Editorial
GS
Paper III: Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilization of
resources, growth, development, and employment.
Lustre or bluster?: India’s economic
mettle will be on test asit faces headwinds
Analysis: Impact
of West Asian Crisis on Indian Economy
Executive
Summary
The Indian
economy is facing a significant slowdown triggered by the geopolitical crisis
in West Asia (specifically involving Iran). This external shock has disrupted
supply chains, inflated energy costs, and dampened industrial output, ending a
period of relatively stable growth.
Key Data
Points (March 2026)
·
Core Sector
Contraction: The Index
of Eight Core Industries contracted by 0.4%, the worst performance in 19 months.
·
Sectoral
Hits: Four out of
eight sectors contracted.
o Fertilizers:
Suffered the most severe hit (-24.6%) due to natural gas import constraints.
o Manufacturing:
PMI indicates a slowdown driven by a reduction in fresh orders.
o Steel & Cement: Significant slowdowns suggest a pause in construction and private
investment.
·
Fiscal Year
Performance: 2025-26
recorded the lowest full-year growth since the COVID-19 pandemic.
Macro-Economic
Implications
1.
Agricultural
Vulnerability: The
fertilizer shortage, combined with an El Niño-impacted below-normal monsoon, threatens
agricultural productivity. This poses a risk to rural demand and food
inflation.
2.
External
Dependency: The crisis
highlights India’s high sensitivity to global dynamics, particularly regarding
energy (crude oil and natural gas) and trade stability.
3.
Investment
Climate: Foreign
Direct Investment (FDI) is cooling due to a combination of global instability
and trade frictions (specifically with the U.S. administration), challenging
India’s “bright spot” status.
4.
Domestic
Headwinds: Stagnant
household real incomes and rising inflation are squeezing domestic consumption,
which has traditionally been a growth engine.
______________________________________________________________________________________
Editorial
GS
Paper II: Appointment to various Constitutional posts, powers, functions and
responsibilities of various Constitutional Bodies; Salient features of the
Representation of the People’s Act.
Invidious
speech: ECI’s inaction on the Prime Minister’s violations of model code is
troubling
Analysis: Institutional
Credibility and the Model Code of Conduct
Contextual
Background
The core issue involves the Election Commission of India’s (ECI)
perceived delay or reluctance to take action against the Prime Minister for
alleged violations of the Model Code of Conduct (MCC). Specifically,
it pertains to a televised address by the PM using state-owned media
(Doordarshan and Sansad TV) for political signaling during an active election
cycle in states like Tamil Nadu and West Bengal.
Key
Issues & Institutional Challenges
·
Misuse of
Official Machinery: Under the MCC, the party in power is
prohibited from using government resources—including official mass media—for
partisan electioneering.
·
Procedural
Inconsistency: The ECI has traditionally been swift in sanctioning opposition
leaders, yet critics highlight a pattern of “benign delay” or diluted
responses regarding the Prime Minister (e.g., addressing notices to the Party
President instead of the individual candidate).
·
The
“Official Announcement” Loophole: Strategic timing of speeches (like the 2019
Anti-Satellite test or 2026 legislative commentary) allows the government to
frame political messages as “official state business,” granting the
ECI “plausible deniability” while the message still reaches and
influences the electorate.
·
Institutional
Credibility: The ECI is a constitutional body under Article 324.
UPSC
Point of View: Critical Perspectives
|
Concern |
Implication
for Democracy |
|
Level Playing Field |
If the
ruling party has exclusive access to state media, the competitive fairness of
the election is compromised. |
|
Independence of ECI |
Allegations
of being a “partisan” body erode public trust in the electoral
outcome. |
|
Enforcement of MCC |
Without
statutory teeth, the MCC depends on the “certainty and swiftness”
of ECI action. Delays render the code ineffective. |
Conclusion
The sanctity of Indian elections rests not
just on the casting of votes, but on the neutrality of the referee. The current friction
highlights the need for the ECI to demonstrate “procedural fairness”
by applying the same standards of accountability to the highest executive
office as it does to any other candidate. Failure to do
so risks turning the MCC into a “tiger without teeth,” favoring
incumbency over democratic equity.
Editorial
GS
Paper II: Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries
on India’s interests; Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements
involving India and/or affecting India’s interests.
India must draw a red line on U.S. unilateral sanctions
Analysis: Strategic Autonomy and
the Sanctions Dilemma
Impact of
the West Asia War (April 2026)
The ongoing conflict involving
the U.S., Israel, and Iran has shifted India’s economic trajectory from a
“bright spot” to a zone of heightened risk:
·
Energy
and Supply Chains: The “double blockade”
of the Strait of Hormuz
(by IRGC and U.S. forces) has led to record-high energy bills, insurance costs,
and a 7% slump in exports
(March 2026).
·
Global
Standing: Due to rupee depreciation driven by energy costs and sanctions,
India has slipped from the projected 4th to the 6th largest economy in IMF rankings,
trailing behind Japan and the UK.
·
Secondary
Sanctions: The U.S.
has threatened BRICS members with tariffs if they pursue non-dollar payment
mechanisms, directly challenging India’s fiscal sovereignty.
The
“Opportunity Cost” of Compliance
The analysis
argues that India’s tendency to yield to U.S. unilateral sanctions (which lack
UN mandate) has yielded diminishing returns:
1.
Energy Diversification: By “zeroing out” Iranian
and Venezuelan oil since 2019 to appease the U.S., India missed out on billions
in savings from discounted “sweet crude.”
2.
Infrastructure
Stagnation: Compliance
delayed the Chabahar Port
and INSTC (International
North-South Transport Corridor) projects. Had these been operational, India
would be less reliant on the now-blocked Strait of Hormuz.
3.
Coercion
Cycle: The text
suggests that compliance does not curb the U.S. “appetite” for
sanctions but rather invites more demands (e.g., the 25% penalty tariff on
Russian oil imposed in late 2025).
UPSC Key
Concepts: Lessons from History
·
The
“Short-Tether” Policy (1966): The text draws a parallel to the Lyndon Johnson era, where food
aid was used as a political lever to influence India’s stance on the Vietnam
War. This humiliation catalyzed the Green Revolution.
·
Strategic
Autonomy: The author posits that a “New Green Revolution” in energy independence is
required.
·
Multilateralism
vs. Unilateralism: While the
UN has 15 active sanction regimes, the U.S. maintains over 365. Yielding to the
latter weakens the rules-based international order.
Proposed
Way Forward for New Delhi
To restore
its “bright spot” status, India must transition from compliance to
resistance through:
·
Alternative
Payments:
Establishing robust Rupee-Rial
trade and intra-BRICS settlement systems.
·
“Air-Gapped”
Banking: Developing
financial institutions insulated from the SWIFT system and Western pressure.
·
Diplomatic
Resolve: Unequivocally denouncing unilateral sanctions as a violation of
sovereignty, mirroring the resolve shown during the purchase of the Russian
S-400 systems.
______________________________________________________________________________________
Editorial
GS Paper III: Indian Economy (Infrastructure:
Energy), Environmental Pollution and Degradation, and Changes in Industrial
Policy
India’s LPG crisis is the wake-up call it cannot
ignore
Analysis: India’s Energy Security
and the Compressed Biogas (CBG) Pivot
The Energy
Crisis of 2026: A Structural Warning
The current
crisis is not a temporary glitch but a signal of deep-rooted systemic
vulnerabilities.
·
Import
Dependence: India’s
crude oil import dependency has surged to 88.6%.
·
The LNG Paradox: While India has built
significant regasification capacity (>50 MMT), utilization remains low (50%-60%) due to inadequate
pipeline infrastructure and demand-supply mismatches.
·
Economic
Impact: Volatile
global prices are leading to “imported inflation,” straining public
finances and causing domestic shortages (e.g., in Mumbai and Bengaluru).
The
Potential of Compressed Biogas (CBG)
CBG is
identified as the primary solution to bridge the energy gap while addressing
environmental concerns.
·
Resource
Potential: Estimated 62 MMT annually from
agri-residue, animal waste, and municipal solid waste.
·
Current
Status: Significant
execution gap; only 132
plants are operational, producing a mere 920 tonnes/day.
·
Triple
Benefit: Enhances energy security, promotes environmental sustainability
(reduces stubble burning), and boosts rural economy (farmer income).
Barriers
to Scalability
1.
Feedstock
Fragmentation: Lack of a
reliable, mapped, and aggregated supply of biomass.
2.
Regulatory
Hurdles: Approval
processes currently take 6–9 months, deterring private investment.
3.
Financial
Constraints: Inadequate
access to green bonds and carbon credit integration.
4.
Market
Immaturity:
Underdeveloped markets for fermented
organic manure (digestate), a key by-product.
Strategic
Roadmap for Self-Reliance (Atmanirbharta)
The analysis
suggests a shift from “reactive interventions” to “structural
reforms”:
·
National
Feedstock Security Framework: State-wise mapping and long-term contracts to ensure a
predictable supply of biomass.
·
Regulatory
Streamlining:
Implementing a Single-Window
Clearance system to accelerate project timelines.
·
Dedicated
Energy Crops: Strategic
use of 2-3% of agricultural land for high-yield crops like Napier Grass to stabilize
the biomass base without threatening food security.
·
Financial
Innovation: Utilizing Viability Gap Funding (VGF)
and green financing to improve project economics.
__________________________________________________________________________________
Opinion
GS Paper II: Effect of policies and politics
of developed and developing countries on India’s interests; Important
International institutions, agencies and fora- their structure, mandate.
Lunar governance should be multilateral
Analysis: Space Governance and the Crisis of
International Credibility
1. The
Dichotomy: Technological Universalism vs. Political Unilateralism
The text
draws a parallel between the 1968 Apollo 8 “Earthrise” (occurring
alongside the My Lai massacre) and the 2026 Artemis II mission (occurring amidst
strikes in Iran and Gaza).
·
The
Contradiction: While NASA
invokes “humanity’s return to the moon,” the U.S. administration is
accused of disregarding the very international laws that protect humanity.
·
Institutional
Erosion: The U.S. is
critiqued for “hollowing out” global institutions, specifically the WTO Appellate Body, by
blocking appointments, thereby ensuring trade disputes (like Trump’s tariffs)
remain unresolved.
2. Legal
and Humanitarian Concerns
·
IHL
Violations: Reports
from the UN and the International Commission of Jurists highlight strikes on
protected sites and civilian casualties (e.g., girls’ primary schools in Iran)
as evidence of a “contempt for international humanitarian law (IHL).”
·
Judicial
Defiance: Despite ICC arrest warrants for
Israeli leadership and ICJ
scrutiny for genocide, the U.S. has continued arms supplies and sanctioned
ICC officials, signaling a shift toward unmitigated self-interest over global
due process.
·
Domestic
Policy as Global Signal:
Massive deportations (approx. 6 lakh people in Trump’s second term) and the
questioning of “due process” for migrants further erode the U.S.’s
moral standing to lead international rule-making.
3. Space
Governance: The Artemis Accords vs. The Moon Agreement
The core
strategic concern for India and the world lies in how the lunar frontier is
governed:
·
The Artemis
Accords: Critics
argue these Accords (bilateral in nature) allow the U.S. to set unilateral
norms for lunar resource
extraction (e.g., water ice at the South Pole).
·
“Safety
Zones”: There is a
risk that these zones could become “exclusion zones,” allowing early
movers to monopolize finite resources without formally violating the Outer Space Treaty.
·
The
Multilateral Alternative:
The 1979 Moon Agreement
advocates for an international regime to govern resource exploitation, viewing
the moon as the “Common Heritage of Mankind.” The U.S. and other
major powers have largely bypassed this in favor of the Artemis framework.
4.
Implications for Global Leadership
·
Exclusionary
Architecture: By
excluding China and bypassing the UN Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space (COPUOS),
the U.S. risks turning space into a domain of confrontation rather than
cooperation.
·
The Middle
Path: The
analysis suggests that neither U.S. nor Chinese unilateralism is ideal. A
credible governance architecture must be multilateral and treaty-level,
ensuring all nations—not just “early movers”—have a stake in lunar
resources.
Conclusion
for UPSC Mains
For India,
which is a signatory to the Artemis Accords but also a champion of the Global South and
multilateralism, the challenge is to ensure that space does not become a site for
“Colonialism 2.0.” The U.S.’s internal and external disregard for
established international laws (WTO, ICC, IHL) serves as a cautionary tale:
technological leadership without ethical and legal consistency undermines the
legitimacy of the global order.
______________________________________________________________________________________
Text&Context
GS Paper II: Appointment to various
Constitutional posts, powers, functions and responsibilities of various
Constitutional Bodies; Judiciary (Removal of Judges)
On the Yashwant Varma probe’s future
Analysis: Accountability and the
“Resignation Loophole” in Judicial Removal
The Core
Legal Question
Does a
statutory inquiry against a judge under the Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968 automatically terminate if
the judge resigns before the process is completed?
Recent
instances, such as the resignation of Justice Yashwant Varma, have highlighted a recurring
pattern where judges quit to avoid a formal finding of guilt, effectively
stalling the constitutional machinery of accountability.
Constitutional
and Statutory Framework
·
Article
124(4) & (5): The
Constitution mandates Parliament to regulate the investigation into a judge’s
“misbehaviour or incapacity.”
·
The Judges
(Inquiry) Act, 1968:
Distinguishes between two stages:
1.
Investigative
(Judicial): Determining
findings of fact and guilt (Sections 3 & 4).
2.
Removal
(Political): The actual
vote in Parliament based on the report.
·
Supreme
Court Rulings: In Sub-Committee on Judicial
Accountability (1991) and Sarojini Ramaswami (1992), the Court held that the
investigative stage is statutory
and judicial in character, independent of the political decision of the
House.
The
Argument for Continuation of Inquiry
The
analysis, drawing from jurist G. Mohan Gopal’s 2011 reasoning, argues that the
inquiry should survive resignation for the following reasons:
·
Public Good: The citizenry has a right to
know if serious charges against a high constitutional functionary are true.
·
Preventing
“Absurd Situations”: Allowing a judge to unilaterally terminate a removal procedure by
resigning creates an “easy exit.” It allows them to preserve
post-retirement benefits and protect their reputation despite potential
misconduct.
·
Rule 8
(Judges Inquiry Rules, 1969): The law already foresees non-cooperation by a judge and allows
the committee to proceed ex-parte.
This suggests the process is not tethered solely to the judge’s active tenure.
The 2011
Precedent vs. The Reformist Path
|
The
“Ansari” Precedent (2011) |
The
“Mohan Gopal” View (Proposed) |
|
Action: Wound up
the committee after Justice Dinakaran resigned. |
Action: Continue
the inquiry to reach a factual finding of guilt or innocence. |
|
Logic:
Resignation makes the removal motion “infructuous” as the judge is
no longer in office. |
Logic: The
inquiry is a statutory duty to the truth; the political removal is a separate
exercise. |
|
Impact: Provides
a loophole for judges to avoid adverse findings and “seal the record.” |
Impact: Ensures
accountability and transparency, preventing the misuse of resignation as a
shield. |
UPSC Key
Takeaway: Administrative vs. Constitutional Accountability
For a civil
services aspirant, this case study underscores a significant gap in Constitutional Morality. While
the primary objective of the Act is “removal,” the finding of fact is an essential
component of judicial accountability. If resignation wipes the slate clean, the
“disciplinary” nature of the proceedings is lost, potentially
undermining the integrity of the higher judiciary.
Conclusion
The Speaker
of the Lok Sabha now faces a choice: follow a precedent based on silent laws
and questionable foreign examples, or establish a new standard where resignation does not mean an escape
from accountability. Establishing a “National Feedstock” of
judicial integrity requires closing this loophole to ensure that the
“record” of a constitutional office is never arbitrarily sealed.
______________________________________________________________________________________
Text & Context
GS Paper I: Salient features of Indian
Society; Effects of globalization on Indian society; Urbanization, their
problems and their remedies. GS Paper III: Inclusive growth and issues arising
from it; Employment.
Challenges for India’s informal
urban workforce
Analysis: The Urban Precariat and the Crisis of
Social Reproduction
1. The
Fragmented Urban Workforce
·
The
Informality Trap:
Approximately 90% of India’s
workforce is informal. In cities, Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS) data
shows a persistent lack of regular salaried employment.
·
De-industrialization
of City Centres: Urban hubs
have transitioned from industrial production centers (e.g., the era of Mumbai’s
mills) to centers of social
reproduction.
·
Consequence: Organised labour has declined,
replaced by a fragmented workforce whose primary focus is day-to-day survival
(securing water, housing, and basic needs) rather than collective bargaining.
2. Shift
in State Policy: The Washington Consensus Influence
The state
has moved from being a provider of
rights to an enabler of
markets:
·
Market-Based
Services: Transition
of essential services (water, electricity) to “user-fee” models.
·
Fiscal Over
Social Priority: Development
is guided by fiscal discipline and privatization rather than social safety
nets.
·
Housing
Crisis: The state
has retreated from providing low-income housing. Consequently, the urban poor
spend 30%–50% of their
income on informal, hazardous housing (slums/chawls).
3. The
Intersectionality of Vulnerability
The
precariousness of the urban worker is defined by three overlapping factors:
1.
Labour
Vulnerability: Dilution of
labour laws and lack of job security.
2.
Environmental
Insecurity: ~60% of
informal settlements are in flood-prone or hazardous areas, exacerbating
climate risk.
3.
Financial
Exclusion: A lack of
collateral forces the poor toward local moneylenders, creating chronic debt traps (as
highlighted by the RBI Bulletin 2025).
4. Proposed
Reforms and The Kerala Model
To reclaim
urban spaces for the worker, the text suggests:
·
Workers’
Councils: As proposed
by the Kerala Urban
Commission, integrating informal workers into city councils as
“co-producers” of governance.
·
Building
Intersections: Creating
alliances between organized trade unions and informal workers to improve
bargaining power.
·
Reclaiming
Urban Commons: Protecting
natural spaces from commodification and ensuring they remain accessible to the
poor.
Conclusion
for UPSC Mains
The recent
protests in Noida are symptomatic of a deeper “urbanization of
precariousness.” For sustainable urban growth, India must move beyond
“world-class” infrastructure optics and address the structural exclusion of the
people who build and service its cities. Policy must shift from viewing the
urban poor as “beneficiaries” to recognizing them as stakeholders with a right to
the city.
__________________________________________________________________________________
Text & Context
GS Paper I: Salient features of Indian
Society, Caste System; GS Paper II: Government policies and interventions for
development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and
implementation.
Understanding Kshatriyaisation and its
relevance in contemporary India
Analysis: Kshatriyaisation and the Politics of
Identity
1.
Historical Precedence of Caste Mobilization
The
celebration of figures like Maharaja Suheldev or Rani Velu Nachiyar is not an
isolated event but rooted in long-standing community aspirations:
·
Kshatriya
Claims: Since the
late 19th century (e.g., Akhil Bharatiya Kshatriya Mahasabha, 1897), various
agrarian and tribal communities (Yadavs, Kurmis, Vanniyars, Marathas) have
claimed Kshatriya varna
status based on their historical roles as militias or landholders.
·
Identity
Assertion: These
claims were historically used to seek recognition from the British
administration and are now used for social mobilization in independent India.
2.
Conceptual Lenses: Sanskritization vs. Kshatriyaisation
The text distinguishes
between two sociological processes to explain this phenomenon:
·
Sanskritization
(M.N. Srinivas): A
“from below” process where underprivileged castes adopt the rites and
lifestyle of higher castes (Brahmins or Kshatriyas) to seek upward mobility.
·
Kshatriyaisation
(Hermann Kulke): A
“from above” political strategy where rulers or elites grant status
symbols and warrior identities to tribal or diverse groups to legitimize their own power
and broaden their political base.
·
The
“Infection of Imitation”: Invoking Ambedkar and Tarde, the text notes that castes often
form by imitating the “prestige” of ruling classes to acquire social
authority.
3.
Strategic Political Appropriation
The BJP-RSS
focus on these icons serves a specific dual purpose in contemporary politics:
·
Validation
of Caste Pride: By
celebrating specific “jati” warriors, the political leadership
validates the internal hierarchies and pride of diverse groups (Rajbhars,
Pasis, Gonds, etc.).
·
Active Hindu
Identity: It
transforms a “passive” religious identity into an assertive “warrior”
identity. This helps in merging various caste interests into a singular
Hindu nationalist narrative.
·
Vote Bank
Consolidation: Linking
historical martial roles to current nationalist goals reinforces political
allegiance, making these communities key stakeholders in the “Hindu
Rashtra” project.
4.
Socio-Political Implications
·
Persistence
of Caste: Rather than
weakening caste, this process re-codifies it. Upward mobility is sought within the caste
framework rather than by abolishing it, thereby perpetuating structural
inequalities.
·
Political
Legitimacy: As André
Beteille and Christophe Jaffrelot suggest, modern caste hierarchy is now shaped
more by power and
political mobilization than by traditional ritual purity.
·
Structural
Reproduction: By focusing
on “warrior” pasts, the system reproduces social stratification under
the guise of historical “restoration.”
Conclusion
for UPSC Mains
The sudden
spurt in celebrating regional icons is a sophisticated marriage of sociology and statecraft. While
it provides “symbolic inclusion” to marginalized or agrarian
communities, it simultaneously utilizes the Kshatriya model to consolidate a fragmented Hindu
society into a politically cohesive unit. For an aspirant, this illustrates how
traditional social structures like caste are not fading but are being
repurposed to serve modern political ideologies.
