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27 January 2026

India, EU Near FTA Finish Line | Canada PM Denies China FTA Plan | Caste Count Method Undecided | Playing Games On Job Guarantee | India's Climate Gap Is Language | Mrach Of The Republic | Mind The Time | Cybercrime And Global Crisis | Reforms Shield Economy As Order Fades | Sanctions Push Banks To Gold

INDIA, EU CLOSE IN ON FTA

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context
  • India and the European Union concluded official-level negotiations on the India–EU Free Trade Agreement (FTA).
  • Negotiations were originally launched in 2007, stalled multiple times, frozen during 2014– 2022, and relaunched with a pragmatic approach.
  • FTA announcement coincided with the India– EU Summit and EU leadership’s participation in India’s 77th Republic Day celebrations.

Key Facts

  • Final steps include legal scrubbing, translation into EU languages, and ratification by the European Parliament and all 27 EU member states.
  • The FTA is among the largest bilateral trade agreements globally by economic size.
  • Parallel agreements expected in defence & security, maritime cooperation, energy transition, and mobility.
  • EU leaders publicly stated that a “successful India” contributes to global stability and security.
  • India–EU partnership framed as part of shaping a new global order.

Static Linkages

  • FTAs aim at trade liberalisation through tariff reduction and regulatory cooperation (WTO- compatible).
  • Trade creation vs trade diversion effects relevant for assessing FTA outcomes.
  • Strategic autonomy: India’s multi-alignment and EU’s “open strategic autonomy”.
  • Indo-Pacific framework: maritime security, freedom of navigation, UNCLOS principles.
  • Sanctions regimes: EU sanctions on Russia affecting defence cooperation dynamics.

Significance

  • Enhances market access for Indian goods and services, especially in manufacturing and services.
  • Supports supply-chain diversification (China+1) for EU economies.
  • Strengthens India’s role in global value chains.
  • Anchors economic engagement to a broader strategic and security partnership.

Challenges / Concerns

  • Sensitive sectors such as agriculture and dairy largely excluded.
  • Stringent EU norms on environment, labour, carbon standards may increase compliance costs.
  • Investment protection and regulatory sovereignty remain contentious.
  • Ratification risks due to EU domestic political processes.

Way Forward

  • Gradual expansion of FTA scope through review and upgrade clauses.
  • Capacity building for Indian exporters to meet EU regulatory standards.
  • Align trade cooperation with energy transition and digital trade frameworks.
  • Use FTA as a base for deeper technology, defence, and maritime collaboration.

CANADA PM DENIES CHINA FTA PLAN

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

  • Mark Carney ruled out any FTA with China.
  • Statement followed Donald Trump’s threat of 100% tariff on Canadian imports.
  • Clarification that Canada’s China engagement was sector-specific tariff correction, not an FTA.
  • Obligations cited under United States–Mexico– Canada Agreement regarding non-market economies.

Key Points

  • Canada had imposed 100% tariff on Chinese EVs; 25% on steel & aluminium.
  • China retaliated with 100% tariffs on canola oil & meal; 25% on pork & seafood.
  • Canada partially reduced EV tariffs after talks to secure agricultural tariff relief.
  • US warned against Canada becoming a trans- shipment route for Chinese goods.
  • Canadian auto sector heavily dependent on US market access.

Static Linkages

  • Non-Market Economy: State control over prices/production; special trade remedies allowed.
  • Trade Diversion: Preferential trade can shift imports from efficient to inefficient sources.
  • Rules of Origin: Prevent tariff circumvention in FTAs.
  • Strategic Protectionism: Tariffs used as geopolitical tools.
  • Primary Sector Vulnerability: Agriculture most exposed to retaliatory tariffs.

Critical Analysis

  • Advantages
    • Safeguards US market access for Canada.  
    • Limits tariff circumvention risks.
    • Protects domestic manufacturing.
  • Disadvantages
    • Constrains trade policy autonomy.  
    • Agriculture exposed to retaliation.  
    • Weakens multilateral trade norms.
  • Challenges
    • Asymmetric dependence in FTAs.
    • Managing geopolitics–economics trade-off.

Way Forward

  • Tighten rules of origin enforcement.  
  • Diversify export destinations.
  • Strengthen domestic manufacturing capacity.
  • Use sectoral engagement instead of comprehensive FTAs.
  • Provide export risk mitigation for farmers.

CASTE COUNT METHOD UNDECIDED

KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context
  • Methodology for caste enumeration in Census 2027 not finalised yet; preparatory exercise for PE phase likely by July.
  • Debate over absence of explicit OBC/general caste column in HLO questionnaire (Phase-1).
  • Government clarified caste enumeration will be part of Phase-2 (Population Enumeration).
  • First Census after Independence to enumerate castes beyond SC/ST.
  • Caste count to be conducted within Census framework, unlike Socio-Economic Caste Census 2011.

Key Points

  • Census conducted in two phases:
    • Houselisting & Housing Census (HLO): April–September 2026
    • Population Enumeration (PE): February 2027 (earlier in snow-bound states)
  • Caste details collected only in PE phase, not HLO.
  • Digital Census: data collection via smartphones, mobile apps; self-enumeration portal proposed.
  • Question 12 of HLO asks only SC/ST/Others (same as 2011 HLO format).
  • Final caste questionnaire expected in September 2026.
  • SC/ST lists centrally notified; OBC lists maintained by Centre and States.
  • Central lists: ~2,650 OBCs, ~1,170 SCs, ~890 STs.
  • Decision pending on whether “Other” category will merge Central & State OBC lists.

Static Linkages

  • Census conducted under Census Act, 1948.
  • Article 15(4), 15(5), 16(4): constitutional basis for affirmative action.
  • Article 340: provision for identifying backward classes.
  • Delimitation, reservation, and welfare policy rely on Census data.
  • 1931 Census: last full caste enumeration (4,147 castes recorded).

Critical Analysis

  • Pros:
    • Statutory backing improves credibility and usability of data.
    • Enables evidence-based policy for reservations and welfare schemes.
    • Corrects outdated caste population estimates.
  • Cons/Challenges:
    • Risk of data inflation due to self- identification.
    • Administrative complexity due to multiplicity of caste names.
    • Potential politicisation of caste data.
    • Harmonisation of Central and State OBC lists unresolved.

Way Forward

  • Finalise uniform, transparent caste classification methodology.
  • Extensive pre-testing and standardisation of caste nomenclature.
  • Consultation with States, political parties, and experts.
  • Robust data anonymisation and privacy safeguards.
  • Clear policy roadmap on use of caste data post-enumeration.
PLAYING GAMES ON JOB GUARANTEE
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context
  • VB–G RAM G Act proposed as a replacement for MGNREGA, 2005.
  • Government claims expansion of employment guarantee and improved fiscal discipline.
  • Critics argue dilution of rights-based employment guarantee and centralisation of control.

Key Provisions / Changes

  • Increases maximum entitlement to 125 days per household per year.
  • Employment guarantee applicable only in rural areas notified by Central government.
  • Replaces demand-driven funding with normative (pre-determined) allocations.
  • Strong statutory push for digital technology- based implementation.
  • Wage payment timelines and social audit provisions largely borrowed from MGNREGA.

Core Issues Identified

  • Conditional notification undermines the legal guarantee of employment.
  • Enhanced entitlement could have been achieved under existing MGNREGA framework.
  • Normative funding likely to operate as de facto expenditure ceiling.
  • Weak empirical basis for claim that MGNREGA disproportionately benefits richer States.
  • Poor States constrained by lower administrative and fiscal capacity.
  • Excessive digital reliance risks exclusion errors and informal corruption.

Static Linkages

  • Rights-based welfare vs scheme-based welfare approach.
  • Fiscal federalism and Centre–State relations.
  • Employment generation as a counter- cyclical social protection tool.
  • Governance capacity as determinant of welfare outcomes.

Critical Analysis

  • Arguments in Favour
    • Predictable fiscal outlay through normative funding.
    • Higher nominal employment entitlement.
    • Administrative uniformity and central monitoring.
  • Arguments Against
    • Employment guarantee incompatible with capped funding.
    • Centralised notification weakens State autonomy.
    • No evidence that budget caps improve inter-State equity.
    • Digital rigidity may worsen worker participation and trust.
    • Rebranding risks prioritising political credit over workers’ rights.

Way Forward

  • Retain demand-driven funding as non- negotiable principle.
  • Remove discretionary notification clauses.
  • Raise wage rates in poorer States to improve uptake.
  • Strengthen implementation capacity rather than impose caps.
  • Use technology as facilitative, with robust grievance redressal.
  • Preserve rights-based legal architecture of employment guarantee.

INDIA’S CLIMATE GAP IS LANGAUGE

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • ‘Loss and Damage’ has gained prominence in global climate negotiations post COP27– COP28.
  • It addresses climate impacts beyond adaptation capacity, especially for developing countries.
  • In India, the concept is largely interpreted through the lens of disaster relief and compensation, creating a governance gap.

Key Points

  • Loss and Damage includes:
    • Economic losses: crops, housing, infrastructure, livelihoods.
    • Non-economic losses: biodiversity, culture, identity, traditional knowledge.
  •  International framing covers:
    • Sudden-onset events (cyclones, floods).  
    • Slow-onset processes (sea-level rise, desertification, glacial retreat).
  • Indian administrative understanding:
    • Loss = damage assessment (nuksaan aaklan).
    • Damage = compensation (haani purti).
    • Crisis handled under disaster management norms.
  • Result:
    • Climate loss reduced to post-event relief.
    • Irreversible and non-quantifiable losses ignored.

Static Linkages

  • Disaster Management Act, 2005 focuses on response, relief, and rehabilitation, not irreversible loss.
  • IPCC recognises limits to adaptation and residual climate risk.
  • Sendai Framework emphasises risk communication and preparedness.
  • Economic Survey highlights climate impacts on health, labour productivity, and agriculture.
  • Second ARC stresses citizen-centric communication in governance.

Critical Analysis

  • Issues
    • Conceptual dilution of Loss and Damage at implementation level.
    • Over-reliance on technical jargon and indices.
    • Weak translation of climate science into administrative decisions.
    • Exclusion of livelihood realities and social vulnerabilities.
    • Limited institutional capacity for climate risk communication.
  • Implications
    • Narrow policy responses.
    • Underestimation of long-term climate risks.
    • Ineffective utilisation of climate finance.
    • Low community trust in advisories and warnings.

Way Forward

  • Create a distinct national framework for Loss and Damage.
  • Integrate non-economic losses into climate assessments.
  • Institutionalise climate communication within district administration.
  • Localise climate information by language, occupation, and region.
  • Co-produce advisories with frontline workers and local institutions.
  • Strengthen media partnerships for trusted risk messaging.
MARCH OF THE REPUBLIC

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Address to the nation on the eve of 77th Republic Day by Droupadi Murmu.
  • Focus on India’s democratic journey, self- reliance, and constitutional values.
  • Reference to major national milestones and reforms.

Key Highlights

  • Emphasis on Atmanirbharta across defence, economy, and technology.
  • Praise for Operation Sindoor as an example of indigenous defence capability.
  • Assertion of India’s trajectory towards becoming the third-largest global economy.
  • Commendation of reforms:  
    • Goods and Services Tax  
    • New Labour Codes.
  • Recognition of women’s participation in:
    • Agriculture, science, space, and electoral democracy
  • Tribute to:
    • Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel for national integration.
    • Vande Mataram on 150th anniversary.   
  • Appreciation of contributions by farmers, sanitation workers, teachers, scientists, and healthcare professionals.

Static Linkages

  • President as:
    • Head of State and symbol of unity (Articles 52–62).
    • Supreme Commander of Armed Forces (Article 53).
  • Republic Day:
    • Adoption of the Constitution on 26 January 1950.
  • Core constitutional ideals:
    • Sovereignty, democracy, secularism, fraternity.
  • National integration:
    • Role of Patel in accession of princely states.
  • Economic reforms:
    • GST as a measure for cooperative federalism.

Critical Analysis

  • Positive:
    • Reinforces constitutional symbolism and national confidence.
    • Highlights inclusive role of women and grassroots workers.
  • Concerns:
    • Overemphasis on achievements may dilute focus on:
    • Civil liberties.
    • Federal balance.
    • Persistent socio-economic inequalities.
  • Constitutional nationalism requires:
    • Protection of rights along with national pride.

Way Forward

  • Align developmental narrative with rights- based constitutional governance.
  • Strengthen cooperative federalism.
  • Ensure inclusive and employment-generating growth.
  • Uphold constitutional morality in policy and politics.
  • Balance national pride with democratic accountability.

MIND THE TIME 

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • RBI report highlights uneven demographic transition across Indian States
  • Kerala & Tamil Nadu projected to become ageing States by 2036
  • Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Jharkhand to retain rising working-age population beyond 2031
  • Karnataka & Maharashtra in intermediate demographic stage
  • RBI suggests:
    • Subsidy rationalisation for ageing States  
    • Human capital investment for youthful States

Key Facts & Data

  • Elderly population threshold:
    • Ageing State: >20% population aged 60+  India TFR:
    • 2.0 (NFHS-5) – below replacement level  
  • Elderly dependency ratio rising fastest in southern States
  • Education expenditure as % of GSDP:
    • Stagnant/declining in major youthful States (Economic Survey)
  • Majority workforce:
    • Informal sector → limited pension coverage  
  • Automation & AI reducing labour absorption capacity

Core Issues Identified

  • Fiscal stress on ageing States due to pensions & healthcare
  • Demographic dividend at risk in youthful States due to:
    • Low skill levels
    • Poor employability
  • Fiscal federalism imbalance:
    • Population-based Finance Commission criteria  
    • Proposed delimitation affecting political representation  
  • Gendered ageing:
    • Women live longer but lack assets and pensions
    • Collapse of informal family support systems

Static Concept Linkages

  • Demographic Transition Theory  Dependency ratio (young vs old)
  • Finance Commission – Article 280  
  • Informal sector dominance in India
  • Social security: contributory vs non-contributory pensions
  • Feminisation of ageing

Critical Concerns

  • Penalisation of population-stabilising States  
  • Risk of “ageing before becoming rich”
  • Over-reliance on labour-intensive growth in automation era
  • Lack of universal old-age income security
  • RBI fiscal advice ignores political economy constraints
  • Geriatric care limited to affluent sections

Way Forward

  • Universal, non-contributory old-age pension system  
  • Early healthcare & pension capacity building in youthful States
  • Industrial policy focusing on:  
    • Green energy
    • Care economy
  • Skill development aligned with future technologies  
  • Reform Finance Commission criteria to reward population stabilisation
  • Expand public geriatric healthcare infrastructure
  • Gender-sensitive ageing policies

CYBERCRIME AND GLOBAL CRISIS

KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Contextof the News
  • UN General Assembly adopted the United Nations Convention against Cybercrime (Dec 2024).
  • First multilateral criminal justice treaty negotiated in over 20 years.
  • Proposed initially by Russia (2017); supported by China.
  • Supported by 72 countries; India, USA, Japan, Canada did not sign.
  • Aims to create a global framework to combat cybercrime.

Key Points

  •  Convention is open to all UN member states.  Intended as an alternative to the Budapest Convention on Cybercrime (2001).
  • Defines “serious cybercrime” in broad terms.
  • Procedural safeguards linked to domestic legal systems, not uniform global standards.
  • Allows cross-border cooperation in cybercrime investigations.
  • Concerns over misuse against journalists, activists, political dissenters.
  • Reflects deep divisions in global cyber governance, even among allies.

Static Linkages

  • Cyberspace as a borderless global commons (NCERT).

Critical Analysis

  • Pros
    • Attempts to create a universal cybercrime framework.
    • Facilitates international cooperation on cyber offences.
    • Addresses fragmentation in cybercrime laws.
  • Cons
    • Vague definitions may enable abuse of state power.
    • Weak and uneven human rights protections.
    • Lack of consensus among major cyber powers.
    • Reinforces polycentric global governance with overlapping regimes.
  • India-specific Concerns
    • Reduced control over citizens’ data.
    • Limited acceptance of India’s negotiation proposals.
    • Capacity constraints in managing multiple governance forums.

Way Forward

  • Enhance technical and legal cyber diplomacy capacity.
  • Strengthen domestic cyber laws with rights- based safeguards.
  • Lead plurilateral initiatives on cyber norms.
  • Advocate clearer definitions and stronger safeguards in future protocols.
  • Align domestic digital regulations with principle-based governance.
REFORM SHIELD ECONOMY AS ORDER FADES
KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Indian economy entered 2026 with cyclical upswing after multiple policy supports in 2025.
  • Growth sustainability questioned once temporary (cyclical) tailwinds fade.
  • Focus on two key rotations:
  1. Demand drivers
  2. Cyclical to structural growth

Key Points

  • 2025 growth drivers:
    • GST and income tax cut
    • Monetary and regulatory easing
    • Lower crude oil prices (improved terms of trade
    • Second consecutive normal monsoon
  • Central government capital expenditure growth slowed:
  • ~30% annually post-pandemic → ~10% currently
  • State capex constrained due to:  
    • Fiscal stress
    • Competitive populism  Real estate slowdown:
    • Earlier growth driven by upper-income groups
  • Demand saturation emerging
    • Demand rotation needed towards:  
    • Private consumption
    • Private investment
  • Rural consumption showing recovery; urban consumption uneven
  • Auto sector improved post-GST cuts; consumer durables recovery weak
  • Personal credit growth driven largely by gold loans, indicating supply-side push
  • Wage growth of listed firms:
    • ~15% (2022–23) → mid-single digits (2025)
  • Non-oil export growth slowed to ~3% (nominal terms)
  • Private capex subdued due to:  
    • Weak demand visibility
    • Global uncertainty
    • Excess global capacity (especially China)  
  • Fiscal policy space limited:
    • Nominal GDP growth likely ~9%
    • Additional fiscal consolidation required to stabilise debt (~80% of GDP)
  • Monetary policy space limited:
    • Real interest rates already ~1.25%  
  • Structural reforms underway:
    • GST rationalisation  
    • Labour codes
    • 100% FDI in insurance  
    • Multiple FTAs signed
  • Growth challenge:
    • Per capita GDP growth required ~8% (USD terms) till 2047
    • Working-age population growth declining towards zero

Static Linkages

  • Fiscal deficit and debt sustainability (FRBM framework)
  • Demographic dividend and dependency ratio
  • Capital-intensive vs labour-intensive growth
  • Human capital theory (education, skills, health)  
  • Trade theory: tariffs as implicit export tax

Critical Analysis

  • Cyclical growth unsustainable without demand broadening
  • Over-capitalisation limiting employment generation
  • Weak wage growth constraining consumption recovery
  • Fiscal and monetary limits increase reform urgency  
  • Global protectionism adds external vulnerability

Way Forward

  • Transition from cyclical support to structural reforms
  • Promote labour-intensive sectors explicitly  Mission-mode investment in:
    • Education  
    • Skilling
    • Health
  • Ensure labour formalisation does not raise hiring costs excessively
  • Rationalise import tariffs and non-tariff barriers
  • Deepen export integration with global value chains
  • Focus on productivity-led, employment-rich growth

SANCTIONS PUSH BANKS TO GOLD

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News
  • Gold prices crossed $5,000 per ounce, coinciding with a four-month low in the US dollar.
  • Central banks are increasingly accumulating gold as part of reserve diversification.
  • India’s forex reserves rose sharply, largely due to revaluation gains in gold holdings.
  • Global discourse on de-dollarisation has intensified amid geopolitical tensions and sanctions.

Key Points

  • US dollar declined by ~9% in 2025, sharpest fall in nearly a decade.
  • RBI’s forex reserves rose ~12% YoY, while foreign currency assets rose only ~5%.
  • Value of RBI’s gold holdings increased by ~70% in one year.
  • Gold share in India’s forex reserves rose from ~12% to ~17%.
  • RBI added only ~4 tonnes of gold in 2025; rise mainly due to price appreciation.
  • Major central bank gold buyers (2025):  
    • Poland – 95 tonnes
    • Kazakhstan – 49 tonnes  
    • Brazil – 43 tonnes
  • India’s US Treasury holdings declined from $234 bn (Nov 2024) to $186.5 bn (Nov 2025).
  • China’s US debt holdings at a 16-year low.
  • Share of US dollar in global forex reserves fell to 58.5% (2024) — lowest in over 30 years.
  • Energy and commodity contracts increasingly priced in non-dollar currencies.
  • Freezing of Russia’s reserves (2022) accelerated reserve diversification by many countries.

Static Linkages

  • Components of forex reserves: Foreign Currency Assets, Gold, SDRs, Reserve Tranche Position.
  • Gold functions as:  
    • Store of value
    • Hedge against inflation
  • Insurance against currency and geopolitical risk   
  • Bretton Woods System and emergence of US dollar as global reserve currency.
  • Triffin Dilemma in reserve currency systems.
  • Reserve adequacy and external sector stability (Economic Survey, RBI).

Critical Analysis

  • Advantages
    • Reduces over-dependence on US dollar assets.  
    • Enhances financial security against sanctions.
    • Improves resilience of forex reserves during crises.
    • Reflects prudent risk diversification by central banks.
  • Challenges
    • Gold offers no interest income unlike sovereign bonds.
    • Reduced dollar dominance may increase transaction costs.
    • Fragmentation of reserve currencies may reduce global financial stability.
    • Potential geopolitical retaliation via trade or financial measures.

Way Forward

  • Maintain optimal balance between gold, dollar, and other reserve assets.
  • Promote local currency trade settlement mechanisms.
  • Strengthen multilateral financial safety nets.
  • Enhance domestic financial market depth to absorb global shocks.
  • Gradual and calibrated diversification to avoid reserve volatility.