US Deal Excludes Key Sectors | Turtle Trails Worry Conservationists | 84% Waste -Pickers SC, St : GOVT. | India Shifts To Electrons Now | AI Investment Cucle: Applications | End In Sight | Stop Date Sharing, SC Tell Meta | india -US Shape Asia Balance | Economy Still Seeks A Plan | Integration Deal Open New Doors | SC Mensturual Ruling Upholds Dignity
US DEAL EXCLUDES KEY SECTORS
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context Of the News
- India and the United States concluded a bilateral trade deal announced by their leaders.
- The United States reduced its reciprocal tariff on Indian exports from 25% to 18%.
- Additional 25% penalty tariffs imposed due to India’s import of Russian oil were fully withdrawn.
- India excluded sensitive agricultural commodities and dairy products from the agreement.
- Final technical detailing and joint statement are awaited.
Key Points
- Agriculture and dairy excluded to protect: Small and marginal farmers
- Cooperative-based dairy ecosystem Sectors benefiting from tariff reduction:
- Textiles and apparel
- Leather and footwear Gems and jewellery
- Plastics and rubber goods Organic chemicals
- Machinery and aircraft components
- U.S. indicated Indian imports worth USD 500 billion over five years, covering:
- Energy imports (LNG)
- Civil nuclear equipment
- Data centre infrastructure
- Advanced semiconductor and AI chips
- Tariffs had earlier led to export distress in marine and textile sectors.
Static Linkages
- WTO framework:
- Bound tariffs vs applied tariffs
- Most Favoured Nation (MFN) principle
- Agreement on Agriculture (AoA):
- Market access
- Domestic support limits
- India’s Foreign Trade Policy (FTP) 2023:
- Export competitiveness
- Integration with global value chains
- Economic Survey:
- Trade deficit and Current Account Deficit (CAD)
- Parliamentary conventions:
- Executive primacy in treaty-making
- Post-facto legislative oversight
Critical Analysis
- Advantages
- Protects politically sensitive agricultural and dairy sectors.
- Improves export competitiveness of labour- intensive industries.
- Withdrawal of penalty tariffs reduces trade uncertainty.
- Enhances strategic economic engagement with the U.S.
- Concerns
- High import commitments may widen trade deficit.
- Limited transparency and parliamentary discussion.
- Risk of over-dependence on U.S. technology and energy.
- Long-term impact on domestic manufacturing remains unclear.
Way Forward
- Institutionalise Parliamentary scrutiny of trade agreements.
- Conduct sector-wise cost–benefit analysis before implementation.
- Align import commitments with Atmanirbhar Bharat objectives.
- Strengthen export diversification beyond the U.S. market.
- Provide adjustment support to MSMEs and exporters.
TURTLE TRAILS WORRY CONSERVATIONISTS
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
- Union Budget 2026–27 proposed development of “turtle trails” at sea turtle nesting sites along the coasts of Odisha, Karnataka and Kerala.
- The proposal has raised concerns among conservationists regarding anthropogenic pressure on mass nesting (arribada) sites of Olive Ridley sea turtles.
- Odisha hosts the largest mass nesting sites globally for Olive Ridley turtles, particularly at Gahirmatha and Rushikulya.
Key Points
- Arribada: A rare phenomenon of synchronized mass nesting by Olive Ridley turtles.
- Occurs at very limited global locations – India, Costa Rica, and a few other beaches worldwide.
- Rushikulya rookery recorded ~7 lakh nesting turtles during February 2025 (Forest Department data).
- Sea turtles are highly sensitive to artificial light, noise, and human presence, which affects nesting and hatchling survival.
- Experts argue that “turtle trails” imply tourism infrastructure, which may disturb nesting ecology.
Static Linkages
- Olive Ridley turtles are listed under Schedule I of the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972.
- India is a party to the Convention on Migratory Species (CMS), which includes marine turtles.
- Coastal Regulation Zone (CRZ) Notification restricts construction and commercial activity in ecologically sensitive coastal areas.
- National Wildlife Action Plan (2017–2031) prioritises habitat protection and minimising human interference.
- NCERT Ecology: Impact of light pollution and habitat disturbance on wildlife behaviour.
Critical Analysis
- Concerns
- Mass nesting beaches require strict no- disturbance zones during nesting season.
- Ecotourism has historically caused ecological damage due to weak regulation.
- Absence of stakeholder consultation before policy announcement.
- Existing enforcement mechanisms (fishing bans, patrolling) remain weak.
- Arguments in Favour
- Potential for awareness generation and alternative livelihoods if strictly regulated.
- Core Issue
- Conflict between tourism-led conservation model and science-based habitat protection.
Way Forward
- Declare arribada beaches as seasonal or permanent “No-Go Zones”.
- Promote off-site interpretation centres and virtual tourism instead of physical access.
- Strengthen enforcement of fishing bans and night patrolling during breeding season.
- Mandatory scientific consultation and EIA before eco-tourism projects in sensitive habitats.
- Align coastal tourism policies with National Wildlife Action Plan and CRZ norms.
84% WASTE-PICKERS SC,ST:GOVT.
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
- Union government tabled official data for the first time on enumeration of waste-pickers in Parliament.
- Data released by the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment.
- Enumeration carried out under the NAMASTE Scheme.
- Aim: formal recognition, safety, and eradication of hazardous sanitation work.
Key Points
- Total waste-pickers enumerated (urban areas): 1.52 lakh (till 23 January).
- Gender composition:
- Women: 48.7%
- Men: 51.3%
- Transgender: 12 persons
- Social category (All India):
- SC: 60.3%
- ST: 10.5%
- OBC: 13.7%
- General category: 10.7%
- Others: 7,402
- State-level anomalies:
- Delhi & Goa: General category forms majority.
- West Bengal: 42.4% General category.
- Definition (NAMASTE):
- Waste-pickers are informal workers engaged in collection and recovery of recyclable solid waste.
- Related sanitation data:
- ~89,000 sewer/septic tank workers enumerated.
- 95.8% men; ~92% from SC/ST/OBC backgrounds.
Static Linkages
- Article 17 – Abolition of untouchability (caste- linked sanitation work).
- Article 21 – Right to life with dignity. DPSPs:
- Article 39(e): Protection of workers’ health.
- Article 47: Public health responsibility of the State.
- Prohibition of Employment as Manual Scavengers Act, 2013.
- Solid Waste Management Rules, 2016 – role of ULBs.
Critical Analysis
- Strengths
- First national-level official database of waste- pickers.
- Enables formal recognition by Urban Local Bodies.
- Highlights gender dimension in informal urban labour.
- Limitations
- Enumeration largely urban-focused.
- Data collection ≠ rehabilitation or livelihood security.
- Continued caste concentration reflects structural inequality.
- State-level variations indicate migration and informal labour gaps.
Way Forward
- Extend enumeration to rural and peri-urban areas.
- Link waste-pickers to social security schemes (e-Shram, insurance).
- Skill development and alternative livelihood pathways.
- Full mechanisation of sewer/septic cleaning.
- Time-bound rehabilitation targets with State accountability.
INDIA SHIFTS TO ELECTRONS NOW
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
- Global industry is shifting from fuel-based energy use (“molecules”) to electricity-based energy use (“electrons”).
- China has achieved nearly 50% industrial electrification, while India remains at ~25%.
- Electrification is emerging as a key determinant of industrial competitiveness, export resilience, and decarbonisation.
- Carbon-linked trade instruments such as the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) increase pressure on carbon-intensive manufacturing.
Key Points
- Electrons vs Molecules
- Molecules: Coal, oil, gas, LPG directly combusted in boilers, kilns, engines.
- Electrons: Electricity supplied via grid for industrial heat, motion, and processes.
- Efficiency Aspect
- Electric motors: ~90–95% efficiency.
- Internal combustion engines: ~30–35% efficiency.
- Comparative Status
- China: ~50% of industrial energy from electricity; higher green electricity share.
- India: ~25% industrial electrification; green electricity ~7–8% of final energy.
- Economy-wide electrification: China (~31%), USA (~32%), EU (~34%).
- Sectoral Evidence
- Steel: China increased Electric Arc Furnace (EAF) steel via policy support and scrap recycling.
- Cement: Electrification of grinding, material handling; waste heat recovery (30–35 kWh/tonne).
- Strategic Outcome
- Electrification improves automation, process control, and ease of decarbonisation.
Static Linkages
- Electricity as a secondary energy carrier with higher conversion efficiency (NCERT – Geography).
- Industrial competitiveness depends on energy cost, reliability, and quality (NCERT – Economics).
- Hard-to-abate sectors: steel and cement (Economic Survey; IPCC).
- Energy security dimensions: availability, affordability, reliability (Government of India framework).
- Trade–climate linkage through carbon pricing and border measures (WTO discussions).
Critical Analysis
- Pros
- Enhances export competitiveness under carbon-sensitive trade regimes.
- Reduces exposure to imported oil and gas price volatility.
- Enables industrial automation and productivity gains.
- Facilitates long-term decarbonisation pathways.
- Cons / Challenges
- High capital cost of electrifying legacy industrial systems.
- Grid reliability and power quality issues, especially for MSMEs.
- Risk of “grey electrification” if electricity remains coal-dominated.
- Limited scrap ecosystem constrains EAF expansion in India.
- Cement calcination emissions remain structurally difficult to eliminate.
- Stakeholder Issues
- MSMEs face financing and technology barriers.
- Export-oriented firms face CBAM-related compliance pressure.
- Power sector requires grid modernisation, not only capacity addition.
Way Forward
- Launch a National Mission on Industrial Electrification.
- Shift policy focus from MW addition to MWh delivery to industry.
- Mandate electrification norms in new industrial parks and corridors.
- Expand scrap markets and incentivise renewable-linked EAF steel.
- Support waste heat recovery, electrified kilns, and CCUS pilots in cement.
- Provide concessional finance and technical support to MSMEs.
- Integrate digitalisation for energy efficiency and carbon accounting.
- Accelerate transition towards green electrons, not just electrification
AI INVESTMENT CYCLE: APPLICATIONS
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
- Global Artificial Intelligence (AI) ecosystem is undergoing a transition from infrastructure-led growth to application-led value creation.
- Despite heavy investment in data centres, chips and foundation models, profitability of core AI infrastructure remains weak.
- Recent global investment trends indicate that AI applications integrated into enterprise workflows are emerging as the primary drivers of revenue, adoption, and margins.
- This shift has implications for competition policy, regulation, innovation financing and digital economy governance.
Key Points
- Global AI infrastructure spending (2025):~$320 billion
- Includes GPUs, cloud computing, data centres and foundation models.
- Foundation model providers face:
- High inference and operational costs
- Intense price competition
- Thin or negative profit margins
- AI application spending (2025): ~$19 billion
- Over 50% of generative AI expenditure
- ~6% of global software market within 3 years
- Enterprise adoption:
- AI applications increasingly used in coding, customer service, workflow automation
- Departmental AI market size (2025): ~$7.3 billion
- Coding tools constitute the largest share
- Investment trends:
- Sharp rise in private equity and M&A activity focused on AI applications
- Majority of deals are add-on acquisitions for existing firms
- Profitability outlook:
- Generative AI turned profitable at aggregate level in 2025
- Majority of profits accrue to end-solution providers, not infrastructure sellers
Static Linkages
- Technology adoption lifecycle
- Platform and network effect economics
- Value chain analysis (upstream vs downstream capture)
- Competition and monopoly theory
- Intellectual Property Rights in digital economy
- Data as an economic resource
- Regulatory lag in emerging technologies
Critical Analysis
- Positive Aspects
- Application-based AI improves productivity across sectors
- Vertical-specific AI tools create sustainable business models
- Reduces dependence on speculative venture capital funding
- Encourages outcome-based technology adoption
- Concerns
- Vertical integration by foundation model providers may reduce competition
- High entry barriers for startups due to compute dependency
- Copyright disputes over training data
- Privacy risks from autonomous AI agents accessing sensitive data
- Acqui-hire practices may weaken innovation ecosystems
Way Forward
- Encourage application-layer innovation rather than infrastructure concentration
- Strengthen competition scrutiny for AI-related mergers and acquisitions
- Allow regulatory flexibility for experimentation at application level
- Update data protection and privacy frameworks for AI agents
- Support startups through:
- Open datasets
- Affordable compute access
- Public digital infrastructure
- Promote ethical and accountable AI deployment
END IN SIGHT
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- India and the United States announced a trade understanding involving a sharp reduction in
- U.S. tariffs on Indian imports.
- Tariffs reportedly reduced from 50% to 18%, but implementation timeline remains unclear.
- Announcement made via social media, not through formal joint statements.
- Ambiguity persists on:
- Nature of the deal (mini-deal / first tranche / full BTA).
- India’s reciprocal commitments.
- U.S. claim that India would stop buying Russian oil has not been officially confirmed by India.
Key Points
- Beneficiary sectors:
- Textiles
- Apparel
- Footwear Leather
- Engineering goods
- These sectors are labour-intensive and export- oriented.
- Russian oil constitutes ~30–35% of India’s crude oil imports.
- Complete stoppage of Russian oil would:
- Affect India’s energy security.
- Increase import costs.
- Impact defence and strategic relations.
- Indian markets reacted positively:
- Stock indices rose.
- Rupee appreciated.
- India–EU trade deal expected to further improve export competitiveness.
- Indian exporters still face slightly higher tariffs compared to ASEAN nations enjoying MFN benefits.
Static Linkages
- MFN principle under WTO allows preferential trade agreements (GATT Article XXIV).
- Trade policy instruments:
- Foreign Trade Policy
- Customs Tariff Act, 1975
- Energy security as a pillar of economic stability (Economic Survey, NITI Aayog).
- Parliamentary oversight is a constitutional convention, not a legal mandate.
- Trade diplomacy linked with strategic autonomy.
Critical Analysis
- Positives
- Enhances export competitiveness.
- Relief to MSMEs and labour-intensive sectors.
- Strengthens India–U.S. economic engagement.
- Concerns
- Lack of transparency on India’s commitments.
- Risk to strategic autonomy in energy decisions.
- Possible strain on India–Russia relations.
- Parliamentary non-discussion on major strategic realignment.
- Continued tariff disadvantage compared to ASEAN exporters.
Way Forward
- Place trade and energy commitments before Parliament.
- Maintain diversified crude oil sourcing.
- Ensure trade deals align with domestic manufacturing goals.
- Balance economic diplomacy with strategic autonomy.
- Use FTAs to secure market access beyond tariff cuts.
STOP DATA SHARING,SC TELL META
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
- The Supreme Court of India heard appeals filed by Meta Platforms and WhatsApp LLC against a judgment of the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal.
- NCLAT had upheld a ₹213.14 crore penalty imposed by the Competition Commission of India for abuse of dominant position via WhatsApp’s 2021 privacy policy.
- The Supreme Court expressed serious concerns over data sharing, user consent, monopoly power, and violation of constitutional values.
- The Court may impose interim restrictions on data sharing pending final adjudication.
Key Points
- CCI penalised WhatsApp for forcing acceptance of data-sharing terms as a condition for service.
- WhatsApp was found to be a dominant player in the relevant messaging market.
- The “opt-out” mechanism was criticised as illusory and non-voluntary.
- Supreme Court linked privacy, consent, and competition law with constitutional principles.
- Data sharing for commercial exploitation and targeted advertising was flagged.
- Penalty amount deposited; withdrawal stayed by Court.
Static Linkages
- Right to Privacy is a fundamental right under Article 21 (Justice K.S. Puttaswamy judgment).
- Competition Act, 2002 – Section 4 (Abuse of Dominant Position).
- Informed Consent as a core principle of autonomy and dignity.
- Information Asymmetry between digital platforms and consumers.
- Network effects leading to monopolistic tendencies in digital markets.
- Constitutional morality as a guiding principle for governance.
Critical Analysis
- Issues Identified
- Consent obtained under take-it-or-leave-it conditions lacks voluntariness.
- Complex legal language undermines informed decision-making.
- Dominant digital platforms can coerce users without meaningful alternatives.
- Commercial exploitation of personal data raises ethical and constitutional concerns.
- Weak enforcement framework for Big Tech regulation.
- Constitutional Dimensions
- Violation of dignity and autonomy under Article 21.
- Conflict between economic power and individual rights.
- Need to balance innovation with constitutional safeguards.
Way Forward
- Enforce clear, simple, and granular consent mechanisms.
- Strengthen ex-ante regulation of digital gatekeepers.
- Ensure data minimisation and purpose limitation norms.
- Improve coordination between competition, consumer, and data regulators.
- Enhance digital literacy to empower informed consumer choice.
- Align competition enforcement with constitutional values.
INDIA- US TO SHAPE ASIA BALANCE
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- Announcement of an India–US trade deal (Feb 2025) after prolonged tariff-related tensions.
- Follows bilateral summit between Narendra Modi and Donald Trump in Washington.
- Marks stabilisation of India–US relations after a phase of transactional diplomacy.
- Enables renewed focus on Indo-Pacific, defence industrialisation, and critical technologies.
Key Points
- Trade deal yet to be formally concluded; requires negotiations on tariffs, market access, and supply chains.
- India followed a policy of strategic restraint during tariff pressures.
- Bilateral partnership supported by institutional depth built over 25 years.
- Pakistan lacks strategic parity with India in US policy due to economic divergence.
- India’s Russian oil imports are market-driven, not strategic alignment.
- The US Indo-Pacific strategy aligns with India’s vision of a multipolar Asia.
- China remains the primary strategic variable in India–US relations.
- India’s economic diplomacy increasingly oriented toward US, Europe, and Anglo-Saxon economies.
Static Linkages
- Balance of Power theory (NCERT – Political Science).
- Strategic Autonomy in India’s foreign policy.
- Trade liberalisation under WTO framework.
- Energy security and diversification (Economic Survey).
- SAGAR doctrine and Indo-Pacific maritime strategy.
Critical Analysis
- Positives
- Reduces trade uncertainty between India and the US.
- Strengthens India’s role in Indo-Pacific security.
- Enhances cooperation in defence manufacturing and technology.
- Supports India’s economic integration with advanced economies.
- Concerns
- Risk of excessive economic dependence on Western markets.
- Trade concessions may affect sensitive domestic sectors.
- Managing Russia ties without strategic contradiction.
- Transactional US approach may cause future volatility.
Way Forward
- Early formalisation of the trade agreement.
- Institutionalise defence and technology cooperation.
- Diversify energy sources while maintaining strategic autonomy.
- Use Indo-Pacific convergence to expand regional influence.
- Align economic diplomacy with long-term industrial growth.
ECONOMY STILL SEEKS A PLAN- Union Budget highlighted multiple employment, skilling and industrial promotion schemes amid concerns over weak job creation.
- Implementation delays, low outcomes and fiscal under-utilisation of flagship schemes have raised questions on India’s growth and employment strategy.
- The issue assumes significance in the backdrop of global supply chain realignment and India’s demographic dividend.
Key Points
- Employment Linked Incentive (ELI) Scheme
- Announced with an outlay of ₹2 lakh crore.
- Target: 4.1 crore jobs
- Operationalisation delayed by nearly one year.
- No publicly available evidence of net job creation so far (PRS India).
- PM Internship Schem
- Target: 1 crore internships over five years.
- Actual outcomes:
- 1.65 lakh offers issued.
- ~16,000 joined.
- High dropout rate (~41%).
- Very limited transition to regular employment.
- Allocation reduced sharply in the latest Budget.
- Production Linked Incentive (PLI) Scheme
- Total outlay: ₹1.97 lakh crore across 14 sectors.
- Only ~12% of committed incentives disbursed.
- Benefits concentrated in a few large firms.
- Domestic firms struggled to meet production and investment thresholds.
- WTO dispute concerns over local value-addition requirements.
- Skill Development (PMKVY)
- ₹10,000 crore spent to skill around 1 crore youth.
- CAG audit findings:
- Over 90% beneficiary bank accounts invalid or non-functional.
- Weak monitoring and verification mechanisms.
- Foreign Direct Investment
- Net FDI inflows declined sharply in FY25.
- Indicates rising repatriation and investor caution despite FTAs.
- Semiconductor Ecosystem
- Budgetary allocation for fabrication reduced in revised estimates.
- Delays in flagship fab projects.
- India has strong chip design capabilities but weak manufacturing depth.
Static Linkages
- Demographic Dividend and Employment Elasticity of Growth (NCERT – Indian Economy)
- Role of Industrial Policy in Structural Transformation
- WTO Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures
- Fiscal Policy and Public Expenditure Effectiveness
- Accountability of Public Spending (CAG, Article 149)
Critical Analysis
- Positive Aspects
- Large fiscal commitment towards manufacturing and employment.
- Strategic focus on sunrise sectors.
- Use of incentives to attract private investment.
- Challenges
- Gap between announcements and implementation.
- Low absorption of allocated funds.
- Weak outcome monitoring. Skill–industry mismatch.
- Over-centralisation affecting policy adaptability. WTO compliance risks.
Way Forward
- Shift from scheme-based approach to outcome- based policy design.
- Strengthen independent evaluation and real-time monitoring.
- Improve Centre–State coordination in employment generation.
- Align skilling programmes with local labour market needs.
- Redesign incentives to reward value addition and job creation.
- Build specialised technical capacity within government.
INTEGRATION DEAL OPENS NEW DOORS
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- India and the United States have concluded a bilateral trade agreement after prolonged uncertainty.
- The agreement follows India’s recent trade engagements with the European Union, indicating a broader shift in trade policy.
- US tariffs on Indian exports have been reduced from 50% to 18%, effective immediately.
- The deal comes amid geopolitical instability, global supply-chain reconfiguration, and protectionist pressures.
- Financial markets responded positively, reflecting improved investor confidence.
Key Points
- Trade Competitiveness:
- Tariff reduction places India in a more favourable position vis-à-vis export competitors such as Vietnam, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, and China.
- Energy Trade Aspect:
- India has been reducing crude oil imports from Russia and increasing imports from the US.
- US share in India’s crude oil imports rose to 7.48% (Apr–Oct) from 4.43% in the corresponding previous period.
- Capital Flows:
- Removal of trade uncertainty may encourage FDI inflows and reverse FPI outflows ($18.9 billion withdrawn last year).
- Supply Chains:
- The deal supports India’s role in the China- Plus-One strategy, enhancing manufacturing relocation prospects.
- Macroeconomic Impact:
- Positive impact observed on equity markets and rupee stability.
Static Linkages
- Comparative advantage and gains from trade Tariff and non-tariff barriers
- Balance of Payments – Capital Account
- Foreign Direct Investment vs Foreign Portfolio Investment
- Energy security and diversification of oil imports
- Global value chains and manufacturing competitiveness
Critical Analysis
- Positive Aspects
- Enhances export competitiveness through preferential market access.
- Strengthens India’s economic engagement with Western economies.
- Improves investor sentiment and capital inflow prospects.
- Supports diversification of supply chains away from China.
- Signals a shift away from inward-looking protectionism.
- Concerns
- Details of the agreement remain unclear, especially on energy commitments.
- Benefits may be sector-specific, not broad- based.
- Risk of reduced policy space in future trade negotiations.
- Domestic constraints (logistics cost, regulatory burden, skills) may limit gains.
- Potential trade-off with strategic autonomy.
Way Forward
- Align trade agreements with domestic structural reforms.
- Improve logistics, infrastructure, and ease of doing business.
- Ensure diversification in energy sourcing to maintain flexibility.
- Strengthen MSME integration into global value chains.
- Pursue high-quality trade agreements while safeguarding national interests.
SC MENSTRUAL RULING UPHOLDS DIGNITY- The Supreme Court of India delivered a judgment recognising menstrual hygiene as an essential component of dignity, health, education and gender equality.
- The Court directed government and private schools to ensure:
- Free supply of sanitary pads
- Availability of gender-segregated functional toilets
- Safe disposal mechanisms for menstrual waste
- Timeframe for implementation: three months. The ruling addresses persistent stigma, infrastructural gaps, and discrimination faced by menstruating girls, particularly in government schools.
- The judgment reinforces existing but poorly implemented policy advisories.
Key Points
- Menstruation acknowledged as a systemic concern, not a private or individual issue.
- Poor menstrual hygiene management (MHM) contributes to:
- School absenteeism
- Dropout rates among adolescent girls
- Ministry of Education (2021) issued guidelines for:
- Sensitisation of teachers and staff
- Dispelling myths around menstruation
- World Health Organization (WHO) recognises MHM as critical for adolescent health.
- The Court highlighted that policies often assume the male body as the default, leading to exclusion of girls’ lived realities.
- Judgment expands the scope of substantive equality and dignity.
Static Linkages
- Article 21 – Right to Life with dignity Article 14 – Equality before law
- Article 15 – Prohibition of discrimination on grounds of sex
- Article 39(e) – Protection of health of women
- Article 42 – Just and humane conditions of work and maternity relief
- Swachh Bharat Mission – Swachh Vidyalaya component
- Rashtriya Kishor Swasthya Karyakram (RKSK)
- National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 – Access, equity and inclusion
Critical Analysis
- Strengths
- Moves beyond formal equality to real, lived equality.
- Strengthens constitutional interpretation of dignity.
- Aligns education policy with public health goals.
- Addresses structural causes of gender-based exclusion.
- Limitations / Challenges
- Uneven implementation capacity across states.
- Inadequate sanitation and waste management infrastructure.
- Limited training and sensitisation of school personnel.
- Monitoring and accountability mechanisms remain weak.
- Constitutional Dimension
- Reinforces transformative constitutionalism.
- Emphasises dignity as a positive obligation of the State.
Way Forward
- Dedicated budgetary allocation for MHM in schools.
- Institutionalised sensitisation training for teachers and staff.
- Integration of menstrual health into school health education.
- Strengthen waste disposal infrastructure through local bodies.
- Inter-departmental coordination between education, health, and WCD ministries.
- Adopt a life-cycle approach to women’s health policy.