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Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 24 December 2025

  1. AI Diffusion, Not Chip Dominance: India’s Real AI Advantage
  2. End the exploitation


 Why is it in News?

  • A widely cited op-ed by Samir Saran, President of the Observer Research Foundation (ORF), argues that Indias real AI opportunity lies beyond chips and data centres, at a moment when:
    • India is scaling IndiaAI Mission (10,300+ crore),
    • Global AI geopolitics is fragmenting into Compute-rich vs Compute-poor blocs,
    • Policymakers are debating sovereignty, regulation, and economic capture in AI.

Relevance

GS III – Science & Technology / Economy

  • AI as a General Purpose Technology (GPT).
  • Industrial policy vs innovation ecosystems.
  • Digital Public Infrastructure as growth multiplier.

GS II Governance

  • Role of state in technology diffusion.
  • Regulatory capacity in emerging technologies.

Practice Questions

  • Artificial Intelligence as a General Purpose Technology rewards diffusion more than invention.”Examine this statement in the context of Indias AI strategy. (250 words)

Core Thesis of the Article

  • Compute (chips, data centres) is necessary but not sufficient.
  • India’s comparative advantage lies in AI diffusion, applications, and governance, not in winning the chip arms race against the US or China.

Three Distinct AI Phases Identified 

1. Compute Era

  • Dominated by:
    • Advanced semiconductors (≤5 nm chips),
    • Hyperscale data centres,
    • Capital-intensive infrastructure.
  • Reality Check for India:
    • Global AI compute market dominated by US firms (NVIDIA, AMD, hyperscalers).
    • Cutting-edge fabs require $10–20 billion per plant and long gestation.
    • India currently imports >85% of high-end chips.

Inference: Competing head-on here offers low returns, high dependency risks.

2. Diffusion Era (Indias Sweet Spot)

  • Focus shifts from who builds models to who deploys them at scale.
  • Involves:
    • AI adoption across health, agriculture, logistics, MSMEs, governance.
    • Integration with existing digital public infrastructure (DPI).

Indias Structural Advantages:

  • Population-scale platforms:
    • Aadhaar (1.3+ bn),
    • UPI (≈12 bn transactions/month in 2024–25),
    • CoWIN, DigiLocker, ABHA.
  • Cost-efficient innovation:
    • Lowest marginal cost of digital delivery globally.
  • Talent pool:
    • ~1.5 million engineering graduates annually.
  • Precedent:
    • India led global diffusion of digital payments without owning core hardware.

3. Value Creation Era

  • Economic value accrues not to model builders alone, but to:
    • Domain-specific AI solutions,
    • Workflow integration,
    • Localised, trusted AI systems.
  • Example logic:
    • LLM ≠ value,
    • LLM + sectoral data + regulation-aware deployment = value.

Key Warnings in the Article

  • Mistaking LLMs for the entire AI stack:
    • Models are commodities over time.
    • Differentiation lies in use-cases, data pipelines, and institutional embedding.
  • Over-centralised AI policy:
    • Risk of stifling innovation if regulation precedes diffusion.
  • Copy-paste Western regulation:
    • EU-style heavy ex-ante AI regulation may be misaligned with Indias developmental needs.

Policy Prescriptions Suggested (Implicit & Explicit)

1. Strategic Compute, not Maximal Compute

  • Secure baseline sovereign compute for:
    • Research,
    • Critical public services,
    • Strategic sectors.
  • Avoid prestige-driven chip nationalism.

2. State as Market-Maker

  • Government to:
    • Anchor demand via public procurement,
    • Enable sandboxes for AI deployment in welfare, justice, climate, urban governance.
  • Historical parallel:
    • UPI succeeded because state created rails, private sector built innovation.

3. Regulate Outcomes, not Innovation

  • Focus on:
    • Accountability,
    • Bias,
    • Safety in high-risk use cases.
  • Avoid regulating models in abstraction.

Critical Evaluation

Strengths

  • Realistic assessment of India’s constraints.
  • Shifts debate from hardware fetishism to developmental outcomes.
  • Anchored in India’s proven DPI success model.

Limitations

  • Underplays long-term strategic risks of compute dependency.
  • Requires high-quality state capacity to avoid diffusion without accountability.

Conclusion

  • India’s AI race is not about owning the fastest chips, but about deploying intelligence at population scale.
  • If the 20th century rewarded those who controlled factories, the 21st will reward those who control platforms, workflows, and trust.
  • The article reframes AI from a geopolitical arms race into a governance and development challenge—where India holds asymmetric advantage.


 Why is it in News?

  • The Supreme Court of India, in a 19 December 2025 judgment, termed child trafficking a deeply disturbing reality” in India.
  • The Court upheld convictions under the Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act (ITPA) in a Bengaluru case involving sexual exploitation of a minor by organised trafficking cartels.
  • The ruling comes amid persistently low conviction rates, despite multiple anti-trafficking laws and institutions.

Relevance

GS II – Polity & Governance

  • Protection of vulnerable sections.
  • Role of judiciary in rights enforcement.
  • Police and criminal justice reforms.

GS I – Society

  • Child rights, social evils, organised crime.
  • Impact of poverty, migration, and urbanisation.

Practice Questions

  • Despite a robust legal framework, conviction rates in child trafficking cases remain abysmally low in India. Analyse the structural and institutional reasons for this gap. (250 words)

Key Judicial Observations (Doctrinal & Practical)

  • Nature of Crime:
    • Child trafficking is a grave violation of dignity, bodily integrity, and Article 21 protections.
    • Operates through multi-layered organised networks: recruitment → transport → harbouring → exploitation.
  • Victim-Centric Jurisprudence:
    • A trafficked child is not an accomplice.
    • Testimony of a minor victim must be treated as that of an injured witness”.
  • Evidentiary Standards:
    • Courts must show sensitivity and latitude”.
    • Minor inconsistencies in testimony cannot be grounds for disbelief, given trauma and age.
  • Bench: Justices Manoj Misra and Joymalya Bagchi.

Scale of the Problem: Data Snapshot

  • Human Trafficking Cases (2018–2022): 10,659 cases
    (as informed by the Ministry of Home Affairs to Parliament)
  • Conviction Rate:~4.8%
    • Indicates a severe enforcement and prosecution gap, not absence of law.
  • Forms of Child Exploitation:
    • Sexual exploitation (dominant in urban networks),
    • Forced child labour,
    • Domestic servitude,
    • Begging rackets,
    • Online grooming and trafficking via digital platforms.

Legal & Institutional Framework (India)

  • Substantive Laws:
    • Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act, 1956.
    • Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2015.
    • Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Act, 1976.
    • Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Amendment Act, 2016.
  • Constitutional Mandate:
    • Article 23: Prohibition of trafficking.
    • Article 39(e) & (f): Protection of children from abuse and exploitation.
  • Institutional Gaps:
    • Anti-Human Trafficking Units (AHTUs) exist on paper in many districts but suffer from:
      • Understaffing,
      • Poor training,
      • Weak coordination with NGOs and prosecutors.

Why Laws Are Not Enough ?

  • Low Conviction Rates:
    • Weak investigation,
    • Hostile witnesses,
    • Poor victim protection during trial.
  • Rehabilitation Deficit:
    • Rescue often ends with one-time compensation.
    • Inadequate focus on:
      • Long-term psychological care,
      • Education continuity,
      • Skill development.
  • Federal & Inter-State Complexity:
    • Trafficking networks operate across states; policing remains largely state-bound.
  • Digital Transformation of Crime:
    • Use of social media, messaging apps, and encrypted platforms for:
      • Grooming,
      • Recruitment,
      • Sale and movement of victims.

Prevention Lens: What the Editorial Emphasises

  • Education as Prevention:
    • Enforce Right to Education Act promise of schooling up to 14 years.
    • School retention is among the strongest safeguards against trafficking.
  • Community & Civil Society Role:
    • Early warning systems,
    • Community vigilance,
    • NGO–police collaboration.
  • Need for Comprehensive Anti-Trafficking Law:
    • A standalone, modern Anti-Trafficking Act with:
      • Victim-centric procedures,
      • Inter-state investigation powers,
      • Time-bound trials.

Critical Takeaway

  • India’s child trafficking challenge is no longer a legal vacuum problem, but a governance, enforcement, and rehabilitation failure.
  • The Supreme Court has clarified the judicial approach; the remaining burden lies with:
    • Executive capacity,
    • Police professionalism,
    • Prosecutorial sensitivity,
    • Civil society participation.

Conclusion:

  • Child trafficking will not end with harsher laws alone—it demands a coordinated ecosystem of prevention, sensitive justice, and long-term rehabilitation, with the child placed firmly at the centre of the response.

December 2025
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