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30 January 2026

Survey Sees Upbeat India, Troubled World | SC Stays 2026 UGC Equality Rules | Survey Backs FRBM Ease, Warns States | Survey Flags Uneven Secondary Schools | Survey Flags Digital Addiction Risks | India–Arab League: Bridges, Opportunities | Is India Ready for The End of Globalisation | Devolution, Not Debt | Quick Pill | Regulators Must Walk a Tightrope | Ethanol Blending Hits Food Security | PSU Turn Arounds Hold Lessons | Law’s Blind Spots Endanger Women | Eco Survey Flags Issues, Solutions Await | Rupee Woes Largely External | UGC Rules: Shift From Words To Action

SURVEY SEES UPBEAT INDIA, TROUBLED WORLD

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

What is the core message of the Survey?
  • India’s medium-term potential growth has improved to ~7%.
  • Global economy faces high uncertainty, including a low-probability but high-impact crisis risk in 2026.
  • India is relatively resilient but not immune to global shocks, especially via capital flows.

Why was India’s growth outlook upgraded?

  • Structural Reasons (Supply-side)
  • Capital formation increased due to:
    • High public capital expenditure.
    • Infrastructure creation (physical + digital).
  • Labour participation improved due to:
    • Formalisation of employment.
    • Better labour market integration.
  • Efficiency gains (TFP) due to:
    • Logistics reforms.
    • Tax simplification.  
    • Digital governance.

Growth projections

  • FY 2025–26 GDP growth: 7.4%
  • Q3 FY 2025–26 nowcast: ~7%
  • FY 2026–27 growth range: 6.8% – 7.2%  
  • Medium-term potential growth: ~7%

Global scenarios for 2026

(a) Worst-case scenario (10–20% probability)  

  • Crisis worse than 2008.
  • Amplification of shocks, not isolated shocks:
    • Financial instability
    • Over-leveraged AI investments  
    • Geopolitical escalation
  • Outcomes:
    • Global liquidity contraction  
    • Capital flight
    • Risk aversion

(b) Best-case scenario (40–45%)

  • 2025-like conditions continue.
  • Global system becomes more fragile.

(c) Disorderly multipolar breakdown (40–45%)

  • Strategic rivalry intensifies.
  • Ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict.
  • Weak global governance and security institutions.

Why AI is an economic risk

  • AI investments are:  Highly leveraged
    • Based on optimistic revenue expectations  
  • Risk:
    • Asset price corrections
    • Financial market instability  
  • Important distinction:
    • Technology adoption continues  
    • Financial stress increases

Risks to India

  • Capital flow volatility  Pressure on rupee
  • External sector vulnerability
  • Impact may be prolonged, not temporary.
  • Structural insight highlighted by Survey
  • Rising incomes → Rising imports  Even with:
    • Indigenisation  
    • Make in India
  • Therefore:
    • Export competitiveness and foreign exchange earnings are critical.

Static Concept Linkages

  • Potential GDP
  • Total Factor Productivity (TFP)
  • Balance of Payments sustainability  
  • Capital account volatility
  • Import-income elasticity
  • Crowd-in effect of public investment

Way Forward

  • Strengthen domestic capital markets.  
  • Diversify export base.
  • Maintain adequate forex reserves.
  • Improve macro-prudential regulation.
  • Sustain infrastructure investment with fiscal discipline.

SC STAYS 2026 UGC EQUALITY RULES 

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Contect of the News

  • The Supreme Court of India kept the UGC (Promotion of Equity in Higher Education Institutions) Regulations, 2026 in abeyance.
  • The Court ordered continuation of UGC Regulations, 2012 until further examination.
  • Petitions challenged Regulation 3(c), which defines caste-based discrimination only against SCs, STs and OBCs.
  • Court observed possible social divisiveness, risk of exclusion, and need for closer scrutiny.
  • Notices issued to the Union Government and the University Grants Commission.

Key Points

  • Regulation 3(c) restricts legal recognition of caste-based discrimination to constitutionally recognised backward classes.
  • Petitioners argued:
    • Violation of Article 14 (equality before law).
    • Absence of remedy for general category students.
    • Potential misuse in campus disputes (e.g., ragging).
  • Court observations:
    • Discrimination should be addressed in an inclusive manner.
    • Educational campuses must reflect unity and social integration.
  • Issue involves balance between affirmative action and equal protection of law.

Static Linkages

  • Article 14 – Equality before law; reasonable classification.
  • Article 15(1) – Non-discrimination.
  • Articles 15(4), 15(5) – Special provisions for backward classes.
  • Article 21 – Right to dignity.
  • UGC Act, 1956 – Regulatory powers in higher education.
  • NEP 2020 – Equity, inclusion, non- discrimination.
  • Doctrine of substantive equality (Indian constitutional jurisprudence).

Critical Analysis

  • Arguments Supporting 2026 Regulations  
  • Addresses historical and structural discrimination.
  • Reinforces constitutional mandate of affirmative action.
  • Recognises vulnerability of marginalised groups in campuses.
  • Concerns Raised
    • Narrow definition may violate universality of equality.
    • Risk of selective protection and legal imbalance.
    • Potential chilling effect on campus harmony.  
    • Over-criminalisation of academic disputes.

Way Forward

  • Adopt behaviour-based, identity-neutral definition of discrimination.
  • Ensure procedural safeguards against misuse.
  • Strengthen institutional grievance redressal mechanisms.
  • Align regulations with NEP 2020 and constitutional morality.
  • Promote sensitisation and inclusiveness over penal measures.

SURVEY BACKS FRBM EASE, WARNS STATES

KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
  • Economic Survey 2025-26 recommends delaying rigid fiscal deficit targets under the FRBM framework.
  • Rationale: Need for policy flexibility amid global geopolitical and geoeconomic uncertainty.
  • Survey acknowledges:
    • Successful fiscal consolidation by the Centre.
    • Worsening fiscal position of State governments.

Key Points

  • Centre’s fiscal deficit:
    • 9.2% of GDP (2020-21) due to COVID-19.
    • Projected to decline to 4.4% of GDP in the current financial year.
    • Achieved in line with commitment to halve pandemic-year deficit in five years.
  • Fiscal consolidation:
    • Achieved despite absence of a legislatively binding target.
    • Simultaneous emphasis on capital expenditure, improving expenditure quality.
  • FRBM targets:
    • Original target:
    • 3% fiscal deficit to GDP by 2020.
    • Target repeatedly deferred.
    • Achieved only once since enactment in 2003.
  • Fiscal credibility:
    • Repeated target slippages weakened credibility earlier.
    • Post-COVID fiscal prudence restored market and rating-agency confidence.
  • State finances:
    • Revenue-surplus States declined from 19 (2018- 19) to 11 (2024-25).
    • Aggregate revenue deficit of States increased from 0.1% to 0.7% of GDP.
    • Driven by:
      • Lower revenue mobilisation.
      • Higher committed expenditure, including cash transfers.

Static Linkages

  • Fiscal deficit:
    • Excess of total expenditure over non-debt receipts.
  • Revenue deficit:
    • Borrowing used for consumption, not asset creation.
  • FRBM Act, 2003:
    • Objective: Fiscal discipline, macroeconomic stability, inter-generational equity.
  • Capital expenditure:
    • Higher growth and employment multiplier than revenue expenditure.
  • Federal fiscal structure:
    • States’ fiscal stress affects overall macroeconomic stability.

Critical Analysis

  • Arguments in favour of flexibility
  • Enables counter-cyclical fiscal policy during global shocks.
  • Prevents growth sacrifice due to premature austerity.
  • Supports infrastructure-led growth through higher capital spending.
  • Concerns
    • Persistent deviation from statutory targets risks long-term fiscal discipline.
    • Rising State revenue deficits may:
    • Increase debt burden.
    • Crowd out private investment.
    • Populist cash transfers can weaken State fiscal sustainability.

Way Forward

  • Adopt debt-to-GDP ratio as primary fiscal anchor.
  • Use cyclically adjusted fiscal deficit instead of rigid targets.
  • Strengthen State Fiscal Responsibility legislations.
  • Rationalise subsidies and cash transfers through better targeting.
  • Establish an independent fiscal council for monitoring and transparency.
SURVEY FLAGS UNEVEN SECONDARY SCHOOLS
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
  • The Economic Survey 2025–26 highlighted structural constraints in achieving the Expected Years of Schooling (EYS) target of 15 years envisaged under the National Education Policy.
  • The Survey identifies uneven availability of secondary schools, especially in rural areas, as a critical impediment.
  • It flags adolescent dropouts (14–18 years) as the weakest segment in India’s education pipeline.

Key Points

  • Expected Years of Schooling (EYS):  Current level: 13 years
  • NEP target: 15 years (ages 3–18 under 5+3+3+4 structure)
  • Availability of secondary schools:
    • Rural India: ~17% schools offer secondary education
    • Urban India: ~38%
  • Secondary Net Enrolment Ratio (NER):
    • 52.2%, indicating high dropout after Grade VIII
  • Out-of-school adolescents (14–18 years):
    • Nearly 2 crore (PLFS 2023–24)
  • Primary reasons for dropout:
    • Supplementing household income: 44% overall
    • Boys: 67% cite economic work
    • Girls: 55% cite domestic and care responsibilities
  • Vocational education gap:
    • Only 0.97% adolescents received institutional skilling
    • 91.94% received no skilling support
  • Higher education landscape:
    • Over 81% enrolment in State institutions  
    • Emphasis on State capacity building
  • Institutional expansion:
    • 23 IITs, 21 IIMs, 20 AIIMS
    • International IIT campuses in Zanzibar and Abu Dhabi
  • Policy focus on internationalisation of higher education and regulatory rationalisation through Viksit Bharat Shiksha Adhishthan Bill, 2025.

Static Linkages

  • Article 21A: Guarantees free and compulsory education for ages 6–14 only.
  • Education in Concurrent List: Requires coordinated Centre–State action.
  • Human Capital Theory: Education as a driver of productivity and growth.
  • Demographic Dividend: Quality secondary education critical for labour force readiness.
  • Gendered social norms: Domestic responsibilities affecting female education outcomes.

Critical Analysis

  • Strengths
    • Data-driven identification of secondary education bottleneck.
    • Recognition of economic compulsion as a key dropout driver.
    • Emphasis on vocational integration within schooling.
    • Focus on international competitiveness of higher education.
  • Challenges
    • Infrastructure deficit in rural secondary education.  
    • Weak linkage between schooling and employability. 
    • Gendered burden of unpaid care work.
    • Risk of internationalisation benefiting only elite institutions.
    • Fiscal and administrative capacity constraints at State level.

Way Forward

  • Expand secondary school infrastructure in rural and aspirational districts.
  • Integrate vocational education and apprenticeships from Grade IX.
  • Strengthen conditional cash transfers and scholarships for adolescents.
  • Flexible schooling models for working children.
  • Enhance State funding and governance capacity in higher education.
  • Convergence of NEP 2020, Skill India, Digital Education initiatives.
  • Community-level interventions to reduce gendered care burdens.

SURVEY FLAGS DIGITAL ADDICTION RISKS

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • The Economic Survey 2025–26 flagged digital addiction and screen-induced mental health disorders as an emerging public health challenge, especially among children and adolescents.
  • It linked the rise in screen dependence to post- pandemic behavioural changes, increasing lifestyle diseases, and long-term productivity risks.
  • The Survey also highlighted India’s significant progress in maternal and child health indicators, alongside the need to rebalance healthcare priorities towards preventive and mental healthcare.

Key Points

  • Rapid increase in digital addiction, anxiety, depression, sleep disorders, and attention deficits among youth.
  • Recommended multi-layered interventions:
    • Cyber-safety education and peer mentoring
    • Mandatory physical activity in schools
    • Parental training on screen-time regulation
    •  Age-appropriate digital access norms
    • Platform accountability for harmful content
  • Proposed network-level safeguards:
    • Differentiated data plans (educational vs recreational)
    • Default blocking of high-risk digital content  
  • Expansion of Tele-MANAS from crisis counselling to digital addiction management, integrated with schools and colleges.
  • Health outcome achievements (1990–2023):
    • MMR reduced by 86% (global average: 48%)  
    • U5MR declined by 78% (global: 61%)
    • NMR reduced by 70% (global: 54%)
    • IMR declined from 40 (2013) to 25 (2023) per 1,000 live births
  • Experts highlighted the role of lifestyle diseases, thrifty gene hypothesis, and unhealthy food habits in India’s disease burden (as noted by Indian Medical Association leadership).

Static Linkages

  • Health as a State subject with Union support under the Seventh Schedule (Constitution of India).
  • Preventive healthcare emphasis aligns with Primary Health Care approach (Alma-Ata Declaration).
  • Mental health as part of Right to Life (Article 21) – judicial interpretation.
  • Demographic Dividend theory: productivity depends on health, skills, and employability of working-age population.
  • Epidemiological transition: coexistence of communicable and non-communicable diseases in developing economies.

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
    • Shifts healthcare focus from curative to preventive models.
    • Recognises digital well-being as a public policy concern.
    • Integration of mental health with education systems reduces stigma.
    • Data-driven surveillance improves early intervention capacity.
  • Concerns / Challenges
    • Implementation capacity varies across States.
    • Risk of over-regulation impacting digital inclusion.
    • Shortage of trained mental health professionals.
    • Platform accountability raises issues of free speech and regulation.
    • Digital divide may limit access to tele-mental health services.

Way Forward

  • National Digital Wellness Framework with clear standards for children.
  • Strengthen school-based health programmes under Ayushman Bharat.
  • Expand mental health workforce through task- shifting and skilling.
  • Incentivise platforms to adopt ethical-by-design algorithms.
  • Community-level awareness using ASHAs, teachers, and local bodies.
  • Continuous monitoring using anonymised digital public health data.
INDIA-ARAB LEAGUE: BRIDGES, OPPORTUNITIES

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • The 2nd India–Arab Foreign Ministers’ Meeting is being held in New Delhi (January 30–31, 2026).
  • Delegations from all 22 member states of the Arab League are participating.
  • The meeting is taking place amid:
    • Escalating tensions involving Iran and U.S. military build-up.
    • Fragile ceasefires in Gaza and Syria.
    • Emerging strategic differences among key Arab powers (Saudi Arabia–UAE).
  • India’s outreach reflects its growing role in West Asian geopolitics, energy security, trade, and maritime stability.

Key Points

  • Institutional Engagement
    • India–Arab League MoU signed in 2002 to institutionalise dialogue.
    • Arab–India Cooperation Forum (AICF) established in 2008.
    • Indian Ambassador to Egypt designated as Permanent Representative to Arab League (2010).
  • Strategic Partnerships
    • Strategic partnership agreements with Oman, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Qatar.
  • Trade & Investment
    • India–Arab League trade exceeds $240 billion.
    • CEPA signed with UAE and Oman.
    • Major investment pledges in Indian infrastructure and manufacturing.
  • Connectivity
    • Importance of maritime routes: Suez Canal, Red Sea, Gulf of Aden.
    • India–Middle East–Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC) enhances supply chain resilience.
  • Energy Security
    • West Asia supplies:
      • ~60% of India’s crude oil  
      • ~70% of natural gas
      • 50% of fertilisers
    • Long-term LNG agreements with Qatar and ADNOC.
  • Digital & Fintech
    • RuPay card and UPI operational in multiple Arab states.
    • Rupee–Dirham settlement mechanism operational.
  • Defence & Security
    • Defence cooperation agreements with several Arab countries.
    • Maritime cooperation under SAGAR framework.
    • Strategic access to Duqm Port (Oman).
  • Counter-terrorism
    • Arab League countries support India on cross-border terrorism.
    • Condemnation of major terror attacks in India.

Static Linkages

  •  Regional organisations as instruments of collective diplomacy.
  • Strategic importance of West Asia–North Africa (WANA) in global geopolitics.
  • Maritime chokepoints and sea lane security.  Evolution of India’s foreign policy: Non-
  • Alignment → Strategic Autonomy → Multi- alignment.
  • Energy diplomacy as a component of national security.

Critical Analysis

  • Strengths
    • Enhances India’s strategic presence in West Asia.
    • Secures long-term energy supplies.
    • Expands defence exports and joint production.
    • Strengthens India’s role as a balancing power amid great power rivalry.
  • Challenges
    • Intra-Arab rivalries complicate India’s diplomatic balancing.
    • Regional instability threatens energy and trade routes.
    • Continued dependence on fossil fuels.
    • Fragile peace processes increase security risks for diaspora and shipping.

Way Forward

  • Maintain issue-based engagement without alignment in regional rivalries.
  • Link energy partnerships with renewables and green hydrogen.
  • Strengthen maritime domain awareness and naval cooperation.
  • Fast-track operationalisation of IMEC.
  • Expand defence co-development under Atmanirbhar Bharat.
  • Use digital public infrastructure as a diplomatic tool.

IS INDIA READY FOR THE END OF GLOBALISATION 

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Recent statements by Donald Trump indicated a transactional and coercive approach to trade, including tariff threats linked to India’s foreign policy choices.
  • The episode reflects a structural shift in the global economic order away from rule-based multilateralism.
  • Global trade is increasingly shaped by power politics rather than liberal economic norms.

Key Points

  • Return of Mercantilism
    • Trade viewed as an instrument of state power.
    • Export surpluses considered strength; import dependence seen as weakness.
  • End of Liberal Globalisation
    • Decline of WTO-led dispute settlement.
    • Erosion of trust in multilateral institutions.
  • Rise of Populist Economics
    • Protectionism driven by wage stagnation and deindustrialisation in developed countries.
  • China Factor
    • Integration into global markets without political liberalisation.
    • Persistent trade surpluses via excess capacity and state control.
  • Impact on Developing Countries  Reduced policy space.
    • Conditional aid aligned with donor national interests.
    • Weak collective bargaining on climate finance and global commons.

Static Linkages

  • Mercantilism: Pre-classical trade theory prioritising state power.
  • Comparative Advantage: Classical theory underlying liberal trade.
  • Post-WWII Global Order
    • Bretton Woods Institutions (IMF, World Bank).
    • GATT → WTO framework.
  • State Capacity and Development
    • Link between public investment in health, education and productivity (NCERT, Class XI & XII).
  • Global Governance
    • Sovereignty vs multilateral norms debate.

Critical Analysis

  • Positive Dimensions
    • Strategic autonomy allows selective partnerships.
    • Opportunity to shape norms in areas like digital public infrastructure.
  • Concerns
    • Rule-based trade erosion disadvantages middle powers.
    • Mercantilism increases risk of tariff wars and inflation.
    • China’s excess capacity constrains industrialisation of late-comer economies.
    • India’s low state capacity limits competitiveness in a protectionist world.
  • Indian Constraints
    • Underinvestment in health and education.  
    • High inequality and weak social mobility.
    • Incomplete demographic dividend utilisation.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen State Capacity
    • Higher public spending on health and education (Economic Survey, NITI Aayog).
  • Targeted Industrial Policy
    • Focus on renewables, digital public infrastructure, services.
  • Human Capital Development
    • Skill formation aligned with labour- intensive sectors.
  • Coalition-based Multilateralism
    • Issue-based leadership with Global South.
  • Inclusive Growth
    • Broaden economic base through decentralisation and social investment.

DEVOLUTION, NOT DEBT

KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Contextof the News
  • Recent fiscal trends indicate a declining stabilising role of Central tax devolution in State finances.
  • States are increasingly financing routine revenue expenditure through market borrowings, especially State Development Loans (SDLs).
  • This trend accelerated after COVID-19 (2020- 21) when Central transfers were insufficient to absorb fiscal shocks.
  • Despite the 15th Finance Commission recommending 41% share of States in the divisible pool, effective resource flow has weakened due to rising cesses and surcharges.

Key Points

  • Rising Dependence on SDLs
    • 2024-25 (Revised Estimates):
      • Tamil Nadu: SDLs ≈ 35% of revenue receipts
      • Maharashtra: SDLs ≈ 26% of revenue receipts
  • Structural Shift Post-GST
    • Indirect tax collection centralised.
    • Weakening of tax effort–revenue reward linkage, especially for industrialised States.
  • Borrowing for Welfare Spending
    • Pensions, health insurance, and social security increasingly funded via debt.
    • State PSUs and SPVs used for off-budget borrowings.
  • West Bengal Example
    • Central devolution ≈ 47.7% of revenue receipts (5- year average).
    • SDLs ≈ 35% of revenues despite rising nominal transfers.
  • Macro-Fiscal Risk
    • Rising debt-to-GSDP ratios.
    • Reduced fiscal space for public capital expenditure and private investment.

Static Linkages

  • Fiscal Federalism – Vertical and horizontal devolution.  
  • Article 270 – Distribution of taxes between Union and States.
  • Article 271 – Power of Union to levy cesses and surcharges.
  • FRBM Acts – Fiscal discipline and debt sustainability.
  • GST Framework – Destination-based consumption tax.
  • Crowding Out Effect – Public borrowing reducing investment.

Critical Analysis

  • Key Issues
    • Replacement of devolution with borrowing weakens cooperative federalism.
    • Heavy reliance on SDLs for revenue expenditure raises inter-generational equity concerns.
    • Expansion of cesses and surcharges reduces States’ constitutional revenue entitlements.
    • GST design dilutes incentives for States with higher tax effort.
    • Increased debt servicing limits capital expenditure.
  • Stakeholder Impact
    • States: Reduced fiscal autonomy, higher debt burden.
    • Centre: Greater fiscal discretion via non-shareable taxes.
    • Economy: Risk to long-term growth and macro-stability.

Way Forward

  • Include cesses and surcharges within the divisible pool.
  • Increase effective devolution, not just nominal percentages.
  • Revisit horizontal devolution criteria to reward tax effort and efficiency.
  • Strengthen fiscal transparency by limiting off-budget borrowings.
  • Ensure borrowings are directed primarily towards capital expenditure.
  • Enhance States’ own tax revenue mobilisation and expenditure efficiency.
QUICK PILL
KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Government amended the New Drugs and Clinical Trials Rules, 2019.
  • Mandatory test licence for non-commercial manufacture of small drug quantities for R&D has been removed.
  • A prior-intimation mechanism through the Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation (CDSCO) SUGAM Portal has been introduced.
  • Objective: reduce regulatory delays and promote pharmaceutical research and innovation.

Key Points

  • Licence requirement replaced by online notice of intent for research-only drug manufacture.
  • Manufacturing can begin after online acknowledgment on the SUGAM Portal.
  • Expected reduction in drug development timeline by ~3 months (government estimate).
  • Certain low-risk bioavailability and bioequivalence studies allowed via prior Bintimation.
  • Licence requirement continues for high-risk psychotropic and narcotic drugs.
  • Statutory processing time for such licences reduced from 90 days to 45 days.
  • Mandatory documentation and compliance with Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) retained.

Static Linkages

  • Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940
  • Regulatory governance in public health
  • Concept of Licence Raj and economic reforms  
  • Risk-based regulation
  • Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP)  
  • Ease of Doing Business framework

Critical Analysis

  • Advantages
    • Reduces bureaucratic bottlenecks in pharmaceutical R&D.
    • Encourages innovation and faster drug development.
    • Supports India’s role as a global pharmaceutical supplier.
    • Aligns with post-COVID need for rapid healthcare solutions.
  • Concerns
    • Risk of weakened quality control without prior licensing.
    • Increased burden on post-manufacture inspections.
    • Past sub-standard drug incidents highlight enforcement gaps.
    • Capacity constraints of drug regulatory authorities.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen post-intimation inspections and audits.
  • Integrate digital GMP compliance tracking with SUGAM Portal.
  • Enhance manpower and technical capacity of regulators.
  • Adopt risk-based monitoring rather than blanket controls.
  • Ensure accountability through penalties for violations.
REGULATORS MUST WALK TIGHTROPE

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Economic Survey 2025–26 tabled in Parliament assessed India’s financial sector amid global uncertainty.
  • Highlighted the role of financial sector regulators in balancing growth, stability, and inclusion.
  • Emphasised differentiated regulation due to India’s diverse financial ecosystem.

Key Points

  • Regulatory Approach
    • Balance between global capital flow openness and protection from external shocks.
    • Adoption of differentiated supervision:
      • Stricter oversight for fragile/emerging segments.
      • Greater regulatory flexibility for mature markets.
  • Banking Sector Performance
    • GNPA ratio: 2.2% (Sept 2025) – multi- decadal low.
    • Net NPA ratio: 0.5% (Sept 2025) – record low.
    • SCB credit growth: 14.5% (Dec 2025) vs 11.2% (Dec 2024).
  • Capital Markets
    • 2.35 crore demat accounts added in FY26 (till Dec 2025).
    • Total demat accounts: 21.6 crore+.
    • 12 crore unique investors crossed in Sept 2025.
    • Nearly 25% women participation.
  • Mutual Funds
    • 5.9 crore unique investors (Dec 2025).
    • 3.5 crore investors from non-Tier I & Tier II cities.
  • Regulatory Reforms
    • Focus on investor protection, market transparency, and regulatory modernisation.

Static Linkages

  • Financial stability as a precondition for sustainable growth.
  • Role of prudential and macro-prudential regulation.
  • Capital account management in emerging economies.
  • Financial inclusion and inclusive growth.
  • Risk of contagion from global financial cycles.

Critical Analysis

  • Strengths
    • Improved asset quality strengthens banking resilience.
    • Broader retail participation deepens domestic capital markets.
    • Differentiated regulation reduces systemic risk.
    • Lower dependence on volatile foreign capital.
  • Challenges
    • Retail investor vulnerability to market volatility.
    • Global spillovers from monetary tightening and geopolitical risks.
    • Regulatory arbitrage across financial institutions.
    • Uneven financial literacy and access in rural areas.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen macro-prudential oversight and stress testing.
  • Enhance financial literacy and investor awareness.
  • Improve inter-regulatory coordination.
  • Develop counter-cyclical regulatory tools.
  • Balance innovation with consumer protection. 

ETHANOL BLENDING HITS FOOD SECURITY

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Why this issue has emerged

  • India is expanding its ethanol blending programme to reduce crude oil imports and enhance energy security.
  • To meet rising ethanol demand, cultivation of maize (a key ethanol feedstock) is increasing.
  • Farmers are shifting land from pulses, oilseeds and millets to maize due to:
    • Better price realisation
    • Assured industrial demand 
    • Lower market risk

How maize expansion affects food security Food security rests on availability, affordability and nutrition.

  1. Availability Impact
    • Pulses and oilseeds are being displaced by maize.
    • This reduces domestic supply of protein- rich and fat-rich food items.
    • Expected reduction in paddy area has not occurred, limiting adjustment space.
  1. Affordability Impact
    • Lower domestic production of oilseeds increases edible oil imports.
    • Higher import dependence exposes prices to:
      • Global price shocks
      • Geopolitical disruptions
    • This can increase food inflation.
  1. Nutritional Impact
    • Pulses and edible oils are essential for:  
      • Protein intake
      • Fat-soluble vitamins
    • Their neglect worsens nutritional outcomes, especially for vulnerable groups.

Why the Economic Survey flags it as a serious concern

  • Pulses and oilseeds are structurally important to India’s consumption basket.
  • Unlike rice and wheat:
    • They have weaker procurement support.
    • Farmers deprioritise them when better alternatives exist.
  • Over time, this may:
    • Entrench edible oil import dependence
    • Increase volatility in domestic food prices  
  • This creates a policy contradiction:
    • Self-reliance in energy
    • Reduced self-reliance in food

Positive side of ethanol blending

  • Substitution of crude oil imports.  Foreign exchange savings.
  • Reduction in greenhouse gas emissions.  
  • Additional income to farmers.

Core issue in one line

  • Market-driven expansion of maize for ethanol, without safeguards for pulses and oilseeds, risks weakening India’s food and nutritional security while pursuing energy self-reliance.

Way forward logic

  • Shift focus to second-generation biofuels.
  • Strengthen procurement and price assurance for pulses and oilseeds.
  • Integrate nutrition security into biofuel policy.  
  • Promote region-specific cropping strategies.
  • Balance energy goals with long-term food security.
PSU TURN AROUNDHOLD LESSONS

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • With the Union Budget approaching, focus has increased on the performance and transformation of Central Public Sector Enterprises (CPSEs) over the last decade.
  • India’s CPSE reforms align with the global shift away from centralised economic planning.
  •  The New Public Sector Enterprises Policy, 2020 under Atmanirbhar Bharat redefined the role of CPSEs.
  • Recent data from Economic Survey, Department of Public Enterprises (DPE), OECD highlight financial and operational turnaround.

Key Points

  • CPSEs are classified into strategic and non- strategic sectors (New PSE Policy, 2020).
  • Government to retain minimum presence (1–4 CPSEs) in strategic sectors like defence, energy, space.
  • Profit-making CPSEs increased from 157 (FY15) to 227 (FY25).
  • Loss-making CPSEs declined from 77 to 63 during the same period.
  • Net profit of CPSEs rose from ₹1.30 lakh crore (FY15) to ₹3.09 lakh crore (FY25).
  • Net worth of CPSEs increased from ₹9.85 lakh crore to ₹22.33 lakh crore.
  • Contribution to Central Exchequer rose from ₹2.00 lakh crore to ₹4.94 lakh crore.
  • Market capitalisation of 66 listed CPSEs reached ₹38.57 lakh crore (March 2025).
  • CPSEs contribute about 10% of national savings and remain a net saving sector.
  • Gross Capital Formation by non-financial CPSEs grew by 11.9%, supporting infrastructure investment.
  • PSU banks saw turnaround post twin balance sheet crisis and bank amalgamation.
  • PSB net profits rose from ₹37,019 crore (FY14) to ₹1.78 lakh crore (FY25).
  • Defence exports by CPSEs reached ₹23,622 crore (2024–25).
  • CPSEs are contributing to green transition (railway electrification, renewables, hydrogen).
  • Indian oil CPSEs have 45 overseas assets in 21 countries with investments of $40.6 billion.

Static Linkages

  • Role of PSUs in planned economic development (Five-Year Plans).
  • Disinvestment vs Strategic Disinvestment.
  • Twin Balance Sheet Problem (Economic Survey 2016–17).
  • Public investment as a driver of capital formation.
  • Energy security and green growth.
  • Banking sector reforms and financial stability.

Critical Analysis

  • Advantages
    • Improved efficiency, profitability, and market discipline.
    • CPSEs acting as counter-cyclical investors.
    • Enhanced contribution to exports and strategic sectors.
    • Strengthening fiscal resources through dividends and taxes.
  • Concerns
    • Limited R&D spending compared to global peers.
    • Skill gaps due to rapid technological change.
    • Risk of over-emphasis on valuation over social objectives.
    • State-level PSEs remain largely unreformed.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen corporate governance aligned with OECD norms.
  • Increase R&D and innovation spending.
  • Rationalise CPSE portfolio through strategic disinvestment.
  • Accelerate digital and skill upgradation.
  • Extend reform momentum to state PSEs.
  • Balance commercial efficiency with public welfare objectives.

LAW’S BLIND SPOTS ENDANGER WOMEN

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Continued ethnic violence in Manipur since 2023 has highlighted sexual violence against women during internal conflicts.
  • Death of a young survivor in 2026 renewed focus on access to justice and the legal understanding of consent.
  • Retention of several contested provisions in the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), 2023 has brought structural gender justice issues into focus.

Key Points

  • Marital rape exception continues under Section 63, BNS, excluding non-consensual intercourse within marriage from rape.
  • Restitution of Conjugal Rights (RCR) allows courts to compel cohabitation.
  • Minimum age of marriage remains 18 for women and 21 for men.
  • POCSO Act, 2012 criminalises all sexual activity below 18 years, irrespective of consent.
  • Section 69, BNS criminalises sexual relations based on false promise of marriage.
  • Laws show inconsistent treatment of consent across marital, adolescent, and adult relationships.

Static Linkages

  • Article 14 – Equality before law
  • Article 15 – Prohibition of discrimination on grounds of sex
  • Article 21 – Right to life includes dignity, privacy, bodily autonomy
  • Directive Principles – Protection of women and children
  • 42nd Law Commission Report (1971) – Recommended criminalisation of marital rape
  • Justice J.S. Verma Committee (2013) – Opposed marital rape exception
  • Substantive equality vs formal equality (NCERT Polity)

Critical Analysis

  • Concerns
    • Marital rape exception undermines bodily autonomy.
    • RCR prioritises institution of marriage over consent.
    • Differential marriage age institutionalises inequality.
    • POCSO ignores adolescent autonomy, leading to misuse.
    • “Promise of marriage” offence reflects paternalistic assumptions.
    • Gap between constitutional morality and statutory law.
  • Implications
    • Weakens substantive gender equality.
    • Limits access to criminal justice for married women.
    • Over-criminalisation of consensual relationships.
    • Burden on judiciary and law enforcement.

Way Forward

  •  Criminalise marital rape with safeguards.
  • Repeal or reform RCR in line with Article 21.
  • Harmonise minimum age of marriage on equality principles.
  • Introduce close-in-age exemption under POCSO.
  • Clarify Section 69, BNS with objective legal standards.
  • Align personal and criminal laws with constitutional morality.

ECO SURVEY FLAGS ISSUES SOLUTIONS AWAIT

KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
  • The Economic Survey 2025–26 highlights a paradox in India’s macroeconomic situation.
  • Despite strong growth, low inflation, and improved balance sheets, concerns persist regarding consumption demand, private investment, exports, capital flows, and fiscal sustainability.
  • The Survey’s observations assume significance in the backdrop of global economic uncertainty and the forthcoming Union Budget.

Key Points

  • Medium-term growth outlook revised to ~7%.  GDP growth projection for 2026–27: 6.8–7.2%.  Inflation remains within the tolerance band.
  • Corporate and banking sector balance sheets are relatively healthy.
  • Signs of broad-based revival in private investment remain limited.
  • Household consumption growth shows weakness.
  • Merchandise exports remain sluggish.
  • Foreign portfolio investors have reduced investments.
  • Rupee depreciation to around ₹92 per USD.
  • India’s Balance of Payments remains dependent on capital inflows.
  • Currency valuation does not fully reflect economic fundamentals but affects investor sentiment.
  • States’ fiscal populism flagged as a major concern.
  • As per ICRA, unconditional cash transfers by 11 states ≈ ₹1.5 lakh crore (2025–26).
  • Committed expenditure constitutes ~62% of states’ revenue receipts, limiting capital expenditure.

Static Linkages

  • Components of GDP and demand-side constraints  
  • Balance of Payments: Current account vs Capital account
  • Exchange rate determination under managed float regime
  • Fiscal deficit, revenue deficit, and quality of expenditure
  • Crowding-out effect of revenue expenditure  Fiscal federalism and state finances
  • Counter-cyclical fiscal policy
  • External sector vulnerability of emerging economies

Critical Analysis

  • Strengths
    • Strong macroeconomic stability enhances resilience.
    • Low inflation provides policy space.
    • Healthy banking sector improves credit flow potential.
    • Structural reforms support long-term growth prospects.
  • Concerns
    • Weak consumption demand affects aggregate demand.
    • Narrow private investment revival constrains medium-term growth.
    • Heavy reliance on volatile capital inflows increases external vulnerability.
    • Rupee depreciation affects import costs and investor confidence.
    • Fiscal populism reduces productive capital expenditure.
    • High committed expenditure limits developmental spending by states.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen export competitiveness through diversification and logistics reforms.
  • Encourage private investment via regulatory certainty and infrastructure push.
  • Improve quality of fiscal spending with greater focus on capital expenditure.
  • Rationalise cash transfer schemes with targeting and outcome-based assessment.
  • Enhance domestic savings and long-term capital formation.
  • Reduce dependence on short-term foreign capital inflows.
  • Align Union Budget priorities with medium-term growth strategy outlined in the Survey.
RUPEE WOES LARGELY EXTERNAL
KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • The Economic Survey 2025-26, tabled in Parliament of India, highlighted the sharp underperformance of the Indian rupee, which depreciated to ₹91.98 per US dollar.
  • The Survey attributed rupee weakness mainly to external geopolitical and financial factors, not to domestic macroeconomic instability.
  • It cautioned against potential capital flow disruptions and liquidity tightening amid rising global uncertainty.

Key Points

  • Rupee weakness driven primarily by:
    • Sustained foreign portfolio investment (FPI) outflows,
    • Global geopolitical tensions,
    • Tight global financial conditions.
  • Domestic macroeconomic fundamentals remain strong:
    • Stable growth outlook,  Controlled inflation,
    • Favourable monsoon and agricultural prospects.
  • India runs:
    • Trade deficit in goods,
    • Surplus in services and remittances, which is insufficient to offset goods deficit.
  • India depends on foreign capital inflows to maintain a healthy Balance of Payments (BoP).
  • When capital inflows weaken, exchange rate stability becomes vulnerable.
  • The Survey emphasised:
    • Manufacturing-led export growth as a prerequisite for durable currency strength,
    • Services exports as a complement, not a substitute, for manufacturing.
  • A mildly undervalued rupee currently:
    • Offsets the impact of higher US tariffs on Indian exports,
    • Does not pose inflationary risks due to stable crude prices.
  • Risks identified:
    • Capital flight,
    • Liquidity contraction,
    • Disruptions from emerging financial instruments like stablecoins.

Static Linkages

  • Exchange rate determination (demand–supply of foreign exchange).
  • Balance of Payments: Current Account vs Capital Account.
  • Role of FDI vs FPI in external stability.
  • Manufacturing-led growth model (East Asian experience).
  • Foreign exchange reserves and central bank intervention (RBI framework).
  • Twin deficits hypothesis.

Critical Analysis

  • Strengths
    • Currency weakness largely due to external shocks, not domestic mismanagement.
    • Domestic institutional investors provide partial insulation from volatile foreign flows.
    • Policy recognition of manufacturing as a strategic economic pillar is positive.
  • Challenges
    • Persistent merchandise trade deficit.
    • Overdependence on volatile portfolio capital.
    • Investor hesitation due to global uncertainty and policy risks.
    • Rising geopolitical fragmentation affecting global capital mobility.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen manufacturing competitiveness and export capacity.
  • Shift from FPI-led inflows to stable FDI-driven industrialisation.
  • Diversify export markets and products.
  • Build larger foreign exchange and liquidity buffers.
  • Enhance policy credibility, predictability and administrative efficiency.
  • Develop alternative trade and payment mechanisms to reduce external vulnerability.
UGC RULES: SHIFT FROM WORDS TO ACTION

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • The Supreme Court of India stayed the UGC (Promotion of Equity in Higher Education Institutions) Regulations, 2026.
  • The Court directed that the UGC Equity Regulations, 2012 shall continue till further orders.
  • The stay followed challenges alleging dilution, exclusion, and ambiguity in defining discrimination.
  • The regulations were framed after petitions related to institutional caste discrimination cases.

Key Points

  • Regulatory Authority: University Grants Commission
  • Major Change in 2026 Regulations:  
      • Separate definition of: “Discrimination”
      • “Caste-based discrimination”  
  • Issue with New Definition:
    • Caste-based discrimination restricted to SC/ST/OBCs.
    • Alleged exclusion of general category from protection.
  • Court’s Observation:
    • Redundancy between general discrimination and caste-based discrimination.
    • Questioned regression from broader protection in 2012 regulations.
  • Omissions in 2026 Rules:
    • No explicit listing of discriminatory practices.
    • No definitions of harassment, victimisation, ragging.
  • New Enforcement Powers:
    • UGC may debar institutions from grants and schemes.
    • National monitoring committee mandated.
  • Institutional Mechanism:
    • Mandatory Equal Opportunity Centres.
    • Representation of SC, ST, OBCs, PwDs, women.
    • Time-bound grievance redressal.

Statics Linkages 

  • Article 14 – Equality before law.
  • Article 15(1) – Prohibition of discrimination.
  • Article 15(4) – Special provisions for SC/ST/OBCs.  
  • Article 21 – Right to dignity.
  • UGC Act, 1956 – Power to frame regulations.
  • NCERT Polity – Equality, social justice, affirmative action.
  • 2nd ARC – Institutional mechanisms for inclusion.

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
    • Strengthened enforcement through penalties.  Institutionalisation of grievance redressal.
    • Explicit focus on marginalised communities. Concerns
    • Narrow definition may exclude intersectional discrimination.
    • Removal of illustrative discriminatory acts reduces clarity.
    • Potential dilution of comprehensive equality framework.
    • Risk of inconsistent interpretation across institutions.
  • Constitutional Dimension
    • Balance between substantive equality (Article 15(4)) and formal equality (Article 14).
    • Regulatory action must advance, not regress, rights protection.

Way Forward

  • Harmonise definitions to ensure universal protection against discrimination.
  • Restore illustrative list of discriminatory practices.
  • Ensure regulations align with Articles 14, 15, and 21.
  • Strengthen monitoring with periodic judicial and parliamentary oversight.
  • Promote campus integration over segregation .