The Hindu – UPSC News Analysis
“From Headlines to Answer Sheets — Curated Analysis for UPSC Mains & Prelims”
Prepared by Legacy IAS Academy, Bangalore | UPSC Civil Services Coaching
The Finance Minister announced a ₹57,381 crore Economic Stabilisation Fund as part of the Second Supplementary Demand for Grants passed by the Lok Sabha. The allocation aims to provide fiscal headroom to absorb global economic shocks — including the West Asia conflict ($100/barrel oil), supply chain disruptions, and unexpected sub-sector shocks. The Lok Sabha cleared a net cash outgo of ₹2.01 lakh crore while the Centre reaffirmed its fiscal deficit target of 4.4% of GDP for 2025-26.
- Supplementary Demands for Grants: Under Article 115 of the Constitution, the government may seek additional appropriations when authorised expenditure proves insufficient. These go to Parliament for approval.
- Fiscal Deficit Target: Budget 2025-26 set it at 4.4% of GDP; the government is on the FRBM (Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management Act, 2003) consolidation path targeting ~4.5% → 4.4%.
- Economic Stabilisation Fund: A dedicated buffer fund — akin to a sovereign rainy-day reserve — to respond to external shocks without disturbing normal budgetary operations.
- West Asia Impact: India imports ~87% of its crude oil; $100/barrel prices strain Current Account Deficit (CAD), inflation, and rupee stability simultaneously.
| Dimension | Details |
|---|---|
| Fund Size | ₹57,381 crore (part of ₹2.81 lakh crore extra spending sought) |
| Net Cash Outgo | ₹2.01 lakh crore (after ~₹80,000 crore additional receipts) |
| Fiscal Deficit | Maintained at 4.4% of GDP |
| Oil Shock | $100/barrel; Strait of Hormuz disruption |
| LPG Import Concern | 60% imported; 90% via Strait of Hormuz |
| Rupee Impact | Fresh low of ₹92.3 per USD on March 14 |
🔄 Cause–Effect Chain: West Asia War → Indian Economy
- Structural Vulnerability: India’s 87% oil import dependence is a chronic fiscal risk; a stabilisation fund treats symptoms, not the structural problem of import reliance.
- Crowding Out Risk: Large supplementary allocations can divert funds from capital expenditure, which is the actual driver of growth.
- Inflation–Growth Dilemma: Supply-driven inflation (oil) cannot be effectively tamed by demand-side tools (interest rates), placing a difficult burden on the RBI in its April MPC meeting.
- Fiscal Credibility: Maintaining 4.4% deficit during a global shock is commendable — signals institutional maturity. However, it relies heavily on assumed additional receipts of ₹80,000 crore, which must be verified.
- Short-term: Expedite strategic oil stock release from SPR (Strategic Petroleum Reserve); diversify LPG import routes (pipeline from Central Asia).
- Medium-term: Accelerate domestic renewable energy capacity; fast-track nuclear energy under SHANTI Bill, 2025.
- Long-term: Build a permanent statutory Fiscal Stabilisation Fund on the lines of Norway/Chile — funded in normal years, drawn down in crisis years.
- SDG Linkage: SDG 7 (Affordable and Clean Energy), SDG 8 (Decent Work and Economic Growth), SDG 17 (Partnerships for global stability).
🎓 F. Exam Orientation
🔵 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
- (a) Article 112
- (b) Article 113
- (c) Article 115 ✓
- (d) Article 116
Since February 28, 2026, when Israel and the U.S. jointly attacked Iran, the entire West Asian region has been engulfed in war. 90 lakh–1 crore Indian expatriates in GCC countries face direct security risks. At least 5 Indian sailors have died, ~35-40 injured in drone/missile attacks. 1.5 lakh Indians have returned home. India’s Consular responses face criticism for inadequacy. The crisis also highlights India’s energy and remittance vulnerabilities due to its deep integration with the Gulf.
- Indian Diaspora in GCC: The 6 GCC countries (Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, UAE, Qatar, Bahrain, Oman) host the largest concentration of Indian workers globally — ~90-100 lakh.
- Remittances: India is the world’s top remittance receiver; GCC accounts for ~50% of total inflows (~$30-35 billion annually).
- Strait of Hormuz: A crucial chokepoint through which ~20% of global oil trade and ~25% of LNG pass. Iran has threatened indefinite closure.
- Operation Dost / Kaveri-type Evacuations: India has conducted large-scale evacuations previously (e.g., Operation Rahat in Yemen, 2015 — 4,741 Indians).
- MEA Consular Services: Regulated under Vienna Convention on Consular Relations, 1963.
🌐 India’s Stakes in West Asia Crisis
| Issue | Challenge | India’s Response |
|---|---|---|
| Stranded tourists | Flights cancelled; hotels overcharging | Consular advisories; limited in-person help |
| Seafarers at risk | Missile attacks on tankers; 5 dead | DGS monitoring; calls for ceasefire |
| Energy supply | Hormuz closed; LPG “slight concern” | Russian oil waiver; domestic production up 30% |
| Diplomatic balance | Co-sponsored UNSC Res. 2817 vs. BRICS Chair | Calling for dialogue; not condemning US-Israel |
- Consular Failure: Lack of timely in-person support at Dubai consulate reveals systemic under-preparedness for large-scale diaspora crises.
- Structural Vulnerability: India’s inability to evacuate 90+ lakh people underlines the need for bilateral emergency agreements with GCC countries.
- Diplomatic Tightrope: India co-sponsored UNSC Resolution 2817 against Iran while holding BRICS Presidency (Iran is BRICS+ member) — this creates contradictions in India’s non-alignment tradition.
- Remittance Shock Risk: Any prolonged crisis causing reverse migration could trigger a remittance shock affecting Kerala, UP, Bihar economies significantly.
- Establish a permanent Diaspora Emergency Response System with pre-positioned resources at major MEA missions.
- Negotiate bilateral labor protection agreements with GCC states including emergency evacuation protocols.
- Develop a National Remittance Stabilisation Fund for crisis periods to support dependent families.
- Pursue energy diversification urgently — nuclear, solar, green hydrogen — to reduce Gulf energy dependence.
- India must articulate a consistent West Asia doctrine that aligns its strategic interests with its traditional non-aligned, humanitarian foreign policy.
🎓 F. Exam Orientation
🔵 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
1. India is the world’s top remittance-receiving country.
2. About 90 lakh–1 crore Indians live and work across GCC countries.
3. GCC comprises 8 member countries.
- (a) 1 and 2 only
- (b) 1 and 2 only ✓
- (c) 2 and 3 only
- (d) 1, 2 and 3
India’s retail inflation (CPI) rose to 3.2% in February 2026 — a 10-month high — driven primarily by food and precious metal prices. This is based on the new CPI series (second data release). Food inflation jumped to 3.35% from 2.1% in January, with tomato prices rising over 45%. Gold jewellery inflation hit 48.2% and silver jewellery over 160%. The RBI’s April MPC meeting faces a difficult task as inflation is supply-driven, not demand-driven.
- CPI (New Series): Base year — recently revised. Food and beverages now carry a 36.75% weight in the new series (lower than old series).
- RBI’s Inflation Target: Under FRBM framework and RBI Act amendment (2016), RBI targets 4% CPI ± 2% (band: 2-6%). Current 3.2% is within target.
- MPC (Monetary Policy Committee): 6-member body; Governor + 3 RBI officials + 3 external members. Decisions by majority.
- Base Effect: Statistical phenomenon where low prices in the previous year inflate year-on-year percentage changes. The base effect that suppressed inflation has now worn off.
- El Niño: Climate pattern causing below-normal monsoon → food price risk. Predicted to return mid-2026 monsoon.
| Inflation Component | February 2026 | January 2026 |
|---|---|---|
| Overall CPI | 3.2% | Lower (base effect) |
| Food & Beverages | 3.35% | 2.1% |
| Tomato | +45% | — |
| Onion | -28% | — |
| Potato | -18% | — |
| Gold Jewellery | 48.2% | 46.8% |
| Silver Jewellery | 160%+ | 160%+ |
🧠 Drivers of India’s Current Inflation — Mind Map
- Supply vs. Demand Inflation: Current inflation is cost-push (supply-side). Raising interest rates to combat it would reduce aggregate demand without fixing supply — potentially slowing growth without taming prices.
- New CPI Series Limitation: Too little data for robust trend analysis — policymakers must exercise caution in interpreting the new series.
- Precious Metal Weight: Gold/silver inflation reflects global uncertainty, not domestic policy failure — difficult for RBI to address.
- Structural Food Inflation: India’s food inflation is structurally linked to monsoon dependence, cold chain inefficiency, and high intermediary margins.
- Government to expedite price stabilisation interventions: release buffer stock of vegetables; reduce import duties on edible oils.
- RBI to maintain accommodative stance but signal readiness to act — “watchful pause” at April MPC.
- Accelerate PM Kisan Sampada Yojana for cold chain and food processing to reduce food inflation volatility.
- Long-term: Expand alternative energy to reduce fuel-driven input cost inflation (SDG-7).
🎓 F. Exam Orientation
🔵 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
1. The MPC has 6 members, of whom 3 are from the RBI and 3 are external members appointed by the Government.
2. The RBI Governor has a casting vote in case of a tie.
3. The inflation target for the MPC is set by the RBI independently without Government notification.
- (a) 1 and 2 only ✓
- (b) 2 and 3 only
- (c) 1 and 3 only
- (d) 1, 2 and 3
Shashi Tharoor’s op-ed traces the birth, legacy, and collapse of the Washington Consensus (WC) — the 10-point neoliberal policy framework coined by John Williamson in 1989. The WC advocated fiscal discipline, privatisation, deregulation, and trade liberalisation. However, decades of implementation reveal systemic failures — from the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis to the 2008 meltdown, rising inequality, and the current Trump tariff era. The world is now navigating a post-Washington Consensus multipolar order requiring context-sensitive, pragmatic policy eclecticism.
- Washington Consensus (1989): 10 prescriptions — fiscal discipline, public spending reorientation, tax reform, interest rate liberalisation, competitive exchange rates, trade liberalisation, FDI liberalisation, privatisation, deregulation, property rights.
- Bretton Woods Institutions (BWIs): World Bank and IMF — adopted WC principles and imposed them via structural adjustment conditionalities on developing nations.
- WTO Ministerial Failures: Seattle (1999) and Cancún (2003) reflected North-South rifts; Doha Round remains incomplete.
- TRIPS, TRIMs, TRIMS: WTO agreements that restricted developing countries’ industrial policy space — a key WC legacy.
- Beijing Consensus: Alternative model — state-led development, targeted industrial policy, limited political liberalisation (China’s rise).
| Phase | Dominant Paradigm | Key Features | Failures/Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1980s-1990s | Washington Consensus | Liberalise, Privatise, Deregulate | Asian Crisis 1997, inequality spikes, social unrest |
| 2000s | Post-WC (Stiglitz) | Institutions matter; social safety nets; governance | Partial correction; Doha Round stalled |
| 2008-2020 | Keynesian Revival | Stimulus spending; financial regulation | Recovery but rising populism (MAGA, Brexit) |
| 2020s | Geoeconomics Era | Industrial policy, supply chain security, tariffs | Trump tariffs; China decoupling; fragmentation |
- One-size-fits-all Fallacy: WC ignored the developmental state experiences of South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore — nations that industrialised via state-led strategies not WC principles.
- Power Asymmetry: WC was designed in Washington without meaningful participation of developing nations — reflecting neo-colonial intellectual dominance.
- Trump Paradox: The US itself now practices the opposite of WC — protectionism, industrial subsidies (CHIPS Act, IRA) — while earlier preaching liberalisation to others.
- India’s Opportunity: As multipolarism rises, India can articulate a third way — combining market dynamism with inclusive state capacity — distinct from both WC orthodoxy and the Beijing model.
- A New Development Consensus must be inclusive, bottom-up, and context-sensitive — drawing from South Korea (industrial policy), Nordic states (social protection), and China (infrastructure-led growth) selectively.
- India should advocate in G20, BRICS, and WTO for flexibilities that allow developing nations to pursue strategic industrial policies.
- Digital trade governance, climate finance, and AI regulation are new frontiers where a post-WC consensus must be built.
🎓 F. Exam Orientation
🔵 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
- (a) A military alliance between the US and NATO members
- (b) A set of free trade agreements led by the United States
- (c) A set of neoliberal economic policy prescriptions for developing countries promoted by IMF and World Bank ✓
- (d) A UN resolution on global financial stability
Canadian PM Mark Carney’s visit to India (Feb 27 – Mar 2, 2026) marked a strategic turnaround in India-Canada relations after years of strain under Trudeau. The visit yielded at least 8 agreements, including a Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) roadmap, a uranium supply deal, critical minerals MoU, and technology innovation partnerships. Energy, nuclear, and critical minerals emerged as the pillars of renewed engagement.
- India-Canada Estrangement (2023-25): Triggered by Canadian PM Trudeau’s allegations linking Indian officials to the Nijjar killing — India denied; relationship froze.
- CEPA: Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement — India is negotiating several CEPAs (UAE signed 2022, UK ongoing). Unlike FTAs, CEPAs cover goods, services, investments, and IP.
- Cameco: Canada’s largest uranium producer; India’s nuclear fuel security heavily depends on secure long-term contracts.
- SHANTI Bill, 2025: India’s Sustainable Harnessing and Advancement of Nuclear Energy for Transforming India — opens civilian nuclear to private sector; targets 100 GW nuclear by 2047.
- Pax Silica Coalition: US-led coalition for AI and semiconductor cooperation; India is a member.
| Area | Agreement/Outcome | Strategic Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Trade | CEPA terms of agreement signed | Comprehensive market access; services trade |
| Nuclear Energy | DAE + Cameco uranium supply deal | Fuel security for India’s 100 GW nuclear target (2047) |
| Critical Minerals | MoU on critical minerals cooperation | Counter China’s rare earth dominance; Pax Silica linkage |
| Technology | Australia-Canada-India Tech Partnership MoU | Indo-Pacific engagement; semiconductor/AI value chain |
| Research & Culture | Research partnership + cultural exchange | People-to-people ties; academic collaboration |
| Food Security | Food and nutrition collaboration | Agriculture R&D; food processing |
- Pragmatic Diplomacy: Both India and Canada chose deliverables over legacy disputes — a mature, interest-based approach to reset relations.
- Nuclear Dependence Risk: India must diversify uranium suppliers beyond Canada to avoid single-source vulnerability (Australia, Kazakhstan are alternatives).
- CEPA Negotiations: India-Canada FTA talks stalled repeatedly since 2010. Converting “terms of agreement” into a full CEPA requires navigating agriculture, dairy, and services market access sensitivities.
- Diaspora Sensitivity: Canada’s large Sikh diaspora continues to influence its domestic politics vis-à-vis India — a persistent undercurrent risk.
- Expedite CEPA negotiations with clear timelines — leverage Carney’s pragmatic approach before Canadian electoral cycles disrupt continuity.
- Build a trilateral India-Canada-Australia critical minerals framework under the existing tech MoU.
- Link uranium supply to India’s 100 GW nuclear target by 2047 as a strategic priority under the National Energy Security Plan.
- Manage diaspora diplomacy proactively — engage with Canadian Sikh community constructively on shared values.
🎓 F. Exam Orientation
🔵 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
- (a) Allow private sector participation in civilian nuclear energy
- (b) Achieve 100 GW nuclear power capacity by 2047
- (c) Transfer nuclear weapons technology to allied nations ✓
- (d) Reduce India’s dependence on imported fossil fuels
The Supreme Court, in the Rachana Gangu case, directed the Ministry of Health to design a no-fault compensation scheme for serious Adverse Events Following Immunisation (AEFI) in India’s COVID-19 vaccination campaign. This marks a shift from fault-based to no-fault liability. The case arose from deaths allegedly caused by Vaccine-Induced Immune Thrombotic Thrombocytopenia (VITT) — a rare Covishield complication. The Court affirmed that the absence of a formal compensation policy left affected families in a legal vacuum.
- AEFI (Adverse Events Following Immunisation): Any untoward medical occurrence after vaccination; may or may not be causally related to the vaccine.
- No-Fault Compensation: Compensation regardless of negligence proof — based on plausible causal link between vaccine and adverse event.
- Covishield: AstraZeneca’s COVID vaccine (manufactured by SII); ~220 crore doses administered in India; AstraZeneca acknowledged VITT risk in UK court in 2024.
- Jacob Puliyel Case (2022): SC upheld emergency vaccine approvals but stressed need for public AEFI data availability.
- COVAX: Global COVID vaccine facility; established a no-fault mechanism for 92 low-middle income countries.
- National Compensation Fund Models: US (VICP — Vaccine Injury Compensation Program), UK (VDPS — Vaccine Damage Payment Scheme).
| Aspect | Fault-Based System | No-Fault System |
|---|---|---|
| Burden of Proof | Claimant must prove negligence | Claimant shows plausible causal link |
| Practical Access | Difficult for ordinary citizens; expensive | Accessible; administrative process |
| State Responsibility | Government deflects liability | State assumes duty of care |
| Vaccine Confidence | May reduce trust if no recourse | Increases public trust in immunisation |
| Examples | India (pre-SC order) | US (VICP), UK (VDPS), COVAX mechanism |
- Balance Required: A no-fault scheme must be designed carefully to avoid moral hazard — excessive claims or fraudulent applications — while ensuring genuine victims receive timely relief.
- India’s Scale Challenge: With 220 crore COVID doses administered, even a very small AEFI rate translates to thousands of potential claimants — the compensation fund must be adequately resourced.
- Vaccine Hesitancy Risk: Paradoxically, acknowledgement of VITT risk could fuel anti-vaccine sentiment if communication is not managed carefully.
- Precedent for Future Campaigns: The HPV vaccine drive and future pandemic responses will now need to factor in mandatory compensation infrastructure from the outset.
- Design a National Vaccine Injury Compensation Programme (NVICP) on the lines of US VICP — administrative, no-fault, with defined compensation schedules.
- Create an independent expert review panel (virology, immunology, public health experts) to assess AEFI causality claims quickly.
- Ensure public AEFI data transparency (as directed in Jacob Puliyel, 2022) to build trust.
- Link with SDG 3 (Good Health and Well-being) — ensuring vaccine confidence through accountability mechanisms.
🎓 F. Exam Orientation
🔵 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
- (a) The government accepts no liability for vaccine injuries
- (b) Only negligence by manufacturers is grounds for compensation
- (c) Compensation is provided based on a plausible causal link to vaccination, without requiring proof of negligence ✓
- (d) Courts alone can award compensation for vaccine injuries
INDIA bloc MPs submitted a 10-page notice in both Houses of Parliament seeking removal of Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) Gyanesh Kumar — the first time such a formal notice has been moved in Parliament. The notice lists 7 charges including partisan conduct, obstruction of electoral fraud investigation, and mass disenfranchisement. The notice was signed by 130 Lok Sabha MPs and 63 Rajya Sabha MPs — exceeding the required thresholds.
- Constitutional Provision: Article 324(5) — The CEC can be removed only by the President, on an address by both Houses of Parliament, in the same manner and on the same grounds as a Judge of the Supreme Court.
- Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968: Governs the process — if notices are submitted in both Houses on the same day, an inquiry committee is constituted jointly by Speaker (LS) and Chairman (RS).
- Threshold: Minimum 100 MPs in Lok Sabha; 50 MPs in Rajya Sabha must sign the notice.
- SIR (Special Intensive Revision): The electoral roll exercise at the centre of allegations — Opposition claims it disenfranchises minorities and women disproportionately.
- Chief Election Commissioner and Other Election Commissioners (Appointment, Conditions of Service and Term of Office) Act, 2023: Changed appointment process — removed CJI from selection panel, replacing with a Cabinet Minister; widely criticised by Opposition.
🔄 Constitutional Process for Removal of CEC (Article 324 + Judges Inquiry Act, 1968)
- Historical First: While constitutional provisions exist, this is the first formal removal motion for CEC — underlines the severity of the institutional credibility crisis.
- Electoral Integrity Concerns: If Opposition allegations about SIR causing disenfranchisement are verified, it raises fundamental questions about the independence and integrity of India’s election machinery.
- ECI Appointment Controversy: The 2023 Act removing the CJI from the appointment panel has already weakened the perception of ECI independence. The current motion accelerates this institutional crisis.
- Numbers Challenge: Even with 130+63 signatures, the motion needs to be admitted and then pass with two-thirds majority — difficult given current political arithmetic.
- Restore the original appointment mechanism including CJI in the selection panel as recommended by the Supreme Court in Anoop Baranwal (2023).
- Establish a Parliamentary Committee on Electoral Integrity for continuous oversight of ECI without undermining its independence.
- Ensure SIR transparency — publish granular data on deletions/additions by constituency, demographic, and reason.
- Strengthen Election Commission Act with fixed terms, transparent processes, and multi-party oversight.
🎓 F. Exam Orientation
🔵 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
1. The CEC can be removed by the President on the address of Parliament.
2. The process for CEC removal is exactly the same as for removal of a High Court judge.
3. The Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968 governs the process of inquiry for removal of the CEC.
- (a) 1 and 2 only
- (b) 1 and 3 only ✓
- (c) 2 and 3 only
- (d) 1, 2 and 3
The Central Government introduced the Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Amendment Bill in Parliament, seeking to redefine “transgender person” by dropping the concept of self-perceived gender identity. The new definition restricts the category primarily to those with biological/medical conditions or traditional socio-cultural identities (kinner, hijra, aravani). Activists and the trans community strongly oppose the Bill, saying it violates the landmark NALSA judgment (2014) and rolls back hard-won rights.
- NALSA v. Union of India (2014): Supreme Court declared transgender persons as the “third gender”; affirmed right to self-identification of gender without surgery requirement; directed affirmative action for transgender community.
- Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act, 2019: Existing law; defined transgender to include self-perceived gender identity; prohibited discrimination; provided for certificates and welfare boards.
- CEDAW: Convention on Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women — India is a signatory; recognises non-discrimination in gender matters.
- Article 21: Right to Life and Personal Liberty — interpreted to include right to dignity, gender identity, and sexual orientation (Navtej Johar, 2018).
- Navtej Singh Johar v. UoI (2018): SC decriminalised homosexuality (Section 377 IPC); affirmed LGBTQ+ persons’ right to dignity.
| Aspect | Existing Act (2019) | Proposed Amendment (2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Definition Basis | Self-perceived gender identity | Biological/medical conditions + traditional identities only |
| Inclusion | Broad — trans-man, trans-woman, genderqueer, intersex | Narrow — biological variance, intersex, kinner/hijra/aravani |
| Self-ID Right | Explicitly included | Effectively removed |
| NALSA Compliance | Aligns with 2014 judgment | Activists say violates NALSA |
| New Provisions | — | Specific crimes against trans persons/children added |
- Regression vs. Reform: While the government frames the amendment as targeting “genuine” beneficiaries, it effectively reverses the progressive identity-affirmation framework established over decades of judicial activism.
- Medicalization of Identity: Requiring biological/medical conditions as the basis for transgender identity returns to a discredited medical model — rejected globally as dehumanising.
- Positive Additions: The amendment’s introduction of specific criminal penalties for violations against transgender persons and children is a positive step toward enforcement.
- Global Trend Conflict: Most progressive nations (UK, Canada) are moving toward more inclusive self-identification systems; India’s proposed amendment moves in the opposite direction.
- Retain the self-perceived gender identity provision consistent with NALSA (2014) while adding clear administrative procedures to prevent misuse.
- Establish a National Transgender Welfare Board with transgender representation for policy development.
- Implement the criminal provisions strictly — non-discrimination in education, employment, housing — which the original Act lacks enforcement mechanisms for.
- Align with SDG 10 (Reduced Inequalities) and SDG 16 (Peace, Justice, Strong Institutions) — include LGBTQ+ welfare in social justice frameworks.
🎓 F. Exam Orientation
🔵 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
- (a) Homosexuality is a criminal offence under Section 377 IPC
- (b) Gender reassignment surgery is mandatory for legal recognition as a transgender person
- (c) Transgender persons have the right to self-identify their gender as male, female, or a third gender without requiring surgery ✓
- (d) Transgender persons are entitled to reservation in OBC category only


