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26 May 2026

SC Blames NTA For 2026 NEET Paper Leak | Kerala Lynching Case: HC Acquits One, Gives Life Term To 12 Others | Finance Commission Transfers And Equity Concerns | India-Australia: Bridging Trade And Trust Barriers | From Black To Grey | Baby Bait | Dead Ends in Bengal Need New Directions From Both Sides | Ghazipur to J&K: Healing Drug Addiction Wounds | Dust Is Easiest To Clean — The Time is Now | Health Indicators show Gains And Disparities

SC BLAMES NTA FOR 2026 NEET PAPER LEAK 

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • The Supreme Court criticised the National Testing Agency (NTA) over the alleged NEET-UG 2026 paper leak.
  • Around 23 lakh students were affected after cancellation of the examination.
  • A CBI probe is underway; re-examination scheduled on June 21, 2026.
  • The Court observed that despite reforms suggested after the 2024 NEET controversy, adequate safeguards were not implemented.
  • Petitions before the Court sought: Restructuring/replacement of NTA Conversion of NTA into a statutory body through Parliamentary law Shift to Computer-Based Testing (CBT)
  • Digital locking and encryption of question papers

Key Points

  • NTA was established in 2017 under the Ministry of Education as a registered society.
  • Conducts major examinations:
    • NEET
    • JEE Main
    • CUET
    • UGC-NET
  • Supreme Court in 2024 constituted a committee headed by former ISRO Chairman K. Radhakrishnan.
  • Key recommendations:
    • Transition to CBT model
    • Stronger cybersecurity systems
    • End-to-end encrypted paper transmission
    • Improved monitoring and accountability
  • Petitioners argued that NTA lacks:
    • Parliamentary accountability
    • Statutory backing
    • Direct institutional oversight mechanisms

Static Linkages

  • Article 14 → Equality before law and non arbitrariness in state action.
  • Article 21 → Fair procedure and protection of dignity.
  • Judicial Review under Articles 32 and 226.
  • Statutory bodies are created through Acts of
  • Parliament/State Legislature.
  • E-governance promotes transparency and efficiency in public administration.
  • Cybersecurity is a key component of digital governance.
  • Second ARC emphasised accountability and citizen centric governance.
  • Public examinations are linked with meritocracy and equal opportunity.

Critical Analysis

  • Significance of Reforms
    • CBT reduces physical paper leak risks.
    • Digital systems can improve transparency and efficiency.
    • Statutory status may strengthen accountability mechanisms.
    • Judicial scrutiny enhances institutional responsibility.
  • Challenges
    • Digital divide may disadvantage rural candidates.
    • Cyberattacks and data breaches remain risks in CBT.
    • Weak institutional accountability reduces public trust.
    • Repeated exam leaks create psychological stress among aspirants.
  • Constitutional & Governance Concerns
    • Fair examinations are linked to equality ofopportunity.
    • Failure of exam integrity affects credibility of public institutions.
    • Raises concerns regarding administrative accountability and governance capacity.

Way Forward

  • Enact a comprehensive law for public examination integrity.
  • Convert NTA into a statutory autonomous authority.
  • Gradual nationwide shift towards secure CBT infrastructure.
  • Mandatory cybersecurity audits and encryption systems.
  • Independent oversight and regular parliamentary review.
  • Time-bound grievance redressal mechanisms.
  • Strong penal provisions for paper leak networks

KERALA LYNCHING CASE: HC ACQUITS ONE GIVES LIFE TERM TO 12 OTHERS

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Kerala High Court enhanced punishment to life imprisonment for 12 convicts in the 2018 Madhu lynching case.
  • The first accused was acquitted due to weak identification evidence and hostile witnesses. Madhu, a tribal youth from Attappady, Kerala, was lynched after allegations of theft.
  • The Court termed the incident a reminder of the gap between constitutional ideals and ground realities faced by marginalized communities.
  • Electronic evidence and CCTV footage became crucial in securing conviction.

Key Constitutional & Legal Points

  • Article 14 – Equality before law.
  • Article 15 – Prohibition of discrimination.
  • Article 21 – Right to life with dignity.
  • Article 46 – Protection of educational and economic interests of Scheduled Tribes. 
  • SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989.
  • Witness Protection Scheme, 2018.
  • Supreme Court judgment:
    • Tehseen S. Poonawalla vs Union of India (2018) on mob lynching.
  • Importance of electronic evidence under
  • Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam / Evidence Law framework.

UPSC-Relevant Issues

  • Mob vigilantism and breakdown of Rule of Law.
  • Tribal marginalisation and social exclusion.
  • Failure of witness protection mechanisms.
  • Constitutional morality vs mob mentality.
  • Criminal justice reforms and speedy trial.
  • Role of judiciary in protecting vulnerable communities.
  • Ethical concerns regarding bystander inaction.
  • Important Observations of the Court
  • Mob justice cannot replace legal justice.
  • Tribal persons continue to face structural Mdiscrimination.
  • Witness intimidation weakened prosecution.
  • Bail misuse and hostile witnesses affected trial quality.
  • Human dignity is central to constitutional governance.

Governance & Social Justice Dimensions

  • Need for stronger implementation of SC/ST safeguards.
  • Better policing in tribal areas.
  • Strengthening forensic and digital evidence systems.
  • Community sensitisation regarding constitutional values.
  • Fast-track courts for atrocities against vulnerable groups. 

Ethical Dimensions

  • Compassion and empathy towards marginalized groups.
  • Constitutional morality.
  • Accountability of society during mob violence.
  • Human dignity as a core ethical value.
  • Failure of collective social responsibility.

Way Forward

  • Enact dedicated anti-lynching law.
  • Strengthen Witness Protection Scheme.
  • Improve tribal welfare delivery and legal awareness.
  • Ensure strict monitoring of bail conditions.
  • Increase conviction through forensic evidence.
  • Promote constitutional values through education and governance

FINANCE COMMISSION TRANSFERS AND EQUITY CONCERN

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context

  • The 16th Finance Commission retained the States’ share in the divisible tax pool at 41%.
  • States demanded:
    • Inclusion/capping of cesses & surcharges,
    • Higher fiscal autonomy,
    • Greater share in central taxes.
  • Debate intensified over:
    • Equity vs efficiency,
    • Fiscal federalism,
    • Regional imbalance between richer and poorer States.

Key Points

Constitutional Provisions

  • Finance Commission → Article 280.
  • Recommends:
    • Vertical devolution (Centre–State),
    • Horizontal devolution (among States).
  • Major Recommendations
    • States’ share retained at 41%.
    • Revenue deficit grants abolished.
    • States advised to:
    • Keep fiscal deficit below 3%,
    • Stop off-budget borrowings.
    • Criteria for Horizontal Devolution
  • Criterion                                                     Weight
    Income Distance                                      42.50%
    Population                                               17.50%
    Area                                                            10%
    Forest & Ecology                                      10%
  • Demographic Performance                     10%
    GDP Contribution 10%

Major Issues Raised

  • Cesses & surcharges exceed 15% of gross tax revenue and are not shareable.
  • GST reduced States’ fiscal flexibility.
  • Centrally Sponsored Schemes reduce fiscal autonomy.
  • Southern States argued that:
    • Better governance,
    • Population control,
    • Higher tax contribution 
    • are not adequately rewarded.

Regional Imbalance

  • Share of southern States declined from:
    • 24.8% (6th FC) → 15.8% (15th FC).
  • Major beneficiary States:
    • Uttar Pradesh,
    • Bihar,
    • Madhya Pradesh,
    • West Bengal.

Static Linkages

  • Article 270 → Distribution of taxes between Centre and States.
  • Article 271 → Cesses and surcharges excluded from divisible pool.
  • FRBM framework promotes fiscal discipline.
  • GST Council institutionalised cooperative federalism.
  • Equalisation transfers reduce inter-State disparities.
  • Fiscal federalism is part of cooperative federalism.

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
    • Supports poorer States through income-distance criterion.
    • Promotes balanced regional development.
    • Encourages fiscal discipline.
    • Ecological criteria incentivise forest conservation.
  • Concerns
    • Rising cesses weaken States’ fiscal capacity.
    • Efficient States feel penalised.
    • Reduced grants may increase stress on poorer States.
    • GST reduced taxation autonomy of States.
    • Equity criteria dominate over efficiency indicators.

Way Forward

  • Cap cesses and surcharges.
  • Increase weight for fiscal performance and tax effort.
  • Strengthen fiscal autonomy of States.
  • Ensure transparent and predictable devolution criteria.
  • Balance equity with efficiency.
  • Strengthen cooperative federal institutions
INDIA- AUSTRALIA: BRIDGING TRADE AND TRUST BARRIER
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
  • India and Australia are likely to upgrade the 2022 Economic Cooperation and Trade Agreement (ECTA) into a Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement (CECA).
  • The issue gained importance during the Quad Foreign Ministers’ meeting attended by Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong.
  • India is rapidly pursuing FTAs due to global geopolitical instability, tariff uncertainties, and external sector pressures.
  • Agriculture has emerged as the key contentious sector in CECA negotiations.

Key Points

  • Bilateral merchandise trade rose from $12.2 billion (FY21) to $24.1 billion (FY25) after ECTA.
  • Australian exports constitute nearly two-thirds of bilateral trade.
  • India excluded sensitive sectors such as:
    • Dairy
    • Wheat
    • Rice
    • Sugar
    • Chickpeas from tariff liberalisation under ECTA.
  • Average farm size:
    • India: ~0.73 hectares
    • Australia: >1,400 hectares.
  • Agriculture contributes:
    • ~16% to India’s GDP
    • ~2.5% to Australia’s GDP.
  • Australia seeks greater agricultural market access in India.
  • India loses 15–35% of agricultural output due to post-harvest inefficiencies.
  • India-Australia cooperation is expanding in:
    • Precision farming
    • Cold-chain infrastructure
    • Climate-resilient agriculture
    • Water management.

Static Linkages

  • WTO Agreement on Agriculture:
    • Market access
    • Domestic support
    • Export subsidies.
  • SPS (Sanitary and Phytosanitary) Measures regulate food safety and plant/animal health standards.
  • MSP and food procurement are linked with food security objectives.
  • Small and fragmented landholdings reduce agricultural competitiveness.
  • FTAs aim to reduce tariffs and improve trade integration.
  • Trade deficit impacts Balance of Payments stability.
  • Agricultural infrastructure gaps lead to high post harvest losses.
  • Climate-resilient agriculture is crucial for sustainable farming.

Critical Analysis

  • Advantages
    • CECA can strengthen India’s export diversification
      strategy.
    • Australian investment can improve:
      • Agri-logistics
      • Storage
      • Cold-chain infrastructure.
    • Technology transfer can improve productivity and climate resilience.
    • Better SPS cooperation can improve Indian agricultural exports.
  • Concerns
    • Cheap agricultural imports may hurt Indian farmers.
    • Structural asymmetry between Indian and
    • Australian agriculture creates unequal competition.
    • Trade liberalisation may increase dependence on imports.
    • Sensitive sectors linked to livelihood and food security remain vulnerable.
  • Stakeholder Perspective
    • Farmers demand protection from low-cost imports.
    • Agri-businesses favour greater market integration.
    • Consumers may benefit from lower prices.
    • Government seeks balance between trade expansion and livelihood protection.

Way Forward

  • Follow calibrated agricultural liberalisation.
  • Protect sensitive sectors through safeguard duties.
  • Expand agri-tech and climate-resilient farming partnerships.
  • Strengthen SPS certification and export quality standards.
  • Promote investment in:
    • Warehousing
    • Cold chains
    • Food processing.
  • Focus on value-added agricultural exports

FROM BLACK TO GREY

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • The Sample Registration System (SRS) Statistical Report 2024 indicates a major demographic transition in India.
  • India’s Total Fertility Rate (TFR) has declined to 1.9, below the replacement level of 2.1.
  • Crude Birth Rate (CBR) declined from 21 (2014) to 18.3 (2024).
  • Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) reduced to 24.
  • India is moving from a phase of high population growth towards:
    • ageing population,
    • slower workforce expansion,
    • regional demographic imbalance.
  • Despite fertility decline, India continues to possess a demographic dividend due to a large youth population.

Key Points

  • Important Demographic Indicators
    • TFR: 1.9
    • Replacement Level Fertility: 2.1
    • Life Expectancy: ~72 years
    • Median Age of India: 29.2 years
    • Over 65% population below 35 years
    • Around 370–380 million youth (15–29 years) in 2026
  • Causes of Fertility Decline
    • Urbanisation
    • Female education
    • Access to contraception
    • Delayed marriages
    • Rising cost of living
    • Preference for smaller families

Regional Trends

  • Southern States:
    • low fertility,
    • better health indicators.
  • Northern States:
    • higher fertility,
    • higher IMR, 
    • weaker healthcare access.
  • Rural areas lag behind urban areas in:
    • maternal healthcare,
    • awareness,
    • education outcomes.

Static Linkages

  • Demographic Transition Theory
  • Replacement Level Fertility
  • Population Momentum
  • Demographic Dividend
  • Dependency Ratio
  • Ageing Population
  • National Population Policy, 2000
  • SDG 3, SDG 5, SDG 10

Critical Analysis

  • Opportunities
    • Reduced pressure on resources and public infrastructure.
    • Better maternal and child health outcomes.
    • Opportunity to utilise demographic dividend through skilling and employment generation.
  • Challenges
    • Risk of ageing population in future.
    • Shrinking workforce growth rate.
    • Regional demographic imbalance.
    • Weak social security for elderly population.
    • Persistent rural-urban disparities.
  • Key Concern
    • India may face the challenge of “getting old before getting rich” if demographic dividend is not effectively utilised.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen skill development and employment generation.
  • Improve female labour force participation.
  • Expand healthcare and elderly care infrastructure.
  • Focus on lagging northern and rural regions.
  • Strengthen social security and pension systems.
  • Invest in human capital formation.

BABY BAIT

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Andhra Pradesh government proposed incentives for families having three or more children.
  • The move comes due to concerns over:
    • Declining fertility rate,
    • Rapid ageing population,
    • Future labour force shortage.
  • Andhra Pradesh’s Total Fertility Rate (TFR) has fallen to nearly 1.5, below the replacement level of 2.1.
  • Proposed measures include:
    • ₹30,000 incentive for third child,
    • ₹40,000 for fourth child,
    • Monthly support for five years,
    • Free education till 18 years,
    • Childcare and maternity support.

Key Points

  • India is witnessing demographic transition with falling birth and death rates.
  • Southern States have lower fertility and higher ageing compared to northern States.
  • Declining fertility may lead to:
    • Higher old-age dependency ratio,
    • Increased healthcare and pension burden,
    • Shrinking workforce.
  • Reasons for low fertility:
    • Rising cost of education and housing, 
    • Urbanisation,
    • Delayed marriages and employment,
    • Preference for smaller families.
  • International experience shows:
    • Cash incentives alone do not significantly increase fertility.
    • Countries like France and Nordic nations succeeded through:
      • Universal childcare,
      • Paid parental leave,
      • Flexible work systems,
      • Women-friendly labour policies.
  • Andhra Pradesh also aims to increase women’s labour force participation, which may conflict with higher fertility goals if social support systems remain weak.

Static Linkages

  • Replacement fertility rate – around 2.1 children per woman.
  • Demographic Transition Theory.
  • Population ageing and dependency ratio.
  • Demographic dividend.
  • Human capital formation.
  • Population momentum.
  • Delimitation based on population.
  • Sustainable development and carrying capacity.

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
    • Recognises emerging issue of ageing population.
    • May help maintain future working-age population.
    • Expands maternal and childcare support.
    • Encourages debate on long-term demographic planning.
  • Concerns
    • Cash incentives may have limited long-term impact on fertility.
    • Poorer families may be influenced disproportionately for short-term benefits.
    • Women may face increased unpaid care burden.
    • Contradiction between:
      • Higher fertility targets and
      • Higher female workforce participation.
    • Increased population may intensify:
      • Water scarcity,
      • Urban congestion,
      • Waste management issues.
  • Delimitation concerns cannot be solved through population expansion policies.

Way Forward

  • Focus on quality of population rather than quantity.
  • Improve public education and healthcare systems.
  • Expand affordable childcare infrastructure.
  • Promote gender-sensitive labour policies.
  • Strengthen elderly-care and social security systems.
  • Enhance skill development and productivity to offset workforce decline.
  • Address federal concerns on delimitation through institutional reforms.

DEAD ENDS IN BENGAL NEED NEW DIRECTIONS FROM BOTH SIDES

KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
  • West Bengal Assembly election results triggered debates on:
    • Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls.
    • Hindu consolidation in elections.
    • Future of secular politics in India.
  • Allegations emerged regarding deletion of nearly 27 lakh voters during electoral roll revision.
  • Questions were raised on:
    • Neutrality of Election Commission.
    • Electoral inclusiveness.
    • Minority representation in democracy.

Key Points

  • Electoral roll revision became politically controversial.
  • Concerns over exclusion of vulnerable and minority voters.
  • Anti-incumbency linked with:
    • Corruption,
    • Cadre dominance,
    • Governance fatigue.
  • “Hindu consolidation” seen as a major electoral factor.
  • Debate intensified on:
    • Constitutional secularism,
    • Majoritarian politics,
    • Democratic accountability.

Static Linkages

  • Article 324 – Powers of Election Commission.
  • Article 326 – Universal Adult Franchise.
  • Articles 14, 15 – Equality and non discrimination.
  • Articles 25–28 – Freedom of religion.
  • Secularism added by 42nd Constitutional Amendment (1976).
  • S.R. Bommai Case – Secularism part of Basic Structure.
  • Representation of People Act, 1950 & 1951.
  • Constitutional morality and pluralism.
  • Free and fair elections as core democratic principle.

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
    • Democratic debate on electoral transparency.
    • Greater focus on institutional accountability.
    • Public discussion on constitutional secularism.
  • Concerns
    • Alleged voter exclusion may weaken electoral fairness.
    • Communal polarization may overshadow governance issues.
    • Perceived institutional bias can reduce public trust.
    • Identity politics may deepen social divisions.

Way Forward

  • Ensure transparent electoral roll revision.
  • Strengthen autonomy of Election Commission.
  • Improve grievance redressal for voters.
  • Promote issue-based politics over identity polarization.
  • Reinforce constitutional values of pluralism and secularism.

GAZIPUR TO J&K: HEALING DRUG ADDICTION WOUND 

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • J&K Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha launched a campaign against increasing drug addiction among youth in Jammu & Kashmir.
  • The issue has gained attention due to rising heroin and synthetic drug trafficking in border states like Punjab and J&K.
  • J&K’s proximity to the “Golden Crescent” makes it vulnerable to cross-border narcotics smuggling.
  • Concerns also exist regarding narco-terrorism and financing of separatist activities through drug networks.

Key Points

  • Golden Crescent: Afghanistan–Pakistan–Iran region; major global opium-producing zone.
  • Golden Triangle: Myanmar–Laos–Thailand region; another major narcotics-producing region.
  • India faces challenges from both trafficking routes.
  • Main trafficking methods:
    • Drones,
    • Border infiltration,
    • Hawala financing,
    • Courier/synthetic drug networks.
  • NDPS Act, 1985 is the primary anti-drug legislation in India.
  • Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB) coordinates anti-narcotics operations.
  • Ministry of Social Justice report on substance abuse:
    • Opioid use in India is higher than global average.
    • Youth are increasingly vulnerable.

Static Linkages

  • Article 47 directs the State to improve public health and prohibit harmful intoxicants.
  • Drug trafficking is linked with organized crime and terrorism financing.
  • Border management is crucial for internal security.
  • Rehabilitation and de-addiction are essential components of welfare governance.
  • Cooperative federalism is necessary for interstate anti-drug operations.
  • Social stigma affects treatment and reintegration of addicts.

Critical Analysis

  • Significance
    • Addresses youth vulnerability and demographic concerns.
    • Helps tackle narco-terrorism and illegal financing.
    • Encourages community participation in governance.
    • Recognizes addiction as a public health issue.
  • Challenges
    • Porous borders and difficult terrain.
    • Weak rehabilitation infrastructure.
    • Social stigma and lack of awareness.
    • Rising synthetic drug trade.
    • Coordination gaps among agencies.
  • Concerns
    • Excessive criminalization may ignore rehabilitation needs.
    • Political and administrative complacency can weaken implementation.
    • Long-term behavioural change requires sustained funding and counselling support.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen border surveillance and intelligence sharing.
  • Expand de-addiction and rehabilitation centres.
  • Integrate counselling in schools and colleges.
  • Increase community policing and awareness campaigns.
  • Improve coordination among NCB, BSF, police, and health departments.
  • Focus on skill development and employment generation for youth.
  • Treat addiction through a balanced approach of enforcement + rehabilitation.

DUST IS EASIEST TO CLEAN- THE TIME IS NOW

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Recent reports highlighted the underutilisation of Mechanical Road Sweeping Machines (MRSMs) in Delhi despite severe air pollution levels.
  • Dust pollution remains a major contributor to particulate matter pollution in Delhi, especially during summer.
  • Civic bodies have failed to ensure uniform deployment of dust-control infrastructure across municipal zones.
  • The issue reflects governance gaps in implementation of pollution-control measures under the National Clean Air Programme (NCAP) and GRAP framework.

Key Points

  • Dust pollution contributes nearly:
    • 41% of PM10
    • 38% of PM2.5 during summer in Delhi.
  • Major sources:
    • Construction and demolition activities
    • Road dust
    • Open soil
    • Heavy vehicular movement
  • MRSMs help through:
    • Mechanised vacuum sweeping
    • Water sprinkling
    • Prevention of dust re-suspension
  • Problems identified:
    • Limited operational use
    • Seasonal deployment during winter only
    • Uneven municipal coverage
    • Weak monitoring and accountability
  • Delhi continues to follow a reactive rather than preventive pollution-control strategy.

Static Linkages

  • PM10: particulate matter less than 10 micrometres.
  • PM2.5: finer particles causing severe respiratory and cardiovascular diseases.
  • National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) notified under Air Act, 1981.
  • Article 21:
    • Right to life includes right to clean environment.
  • Article 48A:
    • State shall protect and improve environment.
  • Article 51A(g):
    • Fundamental duty to protect natural environment.
  • National Clean Air Programme (NCAP):
    • Targeted reduction in particulate pollution.
  • Graded Response Action Plan (GRAP):
    • Emergency pollution-control mechanism for Delhi-NCR.
  • Construction and Demolition Waste Management Rules, 2016 regulate dust emissions.
  • 74th Constitutional Amendment:
    • Urban local bodies responsible for
      sanitation and public health.

Critical Analysis

  • Significance
    • Dust-control measures are relatively low-cost and administratively feasible.
    • Effective mechanised cleaning can substantially reduce particulate pollution.
    • Improves public health and urban sanitation.
  • Challenges
    • Poor coordination among agencies:
      • Municipal corporations
      • PWD
      • Pollution-control authorities
  • Weak enforcement of construction norms.
  • Lack of year-round pollution strategy. 
  • Uneven resource allocation among municipal zones.
  • Administrative apathy and weak monitoring.
  • Governance Concerns
    • Raises issues of:
      • Accountability
      • Transparency
      • Administrative efficiency
  • Reflects implementation deficit rather than policy absence.

Way Forward

  • Ensure year-round operation of MRSMs.
  • Create integrated dust-management strategy for Delhi-NCR.
  • Real-time monitoring of machine deployment.
  • Strict enforcement of construction dust norms.
  • Increase roadside greening and paved shoulders.
  • Strengthen coordination between CAQM, civic bodies, and Delhi government.
  • Conduct periodic third-party environmental audits.
  • Promote preventive rather than seasonal pollution management

HEALTH INDICATORS SHOW GAINS AND DISPARITIES

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context

  • The Sample Registration System (SRS) Report 2024 shows major demographic changes in India.
  • Birth Rate declined from 21 (2014) to 18.3 per 1,000 population (2024).
  • Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) declined from 39 to 24 per 1,000 live births.
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR) remained at 1.9, below replacement level (2.1).
  • Large inter-state disparities continue:
    • Highest IMR: Chhattisgarh (36)
    • Lowest IMR: Kerala (8)
    • Highest TFR: Bihar (2.9)
    • Lowest TFR: Delhi (1.2)

Key Points

Important Data

  • Birth Rate: 18.3TFR: 1.9
  • IMR: 24
  • Rural IMR: 27
  • Urban IMR: 17
  • Around 10% population is above 60 years.

Major Observations

  • India is moving toward population stabilisation.
  • Southern and urbanised states are ageing faster.
  • BIMARU states continue to show high fertility and poor health indicators.
  • Rural-urban healthcare inequality persists.

Reasons for Improvement

  • National Health Mission (NHM)
  • Universal Immunisation Programme
  • Institutional deliveries
  • Better maternal and child healthcare

Static Linkages

  • Replacement level fertility = 2.1
  • Demographic Transition Theory
  • Population momentum
  • Dependency ratio
  • Demographic dividend
  • Public Health → State Subject
  • SDG 3: Good Health and Well-being

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
    • Declining IMR reflects healthcare improvement.
    • Lower fertility indicates better literacy and awareness.
    • Improved institutional deliveries reduced infant deaths.
  • Challenges
    • Wide regional disparities remain.
    • Rural healthcare infrastructure is weak.
    • Ageing population may increase pension and healthcare burden.
    • High fertility states may face unemployment and poverty pressure.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen rural healthcare infrastructure.
  • Improve maternal nutrition.
  • Focus on women’s education and awareness.
  • Expand geriatric healthcare facilities.
  • Target district-level health interventions.
  • Improve Centre-State coordination under NHM.