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16 February 2026

Trade Deals From Strength: PM | AI Summit 2026: Modi Opens | Indian Scientific Service Bridge | UAE–India Corridor Boosts Growth | Poll Sop | Hot Air | India Spotlights Local Fixes | Maternity Act: Empathy Key | Global South Must Seize AI | Agriculture Deal: Gains and Gaps

TRADE DEALS FROM STRANGTH: PM

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context

  • The Prime Minister stated that India signed recent trade agreements with the European Union and the United States from a “position of strength.”
  • Budget 2026 emphasizes capital expenditure- led growth.
  • Record ₹7.85 lakh crore allocated to defence (15% increase over previous year).
  • Focus on integrating MSMEs into global trade and value chains.

Key Points

  • Trade and FTAs
    • Objective: Reduction of tariff and non-tariff barriers.
    • Target sectors: Textiles, leather, processed food, engineering goods, chemicals, gems and jewellery.
    • MSMEs placed at the centre of export strategy.
    • FTAs are permitted under WTO framework as an exception to the Most Favoured Nation principle (GATT Article XXIV).
  • Budget 2026
    • Continued thrust on capital expenditure (infrastructure, logistics, manufacturing).
    • Capital expenditure has a higher multiplier effect than revenue expenditure (Economic Survey).
    • Aim: Crowd in private investment and boost medium-term growth.
  • Defence Allocation
    • ₹7.85 lakh crore – highest allocation among ministries.
    • Focus on modernization and indigenization under Atmanirbhar Bharat.
    • Strengthening preparedness and strategic capability.

Static Linkages

  • Article 253 – Parliament’s power to implement international treaties.
  • Union List – Defence, foreign affairs, foreign trade.
  • Balance of Payments – Impact of exports and imports on Current Account.
  • Capital vs Revenue Expenditure (NCERT Macroeconomics).
  • MSME classification (Revised 2020: Investment and Turnover criteria).
  • GATT 1994 – MFN principle and exceptions for FTAs.

Critical Dimensions for Mains

  • Positives
    • Expansion of export markets.
    • Greater MSME participation in global value chains.
    • Infrastructure-led growth with higher multiplier effect.
    • Improved defence preparedness and modernization.
  • Concerns
    • Risk of widening trade deficit.
    • Compliance burden on MSMEs (standards and certification).
    •   Fiscal pressures due to high defence spending.
    • Possible vulnerability of sensitive sectors such as agriculture and dairy.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen trade facilitation and logistics ecosystem.
  • Capacity building for MSMEs in quality standards and digital compliance.
  • Diversify export basket toward high-value manufacturing and services.
  • Maintain fiscal consolidation path alongside strategic spending.
  • Deepen defence indigenization and boost R&D investment.

AI SUMMIT 2026: MODI OPENS

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • India is hosting the AI Impact Summit 2026 (Feb 16–20) at Bharat Mandapam, New Delhi.
  • It is the 4th Global AI Summit (earlier: UK, South Korea, France).
  • Projected as the first AI summit hosted in a Global South country.
  • Inaugurated by PM Narendra Modi.
  • Participation: ~100 countries; leaders from France, Brazil, European & Global South nations; UN Secretary-General.
  • Themes: People, Planet, Progress (human- centric AI approach).

Key Facts

  • 3,000+ speakers, 500+ sessions, 300+ AI exhibitions.
  • Focus areas:
    • AI for healthcare, agriculture, education  Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI)
    • Ethical AI & equitable access
    • Emphasis on human-centric AI (development- oriented, not heavy regulation).
    • Major global AI firms participated (Google, OpenAI, DeepMind, Anthropic, Microsoft).
    • Includes inclusivity measures (e.g., women- focused hackathon).

Important Government Linkages

  • National Strategy for Artificial Intelligence (NITI Aayog, 2018) – “AI for All” (5 priority sectors: healthcare, agriculture, education, smart cities, smart mobility).
  • Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 – Governs personal data processing.
  • IT Act, 2000 – Legal framework for cyber activities.
  • India Semiconductor Mission (2021) – $10 billion incentive package.
  • National Supercomputing Mission – Indigenous HPC capacity.
  • G20 New Delhi Leaders’ Declaration (2023) – Responsible AI principles.

Constitutional & Ethical Dimensions

  • Article 14 – Risk of algorithmic bias (equality concerns).
  • Article 21 – Right to privacy (Puttaswamy Judgment, 2017).
  • Transparency, accountability, and fairness in AI decision-making.
  • Ethical concerns: surveillance, misinformation, job displacement.

Significance for India

  • Positions India as AI voice of Global South.  Strengthens tech-diplomacy.
  • Supports Digital Public Infrastructure export model (Aadhaar, UPI, CoWIN).
  • AI projected to significantly boost India’s GDP (NASSCOM estimate: ~$500 billion potential contribution).

Challenges

  • Lack of comprehensive AI regulation framework.
  • Compute infrastructure dependency (imported chips, GPUs).
  • Data governance & implementation issues.  
  • Skill gap in advanced AI research.
  • Balancing innovation with safeguards.

Way Forward

  • Develop balanced AI regulatory framework.
  • Strengthen semiconductor & chip ecosystem.  
  • Invest in AI skilling and R&D.
  • Promote open-source AI for developing nations.
  • Institutionalize AI ethics oversight mechanisms.

INDIAN SCIENTIFIC SERVEICE BRIDGE

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Debate has emerged regarding creation of a separate Indian Scientific Service (ISS) to institutionalise scientific expertise within governance.
  • Scientists in government are presently governed under the Central Civil Services (Conduct) Rules, 1964, originally framed for generalist administrators.
  • Increasing policy complexity in climate change, biotechnology, AI, public health, nuclear safety, disaster management and environmental regulation.
  • Countries such as the United States, United Kingdom, France, Germany and Japan have structured scientific advisory systems with institutional safeguards.

Key Points

  • Post-Independence civil services structured around generalist administrative model
  • Scientists recruited through specialised academic and research pathways.
  • No separate All-India Scientific Cadre currently exists.
  • Service conditions of Union services governed under Article 309 of the Constitution.
  • Organisations like CSIR and ICAR have separate recruitment mechanisms but remain under general conduct rules.
  • Scientific advice in India often crisis-driven rather than institutionalised.
  • Scientific Integrity Policies (USA model) ensure:
    • Protection from political interference  
    • Transparent documentation of advice
    • No suppression or alteration of findings

Static Linkages

  • Article 309 – Recruitment and service conditions.
  • Article 312 – Creation of All India Services.  
  • Doctrine of Ministerial Responsibility –
  • Final decision rests with elected executive.
  • Precautionary Principle (Environmental jurisprudence).
  • 2nd Administrative Reforms Commission – Need for domain expertise.
  • Disaster Management Act, 2005 – Role of technical authorities.
  • National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC).

Mains-Oriented Dimensions

  1. Governance Reform
  • Generalist vs Specialist debate.
  • Need for domain expertise in complex sectors.
  • Institutional autonomy vs administrative control.
  1. Science–Policy Interface
  • Reactive consultation vs continuous advisory integration.  
  • Recording scientific dissent and uncertainty.
  • Strengthening regulatory institutions.
  1. Constitutional & Ethical Angle
  • Balance between technocracy and democratic accountability.
  • Scientific integrity and transparency.
  • Public trust in evidence-based policymaking.

Critical Analysis

  • Arguments in Favour
    • Strengthens evidence-based governance.
    • Improves climate and environmental decision-making.  
    • Encourages long-term risk assessment.
    • Reduces over-reliance on ad-hoc committees.
    • Aligns with India’s global climate and technology leadership goals.
  • Concerns
    • Risk of bureaucratic overlap.  
    • Inter-service friction.
    • Possible technocratic dominance.
    • Need to maintain democratic control.  
    • Fiscal and structural challenges.

Way Forward

  • Create Scientific Cadre under Article 309 or Article 312.  
  • Develop Scientific Integrity Framework.
  •   Institutionalise documentation of expert advice.
  • Promote interdisciplinary training for civil servants.  
  • Pilot ISS in climate and disaster sectors.
  • Ensure parliamentary oversight for accountability.

UAE- INDIA CORRIDOR BOOSTS GROWTH

KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
  • India and the UAE achieved the $100 billion bilateral trade target (set for 2030) five years ahead of schedule.
  • A new target of $200 billion in trade by 2032 has been announced.
  • This growth follows the signing of the India– UAE Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) in 2022.
  • Bilateral ties are expanding beyond hydrocarbons into manufacturing, logistics, renewable energy, finance, AI, and digital infrastructure.
  • A Bilateral Investment Treaty (2024) and strategic defence partnership further strengthen institutional architecture.

Key Points

  • Trade & Economic Data
    • Bilateral trade crossed $100 billion ahead of 2030 target.
    • Non-oil trade reached ~$65 billion, indicating diversification.
    • CEPA eliminated tariffs on ~90% of tariff lines.
    • UAE among India’s top trading partners (Ministry of Commerce data)
    • UAE invested $22+ billion in India since 2000.  
    • Indian investments in UAE exceed $16 billion.  ~5 million Indian diaspora in UAE — largest expatriate group.
    • Over 1,200 weekly flights – high connectivity corridor.
  • Strategic Investments
    • UAE sovereign wealth funds (ADIA, Mubadala) investing in:
      • Infrastructure
      • Renewable energy
      • Healthcare
      • Technology
    • LNG supply agreements support India’s energy security.
    • DP World expanding port and logistics infrastructure in India.
    • UAE’s ADIA established presence in GIFT City (IFSC).
    • Bharat Mart (UAE) to promote Indian exports to Africa & Eurasia.
  • Emerging Areas
    • AI cooperation and digital infrastructure.
    • Renewable energy and solar-plus-storage projects.
    • Electric vehicle manufacturing relocation to UAE.
    • Expansion into third markets (Africa, West Asia).

Static Linkages

  • Article 253 – Parliament’s power to implement international agreements.
  • Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) & Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreements.
  • Current Account & Balance of Payments (NCERT Macroeconomics).
  • Energy security & LNG diversification (Integrated Energy Policy).
  • Role of diaspora in foreign policy (India Year Book).  
  • FDI norms & Sovereign Wealth Funds (Economic Survey).
  • International Financial Services Centres (GIFT City framework).

Critical Analysis

  • Advantages
    • Diversification beyond oil reduces vulnerability to crude price shocks.
    • Strengthens India’s energy security through long- term LNG contracts.
    • Enhances logistics competitiveness via port investments.
    • Boosts manufacturing under Make in India.  
    • Positions India strategically in West Asia.
    • Facilitates global expansion of Indian firms.
  • Concerns
    • Potential trade imbalance.
    • Geopolitical instability in West Asia.
    • Regulatory and digital governance challenges in AI cooperation.
    • Investor-State dispute risks under BIT.
    • Welfare concerns of Indian migrant workers.

Way Forward

  • Ensure balanced trade growth with export diversification.
  • Deepen value-chain integration in manufacturing.
  • Strengthen diaspora welfare frameworks.
  • Develop clear AI data governance cooperation.
  • Leverage Bharat Mart to expand India–Africa trade.  
  • Use CEPA as template for future FTAs.
POLL SOP
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
  • Tamil Nadu government advanced ₹5,000 each to 1.31 crore women under the Kalaignar Magalir Urimai Thittam (KMUT).
  • KMUT (launched Sept 2023) provides ₹1,000 per month to women heads of families as a “rights-based grant”.
  • Advance payment (₹3,000 for 3 months) + ₹2,000 “summer assistance” announced before Assembly elections.
  • Total fiscal outgo: ~₹6,550 crore.
  • Debate: Welfare measure vs electoral populism.
  • Concerns regarding enforcement of the Model Code of Conduct (MCC) by the Election Commission of India (ECI).

Key Exam-Relevant Facts

  • Article 324: ECI’s constitutional authority over elections.
  • MCC: Non-statutory code; prohibits new schemes after poll announcement but allows continuation of ongoing schemes.
  • FRBM Act, 2003: Mandates fiscal discipline and deficit control.
  • Subramaniam Balaji vs State of Tamil Nadu (2013): Supreme Court distinguished welfare schemes from “freebies”; directed ECI to frame guidelines.
  • Gender Budgeting introduced in Union Budget (2005–06).
  • DBT mechanism reduces leakages (Economic Survey findings).
  • Directive Principles:
    • Article 38 – Social order for welfare.  
    • Article 39(a) – Adequate livelihood.
    • Article 46 – Promotion of SC/ST interests.

Static Concepts to Revise

  • Welfare State vs Populism
  • Model Code of Conduct (nature, enforceability)  
  • Fiscal Deficit vs Revenue Expenditure
  • Direct Benefit Transfer (JAM Trinity)
  • Electoral Reforms (Level Playing Field doctrine)  
  • Gender Empowerment and Inclusive Growth

Issues Involved

  • Governance Dimension
    • Ambiguity in MCC interpretation.
    • Selective enforcement weakens institutional credibility.
  • Economic Dimension
    • Revenue expenditure vs capital expenditure debate.  
    • Impact on fiscal deficit and debt sustainability.
  • Ethical Dimension (GS 4)
    • Public money for public good vs electoral gain.  
    • Probity in governance.
    • Fairness in democratic competition.
  • Social Justice Dimension
    • Women’s economic empowerment.
    • Targeted redistribution (SC/ST coverage).
  • Arguments For
    • Supports women-led households and inclusive growth.
    • Ongoing scheme (not newly announced).  
    • DBT ensures transparency and efficiency.
    • Consumption support during inflationary stress. 
  • Arguments Against
    • Timing may influence voter behaviour.
    • Creates competitive populism across states. 
    • Fiscal strain on state finances.
    • Undermines “level playing field” principle.

Way Forward

  • Give statutory backing to MCC for clarity and uniformity.
  • Define objective criteria to distinguish welfare from electoral inducement.
  • Strengthen fiscal transparency and legislative oversight.
  • Promote outcome-based welfare instead of unconditional transfers.
  • Ensure uniform ECI enforcement across states.
HOT AIR

 

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • The U.S. administration revoked the 2009 “Endangerment Finding” issued by the United States Environmental Protection Agency.
  • The finding originated from the U.S. Supreme Court judgment in Massachusetts v.
  • Environmental Protection Agency, which held that greenhouse gases (GHGs) qualify as “air pollutants” under the Clean Air Act.
  • In 2009, EPA concluded that six GHGs (CO₂, CH₄, N₂O, HFCs, PFCs, SF₆) endanger public health and welfare.
  • This formed the legal basis for federal GHG and fuel economy standards (2012–2025) for cars and light trucks.
  • The rollback weakens climate regulation in the transport sector and has global implications, including for India.

Key Points

  • Legal Basis: Clean Air Act (1970) empowered EPA to regulate air pollutants.
  • 2007 Judgment: Supreme Court mandated EPA to determine whether GHGs endanger public health.
  • 2009 Endangerment Finding: Recognized climate change as a threat to health and welfare.
  • Six GHGs covered: CO₂, CH₄, N₂O, HFCs, PFCs, SF₆.  
  • Impact on Automobiles:
    • Strengthened Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) standards.
    • Encouraged electric vehicles (EVs) and hybrids.
    • Promoted regulatory credit markets (benefited firms like Tesla, Inc.).
    • Scientific assessments relied heavily on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change reports.

India-Relevant Dimensions

  • India follows BS-VI emission norms (equivalent to Euro 6).
  • Corporate Average Fuel Efficiency (CAFE) standards implemented under the Energy Conservation Act, 2001.
  • EV promotion via FAME-II scheme and National Electric Mobility Mission Plan.
  • India’s Paris commitments:
    • 45% reduction in emissions intensity of GDP by 2030 (from 2005 level).
    • 50% cumulative installed power capacity from non- fossil sources by 2030.

Static Linkages

  • GHGs contribute to radiative forcing and global warming.
  • Transport sector is a major contributor to CO₂ emissions globally.
  • Environmental principles:
    • Precautionary Principle  
    • Polluter Pays Principle
    • Intergenerational Equity
  • Article 21: Right to clean environment (judicial interpretation).
  • Article 48A & Article 51A(g): Environmental protection duties.

Critical Analysis

  • Implications Globally
    • Weakens climate leadership of the U.S.
    • Creates regulatory uncertainty in global clean-tech markets.
    • May slow EV adoption in the short term.
  • Implications for India
    • Risk of domestic auto industry lobbying for dilution of fuel efficiency norms.
    • Could affect global EV supply chains where China dominates battery manufacturing.
    • However, export-oriented manufacturing requires compliance with stricter EU norms.
  • Ethical Dimension
    • Raises concerns of intergenerational equity.
    • Contradicts global collective action principle under climate regime.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen domestic fuel efficiency norms independent of global political shifts.
  • Integrate transport emissions explicitly into India’s climate targets.
  • Accelerate EV infrastructure and battery manufacturing under Atmanirbhar Bharat.
  • Enhance carbon pricing and market-based mechanisms.

INDIA SPOTLIGHT LOCAL FIXES

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • India is hosting the India-AI Impact Summit 2026 in New Delhi (Feb 16–20, 2026).
  • Participation from 100+ countries, including heads of state and global tech CEOs.
  • The summit builds on earlier global AI governance initiatives:
  • AI Safety Summit (UK, 2023) – Focus on AI safety risks.
  • Seoul AI Summit – Expanded to innovation and inclusivity.
  • Paris AI Action Summit – Emphasis on implementation and economic use.
  • India’s theme: “People, Planet and Progress” – Development-oriented AI governance.
  • Linked to the IndiaAI Mission under MeitY.

Key Points

  • IndiaAI Mission (2024):
    • Focus on compute infrastructure, datasets, indigenous AI models.
    • Public-private collaboration model.
  • India has approved proposals to build Large Language Models (LLMs) and Small Language Models (SLMs) domestically.
  • AI applications focus areas:
    • Agriculture (precision farming)  Healthcare diagnostics
    • Governance & public service delivery  
    • Climate modelling
  • India positioning itself as voice of Global South in AI governance.
  • Expansion of domestic data centre capacity to support AI infrastructure.

Static Linkages

  • Scientific temper – Article 51A(h).
  • Right to Privacy – Fundamental Right (Puttaswamy Judgment, 2017).
  • Digital Public Infrastructure (Aadhaar, UPI) – Model for AI-enabled governance.
  • National Strategy for Artificial Intelligence (NITI Aayog, 2018) – “AI for All.”
  • Data Protection framework – Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023.
  • India’s climate commitments under Paris Agreement – relevance to energy-intensive AI.

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
    • Enhances India’s leadership in emerging technology governance.
    • Promotes inclusive datasets to reduce algorithmic bias.
    • Boost to domestic semiconductor and data centre ecosystem.
    • Supports productivity growth and digital economy expansion.
  • Concerns
    • Job displacement in IT and service sectors.  
    • Digital divide – AI access may remain urban- centric.
    • High energy consumption of AI data centres.  
    • Risk of regulatory fragmentation globally.
    • Dependence on imported GPUs and advanced chips.
  • Stakeholders
    • IT industry & startups.
    • Workforce (especially mid-skill employees).  
    • Government & regulators.
    • Global South countries.  Environmental groups.

Way Forward

  • Focus on sector-specific AI solutions (health, agriculture, education).
  • Invest in AI skilling & reskilling under Skill India.
  • Promote green data centres (renewable- powered).
  • Strengthen AI ethics frameworks – transparency & explainability.
  • Encourage open-source AI models for affordability.
  • Develop semiconductor ecosystem under India Semiconductor Mission.

MARTERNITY ACT: EMPATHY KEY

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Despite high academic achievements, women’s participation declines at senior corporate and administrative levels.
  • The “motherhood penalty” is increasingly identified as a structural reason for women exiting the workforce.
  • The Maternity Benefit (Amendment) Act, 2017 expanded paid maternity leave to 26 weeks.
  • Female Labour Force Participation Rate (FLFPR) (PLFS 2022–23) ~37% (15+ years), but formal workforce retention remains low.
  • Lack of affordable childcare and workplace bias affect women’s career continuity.

Key Provisions & Facts

  • Maternity Benefit (Amendment) Act, 2017
    • 26 weeks paid leave (for first two children).  12 weeks for third child onwards.
    • Applicable to establishments with ≥10 employees.
    • Crèche facility mandatory for establishments with ≥50 employees.
    • Provision for work-from-home (mutual agreement basis).
    • Leave for adoptive and commissioning mothers (12 weeks).
  • Child Care Leave (CCL)
    • Central government women employees eligible for 730 days.
    • 100% pay for first year; partial thereafter (as per CCS Rules).
  • Related Schemes
    • Palna (National Creche Scheme) under Mission Shakti.
    • POSHAN Abhiyaan – maternal & child health support.
    • PMMVY – maternity benefit (conditional cash transfer).

Static Linkages

  • Article 14 – Equality before law.
  • Article 15(3) – Special provisions for women and children.
  • Article 42 – Provision for just and humane conditions of work and maternity relief.
  • Directive Principles – Social justice orientation.  
  • Demographic Dividend & Human Capital Formation.  
  • Gender Inequality Index (UNDP).
  • Labour Codes (Code on Social Security, 2020).

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
    • Among the more generous statutory maternity leave policies globally.
    • Improves maternal & child health outcomes.
    • Promotes constitutional vision of social justice.
    • Institutional recognition of unpaid care work.
  • Challenges
    • Cost borne by employers → possible hiring bias.
    • Limited to formal sector; ~90% women in informal economy lack coverage.
    • Weak enforcement of crèche provisions.  
    • Career stagnation & glass ceiling post- maternity.
    • Childcare infrastructure gap.

Way Forward

  • Consider social insurance model (shared cost: employer + state).
  • Universal childcare infrastructure expansion.
  • Incentivize paternity leave for shared caregiving.
  • Strict monitoring of crèche compliance.  
  • Corporate gender-sensitivity audits.
  • Skill development of trained childcare workforce.
GLOBAL SOUTH MUST SEIZE AI

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • The AI Impact Summit is being held in New Delhi.
  • Focus: Making global AI governance more inclusive, especially for the Global South.
  • Earlier global AI discussions were dominated by advanced economies (US, EU, China).
  • India is advocating an AI pathway linked to Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) and inclusive development.

Key Points

  • Nearly 90% of global AI patents originate from the US, Europe and China.
  • AI applications are expanding in:
    • Agriculture (precision farming)  
    • Healthcare (AI diagnostics)
    • Governance (beneficiary identification, DBT optimization)
    • Education (multilingual tools)
  • India’s Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) Core components:
    • Aadhaar – Digital identity.
    • UPI – Real-time payment system.  
    • DBT – Direct transfer of subsidies.
    • CoWIN – Vaccine management platform.
  • Features:
    • Interoperable
    • Open architecture  
    • Scalable
    • Inclusion-focused
  • Bhashini Initiative
    • National Language Translation Mission.
    • Enables AI-driven multilingual governance services.
    • Improves accessibility in welfare delivery.
    • Key Governance Concerns
      • Data privacy
      • Algorithmic bias  Cybersecurity
      • National security implications  
      • Digital divide

Static Linkages

  • Article 14 – Equality before law.
  • Article 21 – Right to privacy (Puttaswamy Judgment, 2017).
  • Directive Principles – Social and economic justice.
  • E-governance reforms (Second ARC recommendations).
  • Concept of public goods and digital commons.  
  • Data protection framework in India.

Critical Analysis

  • Advantages
    • Promotes inclusive AI model for Global South.  
    • Reduces technological dependency.
    • Enhances welfare delivery efficiency.  
    • Strengthens digital sovereignty.
  • Challenges
    • Data misuse risks.
    • Regulatory gaps in AI governance.
    • Concentration of AI patents in developed countries.
    • Infrastructure gaps in rural areas.
    • Cyber vulnerabilities in DPI systems.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen data protection and AI regulatory framework.
  • Promote open-source and collaborative AI models.
  • Build AI capacity in Global South through partnerships.
  • Encourage government as enabler, not controller.
  • Invest in cybersecurity and digital literacy.
  • Promote ethical AI principles – transparency, fairness, accountability.

AGRICULTURE DEAL: GAINS AND GAPS

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context

  • India and the US are close to finalising a bilateral trade agreement expanding market access for select agricultural products.
  • India may reduce tariffs on feed-related imports like Distillers’ Dried Grains with Solubles (DDGS) and feed sorghum.
  • As per NITI Aayog data (Ramesh Chand), Indian agriculture grew at 4.4% annually (2014–15 to 2023–24), but growth has been uneven:
    • Livestock: ~7.2%  
    • Fisheries: ~8.9%  
    • Crops: ~2.8%
  • Livestock and aquaculture sectors have largely welcomed the deal; maize, soybean, and sugarcane farmers have expressed concerns.

Key Exam-Relevant Facts

  • Livestock is a major contributor to agricultural GVA growth.
  • Horticulture output exceeds foodgrain production in volume terms.
  • Feed accounts for 60–70% of poultry production cost.
  • India permits GM cotton but not commercial GM soybean or maize.
  • Yield gap:
    • Indian maize & soybean yields are about one-third of US levels.
    • Apple productivity in US (~48 t/ha) significantly higher than J&K (~12 t/ha) and Himachal (~5 t/ha).
  • WTO’s Agreement on Agriculture allows domestic support under Amber, Blue and Green Boxes.

Static Concepts

  • Structural transformation: Shift from crop- dominated agriculture to livestock & high- value sectors.
  • Comparative advantage determines gains from trade.
  • MSP-driven cereal bias influences cropping pattern.
  • Small and marginal farmers (≈86% of holdings) benefit more from livestock due to low land requirement.
  • Productivity depends on seed technology, irrigation intensity, and extension services.

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
    • Enhances competitiveness of poultry, dairy, and aquaculture sectors.
    • Benefits small & marginal farmers dependent on livestock.
    • Promotes high-value agriculture and diversification.
    • Reduces feed costs → may lower protein food inflation.
  • Concerns
    • Price pressure on maize and soybean farmers.  
    • Large yield gap due to technology restrictions.  
    • Policy distortions (MSP bias toward cereals).
    • Risk of import dependence for feed inputs.
  • Core Issue
    • Trade liberalisation without domestic productivity reform creates asymmetrical competition.

Way Forward

  • Bridge yield gap via:  
    • Precision farming
    • High-density planting
    • Scientific irrigation (PMKSY)
  • Evidence-based regulatory framework for agricultural biotechnology.
  • Diversify incentives toward oilseeds & feed crops.
  • Strengthen FPOs for market access.
  • Align trade policy with domestic agricultural reforms.
  • Invest in R&D through ICAR and digital extension.