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Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 15 November 2025

  1. Janjatiya Gaurav Divas and Tribal Empowerment: Legacy of Birsa Munda
  2. Flexible inflation targeting, a good balance


Why in News ?

  • Janjatiya Gaurav Divas is observed annually on 15 November to honour Birsa Munda.
    2024–25 marks 150th birth anniversary of Birsa Munda, celebrated as Janjatiya Gaurav Varsh.
  • PM visited Ulihatu (birthplace of Birsa Munda), reviewed tribal welfare initiatives, and highlighted decade-long reforms for tribal empowerment.
  • Article reflects on tribal contributions to Indias freedom struggle and government measures for tribal development.

Relevance  

  • GS1 – History & Society
    Tribal revolts, Munda Rebellion, Santhal Rebellion, Kol uprising.
    Role of tribal communities in freedom struggle.
    Tribe–state interactions and socio-cultural identity.
  • GS2 – Governance
    Welfare schemes for Scheduled Tribes.
    Ministry of Tribal Affairs programmes.
    PVTG empowerment model.
    Rights-based approach: FRA, PESA, PM-JANMAN.
  • GS3 – Economy & Environment
    Forest governance, land rights, livelihoods.
    Resource-based tribal economy.
    Skill development & entrepreneurship in tribal belts.
    Inclusion in digital, financial, and agricultural systems.

Practice Question

  • Tribal uprisings were not merely anti-colonial revolts, but assertions of identity, autonomy and resource rights.” Discuss with reference to movements led by Birsa Munda.(250 Words)

Basics

  • Bharat’s tribal communities have historically resisted colonial exploitation, unjust land policies, and British administration.
  • Tribal revolts like Ulgulan (Birsa Munda), Santhal revolt, Tantia Bhils struggle, Rampa rebellion etc. shaped nationalist consciousness.
  • Tribal struggles were not just anti-British—they defended autonomy, land rights, forest livelihoods, dignity, and culture.
  • Birsa Munda’s Ulgulan was against British land laws, missionaries, and local oppressive landlords (dikus).
  • Government recognises their role through Janjatiya Gaurav Divas (2021 decision).

Key Highlights in the Article

Historical Role of Tribal Leaders

  • Consistent uprisings since 18th century contributed to anti-colonial mobilisation.
  • Tribal revolts united communities beyond geographical lines.
  • Movements demonstrated moral strength and collective resistance.

Government Recognition Steps

  • Creation of a dedicated Ministry of Tribal Affairs (1999).
  • Janjatiya Gaurav Divas declared in 2021.PM-PVTG Mission launched for focused development of 75 PVTG groups.
  • PM-AJAY (Adhikar, Jharkhand, Adivasi, Yuva) scheme strengthening tribal socio-economic capacity.
  • PM-JANMAN scheme improving access to housing, education, drinking water, electricity, connectivity, and health.

PMs Visit to Ulihatu (2025)

  • First Prime Minister to visit the birthplace of Birsa Munda.
  • Announcement of enhanced Janjatiya-centric programmes.
  • Emphasis on protecting, empowering, uplifting vulnerable tribal communities (especially PVTGs).

Development Focus for Tribal Communities (Last Decade)

  • Safeguarding land rights, forest rights, and livelihood ecosystems.
  • Expanding modern education—Eklavya Model Schools; 740+ EMRS, special hostels.
  • Boosting digital access, health infrastructure, welfare schemes.
  • Improved agricultural, technological, and entrepreneurship opportunities.
  • Strengthening Gram Sabhas in Scheduled Areas.

Tribal Freedom Struggle Narrative

  • Birsa Munda’s Ulgulan was one of the most powerful mass movements against unjust land tenure systems.
  • Sparked consciousness on land ownership, self-rule, and identity.
  • Though he lived only 25 years, Birsa ignited a pan-tribal resistance movement.

Overview

Historical Importance

  • Tribal uprisings formed the earliest anti-colonial resistance (pre-1857).
  • Revolts were against exploitative land laws, forest restrictions, and missionary interventions.
  • Tribal resistance strengthened national consciousness even before mainstream nationalism took shape.

Cultural and Identity Assertion

  • Movements like Ulgulan reaffirmed tribal pride, religion (Birsait faith), and community unity.
  • They safeguarded egalitarian traditions and local governance models.

Post-Independence Challenges

  • Marginalisation, displacement, PVTG vulnerabilities, lack of basic services.
  • Slow inclusion in mainstream economic growth.
  • Issues: malnutrition, remoteness, infrastructure deficits, education gaps.

Government Responses (Past Decade Highlight)

  • PM-PVTG Mission: focused development of 75 groups.
  • PM-JANMAN: special strategy for vulnerable tribal communities.
  • EMRS expansion: tribal children’s education transformation.
  • Forest rights implementation strengthening autonomy.
  • Economic inclusion: forest produce MSP, livelihood diversification, women-led SHGs.
  • Governance reforms: strengthening local self-governance in Schedule V areas.

Emerging Concerns

  • Balancing development with cultural preservation.
  • Preventing displacement due to mining, dams, or conservation projects.
  • Ensuring tribal agency in decision-making.
  • Digital and health access gaps still significant.

Overall Assessment

  • Recognition of tribal history is improving.
  • Welfare outcomes improving in education, health, connectivity.
  • Need for sustained, community-led, culturally sensitive development.


 Why is this in News?

  • Indias Flexible Inflation Targeting (FIT) mandate — 4% inflation target with a ±2% band — expires in March 2026.
  • The RBI has released a detailed discussion paper raising fundamental questions on:
    • Whether to target headline or core inflation
    • What should be the acceptable inflation rate
    • Whether the inflation band should be changed

Relevance

GS3 – Economy

  • Monetary policy framework and institutional design (MPC, RBI Act amendments).
  • Inflation–growth trade-offs, Phillips Curve debates.
  • Headline vs core inflation: empirical Indian evidence, food–wage spillovers.
  • Role of fiscal discipline (FRBM) in maintaining price stability.
  • Link between inflation expectations, savings, investment and welfare.
  • External shocks & macroeconomic stability.

GS2 – Governance & Policy

  • Statutory mandate of MPC, autonomy of RBI.
  • Cooperative fiscal–monetary policy coordination.
  • Impact of inflation on welfare, consumption and inequality.

Practice Questions

  • Why is headline CPI considered a more suitable target than core inflation in the Indian context? Support your argument with empirical and structural factors.(250 Words)

Inflation Targeting in India

  • Adopted in 2016 via amendments to the RBI Act.
  • Target: 4% CPI inflation, tolerance band 2–6%.
  • Mandate given to Monetary Policy Committee (MPC).
  • Core rationale:
    • Control of inflation protects poor households
    • Reduces uncertainty
    • Improves savings and investment outcomes
    • Anchors expectations

Core Arguments of the Article

Why Inflation Control Is Essential ?

  • High inflation functions as a regressive consumption tax.
  • Disproportionately hurts:
    • Poor households
    • Fixed-income households
    • Unhedged savers
  • High and volatile inflation:
    • Deters savings
    • Diverts investment
    • Damages long-term growth

Should India Target Headline or Core Inflation?

Arguments for Headline Inflation Targeting

  • Headline reflects the actual inflation experience of households, especially the poor.
  • Food inflation is not purely supply-driven; it is influenced by:
    • Liquidity conditions
    • Monetary expansion
    • Wage spillovers
  • Empirical Indian evidence:
    • Food inflation has second-round effects on core inflation (wages, services, non-food items).
    • Thus, controlling food inflation becomes part of general price stability.

Key Theoretical data

  • As per Milton Friedman (1963 Mumbai lecture):
    • Prices cannot rise without money supply expanding.
    • Price rises in selected items (e.g., food) lead to general inflation only when total liquidity expands.

Conclusion

  • For India’s structure, headline inflation remains the correct target — not core.

What Should Be the Acceptable Level of Inflation for India?

Historical Reference

  • Chakravarty Committee (1985):
    • Acceptable inflation = 4%.
    • Provided limited theoretical justification.

Contemporary Evidence

  • Phillips Curve trade-off has collapsed globally and in India.
  • Long-run: no trade-off between growth and inflation (Friedman’s expectations-augmented framework).
  • Short-run: Mild inflation may support growth, but excessive inflation hurts growth.

New Data-Based Finding

  • Using data from 1991–2024 (excluding COVID shock):
    • Quadratic growth–inflation curve shows inflection at 3.98%.
    • Implies:
      • Optimal inflation ≈ 4%,
      • Inflation above 6% sharply reduces growth.

Forward-Looking Consideration (2026–2031)

  • Preliminary RBI simulations suggest:
    • Optimal inflation below 4% for coming decade.
    • Limited justification to increase the target.

Should India Change the Current Inflation Band?

Current Band: 2% to 6%

  • Has provided the right flexibility for shocks.
  • No reason to widen the band.

Critical Missing Element

  • Framework does not specify:
    • How long RBI can stay close to the upper limit (6%)
    • Staying persistently near 6% undermines credibility and violates the spirit of FIT.

Growth and Inflation Data

  • Growth declines rapidly once inflation exceeds 6%.

Dependence on Fiscal Policy

  • History:
    • 1970s–80s inflation mainly due to monetisation of fiscal deficit.
  • Post-reforms:
    • End of adhoc treasury bills (1994)
    • FRBM Act (2003)
    • FIT (2016)

Internal Consistency

  • FRBM discipline and FIT must operate together.
  • Fiscal slippage → inflation slippage → FIT failure.

Overview

Why Headline CPI Must Stay as Indias Target ?

  • Indian consumption basket heavily food-weighted.
  • Food–wage–core transmission is strong.
  • Excluding food inflation would provide wrong policy signals.
  • Headline inflation better reflects:
    • Cost-of-living pressures
    • Distributional impacts
    • Monetary–fiscal interaction effects

Acceptable Inflation = 4%

  • Historical committee recommendation + new empirical validation.
  • India’s growth–inflation relationship is non-linear, with:
    • Growth-maximising inflation ≈ 4%
    • Rapid decline beyond 6%
  • Raising target would:
    • Unanchor expectations
    • Increase cost of government borrowing
    • Hurt real incomes
    • Weaken RBI credibility

Why FIT Band Should Not Be Changed ?

  • Current ±2% gives:
    • Room for supply shocks
    • Room for cyclical flexibility
  • Tightening the band → unnecessary volatility in interest rates
  • Widening the band → reduces accountability
  • Needed:
    • Explicit guidance on duration near upper tolerance limit.

Final Consolidated Takeaways

  • Target variable: Headline CPI (not core).
  • Optimal target: 4% inflation, reaffirmed by post-1991 data.
  • Tolerance band: ±2% should continue.
  • Policy coordination: FIT must operate alongside FRBM discipline.
  • Macro-risk: Staying at 6% inflation for long is growth-negative and credibility-damaging.
  • Forward view: For 2026–2031, optimal inflation may be under 4%, but certainly not above.

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