The Hindu UPSC News Analysis For 15 May 2026

The Hindu – UPSC News Analysis | May 15, 2026 | Legacy IAS
UPSC Mains & Prelims · Daily Analysis

The Hindu
UPSC News Analysis

Structured insights for Civil Services aspirants — GS I · II · III · IV · Essay

📰 Friday, May 15, 2026 — Bengaluru City Edition
📌 8 Articles Analysed 🎯 GS-I · GS-II · GS-III · GS-IV ❓ MCQs Included 📝 Model Mains Questions
GS-III · Indian Economy · Inflation · Monetary Policy

WPI Inflation More Than Doubles to 8.3% in April 2026 — West Asia Crisis & Systemic Inflation

42-month high WPI; crude oil/gas inflation at 67.2%; fuel & power at 24.7%; CPI-WPI divergence signals imminent consumer pass-through

🔹 A. Issue in Brief
  • India’s Wholesale Price Index (WPI) inflation surged to 8.3% in April 2026 — its highest level in 3.5 years (42-month high) — from 3.9% in March 2026, driven almost entirely by the West Asia crisis’s impact on global energy prices.
  • Crude oil and natural gas WPI inflation hit 67.2% (46-month high); fuel and power category inflation reached 24.7% (highest since October 2022). Meanwhile, retail CPI inflation remained at 3.48% — a deceptive calm as producers are still absorbing rising costs.
  • The CPI-WPI divergence signals that consumer inflation is about to burst: public sector oil companies are absorbing under-recoveries of ~₹30,000 crore per month; retail petrol/diesel price hikes are imminent, with economy-wide cascading consequences.
🔹 B. Static Background
  • WPI (Wholesale Price Index): Measures price changes at the producer/wholesale level; base year 2011-12; published by Ministry of Commerce and Industry; covers Primary Articles, Fuel & Power, and Manufactured Products. Does NOT directly measure what consumers pay — it measures what producers receive.
  • CPI (Consumer Price Index): Measures retail-level prices paid by consumers; base year 2012; published by Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI); RBI’s primary inflation target — 4% with ±2% tolerance band.
  • RBI’s Inflation Targeting Framework: Flexible inflation targeting adopted 2016 under amended RBI Act Section 45ZA; MPC (Monetary Policy Committee) mandated to keep CPI inflation at 4% ±2%; failure to achieve for 3 consecutive quarters requires explanation to government.
  • Under-recoveries: When government-controlled oil marketing companies (HPCL, BPCL, IOC) sell fuel below cost — the gap is an “under-recovery” absorbed by the OMC, depleting their financials. After the West Asia war (February 28), crude oil rose from ~$70/barrel to ~$105/barrel — creating unprecedented OMC losses.
  • FRBM Act, 2003: Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management — limits fiscal deficit; fuel price hikes transfer the under-recovery burden from OMCs to consumers; subsidised fuel prices require government support which could breach FRBM targets.
  • Commercial LPG price: 19.2 kg cylinder (used in hotels, restaurants) has risen ₹850–₹1,000 since the war began; 5 kg cylinder (used by migrant labour) up ₹200+ — a direct food inflation transmission mechanism.
🔹 C. Inflation Data — April 2026 vs. Targets
IndicatorMarch 2026April 2026Significance
WPI Inflation (overall)3.9%8.3%42-month high; doubled in one month
Crude Oil & Gas WPI~39-month high67.2%46-month high; primary driver
Fuel & Power WPI~18%24.7%Highest since October 2022
Food WPI1.9%2.0%Relatively contained; food buffer holds
CPI Retail Inflation3.4%3.48%Deceptive calm; pass-through pending
Consumer Food Price Index3.87%4.2%Rising; restaurant/accommodation: sharper
Rupee depreciation (since war)~8.5% against USD in 2.5 monthsVs. 2-3% annually in prior 5 years
OMC under-recovery/month~₹30,000 croreUnsustainable; retail price hike imminent
🔹 D. Critical Analysis
CPI-WPI divergence — the ticking clock: The gap between WPI (8.3%) and CPI (3.48%) is unusually large. It means producers are still absorbing higher input costs rather than passing them to consumers. This is unsustainable — once producers can no longer absorb costs, retail inflation will rise sharply. The WPI is a leading indicator: today’s WPI is tomorrow’s CPI.
RBI’s dilemma — growth vs. inflation: RBI has been in an accommodative monetary policy cycle, cutting rates to support growth. Rising WPI → future CPI rise will force RBI to tighten monetary policy (raise repo rate) — which increases borrowing costs, slows investment, and threatens India’s ~7% GDP growth target. RBI has “limited room” to manoeuvre — a genuine stagflation risk.
Rupee depreciation — imported inflation: The rupee has depreciated ~8.5% since the West Asia war began (February 28) — far exceeding the 2-3% annual average of the past 5 years. A weaker rupee makes all imports more expensive (oil, fertilisers, electronics, machinery) — amplifying the domestic inflation impact beyond just energy prices.
Migrant labour and food inflation transmission: The 5 kg commercial LPG cylinder (widely used by migrant wage labour for cooking) has risen ₹200+. This directly raises food preparation costs at the informal sector level — a regressive inflation impact that hits the poorest disproportionately.
🔹 E. Way Forward
  • Calibrated fuel price revision: Rather than a sudden shock increase, a phased fuel price revision (like the daily revision mechanism pre-2021) would spread the consumer impact and reduce panic-buying.
  • Targeted subsidies: Cushion BPL households from fuel price increases through DBT (Direct Benefit Transfer) for LPG — similar to Ujjwala Yojana subsidy model — while allowing market pricing for commercial consumers.
  • RBI coordination: Pre-emptive MPC communication about inflation trajectory; forward guidance on monetary policy path to anchor inflation expectations before CPI rises.
  • Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) utilisation: India’s SPR at Mangaluru, Padur, and Visakhapatnam holds ~5.33 million tonnes. Coordinated release during supply disruptions can dampen price spikes.
  • Link with SDG 10 (Reduced Inequalities — regressive inflation impact on poor) and SDG 7 (Affordable and Clean Energy).
🔹 F. Exam Orientation
📌 Prelims Pointers
  • WPI base year: 2011-12; published by Ministry of Commerce and Industry; covers Primary Articles (food, non-food), Fuel & Power, Manufactured Products.
  • CPI base year: 2012; published by MoSPI; RBI’s inflation target — 4% ±2%; primary monetary policy anchor under inflation targeting framework.
  • RBI Inflation Targeting: Flexible inflation targeting since 2016; Section 45ZA RBI Act; 6-member MPC (3 RBI + 3 government); CPI target 4% ±2%; breach for 3 consecutive quarters requires explanation.
  • Under-recovery: Difference between market price of fuel and the price at which OMCs (HPCL, BPCL, IOC) sell to consumers; absorbed by OMCs depleting their profits.
  • India’s SPR: Strategic Petroleum Reserve — underground caverns at Mangaluru, Padur (Karnataka), and Visakhapatnam (Andhra Pradesh); ~5.33 million tonnes capacity; managed by Indian Strategic Petroleum Reserves Ltd. (ISPRL).
  • Stagflation: Simultaneous high inflation + low/stagnant economic growth; policy dilemma — inflation requires tightening (raises rates, slows growth) but low growth requires easing (lowers rates, risks more inflation).
📝 Model Mains Question (GS-III · 15 Marks)

“The sharp divergence between India’s WPI (8.3%) and CPI (3.48%) in April 2026 signals an impending inflation surge. Examine the causes of this divergence, its systemic implications for the Indian economy, and the policy options available to the government and RBI.”

Hint: WPI-CPI divergence meaning, energy price transmission mechanism, OMC under-recoveries, rupee depreciation, RBI’s inflation targeting dilemma (tighten vs. support growth), stagflation risk, targeted subsidies, SPR, fuel price revision mechanisms, FRBM constraints. ~250 words.
🎯 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
Q. Consider the following statements about the Wholesale Price Index (WPI) in India:
1. WPI is published by the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI).
2. The base year for WPI currently used in India is 2011-12.
3. WPI is the primary inflation indicator used by the RBI for monetary policy targeting.
4. WPI covers Primary Articles, Fuel & Power, and Manufactured Products.
Which of the above statements are correct?
  • (a) 1 and 4 only
  • (b) 2 and 4 only ✓
  • (c) 2, 3 and 4 only
  • (d) 1, 2 and 4 only
Explanation: Statement 1 is incorrect — WPI is published by the Ministry of Commerce and Industry (not MoSPI; CPI is published by MoSPI). Statement 3 is incorrect — RBI uses CPI (not WPI) for monetary policy targeting under the inflation targeting framework. Statements 2 (base year 2011-12) and 4 (coverage: Primary Articles, Fuel & Power, Manufactured Products) are correct. Answer: (b).
GS-II · Polity · Constitutional Bodies · Separation of Powers

Election Commission Independence — SC Questions 2023 Appointment Act, Anoop Baranwal Case

SC: “Not one absolutely neutral person” in PM-chaired panel; 2023 Act replaced CJI with Cabinet Minister; Basic Structure implications

🔹 A. Issue in Brief
  • The Supreme Court has questioned the constitutionality of the Chief Election Commissioner and other Election Commissioners (Appointment, Conditions of Service, and Term of Office) Act, 2023, observing that the PM-chaired selection committee lacks “even one absolutely neutral person.”
  • The 2023 Act replaced the Chief Justice of India (CJI) on the selection committee with a Cabinet Minister nominated by the Prime Minister — passed within months of the Supreme Court’s Anoop Baranwal judgment (March 2023) that constituted the three-member panel (PM + LoP + CJI) as a stop-gap arrangement.
  • The Court warned that free and fair elections — a Basic Structure element — depend on a truly independent Election Commission, which requires independent Commissioners.
🔹 B. Static Background
  • Article 324: Superintendence, direction, and control of elections vested in the Election Commission; CEC appointed by President; conditions of service prescribed by Parliament under Article 324(5); removal: only by impeachment-like procedure (same as SC judge).
  • Article 324(2): Empowers Parliament to prescribe the number of Election Commissioners and their appointment by the President — the legislative basis for the 2023 Act.
  • Anoop Baranwal vs. Union of India (March 2023): 5-judge Constitution Bench; held that until Parliament enacted a law under Article 324(2), the selection committee for CEC/ECs would comprise the PM, Leader of Opposition (Lok Sabha), and the CJI. The Court described this as a “stop-gap” arrangement — an exercise of judicial restraint.
  • Chief Election Commissioner and other ECs (Appointment) Act, 2023: Passed December 2023; constituted a 3-member selection committee: PM (chair), Cabinet Minister nominated by PM, Leader of Opposition. Replaced CJI with a Cabinet Minister — two of three members are effectively from the ruling party/government.
  • Second ARC (2nd Administrative Reforms Commission, 2008): Recommended that a collegium-type system with multiple independent members should select constitutional functionaries including CEC.
  • Free and fair elections as Basic Structure: Established in Indira Gandhi vs. Raj Narain (1975) and reinforced in multiple cases — electoral democracy is a non-negotiable constitutional foundation.
🔹 C. Selection Panel — Before vs. After
AspectAnoop Baranwal Arrangement (2023)2023 Act (Current)Concern
MembersPM + Leader of Opposition + Chief Justice of IndiaPM + Cabinet Minister (nominated by PM) + Leader of OppositionCJI replaced by PM’s Cabinet Minister
Neutral memberCJI — constitutionally independentNone — Cabinet Minister is by definition aligned with PMSC: “Not one absolutely neutral person”
Appointment basisSC stop-gap under judicial directionParliamentary legislation under Article 324(2)Legally valid but constitutionally questionable
Opposition vetoLoP could withhold consentLoP can dissent but appointment can proceed without unanimous voteOpposition role potentially “ornamental”
Executive dominance1 of 3 (PM)2 of 3 effectively (PM + PM’s minister)Majority in committee with government alignment
🔹 D. Critical Analysis
Parliament vs. Judiciary tension: The Attorney-General argued the court cannot become a “second chamber of Parliament” — Parliament can make laws differently from what the SC envisions. This reflects the classic separation of powers debate: can the SC strike down legislation that undermines its own stop-gap arrangement without the Court explicitly declaring the law unconstitutional under Article 141?
Basic Structure implication: If free and fair elections are a Basic Structure element, and an independent Election Commission is essential to that, then any law that systematically undermines EC independence could be struck down as violating the Basic Structure doctrine (Kesavananda Bharati, 1973). The Court is edging toward this reasoning without explicitly stating it.
Practical consequences — past 11 months: Three CECs and Election Commissioners have been appointed under the 2023 Act since December 2023. Civil society activists and former election commissioners have questioned whether these appointments were made with adequate independence. The West Bengal SIR controversy (deletions of 27 lakh voters, winning margins less than number of deletions in 150 seats) is directly linked to the impartiality concern.
Opposition role — “ornamental”? The SC questioned whether the Leader of Opposition’s presence is merely “ornamental” as appointments can be made without a unanimous vote. Under the 2023 Act, the government’s 2-member majority (PM + Minister) means the LoP cannot block an appointment — reducing the LoP’s role to a formality.
🔹 E. Way Forward
  • Law Commission’s recommendation: Broader collegium-type system including retired judges, civil society representatives, and constitutional experts — not just politicians and government nominees.
  • 2nd ARC recommendation: Multi-member independent panel for appointment of constitutional authorities including CEC.
  • Comparative global practice: UK Electoral Commission — appointed by Parliament on cross-party basis; South Africa — IEC appointed by panel chaired by Chief Justice; USA — FEC has equal Republican and Democrat members. All ensure structural independence from the executive.
  • The SC should consider referring the case to a 5-judge Constitution Bench to definitively rule on whether the 2023 Act violates the Basic Structure — the current 2-judge bench cannot do this.
  • Link with Article 326 (Right to vote — universal adult franchise), Article 14 (equal treatment of all voters), and Preamble (democratic republic).
🔹 F. Exam Orientation
📌 Prelims Pointers
  • Article 324: Election Commission — superintendence, direction, control of elections; CEC removal by same process as SC judge (address of both Houses + Presidential order).
  • Article 324(2): Parliament can prescribe number of Election Commissioners and their appointment by the President — legislative basis for the 2023 Act.
  • Anoop Baranwal Case (March 2023): 5-judge Constitution Bench; constituted PM + LoP + CJI panel as stop-gap; described as “classic judicial restraint”.
  • 2023 Act: Replaced CJI with Cabinet Minister nominated by PM; passed December 2023; currently challenged before the SC.
  • Basic Structure Doctrine: Established in Kesavananda Bharati (1973); Parliament cannot amend the Constitution to destroy its basic features; free and fair elections are a basic structure element (Indira Gandhi vs. Raj Narain, 1975).
  • Article 326: Adult suffrage — right to vote; basis for EC’s mandate to ensure accurate, inclusive electoral rolls; cited by SC in questioning the SIR exercise.
📝 Model Mains Question (GS-II · 15 Marks)

“The Chief Election Commissioner and other Election Commissioners (Appointment) Act, 2023 has been criticised for undermining the independence of the Election Commission. Examine the constitutional basis for this criticism and suggest reforms to ensure genuine independence of the Election Commission.”

Hint: Article 324, Anoop Baranwal judgment, 2023 Act — CJI replaced by Cabinet Minister, executive dominance (2 of 3 members), Basic Structure (free & fair elections), Law Commission/2nd ARC recommendations, global comparisons (UK, South Africa), Constitution Bench referral need. ~250 words.
🎯 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
Q. With reference to the Election Commission of India, consider the following:
1. The Chief Election Commissioner can be removed by the President on an address by both Houses of Parliament passed by a special majority.
2. The Anoop Baranwal judgment (2023) directed that the CEC/EC selection panel should permanently include the Chief Justice of India.
3. The 2023 Act replaced the Chief Justice of India in the selection committee with a Cabinet Minister nominated by the Prime Minister.
4. Under Article 324, the Election Commission can consist of only one member (the CEC).
Which of the above are correct?
  • (a) 1 and 3 only
  • (b) 1, 3 and 4 only ✓
  • (c) 2 and 3 only
  • (d) 1, 2, 3 and 4
Explanation: Statement 2 is incorrect — Anoop Baranwal directed CJI’s inclusion only as a “stop-gap” arrangement until Parliament enacted a law, NOT permanently. Statement 1 (correct — same as SC judge removal, simple majority not required — it is two-thirds present and voting in each House), 3 (correct — 2023 Act replaced CJI with Cabinet Minister), and 4 (correct — Article 324 allows the EC to function with only the CEC; appointment of other ECs is discretionary). Answer: (b).
GS-II · Polity · Electoral Governance

Special Intensive Revision (SIR) Phase 3 — Electoral Rolls Controversy & Democracy Concerns

16 States + 3 UTs from May 30; 36.73 crore voters; civil society alleges voter deletions; Article 326 invoked

🔹 A. Issue in Brief
  • The Election Commission of India (ECI) announced Phase 3 of the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls across 16 States and 3 UTs beginning May 30, 2026 — covering a combined voter base of 36.73 crore. SIR is a house-to-house voter enumeration exercise.
  • The exercise has attracted sharp criticism from civil society activists, former Election Commissioners, and opposition parties who allege it resulted in mass deletions of legitimate voters — in West Bengal alone, 27 lakh people were left out of electoral rolls; in 150 seats, the winning margin was less than the number of deletions.
  • The Supreme Court has previously warned it would intervene if mass deletions occurred — activists are now asking when the Court will act, given Phase 2 data shows the voter base in 12 States declined by 5.18 crore (10.2%).
🔹 B. Static Background
  • Article 326: Elections to the Lok Sabha and State Legislative Assemblies on the basis of adult suffrage — every citizen aged 18+ who is not disqualified (non-citizen, unsound mind, corrupt practices) has the right to vote. SIR’s mass deletions potentially violate this fundamental right.
  • Representation of the People Act, 1950: Governs preparation and maintenance of electoral rolls; Section 22 allows deletion of names on grounds of death, disqualification, or departure from constituency; Section 23 allows additions; Section 24 allows correction of entries.
  • Electoral Roll Revision: Under Article 327, Parliament has power to make provisions for elections; ECI conducts annual Summary Revision (for routine updates) and Special Revision (for intensive verification). SIR is a large-scale special revision.
  • SIR Phase 1 (Bihar, 2025): First phase; Bihar voter base revised; ECI learned lessons from Phase 1 and introduced changes in Phase 2 (no document collection during enumeration phase; Aadhaar added as 12th proof of identity — not citizenship).
  • SC’s Aadhaar direction: Supreme Court directed ECI to include Aadhaar as proof of identity (not citizenship) for SIR purposes — narrowing the verification scope to residency verification, not nationality verification.
🔹 D. Critical Analysis
“Vote dacoity” allegation: Former bureaucrat-turned-activist Harsh Mander alleged that not “vote chori” (theft) but “vote dacoity” (open robbery) took place in West Bengal — 27 lakh voters deleted, of whom only 2,000 had been heard by EC-appointed tribunals. In 150 seats, the winning margin was less than the number of deletions — statistically, these deletions could have affected election outcomes. This is a serious democratic accountability failure.
Aadhaar as identity proof — the ambiguity: The SC directed Aadhaar to be used as proof of identity, not citizenship. But in practice, BLOs (booth-level officers) conducting door-to-door enumeration may conflate the two — deleting names of eligible citizens (including those without Aadhaar) from electoral rolls. This conflation is the core procedural risk of SIR.
ECI’s defence vs. civil society’s concern: ECI maintains SIR is about removing duplicate, deceased, and shifted voters — a legitimate electoral hygiene exercise. Critics respond that the scale of deletions (5.18 crore in Phase 2 States, a 10.2% decline) far exceeds what could be explained by deaths and relocations — suggesting net legitimate voter deletions.
Timing concern: Multiple States in Phase 3 (Delhi, Karnataka, Maharashtra, Jharkhand, Meghalaya) will have final rolls published by October 7, 2026 — potentially ahead of state legislative activities and by-elections. The timing of voter roll revisions relative to elections raises fairness questions.
🔹 E. Way Forward
  • Transparent grievance redressal: ECI should make deletion data publicly available at the booth level; every deleted voter should receive written notice with reasons and an accessible appeal mechanism.
  • SC monitoring: The SC should appoint an independent observer to audit deletion decisions in States where the number of deletions is statistically disproportionate to deaths and relocations.
  • Separation of SIR from election calendar: SIR should be conducted well before election announcement periods to avoid political accusations of targeted deletions.
  • Link with Article 326 (universal adult franchise as a fundamental right), Article 14 (equal protection — all eligible voters treated equally), and SDG 16 (peaceful, just, and inclusive institutions — free and fair elections).
🔹 F. Exam Orientation
📌 Prelims Pointers
  • Article 326: Adult suffrage — elections on basis of adult suffrage; every citizen 18+ entitled to vote; exceptions: non-citizen, unsound mind, corrupt/illegal practices.
  • Article 327: Parliament’s power to make provision for elections to Legislatures; basis for Representation of the People Acts.
  • Representation of the People Act, 1950: Governs electoral rolls — preparation, revision, addition, deletion; Sections 22, 23, 24 cover the mechanics.
  • BLO (Booth Level Officer): Grassroots officer of the ECI responsible for maintaining electoral rolls at the polling booth level; door-to-door enumeration in SIR.
  • SIR Phase 1: Bihar (2025); Phase 2: 12 States including West Bengal, TN, Kerala, Rajasthan (2025); Phase 3: 16 States + 3 UTs from May 30, 2026.
  • BLA (Booth Level Agent): Appointed by political parties to assist BLOs during house-to-house enumeration — provides political oversight of the process.
📝 Model Mains Question (GS-II · 10 Marks)

“The Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls has been simultaneously defended as necessary electoral hygiene and criticised as a potential instrument for disenfranchisement. Examine both sides of this debate with reference to relevant constitutional provisions.”

Hint: Purpose of SIR (dead/duplicate/relocated voters), scale of deletions (5.18 crore), Article 326 (right to vote), West Bengal deletions vs. winning margins, Aadhaar as identity not citizenship, SC’s prior warning, transparent grievance redressal need. ~150 words.
🎯 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
Q. Which of the following correctly describe the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of Electoral Rolls conducted by the Election Commission of India?
1. It is a house-to-house voter enumeration exercise for verifying and updating electoral rolls.
2. The Supreme Court directed that Aadhaar be used as proof of citizenship during SIR.
3. Phase 1 of SIR was conducted in Bihar in 2025.
4. Booth Level Agents (BLAs) appointed by political parties assist BLOs during enumeration.
  • (a) 1, 2 and 3 only
  • (b) 1, 3 and 4 only ✓
  • (c) 2, 3 and 4 only
  • (d) 1, 2, 3 and 4
Explanation: Statement 2 is incorrect — the SC directed Aadhaar to be used as proof of identity (not citizenship) during SIR. Using Aadhaar as citizenship proof would be wrong since Aadhaar only proves identity/residency, not citizenship. Statements 1, 3, and 4 are correct. Answer: (b).
GS-II · International Relations · India’s Foreign Policy

Jaishankar at BRICS — Slamming Unilateral Sanctions & India’s Russian Oil Dilemma

BRICS FM meeting; Russian oil waiver expiring May 16; India imports surge to 1.96 mn bpd; “unjustifiable measures”

🔹 A. Issue in Brief
  • External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar delivered India’s national statement at the BRICS Foreign Ministers’ meeting in New Delhi, calling unilateral non-UN sanctions “unjustifiable” and “inconsistent with international law” — days before the US waiver on India’s Russian oil imports was set to expire on May 16.
  • India’s Russian oil imports surged to 1.96 million barrels per day (bpd) since the start of May (vs. 1.57 mbpd in April) as Indian refiners rushed to secure Russian crude before the waiver expiry — even as Russian crude trades at a premium of $5/barrel (vs. the usual discount).
  • The BRICS meeting brought together Russia’s Lavrov and Iran’s Araghchi (both under heavy US sanctions) alongside India’s Jaishankar — creating a visible signal of India’s multi-alignment in action, even as India faces US pressure to curtail Russian oil imports.
🔹 B. Static Background
  • BRICS: Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa (original members); expanded in 2024 to include Saudi Arabia, UAE, Ethiopia, Egypt, Iran — now called BRICS+; 2026 BRICS Foreign Ministers’ meeting chaired by India (India holds BRICS chairmanship in 2026).
  • Unilateral sanctions vs. UN sanctions: UN Security Council sanctions are legally binding under Chapter VII of the UN Charter; unilateral sanctions (like those of the US, EU) have no binding international law basis and are not obligatory for third countries. India’s official position: only UN-mandated sanctions are legally binding on India.
  • Russia-Ukraine war sanctions: US, EU, G7 imposed extensive sanctions on Russia after February 2022 invasion; India officially does not recognise these as binding; India continued importing Russian oil at discounted rates, becoming Russia’s largest oil customer.
  • US waiver mechanism: Since the West Asia war began (February 28, 2026), the US has been issuing monthly waivers for Indian purchases of Russian crude — explicitly acknowledging India’s energy security needs. The May 16 waiver expiry creates a critical decision point.
  • India’s stated position: “Guided by the interests of 1.4 billion Indians” — India will make oil import decisions based on national energy security and price, not foreign policy alignment. India’s government maintains it does not accept non-UN sanctions.
  • Chabahar port: India-developed strategic port in Iran; the Iran waiver lapsed last month; India was continuing Chabahar operations but under pressure not to expand given US sanctions on Iran.
🔹 C. India’s Oil Import Dilemma — Flowchart
West Asia war disrupts Hormuz shipping → Strait of Hormuz blockade by Iran → Gulf crude supply disruption
India pivots to Russian crude at 1.96 mn bpd (highest ever) — US provides monthly waivers as emergency measure
US waiver expires May 16, 2026 — US signals NO extension (“wouldn’t imagine we’d have another extension” — Treasury Secretary Bessent)
India’s options: (1) Comply — reduce Russian oil, face energy shortage + higher prices; (2) Defy — continue Russian oil, risk US secondary sanctions on Indian banks/refiners; (3) Negotiate — seek another extension
Jaishankar at BRICS: publicly slams “unilateral coercive measures” — signals India will not easily comply; spokesperon declines comment on whether extension was sought
🔹 D. Critical Analysis
India’s strategic embarrassment: The US submarine sinking of Iranian naval ship IRIS Dena in the Indian Ocean (March 4) — a ship returning from India’s International Fleet Review — was described as taking a “big hit” to India’s image as the key regional naval power. India was hosting an international naval exercise when a US submarine sank an Iranian ship in Indian Ocean waters — highlighting India’s inability to protect maritime order in its own claimed sphere.
BRICS as counter-sanctions platform: India is using BRICS to signal opposition to unilateral sanctions without formally “defying” the US. By hosting Russia’s Lavrov and Iran’s Araghchi (two of the most sanctioned countries) and delivering a national statement slamming unilateral sanctions, India is positioning itself as the leader of the Global South resistance to US economic coercion — without taking a formal legal position.
The compliance vs. sovereignty dilemma: India has “in practice complied” with US sanctions on Iran, Venezuela, and Russia historically (under commercial pressure — secondary sanctions on Indian banks/refiners could cut them off from SWIFT and US correspondent banking). But as the editorial notes, each compliance undermines India’s stated principle of not recognising non-UN sanctions — creating an accumulating credibility gap in its non-alignment posture.
🔹 E. Way Forward
  • Build energy supply diversification: Accelerate investments in US LNG (India-USA LNG MoU), Canadian oil sands, Latin American crude — reducing both Gulf and Russian dependency simultaneously.
  • BRICS payment mechanism: Operationalise BRICS cross-currency settlement (local currency trade) to reduce SWIFT dependency — making US secondary sanctions less effective against India-Russia trade.
  • India’s BRICS chairmanship (2026): Leverage chairmanship to build a formal multilateral position against unilateral sanctions — a BRICS declaration opposing extra-jurisdictional application of national sanctions could provide diplomatic cover for India’s Russian oil purchases.
  • Link with Panchsheel (peaceful coexistence, non-interference), NAM legacy (strategic autonomy), and Vishwabandhu aspiration.
🔹 F. Exam Orientation
📌 Prelims Pointers
  • BRICS 2026 chairmanship: India; BRICS+ now includes Saudi Arabia, UAE, Ethiopia, Egypt, Iran (expanded 2024); BRICS FM meeting held in New Delhi May 2026.
  • UN Charter Chapter VII: Allows UNSC to impose binding sanctions on member states; US/EU unilateral sanctions do NOT derive from Chapter VII — not binding under international law on third countries.
  • SWIFT: Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication — global messaging network for banking transactions; exclusion from SWIFT (as Russia faced post-2022) effectively cuts a country off from international financial system — the “nuclear option” of financial sanctions.
  • Chabahar Port: India-developed port in Iran on Gulf of Oman; provides India access to Afghanistan and Central Asia bypassing Pakistan; India operates the Shahid Beheshti terminal; US waiver for Chabahar development lapsed in 2024; Iran waiver (post-West Asia war) also lapsed.
  • Indian Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR): ~5.33 million tonnes in underground caverns at Mangaluru, Padur, Visakhapatnam; managed by ISPRL (Indian Strategic Petroleum Reserves Ltd.).
📝 Model Mains Question (GS-II · 10 Marks)

“India’s public opposition to unilateral sanctions at BRICS contrasts with its historical compliance with such sanctions for commercial reasons. Critically examine this contradiction in India’s foreign policy and its implications for strategic autonomy.”

Hint: India’s stated position (only UN sanctions binding), BRICS FM statement on unilateral sanctions, historical compliance (Iran, Venezuela, Russia under commercial pressure), SWIFT vulnerability, BRICS local currency settlement, US waiver mechanism, strategic autonomy credibility gap. ~150 words.
🎯 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
Q. Consider the following about BRICS:
1. India holds the BRICS chairmanship in 2026.
2. Iran became a member of the expanded BRICS (BRICS+) in 2024.
3. All BRICS members are required to join any sanctions regime imposed by the United States on non-members.
4. The BRICS grouping currently includes more than five countries following its expansion.
Which of the above are correct?
  • (a) 1 and 2 only
  • (b) 1, 2 and 4 only
  • (c) 1, 2 and 4 only ✓
  • (d) 1, 2, 3 and 4
Explanation: Statement 3 is incorrect — BRICS members have NO obligation to join US (or any non-UN) sanctions regimes. US unilateral sanctions are not binding under international law. Statement 1 (India chairs BRICS 2026), 2 (Iran joined expanded BRICS in 2024 along with Saudi Arabia, UAE, Ethiopia, Egypt), and 4 (BRICS now has 10 members) are correct. Answer: (c).
GS-II · IR · Essay · Strategic Studies

India’s Strategic Autonomy — Iran War, Rafale Deal, EU FTA & the Limits of Multi-Alignment

Deepa Ollapally analysis: Trump’s economic + military unilateralism; Rafale tech transfer limits; EU as America’s subordinate

🔹 A. Issue in Brief
  • Research Professor Deepa Ollapally (George Washington University) argues that the Iran war represents a generational challenge to India’s strategic autonomy — greater than the Ukraine war, Trump’s tariff wars, or any post-1991 challenge, because it combines simultaneous economic and military unilateralism by the US.
  • Two recent India foreign policy achievements — the 114 Rafale fighter jet deal with France and the India-EU Free Trade Agreement — were widely seen as India diversifying partners for strategic autonomy. However, the analysis shows these provide limited insulation against US pressure.
  • The core argument: multi-alignment provides strategic autonomy but not geopolitical leadership; and when the US demands alignment of economic policies with American strategic interests (a new development), India’s autonomy space shrinks further.
🔹 B. Key Concepts Table
ConceptDescriptionUPSC Exam Relevance
Strategic AutonomyIndia’s ability to make independent foreign policy decisions based on national interest — not forced by any external powerCore IR concept; Essay and GS-II
Multi-alignmentSimultaneously maintaining relationships with multiple major powers (US, Russia, China, EU, Gulf) without formal alliancesIndia’s post-Cold War foreign policy evolution
Economic UnilateralismUS imposing tariffs, sanctions, export controls as tools of strategic coercion; demanding alignment of others’ economic policies with US interestsNew challenge post-Trump 2.0
Military UnilateralismUS-Israel attacking Iran without UN authorisation or NATO consensus; “unipolarity holding fast” despite IR multipolar aspirationsChallenges to international law and order
Technology DenialUS export controls on advanced technology (chips, dual-use, AI) — China and India affected; Rafale source code under French controlTechnology geopolitics; Sci&Tech-IR linkage
Rafale deal114 jets from France; India chose France over US/Russia for technology transfer and domestic production; but source codes remain under French controlMake in India defence linkage; technology transfer limitations
🔹 D. Critical Analysis
The EU alignment trap: The editorial’s most important warning: Europe historically “falls in line with the US under pressure.” US Secretary of State Rubio’s Munich Security Conference speech called for a “western supply chain” in explicitly civilisational terms, leaving the Global South as “less partners, more targets of competition.” Rubio got a standing ovation from European audiences. India cannot count on European strategic support when the going gets tough — EU FTA notwithstanding.
Rafale source code problem: India chose French jets over US and Russian jets partly hoping for better technology transfer. But “source codes and algorithms will be under French control” — India will be “wedded to the French for upgrades.” This undermines India’s Make in India aspiration in defence and creates a long-term dependency, not strategic autonomy.
Trump’s economic-military “double whammy”: Until Trump 2.0, India could pick economic ties with the US while maintaining strategic distance from US alliance politics — the liberal economic order was “open and inclusive.” Trump is now demanding that others’ economic policies align with US strategic interests — closing this previously available space. This is the fundamental break from the post-WWII economic order that India has navigated successfully since 1991.
IRIS Dena incident — India’s regional naval credibility: A US submarine sinking an Iranian naval ship (IRIS Dena) in the Indian Ocean as it returned from India’s International Fleet Review is diplomatically catastrophic for India’s aspirations as the “net security provider” of the Indian Ocean. India hosted the IFR as a demonstration of its Indian Ocean primacy — and a US ally violated that exercise’s spirit in India’s backyard.
🔹 E. Way Forward (Essay-style)
  • Proactive leadership, not just balancing: Tirumurti (previous day’s analysis) rightly noted that multi-alignment provides autonomy but not leadership; India must actively fill the vacuum left by US credibility loss — especially in facilitating Iran conflict resolution, as Pakistan, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia are already doing so.
  • Deepen BRICS as an institutional alternative: India’s 2026 BRICS chairmanship is an opportunity to build functional alternatives — cross-currency settlement, alternative dispute resolution, joint infrastructure funding — that reduce Global South dependence on US-dominated systems.
  • Make in India defence — demand source code transfer: Future defence procurement should make source code transfer and genuine technology sharing a non-negotiable condition, not an aspiration — India’s defence market is large enough to demand this.
  • Link with Panchsheel, Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam, NAM legacy, and India’s aspiration to represent the Global South in a genuinely multipolar world order.
🔹 F. Exam Orientation
📌 Prelims Pointers
  • Rafale jet deal (2026): 114 Rafale jets from France (Dassault Aviation); negotiated since 2016; chosen over US F-35 and Russian Su-35; India seeks technology transfer and domestic production; source codes under French control.
  • India-EU FTA: Free Trade Agreement negotiations revived after 14-year gap; signed/concluded in 2026; provides preferential market access; India’s domestic concerns: farmers and industrial workers opposition.
  • Munich Security Conference: Annual meeting of global security policymakers in Munich, Germany; US Secretary of State Rubio’s February 2026 speech called for “western supply chain” and civilisational alignment — explicitly leaving Global South on the margins.
  • IRIS Dena: Iranian naval ship; returning from India’s International Fleet Review 2026 (March 4); sunk by US submarine in the Indian Ocean — a serious incident demonstrating US disregard for India’s maritime exercise and India’s inability to prevent it.
  • Deepa Ollapally: Research Professor of International Affairs, George Washington University; recognised scholar of Indian foreign policy and strategic autonomy.
📝 Model Mains Question (GS-II · 15 Marks / Essay)

“India’s multi-alignment strategy has preserved strategic autonomy in the past, but the Iran war’s combination of US economic and military unilateralism has exposed its fundamental limits. Critically evaluate India’s strategic options in this changed geopolitical environment.”

Hint: Multi-alignment (autonomy not leadership), Trump’s double whammy (economic + military unilateralism), Rafale source code limitation, EU FTA as limited shield, EU’s historical subordination to US, BRICS+ as alternative, IRIS Dena incident, proactive leadership need, IMEC, Panchsheel/NAM legacy, Vishwabandhu aspiration. ~250 words.
🎯 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
Q. The concept of “strategic autonomy” in India’s foreign policy context refers to which of the following?
1. India’s policy of not joining any military alliance.
2. India’s ability to make independent foreign policy decisions based on its national interest.
3. India maintaining simultaneously good relations with competing global powers without being forced to choose sides.
4. India’s right to develop nuclear weapons without international obligations.
Select the correct answer:
  • (a) 1 only
  • (b) 1 and 2 only
  • (c) 2 and 3 only ✓
  • (d) 1, 2 and 3 only
Explanation: Statement 1 is partially correct but too narrow — strategic autonomy is not just about not joining military alliances; India participates in Quad (a security grouping). Statement 4 is incorrect — nuclear weapons development has no connection to strategic autonomy as a foreign policy concept. Strategic autonomy primarily means (2) independent decision-making based on national interest and (3) maintaining multi-directional relationships. Answer: (c).
GS-III · Health · International Reports

COVID-19 Linked to 22.1 Million Excess Deaths (2020-2023) — WHO World Health Statistics 2026

3x officially reported deaths; life expectancy reversed; HIV -40%; malaria +8.5%; global health system vulnerabilities

🔹 A. Issue in Brief
  • The WHO World Health Statistics 2026 report estimates COVID-19 was linked to 22.1 million excess deaths (including indirect deaths) between 2020 and 2023 — more than three times the ~7 million officially reported COVID-19 deaths.
  • The pandemic reversed a decade of gains in life expectancy, with recovery remaining incomplete and uneven across regions — particularly in lower-income countries where indirect mortality (from disrupted healthcare services) was highest.
  • The report shows contrasting trends: new HIV infections fell 40% (2010-2024); tobacco and alcohol use declined; 961 million gained safe drinking water access (2015-2024) — but malaria incidence increased 8.5% since 2015, moving further away from global targets.
🔹 B. Key Data from WHO World Health Statistics 2026
🌍 WHO World Health Statistics 2026 — Key Findings
😷 COVID-19 Impact
  • 22.1 mn excess deaths (2020-23)
  • 3x officially reported deaths
  • Life expectancy reversed a decade of gains
  • Recovery incomplete and uneven
✅ Progress Areas
  • New HIV infections ↓40% (2010-24)
  • Tobacco and alcohol use ↓
  • 961 mn gained safe water (2015-24)
  • 1.2 bn gained sanitation access
  • Neglected tropical diseases ↓36%
⚠️ Persistent Challenges
  • Malaria incidence ↑8.5% since 2015
  • Anaemia: 30.7% women of repro age
  • Violence: 1 in 4 women globally
  • South-East Asia: on track for 2025 malaria milestone
🌍 Regional Highlights
  • WHO Africa: HIV ↓70%, TB ↓28%
  • South-East Asia: malaria milestone on track
  • 1.4 bn gained clean cooking solutions
  • 1.6 bn gained basic hygiene
🔹 D. Critical Analysis
Excess deaths vs. official deaths — why the gap? Official COVID-19 deaths count only confirmed positive cases who died. Excess deaths methodology compares actual deaths with expected deaths (based on pre-pandemic trends) — capturing: (1) People who died of COVID without being tested; (2) People who died of treatable conditions (heart attacks, cancer, diabetes) because hospitals were overwhelmed by COVID; (3) Mental health deaths, delayed surgeries, and disrupted immunisation programmes. The 22.1 million vs. 7 million gap reflects massive indirect mortality — a systemic health system failure under pandemic stress.
India’s context: India’s official COVID-19 deaths (2020-23) were ~5.3 lakh. However, excess death studies (including by The Lancet, Science) have estimated India’s excess deaths at 2.5-4 million — among the highest globally. The WHO report’s global figure of 22.1 million implies India likely contributed a significant share. This has been a politically sensitive issue as the government disputed independent excess death estimates.
Malaria as a counterpoint: While COVID-19 dominated, malaria incidence increased 8.5% since 2015 — moving further from SDG 3.3’s target to end malaria by 2030. COVID-19 disrupted malaria control programmes (supply chains, healthcare worker redeployment, reduced access to bed nets and treatment). The climate crisis is further expanding the geographic range of malaria vectors. This represents a double failure — direct COVID impact + indirect malaria deterioration.
🔹 E. Way Forward & Prelims Pointers
📌 Prelims Pointers
  • WHO World Health Statistics: Annual flagship WHO report tracking progress on health-related SDGs; 2026 edition focused on COVID-19 pandemic legacy and global health system recovery.
  • Excess deaths methodology: Actual deaths minus expected deaths (based on pre-pandemic trends); captures COVID deaths not officially recorded + indirect mortality from healthcare system disruption.
  • SDG 3.3: By 2030, end AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria, neglected tropical diseases; combat hepatitis, waterborne diseases; malaria’s 8.5% increase since 2015 sets this target further away.
  • HIV progress: New HIV infections fell 40% (2010-2024); UNAIDS 95-95-95 target (95% diagnosed, 95% on treatment, 95% virally suppressed); Africa achieved 70% reduction.
  • Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs): Group of 20 diseases (lymphatic filariasis, leishmaniasis, etc.) primarily affecting poor populations; WHO NTD 2021-2030 roadmap target; 36% reduction in people requiring interventions (2010-2024).
  • WHO African Region: Fastest progress on HIV (-70%) and tuberculosis (-28%) — attributed to aggressive intervention programmes and Global Fund support.
📝 Model Mains Question (GS-III · 10 Marks)

“The WHO’s estimate of 22.1 million excess deaths linked to COVID-19 (2020-2023) reveals systemic vulnerabilities in global and Indian health systems beyond the directly reported pandemic mortality. Examine these vulnerabilities and suggest reforms to build health system resilience.”

Hint: Excess vs. official deaths methodology, indirect mortality (disrupted healthcare), India’s excess death controversy, malaria setback, SDG 3.3 progress challenges, One Health approach, pandemic preparedness (International Health Regulations reform), India’s Ayushman Bharat, primary healthcare strengthening. ~150 words.
🎯 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
Q. According to the WHO World Health Statistics 2026, which of the following correctly characterises global health trends between 2010 and 2024?
1. New HIV infections declined by 40%.
2. Malaria incidence declined globally, moving toward SDG 3.3 targets.
3. People requiring interventions for neglected tropical diseases decreased by 36%.
4. COVID-19 pandemic reversed a decade of life expectancy gains.
Select the correct answer:
  • (a) 1 and 3 only
  • (b) 1, 3 and 4 only
  • (c) 1, 3 and 4 only ✓
  • (d) 1, 2, 3 and 4
Explanation: Statement 2 is incorrect — malaria incidence INCREASED by 8.5% since 2015, moving the world AWAY from SDG 3.3 malaria targets (not toward). Statements 1 (HIV -40%), 3 (NTDs -36%), and 4 (COVID reversed life expectancy gains) are correct per the WHO World Health Statistics 2026 report. Answer: (c).
GS-II · Governance · Education Policy · GS-III · Sci & Tech

Medical Education in India — Quality Over Quantity, AI Integration & NEET Reform

818 medical colleges; 1.29 lakh MBBS seats; faculty shortages; rote learning; CBME; AI in clinical practice

🔹 A. Issue in Brief
  • India has expanded medical education enormously (596 → 818 colleges; 83,000 → 1.29 lakh MBBS seats in 4 years) — but this quantity expansion has outpaced quality maintenance. The NEET-UG 2026 cancellation has brought into sharp focus systemic questions about India’s medical education framework.
  • Key structural challenges: thousands of PG seats in non-clinical specialities remain vacant; faculty shortages are endemic; research is “non-translational” and primarily driven by promotion requirements; the doctor-patient relationship has shifted from “demigod” to “transactional service provider.”
  • The editorial calls for a fundamental pivot: from capacity-building (quantity) to outcome-focused education (quality) — integrating AI, competency-based learning, and translational research as the next phase of India’s medical education reform.
🔹 B. Static Background
  • National Medical Commission (NMC): Replaced Medical Council of India (MCI) in 2020; established by NMC Act 2020; four autonomous boards: Undergraduate Medical Education Board (UGMEB), Postgraduate Medical Education Board (PGMEB), Medical Assessment and Rating Board (MARB), Ethics and Medical Registration Board (EMRB).
  • NEET-UG: National Eligibility cum Entrance Test — single national entrance exam for MBBS admissions; mandated under Supreme Court direction (2016) and NMC Act; conducted by National Testing Agency (NTA).
  • Competency-Based Medical Education (CBME): Introduced by NMC in 2019 for MBBS; focuses on competencies (skills, knowledge, attitudes) rather than rote learning of subjects — a major pedagogical shift.
  • Radhakrishnan Committee (2024): Constituted post-NEET 2024 paper leak; recommended phased/hybrid testing, overhaul of NTA, digital surveillance, computer-based testing, permanent professional staff for NTA. Most recommendations not yet implemented.
  • India’s doctor density: ~1 doctor per 834 population (WHO recommends 1:1000); though technically meeting WHO standard, distribution is heavily urban-skewed — rural areas severely underserved.
🔹 D. Critical Analysis
Quantity-quality paradox: India has 818 medical colleges (more than any other country) — but thousands of PG seats in non-clinical specialities (microbiology, pathology, biochemistry, anatomy, physiology) remain vacant because students prefer clinical specialities. This misallocation of expanded capacity means pre-clinical and para-clinical teaching is structurally under-resourced — undermining the quality of MBBS foundation training.
AI as a disruptive force in medical education: AI is already being used in diagnostics (radiology AI, pathology AI, ECG interpretation). Medical education must prepare doctors to work WITH AI, not compete with it — this requires “augmentation, not replacement” thinking. Curriculum reform to introduce AI and digital health from the induction stage of MBBS is urgent, but NMC has been slow to update regulatory frameworks.
Research quality vs. quantity: India’s medical institutions produce significant volumes of research, but the editorial notes most is “non-translational” — adding little to patient care. This is driven by faculty promotion norms that count publications (any publications) rather than impact. Reform of NMC’s promotion criteria to emphasise translational research quality over publication quantity would be transformative.
Changing doctor-patient relationship: The shift from “near-unquestioned trust and reverence” to “transactional service provider” has practical consequences: rising violence against doctors, defensive medicine (over-investigation to avoid liability), and reduced willingness of bright students to enter medicine. This is a societal and policy problem, not just a medical profession problem.
🔹 E. Way Forward
  • National Faculty Pool: Centralised pool of qualified faculty (public + private sector) delivering teaching across institutions physically or digitally; standardised centrally-monitored modules — addresses faculty shortage without relaxing standards.
  • Professors of Practice: Experienced clinicians formally integrated into teaching with their contributions recognised under CBME — brings real-world clinical experience into academics.
  • Computer-based/hybrid NEET: Radhakrishnan Committee recommendation; reduces paper leak risk; enables better audit trails; 1,000 standard testing centres in phased manner.
  • AI in curriculum: Mandatory AI and digital health modules from induction stage; case-based learning using AI diagnostic tools; clinical decision support training.
  • Link with SDG 3 (Good Health) — more and better-trained doctors; SDG 4 (Quality Education — outcome-based medical education); SDG 10 (Reduced Inequalities — better rural health workforce).
🔹 F. Exam Orientation
📌 Prelims Pointers
  • National Medical Commission (NMC): Replaced MCI in 2020; NMC Act 2020; 4 autonomous boards (UGMEB, PGMEB, MARB, EMRB); regulates medical education and practice.
  • CBME (Competency-Based Medical Education): Introduced by NMC 2019 for MBBS; focuses on competencies (skills, knowledge, attitudes-values) over content-centric rote learning.
  • Medical college expansion: 596 colleges (2021-22) → 818 colleges (2025-26); 83,000 MBBS seats → 1.29 lakh; India has the world’s largest number of medical colleges.
  • Radhakrishnan Committee (2024): Constituted post-NEET 2024 paper leak; recommended phased testing, computer-based testing, NTA overhaul, 1,000 standard testing centres, digital surveillance, permanent NTA staff.
  • NTA (National Testing Agency): Autonomous body under MoE; conducts NEET-UG, JEE, CUET; established 2017; centre of controversy over 2024 and 2026 paper leaks.
📝 Model Mains Question (GS-II · 10 Marks)

“India’s rapid expansion of medical college capacity has not been matched by commensurate improvement in medical education quality. Examine the key structural challenges and suggest reforms to ensure India produces competent, future-ready doctors.”

Hint: Quantity-quality paradox (818 colleges, vacant non-clinical PG seats), faculty shortage, CBME and its implementation gaps, non-translational research, NEET reform (Radhakrishnan Committee), AI integration, National Faculty Pool, Professors of Practice, NMC’s regulatory role. ~150 words.
🎯 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
Q. Consider the following about the National Medical Commission (NMC) of India:
1. NMC was established under the National Medical Commission Act, 2020, replacing the Medical Council of India.
2. NMC comprises four autonomous boards including the Undergraduate Medical Education Board and the Ethics and Medical Registration Board.
3. Competency-Based Medical Education (CBME) was introduced for MBBS by NMC in 2019.
4. NMC directly conducts the NEET-UG examination for admission to MBBS courses.
Which of the above are correct?
  • (a) 1, 2 and 3 only
  • (b) 1, 2 and 3 only ✓
  • (c) 2, 3 and 4 only
  • (d) 1, 2, 3 and 4
Explanation: Statement 4 is incorrect — NEET-UG is conducted by the National Testing Agency (NTA), not by NMC. NMC sets the standards and curriculum framework, but NTA administers the entrance examination. Statements 1, 2, and 3 are correct. Answer: (b).
GS-III · Environment · Disaster Management · GS-II · Public Health Policy

Heatwave & Cooling Doctrine — India Needs “National Cooling Doctrine” as a Public Health Entitlement

16th Finance Commission: heatwaves as national disaster; NDMA’s inadequate heat action plans; 270 mn NCDs; passive cooling at scale

🔹 A. Issue in Brief
  • The Hindu’s editorial argues that India’s existing heat action plans — led by the NDMA and state governments — have “reached the limits of what they can do.” They rely on short-term palliatives (water kiosks, advisories, shaded bus stops) that save lives at the margins but do not address the underlying exposure of tens of millions of heat-vulnerable Indians.
  • The 16th Finance Commission has recommended that heatwaves be notified as a national disaster — which would unlock dedicated central funding for heat response and infrastructure.
  • The editorial calls for a “national cooling doctrine” — treating sustained access to safe indoor temperatures as a public health entitlement, not a luxury — including mandatory cooling standards for workplaces, passive cooling materials, district cooling systems, and affordable, India-appropriate air conditioning.
🔹 B. Static Background
  • Heatwave definition (IMD): When maximum temperature ≥40°C (plains), ≥30°C (hills), and departure from normal is ≥4.5°C; severe heatwave when departure ≥6.4°C or actual temperature ≥45°C (plains).
  • National Disaster Management Act, 2005: Establishes NDMA (National Disaster Management Authority); Section 2(d) defines “disaster” — heatwaves are currently NOT officially notified as a national disaster; 16th Finance Commission recommends this change.
  • 15th Finance Commission: Had recommended strengthening SDRF (State Disaster Response Fund) for climate-related disasters; heatwave relief was covered under SDRF in several states but not nationally designated.
  • Heat Action Plans (HAPs): NDMA-guided, state-specific plans for heatwave preparedness; Ahmedabad’s HAP (2013) was India’s first — became global model after a 2010 heatwave killed 800+ people; NDMA concedes quality of HAPs is “uneven” and many are “imitations of plans drafted elsewhere.”
  • 270 million NCDs: Approximately 270 million Indians live with chronic non-communicable diseases (heart disease, diabetes, hypertension, COPD) — all of which significantly increase heat vulnerability. Heat-aggravated NCD mortality is the hidden face of India’s heatwave mortality.
  • India Cooling Action Plan (ICAP), 2019: MoEFCC document; targets reducing cooling energy demand by 20-25% by 2037-38; reducing refrigerant demand by 25-30%; training 100,000 service technicians; but ICAP focus is primarily on refrigerant phase-down (Montreal Protocol commitments), not on heat health access.
🔹 C. Cooling Doctrine — Policy Components
ComponentCurrent GapProposed ActionUPSC Angle
Workplace cooling standardsNo mandatory minimum temperature standards for factories, warehouses, call centresMandatory minimum cooling standards for indoor workplaces; inspection regimeGS-II: Labour welfare, occupational health regulation
Passive coolingReflective roofing adoption scattered; no national programmeReflective roofing, passive materials at scale; district cooling for dense urban zonesGS-III: Environment, Urban planning, SDG 11
Energy-efficient ACWestern AC designed for temperate climates; India has wetter, longer, more humid heat; grid capacity only 60% of installedIndia-specific affordable AC calibrated for Indian grid; BEE star rating innovationGS-III: Energy, Sci&Tech, SDG 7
Heatwave as national disasterNot notified; SDRF provides some relief but no dedicated central fund16th Finance Commission recommendation: notify heatwaves as national disaster → NDRF accessGS-III: Disaster Management, Finance Commission
Heat health entitlementTreated as emergency response only; no rights-based frameworkSafe indoor temperature as a public health entitlement — like right to clean air/waterGS-II: Rights, Welfare, GS-IV: Ethics of care
🔹 D. Critical Analysis
India’s heat is NOT Western heat: The editorial’s key insight — “India’s heat is wetter, longer and more humid than the dry European summers that produced much of the existing cooling literature.” Most international cooling standards (ASHRAE, EU building standards) are designed for dry European or North American climates. Applying these to India’s humid tropical heat is systematically inappropriate. India needs its own thermal comfort research and standards.
Grid capacity as the binding constraint: Even if affordable ACs were available to all Indians, “the grid in India, even on its best days, can supply at most 60% of its installed capacity.” A national cooling doctrine that relies on air conditioning without simultaneously strengthening grid reliability, renewable energy capacity, and demand-side management would be self-defeating — peak summer AC demand would simply cause power cuts.
Occupational heat — the invisible crisis: India has millions of outdoor workers (construction, agriculture, salt pan workers, street vendors) and indoor informal sector workers (small factories, kitchens) exposed to extreme heat without any regulatory protection. Mandatory occupational heat exposure standards (as exist in Qatar’s World Cup worker protections, or OSHA heat standards in the US) do not exist in India — a major policy and human rights gap.
🔹 E. Way Forward
  • Notify heatwaves as national disaster: Implement the 16th Finance Commission recommendation immediately — unlock NDRF (National Disaster Response Fund) for heat infrastructure, not just emergency relief.
  • India Cooling Action Plan (ICAP) 2.0: Expand ICAP beyond refrigerant phase-down to include heat health access, passive cooling standards, green building codes for thermal comfort, and district cooling systems for dense urban areas.
  • Occupational Heat Standard: Under Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code, 2020 — notify mandatory heat exposure limits, mandatory breaks, cooling areas for outdoor/informal sector workers.
  • Green building code: Make Energy Conservation Building Code (ECBC) compliance mandatory for all new buildings (not just large commercial buildings); include passive cooling requirements (orientation, insulation, roof materials).
  • Link with SDG 3 (Good Health and Wellbeing — heat mortality), SDG 11 (Sustainable cities — urban heat island mitigation), SDG 13 (Climate Action — heat adaptation), and Article 21 (Right to Life — includes right to live in dignity which implies right to a survivable temperature environment).
🔹 F. Exam Orientation
📌 Prelims Pointers
  • Heatwave (IMD definition): Max temperature ≥40°C (plains) with departure ≥4.5°C from normal; severe heatwave ≥6.4°C departure or ≥45°C actual temperature.
  • NDMA: National Disaster Management Authority; established under Disaster Management Act 2005; chaired by Prime Minister; formulates national disaster management policies.
  • 16th Finance Commission: Constituted 2023; recommended heatwaves be notified as national disaster to unlock central funding (NDRF) for heat response infrastructure.
  • Heat Action Plans (HAPs): State/city-level plans for heatwave preparedness; Ahmedabad’s 2013 HAP was India’s first and became global model; NDMA concedes quality is uneven across states.
  • India Cooling Action Plan (ICAP), 2019: MoEFCC; targets reducing cooling energy demand 20-25% by 2037-38; refrigerant phase-down per Montreal Protocol commitments; 100,000 technician training target.
  • Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code, 2020: One of 4 labour codes; consolidates 13 central labour laws; basis for notifying occupational heat exposure standards — not yet notified.
📝 Model Mains Question (GS-III · 15 Marks)

“India’s existing heat action plans are inadequate to address the systemic heat vulnerability of tens of millions of Indians. Critically examine the gaps in India’s heat governance framework and propose a ‘national cooling doctrine’ as a public health entitlement.”

Hint: HAPs as palliatives (water kiosks, advisories), NDMA’s acknowledgment of uneven quality, heatwave notification as national disaster (16th FC), 270 mn NCD patients with heat vulnerability, passive cooling (India-specific not Western), grid capacity constraint (60%), occupational heat (no Indian standard), ICAP 2.0, green building code (ECBC), Article 21 (Right to Life), SDG 3, 11, 13. ~250 words.
🎯 Probable UPSC Prelims MCQ
Q. Consider the following about heatwaves in India:
1. The IMD classifies a heatwave condition when maximum temperature is ≥40°C in the plains with a departure of ≥4.5°C from normal.
2. Heatwaves are currently notified as a national disaster under the Disaster Management Act, 2005.
3. The 16th Finance Commission recommended that heatwaves be notified as a national disaster to unlock NDRF funding.
4. The India Cooling Action Plan (ICAP) was launched by the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change in 2019.
Which of the above are correct?
  • (a) 1 and 3 only
  • (b) 1, 2 and 4 only
  • (c) 1, 3 and 4 only ✓
  • (d) 1, 2, 3 and 4
Explanation: Statement 2 is incorrect — heatwaves are currently NOT notified as a national disaster under the DM Act 2005; this is precisely the recommendation the 16th Finance Commission made (Statement 3, which is correct). Statements 1 (IMD heatwave definition), 3 (16th FC recommendation), and 4 (ICAP 2019, MoEFCC) are correct. Answer: (c).

❓ FAQs for UPSC Revision

The Wholesale Price Index (WPI) measures price changes at the producer/wholesale level — before goods reach consumers. India’s WPI is published by the Ministry of Commerce and Industry (base year 2011-12) and covers Primary Articles (food, non-food), Fuel & Power, and Manufactured Products. In April 2026, WPI inflation surged to 8.3% — a 42-month high — from 3.9% in March 2026. The near-doubling in a single month was caused almost entirely by the West Asia war’s impact on global energy prices: crude oil and natural gas WPI inflation hit 67.2% (46-month high); fuel and power inflation hit 24.7%. The sharp WPI rise is alarming for two reasons: First, WPI is a leading indicator — when wholesale prices rise, producer costs rise, and eventually these costs get passed on to consumers (retail CPI inflation). Currently, CPI inflation stands at 3.48% — a “deceptive calm” because producers and OMCs are still absorbing costs. Second, public sector oil marketing companies (HPCL, BPCL, IOC) are reportedly absorbing under-recoveries of ~₹30,000 crore/month — which is unsustainable, making retail petrol/diesel price hikes imminent. Once fuel prices are raised, the economy-wide cascading effect (higher transport costs → higher food costs → higher industrial costs) will push CPI inflation sharply upward, beyond RBI’s 6% upper tolerance band, forcing monetary tightening and threatening India’s ~7% GDP growth target.
Anoop Baranwal vs. Union of India (March 2023) was a landmark 5-judge Constitution Bench judgment that addressed a constitutional vacuum: Article 324(2) empowers Parliament to prescribe the appointment of the Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) and Election Commissioners (ECs), but no such law existed. The Supreme Court held that until Parliament enacted a law, the selection committee for CEC/ECs would comprise: (1) The Prime Minister, (2) The Leader of the Opposition in the Lok Sabha, and (3) The Chief Justice of India. The court described this as a “stop-gap” arrangement and a “classic example of judicial restraint and statesmanship” — not a permanent constitutional decree. Within months, the government enacted the Chief Election Commissioner and other Election Commissioners (Appointment, Conditions of Service, and Term of Office) Act, 2023 (December 2023). The 2023 Act constituted the selection committee as: (1) PM (chair), (2) A Cabinet Minister nominated by the PM, (3) Leader of the Opposition. Critically, the Chief Justice of India was replaced by a Cabinet Minister who is, by definition, aligned with the Prime Minister. Now 2 of 3 committee members are effectively from the ruling government. The Supreme Court (in May 2026 hearings) questioned: (1) “Not one absolutely neutral person” on the panel; (2) Whether the Cabinet Minister can be expected to “defy the Prime Minister”; (3) Whether the LoP’s presence is merely “ornamental” since appointments can proceed without a unanimous vote. The court warned that free and fair elections — a Basic Structure element (Indira Gandhi vs. Raj Narain, 1975) — depend on a truly independent Election Commission.
The Special Intensive Revision (SIR) is a large-scale, house-to-house voter enumeration exercise conducted by the Election Commission of India (ECI) to update and verify electoral rolls — checking for deceased voters, people who have moved, and adding newly eligible voters. It is distinguished from the routine annual Summary Revision by its comprehensive door-to-door nature. SIR Phase 1 was conducted in Bihar (2025); Phase 2 covered 12 States (including West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, UP, Rajasthan); Phase 3 covers 16 States + 3 UTs beginning May 30, 2026. The controversy: In Phase 2, the voter base declined by 5.18 crore (10.2%) in 12 States — far more than what could be explained by deaths and relocations. In West Bengal alone, 27 lakh voters were deleted, and in 150 seats the winning margin was less than the number of deleted voters. Civil society alleges “vote dacoity” — legitimate voters being removed from rolls. ECI defends the exercise as necessary electoral hygiene (removing dead/duplicate/relocated voters). Key legal issues: Article 326 guarantees the right to vote to every citizen 18+; mass deletion of legitimate voters violates this. Aadhaar was added as the 12th proof of identity (per SC direction) — but the SC specified it is proof of identity, not citizenship. Activists allege BLOs are conflating the two. The SC had warned it would intervene if mass deletions occurred — Phase 2 data shows they have, and civil society is asking the court to fulfil its warning.
At the BRICS Foreign Ministers’ meeting in New Delhi (May 15, 2026), EAM Jaishankar delivered India’s national statement calling unilateral non-UN sanctions “unjustifiable” and “inconsistent with international law” — a pointed message directed at the US, which was about to let its waiver on India’s Russian oil imports expire on May 16. India’s position on sanctions: India officially recognises only UN Security Council (UNSC) sanctions under Chapter VII of the UN Charter as legally binding. Unilateral sanctions imposed by the US, EU, or any other country do not have binding force in international law — third countries are not obligated to comply. However, in practice, India has historically complied with US sanctions on Iran, Venezuela, and Russia for commercial reasons: Indian banks and refiners fear being cut off from SWIFT (the global banking messaging network) and from US correspondent banking if they violate US secondary sanctions. The current dilemma: The West Asia war (February 28) disrupted Hormuz-dependent Gulf crude supplies. India pivoted massively to Russian crude (1.96 mn bpd in early May 2026) with US waivers. When the waiver expired May 16 and the US signalled no extension, India faces a choice: (1) Comply — face energy supply stress; (2) Continue — face potential secondary sanctions on Indian banks/refiners; (3) Use BRICS public posture to negotiate another extension. Jaishankar’s speech was likely Option 3 in action — a public signal that India will not easily comply, designed to create negotiating pressure for another extension.
India’s existing heat action plans (HAPs) — coordinated by NDMA and implemented at the state/city level — focus on short-term palliatives: water kiosks, public advisories, shaded waiting areas, opening cooling centres. The NDMA itself acknowledges these plans are “uneven” in quality and many are imitations of plans drafted elsewhere. They do not address the underlying structural heat exposure of tens of millions of Indians who work, commute, and sleep in extreme heat. A “national cooling doctrine” would treat sustained access to safe indoor temperatures as a public health entitlement — not a luxury — similar to how access to clean water or sanitation is treated. Components would include: (1) Mandatory minimum indoor temperature standards for all workplaces (factories, warehouses, kitchens, call centres, delivery hubs) with enforceable inspection; (2) Passive cooling at scale — reflective roofing, insulation materials, district cooling systems for dense urban areas; (3) Affordable, India-appropriate air conditioning calibrated for India’s humid, longer heat seasons (not designed for European climates) and for India’s grid reality (only 60% of installed capacity available); (4) Heatwave notification as national disaster — 16th Finance Commission recommendation — to unlock National Disaster Response Fund (NDRF) for heat infrastructure; (5) Occupational heat exposure standards under the Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code, 2020 for outdoor and informal sector workers. The doctrine must be India-specific because India’s heat is fundamentally different from the Western climates that produced most of the existing cooling technology and standards.
Official COVID-19 deaths count only confirmed positive COVID-19 cases who died — they require a positive test AND attribution of death to COVID. The WHO World Health Statistics 2026 report uses the “excess deaths” methodology: actual deaths during 2020-2023 minus expected deaths (based on pre-pandemic trends extrapolated forward). The gap between actual and expected = excess deaths. This captures: (1) COVID deaths that were never confirmed by testing (especially in rural/poor areas with limited testing); (2) Indirect deaths — people who died of treatable conditions (heart attack, diabetes complications, cancer) because hospitals were overwhelmed and people avoided seeking care during COVID; (3) Excess mortality from disrupted immunisation, delayed surgeries, maternal deaths, and mental health crises. The global estimate: 22.1 million excess deaths vs. ~7 million officially reported — a 3x multiplier. For India: India’s official COVID-19 death count (2020-23) was ~5.3 lakh. Independent excess death studies (The Lancet, Science) estimated India’s actual excess mortality at 2.5-4 million — making it potentially the worst-affected country in absolute numbers. The Indian government disputed these estimates. The WHO’s global figure implies India likely contributed a significant share of the 22.1 million excess deaths. This matters for policy because: (1) Understanding the true pandemic mortality helps calibrate pandemic preparedness investments; (2) Indirect mortality reveals healthcare system failure points that need fixing; (3) The life expectancy reversal (a decade of gains reversed in 2-3 years) has long-term human capital implications for India’s demographic dividend.
India has expanded medical education massively — from 596 to 818 medical colleges and from 83,000 to 1.29 lakh MBBS seats between 2021-22 and 2025-26. But this quantity expansion has not been matched by quality improvement. Key challenges: (1) Faculty shortages — pre-clinical and para-clinical specialities (anatomy, biochemistry, microbiology, pathology, physiology) face acute faculty shortages because rapid college expansion outpaced the supply of qualified teachers; (2) Vacant PG seats — thousands of postgraduate medical seats in non-clinical specialities remain vacant each year as students prefer clinical specialities; (3) Non-translational research — most medical research is driven by academic promotion norms (publication counts) rather than real-world clinical impact; (4) NEET systemic failures — 2024 and 2026 paper leaks erode the examination’s credibility and create immense student stress; (5) Changing doctor-patient relationship — trust erosion and transactional framing; (6) Outdated curriculum — AI and digital health barely integrated despite these being central to modern medicine. Recommended reforms: National Medical Commission (NMC) to allow a National Faculty Pool (centralised faculty shared across institutions); Professors of Practice (experienced clinicians formally integrated into teaching); Computer-based/hybrid NEET (Radhakrishnan Committee, 2024); AI and digital health integrated into MBBS curriculum from induction; Competency-Based Medical Education (CBME) — introduced 2019, needs stronger implementation; Research quality norms emphasising translational impact over publication volume; 1,000 secure Standard Testing Centres across India for examination integrity.
India’s multi-alignment strategy — simultaneously maintaining close relationships with the US (Quad, defence), Russia (oil, S-400), China (trade, SCO), Gulf (energy, diaspora), Iran (Chabahar), and Europe (FTA, Rafale) — has been India’s signature post-Cold War foreign policy. It provides strategic autonomy (independent decision-making based on national interest) but as scholar Deepa Ollapally argues, it does not automatically provide geopolitical leadership. The Iran war has exposed specific limits: (1) Economic + military unilateralism simultaneously: Trump is demanding alignment of others’ economic policies with US strategic interests (cutting Russian oil, abandoning Chabahar/Iran, not de-dollarising in BRICS) AND conducting military unilateralism (attacking Iran without UN/NATO consensus). India has never faced both simultaneously. (2) Rafale source code limitation: India chose France over US/Russia partly for technology transfer. But source codes and algorithms remain under French control — India is “wedded to France for upgrades,” undermining Make in India in defence. (3) EU as US subordinate: Rubio’s Munich speech called for “western supply chain” in explicitly civilisational terms that leave the Global South out. Europe historically falls in line with the US under pressure — India cannot count on EU FTA as genuine strategic insulation. (4) IRIS Dena incident: US sinking an Iranian naval ship in the Indian Ocean during India’s International Fleet Review revealed India’s inability to protect maritime order in its own “backyard.” (5) Pakistan/Turkey filling the diplomatic vacuum: India’s strategic ambiguity on the Iran war has left space for Pakistan and Turkey to play mediator roles — ceding geopolitical influence India could have claimed as the leader of the Global South.

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© 2026 Legacy IAS. Prepared for educational purposes to aid UPSC Civil Services aspirants.

Content is value-added analysis of publicly reported news. All news credits to The Hindu (May 15, 2026, Bengaluru City Edition).

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