The Hindu — UPSC Analysis
Wednesday, 8 July 2026
Bengaluru City Edition · Curated for Prelims & Mains | GS I · II · III · IV
📋 Today's Topics
- India's economic prospects after the West Asian crisisGS3
- Can cooperatives serve as a worker-centric model?GS3
- Beyond three Cs: the new lexicon of India–Australia tiesGS2
- India's EV transition & the case for retrofitmentGS3
- Linking women's incomes & healthcareGS1 · GS2
- The method for caste enumeration in the CensusGS1 · GS2
- Modi bats for a two-state solutionGS2
- WhatsApp usernames & informational privacyGS2 · GS3
- HC upholds a uniform legal marriage ageGS1 · GS2
- Independence of the Bar & the rule of lawGS2
- School dropout rate falls: the UDISE+ reportGS2
- What does the lifting of gas curbs mean?GS3
- El Niño & the pressure on rural demandGS3
- Finerenone & a broader fight against kidney diseaseGS3
- Encroachment on Assam's forests & sanctuariesGS3
- CPI(M) vs the proposed NFSA amendmentGS2
- Polity, S&T & World RoundupGS2 · GS3
- Quick Prelims Revision (MCQ Bank)Prelims
- FAQsRevision
India's economic prospects after the West Asian crisis
Context
An editorial argues that while the West Asian crisis resulted in a period of relatively higher crude prices, the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz should let the economy normalise at a lower level, keeping the 2026–27 outlook and medium-term growth broadly intact.
Background & Key Facts
- The crude spike: The Indian crude basket rose to about $114.5/bbl (March 2026) before easing; higher prices while they last strain the trade balance and the rupee.
- Growth outlook: The National Statistical Office's provisional estimates confirm strong post-Covid recovery — real GDP grew 7.2% (2024–25) and is projected around 6.6–8.9% for 2026–27, with an implicit price deflator-based inflation of ~8.9%.
- El Niño & fertilizer risk: A weak monsoon under El Niño could hit the kharif crop and raise fertilizer-import costs; the IMD estimated a ~10% rainfall shortfall (to late June).
- Reserves & petroleum: With rising global crude and normalisation, the government should shore up fertilizer and other critical-commodity reserves; India's dependence on imported crude rose to ~90% (2025–26). The RBI paid a large dividend (~₹2.69 lakh crore) to the government.
Resilient but exposed: Strong growth continues, but ~90% crude-import dependence keeps India vulnerable to price shocks.
Inflation risk: Higher oil and fertilizer costs, plus a weak monsoon, could push inflation above target.
Buffer strategy: Building strategic and commodity reserves is prudent insurance against future disruptions.
- Build strategic petroleum and fertilizer reserves.
- Diversify crude sources and accelerate the energy transition.
- Guard against inflation via prudent fiscal-monetary coordination.
Indian crude basket GVA vs GDP GDP deflator RBI dividend
MCQ: National income
The "GDP deflator" is:
- A measure of the general price level of all goods and services in GDP
- A tax on gross domestic product
- The difference between GDP and GNP
- A subsidy on exports
Can cooperatives serve as a worker-centric model?
Context
An editorial ("Grand ambitions") argues that India's cooperative sector can serve as a worker-centric model of development — a "balancing intervention" between hyper-scalers and self-employed micro-businesses — though it must overcome its imperfections.
Background & Key Facts
- The vision: The Cooperation Ministry (created 2021) is experimenting to harness cooperatives' potential — connecting members to the broader economy, spanning agriculture, dairy, fisheries, banking, housing, consumer cooperatives and exports.
- Enablers: A Primary Agricultural Credit Societies (PACS) revamp, digital technology, and market linkages are foundations; a reformed legal framework has empowered ~25 business activities, transforming cooperatives into multifaceted institutions.
- The caution: The Ministry must avoid multi-State cooperative societies expanding market access for members while strengthening cooperative value chains — the risk of "hypercapitalism" through cooperatives; a well-coordinated sector can offset the social, environmental and political costs of the economy.
Balancing role: Cooperatives can democratise economic gains between large corporations and the self-employed.
Governance risks: Politicisation, poor accountability and elite capture have historically weakened cooperatives.
Avoiding hypercapitalism: Cooperatives must retain their member-centric, democratic character, not mimic corporate concentration.
- Strengthen PACS, digital tech and market linkages.
- Ensure transparent, accountable, member-centric governance.
- Guard against politicisation and elite capture.
Ministry of Cooperation PACS Multi-State cooperatives 97th Amendment
MCQ: Cooperatives
Consider the following statements:
- The 97th Constitutional Amendment gave constitutional status to cooperative societies.
- Primary Agricultural Credit Societies (PACS) operate at the village level.
- Cooperation is a subject exclusively in the Union List.
- 1 and 2 only
- 2 and 3 only
- 1 and 3 only
- 1, 2 and 3
Beyond three Cs: the new lexicon of India–Australia ties
Context
An opinion piece argues that India–Australia ties have moved beyond the old "three Cs" (Commonwealth, Cricket and Curry) and the later "three Ds" (Democracy, Diaspora and Dosti) to a partnership defined by trade, defence, education and innovation. (Opinion; the substance is exam-relevant.)
Background & Key Facts
- Trade & investment: Growing bilateral cooperation via the Economic Cooperation and Trade Agreement (ECTA) — India gets preferential access to ~90% of Australia's tariff lines (coal, minerals, resources, wool, avocado, macadamia); the ambition is to raise bilateral trade from ~$33 billion (2025) to $100 billion by 2030.
- The "E" factor: Beyond Cs and Ds, ties are enriched by Energy and Education — an India–Australia Renewable Energy Partnership, a Green Hydrogen Task Force, and Australia's role in supplying critical minerals for India's clean-energy transition and semiconductors.
- Uranium & defence: Australia will supply uranium; defence exercises (AUSINDEX, Malabar) and a Defence Ministers' dialogue deepen coordination; the two are also building education and skills links (Indian campuses in Australia).
- Multilateral partners: Both cooperate in the Quad and the Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA), and can shape rules for critical minerals, rare earths, semiconductors and new tech.
Strategic maturation: The relationship has moved from cultural affinity to a substantive strategic and economic partnership.
Critical minerals: Australia is key to India's clean-energy and semiconductor supply-chain security.
Delivery: Realising the $100-billion trade ambition needs sustained follow-through and market access.
- Deepen ECTA, critical-minerals and clean-energy cooperation.
- Expand defence exercises and education/skills partnerships.
- Coordinate in the Quad and IORA on supply chains.
India–Australia ECTA Critical minerals IORA AUSINDEX / Malabar
MCQ: India–Australia ties
The India–Australia ECTA is a:
- Trade agreement (Economic Cooperation and Trade Agreement)
- Defence pact
- Climate treaty
- Visa-waiver arrangement
India's EV transition & the case for retrofitment
Context
A Data Point analysis argues India's EV transition "cannot afford to ignore retrofitment" — converting existing petrol/diesel vehicles to electric — as a way to democratise the transition and support a circular mobility economy. (Opinion/analysis; the substance is exam-relevant.)
Background & Key Facts
- The gap: Over the past decade, EV policy emphasised buying new electric vehicles; but not all households can afford a new EV. Retrofitment — replacing the internal combustion engine with an electric one — extends a vehicle's life and cuts waste.
- Barriers: Retrofitment is not cost-competitive with new EVs, faces regulatory complexity (registration, insurance, safety) and needs certification, skilled technicians, and consumer trust; the market itself is maturing faster than the policy.
- The fixes: A national retrofitment framework — formal recognition of retrofitters, certification and safety standards, and inclusion of retrofitted vehicles under schemes like the FAME/PM E-DRIVE — could democratise access; certified retrofitters are formally recognised as vendors under some State policies (e.g., Madhya Pradesh).
- Circular economy: Retrofitment reduces scrap, extends asset life and supports a circular mobility economy.
Inclusive transition: Retrofitment can bring the EV shift to those who can't afford new vehicles.
Regulatory gaps: Certification, safety and financing frameworks lag the market.
Circularity: Extending vehicle life reduces scrap and embodied-carbon waste.
- Build a national retrofitment framework (certification, safety, finance).
- Include retrofitted EVs under incentive schemes.
- Support a circular mobility economy and skilled technicians.
EV retrofitment Circular economy FAME / PM E-DRIVE VAHAN database
MCQ: EV policy
"Vehicle retrofitment," in the EV context, means:
- Converting an existing internal-combustion vehicle to run on electricity
- Manufacturing a brand-new electric vehicle
- Scrapping an old vehicle
- Importing electric vehicles
Linking women's incomes & healthcare
Context
An opinion piece argues that as India experiences two revolutions — economic (rising female labour-force participation and incomes) and epidemiological (rising non-communicable diseases) — women's economic empowerment can reshape household health spending. (Opinion; the themes are exam-relevant.)
Background & Key Facts
- The twin shifts: Female labour-force participation and incomes are rising; simultaneously, India faces a growing burden of NCDs (diabetes, hypertension, cardiovascular disease, obesity, mental-health challenges).
- The finding: Research (drawing on a large hospital dataset) found that when women received a health shock, female-led households increased overall healthcare expenditure by ~11.6%, with more spending on medicines, doctors' consultations and healthier lifestyles — associated with improving health.
- Reorienting priorities: Women's control of additional income tends to reorganise household spending toward health — transfers to women generate greater investment in education, nutrition and children's wellbeing.
- Why it matters: Healthcare expenditure is often out-of-pocket; women's economic agency could deepen preventive-care spending and improve outcomes.
Empowerment & health: Women's incomes reorient household spending toward preventive and better health.
Out-of-pocket burden: High OOP health spending underlines the value of income security and insurance (e.g., Ayushman Bharat).
Beyond hospitals: Social determinants — nutrition, education, sanitation — matter as much as clinical care.
- Promote women's economic participation and financial agency.
- Strengthen preventive care, insurance and the social determinants of health.
- Design transfers/schemes that empower women as recipients.
NCDs Out-of-pocket expenditure Ayushman Bharat Female labour-force participation
MCQ: Health economics
"Out-of-pocket expenditure" on health refers to:
- Payments made directly by households at the point of care
- Government health budgets
- Insurance company payouts
- Foreign aid for health
The method for caste enumeration in the Census
Context
An explainer examines the method for caste enumeration in Census 2027 — the "pre-test" and questionnaire design, and lessons from past anomalies in the 2011 Socio-Economic Caste Census (SECC).
Background & Key Facts
- The design: The Census pre-test (second phase, started in 16 States/UTs on July 6, 2026) has an "open column" for respondents to record their caste — the outcome will decide how Independent India enumerates caste for the first time (the last comprehensive caste data was from 1931).
- The method debate: An open column (respondents state their caste) versus a pre-coded list; the government did the latter in the 2022–23 caste-based survey. An open column risks inconsistency and difficulty tabulating thousands of caste names.
- 2011 SECC anomalies: The SECC returned ~46 lakh different "caste names," reflecting the difficulty of the open-ended method; the Union government told the SC that caste bifurcated into sub-castes, and the total number cannot be relied on for reservation/policy.
- Timeline: House Listing (Phase 1) and then Population Enumeration (reference date March 1, 2027) will conduct the caste count; the Opposition seeks wider consultation on methodology.
Data reliability: The 2011 SECC's chaotic caste count is a cautionary tale for methodology.
Policy stakes: Caste data can sharpen welfare and reservation policy but is politically sensitive.
Method matters: Choice of open column vs pre-coded list critically affects data quality.
- Refine questionnaire methodology using pre-test feedback.
- Ensure standardisation and consultation to avoid SECC-type anomalies.
- Safeguard data quality and privacy for policy use.
Census 2027 SECC 2011 Caste enumeration (open column) Population Enumeration
MCQ: Caste data
The 2011 Socio-Economic Caste Census (SECC) is often cited for:
- Returning a very large, hard-to-classify number of caste names
- Being the first digital census
- Enumerating only SC/ST
- Being conducted by the Election Commission
Modi bats for a two-state solution
Context
In Indonesia, PM Modi reiterated support for a two-state solution to iron out the Israel–Palestine conflict, stressing the role of dialogue and diplomacy in a "period of global turbulence."
Background & Key Facts
- India's stance: India reiterated support for a negotiated two-state solution — a sovereign, independent Palestine alongside Israel — and the primacy of dialogue over conflict.
- The setting: The remarks came during Modi's visit to Indonesia (the world's largest Muslim-majority democracy), amid the wider West Asia crisis; both leaders stressed diplomacy over war.
- Continuity: India's position balances its strong ties with Israel and its historical support for the Palestinian cause — a long-standing "de-hyphenated" approach.
Balanced diplomacy: India maintains ties with Israel while backing Palestinian statehood — a careful balancing act.
Dialogue over conflict: Emphasis on negotiation aligns with India's Global-South and strategic-autonomy posture.
Regional stakes: West Asian stability directly affects India's energy, trade and diaspora.
- Support a negotiated two-state solution and dialogue.
- Maintain balanced ties across the region.
- Protect India's energy, trade and diaspora interests.
Two-state solution Israel–Palestine India–Indonesia CSP De-hyphenation
MCQ: West Asia
The "two-state solution" in the Israel–Palestine context refers to:
- An independent State of Palestine coexisting alongside Israel
- Two separate states within Israel
- A single binational state
- A UN trusteeship
WhatsApp usernames & informational privacy
Context
A News Analysis argues the debate over WhatsApp's username feature brings informational privacy to the fore — testing whether the government can dictate a lawful product feature, and how to balance privacy against fraud risk.
Background & Key Facts
- The feature: A username would let users be contacted without revealing phone numbers; the government worries it could be exploited for online fraud, phishing, digital-arrest scams and impersonation.
- The privacy angle: Not exposing a phone number is itself a privacy-enhancing measure grounded in the right to privacy (recognised as a fundamental right under Article 21 in Puttaswamy); the seamless structure of usernames also aids privacy.
- The regulatory question: Whether the state can direct a private platform to hold a lawful feature — critics argue the notice targets a legitimate product; the government cites its intermediary-oversight powers under the IT Act and IT Rules.
Privacy vs. security: Hiding numbers protects privacy but can aid anonymity-enabled fraud — a genuine trade-off.
State & product design: The case tests how far the government can shape private platforms' features.
Puttaswamy frame: Informational privacy is a fundamental right; restrictions must be reasonable and proportionate.
- Balance informational privacy with anti-fraud safeguards through consultation.
- Apply the proportionality test to any restriction.
- Strengthen platform-level spam/impersonation controls and user awareness.
Right to privacy (Puttaswamy) Article 21 IT Act / IT Rules Proportionality
MCQ: Right to privacy
The right to privacy was recognised as a fundamental right by the Supreme Court in:
- K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India (2017)
- Maneka Gandhi (1978)
- ADM Jabalpur (1976)
- Kesavananda Bharati (1973)
HC upholds a uniform legal marriage age
Context
The Allahabad High Court upheld the uniform minimum legal age of marriage for all religions, holding that the Prohibition of Child Marriage Act (PCMA), 2006 applies across religious communities and overrides personal law where they conflict.
Background & Key Facts
- The ruling: The Court held the PCMA — which requires a minimum marriage age (18 for women, 21 for men) — applies to all citizens regardless of religion, and prevails over personal-law provisions (e.g., Muslim personal law) that permit marriage at puberty.
- The reasoning: The Bench acknowledged that where personal law conflicts with the PCMA, the special secular law prevails; it also invoked the POCSO Act, holding a marriage involving a minor would breach child-protection law.
- Significance: The judgment reinforces a uniform, child-protective standard on marriage age, a step in curbing child marriage.
Secular law over personal law: The ruling affirms that child-protection law overrides conflicting personal-law provisions.
Child rights: A uniform minimum age protects minors from early marriage and its harms.
Uniformity debate: It feeds the wider debate on harmonising personal laws (and the UCC).
- Enforce the PCMA uniformly and strengthen child-protection.
- Raise awareness against child marriage.
- Address the personal-law/secular-law interface sensitively.
PCMA, 2006 POCSO Act Personal law vs secular law Child marriage
MCQ: Marriage law
Under the Prohibition of Child Marriage Act, 2006, the minimum legal age of marriage is:
- 18 for women and 21 for men
- 18 for both
- 21 for both
- 16 for women and 18 for men
Independence of the Bar & the rule of law
Context
The Supreme Court held that the independence of the Bar is crucial for the preservation of the rule of law — a robust, fearless legal profession is indispensable to the administration of justice.
Background & Key Facts
- The observation: The Court stressed that an independent Bar — free of pressure from the Executive and Legislature — is essential to the fair delivery of justice; "the independence of the Bar constitutes an indispensable foundation for the rule of law."
- Bench & Bar: The judgment framed the relationship between the judiciary (Bench) and lawyers (Bar) as a "collaborative mission," each essential to justice; lawyers must be able to act without fear or favour.
- Wider frame: It ties into concerns about Bar Association resolutions refusing to represent an accused, and pressures on advocates — reinforcing that the Bar's autonomy underpins fair trials.
Pillar of justice: An independent Bar checks arbitrary power and safeguards fair trials.
Fearless advocacy: Lawyers must represent even unpopular clients without pressure.
Bench–Bar synergy: Justice depends on the collaborative independence of both.
- Protect the independence and autonomy of the Bar.
- Prevent pressure on advocates and boycott resolutions.
- Strengthen the Bench–Bar collaborative mission.
Independence of the Bar Rule of law Bench & Bar Bar Council of India
MCQ: Legal profession
The statutory body that regulates the legal profession and legal education in India is the:
- Bar Council of India
- Supreme Court Registry
- National Judicial Appointments Commission
- Law Commission of India
School dropout rate falls: the UDISE+ report
Context
The Education Ministry's UDISE+ report (2025–26) shows the school dropout rate falling across key stages, with more schools getting internet, stronger learner progression, and improved "gender balance" as women teachers rise.
Background & Key Facts
- Dropout decline: Primary (Classes 3–5) dropout fell to ~2.3%, secondary dropped from ~8.2% to ~7%; consistent declines across levels suggest schools are more responsive.
- Gross Enrolment Ratio (GER): The secondary-level GER rose to ~71.7% (from ~68.5%), a statistical measure of enrolment relative to the eligible age group.
- Access & equity: More schools have internet (up from ~64.7% to ~74%); teacher strength rose ~8.3%; women teachers (~54.9%) bring a "gender balance"; girls' enrolment rose marginally; toilets and net connectivity improved.
- Retention: Student retention rose, reflecting better transition across stages — though gaps at higher stages persist.
Progress on access: Falling dropouts and rising GER/retention signal improving schooling outcomes.
Equity gains: More women teachers and better facilities (toilets, internet) aid retention, especially of girls.
Higher-stage gap: Dropouts remain higher at secondary level — the transition challenge persists.
- Sustain retention at secondary stages and reduce dropouts.
- Expand digital access, teacher strength and facilities.
- Focus on learning outcomes, not just enrolment (NEP 2020).
UDISE+ Gross Enrolment Ratio Dropout rate NEP 2020
MCQ: Education indicators
The "Gross Enrolment Ratio" (GER) measures:
- Total enrolment in a level of education as a percentage of the eligible age-group population
- The number of schools per district
- Teacher-pupil ratio
- Literacy rate
What does the lifting of gas curbs mean?
Context
An explainer sets out what led to the lifting of the emergency gas-supply curbs imposed after the West Asia crisis, and what it means for industry — as LNG shipments and Hormuz traffic normalised.
Background & Key Facts
- The order & its lifting: On July 4, 2026, the government lifted the emergency curbs under the (Natural Gas Supply Regulation) Order, 2026 — which had prioritised domestically produced and imported LNG for key consumers (fertilizer, city gas) during the crisis.
- Who benefits: Domestic piped gas (PNG) and CNG users will receive up to 80% of their previous six-month average supply; fertilizer plants up to 70%, restoring the supply of gas at improved market situation; refineries, city-gas distributors and industries (e.g., ceramic) need reliable gas at affordable rates.
- Who uses LNG most: Fertilizer plants consume a large share of India's LNG (natural gas is a key feedstock for urea); city-gas distribution and ceramics were hit during the curbs (e.g., ~600 factories in Morbi).
- Next step: India should diversify gas sources and build storage; the Petroleum Minister noted the need to reduce dependence on the Hormuz route.
Import concentration: Heavy LNG reliance on West Asia left industry exposed to the Hormuz disruption.
Feedstock link: Gas is critical for fertilizer (urea) production — supply shocks hit farm inputs.
Diversification: Building reserves and diversifying sources is the structural fix.
- Diversify LNG sources and build storage/pipeline capacity.
- Protect fertilizer and city-gas supply during shocks.
- Reduce dependence on single chokepoint routes.
LNG / PNG / CNG Natural gas as feedstock (urea) Force majeure Strait of Hormuz
MCQ: Gas economy
Natural gas is a key feedstock in the production of which of the following?
- Urea (fertilizer)
- Cement
- Steel
- Aluminium
El Niño & the pressure on rural demand
Context
Rural demand faces pressure as El Niño impacts rains — a ~41% rainfall deficiency in the first month of the southwest monsoon in June 2026 threatens farm output, incomes and demand.
Background & Key Facts
- The deficit: With roughly 43% of employment dependent on agriculture (per the PLFS), a deficient monsoon implies weaker farm labour and falling farm incomes, pressuring rural demand.
- Inflation focus: Higher food and energy prices push inflation up; the CPFI (consumer food price inflation) climbed; the overall retail inflation reading was ~3.93% (May 2026), within the RBI's 2–6% tolerance band.
- Policy outlook: The RBI held the repo rate at ~5.25% (recently); analysts expect it may cut rates ~20 basis points in 2027 if conditions allow, balancing growth and inflation.
Rural vulnerability: Monsoon-dependent agriculture and rural demand are highly exposed to El Niño.
Inflation-growth trade-off: Food and energy price pressures complicate monetary policy.
Resilience gap: Weak irrigation and buffer management amplify monsoon shocks.
- Strengthen irrigation, buffer stocks and rural safety nets.
- Support farm incomes and rural demand during deficits.
- Balance inflation control with growth support.
El Niño / monsoon deficit CPFI / retail inflation RBI tolerance band PLFS
MCQ: Inflation targeting
The RBI's flexible inflation-targeting framework sets a CPI inflation target of:
- 4% within a band of 2–6%
- 2% within a band of 0–4%
- 6% within a band of 4–8%
- 0% (zero inflation)
Finerenone & a broader fight against kidney disease
Context
Three global studies suggest that finerenone — a drug previously used mainly for diabetes-related kidney disease — could help a much broader group of patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD), even without diabetes.
Background & Key Facts
- The finding: Studies (in NEJM, JAMA and The Lancet) found finerenone slowed disease progression, reduced protein leakage in urine and lowered the risk of kidney failure across different causes of CKD — not just diabetes.
- How it works: Finerenone doesn't target diabetes itself; it blocks inflammation and scarring inside the kidneys — a shared pathway common to many kidney diseases (e.g., IgA nephropathy, glomerulonephritis).
- The caution: A key side effect is hyperkalaemia (high blood potassium), which needs monitoring; the drug is already available in India (around ₹80–90/day), but cost and access remain concerns, and it loses patent protection in 2028.
Broader benefit: Extending finerenone to non-diabetic CKD could help many more patients delay kidney failure.
Access & cost: Affordability is critical in India, where CKD is rising; generic competition after 2028 may help.
Safety monitoring: Hyperkalaemia risk requires routine potassium checks.
- Expand affordable CKD therapy and screening.
- Strengthen primary-care detection of kidney disease.
- Monitor safety (potassium) and support generics post-2028.
Chronic Kidney Disease Finerenone Hyperkalaemia NCDs
MCQ: Kidney disease
A notable side effect of finerenone requiring monitoring is:
- Hyperkalaemia (high blood potassium)
- Low blood sugar
- High blood pressure
- Vitamin D deficiency
Encroachment on Assam's forests & sanctuaries
Context
The Assam government told the Assembly that eight wildlife sanctuaries and 281 reserve forests are under encroachment, with over 3.15 lakh hectares of protected/reserve forest under illegal occupation.
Background & Key Facts
- The scale: Eight wildlife sanctuaries and 281 reserve forests are encroached; ~3.15 lakh hectares are under illegal occupation. The State said it has evicted encroachers from ~16,937 hectares in the past five years.
- The stakes: Encroachment fragments habitats and threatens biodiversity in a State known for one-horned rhinos (Kaziranga), elephants and rich forest ecosystems.
- Governance challenge: Balancing eviction and forest protection with the rights and rehabilitation of forest dwellers (Forest Rights Act) is a persistent tension.
Habitat loss: Large-scale encroachment fragments habitats and threatens wildlife and ecosystems.
Rights balance: Eviction must be balanced against the rights of genuine forest dwellers under the FRA.
Enforcement: Sustained protection and rehabilitation, not one-off drives, are needed.
- Protect forests while respecting Forest Rights Act entitlements.
- Ensure fair rehabilitation and consultation.
- Strengthen monitoring and habitat connectivity.
Wildlife sanctuaries / reserve forests Forest Rights Act Kaziranga Habitat fragmentation
MCQ: Forest governance
Under the Wild Life (Protection) Act, activities in a "wildlife sanctuary" are:
- Regulated, with certain rights permissible subject to conditions
- Completely unrestricted
- Identical to those in a national park with no difference
- Banned for all research
CPI(M) vs the proposed NFSA amendment
Context
The CPI(M) sought the withdrawal of a proposed amendment to the National Food Security Act (NFSA), which it says would "gradually dilute" the food-entitlement system and weaken support for the poorest.
Background & Key Facts
- The change: The amendment would proportionately affect the poorest and most vulnerable, reducing per-capita foodgrain entitlement (reportedly from 5 kg to 7 kg framing) and diluting the legally guaranteed entitlement — the party says it would substantially reduce foodgrain support.
- The NFSA: The Act (2013) guarantees subsidised foodgrain (currently 5 kg per person per month) to about two-thirds of the population via the Public Distribution System — a rights-based food-security framework.
- The concern: Critics argue any dilution undermines food security amid rising prices and rural stress; the government's stated aim is to align entitlements with the Act.
Rights-based security: The NFSA is a legally guaranteed entitlement; dilution risks the poorest amid inflation.
Targeting vs. universality: Reforms must not undermine coverage of the genuinely needy.
Food-security stakes: Amid monsoon and price stress, robust PDS support is crucial.
- Preserve the rights-based entitlement and coverage of the vulnerable.
- Improve targeting and leakage control without cutting entitlements.
- Strengthen the PDS amid price and climate stress.
National Food Security Act, 2013 Public Distribution System Antyodaya Anna Yojana Right to food
MCQ: Food security
Under the National Food Security Act, 2013, priority households are entitled to foodgrain at:
- 5 kg per person per month
- 35 kg per person per month
- 10 kg per household per month
- 2 kg per person per month
Polity, S&T & World Roundup
Governance & federalism
- Four States settle Narmada payments: Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat, Rajasthan and Maharashtra reached an agreement on long-pending Narmada-project payments (Sardar Sarovar); the Home Minister said water and electricity dues were settled amicably — a note on cooperative federalism and inter-State river projects.
- IIM Bangalore to set up an Indonesia campus: IIM Bangalore will establish a campus in Indonesia — the first such foreign campus — to strengthen technological cooperation and India–ASEAN academic ties.
Science & technology
- Contact lost with Drishti: A Bengaluru start-up (GalaxEye) lost contact with Drishti, described as the world's first OptoSAR satellite (integrating optical/electro-optical and Synthetic Aperture Radar sensors) after a geomagnetic solar storm.
- Diamond jewellery on Vikram-1: A diamond-jewellery creation, mounted on an aluminium base plate, will be among the payloads on the private Vikram-1 rocket (Skyroot) — a symbolic tribute to visionaries.
The world in brief
- Tanker attacked in the Strait of Hormuz: An LNG tanker (a Qatari vessel) was struck by a projectile off Oman in the Strait of Hormuz; Doha called targeting the vessel an "unacceptable" attack on international navigation and energy security — a fresh escalation.
- Trump–Erdogan & NATO: The U.S. President praised Turkey's leader but criticised NATO allies ahead of a summit in Ankara — a signal on transatlantic strains.
Sardar Sarovar / Narmada OptoSAR / SAR satellite Vikram-1 (Skyroot) Strait of Hormuz
MCQ: Current affairs mix
Consider the following statements:
- Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) can image the Earth's surface regardless of cloud cover or daylight.
- The Sardar Sarovar Project is on the Narmada river.
- Vikram-1 is a rocket developed by a private Indian space start-up.
- 1 and 2 only
- 2 and 3 only
- 1 and 3 only
- 1, 2 and 3
📝 Quick Prelims Revision — MCQ Bank
Q1 — Economy
Gross Value Added (GVA) differs from GDP primarily because GDP:
- Adds net taxes on products (taxes minus subsidies)
- Excludes services
- Counts only exports
- Is measured at constant prices only
Q2 — Polity
The Prohibition of Child Marriage Act, 2006 is a:
- Secular law applicable across religions
- Personal law for Hindus only
- State law of Uttar Pradesh
- Directive Principle
Q3 — Governance
The National Food Security Act delivers subsidised foodgrain primarily through the:
- Public Distribution System
- Direct Benefit Transfer only
- Open market
- Cooperative banks
Q4 — Science & Tech
Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) satellites are especially useful because they can:
- Image through clouds and at night
- Only work in daylight
- Measure only temperature
- Detect only vegetation
Q5 — Polity
The right to privacy is protected as an intrinsic part of which fundamental right?
- Article 21 (life and personal liberty)
- Article 19(1)(a)
- Article 25
- Article 32
❓ FAQs
Frequently asked exam-oriented questions — 8 July 2026 edition
How does the West Asian crisis affect India's economic prospects?
Why is the method of caste enumeration in the Census significant?
What did the Allahabad High Court rule on the legal marriage age?
Why does the WhatsApp username debate matter for informational privacy?
Why is finerenone significant for kidney-disease patients?
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Jayanagar, Bengaluru · Classroom & Online · legacyias.com
Analysis based on The Hindu, Bengaluru City Edition, 8 July 2026. Prepared for academic use. Static background and frameworks added for exam preparation; original article text has been paraphrased, not reproduced.


