Crest Learning UPSC
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An initiative to prepare for UPSC. We Cover important news articles from reputated news papers, PIB, YOJANA, KURUKSHETRA and other govt. Documents Aligned with static Syllabus of the UPSC.
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#mains
ā”ļøNew rules for panchayti raj
āļø Governance Issues
⢠Controversy: New rules allegedly empower BDOs over elected Panchayat Samiti chairpersons.
⢠Political Fallout: BJD accuses Centre of undermining federalism and local democracy.
š§© Implications
⢠Democratic Deficit: Elected representatives sidelined by bureaucrats.
⢠Centralization vs Decentralization: Violates spirit of grassroots governance.
⢠Federalism at Risk: CentreāState tensions over local governance autonomy.
š Case Law
⢠State of UP vs Pradhan Sangh (1995): Affirmed Panchayat autonomy.
⢠Rajendra Singh vs State of MP (2005): Emphasized functional devolution.
š§ Strategic Recommendations
⢠Clear role demarcation between elected bodies and bureaucracy.
⢠Strengthen capacity-building for Panchayat leaders.
⢠Promote bottom-up planning in schemes like MGNREGA, Jal Jeevan Mission.
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#Prelims
š Constitutional Provisions
⢠Article 243ā243O: Establishes Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs).
⢠73rd Constitutional Amendment Act (1992):⢠Mandates a three-tier system: Gram Panchayat, Panchayat Samiti, Zila Parishad.
⢠Article 243G: Empowers Panchayats to function as institutions of self-government.
š Key Data
⢠PRIs in India: Over 2.6 lakh Panchayats (MoPR, 2024).
⢠Womenās representation: ~46% of elected Panchayat members are women (MoPR).
⢠MGNREGA: ā¹73,000 crore allocated in Union Budget 2024ā25.
⢠15th Finance Commission: ā¹2.36 lakh crore recommended for local bodies (2021ā26).
šļø Key Schemes
⢠MGNREGA: Panchayats play a key role in planning and implementation.
⢠SVAMITVA Scheme: Uses drone tech for property mapping in rural areas.
⢠eGramSwaraj Portal: Tracks Panchayat finances and development plans.
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š§ #Prelims
⢠Electrolyser: Device that splits water into hydrogen and oxygen using electricity.
⢠Green Hydrogen: Hydrogen produced via electrolysis using renewable energy.
⢠Types of Electrolysers:⢠Alkaline Electrolysers
⢠PEM (Proton Exchange Membrane)
⢠SOEC (Solid Oxide Electrolyser Cells)
š Key Data Points
⢠Global electrolyser capacity (2024): ~1.1 GW installed.
⢠Chinaās share: Over 40% of global electrolyser manufacturing capacity.
⢠Indiaās National Green Hydrogen Mission (2023): ā¹19,744 crore outlay.
⢠Target: 5 MMT (million metric tonnes) of green hydrogen annually by 2030.
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ā”ļø Prelims Focus
⢠DPIIT(Department of industry and internal trade): Nodal agency for startup recognition.(under ministry of commerce and industry)
⢠Key Data:⢠India has over 1 lakh recognized startups (DPIIT, 2025).
⢠Third-largest startup ecosystem globally after US and China.
⢠Unicorn count: ~110+ unicorns as of mid-2025.
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Governance, Strategy & Implications
šEconomic Rationale
š¹Inflation Control vs. Farmer Income: MSP hikes balance rising input costs with inflationary pressures.
š¹Terms of Trade: Favoring oilseeds and pulses over cereals reflects a strategic shift in cropping patterns.
šStrategic Goals
š¹Reducing Import Dependency:⢠India imports ~60% of edible oils and ~25% of pulses.
š¹Boosting domestic production aligns with food security and forex conservation.
š¹Crop Diversification:⢠Higher MSPs for lentil, mustard, safflower signal push away from wheat-centric agriculture.
šGovernance & Policy Linkages
š·MSP as a Policy Tool:⢠Linked to schemes like PM-AASHA, PM-KISAN, and National Food Security Mission.
š¹Cabinet Decision Context:⢠Reflects inter-ministerial coordinationāagriculture, finance, and consumer affairs.
šChallenges & Critiques
š¹Procurement Gaps:⢠Actual procurement often limited to wheat and rice; pulses/oilseeds face market volatility.
š¹Gram MSP Stagnation:⢠Raises questions on regional equity and pulse promotion consistency.
šWay Forward
š¹Strengthen Procurement Infrastructure for pulses and oilseeds.
š¹Promote Farmer Awareness of MSP and procurement mechanisms.
š¹Integrate MSP with Climate-Resilient Cropping and soil health initiatives.
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šPrelims Pointers:
š¹Wheatās ā¹160 hike is the highest since 2007ā08.
š¹Total procurement outlay for pulses & oilseeds: ā¹11,000 crore.
š¹Gram MSP unchanged despite being a major pulse crop.
š¹Mission for Atmanirbharta in pulses launched to reduce import dependency.
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ā”ļøacc. To NCRB, 2023
šat Delhi railway stations crime increased by 59% in 2023( 4813 incidents) from 2332 cases in 2021.
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ā”ļøRBI has allows to fund M&H, lend in rupee to residents of Indiaās neighbours
šBanks Allowed to Fund Mergers & Acquisitions (M&As)
š¹Previously, banks were restricted from directly financing M&A deals due to concerns over speculative lending and risk exposure.
š¹The RBI now permits banks to lend for acquisition of equity shares, enabling them to support corporate takeovers and strategic consolidations.
š¹This move is expected to revitalize the primary market, encourage corporate restructuring, and boost investment activity.
šRupee Lending to Residents of Neighbouring Countries
š¹Banks can now extend loans in Indian Rupees (INR) to residents and Indian company branches in 22 countries, including Nepal, Bhutan, Sri Lanka, and Bangladesh.
š¹This policy promotes the internationalization of the rupee, making it a preferred currency for regional trade and finance.
š¹It also strengthens economic diplomacy, aligning with Indiaās āNeighbourhood Firstā strategy by deepening financial ties with bordering nations.
šUse of Special Rupee Vostro Accounts for Trade Settlements
š¹Vostro accounts are special bank accounts held by foreign banks with Indian banks, used to settle trade in INR.
š¹RBIās push for Vostro-based trade settlements reduces dependence on the US dollar and supports bilateral trade in local currencies.
š¹This enhances monetary sovereignty, lowers transaction costs, and insulates India from global currency fluctuations.
šLoan Limit Against Shares Raised from ā¹25 Lakh to ā¹1 Crore
š¹Investors and businesses can now borrow up to ā¹1 crore against shares and debentures, up from the previous ā¹25 lakh cap.
š¹This increases credit availability, encourages capital market participation, and supports leveraged investments.
š¹It reflects RBIās confidence in the maturity of Indiaās financial markets and its intent to stimulate economic activity.
šLoans & Guarantees to Step-down Subsidiaries of Indian Companies
š¹Banks are now allowed to lend and provide guarantees to step-down subsidiaries (i.e., subsidiaries of subsidiaries) of Indian firms abroad.
š¹This builds on the 2018 reform that permitted lending to direct overseas subsidiaries.
š¹It facilitates global expansion, improves financial flexibility, and strengthens the international competitiveness of Indian corporates.
šRevision of FEMA Norms to Enable Strategic Financial Flows
š¹These reforms are part of a broader revision of the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA) framework.
š¹The RBI is shifting from a restrictive stance to a more enabling regulatory approach, allowing banks to play a larger role in cross-border finance.
š¹This reflects Indiaās ambition to become a regional financial powerhouse, with the rupee at the center of South Asian trade and investment.
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Today leftists are on the leave, so The Hindu in not available.
but we are rationalist, so for today we will have flavour of rightist, so that Covering Indian express.
Wait ... work in progressš
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ā”ļøBomb attack on Pakistan's paramilitary office at Quetta (capital of Balochistan province)
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ā”ļøAsian development bank (ADB) has downgraded, India's growth Outlook for 2025-26 fiscal year, from 6.7% (predicted in April) to 6.5% due to 50 % tariff imposed by the U.S on imports from india.
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ā”ļøCrime against children records 9.2% rise in 2023.
š1,77,335 cases in 2023
šcrime rate stood 39.9/1,00,000(2023)
šcrime rate 36.6, in 2022
š¹45% cases comprises kidnapping
š¹38.2% (POCSO) act
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ā”ļøacc to NCRB, Total suicides are 1,71418 in 2023.
š out of this 10,786 (6.3%) are farmers and agricultural workers.
š¹4690 were farmers or cultivators, in which 4553 were male and 137 were female
š¹6096 suicides by farm workes
In which 5433 were male and 663 were female.
šState wise% of farmers and workers suicides
š¹Maharashtra 38.5%
š¹Karnataka 22.5%
š¹Andhra 8.6%
š¹MP 7.2%
š¹atamil5.9%
šW.Bengal, Bihar, Jharkhand, himachal, Arunachal, goa, Manipur, mizoram, Nagaland, tripura, chandigarh, Delhi and Lakshadweep reported no suicides from the farm belt.
šhow it can be possible ?
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ā”ļøacc to NCRB, over 1.73 lakh killed in road accidents in 2023.
š1.6% rise in fatalities than 2022
š46% of victims being two wheeler riders.
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ā”ļø@Data&facts
šYouth Demographic Advantage:
š¹65% of Indiaās population is under 35āa massive opportunity for economic and democratic transformation.
šUrban-Rural Economic Imbalance
š¹Cities cover just 3% of Indiaās land but contribute over 60% of GDP, leaving districts economically marginalized.
šDistrict-Level Contribution to GDP
š¹80% of districts contribute less than 1% each to national GDPāhighlighting stark regional disparities
šLimited Mobility
š¹85% of Indians remain in the district of their birth, yet policy focus remains urban-centric
šGovernance Centralization
š¹Top-down schemes and technocratic delivery models dominate, reducing local political agency and citizen participation .
šDemocratic Fatigue
š¹Citizensāespecially youthāfeel alienated due to limited opportunity and lack of ownership in governance
šDistrict Planning Deficit
š¹District Planning Committees (DPCs) under Article 243ZD are often non-functional or absent, weakening bottom-up planning
šCall for Civic Reimagining
š¹Districts should be reclaimed as democratic commonsāspaces for participatory planning, accountability, and inclusive growth A.
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ā”ļø100Yrs of UPSC
š (Issues & Analysis)
šļø Institutional Legacy
š·UPSC has served as the bedrock of Indiaās meritocratic civil services for a century.
š·Its evolution reflects Indiaās transition from colonial bureaucracy to constitutional governance.
š Constitutional Status
š¹Article 315ā323 of the Indian Constitution provide for:⢠Independence of UPSC
š¹Tenure security of members
š¹Consultative role in recruitment, disciplinary matters, and service conditions
š Role in Governance
š¹UPSC ensures non-partisan, competence-based selection for key administrative roles.
š¹It upholds equal opportunity across caste, region, and class through standardized exams.
āļø Challenges & Critiques
š¹Changing nature of governance demands new skill setsādigital literacy, behavioral insight, policy innovation.
š¹Concerns over:⢠Overemphasis on rote learning
š¹Limited diversity in selection
š¹Need for exam reform to reflect evolving administrative needs
š§© Reform & Modernization
š¹UPSC has adopted:⢠Online applications, digital evaluation, and transparent disclosures
š¹ Revised syllabi to include ethics, governance, and current affairs
š¹Still needs:⢠Greater regional outreach
š¹Inclusion of contemporary governance tools (e.g., data analytics, climate policy)
š Global Comparison
š¹UPSC stands among the most respected public service commissions globally, comparable to UKās Civil Service Commission and Singaporeās PSC.
šConclusion
UPSCās centenary is not just a celebration of institutional longevityāitās a moment to reaffirm its role as the guardian of meritocracy in a rapidly changing India. As governance evolves, so must the mechanisms that select its stewards.
