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Dedicated to Civil Services(UPSC and MPSC) Preparation. Consistency is the Name of the Game! H.V Desai Competitive Exams Centre, Nirav Da 596, Budhwar Peth, Opposite Bhau Rangari Ganapati, Behind Shaniwar Wada, Near Sakal Office, Budhwar Peth, Pune.
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Consider the following:
I. Medical services for overseas patients in India
II. Legal and financial advisors III. Government officials IV. Tourist guide How many of the above are examples of quinary activities?
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What is the correct sequence of occurrence of the following cities in South-East Asia as one proceeds from south to north?
I. Bangkok II. Hanoi
III. Vientiane IV. Phenom penh
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Which of the following reports are published by the World Bank Group?
World Development Report
Global Economic Prospects Logistics Performance Index Business Ready (B-READY Index) Select the correct answer using the code given below:
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Which of the following are considered indicators of a country's external debt sustainability?
Debt-to-GDP ratio
Debt service ratio Ratio of foreign exchange reserves to short-term debt Fiscal Deficit to CAD ratio
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The Arvind Mayaram Committee is primarily associated with which of the following?
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Consider the following statements with reference to the Variable Rate Repo:
I. It is predetermined by the Reserve Bank of
India. II. It provides short-term liquidity to banks. Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
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Which one of the following refers to the profit earned by the Government by issuing currency?
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🚨 Zhat Pat Pata Pat Notes 🚨
UPSC students साठी खास बनवलेली One-Week MPSC Prelims Conversion Strategy 🔥
या Notes मध्ये तुम्हाला मिळेल:
✅ MPSC साठी important Maharashtra-specific focus
✅ UPSC knowledge ला MPSC pattern मध्ये convert करणारी revision
✅ One-week मध्ये revise करता येईल अशी crisp & exam-oriented material
✅ Static + Current Affairs चा fast revision approach
✅ Last moment confusion कमी करणारी structured notes
तुम्ही UPSC साठी मेहनत केली आहे.
आता तीच मेहनत MPSC Prelims 2026 मध्ये result मध्ये convert करा. 💯
📅 PDF Release: 24th May
⏰ Time: 5:00 PM
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📥 Zhat Pat Pata Pat Notes download करा आणि
MPSC Prelims 2026 साठी smart final revision सुरू करा. 🚀
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Do not chase confidence from outside.
Build confidence from discipline.
You have studied for months and years. Now respect your own journey. The exam hall does not need a perfect student. It needs a calm, alert, practical student.
On 24th May, do not go to prove your entire life.
Go to solve one question at a time.
Stay calm.
Stay sharp.
Trust your preparation.
And give your best.
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No mobile phone inside the examination hall.
No smartwatch.
No Bluetooth device.
No calculator.
No electronic device.
No notes inside the hall.
No digital watch.
If you are carrying a phone because you are travelling, make your own safe arrangement outside the centre. Do not assume that the centre will keep your belongings safely.
Visit or at least properly check your exam venue before the exam day.
Do not search the centre for the first time on exam morning. Many centres have similar names. Sometimes the Google Maps location is confusing. Sometimes the gate is on another side. Sometimes traffic near the centre is heavy.
Check:
Exact school/college name.
Gate location.
Travel time.
Parking possibility.
Nearby waiting area.
Nearby food/water availability.
Distance from your home or stay.
Backup travel option.
Remember: entry closes 30 minutes before the exam.
For the first paper at 9:30 AM, entry closes at 9:00 AM.
For CSAT at 2:30 PM, entry closes at 2:00 PM.
Do not plan to reach at 8:55. That is not confidence; that is risk.
Reach early. Sit calmly. Let others panic if they want. You stay composed.
Clothing is also important.
Wear comfortable clothes. It is summer, so avoid very tight or uncomfortable clothes. Choose simple, decent, breathable clothing. Avoid anything that creates checking issues. Avoid smartwatches or unnecessary accessories. Wear comfortable footwear because you may need to walk or stand.
Between GS and CSAT, do not do post-mortem of Paper 1.
This is extremely important.
After GS, do not ask:
“How many attempted?”
“What is the answer to that polity question?”
“Was option C correct?”
“What will be the cut-off?”
This can destroy your CSAT.
UPSC is cleared after both papers, not after GS alone. CSAT is qualifying, but if you ignore it mentally, it can become dangerous.
After GS:
Come out calmly.
Eat light food.
Drink water/electrolytes.
Avoid heavy lunch.
Avoid discussion.
Avoid answer keys.
Avoid YouTube analysis.
Take 10–15 minutes rest.
Reset your mind.
Tell yourself:
“Paper 1 is over. Now I have only one duty — CSAT.”
For CSAT, do not enter casually. Many good aspirants suffer because they underestimate CSAT. Read carefully. Manage time. Do not get stuck on ego questions. If one passage or math question is taking too much time, move ahead.
Inside the exam hall:
First, breathe.
Read instructions properly.
Fill the OMR carefully.
Check roll number, booklet series, and other details.
Do not make silly mistakes in bubbling.
Do not rush in the first 10 minutes.
Do not get emotionally attached to any question.
If you do not know, leave it or mark it for later.
Accuracy matters more than ego.
Remember:
A difficult paper rewards calm students.
An easy paper rewards accurate students.
An unpredictable paper rewards flexible students.
So be calm, accurate, and flexible.
Every night before the exam, practice visualization for 3–5 minutes.
Close your eyes and imagine:
1. I am waking up calmly.
2. I am getting ready without hurry.
3. My admit card, ID, pens, photos, water, chocolates, and electrolytes are packed.
4. I am reaching the centre early.
5. I am entering the gate before time.
6. I am sitting calmly in the classroom.
7. I am not disturbed by other students.
8. I am reading the instructions carefully.
9. I am filling the OMR correctly.
10. I am opening the paper with a stable mind.
11. The first few questions may be easy or difficult, but I remain calm.
12. I am reading every question properly.
13. I am not making emotional guesses.
14. I am leaving doubtful questions without guilt.
15. I am using elimination intelligently.
16. I am managing time well.
17. I am checking my OMR carefully.
18. After GS, I am not discussing answers.
19. I am entering CSAT with a fresh mind.
20. I am coming out of the exam knowing that I gave my best.
This visualization is not magic. It is mental rehearsal. It prepares your brain to behave calmly on the actual day.
Final message:
In the last 2–3 days, do not chase perfection.
Chase stability.
Do not chase new knowledge.
Chase recall.
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Dear UPSC Prelims 2026 Aspirants,
Your Prelims is on 24th May. These last 2–3 days are not for panic, overthinking, or setting impossible targets. These days are for calm revision, routine, confidence, and exam-day readiness.
First thing: do not expect anything from the paper.
The paper can be easy.
The paper can be difficult.
The paper can be unpredictable.
The paper can feel different from mocks.
But remember one thing — it is the same paper for everyone. Your job is not to control the paper. Your job is to control your mind, your time, your accuracy, and your decision-making.
Do not enter the exam hall with a fixed expectation like:
“This year polity will be easy.”
“Environment will dominate.”
“Cut-off will go high.”
“Paper will be like last year.”
No. UPSC does not work according to our expectations. Go with an open mind. Read every question fresh. Do not get shocked in the first 10 minutes. Many aspirants lose the exam not because they do not know enough, but because they panic early.
For the next 2–3 days, do not keep any major new target.
Do not say:
“I will finish the whole economy.”
“I will complete entire medieval history.”
“I will solve 5 full-length tests.”
“I will read one new booklet.”
This is not the time to expand. This is the time to consolidate.
Just scan through your own notes.
Revise the things you have already studied.
Go through short notes, marked pages, maps, schemes, constitutional articles, environment facts, current affairs pointers, and your mistake notes.
At this stage, revision should feel light but repeated. Your target is not to become perfect. Your target is to keep your mind active and familiar with the material.
You may feel anxiety.
You may suddenly remember all the days you wasted.
You may remember the topics you skipped.
You may feel that others are more prepared.
You may feel that you are forgetting everything.
You may feel that your mocks were not good enough.
This is normal.
Almost every serious aspirant feels this before Prelims. Anxiety does not mean you are weak. It means this exam matters to you. But do not allow anxiety to become your decision-maker.
Whenever your mind says, “I have not done enough,” reply calmly:
“Whatever I have done, I will use it properly.”
Whenever your mind says, “What if I fail?” reply:
“Right now, my job is not to predict the result. My job is to attempt the paper with maturity.”
Whenever your mind says, “I wasted time,” reply:
“That time is gone. These 2 hours are still in my hand.”
Your final days should be simple:
Wake up on time.
Eat normal food.
Revise limited notes.
Do not compare with others.
Avoid social media panic.
Avoid topper strategy videos now.
Avoid new PDFs.
Avoid unnecessary discussion.
Sleep properly.
Keep your body calm.
One very important point: do not disturb your daily routine now.
If you suddenly sleep very late, wake up late, change food habits, or over-study at night, your body will not support you on exam day. UPSC Prelims is not only a knowledge test. It is also a stamina test, patience test, and temperament test.
Your GS paper is from 9:30 AM to 11:30 AM.
Your CSAT paper is from 2:30 PM to 4:30 PM.
So train your mind to be active during these exact hours.
In the next 2–3 days, sit quietly during these time slots and revise. Let your body understand that this is performance time.
Now, exam-day preparation.
One day before the exam, keep everything ready.
Carry:
Printed admit card — preferably 2 copies.
Original photo ID used in the application.
Passport-size photos, if needed as per admit-card instruction.
Black ballpoint pens — at least 2–3.
Transparent water bottle, if allowed at your centre.
Chocolates or small energy bites.
Electrolytes or ORS because it is summer.
Light snacks for the gap between GS and CSAT.
Simple lunch or homemade food, if possible.
Small towel or handkerchief.
Basic medicines, if you normally need them.
Do not carry unnecessary things.
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Consider the following:
I. Coins of any denomination any sum
II. Every current banknote issued by Reserve Bank of India III. Cheques drawn on savings or current accounts IV. Central Bank Digital Currency How many of the above are legal tenders in India?
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Which one of the following statements best describes the term ‘tax credit’?
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Consider the following
I. Decrease the repo rate
II. Increase the tax rates III. Decrease public expenditure IV. Increase import duty on raw materials How many the above steps can be taken by a government/central bank to tackle inflation in an economy?
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