Call Us Now

+91 9606900005 / 04

For Enquiry

legacyiasacademy@gmail.com

Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 13 May 2025

  1. A belated admission
  2. The educational landscape, its disconcerting shift
  3. India’s rising e-waste, the need to recast its management


Context : Excess Deaths vs. Official Toll:

  • Civil Registration System (CRS) data for 2021 shows 21.5 lakh excess deaths.
    • Officially reported COVID-19 deaths for 2021 were only 3.32 lakh.
    • Suggests gross under-reporting of COVID-19 deaths.

Relevance : GS2 (Governance), GS4 (Ethics – Accountability), GS3 (Disaster Management).

Practice Question: Data delayed is data denied.” In light of the delayed release of civil registration data during COVID-19, critically examine the implications of data opacity on public health policy and democratic accountability in India.(250 Words)

  • Independent Findings Validated:
    • RTI findings and surveys (notably by The Hindu) had earlier indicated millions of uncounted deaths.
    • These findings were initially dismissed by the government.
  • High Under-reporting Multiples:
    • Excess death multiples vs. reported COVID deaths:
      • Gujarat: 44.2x
      • Madhya Pradesh: 19.5x
      • Uttar Pradesh: 19.5x
      • Telangana: 18.2x
    • Points to state-level data suppression or non-recognition of COVID deaths with comorbidities.

Governance and Accountability Concerns:

  • Delayed Release of Data:
    • Registrar General’s report released nearly 4 years after the second wave.
    • Indicates a reluctance to acknowledge and assess the pandemic’s true toll.
  • Failure to Utilize Improved Civil Registration System:
    • CRS has become more robust and widespread, with improved death reporting.
    • Yet, delay in publishing data undercuts progress and transparency.
  • Lack of Medical Certification:
    • Cause of death certification remains low.
    • Weakens the ability to use mortality data for public health planning.

Implications:

  • Public Health Policy Impact:
    • Delayed and inaccurate data leads to misinformed public health responses.
    • Hampers future pandemic preparedness and resilience.
  • Erosion of Public Trust:
    • Undermines credibility of government statistics and damages public trust.
    • Highlights need for data transparency and accountability in crisis management.

Conclusion:

  • The revelation of excess deaths serves as a belated but important admission.
  • The government must ensure timely and accurate release of vital statistics.
  • Emphasizes that data delayed is data denied, especially in a public health emergency.


Key Issues in the Evolving Educational Landscape

  • Historical Role of Education: Traditionally, higher education nurtured critical thinking, dissent, and progress across disciplines. Universities were autonomous centres of intellectual inquiry and democratic engagement.
  • Shift Toward Conformity: Modern universities are increasingly functioning under bureaucratic and ideological control, prioritising efficiency and market needs over academic freedom.

Relevance : GS2 (Governance , Education), GS4 (Ethics – Integrity in institutions).

Practice Question : Critically analyse how centralisation, marketisation, and ideological control are reshaping Indias higher education system. What steps can be taken to safeguard academic autonomy and foster critical thinking?(250 Words)

  • Centralisation of Curricula:
    • Earlier, universities had autonomy to design context-specific syllabi.
    • Now, bodies like the UGC and policies like NEP impose standardised content, often reflecting political or economic agendas rather than academic merit.
    • This erodes academic autonomy and leads to a monolithic intellectual ecosystem devoid of diversity and innovation.
  • Suppression of Dissent:
    • Critical voices, especially those citing thinkers like Chomsky or challenging dominant narratives, face reprimands or marginalisation.
    • Self-censorship among faculty and students is rising due to fear of professional or political backlash.
  • Rise of Corporatisation:
    • Education is being reframed as a market commodity, prioritising revenue, branding, and investor interest.
    • Disciplines like technology and business receive disproportionate support, while humanities and social sciences are devalued.
  • Metrics-Driven Evaluation:
    • Faculty are judged based on quantitative metrics (publications, rankings, ratings), not scholarly depth.
    • Global rankings push institutions to emulate Western models, sidelining local intellectual traditions.
  • Dilution of Academic Governance:
    • Appointing leaders from non-academic or corporate backgrounds undermines scholarly priorities.
    • Increasing ideological influence in appointments risks converting leadership into tools of conformity.
  • Conclusion:
    • The crisis in education is rooted in a crisis of imagination and purpose.
    • Preserving universities as spaces of free thought is essential not only for academic integrity but for sustaining democracy and public reasoning.


Indias E-Waste Explosion

  • Rapid growth: E-waste increased by 151.03% from 7.08 lakh MT (2017-18) to 17.78 lakh MT (2023-24).
  • Annual addition: ~1.69 lakh MT of e-waste is added each year.
  • India ranks among the top global e-waste generators (with China, USA, Japan, Germany).

GS Paper: GS3 (Environment, Economy, Science & Tech).

Practice Question: Indias e-waste problem reflects a larger failure to transition towards a circular economy. Evaluate the role of Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) and floor pricing in enabling sustainable e-waste management in India.(250 Words)

 Consequences of Improper E-Waste Management

  • Environmental loss:
    • Water pollution from cyanide & sulphuric acid.
    • Air pollution from lead fumes, plastic burning.
    • Soil contamination.
  • Economic loss:
    • $10 billion annually in environmental damage.
    • 80,000 crore (~$9.6 billion) loss from undervalued critical metals.
    • $20 billion social loss due to unregulated informal sector.
    • ~$20 billion in tax losses due to unaccounted cash transactions.
  • Human cost:
    • Informal recycling involves women and children.
    • Average lifespan <27 years due to toxic exposure.

Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR): Concept & Potential

  • EPR shifts waste management responsibility to producers, importers & brand owners.
  • Promotes:
    • Sustainable design,
    • Lifecycle accountability,
    • Environmental cost internalisation.
  • Helps reduce burden on municipalities and curb informal recycling.

Significance of EPR Floor Price (As per 2022 Rules)

  • Prevents market collapse like in plastic waste management.
  • Encourages:
    • Formal recyclers to invest in advanced tech (gold, copper recovery).
    • Expansion of safe, certified recycling infrastructure.
  • Aims to formalise the sector (which is 95% informal currently).
  • Reduces health and environmental risks by discouraging hazardous informal recycling.

Towards a Circular Economy

  • E-waste reimagined as a resource rather than a liability.
  • Stable pricing fosters:
    • Material recovery over landfill disposal.
    • Investment in recycling innovation.
    • Compliance with EPR targets.
  • Floor price can unlock sustainability and innovation without significantly raising product costs.

Balancing Concerns

  • Critics fear consumer cost rise due to floor pricing.
  • But:
    • Environmental and social costs of inaction far outweigh financial concerns.
    • Encourages product innovation and durability — key EPR goals.

Way Forward: A Recycling Vision for India

  • Formalisation of e-waste sector is essential for:
    • Tax revenue,
    • Health safety,
    • Resource efficiency.
  • A visionary floor pricing policy is the foundation for sustainable growth and global leadership.
  • India must act decisively to convert a waste crisis into a green opportunity.

May 2025
MTWTFSS
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031 
Categories