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ABCD of UPSC by Vikas Dhayal

ABCD of UPSC by Vikas Dhayal

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This channel is an initiative of CSE Topper. Now bringing to you a Free Mapping Series for Prelims. 🏅In Prelims 2025 8 out of 14 Questions of mapping were from this series. 🏅In Prelims 2024 13/15 Questions were solvable based on that year’s series

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📈 تحلیل کانال تلگرام ABCD of UPSC by Vikas Dhayal

کانال ABCD of UPSC by Vikas Dhayal (@abcd_of_upsc) در بخش زبانی انگلیسی بازیگری فعال است. در حال حاضر جامعه شامل 63 478 مشترک است و جایگاه 2 631 را در دسته آموزش و رتبه 5 513 را در منطقه الهند دارد.

📊 شاخص‌های مخاطب و پویایی

از زمان ایجاد در невідомо، پروژه رشد سریعی داشته و 63 478 مشترک جذب کرده است.

بر اساس آخرین داده‌ها در تاریخ 10 ژوئن, 2026، کانال فعالیت پایداری دارد. در ۳۰ روز گذشته تغییر اعضا برابر 165 و در ۲۴ ساعت گذشته برابر -16 بوده و همچنان دسترسی گسترده‌ای حفظ شده است.

  • وضعیت تأیید: تأیید نشده
  • نرخ تعامل (ER): میانگین تعامل مخاطب 19.43% است و در ۲۴ ساعت نخست پس از انتشار، محتوا معمولاً 9.03% واکنش نسبت به کل مشترکان کسب می‌کند.
  • دسترسی پست‌ها: هر پست به طور میانگین 12 337 بازدید دریافت می‌کند. در اولین روز معمولاً 5 731 بازدید جمع‌آوری می‌شود.
  • واکنش‌ها و تعامل: مخاطبان به‌طور فعال حمایت می‌کنند؛ میانگین واکنش به هر پست 20 است.
  • علایق موضوعی: محتوا بر موضوعات کلیدی مانند mapping, topper, governance, prelim, upsc تمرکز دارد.

📝 توضیح و سیاست محتوایی

نویسنده این فضا را محل بیان دیدگاه‌های شخصی توصیف می‌کند:
This channel is an initiative of CSE Topper. Now bringing to you a Free Mapping Series for Prelims. 🏅In Prelims 2025 8 out of 14 Questions of mapping were from this series. 🏅In Prelims 2024 13/15 Questions were solvable based on that year’s serie...

به لطف به‌روزرسانی‌های پرتکرار (آخرین داده در تاریخ 11 ژوئن, 2026)، کانال همواره به‌روز و دارای دسترسی بالاست. تحلیل‌ها نشان می‌دهد مخاطبان به‌طور فعال با محتوا تعامل دارند و آن را به نقطه اثرگذاری مهم در دسته آموزش تبدیل کرده‌اند.

63 478
مشترکین
-1624 ساعت
+1597 روز
+16530 روز
آرشیو پست ها
Current Affairs Series for Mains-26 Topic-9 #GS2 VB-G RAMG 📌 Introduction The Parliament enacted Viksit Bharat – Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission (Gramin) Act, 2025 (VB-G RAM G) which seeks to replace the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA), 2005. 📜 Key Statutory Provisions 1. Aggregates all works into the Viksit Bharat National Rural Infrastructure Stack (VB-NRIS). Priority areas are water security, rural infrastructure, livelihoods, and climate resilience. 2. Mandates Viksit Gram Panchayat Plans (VGPP) integrated with PM Gati Shakti and national spatial systems. 3. Permits States to pause operations for up to 60 days during sowing and harvesting to protect farm labor availability. 4. Executed as a Centrally Sponsored Scheme (CSS) with shared Centre-State responsibilities. 5. Empowers the Centre to grant temporary operational relaxations during natural calamities or extraordinary events. 6. Enforces biometric attendance, GIS planning, real-time monitoring, public disclosures, and social audits. 7. Establishes Central and State Gramin Rozgar Guarantee Councils 🌟Significance 1. Preserves the justiciable right to work, expanding the entitlement from 100 to 125 days. 2. Maintains worker-driven demand while utilizing advance village planning to ensure projects are deployable immediately. 3. Gram Panchayats handle planning/implementation, and Gram Sabhas retain approval powers. 4. Framed as consultation-backed via technical workshops, state discussions, and multi-stakeholder engagements. 5. Pre-notified 60-day pauses are customizable by district, block, or panchayat based on local agro-climatic timelines. ⚠️Operational Concerns 1. Passed hurriedly with limited debate and a lack of wide public consultation, threatening democratic legitimacy. 2. Shifting to supply-driven framework, undermining the statutory right to work. 3. Concentrates key decision-making powers such as normative allocations and scheme operationalization rules in the Union government 4. The mandatory 60:40 cost-sharing structure combined with the requirement for States to absorb budget overruns penalizes regional finances. 5. Universal enforcement of biometric attendance, GPS tracking, and digital dashboards risks the systemic exclusion of vulnerable workers due to technical failures. 6. Overlap with the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 creates legal uncertainty over what public data remains accessible, potentially hindering social audits. 🎯Conclusion Aligning technological innovation with constitutional principles of federalism, transparency, and the right to work will be essential for ensuring that the transition from MGNREGA strengthens the foundations of inclusive rural development envisioned under Viksit Bharat @2047. 🚨Tap here to avail Compilations of GS-1,2,3 and 4 combined(covers all best copy snippets from 2019-2025)- Click here for samples You can also share your suggestions for important current affairs topics for mains-26 at @csetopper_helpline as per your reading of the newspaper and analysis of PYQs. Hit some likes to motivate.

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Current Affairs Series for Mains-26 Topic-8 #GS3 📌India's Gig Economy The Code on Social Security, 2020 defines a gig worker as an individual working outside traditional employer-employee relationships. 📊 Current Data 1. Workforce Growth Scaled from 77 lakh (FY21) to 120 lakh (FY25); projected to touch 235 lakh by 2029–30. 2. Workforce Share Comprises >2% of India’s total workforce (FY25). 3. India is the 5th largest gig economy globally (projected 3rd by 2030). 4. Valuated at ~USD 20 billion, growing at 17% annually through 2027. 🌟Significance A. Economic Impact (a) Anchors the services sector (which drives >55% of GDP) via logistics, e-commerce etc. (b) Powered by gig networks, the Q-Commerce market surged to ₹64,000 crore in 2025-26. (c) The "Dark Store" model and AI routing shift economic hubs into Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities, mitigating distressed migration. (d) Draws unregistered labor into a digital ecosystem(31.2 crore workers are registered on the e-Shram portal(2025)) (e) Integrates millions into India's DPI (UPI, mobile connectivity), pushing the digital economy to contribute nearly one-fifth of national income by 2029-30. (f) Lowers capital entry barriers for micro-entrepreneurship and enhances labor market flexibility. B. Social Impact (a) Grants income and credit access to youth, migrants, and semi-skilled laborers. (b) FLFPR is rising, with women constituting ~28% of the platform economy, Flexible hours and home-based tasks bypass safety and mobility barriers. (c) Delivers affordable, personalized, and hyper-local doorstep delivery. ⚠️Challenges A. Economic & Labor Vulnerabilities (a) Driven by declining per-order payouts, lack of minimum wage rules, and high competition eg. over 1/3rd of delivery workers earn <₹10,000/month. (b) Workers routinely lack access to clean toilets and drinking water. B. Institutional & Regulatory Gaps (a) Over 82% of gig workers remain informal "independent contractors" without safeguards. (b) The Code on Social Security imposes a 90-day rule, creating an entry barrier for short-term workers. (c) State-level legislations, such as the Rajasthan Platform Based Gig Workers Act (2023) face slow and uneven rollout. C. Operational & Social Barriers (a) Rapid "10-minute delivery" targets spike road accident risks. (b) Opaque "black box" algorithms dictate order allocation and ratings, inducing "algorithmic anxiety" and sudden, unappealable ID deactivations. (c) 30% gender wage gap in the gig economy(WEF). 🏛️ Government Initiatives Code on Social Security, 2020: Formally recognizes gig workers, a dedicated Social Security Fund, and universal welfare frameworks. e-Shram Portal: A centralized database mapping unorganized and gig workers to ensure social security portability. Pradhan Mantri Suraksha Bima Yojana (PMSBY): Provides an accidental insurance cover of ₹2 lakh/year to registered unorganized workers Ayushman Bharat (AB-PMJAY): Offers health insurance up to ₹5 lakh/family to gig workers registered on e-Shram for at least 90 days. 🎯Conclusion To achieve this, NITI Aayog recommends a 'Platform India Initiative' to systematically formalize worker protections while accelerating sector growth and align with ILO principles, SDG 8 (Decent Work), and SDG 10 (Reduced Inequalities). 🚨Tap here to avail Compilations of GS-1,2,3 and 4 combined(covers all best copy snippets from 2019-2025)- Click here for samples You can also share your suggestions for important current affairs topics for mains-26 at @csetopper_helpline as per your reading of the newspaper and analysis of PYQs. Hit some likes to motivate.

Concerns with India’s FTAs 1.Import growth frequently outpaces exports. From 2017 to 2022, exports to FTA partners grew by 31%, whereas imports jumped by 82%, causing unsustainable imbalances. 2. India's FTA utilization sits at just 25%, lagging far behind the 70-80% rate seen in developed economies. 3. Competitors outpace domestic industries through cost efficiencies and innovation eg. ASEAN and South Korea lead India in electronics and textiles. 4. Raw material imports face higher taxes than finished products, hurting domestic manufacturers. 5. Non-Tariff Barriers: Standard and technical hurdles impede exports eg The EU's(CBAM) threatens $8 billion of Indian export 6. Western partners push for tighter intellectual property rules 🛣️Way Forward 1. Strategically align the PLI scheme with trade deals to guarantee preferential treatment manufacturing sectors. 2. Form specialized industrial parks and run sector-specific skill initiatives. 3. Launch "MSME Global Connect" programs and deploy performance-incentivized credit schemes. 4. Deploy multi-stakeholder negotiating teams to target market access thresholds tailored to domestic industrial readiness. 5. Escalate R&D spending in export sectors to create high-value products 🎯Conclusion In the Amrit Kaal era, well-calibrated FTAs serve as vital economic bridges to connect India to global markets, capital, technology, and innovation, accelerating the nation's journey toward a globally competitive, developed economy by 2047. 🚨Tap here to avail Compilations of GS-1,2,3 and 4 combined(covers all best copy snippets from 2019-2025)- Click here for samples You can also share your suggestions for important current affairs topics for mains-26 at @csetopper_helpline as per your reading of the newspaper and analysis of PYQs. Hit some likes to motivate.

Current Affairs Series for Mains-26 Topic-7 #GS3 A Free Trade Agreement (FTA) is a pact between two or more nations designed to reduce trade barriers on mutual goods. India has steadily expanded its trade network to nine FTAs spanning 38 countries. Important Agreements 1. India–UAE CEPA, 2022 (a) Aims to boost bilateral trade in goods to $100 billion and services to $15 billion within five years. (b) Intends to create more than one million job opportunities for the Indian workforce through trade liberalization and market access. (c) Enables preferential market access for labor-intensive goods like textiles and engineering goods. (d) Ensures zero-duty market access for 90% of UAE exports into India, benefiting commodity exporters of petrochemicals, aluminum etc 2. India–Australia ECTA ,2022 (a) Australia provides 100% duty-free access for Indian exports, including textiles, leather, and jewelry. (b) Extends post-study work visas (2–4 years) for Indian students (c) Implements robust Rules of Origin to prevent third-party re-routing and features fast-track pharmaceutical approvals. (d) Eliminates double taxation on Indian IT offshore income. 3. India–EFTA Trade and Economic Partnership Agreement (TEPA), 2024 (a) Marks the first FTA with a binding commitment of $100 billion in Foreign (b) Direct Investment (FDI) and the creation of 1 million direct jobs in India over 15 years. (c) Protects sensitive domestic sectors by keeping dairy, soya, coal, and specific agricultural products on the exclusion list. (d) EFTA eliminates or reduces import tariffs on 99.6% of India's exports; India eliminates or reduces tariffs on 95.3% of EFTA exports. 4. India–UK CETA, 2025 (a) India will lower tariffs on 90% of UK exports over ten years. (b) Introduces a Double Contribution Convention exempting short-term professionals from dual social security contributions. (c) Grants UK companies regulated access to India's government procurement markets in transport, healthcare, and energy. 5. India-EU FTA, 2026 (a) India secures preferential access to 97% of European tariff lines, covering 99.5% of total trade value. (b) Establishes a framework for Indian students to access regional study opportunities and post-study work visas. (c) Secures preferential market access for agricultural products like tea and coffee while expanding the reach of traditional Indian medicine. (d) Heightens institutional cooperation on Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) measures and Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT). India’s Gains from Free Trade Agreements 1. Boosts exports via tariff drops eg.India-UAE CEPA offered 90% duty-free access, driving a 12% export increase in its first year. 2. Secures stable capital eg.the India-Australia ECTA triggered a 25% surge in FDI inflows. 3. Grants access to advanced technologies, such as renewable energy eg. India-Australia ECTA. 4. Integrates small and medium enterprises into global value chains, benefiting IT eg.the India-Singapore CECA. 5. Helps diversify sourcing channels eg.India-Australia ECTA secures critical minerals needed for green tech and EV manufacturing. 6. Liberalises entry norms and mutual recognition eg.Australia ECTA simplifying visa paths for IT/ITeS and professionals.

Current Affairs Series for Mains-26 Topic-6 #GS3 📌 Introduction India achieved its March 31, 2026 target of eliminating Maoist violence (MHA). LWE-affected districts declined from 126 (2014) to ~7 (2026), marking a major internal security success. 📊 Current LWE Landscape (2026) • Only 3 "most affected" districts remain: Bijapur, Sukma, and Narayanpur (Chhattisgarh). • 31 Legacy & Thrust districts require sustained state support to prevent relapse.LWE incidents declined by 88% • Annual deaths reduced by 90% 🕒 Timeline of Naxalism 1967: Naxalbari uprising in West Bengal demanding land reforms. ⬇️ 1969: CPI (M-L) formed by Charu Majumdar and Kanu Sanyal. ⬇️ 1971–72: Operation Steeplechase; major crackdown, Charu Majumdar dies. ⬇️ 1980s–90s: Emergence of PWG and MCC. ⬇️ 2004: PWG and MCC merge to form CPI (Maoist). ⬇️ 2000s–Present: Coordinated security and development measures. ⚠️ Persisting Challenges • Front organizations aid recruitment, financing and legal support. • Urban Maoist networks are shifting towards ideological subversion.Limited forest-based industries risk youth re-radicalization.Porous interstate borders require stronger intelligence coordination.Difficult terrain like Karreguttalu Hills complicates operations. 🔍 Root Causes (D. Bandopadhyay Committee, 2006) • Socio-economic inequality, unemployment and livelihood disruption.Governance deficits and corruption (e.g., PDS leakages). • Tribal marginalization by dominant groups. • Land alienation and inadequate rehabilitation after displacement. • Weak implementation of Fifth Schedule safeguards and FRA, 2006. • Poverty and inadequate health and education infrastructure. 🏛️ Government Counter-Insurgency Measures A. Security Measures • National Policy & Action Plan (2015): Security, rights protection and development. • SAMADHAN Doctrine: Smart Leadership, Aggressive Strategy, Motivation & Training, Actionable Intelligence, Dashboard KPIs/KRAs, Harnessing Technology, Theatre-specific plans and No access to financing. • Special Infrastructure Scheme : Supports security infrastructure, including 250 fortified police stations. • NIA Anti-Naxal Vertical: Investigated 108 cases • Bastariya Battalion (2018): 1,143 recruits, including 400 local youths. • Operation Black Forest: Eliminated 27 Maoists, including the CPI (Maoist) General Secretary. B. Socio-Political Measures • Strengthened grassroots governance through PESA Act, 1996. • Tribal Youth Exchange, radio, documentaries and outreach campaigns counter Maoist propaganda.Established 1,007 bank branches and 937 ATMs in 30 most affected districts.Sanctioned 48 ITIs and 61 Skill Development Centres across 48 districts.Approved 17,589 km of roads; 12,000 km built (2014–2025). • Surrender and Rehabilitation Policy offering financial aid and skill development. 🎯 Conclusion India's transition to regional stabilization has laid the foundation for a Naxal-Mukt Bharat. Sustaining these gains requires bridging trust deficits, protecting tribal rights, strengthening local governance, and promoting value-added forest industries for inclusive development. 🚨Tap here to avail Compilations of GS-1,2,3 and 4 combined(covers all best copy snippets from 2019-2025)- Click here for samples You can also share your suggestions for important current affairs topics for mains-26 at @csetopper_helpline as per your reading of the newspaper and analysis of PYQs. Hit some likes to motivate.

Current Affairs Series for Mains-26 Topic-5 #GS3 SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT (SWM) IN INDIA 🔢Current Status (CPCB 2023-24) Generation: ~1.85 lakh TPD (Tonnes Per Day). Treatment: 61% processed/treated | 39% landfilled. 📌SWM Rules 2026 (Superseding 2016 Rules) 1.4-Stream Segregation: Wet (organic), Dry (recyclables), Sanitary (diapers/tampons), and Special Care (paints/medicines/bulbs). 2.Bulk Waste Generators (BWG): Criteria: Entities with a floor area of 20,000 square metres or more, water consumption of 40,000 litres/day, or waste generation of 100 kg/day are classified as BWGs. Rule: Must process on-site or obtain an EBWGR Certificate (Extended Bulk Waste Generator Responsibility). 3.Enforcement: 'Polluter Pays' principle for violations + Centralised Online Portal for end-to-end tracking. 4.Local Bodies: Mandated for collection, segregation, and transport in coordination with Material Recovery Facilities (MRFs). 5.Industrial RDF: Cement and other industries must substitute solid fuel with Refuse Derived Fuel (RDF) (shredded/dehydrated municipal waste). 6.Landfill Limit: Strictly restricted to inert, non-recyclable, and non-energy recoverable waste. 7.Hilly & Island Zones: Special eco-provisions including tourist inflow regulation and mandatory tourist user fees. ⚠️ CHALLENGES 1.Central monitoring portal bypasses local body autonomy. 2.High-tech tracking duties without matching financial devolution for small ULBs. 3.Four-stream source sorting lacks public compliance and split-compartment trucks. 4.Material Recovery Facilities lack technology for sanitary and hazardous waste. 5.Low calorific value and high moisture restrict industrial fuel substitution. 6.Rigid formalization risks disrupting the livelihoods of ragpickers. 🏛️Government Interventions Statutory Frameworks: Solid, E-Waste, and Plastic Waste Management Rules under EPA, 1986. Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR): producers to collect/recycle plastic packaging, e-waste, batteries etc. Swachh Bharat Mission (SBM): Central funding for urban/rural waste-processing infrastructure. Compost Banao Campaign: converting kitchen organic waste into agricultural fertilizer. Waste-to-Energy Program: MNRE financial subsidies for waste-to-fuel/electricity plants. 🛣️Way Forward 1.Engineering choices based on actual waste composition and spatial economics. 2.Integrate IoT, RFID door-to-door tracking, and GPS fleet monitoring. 3.Geotagged waste infrastructure + comprehensive generation databases. 4.Shift from linear use to resource recovery, composting, and bio-methanation. 6.Formalize ragpickers into organized Material Recovery Facilities (MRFs). 7.Joint industry-led collection hubs to ease local body compliance. 8.State flexibility, empowered local bodies and citizen accountability. Conclusion By aligning actions with Mission LiFE to reduce consumption, India can transform waste handling into a citizen-led mass movement that transitions the nation into a circular economy focused on resource and energy recovery. 🚨Tap here to avail Compilations of GS-1,2,3 and 4 combined(covers all best copy snippets from 2019-2025)- Click here for samples You can also share your suggestions for important current affairs topics for mains-26 at @csetopper_helpline as per your reading of the newspaper and analysis of PYQs. Hit some likes to motivate.

Current Affairs Series for Mains-26 India's EV Revolution As per NITI Aayog's "Unlocking a $200 Billion Opportunity" report, EV adoption can reduce import dependence, lower emissions, and create a globally competitive manufacturing ecosystem. 📈Current E-Mobility Status EV sales: 50,000 (2016) → 2.08 million (2024) Market penetration: 7.5% (2024) against the 30% target by 2030 🌟Benefits of EVs over ICE Vehicles 1.~3× lower CO₂ emissions, even after accounting for electricity generation 2.~60% energy-to-wheel efficiency vs ~20% for petrol vehicles. 3.30% EV penetration by 2030 can save ₹1.1 lakh crore annually in oil imports. 4.Reduced urban noise pollution. 5.Home charging convenience;Potential for battery swapping 6.Zero tailpipe emissions improve urban air quality ⚠️Key Challenges 1.E-buses and e-trucks cost 2–3× more 2.Heavy batteries reduce truck payload capacity 3.15-year scrappage norms lower resale value. 4.Public charging costs nearly 4× home charging 5.Concerns over battery degradation and fire risks( Eg. Ola). 🏛️Existing Policy Support PM E-DRIVE: Incentives for e-2Ws, e-3Ws, e-ambulances, e-trucks, e-buses and charging infrastructure. DST's EVolutionS supports EV startups. PM e-Bus Sewa: Payment Security Mechanism for 38,000+ e-buses. PLI for Auto & Components: 50% domestic value addition. PLI-ACC: 50 GWh domestic battery manufacturing. 💡Way Forward 1.Promote Battery-as-a-Service (BaaS) and leasing. 2.Introduce Battery Passport for lifecycle tracking. 3.Develop charging hubs across 20 high-density corridors. 4.Adopt Time-of-Day (ToD) pricing. 5.Create a centralized nodal authority. 6.National EV app for charging location, booking, and payments.(🌍Europe: ChargeMap) 7.Strengthen academia-industry-government collaboration for advanced battery chemistry. 📝Conclusion Combining robust policy support with innovative financing, charging infrastructure and digital integration can accelerate India's transition to electric mobility, making it a cornerstone of Viksit Bharat 2047 and the country's Net Zero emissions goal by 2070. 🚨Tap here to avail Compilations of GS-1,2,3 and 4 combined(covers all best copy snippets from 2019-2025)- Click here for samples You can also share your suggestions for important current affairs topics for mains-26 at @csetopper_helpline as per your reading of the newspaper and analysis of PYQs. Hit some likely to motivate.

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Current Affairs Series Topic-3 Governor’s partisan role in News #GS2 Article 153 mandates a Governor for each state as the constitutional head of the state executive Intended to serve as an impartial bridge between the Union and the States. I. Key Areas of Conflict 1.Misuse of Article 356: Arbitrary recommendations for President’s Rule to dismiss elected state governments (e.g., Uttarakhand, 2016). 2.Legislative Obstruction: Weaponizing Articles 200 and 201 by withholding assent, delaying state bills, or reserving them for the President.(Tamil Nadu - Governor delayed 12 Bills ) 3.University Governance: Overstepping the "aid and advice" of the state cabinet in appointing Vice-Chancellors.(West Bengal 2023) 4.Partisan Discretion: Showing bias during post-hung assembly scenarios, unilaterally ordering floor tests.(Maharashtra Case) 5.Insecure Tenure: Lack of structural independence due to the constant threat of arbitrary removal by the central government. II. Judicial Evolution [1974] Shamsher Singh vs State of Punjab : Governor bound by the aid and advice of the State Council of Ministers. [1994] S.R. Bommai vs Union of India: Government majority must be tested strictly on the floor of the House. [2010] B.P. Singhal vs Union of India: Removal of Governors cannot be arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable. [2016] Nabam Rebia Case: Discretion does not extend to Article 174 [2023] State of TN vs The Governor of Tamil Nadu Case: Governor must assent to re-passed bills; set strict guidelines against delays. [2025] Pres. Reference on Governor’s Powers: Rejected "deemed assent" timelines, but chronic delays remain judicially reviewable. III. Recommended Institutional Reforms 1. Appointment & Tenure Reforms 1.Select Governors through a committee of the Prime Minister, Home Minister, Lok Sabha Speaker, and the concerned State Chief Minister (NCRWC, 2002). 2.Choose eminent, non-local individuals with no active political links (Sarkaria Commission). 3.Delete the "doctrine of pleasure." Grant a fixed 5-year term and introduce removal via state-level impeachment (Punchhi Commission). 2. Functional & Discretionary Reforms 1.Formulate 'Code of Conduct' to exhaustively define discretionary powers under Article 163 (Second ARC). 2.Mandate a floor test within 48 hours as the sole legal method to prove a legislative majority. 3.End the ex-officio Chancellor convention to eliminate administrative friction (Punchhi Commission). 4.Article 356 should be used very sparingly and as a matter of last resort(Sarkaria commision) Conclusion: To safeguard cooperative federalism, the Governor's office must transition from a tool of central intervention into a constitutional anchor. Discretion must be guided by reason, bound by a clear code of conduct, and structurally insulated from partisan politics.

Mains Current Affairs Series Topic-2: 📌 16th Finance Commission (2026–31): Key Recommendations 🔹 1. Tax Devolution ➡️ Vertical Devolution • States’ share in the divisible tax pool retained at 41% (same as 15th FC). • Divisible pool excludes cesses, surcharges and collection charges. ➡️ Horizontal Devolution Formula • Income Distance – 42.5% • Population (2011 Census) – 17.5% • Demographic Performance – 10% • Area – 10% • Forest & Ecology – 10% • Contribution to GDP – 10%Major Change: Tax and Fiscal Effort criterion removed. 🔹 2. Grants-in-Aid • Total Grants: ₹9.47 lakh crore (2026–31) • Local Body Grants: ₹8 lakh crore Rural Local Bodies: ₹4.4 lakh crore Urban Local Bodies: ₹3.6 lakh crore Disaster Management Grants: ₹2,04,401 crore Discontinued Grants: Revenue Deficit Grants Sector-Specific Grants State-Specific Grants 🔹 3. Other Recommendations • Fiscal Roadmap: Centre’s fiscal deficit: 3.5% of GDP States’ fiscal deficit: 3% of GSDP Target Year: 2030–31 • Power Sector Reforms: Promote DISCOM privatization • Transparency: Annual disclosure of CAG-certified Net Tax Proceeds under Article 279 Concerns Regarding the 16th FC • States demanded a 50% share, but retention at 41% may be inadequate. • Higher weight to Population (2011) and GDP Contribution may favour larger and industrialised states. • Greater share of tied grants may reduce fiscal flexibility of states. • Removal of Revenue Deficit Grants may affect revenue-deficit states such as Punjab. • Restrictions on off-budget borrowings may constrain infrastructure and welfare spending. 💡 Measures to Strengthen Fiscal Federalism • Cap cesses and surcharges to protect the divisible pool. • Link transfers to revenue buoyancy and tax effort. • Introduce a Floor Guarantee so that no state’s share falls below 15th FC levels. • Reactivate the Inter-State Council (Article 263) for regular fiscal consultations. 📝 Conclusion The 16th Finance Commission marks a shift towards a more performance-oriented fiscal framework. Its success will depend on balancing fiscal discipline, cooperative federalism, growth and equity while supporting the vision of *Viksit Bharat@2047

Noted everything including data, keywords, details needed for a possible direct mains question. Can be used in an indirect answer as well. Trying to cover as many probable current affairs themes for Mains-26 as possible through the Free Current Affairs Series for Mains-26.

Mains Current Affairs Series: Topic-1 #GS3 #Environment Plastic waste management rules 2026 : India is the world's largest plastic polluter: 9.3 mt/year (~20% global share)(Nature Study) Ranking: India (9.3 mt) > Nigeria (3.5 mt) > Indonesia (3.4 mt) > China (2.8 mt). Of India's plastic waste: 5.8 mt incinerated, 3.5 mt released into the environment. Key features of the 2026 Rules: 1.Recycled Content Targets Category I (Rigid): 30% → 60% (2025–26 to 2028–29) Category II (Flexible): 10% → 20%(2025-26 to 2027-28) Category III (Multi-layered): 5% → 10%(2025-26 to 2027-28) 2.Reuse Mandates (2025–26): 70% (large water packaging); 10% (small containers 0.9–4.9L & large non-water packaging). 3.Compliance Flexibility: Deficits can be carried forward for 3 years, with 1/3 annual gap clearance. 4.Tradable Certificates: Firms can buy credits from over-performers. 5.Exemptions: Food/beverage packaging,medicines and pesticides where safety norms restrict recycled content. 6.Implementation: Centralized EPR portal under CPCB. 7.Legal Definitions: Clarifies "reuse," "end-of-life disposal," and "plastic waste processors." Key Concerns: for a possible mains question 1.100% collection target vs 50–60% actual achievement. 2.Weak enforcement in informal markets; food/beverage sector largely excluded. 3.Carry-forward provision weakens accountability. 4.Alternatives are costlier; consumers perceive single-use plastic as more hygienic. 5. 6 lakh+ fake certificates detected; reliance on self-reporting. Way Forward: can mention these keywords in the conclusion 1.Stronger inspections and penalties. 2.Independent audits and reliable public data. 3.Affordable eco-friendly alternatives. 4.Support for vendors and consumer awareness. The Rules, 2026 enhance flexibility but weaken accountability. Reducing India's plastic footprint and achieving a circular economy will require stronger enforcement, transparent tracking, and effective EPR implementation.

MIG for Ethics Starts tomorrow. Text at @csetopper_helpline to reserve your seat.

⭐️Early bird Additional Discount of 10% available till Midnight for Ethics MIG-26. Text at @csetopper_helpline to reserve your seat today

Seshan MS(AIR 197) said this👆🏼while writing MIG-25 between Prelims-Mains period last year. Seshan improved all his GS score
Seshan MS(AIR 197) said this👆🏼while writing MIG-25 between Prelims-Mains period last year. Seshan improved all his GS scores with Ethics score seeing improvement of 20 Marks eventually. The process of MIG and our team has given the probably highest enrolment to selection ratio in the past 3 years(consistently delivering under 100 ranks as well). Simrandeep Kaur joined and wrote in both the December’25 batch of MIG and the one between Prelims and Mains last year and secured AIR 15 ⭐️Early bird discount on Ethics-MIG-26 to END at Midnight. Can reserve your seat by texting at @csetopper_helpline

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AIR-38 Deepanshu Jindal’s shared a testimonial about Ethics MIG. He Improved his Ethics score by 20+ getting and got a double digit rank. Ethics MIG-26 is built on one of the most competitive and high-value answer improvement approaches for UPSC preparation. Real-time competition brings out the best in every serious aspirant. Evaluations are conducted by a team of toppers of the paper, unlike the mass-checking model followed by mainstream coachings. Those who write answers daily within the fixed 5-hour window are rewarded with same-day evaluations and continuous incremental improvement. This is what MIG achieved: • 51 selections in 2023 • 70 selections in 2024 • 71 selections in the final list of 2025 The Ethics MIG-26(Click for Brochure) starts on 3rd June for Mains-26 at an early bird discount for the first 50 seats on top of available discounts. For enrolment and details, text at @csetopper_helpline

Ethics MIG-26 is built on one of the most competitive and high-value answer improvement approaches for UPSC preparation. Real
Ethics MIG-26 is built on one of the most competitive and high-value answer improvement approaches for UPSC preparation. Real-time competition brings out the best in every serious aspirant. Evaluations are conducted by a team of toppers of the paper, unlike the mass-checking model followed by mainstream coachings. Those who write answers daily within the fixed 5-hour window are rewarded with same-day evaluations and continuous incremental improvement. This is what MIG achieved: • 51 selections in 2023 • 70 selections in 2024 • 71 selections in the final list of 2025 The Ethics MIG is currently available at an early bird discount for the first 50 seats on top of available discounts. For enrolment and details, text at @csetopper_helpline

+3
Sakshi Jain(AIR 37) GS 4 FLT Written on the final day of Ethics MIG-25 in June-2025. Student of MIG-25 and Essay Kaise-25. Scored 126 in Ethics MIG-26 Starts on 3rd June 2026. Can check the schedule and brochure in pinned message. Text at @csetopper_helpline to join at early bird discount. Join here for Essay specific channel