NEW GST REFORM FROM SEPTTER 22
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Structural Reform in GST
Move towards a two-rate system:
5% (essential & common-use items)
18% (standard rate for most goods/services)
Introduction of a 40% “special rate” → for sin goods (tobacco, pan masala, gutka, bidi, aerated/caffeinated drinks) and super-luxury goods (large cars, motorcycles>350cc, yachts, helicopters, airplanes for personal use).
Effective Date
- New rate structure effective from September 22, 2025 (most items).
- Tobacco-related items → transition later, after Centre repays loans for GST compensation to States.
Fiscal Implication
Estimated ₹48,000 crore revenue impact (based on 2023–24 consumption patterns).
Govt expects buoyancy effect and better compliance to offset losses.
- Rate reductions on daily-use items:
- From 18%/12% → 5%: hair oil, soap, shampoo, toothbrush, toothpaste, bicycles, kitchen/tableware, household articles.
- From 5% → 0%: all Indian breads (roti, chapati, paratha), paneer, ultra-HT milk.
- Processed foods: namkeens, sauces, pasta, instant noodles, chocolates, coffee, butter moved to 5%.
Health & Social Sector Benefits
Labour-Intensive & Agriculture Support
Handicrafts, marble/granite blocks, intermediate leather goods: 12% → 5%.
12 bio-pesticides & bio-menthol: 12% → 5%.
Fertilizer input chemicals (sulphuric acid, nitric acid, ammonia): 18% → 5%.
Industry & Infrastructure
Continuity
Tobacco Sector Exception
- Current regime (28% + Compensation Cess) will remain till States’ compensation loans are repaid.
- Later, tobacco & related products to be shifted to 40% slab.
SRILANKAN TAMIL REFUGEES WHO ARRIVED BEFORE 2015 EXEMPTED
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Immigration and Foreigners Act, 2025
Penal provisions:
- Entry/stay without valid passport/visa → ₹5 lakh fine or up to 5 years’ imprisonment or both.
Section 3(1), (2), (3): Requirement of passport, travel document, or visa for entry/stay.
Sri Lankan Tamil Refugees
- Exemption granted under the Immigration and Foreigners (Exemption) Order, 2025.
- Applies to Sri Lankan Tamils who entered India before January 9, 2015 and are registered with the government.
Exemption covers:
- Stay in India without valid travel documents.
- Exit from India.
- Earlier order (December 16, 2015): Waived visa fees & overstay penalty for voluntary return to Sri Lanka.
- Significance: Protects them from being treated as “illegal migrants.”
Exemption for Six Minority Communities
- Applies to Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, Jains, Parsis, Christians from Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Pakistan.
- Cut-off: Entered India before December 31, 2024.
- Purpose: Enable long-term visas (precursor to citizenship).
- Justification: Protection from religious persecution.
- Note: Exemption ≠ extension of CAA cut-off date (still December 31, 2014).
Citizenship Framework
Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2019 (CAA):
Cut-off date for eligibility: December 31, 2014.
Cut-off date for eligibility: December 31, 2014.
- Citizenship Act, 1955:
- Naturalisation requires 11 years’ aggregate stay in India.
Political Context
- BJP units (esp. West Bengal) have been demanding extension of CAA cut-off date.
- Recent confusion arose when Union MoS Sukanta Majumdar (BJP, West Bengal) posted (later deleted) thanking PM/ HM for extension.
- Clarified: Exemption = protection from deportation, not automatic CAA.
CONCEALING A JUNGE DISSENT, ERODING JUDICIARY’S AUTHORITY
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Core Concept – Culture of Justification
- Coined by Etienne Mureinik (South African law professor).
- Principle: Every exercise of public power must be explained and defended, not just commanded.
- Indian courts have invoked this principle often to demand state accountability.
- Irony: The judiciary demands justification from others but shields its own decision-making (Collegium) from scrutiny.
The Collegium System – Background
Created by Judicial Pronouncements:
- Second Judges Case (1993) → primacy to judiciary in appointments.
- Third Judges Case (1998) → institutionalised Collegium of 5 senior-most SC judges.
- Nature: Judge-made law, not part of original Constitution.
- Functions: Appointment and transfer of judges in High Courts and Supreme Court.
- Criticism: Opaque, secretive, minimal disclosure of reasoning.
Justice Nagarathna’s Dissent – Case in Point
- Objection to Collegium’s recommendation of Justice Vipul M.Pancholi.
- Reported as “grave reservations” but not officially recorded
- Resolution uploaded on SC website showed unanimity, hiding dissent.
- Government notified the appointment within 48 hours, ignoring dissent.
- Highlights: Opacity, lack of accountability, suppression of internal disagreement
Transparency Attempts & Retreat
- 2017: Collegium began publishing resolution.
- 2018: Brief experiment with fuller reasons for decisions (later withdrawn).
- Reason for rollback: Fear of reputational harm to candidates.
- Current practice: Minimal, skeletal announcements → effectively a black box system.
Critiques of Collegium Secrecy
- Reputational harm argument weak: Can be mitigated with structured disclosure.
- Political pressure argument weak: Secrecy has not stopped the executive from delaying/ignoring Collegium recommendtaion.
- Comparative Perspective:
- UK: Judicial Appointments Commission – transparent criteria,reports.
- South Africa: Judicial Service Commission – public interviews,debates.
- Legitimacy flows from openness, not secrecy.
Democracy, Judiciary & Accountability
Judiciary plays counter-majoritarian role: Protects rights, checks executive and legislature.
Independence of judiciary = cornerstone of constitutional democracy.
- But legitimacy of unelected judges depends on trust.
- Without transparency in appointments, democratic deficit deepens.
- Paradox: Judiciary demands accountability from others but shields itself.
Reform Imperatives
- Collegium must adopt culture of justification in its own functioning.
- Public reasoning would strengthen, not weaken, judicial independence.
Need for:
INDIA’S RECENT MARITIME REFORMS NEED COURSE CORRECTION
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
New legislative package (2025):
Positives / Intended Outcomes
Concerns & Criticisms
- Federalism & Centralisation
- Maritime State Development Council (chaired by Union Minister) → directs States to follow Centre’s policies (e.g., Sagarmala, Gati Shakti).
- Reduces States’ fiscal & policy autonomy in port development.
Seen as federal subordination rather than cooperative federalism.
- Judicial Independence & Dispute Resolution
- Judicial Independence & Dispute Resolution committees.
Risk: Bias, lack of impartiality, reduced investor confidence.
- Ownership Loopholes (Merchant Shipping Act, 2025)
Earlier: 100% Indian ownership required.
Now: Partial Indian ownership allowed (incl. OCI & foreign entities).
- Thresholds left to executive notification → potential dilution.
- BBCD registration: May allow foreign control of Indian-flagged vessels indefinitely.
- Risk of becoming a “flag of convenience” jurisdiction.
Small Operators & Compliance Burden
- Mandatory registration of all vessels, irrespective of size.
Coastal Shipping Act → burdensome reporting rules for small players (fishing industry particularly).
Sweeping discretion for DG Shipping to allow foreign vessels (grounds: “national security”, “strategic alignment”) → scope for arbitrariness.
Broader Implications
- Economic: Potential to boost trade, attract FDI, but compliance burdens may hurt smaller domestic players.
- Governance: Excessive centralisation → weakens federal compact.
Judicial: Erosion of independent judicial review.
Strategic: Risk of foreign dominance over Indian-flagged fleet; long-term maritime security concerns.
Regulatory Philosophy: Heavy executive discretion, limited parliamentary oversight, minimal public debate.
RAIN & REPEAT
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Hydrological Stress
- Reservoirs & barrages designed for seasonal inflows, but crises emerge when deluge coincides with near-full reservoirs (Srisailam 94%, Nagarjuna Sagar 96%).
- Tributaries & rivulets neglected → Budameru (capacity 7,000 cusecs; inflow 35,000 cusecs in 2024) flooding Vijayawada.
- Floodbanks near Bhadrachalam (Godavari) sinking/collapsing.
Infrastructure Weaknesses
- Damaged gates (Prakasam Barrage) left unrepaired, hampering water release.
Urban vulnerabilities:
Encroached stormwater channels, incomplete desilting, concretised land → reduced absorption.
Infrastructure exists but is not maintained or upgraded with urgency.
Governance & Disaster Management
- Disaster management apparatus effective in saving lives → institutional maturity.
- Weakness: reactive, relief-focused, not risk-reduction oriented.
Telangana → ₹1 crore per district (short notice) for relief.
Structural solutions (floodbanks, diversion channels) remain incomplete.
- Protests highlight opaque relief fund utilisation and unfinished works.
Recurrent Pattern
- In both 2024 & 2025:
- Late Aug–early Sept extreme rainfall.
- Krishna & Godavari systems severely strained.
- Vijayawada inundated.
- Public protests ensued.
Way Forward / Reform Agenda
Reservoir Management:
- Real-time hydrological modelling.
- Pre-deluge drawdown for flood cushion creation.
Urban Planning:
- Prioritise drainage networks.
- Ensure permeable land reserves.
- Move beyond cosmetic desilting.
Flood Infrastructure:
- Continuous (not episodic) maintenance of floodbanks & sluices.
- Depoliticised upkeep insulated from political cycles.
Governance Mindset:
- Avoid “fatalism” that extreme rainfall overwhelms all→ reform still possible.
TARIFF IMPACTING 55% INDIA EXPORTS TO US
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Tariffs Impact: ~55% of Indian exports to US currently under punitive tariffs (as high as 50%).
Affected Sectors: Mostly consumer goods → globally large markets, hence diversification possible.
Policy Approach Needed:
- Short-term: Mitigation support for most-exposed sectors.
- Long-term: Finding new markets, leveraging FTAs (e.g., India–UK).
- Global Context: Despite US measures, ~87% of global trade continues normally → scope for trade deepening.
Russian Oil & Balance of Payments
- Sovereign Choice Principle: Nations must retain autonomy to buy energy from any source.
- Economic Benefit: Cheaper Russian oil → significant savings for India’s BoP.
- Counterfactual Impact: Without Russian oil, global market prices would spike, hurting India’s import bill.
- Legal Justification: India allowed to continue purchases to mitigate instability as world’s 3rd largest oil importer.
Sanctions as a Source of Instability
- Ignored by Multilateral Institutions: IMF, World Bank etc. have not fully quantified sanctions’ spillover effects.
- Sanctions & Counter-Sanctions: Comparable to war costs in terms of economic instability.
- Investment Climate: Secondary sanctions + tariff uncertainty → high investment risk globally (“China + wait” phase).
- Policy Gap: Need granular estimates of spillover costs to inform global policymaking.
BRICS & Alternative Institutions
- Expanded BRICS: Now includes new members beyond the original five → inclusive, growing bloc.
- Not a Counterpoint to the West: Framed as a cooperative institution for emerging economies’ interests.
Institutional Tools:
- New Development Bank (NDB)
- Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB)
- Contingent Reserve Arrangement (CRA) → risk- mitigation frameworks.
Climate Financing & CBAM (Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism)
- Developed vs Developing Divide: Developed nations consume high-carbon products; developing nations bear adjustment costs.
- CBAM Implementation: EU’s CBAM effective 1 Jan 2026 → non-tariff barrier for exports from emerging economies.
- Geopolitical Bias: EU unlikely to impose CBAM on the US (due to trade agreement) → creates asymmetry.
- India’s Opportunity: Use US carve-out precedent to argue for relief/exemptions for emerging economies.
AN EPIC EXCLUSION
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Electors Photo Identity Card (EPIC): Origins and Significance
- Introduced by Election Commission of India (ECI) in 1990s, under T.N. Seshan’s leadership.
- Aimed to curb impersonation, bogus voting, and electoral malpractice.
- Became the most widely possessed ID in India, central to voter identification.
- Symbol of ECI’s independence and assertion of electoral integrity.
- Funded after confrontation with PM P.V. Narasimha Rao (Article 75(5) anecdote).
Current Controversy (Bihar SIR – 2025)
- Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls announced in Bihar.
- Applicants asked to submit any of 11 documents to prove identity/residence.
- EPIC and Aadhaar excluded from the accepted list → raised litigation & SC intervention.
Supreme Court’s response:
- Surprised at exclusion of EPIC & Aadhaar.
- Directed inclusion of Aadhaar (limited to deleted voters), not EPIC.
- ECI’s stance: Claimed compliance with Court, but continued non-acceptance of EPIC.
Issues and Concerns
- Paradox: EPIC valid for 2024 General Election (642 million voters) but invalid for roll revision.
- Symbolic irony: On National Voters’ Day (25th Jan), President of India personally hands over EPICs to new voters.
- Risk of disenfranchisement:
- Particularly severe in Bihar (high migration, rural poor).
- Many citizens possess only EPIC as ID.
- Exclusion may deter enrolment, reduce participation, erode trust.
- Public perception: Arbitrary/inconsistent rules undermine credibility of elections.
Constitutional & Democratic Dimensions
- Free and fair elections = part of basic structure doctrine (Kesavananda Bharati case).
- ECI’s independence under Article 324 questioned if its own reform (EPIC) sidelined.
- Right to vote & participation linked to Article 326 (universal adult suffrage).
- Trust in institutions: Democracy depends not only on procedure but also on perception of fairness.
Way Forward / Reform Imperatives
- Reinstate EPIC as valid document with safeguards against duplication/misuse.
- Ensure no genuine voter excluded for lack of alternative IDs (passport, DL, etc.).
- Transparent communication by ECI: Why excluded? Any evidence of misuse?
- Use controversy as an opportunity for civic education.
- Reaffirm EPIC’s central role as an anti-fraud measure & democratic symbol.
DELHI HC: DENIED BAIL TO UMAR KHALID
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- Delhi HC (Sept 2025 ruling) denied bail to Umar Khalid, Sharjeel Imam, Gulfisha Fatima, and 7 others.
- Accused in the Feb 2020 Delhi riots case; charged under UAPA, 1967.
- In custody for 5+ years without trial commencing.
Legal Provisions Involved
UAPA Sections:
- Section 15 – defines a “terrorist act” (includes causing terror by explosives, firearms, or any other means).
- Section 16 – prescribes punishment (including death penalty) for terrorist acts.
- Section 13 – “unlawful activities” (lesser offence, bail provisions less stringent).
- Section 43D(5) – bar on bail if accusations are prima facie true, unless exceptional delay/lapse.
Prosecution’s Case
- Riots were a “deep-rooted, premeditated conspiracy”.
- Allegations: conspiracy through WhatsApp groups + secret meetings; “chakka jam” = “any other means” of striking terror.
- 54 deaths, 1,500+ properties
Key evidence:
- WhatsApp chats.
- Testimony of protected witnesses (“Radium”,“Sodium”).
- Alleged open discussions on escalation of violence.
Defence Arguments
- Evidence from protected witnesses unreliable (delayed, vague, not cross-examinable).
- Actions, at worst, fall under Section 13 UAPA (not terrorism).
- Bail should be given on parity with co-accused (Kalita, Narwal, Tanha).
- Prolonged incarceration without trial violates liberty.
Court’s Reasoning
- At bail stage: evidence presumed true; credibility not examined.
- No mini-trial permissible during bail hearing.
- Found prima facie grounds for allegations → bail
- On parity: SC had earlier directed that 2021 bail to Kalita/Narwal/Tanha cannot be precedent.
- On delay: acknowledged 5 years in jail, but said “hurried trial” also risks fairness.
Constitutional & Legal Issues
- Article 21 (Right to Life & Liberty) vs State’s interest in security & terrorism cases.
- Due process concerns: prolonged undertrial detention = punishment before conviction.
- Culture of justification vs culture of suspicion in anti- terror laws.
- Bail as a rule vs UAPA making jail the rule.
Supreme Court Precedent
- Union of India v. K.A. Najeeb (2021):
- Bail granted when incarceration exceeds 5 years and trial unlikely soon.
- Restrictive UAPA bail provisions “melt down” if liberty disproportionately curtailed.
- Delhi HC distinguished current case, citing “ongoing trial process”.