The Hindu — UPSC News Analysis
Daily Editorial & Current Affairs Digest
Tuesday, 2 June 2026 · Bengaluru EditionA Mains-oriented decode of the day’s most exam-relevant news — selected for Prelims facts, Mains linkages, Essay fodder and Interview depth. Reporting filtered out; analysis retained.
1. IIP Rebased to 2022-23 & the Slowdown in Industrial Output
- The new series broadens coverage — adding water supply/sewerage/waste management and gas supply to the existing mining, manufacturing and electricity sectors.
- Mining fell 5.1%; manufacturing grew 6.2%; new basket has 1,042 products (vs 839 earlier).
- IIP: compiled by the National Statistical Office (NSO/MoSPI); a short-term indicator of industrial activity.
- Use-based classification: primary, capital, intermediate, infrastructure, consumer durables & non-durables.
- Base-year revision (to 2022-23) follows the GDP rebasing, improving “granularity” (e.g., rare-earth minerals, renewable vs non-renewable electricity).
| Sector | Growth (YoY) |
|---|---|
| Mining & quarrying | −5.1% |
| Manufacturing (~75% weight) | +6.2% |
| Electricity & gas supply | +4.9% |
| Water/sewerage/waste mgmt (new) | +6.6% |
| Capital goods | +16% (quickened) |
- Why rebasing matters: Updated base years better reflect the current economic structure and consumption patterns; improves policy accuracy.
- Mixed signals: Robust capital-goods growth (16%) signals investment, but contracting mining and a slower headline rate warrant caution.
- Comparability: A linking formula is provided, but series breaks complicate trend analysis.
- Timely, granular data and periodic rebasing for evidence-based policy; revive lagging consumer-goods demand.
- Support manufacturing via PLI and ease-of-doing-business reforms. Link to SDG-9.
Prelims Pointers
- IIP compiled by NSO (MoSPI); base year now 2022-23.
- Manufacturing ~75% of IIP basket.
- Use-based categories (capital, intermediate, etc.).
Mains Model Question
Why is the periodic rebasing of macroeconomic indicators like the IIP important? Discuss the significance of the revised IIP series. (10 marks, 150 words)
The Index of Industrial Production (IIP) in India is compiled and released by:
- The Reserve Bank of India
- The National Statistical Office (MoSPI)
- NITI Aayog
- The Ministry of Commerce
Show Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b). The IIP is compiled by the NSO under the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation; manufacturing has the largest weight.
2. IMEC: Caught Between Commerce & Geopolitics
- ~20 million barrels of crude (a third of global supply) pass through Hormuz daily; India imports ~88% of its crude.
- IMEC, announced at the 2023 G-20 (Delhi), connects India to Europe via the Arabian Peninsula, bypassing the Suez Canal.
- IMEC sections: Eastern (India→UAE by sea), Central (UAE-Saudi-Jordan-Israel, to Haifa port), Western (Haifa→Europe).
- Multimodal: rail, ports, pipelines, undersea data cables, green-hydrogen corridors.
- Compare: INSTC (bypasses Suez via Iran), China’s BRI.
| Corridor | Route logic | Lead |
|---|---|---|
| IMEC | India→Gulf→Israel→Europe (bypass Suez) | India, US, EU, Gulf |
| INSTC | India→Iran→Russia/Europe | India, Iran, Russia |
| BRI | China-led overland + maritime | China |
- Geographic vulnerability: Gulf ports (Jebel Ali, Fujairah) and Haifa lie near the conflict zone — undermining IMEC’s premise of avoiding instability.
- Partner divergence: Saudi Arabia-UAE friction (UAE’s OPEC exit, Israel coordination) threatens seamless coordination.
- Strategic logic intact: The war reinforces the long-term need to avoid choke points (the “two C’s” — conflict zones & choke points).
- Build flexibility: explore Oman’s ports (Salalah, Duqm) as eastern entry, and an Egypt spur on the western end.
- India to leverage its trust with both Saudi Arabia and the UAE; deepen ties with EU champions (Italy, France).
Prelims Pointers
- IMEC — announced at G-20 Delhi, 2023; terminates at Haifa.
- Strait of Hormuz — ~1/3 of global oil.
- INSTC; BRI.
Mains Model Question
“The IMEC is strategically vital yet hostage to West Asian geopolitics.” Critically examine its prospects for India. (15 marks, 250 words)
The India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC) is designed primarily to bypass which choke point?
- Strait of Malacca
- Suez Canal
- Panama Canal
- Bab-el-Mandeb only
Show Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b). IMEC connects India to Europe across the Arabian Peninsula, bypassing the Suez Canal; it terminates at Haifa port (Israel).
3. China’s Counter-Space Power & India’s Orbital Vulnerability
- China demonstrated an ASAT test (2007), orbital “dog-fights” (2024), and plans 36,000+ LEO satellites by 2030.
- India has ~60 operational satellites vs China’s 400+ military satellites — far less redundancy.
- Mission Shakti (2019): India’s ASAT test — entered an elite club (US, Russia, China).
- Kessler Syndrome: cascading orbital debris from collisions.
- Defence Space Agency; NavIC (regional navigation); CARTOSAT/RISAT (imaging).
| Type | Effect |
|---|---|
| Kinetic (DN-3, SC-19 missiles) | Physically destroy satellites |
| Laser/dazzlers | Blind/disrupt sensors temporarily |
| Co-orbital (SJ, TJS series) | Interfere with / dislodge satellites |
| Jammers | Disable navigation (e.g., NavIC) |
- Redundancy gap: Losing 5-6 satellites hurts India far more than China, given fewer assets.
- Deterrence limits: Mission Shakit showed capability, but India lacks co-orbital systems and full redundancy.
- Regulatory vacuum: No comprehensive treaty governs counter-space activity — escalation risk in a crisis.
- Expand the space industry beyond ISRO; disaggregate large satellites (e.g., GSAT) into resilient constellations.
- Protect ground assets, build data-sharing with partners, and define clear deterrence red lines.
Prelims Pointers
- Mission Shakti, 2019 — ASAT test.
- Kessler Syndrome; NavIC.
- Defence Space Agency.
Mains Model Question
“Space is emerging as a contested military domain.” Examine the implications of China’s counter-space capabilities for India and suggest a response. (15 marks, 250 words)
“Kessler Syndrome”, in the context of outer space, refers to:
- A failure of satellite navigation
- A cascade of collisions producing self-sustaining orbital debris
- Solar radiation damage to satellites
- A type of anti-satellite laser
Show Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b). Kessler Syndrome describes a runaway cascade of debris-generating collisions in orbit, potentially rendering some orbits unusable.
4. Remittances: The Quiet Anchor of the Rupee
- India received $138 billion in remittances in 2024 — the world’s highest by a wide margin.
- Since mid-2013, remittances have on average financed more than India’s entire trade deficit.
- Balance of Payments = Current Account + Capital Account.
- Current account components: trade balance, Net Primary Income (NPI), Net Secondary Income (NSI) — which captures remittances.
- India runs a structural CAD (imports > exports); remittances ~3% of GDP.
| Feature | Remittances | FDI / FPI |
|---|---|---|
| Stability | Stable, not given to sudden halts | Volatile (esp. FPI) |
| Liability | Transfers — no future outflow | Create future liabilities |
| Transaction cost | Low | Higher |
- Underappreciated buffer: Without high net remittances, India’s CAD and financing demands would be far larger.
- Looming risk: A sliding rupee may make diaspora remitters wait; costlier energy imports widen the trade deficit — squeezing remittances’ cover.
- Analytical blind spot: Policy over-focuses on FDI/FPI, ignoring working-class diaspora flows.
- Lower remittance transaction costs (SDG-10.c target: under 3%); protect diaspora interests & skilling for higher-value migration.
- Diversify energy imports to curb the trade deficit; deepen export competitiveness.
Prelims Pointers
- India — world’s top remittance recipient ($138 bn, 2024).
- Remittances recorded under Net Secondary Income (current account).
- BoP = Current + Capital Account.
Mains Model Question
“Remittances are the unsung stabiliser of India’s external sector.” Examine their role in financing the CAD and supporting the rupee. (10 marks, 150 words)
In India’s Balance of Payments, inward remittances from the diaspora are recorded under:
- The capital account
- Net Secondary Income in the current account
- Foreign portfolio investment
- External commercial borrowings
Show Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b). Remittances are unilateral transfers recorded under Net Secondary Income within the current account.
5. Myanmar President’s Visit — “No Anti-India Space”
- India pressed for dialogue between the junta-backed government and the pro-democracy Opposition.
- Discussions covered defence cooperation (UN peacekeeping training) and the 1,643-km border.
- Myanmar is India’s land bridge to ASEAN under Act East & Neighbourhood First.
- Connectivity: Kaladan Multimodal (Sittwe port) and the Trilateral Highway (Moreh-Mae Sot) — both delayed by conflict.
- Border guarded by Assam Rifles; active hostilities between Myanmar Army and ethnic armed groups (Rakhine).
Security
- NE insurgents on Myanmar soil
- Border, drugs, arms
Connectivity
- Kaladan, Trilateral Highway
- Delayed by conflict
Values vs interests
- Suu Kyi detention raised
- Pragmatic, not “disengagement”
- Pragmatism vs principle: India engages the junta to secure its NE and counter China, while flagging democracy/Suu Kyi.
- Project paralysis: Kaladan and the Trilateral Highway are stalled by “active hostilities” in Myanmar.
- China factor: Deep Chinese influence makes disengagement strategically costly for India.
- Calibrated engagement with support for inclusive dialogue; secure connectivity corridors and the border.
- Coordinate counter-insurgency while pressing for a return to democracy. Link to Act East / Indo-Pacific.
Prelims Pointers
- Kaladan project — Sittwe port.
- Trilateral Highway (India-Myanmar-Thailand).
- Assam Rifles — Myanmar border; ~1,643 km.
Mains Model Question
“India’s Myanmar policy is a balance between strategic pragmatism and democratic values.” Discuss. (15 marks, 250 words)
The India-Myanmar-Thailand Trilateral Highway is intended to connect Moreh in India to Mae Sot in:
- Thailand
- Laos
- Vietnam
- Cambodia
Show Answer & Explanation
Answer: (a). The Trilateral Highway runs from Moreh (Manipur) through Myanmar to Mae Sot in Thailand, a key Act East connectivity project.
6. Delhi HC Recognises the “Right to be Forgotten”
- Over 30 petitioners (acquitted persons, parties to settled disputes) sought removal of name-based searchability of judicial records causing “continuing harm”.
- The Court directed search engines and legal databases to de-index specified judgments from name-based searches.
- Puttaswamy (2017): privacy is a fundamental right under Article 21.
- DPDP Act, 2023: includes data-erasure principles; India lacks a specific “right to be forgotten” statute.
- Origin: EU’s GDPR and the Google Spain case (2014).
| Right to be forgotten | Competing interest |
|---|---|
| Privacy, dignity, reputation (Art. 21) | Right to information & open justice |
| Rehabilitation after acquittal | Transparency of judicial records |
| Data autonomy | Free speech / press freedom (Art. 19) |
- Judicial law-making: In the absence of a statute, constitutional courts are filling the gap — raising consistency concerns.
- Balancing test: Privacy must be weighed against open justice and the public’s right to know; “no longer serving a legitimate public purpose” is the threshold.
- Practical limits: De-indexing from search engines does not erase the underlying record.
- A clear statutory framework (building on the DPDP Act) defining the right, exceptions and procedure.
- Uniform guidelines balancing privacy with open justice. Link to SDG-16.
Prelims Pointers
- Right to privacy — Puttaswamy (2017), Art. 21.
- DPDP Act, 2023 (data erasure).
- “Right to be forgotten” — GDPR origin.
Mains Model Question
“The right to be forgotten must be balanced against open justice and the right to information.” Critically examine in light of recent judicial pronouncements. (15 marks, 250 words)
The “right to be forgotten” in India is currently grounded primarily in:
- A specific Act of Parliament dedicated to it
- The fundamental right to privacy under Article 21
- Article 19(1)(a)
- The Right to Information Act
Show Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b). India lacks a dedicated statute; courts derive the right from privacy under Article 21 (Puttaswamy), with the DPDP Act providing erasure principles.
7. Vizag Hyperscale Data Centre — AI’s Resource Challenge
- Part of a ~₹1.25 lakh crore digital push; integrated with the America-India Connect initiative (multiple subsea cables landing in Vizag).
- Creates India’s second major data gateway on the eastern seaboard, reducing dependence on Red Sea cable routes.
- Hyperscale data centre: very large facility (here, 1 GW) running heavy AI/GPU workloads.
- “Sovereign AI”: keeping data/compute within national control; linked to DPDP Act & data localisation.
- India’s semiconductor push via PLI; environmental clearance norms (EIA).
| Opportunities | Challenges |
|---|---|
| Owning AI infrastructure; jobs | 1 GW power may strain local grid |
| Data gateway, cable diversity | ~20 million litres/day water in a water-stressed district |
| Boosts chip/PLI demand | Dependence on a single foreign provider’s stack |
| Redistributes growth from metros | Sidestepped EIA/public hearing concerns |
- “Sovereign AI” in name only: Reliance on a foreign provider’s proprietary stack limits true sovereignty.
- AI as an infrastructure problem: Power, land and water — not just code — are the bottlenecks.
- Environmental governance: Aggressive State incentives lack green benchmarks; rights groups allege EIA was sidestepped.
- A central single-window for standardised public hearings and resource accounting; mandatory green/water benchmarks.
- Renewable power, water recycling, and codified sustainability safeguards. Link to SDG-6, 9, 13.
Prelims Pointers
- Hyperscale data centre (~1 GW).
- “Sovereign AI”; data localisation.
- Subsea cables; America-India Connect.
Mains Model Question
“AI infrastructure is as much a resource and environmental challenge as a technological one.” Examine with reference to large data centres in India. (15 marks, 250 words)
A “hyperscale” data centre is best characterised by:
- Its location in a metropolitan city
- Very large computing and power capacity supporting heavy AI/cloud workloads
- Exclusive use of renewable energy
- Storage of only government data
Show Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b). Hyperscale facilities have very large compute and power footprints (the Vizag hub’s demand is ~1 GW) to run massive AI/cloud workloads.
8. PCOS → PMOS Renaming & the FemTech Debate
- The rename (published in The Lancet) reflects that the condition is endocrine, metabolic, reproductive and psychological — not just a reproductive/ovarian disorder.
- FemTech platforms offer integrated, non-judgemental care — but cater mostly to urban, digitally savvy women.
- PMOS/PCOS: affects a large share of reproductive-age women; linked to insulin resistance, infertility, NCDs.
- FemTech: female-focused health technology; venture-capital funded.
- Context: shortage of gynaecologists (esp. rural); women’s health under-prioritised.
| FemTech promise | Limits |
|---|---|
| Integrated, multi-specialty care | Needs internet + recurring subscriptions (urban bias) |
| Privacy & non-judgemental approach | Start-up volatility; platforms may shut down |
| Coordinated long-term management | Cannot substitute public healthcare |
- Equity gap: Privatised digital care excludes rural and low-income women — deepening health inequity.
- Systemic failure: FemTech’s rise reflects gaps in public healthcare and a fertility-first, stigmatising clinical culture.
- Neglected drivers: Environmental factors (pollution, adulterated food, stress) rarely feature in PMOS discourse.
- Invest in public healthcare and medical education beyond a fertility-first framework; sensitise gynaecologists.
- Regulate FemTech for data privacy and continuity; address environmental drivers. Link to SDG-3 & 5.
Prelims Pointers
- PCOS renamed to PMOS (multisystem).
- FemTech — women’s health technology.
- Insulin resistance link to NCDs.
Mains Model Question
“Private digital health platforms can complement but not substitute public healthcare.” Examine with reference to women’s health in India. (10 marks, 150 words)
The renaming of PCOS to “Polyendocrine Metabolic Ovarian Syndrome (PMOS)” primarily reflects:
- That it is purely a reproductive disorder
- Recognition of its multisystem endocrine and metabolic nature
- That it affects only older women
- A change in its treatment to surgery
Show Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b). The rename acknowledges the condition’s endocrine, metabolic, reproductive, psychological and dermatological dimensions.
9. NFHS-6: The Dual Burden & the NCD Surge
- Gains: stunting down 17%, severe wasting down 32%, institutional deliveries 90%+, full immunisation 87%+, TFR steady at 2.0.
- Worry: obesity up (men 22.9%→27.3%, women 24%→30.7%); exclusive breastfeeding fell 63.7%→55.8%.
- NFHS: conducted by IIPS, Mumbai; one of the world’s largest household surveys, drives evidence-based policy.
- Replacement-level fertility = 2.1; India below it.
- NCDs: diabetes, cardiovascular, cancer, chronic respiratory — leading causes of death globally.
- Underfunded NCDs: SRS & National Health Accounts data show inadequate focus/funds for lifestyle and metabolic disorders.
- Demographic urgency: As India ages (“greyer nation”), the NCD burden will compound costs.
- Breastfeeding decline: Falling exclusive breastfeeding threatens to reverse infant-nutrition gains.
- Comprehensive NCD screening; nationwide behaviour-change communication on diet/exercise.
- Higher taxes on sugared beverages and packaged foods; strengthen health systems at all levels. Link to SDG-3.
Prelims Pointers
- NFHS by IIPS, Mumbai; TFR 2.0 (replacement 2.1).
- NCDs — diabetes, CVD, cancer, respiratory.
- NP-NCD; POSHAN 2.0.
Mains Model Question
“India’s health system must pivot to confront a rising non-communicable disease burden.” Discuss in light of NFHS-6 findings. (15 marks, 250 words)
The “double burden of malnutrition” refers to the co-existence of:
- Two infectious diseases
- Undernutrition and overnutrition/obesity within the same population
- Anaemia and tuberculosis
- Urban and rural poverty
Show Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b). It is the simultaneous presence of undernutrition (stunting/wasting) and overnutrition (obesity, NCDs) in the same population.
10. Illicit Liquor Tragedies & the Methanol Problem
- Methanol — the toxin behind most hooch tragedies — is cheaply added to boost volume and margins; victims are mostly daily-wage workers.
- Illicit liquor is estimated at ~40% of alcohol consumption in India.
- Alcohol is a State subject (State List); excise is a major State revenue source.
- High taxes on legal liquor push the poor toward the illicit market; total bans (Bihar, Gujarat) can deflect demand to criminal syndicates.
- Methanol regulation falls under industrial-chemical controls.
Demand
- High legal-liquor taxes
- Poverty, addiction, hard labour
Supply
- Easy methanol diversion
- High margins on adulteration
Enforcement
- Only retail vendors caught
- Alleged official complicity
- Regulatory gap: Methanol is easily pilfered and diverted; downstream tracking is weak.
- Social justice: Victims are marginalised, so sustained political will for reform is often lacking.
- Weak deterrence: “Big fish” are rarely caught, and even those arrested are rarely convicted.
- Tight methanol accounting/tracking; affordable legal alcohol alternatives; target upstream suppliers, not just vendors.
- Awareness, de-addiction support, and accountability for official complicity. Link to SDG-3.
Prelims Pointers
- Methanol — toxin in spurious liquor.
- Alcohol — State subject (excise = State revenue).
- Illicit liquor ~40% of consumption.
Mains Model Question
“Recurring hooch tragedies reflect a failure of regulation, enforcement and social policy.” Examine and suggest measures. (15 marks, 250 words)
In spurious-liquor (hooch) tragedies, deaths are most commonly caused by the toxic effects of:
- Ethanol
- Methanol
- Isopropyl alcohol only
- Glycerol
Show Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b). Industrial methanol, illegally added to country liquor, is the toxin behind most hooch deaths; it metabolises into formic acid causing blindness and death.
11. Ladakh Governance & the Sixth Schedule Demand
- The May 22 sub-committee meeting reportedly agreed elected representatives would have executive, financial and legal powers over the bureaucracy.
- Leaders allege the final draft did not reflect this, raising suspicion.
- Ladakh became a UT without a legislature after the 2019 reorganisation of J&K.
- Key demands: statehood, Sixth Schedule protections, job reservation, and local democratic empowerment.
- Sixth Schedule (Art. 244): autonomous councils for tribal areas in the North-East.
| Demand | Rationale |
|---|---|
| Statehood | Democratic self-rule, accountability |
| Sixth Schedule | Protect tribal land, culture, ecology |
| Powers to elected reps | Curb bureaucratic control |
| Job & land safeguards | Guard fragile demography & environment |
- Democratic deficit: A UT without a legislature concentrates power in the bureaucracy/LG, fuelling local discontent.
- Trust deficit: Alleged divergence between agreed minutes and the final draft erodes confidence.
- Ecological stakes: A fragile high-altitude ecosystem strengthens the case for tribal/environmental safeguards.
- Transparent, documented negotiations honouring agreed positions; consider Sixth Schedule / constitutional safeguards.
- Empower local councils (LAHDCs) with real powers. Link to cooperative federalism & SDG-16.
Prelims Pointers
- Ladakh — UT without legislature (2019).
- Sixth Schedule — Article 244; autonomous councils.
- LAHDC — Hill Development Councils.
Mains Model Question
“The demands of Ladakh highlight the tension between administrative convenience and democratic self-governance.” Discuss. (15 marks, 250 words)
The Sixth Schedule of the Constitution provides for:
- Distribution of legislative powers
- Administration of tribal areas through Autonomous District Councils
- Languages of India
- Anti-defection provisions
Show Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b). The Sixth Schedule (Article 244) provides for Autonomous District/Regional Councils in tribal areas of Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura and Mizoram. Ladakh is seeking similar protection.
12. Synthetic Biology — The “Genie” of Writing Life
- Cheaper, faster DNA sequencing (a genome now in hours for a few hundred dollars) plus AI enables genome-scale engineering.
- In 2010, J. Craig Venter’s team chemically synthesised a bacterial genome and booted it in a cell — “digitally created life”.
- Genome: DNA in a cell; ~22,000 protein-coding genes in humans (only ~5x a bacterium).
- Synthetic biology: designing/engineering biological systems; tools include CRISPR gene editing.
- Approaches: top-down (rewrite existing genomes) & bottom-up (build protocells from scratch).
| Promise | Peril |
|---|---|
| Designer cells for drugs, fuels, materials | Bio-safety & bio-security (engineered pathogens) |
| Disease cures, sustainable production | Self-replicating products escape control |
| Understanding life’s origins | Ethical limits; equity of access |
- The “genie conundrum”: Kept locked, knowledge is wasted; released unregulated, it risks unforeseen harm; used wisely, it is transformative.
- Unique risk: Unlike a spaceship or nuclear plant, life can self-replicate — making containment uniquely hard.
- Governance gap: Regulation must keep pace with rapidly cheapening, accessible technology.
- Robust bio-safety/bio-security frameworks (Cartagena Protocol, BWC), ethical oversight and international cooperation.
- Invest in indigenous R&D while building responsible-innovation norms. Relevant for Essay (science & ethics).
Prelims Pointers
- Synthetic biology; CRISPR.
- J. Craig Venter — first synthetic bacterial genome (2010).
- Cartagena Protocol; Biological Weapons Convention.
Mains / Essay Question
“With great power comes great responsibility” — examine the promise and perils of synthetic biology and the governance challenge it poses. (Essay / GS-III, 15 marks)
“Synthetic biology” is best described as:
- The study of synthetic fibres
- Designing and engineering biological systems, including writing genomes
- A branch of artificial intelligence
- The cloning of extinct animals only
Show Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b). Synthetic biology designs and constructs new biological parts, devices and systems — including synthesising entire genomes.
13. India-Australia Defence & Maritime Cooperation
- Progress on information sharing, air-to-air refuelling, joint exercises and undersea/maritime-domain-awareness cooperation.
- Both sides moving towards an MoU on the Provision of Defence Articles and Services.
- India-Australia: Comprehensive Strategic Partnership (2020); both are Quad members.
- Existing frameworks: 2+2 dialogue, mutual logistics support, Exercise AUSINDEX, ECTA (trade).
| Domain | Cooperation |
|---|---|
| Maritime security | Joint road map, MDA, undersea |
| Defence industry | MoU on defence articles/services |
| Interoperability | Refuelling, exercises, info-sharing |
- Indo-Pacific logic: Deepening ties counter assertive Chinese maritime behaviour and bolster a free, open region.
- Beyond signalling: Industrial collaboration and an MoU on defence articles move the relationship from dialogue to capability.
- Complementary to Quad: Bilateral depth reinforces the broader minilateral architecture.
- Finalise the maritime road map and defence MoU; deepen undersea-domain awareness and tech cooperation.
- Leverage the upcoming leaders’ summit to institutionalise gains.
Prelims Pointers
- India-Australia Comprehensive Strategic Partnership (2020).
- Quad members; Exercise AUSINDEX.
- Maritime Domain Awareness (MDA).
Mains Model Question
“India-Australia defence ties are a key pillar of Indo-Pacific stability.” Discuss the drivers and areas of cooperation. (10 marks, 150 words)
“AUSINDEX” is:
- A bilateral trade agreement
- A bilateral naval exercise between India and Australia
- A stock-market index
- A counter-terror mechanism
Show Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b). AUSINDEX is the bilateral maritime/naval exercise between the Indian and Australian navies.
Prelims Quick Bytes
Fact-focused round-up of smaller but Prelims-worthy items from today’s edition.
SC strength rises to 37
The Centre cleared five new Supreme Court judges (incl. senior advocate V. Mohana), taking strength to 37 against a revised sanctioned strength of 38 (raised from 34 via a 2026 ordinance).
JEE Advanced 2026
56,880 candidates qualified for the IITs (46,773 male, 10,107 female); the Madras zone had the most qualifiers. JoSAA counselling begins June 2.
Tylosaurus rex — “T. rex of the sea”
Scientists identified a giant mosasaur as a distinct species; mosasaurs were apex marine reptiles of the Cretaceous, related to today’s monitor lizards.
BRICS culture & ethical AI
The BRICS Culture Track (Varanasi meeting) will discuss ethical use of AI in the creative economy; BRICS now has 11 members + 10 partner countries.
Operation Mule Hunt (Gujarat)
Gujarat exposed cyberfraud worth ₹2,289 crore, acting against 913 “mule” bank accounts — highlighting financial cyber-crime networks.
Fiscal deficit target met
The Centre achieved its 4.4% of GDP fiscal-deficit target for 2025-26 (per the Controller General of Accounts); GST mop-up grew 3.2% to ₹1.94 lakh crore in May.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Quick-revision answers on today’s most important topics — useful for both Prelims facts and Mains value-addition.
What has changed in the new IIP series?
What is the IMEC and why does the Iran war affect it?
Why is China’s counter-space capability a concern for India?
Why are remittances important for the rupee?
What is the “right to be forgotten” the Delhi High Court recognised?
What challenges does the Visakhapatnam hyperscale data centre pose?
Why was PCOS renamed to PMOS?
What are Ladakh’s main governance demands?
How can these topics be used in UPSC answers?
The Hindu — UPSC News Analysis · 2 June 2026
Prepared by Legacy IAS Academy, Bangalore · For educational use of UPSC aspirants.
Analysis and interpretation are original study notes; news facts are drawn from the day’s edition.


