and Himalayan highways:
• Natural ecosystems are treated as replaceable
• Compensatory afforestation is wrongly seen as an adequate solution.
• Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) is being diluted:
• Post-facto clearances allowed
• Environmental damage assessed after it occurs, not before.
• Large infrastructure and corporate projects get easier approvals,
while citizens’ objections are treated as obstacles to development.
• This reflects a shift in judicial philosophy:
• Earlier: Precautionary principle, public trust doctrine
• Now: Leniency, procedural compliance, ease of doing business
• Such dilution weakens:
• Article 21 (right to healthy environment)
• Article 48A (state duty)
• Article 51A(g) (citizen duty)
• The core warning:
• If courts stop acting as environmental guardians,
• There is no institution left to prevent irreversible ecological damage.
takeaway
Environmental jurisprudence is fading not by repeal of laws, but by their weak interpretation and enforcement.
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➡️India’s Climate Ambitions vs Budgetary Allocations
1. Why in News
• Union Budget 2026–27 announced money for clean energy and climate action.
• Experts say money given is less than what India’s climate goals need.
2. Core Issue
• India wants fast climate action.
• But the budget support is cautious and limited.
• This creates a gap between promises and actual action.
3. What India Has Promised
• India aims for Net Zero by 2070.
• India wants to cut emissions intensity by 45% by 2030.
• Climate action now affects trade, jobs and growth, not just the environment.
4. What the Budget Provides
• Solar PV localisation – ₹4,500 crore
→ Helps reduce dependence on Chinese solar imports.
→ Amount is too small to build large-scale manufacturing.
• PM Surya Ghar Muft Bijli Yojana – ₹22,000 crore
→ Promotes rooftop solar for households.
→ Saves electricity bills and reduces power losses.
→ Faces issues like discom cooperation and upfront cost.
• CCUS – ₹20,000 crore (5 years)
→ Helps capture carbon from steel and cement industries.
→ Funding is enough only for testing and pilots, not mass use.
• Green Hydrogen
→ Seen as fuel of the future.
→ High costs and low demand slow actual spending.
• Nuclear Energy
→ Import duty removed till 2035 to cut costs.
→ Still slow due to safety concerns and long construction time.
5. Why CBAM Makes It Urgent (Trade Angle)
• European Union will tax carbon-heavy imports (CBAM).
• Indian steel and aluminium exports will be affected.
• So, cutting emissions is now needed to protect exports.
6. Main Problems in Implementation
• Climate technologies are expensive.
• Private companies fear financial and policy risks.
• Discoms and states lack capacity.
• Policies exist, but execution is slow.
7. Way Forward
• Increase funding from pilot level to full scale.
• Focus first on steel, cement and aluminium.
• Use green bonds and blended finance.
• Give clear, long-term policy signals to investors.
8. Conclusion
• India has strong climate intent but limited budget support.
• Without more funding and faster execution, goals may remain on paper only.
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DPIIT has revised the definition of Startups where it has increased the Turnover/Annual sales to 'Rs. 200 crores'
It has also provided a new definition of 'Deep Tech Startup' till 20 years of incorporation and Turnover up till Rs. 300 crores.
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➡️HRW
• Type: Independent, non-governmental, non-profit international human rights organisation
• Founded: 1978 (initially as Helsinki Watch)
• Headquarters: New York City, USA
• Operational presence: Research and advocacy in 90+ countries
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Issue in News
• Human Rights Watch (HRW) warned that Donald Trump’s return to the White House is accelerating a democratic backsliding in the U.S., contributing to a global decline in democracy to its lowest level in four decades.
Core Claims by HRW
• Authoritarian drift: Concentration of executive power, pressure on institutions, and weakening of checks and balances.
• Human rights impact: Curtailment of civil liberties, erosion of minority protections, and hostile rhetoric translating into restrictive policies.
• Global context: Fits into a wider pattern of democratic recession worldwide, amplifying risks to rule of law.
Why the Assessment Matters
• The U.S. sets global democratic norms; regression there has spillover effects on international human rights standards and accountability.
• HRW’s findings influence UN debates, foreign policy discourse, and civil society advocacy.
Institutional Snapshot (Prelims)
• Nature: Independent, non-profit international NGO (founded 1978; HQ: New York).
• Mandate: Investigate, document, and advocate against human rights violations globally.
• Methods: Field research, country/thematic reports, advocacy with governments and UN mechanisms (e.g., HRC, UPR).
• Funding: Private donations/foundations (no government funding).
Exam Pointers
• Attribute assertions to HRW (secondary source).
• Distinguish clearly: HRW ≠ UN body.
• Link to themes: rule of law, separation of powers, civil liberties, democratic backsliding.
One-line Conclusion
• HRW’s warning frames recent U.S. developments as part of a broader global democratic decline, underscoring the role of independent watchdogs in safeguarding human rights norms.
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➡️Cooperative cab service “Bharat Taxi”
Why in news
• Amit Shah launched India’s first cooperative-based ride-hailing platform, Bharat Taxi, under the Ministry of Cooperation.
What is Bharat Taxi
• A cooperative ride-hailing platform where drivers (called sarathis) are owners, not just service providers.
• Designed as an alternative to aggregator-based models (e.g., commission-heavy platforms).
Key features
• Ownership model: Driver-owned cooperatives → profits/value accrue to members.
• Driver welfare:
• Personal accident insurance: ₹5 lakh
• Family health insurance: ₹5 lakh
• Incentives: Top-performing sarathis to be honoured.
• Expansion plan: Rollout across all States & cities within 2 years.
• Institutional tie-ups: 9 MoUs with public & private stakeholders.
Institutional framework
• Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Cooperation (policy, promotion of cooperatives).
• Operational structure: Multi-State/State cooperative societies of drivers.
• Stakeholders: Driver cooperatives, State transport authorities, insurers, tech partners.
Why it matters
• Economic democracy: Aligns with cooperative principles—member ownership, democratic control, surplus sharing.
• Social security: Formal safety nets for gig workers.
• Policy alignment: Supports cooperative federalism and platform cooperativism in the gig economy.
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1. Indian Mountaineering Foundation (IMF)
• Type: Autonomous body under Ministry of Defence
• Established: 1958
• Headquarters: New Delhi
• Role (Mountaineering):
• Nodal agency for granting expedition permissions in India
• Issues peak-wise approvals, liaison with States/Army
• Frames safety & expedition guidelines
• Earlier role in fees: Collected expedition fees for notified peaks (now waived for Indians for 83 peaks)
2. State Forest Departments
• Legal basis: Indian Forest Act, 1927 + State forest laws
• Role:
• Clearance for climbs in Reserved/Protected Forest areas
• Enforce wildlife & environmental norms
• Ensure compliance with eco-sensitive zone rules
• Earlier role in fees: Charged forest/eco fees for expeditions
• Current change: State governments bear these costs
3. State Governments
• Role:
• Notify peaks open for mountaineering
• Bear expedition-related fees (for the 83 notified peaks)
• Coordinate with IMF, Forest Dept., local administration
• Objective: Promote adventure tourism, local livelihoods, youth participation
4. Ministry of Defence (MoD)
• Administrative control: Oversees IMF
• Relevance:
• High-altitude training relevance (armed forces, disaster response)
• Strategic oversight in border Himalayan regions
5. Local Administration (District Authorities)
• Role:
• Law & order, logistics, disaster management support
• Coordination with SDRF/NDRF during expeditions
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➡️The Budget and the imperative of fiscal consolidation
Why in news
• Union Budget 2026–27 stresses fiscal consolidation while scaling up growth-oriented capital expenditure, especially in advanced technology sectors.
Core theme
• Balancing growth (Viksit Bharat 2047) with debt sustainability, amid slowing revenue buoyancy and rising interest burdens.
Key takeaways with data
1. Shift in expenditure composition (positive structural change)
• Revenue expenditure share fell from ~88% (2014-15) to ~77% (2026-27 BE) → ~11 percentage-point decline.
• Capital expenditure (Capex) share increased, signalling focus on asset creation.
• Capex/GDP remained high post-COVID, supporting growth.
🔹Structural correction improves long-term growth potential but needs sustained execution.
2. Capex growth momentum is slowing (concern)
• Capex growth: 28.3% (2023-24) → 10.8% (2024-25) → ~4.2% (2025-26 RE).
• 2026-27 BE capex growth ~11.5%, only marginally above assumed nominal GDP growth (~10%).
• Capex stays around ~3.1% of GDP → no major step-up.
🔹Without faster capex growth, multiplier effects may weaken.
3. Revenue buoyancy is weakening
• Gross tax buoyancy (2026-27 BE): ~0.8 (benchmark ≈1).
• Direct taxes buoyancy: ~1.1 (share ~61%).
• Indirect taxes buoyancy: ~0.3 (share ~39%), largely due to GST underperformance.
• GST collections not keeping pace with GDP growth.
🔹Indirect tax reform & GST efficiency are critical for consolidation.
4. Fiscal consolidation pace has slowed
• Annual reduction in fiscal deficit/GDP:
• ~0.7 pp (2023-24) → 0.4 pp (2025-26 RE) → 0.1 pp (2026-27 BE).
• Strategy shift from fiscal deficit targeting to debt-GDP targeting lacks clarity.
👉 UPSC angle: FRBM Act, 2018 targets
• Debt-GDP: 40% (Centre)
• Fiscal deficit: 3% of GDP
→ Budget does not clearly map the glide path.
5. Rising debt servicing burden
• Effective interest rate on Centre’s debt (2026-27 BE): ~7.1%.
• Interest payments ≈ 40% of revenue receipts.
• High interest outgo crowds out primary expenditure.
🔹Debt sustainability depends as much on growth & revenue mobilisation as on deficit control.
6. Centre–State fiscal dynamics
• 16th Finance Commission kept States’ share in central taxes at 41%.
• Reduction in grants (especially revenue deficit grants) → lower transfers to States compared to FC-15.
• States’ fiscal space constrained while capex expectations rise.
Overall assessment
• Strengths:
• Clear capex orientation, tech-led growth vision, post-COVID fiscal correction.
• Concerns:
• Slowing capex growth, weak GST buoyancy, rising interest burden, opaque debt-reduction roadmap.
Way forward
• Explicit glide path for debt-GDP & fiscal deficit with assumptions on nominal GDP.
• GST reforms: rate rationalisation, compliance, plug leakages.
• Sustain capex growth > nominal GDP growth to preserve multiplier effects.
• Debt management to reduce interest-revenue ratio.
• Strengthen Centre–State fiscal coordination.
conclusion
Budget 2026–27 advances structural reform through capex but fiscal consolidation now hinges on reviving tax buoyancy and clearly anchoring debt sustainability.
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• Khejri (Prosopis cineraria) is Rajasthan’s State tree and a keystone species in desert ecology.
Why Khejri matters
• Ecological role: Nitrogen-fixing tree; improves soil fertility, prevents desertification, supports biodiversity.
• Livelihood link: Leaves (loong) used as fodder; pods used locally; shade for crops (agro-forestry).
• Cultural-historical value: Central to Bishnoi traditions; linked to the Khejarli sacrifice (1730)—early environmental conservation movement.
• Climate relevance: Enhances resilience in Thar desert conditions; carbon sequestration and micro-climate regulation.
Key concerns raised
• Development vs environment trade-off in a water-scarce, desert ecosystem.
• Procedural safeguards: Adequacy of environmental clearances, public consultation, and alternatives assessment.
• Inter-generational equity: Long-term ecological costs vs short-term infrastructure gains.
Legal–policy context
• Constitutional backing:
• Art. 48A (State to protect environment)
• Art. 51A(g) (Citizen’s duty)
• Statutory framework: Forest/Tree protection rules; Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) norms; compensatory afforestation—often questioned for desert efficacy.
• Judicial principles: Sustainable development, precautionary principle, public trust doctrine.
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