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02 SEPTEMBER 2025 Current Affairs

SCO LEADER ADOPT TIANJIN DECLARATION WHICH'STRONGLY' | THE RISE & RISK OF HEALTH INSURANCE IN INDIA | NOISE POLLUTION IS RISING BUT POLICY IS FALLING SILENT | ANOTHER CHANCE | REWIRING THE EQUILIBRIUM | WHAT PUNJAB NEED | UNDERSTANDING THE HIGH APRIL-JUNE GDP GROWTH NUMBERS

SCO LEADERS ADOPT TIANJIN DECLARATION WHICH ‘STRONGLY’

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Tianjin Declaration adopted by all 10 members:

  • Strong condemnation of terrorism (incl. Pahalgam attack, Jaffer Express, Khuzdar attacks).

  • Rejection of cross-border movement of terrorists; inadmissibility of using terror groups for mercenary purposes.
  • Opposition to unilateral coercive measures (e.g., U.S. tariffs) contravening UN Charter/WTO principles.

  • Concern over IsraelGaza conflict; condemnation of IsraelU.S. strikes on Irans nuclear facilities.

  • Reiteration on inclusive Afghan government for lasting stability.

  • All except India reaffirmed support for Chinas Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).

China’s Role

  • Xi Jinping chaired the summit; criticised Cold War mentality & bullying in global order.

  • Proposed Global Governance Initiative (GGI): sovereign equality, rule of law, multilateralism, people-centered approach.

Announced:

  • ¥2 billion grant this year + ¥10 billion loan to SCO Interbank Consortium.
  • Push for an SCO Development Bank.

    Institutional Changes

  • Partner Status merger: dialogue partner + observer = single partnercategory.

  • Laos accepted as partner → SCO strength: 27 (10 members + 17 partners).

  • Decision to establish SCO Development Bank.

India’s Position

  • PM Modis address:

  • Emphasised SCOs S= Security.

  • No double standards on terrorism → common challenge for humanity.

  • Mentioned Pahalgam terror attack (April 22, 26 killed).

  • Called for coordination on terror financing, radicalisation.

  • Highlighted connectivity projects: Chabahar Port, INSTC → enhance linkages with Afghanistan & Central Asia.
  • Supported SCO reforms: new centres on organised crime, drug trafficking, cyber security.

  • Called for reform of UN & multilateral institutions.

India–Russia Bilateral (Modi–Putin Meeting) Highlights

  • Reaffirmed IndiaRussia special & privileged strategic partnership.

  • Modi stressed need for ceasefire in Ukraine; Putin blamed West & NATO expansion.

  • Both leaders discussed:

  • Deepening cooperation across economic, financial, energy sectors.

  • Regional & global issues, incl. Ukraine conflict.

  • Format: personal interaction → spoke privately in vehicle for ~1 hour before official talks.
  • Modi invited Putin for 23rd IndiaRussia annual summit later this year.

Context

  • Meeting took place amid U.S. 25% penalty on Indian goods linked to IndiaRussia oil trade.

  • Ministry of External Affairs statement avoided mention of oil trade / S. tariffs.

THE RISE & RISKS OF HEALTH INSURANCE IN INDIA

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Bhore Committee’s Vision (1946):

  • Defined UHC as quality health care for all, irrespective of ability to pay. Eight decades later, India is still far from this goal, unlike several other countries.

Insurance-Led Illusion of UHC:

  • Rapid growth of PMJAY (2018, Ayushman Bharat) and State Health Insurance Programmes (SHIPs).
  • PMJAY + SHIPs together claim ~80% population coverage, with a combined budget of ₹28,000 crore (2023–24).

  • Focused mainly on in-patient care, leaving primary and outpatient care neglected.

Structural Faultlines in Health Insurance Approach

Profit-Oriented Medicine:

  • ~⅔ of PMJAY funds go to private hospitals.

  • Promotes poorly regulated profit-seeking providers.

Bias towards Hospitalisation:

  • Insurance encourages tertiary care over preventive/primary care.
  • With ageing population (70+), risk of budget skew towards costly tertiary care.

Low Utilisation Despite High Coverage:

  • Only 35% of insured hospital patients used insurance (2022–23 data).

  • Awareness gaps, procedural hurdles, and private hospital discouragement reduce effective access.

Discrimination in Hospitals:

  • Private hospitals prefer uninsured patients (higher charges).

  • Public hospitals prefer insured patients (extra funding).

  • Creates inequities and pressures for on- spot enrolment.

Provider Grievances:

  • Low reimbursement rates + pending dues>₹12,000 crore under PMJAY.

  • 600+ hospitals have exited scheme since inception.

Fraud and Corruption Risks:

  • NHA flagged 3,200 hospitals for fraud under PMJAY.

  • Irregularities: denial of treatment, overcharging, unnecessary procedures.
  • Weak monitoring and poor transparency (audit reports not public).

Core Problem -Underinvestment in Public Health

  • Public expenditure on health in India = 1.3% of GDP (2022) vs world average 6.1%.

  • Insurance acts as a palliative, not a structural reform.

Comparative Perspective:

  • Countries like Canada, Thailand use social health insurance, but with universal coverage+ non-profit focus.
  •  India’s system remains profit-driven, not rights-based.

Way Forward for UHC:

  • Substantial increase in public health spending.
  •  Strengthening primary health care and preventive services.
  •   Strict regulation of private sector.
  •  Transparency and accountability in insurance schemes.
  • Shift focus from insurance-driven model to public provisioning-based UHC.

NOISE POLLUTION IS RISING BUT POLICY IS FALLING SILENT

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Neglected Public Health Crisis

  • Urban noise pollution exceeds CPCB limits, especially near schools, hospitals, and residential zones.
  •  Violates constitutional promises of peace, dignity, and well-being.

Institutional & Regulatory Gaps

  • National Ambient Noise Monitoring Network (2011): Intended as real-time data platform, but now functions as a passive repository.
  •  Faulty sensor placement (2530 feet high, against CPCBs 2015 guidelines).
  •  Data scattered, unenforced, politically and administratively inert.
  •   Noise Pollution Rules, 2000 provide a framework, but enforcement is symbolic.

Comparative Perspective

  • Europe: Noise data linked to public health policy; annual cost estimated at €100 billion by European Environment Agency.
  •   Led to redesign of speed zones, zoning frameworks.
  •  India: Regulatory fragmentation, poor accountability, weak institutional synergy.

Constitutional Dimensions

  • Article 21: Right to life with dignity includes environmental and mental well-being.
  •   Article 48A: Directive for environmental protection.
  •   Supreme Court (Noise Pollution In Re, 2005; reaffirmed 2024): Excessive noise violates fundamental rights.

Health & Ecological Impact

  • WHO safe limits in silent zones: 50 dB(A) day, 40 dB(A) night. Indian cities often record 6570 dB(A) near sensitive areas.
  • Noise disrupts sleep, cognition, cardiovascular health, childrens development.
  • Ecological impact: 2025 University of Auckland study urban noise disrupted common myna sleep and song patterns, impairing biodiversity communication systems.

Sociocultural & Political Dimension

  • Noise pollution invisible: unlike smog or waste, leaves no visible residue.
  •  Civic fatigue & normalization of honking, drilling, loudspeakers.
  •   Lack of public outrage → political inertia.

Policy & Governance Deficits

  • Fragmented roles: municipal bodies, traffic police, SPCBs work in silos.
  •   Lack of National Acoustic Policy (parallel to NAAQS).
  •   Poor grievance redressal mechanisms.
  •   Urban expansion & logistics traffic aggravate noise crisis.

Way Forward (Reforms)

  • Decentralisation: Give local bodies real-time access to NANMN data.
  •  Enforcement linkage: Monitoring must trigger penalties, compliance, zoning enforcement.
  •  Cultural shift: Promote sonic empathy through education, campaigns, driver training, community awareness.
  •  Sustained behavioural change: From token No Honking Day to continuous civic messaging (like seatbelt adoption).
  •   Urban design: Embed acoustic resilience in planning noise barriers, green buffers, better zoning.
  •  Rights-based approach: Recognise silence as essential to dignity, health, and livability.

ANOTHER CHANCE

KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Supreme Court’s September 1 Order (2025):
  • Directed that claims and objections to Bihar’s Special Intensive Revision (SIR) electoral roll exercise can be filed even after the deadline.

  • Ensures voters wrongfully excluded from the draft rolls get a fair chance for inclusion until the last date for filing nominations.

Election Commission of India (ECI) Clarification:

  • Applications submitted after September 1 will still be processed.
  • Both new registrations and re-inclusions use Form 6, leading to possible data conflation.

Scale of Exclusion:

  • Over 65 lakh names excluded in Bihar’s draft roll.
  •  Only ~33,000 re-inclusion claims filed versus 15 lakh new voter registrations → raises doubts about awareness, accessibility, or processing of claims.

Dispute Between ECI and Political Parties:

  • ECI’s stance: Parties failed to assist excluded voters.
  •  Parties’ stance: Claims were filed, but Block Level Officers mishandled processing.

Supreme Court’s Additional Direction:

  • Bihar State Legal Services Authority to deploy para-legal volunteers to help voters and parties.
  •  Reflects concerns over data anomalies highlighted by media investigations (e.g., The Hindu) and ground reports.

Aadhaar Issue:

  • Aadhaar accepted for excluded voters filing claims.
  •  Logical inconsistency: Aadhaar not accepted as standalone proof for those already in draft roll.

Democratic Responsibility:

  • Political parties must act beyond self-interest to safeguard universal adult suffrage.
  • Electoral roll integrity is central to free and fair elections.

REWIRING THE EQUILIBRIUM

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Historical Context & Continuity

  • India-China relations have always extended beyond bilateral aspects, influenced by global and regional factors.
  •  History shows sharp swingsperiods of cooperation and confrontationbut equilibrium and stability have been long-term goals of Indias policy.

2020 Ladakh Crisis & Repair Process

  • Relations severely strained after Chinas troop build-up in Eastern Ladakh and Galwan clashes (2020).
  •  Breakthrough in October 2024: resolution of two friction points (Demchok, Depsang).
  •   Quiet rebuilding process since then, culminating in bold announcements during Wang Yis August 2024 visit.

Exogenous Developments Shaping Ties

  • Operation Sindoor: Chinas military-intelligence support to Pakistan.
  •   Pahalgam terrorist attack: strained environment.
  •   US factor: Trumps trade war with India, unpredictability in US-China ties, and Washingtons tilt towards Pakistan.
  •  These pushed India and China to accelerate rapprochement despite persisting mistrust.

Strategic Signaling

  • Modis route to Tianjin via Tokyo underlined Indias balancing acteconomic and security engagement with Japan as a message to Beijing and Washington.
  •  India emphasizes it wont concede Asian leadership space to China, while keeping its own options diversified.

Economic Dimension

  • Worsening trade balance: ~90% of bilateral trade is Chinese exports to India → risk of India outsourcing its manufacturing future.
  •  Dependency concerns: Chinas weaponisation of dependenciesthrough exports, capital surplus, and FDI in strategic sectors.

  Indias deliberate choices:

  •   Japanese bullet train tech instead of Chinese.
  •  Indigenous 5G/6G development despite cheaper Chinese alternatives.

Panchsheel Reference

  • Xi Jinping invoked Panchsheel principles during talks → symbolic trust-building gesture.
  •  For India, Panchsheel is historically associated with betrayal (1962 War), creating skepticism.

Strategic Balance

  • India seeks a delicate balance between short- and long- term interests, economic opportunities vs. strategic caution.
  •  Partnerships with major powers must not compromise autonomy.
  • Sudden US policy shifts underline the risks of over- alignment.
  •  Lessons from Europe: maintained massive trade with China despite strong US alliance.

Tianjin Summit Outcomes

  • Consolidated the repair process initiated at Kazan.
  •   Marked stabilisation stage in India-China ties.
  •  Leaders spoke of being partners”—realistic but not idealistic.
  •  Acknowledgement: All great power relations are imperfect, driven by national interests first.

WHAT PUNJAB NEEDS

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context

  • Punjab is facing one of the worst floods in decades – over 3 lakh acres submerged.
  •   Major rivers in spate: Ravi, Sutlej, Beas, Ghaggar.
  •   Dams like Ranjit Sagar, Pong, Bhakra breached or reached danger levels.

Causes

  • Excessive Monsoon Rains
  • Initially bountiful rains – good paddy prospects.
  •   Sudden deluge in late August – disaster situation.

River Dynamics

  • Ravi river swelled, breaking two floodgates of the Madhopur barrage (19th century construction).
  • Himalayan inflows + dam overflows from Himachal Pradesh aggravated floods.

Institutional Lapses

  • Flood-preparedness meeting delayed from Feb – June (due to Delhi elections, Ludhiana bypolls).
  •  Political sparring with Haryana & Bhakra Beas Management Board (BBMB) over water release.
  •  Chronic inefficiencies in the floods & irrigation department.

Impacts

  • Human Impact – Deaths, large-scale displacement, health risks.
  • Agriculture -Paddy crop devastation in a key food- producing state.
  • Infrastructure – Barrage gates collapse, dams under stress.

  • Political Fallout – Tensions between state and Centre, Centre’s silence deepening resentment.

Relief & Response

  • Civil society initiatives → food, medicines.
  •   State government → CM Bhagwant Mann seeking ₹60,000 crore from Centre (claimed withheld funds).
  •  Neighbouring Haryana → CM Nayab Singh Saini promising aid.
  •  Centre’s role questioned → lack of solidarity message noted.

Long-Term Concerns

  • Recurring floods (2019, 2023, 2025) → systemic governance failures.
  •  Food security implications → Punjab as the backbone of India’s grain production.
  •  Climate change angle → Extreme rainfall events becoming frequent.
  •  Need for structural reforms in dam management, interstate coordination, disaster preparedness.

UNDERSTANDING THE HIGH APRIL-JUNE GDP GROWTH

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

GDP Growth Data

Q1 (April–June 2025):

  •   Real GDP growth: 7.8% (highest in 5 quarters).
  •   Nominal GDP growth: 8.8% (lowest in 5 quarters).
  •   Previous quarter (Jan–Mar 2025): 7.4% real GDP growth.

Inflation Factor

  • GDP growth rate depends on:

  • Magnitude of economic.

  • Rate of price increase (inflation).

  •  Real GDP = adjusted for inflation.

  • Nominal GDP = not adjusted for inflation.

  • WPI inflation (Q1 FY25): < 3% (lowest since Q1 FY24).

  • CPI inflation (Q1 FY25): 7%, lowest in 6 years.

GDP Deflator

  • Deflator = measure used to convert nominal GDP to real GDP.
  • Q1 FY25 GDP deflator = 0.9% → unusually low, boosting real GDP artificially.

  • Narrower difference between real & nominal GDP explained by this.

Why Deflator Matters

  • MoSPI uses WPI-heavy deflator → may understate/overstate real growth.

Example:

  • Services sector real growth: 9.3%, but after adjustment expanded 11.3% (due to deflator ~1.9%).
  • Economists argue services GDP deflator is aligned more with WPI than CPI, giving misleading results.

Single vs Double Deflation.

  • Current method: single deflator used for both input & output.

  • Problem:

  • When WPI falls faster than CPI → real growth gets exaggerated.
  • Agriculture & mining use different deflators, but most sectors rely on single deflation.

Forward Outlook

  • June 2025: WPI inflation at -0.13% (first negative in 20 months).

  • July 2025: WPI inflation 1.55% (8-year low).

  • CPI forecast (RBI): 3.1% (2025–26), lower than 2024–25. average (3.25%).

  • Implication:

  • GDP deflator may remain weak.
  • Disconnect between real GDP and high-frequency data may persist.