The Hindu — UPSC News Analysis
Saturday, June 6, 2026
Bengaluru City Edition · Friday's news · Curated for Prelims & Mains | GS I · II · III · IV
Curated by Legacy IAS Academy, Bengaluru. Pure political reporting, sports and celebrity items have been filtered out; selection is driven by Prelims + Mains value.
📋 Today's Topics
- India's Macro Snapshot: GDP 7.7% and the RBI's Repo HoldGS3
- Wooing Foreign Capital: LTCG Waiver on G-Secs & FAR ExpansionGS3
- A Smarter Strategy to Eliminate TuberculosisGS2 · GS3
- India-U.S. Ties After the Rubio VisitGS2
- India-Russia: Putin's "Reliable Partner" MessageGS2
- Great Nicobar & the Nicobarese Elections DebateGS3 · GS2
- CBSE Under Cyberattack: A Lesson in Cyber ResilienceGS3
- PFI Members Charged Under UAPAGS3
- Manipur: Renewed Ethnic Violence in KangpokpiGS2 · GS3
- Energy & Self-Reliance: E85 Ethanol and Andaman GasGS3
- Crypto Regulation: Lessons from the EU's MiCAGS3
- Anti-Defection, the LoP and West Bengal's TurmoilGS2
- Quick Prelims Revision (MCQ Bank)Prelims
- FAQsRevision
1. India's Macro Snapshot: GDP at 7.7% and the RBI's Repo Hold
Context
Two major macro signals landed the same day. GDP growth for 2025-26 was estimated at 7.7% (up from 7.1% in 2024-25), with Q4 at 7.8% — slightly above the 7.6% projected in February. Simultaneously, the RBI's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) unanimously held the repo rate at 5.25% with a neutral stance, while cutting its FY27 growth forecast to 6.6% and raising the inflation forecast to 5.1%.
Background & Key Facts
- GDP estimates: Released by the Ministry of Statistics & Programme Implementation (MoSPI); the base year was recently updated to 2022-23 with methodological improvements.
- Policy rates: Repo 5.25%; Standing Deposit Facility (SDF) 5%; Marginal Standing Facility (MSF) and Bank Rate 5.50%. The MPC has a flexible inflation-targeting mandate of 4% (±2%).
- Key aggregates: Private Final Consumption Expenditure (PFCE) and Gross Fixed Capital Formation (GFCF) measure consumption and investment respectively.
Key Dimensions — The Numbers That Matter
| Indicator | 2024-25 | 2025-26 |
|---|---|---|
| Real GDP growth | 7.1% | 7.7% (Q4: 7.8%) |
| Manufacturing | 9.3% | 10.7% |
| Agriculture | 4.2% | 3.0% (slowing) |
| PFCE (consumption) | 5.8% | 7.7% |
| GFCF (investment) | 6.4% | 8.2% |
RBI assumptions for FY27: crude at $95/barrel; CPI inflation expected to firm towards the upper tolerance band in Q3 FY27 before the supply shock wanes; forex reserves cover ~11 months of imports.
Growth-inflation trade-off: The MPC chose to "wait for greater clarity" — elevated energy prices and supply-chain disruption from the West Asia conflict pull growth down and push inflation up simultaneously.
Agricultural drag & monsoon risk: Slowing farm growth plus a sub-normal monsoon and El Niño forecast cloud the food-inflation outlook.
Resilience vs vulnerability: Strong consumption and investment and a robust banking/corporate balance sheet are offset by external shocks; the FY27 slowdown to 6.6% reflects this.
Repo Rate MPC SDF / MSF MoSPI PFCE & GFCF
2. Wooing Foreign Capital: LTCG Waiver on G-Secs & FAR Expansion
Context
The government promulgated an ordinance waiving the 12.5% long-term capital gains (LTCG) tax on Foreign Institutional Investor (FII) investments in government bonds, effective April 1, 2026. In parallel, the RBI expanded the Fully Accessible Route (FAR) and removed several limits on FPI investment — a coordinated push to attract foreign capital amid heavy outflows (FIIs sold ~₹2.5 lakh crore of Indian securities) and a rupee that has weakened over 5% this year.
Background & Key Facts
- FAR (Fully Accessible Route): A channel allowing non-residents to invest, without limit, in specified categories of dated government securities. It now includes all new issuances of 15, 30 and 40-year G-secs.
- FPI vs FDI: FPI is portfolio (passive, liquid) investment; it is more volatile ("hot money") than long-term FDI.
- India's G-secs are part of global bond indices (e.g., JP Morgan GBI-EM), making tax friction salient for index-tracking inflows.
Key Dimensions — Measures Announced
- Ordinance: 12.5% LTCG waived on FII investment in government bonds.
- FAR widened to include long-tenor (15/30/40-year) G-secs.
- Limits on short-term investments, concentration and individual securities under the FPI General Route removed.
- Higher limits for NRI/OCI investment in listed equity without SEBI registration.
Targeted but partial: Analysts note the relief addresses debt (gilt) investors, not the equity investors whose caution stems from valuation premium, currency risk and the capital-gains structure on shares — "the real ask is on equities, and that is unanswered."
Revenue vs stability: Tax forgone is traded for currency stability and cheaper government borrowing — useful at the margin, not a "magic bullet".
Volatility caveat: Greater reliance on FPI debt inflows can increase exposure to sudden reversals.
FAR FPI vs FDI LTCG G-Secs JP Morgan GBI-EM
3. A Smarter Strategy to Eliminate Tuberculosis
Context
A century after the first TB vaccine, TB still kills more people annually than any other infectious disease, with no effective vaccine for adolescents and adults. New ICMR-led PreVenTB trial data on two indigenous candidates — VPM1002 and Immuvac — offer a meaningful signal, especially against the hard-to-diagnose extrapulmonary TB (EPTB), making the case for a layered, pragmatic strategy rather than waiting for a "perfect" vaccine.
Background & Key Facts
- Disease pathways: Infection by Mycobacterium tuberculosis → latent/asymptomatic → subclinical → active TB, which may be pulmonary (PTB, infectious) or extrapulmonary (EPTB, harder to diagnose).
- National goal: India's National TB Elimination Programme (NTEP) targets elimination (10-20 cases per 100,000); many LMICs sit at 200-300 per 100,000.
- The trial: PreVenTB (ICMR, published in BMJ) — 18 sites, 12,700+ household contacts, aged six and above. VPM1002 is a single-dose modified-BCG vaccine (SIIPL); Immuvac is by Cadila.
Key Dimensions — Trial Efficacy Signals
| Vaccine / Group | Reported efficacy |
|---|---|
| VPM1002 vs extrapulmonary TB | 50.4% (statistically significant) |
| VPM1002 in children 6-14 (all TB) | 64.6% |
| VPM1002 overall (all TB) | 21.4% |
| Immuvac vs EPTB in children 6-10 | >60% |
A notable finding: reduced efficacy in individuals with low BMI — underscoring nutrition as a determinant of vaccine performance.
No "silver bullet": Given diverse disease pathways, a single vaccine may be unrealistic; deploy a combination — better detection, preventive therapy, targeted vaccination of household contacts and school-age children, nutrition support and case-based management.
Indigenous precedent: India has previously made urgency-driven calls — TrueNat (Make-in-India molecular test), Covaxin's "clinical trial mode" approval, and modest-efficacy rotavirus vaccines that still cut child mortality.
EPTB edge: No other current TB vaccine trial has used EPTB as an efficacy endpoint — a reason to act on available evidence rather than wait indefinitely.
- Deploy a layered combination strategy: better detection, preventive therapy, targeted vaccination of household contacts and school-age children, nutrition support and case-based management.
- Act on available indigenous evidence rather than waiting indefinitely for a perfect vaccine.
NTEP VPM1002 Immuvac PreVenTB Trial TrueNat
4. India-U.S. Ties After the Rubio Visit
Context
An opinion piece argues that U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio's visit (May 23-26, 2026) failed to repair a partnership that had "stumbled badly" in late 2025. The relationship — once called the most consequential of the 21st century — is strained, though shared strategic interests remain.
Background — Three Indicators of Deterioration
- U.S.-Pakistan re-warming post-Operation Sindoor, with U.S. praise for Pakistan's role in the Iran crisis — read in India as a betrayal.
- Tariffs: 50% tariffs on Indian exports (among the highest on any country), including a 25% penalty for buying Russian oil.
- Quad neglect: Absence of head-of-state summits and waning enthusiasm — suggesting a downgrade of a central Indo-Pacific pillar.
A March 2026 CNAS report, "Repairing the Breach", and the Hudson Institute's "New India Conference" both flagged the trust deficit.
Stalled diplomacy: The Quad Foreign Ministers' meeting produced no breakthrough; a disputed claim that India committed to $500 billion in U.S. purchases further strained trust.
Author's reading: "America First", as defined day-to-day by the President, now drives U.S. choices more than careful strategic thinking.
Enduring rationale: Keeping the Indo-Pacific open, democratic solidarity, and cooperation on AI, semiconductors, defence and energy keep the partnership strategically relevant.
Quad Operation Sindoor CNAS Indo-Pacific
5. India-Russia: Putin's "Reliable Partner" Message
Context
Russian President Vladimir Putin said Western pressure on India to scale back ties with Russia would harm global stability, calling India a "reliable" strategic partner. He also offered to jointly develop the Su-57 fifth-generation stealth fighter in India, and said Russia would not interfere in the "delicate" India-China relationship.
Background & Key Facts
- Strategic context: Western capitals are uneasy over India's Russian crude imports amid the Ukraine war; the U.S. imposed punitive tariffs.
- Multipolar signalling: Putin is set to visit India in September for the BRICS summit; the 2025 SCO (Tianjin) image of Modi-Putin-Xi drew global attention.
- Defence: Russia is a long-standing defence supplier (e.g., S-400, BrahMos JV); the Su-57 offer dovetails with Make-in-India.
Strategic autonomy: Putin's framing — that India will "prioritise its national interests" and that its U.S. ties do not threaten Russia — reinforces India's multi-alignment.
Balancing act: India must weigh discounted Russian energy and defence offers against Western tariff pressure and the need for advanced Western technology.
Su-57 caution: India's "let's see" response reflects past experience with the FGFA programme and a preference for indigenous AMCA.
Su-57 S-400 / BrahMos BRICS SCO AMCA / FGFA
6. Great Nicobar & the Nicobarese Elections Debate
Context
On World Environment Day, the LoP alleged the Great Nicobar project's "strategic" framing is a cover for commercial interests (he argued INS Baaz could be expanded instead, with Congress support, if defence were the real aim). Separately, the A&N administration has floated draft rules to introduce elections to the Nicobarese tribal community — drawing concern that it could reshape a Tribal Council that has long opposed the mega-project.
Background & Key Facts
- Project: Transhipment port, airport and tourist township; figures reported between ₹81,000-92,000 crore for components.
- Tribal governance: Draft rules issued under the Andaman & Nicobar Islands (Tribal Councils) Regulations, 2009 — proposing Village Councils, Island Tribal Councils, delimitation, electoral rolls, women's reservation and five-year terms.
- Safeguards: Forest Rights Act, 2006 (FRA) requires recognition of forest dwellers' rights; PVTGs (Shompen, Nicobarese) warrant special protection.
Consent vs convenience: Introducing elections to a community that governs intuitively raises fears of "bureaucratisation" and of engineering a leadership more amenable to the Centre's project.
Strategic vs commercial: The LoP's INS Baaz argument reframes the debate — genuine defence needs can be met without rainforest loss.
Ecology: Alleged threat to ~1.5 crore trees, ancient rainforests and coral reefs; FRA-compliant consent and fair settler compensation remain contested.
Great Nicobar Project FRA 2006 PVTGs Shompen / Nicobarese INS Baaz
7. CBSE Under Cyberattack: A Lesson in Cyber Resilience
Context
The CBSE's Post-Result Services portal (for verification/re-evaluation of Class 12 scripts) faced coordinated cyberattacks over three days. The Board filed a complaint with the Delhi Police's IFSO unit, while IIT teams patched critical vulnerabilities — including those in the on-screen marking (OSM) portal built by a private vendor.
Background & Key Facts
- DDoS attack: A Distributed Denial of Service floods a system with traffic to deny access — here, 13 lakh login attempts in a 2-minute window on June 2, rising to 30+ lakh on June 3, against only a few thousand genuine users.
- Vulnerabilities found: "Authentication Bypass", unauthorised admin access, and "Data Exposure" (any logged-in user could extract answer scripts). The vendor had misconfigured cloud storage "buckets" and kept unsecured backups.
- Cyber agencies: CERT-In (national nodal incident-response agency), I4C (Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre), Digital India Corporation; case under IT Act Sections 66 and 43.
Key Dimensions — The "Red Team vs Blue Team" Drill
IIT-Madras experts (Blue Team) hardened the code while IIT-Kanpur (Red Team) attacked it until no weaknesses remained. Notably, AI tools (including Claude) were used to find vulnerabilities faster.
Third-party risk: The breach originated with an external vendor's insecure code and storage — a recurring weakness in government digital systems.
Transparency: Earlier denial of any breach delayed remediation; experts stressed that admitting a flaw is the first step to fixing it.
Critical data: Examination data of lakhs of students is sensitive personal data under the DPDP Act, 2023 — demanding security-by-design and vendor accountability.
DDoS CERT-In I4C DPDP Act 2023 IT Act Sec 66 & 43
8. PFI Members Charged Under UAPA
Context
A Delhi court ordered the framing of charges against 25 people linked to the banned Popular Front of India (PFI), holding that the investigation disclosed "grave suspicion" of a conspiracy to overthrow India's secular democratic government and establish an Islamic caliphate.
Background & Key Facts
- UAPA: The Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act allows designation of unlawful associations and terrorist organisations/individuals; the PFI and affiliates were banned in 2022.
- Investigating agency: The National Investigation Agency (NIA); charges under IPC and UAPA provisions.
- Key evidence cited: a "Vision 2047" document allegedly outlining the long-term objective.
Security vs rights: UAPA prosecutions raise the perennial tension between national security and due-process/civil-liberty safeguards, given stringent bail provisions.
Comparative defence: The defence drew an analogy with the RSS's "Hindu Rashtra" advocacy — courts must distinguish lawful ideological expression from criminal conspiracy.
Threshold of proof: The threshold at the charge-framing stage ("grave suspicion") is lower than that for conviction ("beyond reasonable doubt").
UAPA NIA PFI Ban (2022) Vision 2047 document
9. Manipur: Renewed Ethnic Violence in Kangpokpi
Context
Three Kuki villagers, including a woman, were killed and seven houses torched in Kangpokpi district. The Kuki Inpi Manipur blamed Naga armed groups; the Kuki-Zo Council reiterated its demand for a "separate administration".
Background & Key Facts
- The Meitei-Kuki ethnic conflict in Manipur has persisted since May 2023, with periodic flare-ups; the State has seen prolonged President's Rule and SIR/electoral-roll disputes affecting displaced persons (IDPs).
- The conflict intersects with land, ethnicity (valley vs hills), Scheduled Tribe status demands, and inner-line/autonomy questions.
Security & reconciliation gap: Continued targeted killings undermine confidence-building and entrench demands for separate administration.
Federal management: Restoring security in vulnerable areas, protecting civilians and rehabilitating IDPs are prerequisites for any political settlement.
Meitei-Kuki Conflict President's Rule IDPs Inner-Line / ST Status
10. Energy & Self-Reliance: E85 Ethanol and Andaman Gas
Context
Two energy developments: the launch of E85 fuel (80-85% ethanol), priced ~₹20/litre cheaper than E20 (₹82.12/litre in Delhi) for flex-fuel vehicles; and Oil India Ltd. confirming natural gas in its third Andaman offshore well (Vijayapuram-3), establishing hydrocarbon presence in two of three wells drilled.
Background & Key Facts
- Ethanol Blended Petrol (EBP) Programme: Aims to cut crude imports, support farmer incomes and lower emissions; India achieved ~20% blending (E20) ahead of schedule, now extending to flex-fuel E85/E100.
- Andaman exploration: Part of India's deepwater push; OIL plans to work with global majors (Petrobras, TotalEnergies, BP, Shell, ExxonMobil).
- India imports the bulk of its crude — energy security is a core strategic objective.
Ethanol trade-offs: Blending reduces import dependence but raises food-vs-fuel, water-use and land-use concerns (sugarcane/maize feedstock).
Domestic gas upside: An Andaman discovery could reduce import dependence and strengthen the case for a gas-based economy, subject to commercial viability and ecological safeguards.
EBP Programme E85 / E100 Flex-Fuel Vehicles Vijayapuram-3 Oil India Ltd.
11. Crypto Regulation: Lessons from the EU's MiCA
Context
A fintech executive argued at a global summit that India could learn from the EU on two fronts: making regulators more accessible/approachable to speed innovation, and adopting a comprehensive crypto framework like the EU's Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation.
Background & Key Facts
- MiCA (2023): The EU's framework standardising crypto rules — licensing for crypto-asset service providers, reserve rules for stablecoins, and consumer-protection standards.
- India's stance: Crypto is taxed (30% on gains, 1% TDS) but lacks comprehensive regulation; the RBI has favoured caution and promoted the digital rupee (CBDC).
Regulatory responsiveness: A "submit-and-wait" model slows innovation; direct engagement (sandboxes, consultations) can accelerate it while managing risk.
Clarity vs control: A clear legal framework reduces uncertainty and protects consumers, but must guard against systemic and money-laundering risks.
MiCA CBDC / Digital Rupee Crypto Tax (30% + 1% TDS) Stablecoins
12. Anti-Defection, the LoP and West Bengal's Turmoil
Context
A rebel was recognised as Leader of the Opposition (LoP) in the West Bengal Assembly after claiming the support of 58 of 80 party MLAs, against the party leadership's nominee. Allegations of forged signatures led to expulsions and a CID probe — spotlighting the law on defections and the office of the LoP.
Background & Key Facts
- Tenth Schedule (Anti-Defection Law): Added by the 52nd Amendment (1985); disqualifies members for defection, with the Speaker as adjudicating authority. A "split" defence was removed by the 91st Amendment (2003); only a "merger" (two-thirds) is now exempt.
- Leader of the Opposition: A statutory office (Salary and Allowances of Leaders of Opposition Act, 1977); recognition usually requires a party with a defined strength, and the LoP sits on key selection committees.
Speaker's neutrality: Disputes over recognition and disqualification recur because the Speaker is both a partisan office-holder and the adjudicator under the Tenth Schedule.
Intra-party capture: A bloc of MLAs effectively capturing the legislature party tests the line between legitimate dissent and defection.
Political culture: The episode underscores concerns about violence and opportunism in the State's politics.
Tenth Schedule 52nd Amendment 91st Amendment Leader of Opposition (1977 Act)
📝 Quick Prelims Revision — MCQ Bank
Q1 — RBI Monetary Policy rates (June 2026)
With reference to the RBI's monetary policy, consider the following pairs:
- Repo rate — 5.25%
- Standing Deposit Facility (SDF) rate — 5.00%
- Marginal Standing Facility (MSF) rate — 5.50%
How many pairs are correctly matched (as per the June 2026 policy)?
- Only one
- Only two
- All three
- None
Q2 — Fully Accessible Route (FAR)
The "Fully Accessible Route (FAR)" is associated with:
- Foreign investment in specified government securities without limit
- Fast-track environmental clearances
- Duty-free import of capital goods
- A national highway corridor scheme
Q3 — VPM1002 and Immuvac
VPM1002 and Immuvac, recently in the news, are:
- Indigenous tuberculosis vaccine candidates
- Antiviral drugs for dengue
- mRNA COVID boosters
- Diagnostic kits for malaria
Q4 — Anti-Defection Law
Consider the following statements about the Anti-Defection Law:
- It was inserted into the Constitution by the 52nd Amendment Act.
- The "split" provision was deleted by the 91st Amendment.
- The presiding officer of the House adjudicates disqualification on grounds of defection.
Which are correct?
- 1 and 2
- 2 and 3
- 1 and 3
- 1, 2 and 3
Q5 — DDoS attack
A "Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS)" attack primarily aims to:
- Steal encryption keys
- Overwhelm a system with traffic to deny legitimate access
- Physically damage hardware
- Inject false data into a database
Q6 — MiCA regulation
The "Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA)" regulation is a framework of:
- The European Union
- The United States SEC
- India's SEBI
- The IMF
Q7 — E85 fuel
"E85" fuel refers to a blend containing approximately:
- 8.5% ethanol
- 15% ethanol
- 80-85% ethanol
- 100% ethanol
❓ FAQs
Frequently asked exam-oriented questions — June 6, 2026 edition
Why did the RBI hold the repo rate despite strong GDP growth?
Does the LTCG waiver apply to all foreign investments?
Why is the PreVenTB trial significant for India's TB goal?
What is the core argument in the Great Nicobar "strategic vs commercial" debate?
How does the Anti-Defection Law treat intra-party rebellion?
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Analysis based on news published in The Hindu, Bengaluru City Edition, June 6, 2026. Prepared for academic use. Static background and frameworks added for exam preparation; original article text has been paraphrased, not reproduced.


