UPSC Kurukshetra Monthly Magazine – March 2026

Kurukshetra · March 2026 · UPSC Current Affairs

Kurukshetra March 2026 — Complete UPSC Summary
Rural Rise, National Growth

Six-chapter deep-dive into Kurukshetra March 2026 — Rural Transformation, Agriculture Budget 2026-27, Healthcare System, Yuva Shakti & Enterprise, Women in India (Gender Budget, SHE-Marts), and the landmark Seed Act 2026. Enriched with value addition, current data, and Mains questions. High-relevance for GS Papers II and III.

GS Paper II & IIIBudget 2026-27Rural DevelopmentAgricultureSeed Act 2026UPSC Mains 2026
📅 Kurukshetra: March 2026📚 6 Chapters Covered✍️ Legacy IAS Content Team🔄 Updated: May 2026
01
GS Paper II & III · Rural Development · Governance · Economy

Accelerating Rural Transformation

₹1.97 Lakh Cr Rural Dev (+21%)VB-GRM 125 DaysJJM 81.31%Bharat Net 2.14L Villages

India's rural transformation reflects a sustained policy push towards self-reliant, dignified village communities, aligned with Viksit Bharat 2047. 54.6% of the workforce resides in 6.62 lakh villages under 2.57 lakh Gram Panchayats. Despite limited resource endowment (2.4% land, 4% water), India supports 17% of global population and 15% livestock. The Union Budget 2026-27 allocates ₹1.97 lakh crore to the Ministry of Rural Development (21% increase); combined agriculture + rural development exceeds ₹4.35 lakh crore.

Four Drivers of Rural Transformation

  • Physical Infrastructure: PMGSY connected 99.7% habitations; PMGSY-IV targets 62,500 km (₹70,125 crore). PMAY-G: 4.95 crore pucca houses (₹54,916.7 crore). Saubhagya: 2.86 crore households electrified, power supply +39%
  • Social Infrastructure: Jal Jeevan Mission expanded tap water from 17% (2019) to 81.31% (15.74 crore households). WHO: savings of 5.5 crore hours and prevention of ~4 lakh deaths
  • Digital Infrastructure: Bharat Net: 2.14 lakh villages service-ready; tele-density 86.76%; 5G in 99.9% districts; national waterways + coastal shipping to reduce logistics costs
  • Agriculture: India now largest rice producer and 2nd-largest fish producer — subsistence farming → market-oriented agriculture
₹1.97L CrRural Development allocation 2026-27 (+21%)
₹4.35L CrCombined agriculture + rural development 2026-27
99.7%Habitations connected under PMGSY
81.31%JJM tap water coverage (17% in 2019 → 81.31%)
₹1.51L CrVB-GRM total allocation; 125 days employment
50%VB-GRM decentralised implementation via Gram Panchayats

Viksit Bharat Gram Rozgar Mission (VB-GRM)

  • Builds on MGNREGA (8.5 crore assets); total allocation over ₹1.51 lakh crore (₹95,692 crore central share); ₹30,000 crore for MGNREGA transition
  • Employment expanded from 100 → 125 days; introduces unemployment allowance and wage delay compensation
  • Decentralised implementation — 50% via Gram Panchayats; covers infrastructure, livelihoods, and climate-resilient works
💡Value Addition — MGNREGA Evolution, JJM Impact, PM-SVAMITVA & Digital Rural Economy
  • MGNREGA → VB-GRM transition: MGNREGA covers 14 crore registered workers, creates 340+ crore person-days annually — world's largest employment guarantee. VB-GRM shifts: distress employment → productive asset creation (roads, ponds, housing). Unemployment allowance and wage delay compensation signal rights-based entitlement. MGNREGA wages (₹267-357/day) remain below casual labour market wages (₹400-500/day) — periodic revision needed.
  • JJM — transformative impact: WHO-estimated 5.5 crore hours saved daily (largely women's time fetching water), 4 lakh deaths prevented annually from waterborne diseases. JJM Phase 2 focuses on source sustainability (watershed management, groundwater recharge) — addressing quality alongside quantity.
  • PM-SVAMITVA — digital land rights: Mapped 65+ lakh properties in 3.17 lakh villages — providing property rights cards (adhikar patr). Enables rural households to use land as collateral for bank loans — potentially unlocking ₹9-12 lakh crore in rural assets. Feeds into PMAY-G targeting and rural planning.
  • Digital rural economy: Bharat Net enables: CSCs (400+ government services online), PM-KISAN e-KYC, e-NAM commodity trading, eSanjeevani (22 crore+ consultations). New rural livelihoods: gig work, AgriTech, e-commerce fulfilment — diversifying income beyond agriculture for rural youth.
  • Rural-urban divide data: Per capita income rural ₹1.25 lakh/year vs urban ₹3.5 lakh/year — 2.8x gap. Rural poverty 31% vs urban 12%. But narrowing: rural FLFPR 23%→41.7% (PLFS 2023-24); rural MSMEs 5.3 crore → 7+ crore. Transformation is working — unevenly across states.
Mains Question — Chapter 1
Q. "Rural infrastructure serves as a bridge between aspiration and opportunity." Critically examine India's rural transformation and the significance of VB-GRM. (GS III · 15 Marks)
Approach: Rationale (54.6% workforce, 6.62L villages, 17% global population — structural challenge) → 4 drivers: Physical (PMGSY 99.7%, PMAY-G 4.95 Cr, Saubhagya 2.86 Cr HH), Social (JJM 17%→81.31%, WHO estimates), Digital (Bharat Net 2.14L villages, 5G 99.9%), Agriculture (largest rice, 2nd fish) → Budget 2026-27 (₹1.97L Cr +21%, ₹4.35L Cr combined) → VB-GRM (MGNREGA base, ₹1.51L Cr, 125 days, unemployment allowance, 50% GP) → PM-SVAMITVA, digital economy → Challenges (regional disparities, income gaps, climate vulnerability, last-mile) → Way forward (climate-resilient infrastructure, livelihood diversification, decentralised governance)
02
GS Paper III · Agriculture · Economy · Environment

Agriculture & Allied Sectors — Budget 2026-27

PM-KISAN ₹60,000 CrCredit ₹22 Lakh CrFisheries 8-9% GrowthBharat-VISTAAR AI

Budget 2026-27 signals a strategic shift: subsidy-driven → productivity enhancement, infrastructure, diversification, and climate resilience. Agriculture: 43-45% workforce, 15-16% GDP — low productivity and disguised unemployment. Ministry of Agriculture budget: ₹1.25L Cr (2024-25) → ₹1.41L Cr (2026-27). Rural Development: ₹2.05L Cr → ₹2.66L Cr. Note: DARE funding reduced to ₹9,967 crore — concern for long-term innovation.

Key Agricultural Schemes — Budget 2026-27

SchemeAllocationPurpose
PM-KISAN₹60,000 croreDirect income support (₹6,000/year to farmers)
PMFBY (Crop Insurance)₹18,500 croreClimate risk; target 30%→38-40% cropped area
RKVY₹12,000 croreFlexible agricultural infrastructure investment
PMKSY (Irrigation)₹11,500 crore+2-3 million hectares; cropping intensity 142%→148%
Agriculture Infrastructure Fund₹10,000 crorePost-harvest, cold chains, warehousing
Fisheries and Allied₹9,200 crore8 lakh jobs; exports ₹60K Cr→₹75K Cr by 2028
Agricultural Credit Target₹22 lakh croreSmall and marginal farmers; KCC to fisheries/dairy
DARE (Research)₹9,967 croreREDUCED — long-term innovation concern

Eight Strategic Priorities

  • Productivity: Historical 2-2.5% → projected 3-3.5%; adds 12-15 MT foodgrain by 2028; 7% capex → 1.9% additional output
  • Horticulture Diversification: 33% agricultural GVA, 38% output value; post-harvest losses 15-20%; cold chains → ₹8,000-10,000 Cr gains + 5-7 lakh jobs
  • Allied Sectors: Fisheries 8-9% growth → 10-11%; 8 lakh jobs; exports ₹60K→₹75K Cr by 2028. Dairy: 5% GDP, 4-5% growth; KCC extended to fisheries and dairy
  • Irrigation: 52% net sown area irrigated; PMKSY adds 2-3M ha; cropping intensity 142%→148%; micro-irrigation: water efficiency +30-40%, yields +15-20%
  • Credit and Insurance: ₹22L Cr target; PMFBY 30%→38-40% area; satellite technology reduces claim delays 25-30%
  • Digital Agriculture: e-NAM → transaction costs -10-12%, price realisation +5-8%; agri-startups 2,500 → 4,000 by 2028; Bharat-VISTAAR AI advisory
  • Climate Resilience: Resilient seeds + irrigation + insurance → crop loss variability -1.5-2 percentage points; natural farming: fertiliser use -8-10%
  • North-East Focus: Yield growth 4-5%, GSDP +1%; Tripura GI Queen Pineapple; concern: DARE funding cut
Agricultural Multiplier: Investment multiplier 1.6-1.8x — ₹15,000 crore investment → ₹24,000-27,000 crore GDP gains. Agricultural GVA growth: 3.5% (normal) to 4.5-5% (favourable conditions).
💡Value Addition — Farm Income Crisis, MSP Reform, e-NAM & Agri-Export Potential
  • Farm income crisis — structural challenge: NSSO Situation Assessment Survey (2019): average monthly farm household income ₹10,218 — barely above MGNREGA wages. Agricultural wages (₹367/day) below manufacturing (₹488/day) and services (₹573/day). PM-KISAN ₹6,000/year helps but doesn't close the gap. Budget's shift subsidy→productivity is the right long-term approach — requires 5-7 years sustained investment.
  • MSP reform debate: MSP covers 23 crops but effective procurement (FCI/state agencies) concentrated in wheat and paddy — only 6% of farmers benefit (ICSSR 2020). Swaminathan Commission's C2+50% MSP (including land rent and family labour) not implemented. ₹22L Cr credit target and e-NAM are market-based alternatives to expanding MSP dependence.
  • e-NAM: Connects 1,389 mandis across 22 states — 1.78 crore registered farmers, 2.41 lakh traders; trading volume ₹3.5L Cr (2023-24). Reduces mandi commission (2-8%) and transport costs, improving price realisation 5-8%. But only 14% of produce transacts through e-NAM — APMC reforms allowing direct farm-to-market sales are the missing piece.
  • India's agri-export potential: USD 53 billion (2023-24) — 2nd globally. Key: basmati (USD 6.1B), marine products (USD 7.3B), spices (USD 4B). Target USD 100 billion by 2030. SPS barriers in EU/Japan/USA limit exports — DARE funding reduction threatens research supporting export certification and product quality.
  • Bharat-VISTAAR AI platform: Integrates satellite data, weather intelligence, AI → hyper-local crop advisory in local languages via voice/SMS. Pilot: 10 lakh+ farmers across 10 states. Full scale for 14 crore farm households could reduce crop loss from ~20% to 12-15% — transformative for agricultural income stability.
Mains Question — Chapter 2
Q. Discuss the significance of allied sectors and digital agriculture in ensuring income stability for farmers. (GS III · 15 Marks — from Kurukshetra)
Approach: Context (43-45% workforce, 15-16% GDP, farm income ₹10,218/month NSSO) → Budget shift (subsidy→productivity, ₹1.41L Cr agriculture) → Allied sectors: Fisheries (8-9%→10-11%, 8L jobs, ₹60K→₹75K Cr exports), Dairy (5% GDP, 4-5% growth, KCC extension), livestock — regular cash flow vs seasonal dependence → Digital agriculture: e-NAM (1,389 mandis, 1.78 Cr farmers, -10-12% transaction costs, +5-8% price), Bharat-VISTAAR (AI advisory, satellite+weather, local language), digital databases (land records, farmer databases), PMFBY satellite (claims -25-30% delay) → Agri-startup ecosystem (2,500→4,000) → Challenges (digital divide, last-mile, DARE funding cut) → Way forward
03
GS Paper II · Health · Governance · Social Justice

Building a Stronger Healthcare System

₹1.06 Lakh Cr (+10%)Bio-Pharma Shakti ₹10,000 CrPM-ABHIM +71.9%13 Pillars

Budget 2026-27 marks a transition to a comprehensive, system-oriented healthcare approach — allocation ₹1,06,530.42 crore (~10% increase), rising by over 194% since 2014-15. Shift: fragmented schemes → integrated health systems approach (nutrition, environment, infrastructure, workforce, surveillance, technology). Life-cycle approach: communicable diseases + maternal-child health + NCDs + workforce + infrastructure gaps.

13 Pillars of Healthcare Budget 2026-27

🏥 1. NHM ₹39,390 Cr (+6.17%)
Primary healthcare backbone; maternal-child health; immunisation; disease surveillance; ASHA workers. Most equitable, cost-effective health model.
💳 2. PM-JAY (Ayushman Bharat)
Strengthens health insurance coverage; reduces catastrophic out-of-pocket expenditure; moves towards Universal Health Coverage (UHC).
🏗️ 3. PM-ABHIM ₹4,770 Cr (+71.9%)
Critical care blocks, district laboratories, emergency preparedness, hospital capacity expansion. Post-pandemic resilient district-level healthcare.
🎓 4. PMSSY ₹11,307 Cr
AIIMS expansion, medical college upgradation; MBBS and PG seats expansion; faculty development; nursing education. Addresses doctor-population ratio imbalance.
👥 5. Allied Health ₹980 Cr
Target: 1 lakh professionals + 1.5 lakh geriatric caregivers. Team-based care for ageing population and NCDs.
🥗 6. Nutrition (POSHAN)
Saksham Anganwadi & POSHAN 2.0 (₹23,100 Cr); PM POSHAN Mid-Day Meal (₹12,750 Cr, +20.3%); PMGKAY food security. Preventive healthcare through nutrition.
🦠 7. NACO ₹3,477 Cr (+30.64%)
HIV/AIDS control, STD prevention, blood safety. Continued focus on communicable diseases despite rising NCDs.
💻 8. ABDM ₹350 Cr (+7.94%)
Digital health records, telemedicine, interoperability. Citizen-centric healthcare delivery through technology.
🌿 9. AYUSH ₹1,300 Cr (+66.5%)
Wellness, preventive care, and integrative medicine. Diversifies healthcare delivery; holistic health approaches.
🏛️ 10. State Support (+500.9%)
Increased assistance to states for public health infrastructure. Health is a state subject — decentralised planning and context-specific solutions.
🌍 11. Environmental Health
Pollution control measures — health-environment nexus; impacts respiratory diseases, cardiovascular conditions, child health.
💊 12. Bio-Pharma Shakti NEW ₹10,000 Cr
Biologics and biosimilars production; 1,000 clinical trial sites; NIPERs strengthened. Integrates health policy with industrial policy — India as global biopharma hub.
💰 13. Cost Reduction
Custom duty exemption on 17 life-saving drugs; rare disease treatment support; mental healthcare institution expansion; trauma centres in district hospitals.
💡Value Addition — Healthcare Financing Gap, Bio-Pharma Shakti, NCD Burden & Doctor Shortage
  • India's healthcare financing gap: Public health expenditure: 2.2% of GDP (2023-24), up from 1.15% (2014-15) — still below WHO-recommended 5%. Out-of-pocket expenditure (OOPE): 39.4% of total health spending (down from 65%). PM-JAY (5 crore insurance for 55 crore beneficiaries) has reduced catastrophic expenditure — but utilisation rates (23%) remain low due to awareness gaps and hospital network limitations.
  • Bio-Pharma Shakti — strategic significance: India supplies 20% of global generic medicines, 60% of UNICEF vaccines, 70% of global ARV drugs — yet imports 60-70% of Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (APIs) from China. Bio-Pharma Shakti targets biologics and biosimilars (the next pharma frontier) — India currently has only 5% global biosimilars market vs 25% in generics. The 1,000 clinical trial sites will make India competitive with China and South Korea in clinical research.
  • NCD burden: NCDs (CVD, diabetes, cancer, COPD) account for 66% of all deaths. Economic cost projected at USD 4.58 trillion (2012-2030). Allied health workforce (1 lakh professionals + 1.5 lakh geriatric caregivers) recognises that NCD management requires team-based care — physiotherapists, dieticians, community health workers at scale.
  • Doctor-population ratio: India has 1.3 doctors per 1,000 (global average 2.5); 75% of doctors in urban areas serving 35% of population. PMSSY's AIIMS expansion (15 new AIIMS since 2014) and MBBS seat expansion are structurally correct. But geographic maldistribution requires bonding requirements for medical graduates to serve rural areas — as practised in Thailand and Brazil's Mais Medicos programme.
  • Mental health crisis: 150 million people need mental healthcare; only 30 million access it (80% treatment gap). Suicide is the leading cause of death among 15-29-year-olds. India has 0.3 psychiatrists per 100,000 (WHO standard: 3). Tele-MANAS (24/7, 23 state cells) is the most scalable solution — requires 5x more funding than currently allocated.
Mains Question — Chapter 3
Q. "The Health Budget 2026-27 reflects a paradigm shift from incremental welfare to holistic health system strengthening." Critically examine key allocations and their UHC significance. (GS II · 15 Marks)
Approach: Context (₹1.06L Cr, +10%, 194% since 2014-15) → Policy shift (fragmented schemes → integrated systems; life-cycle approach) → 13 pillars analysis: NHM backbone, PM-JAY UHC, PM-ABHIM +71.9% resilience, PMSSY medical education, Allied health 1L+1.5L, POSHAN 2.0 nutrition, NACO +30.64%, ABDM digital, AYUSH +66.5%, state support +500.9%, Bio-Pharma Shakti ₹10,000 Cr, 17 drugs customs duty → Outcomes (access, affordability, human capital) → Challenges (OOPE 39.4%, doctor maldistribution, NCD burden, implementation gaps) → Way forward (5% GDP health spending, primary health strengthening, digital integration)
04
GS Paper II & III · Education · Economy · Entrepreneurship

Yuva Shakti — Youth & Enterprise for Viksit Bharat

Education ₹1.39 Lakh CrMSME ₹24,566 CrAVGC 15,000 SchoolsSME Fund ₹10,000 Cr

Budget 2026-27 places Yuva Shakti at the centre — shift from access-driven policies → quality education, employability, innovation, entrepreneurship. Integrates education, skills, technology, and enterprise to create a future-ready workforce and job creators.

Five Pillars of Yuva Shakti Budget

1. Education — ₹1.39 Lakh Crore (NEP 2020 Framework)

  • Atal Tinkering Labs: 10,000 existing → 50,000 proposed; AICTE IDEA Labs for innovation and design thinking
  • Centres of Excellence in AI; PM Research Chairs; PM One Nation One Subscription (journal access)
  • 5 university townships near industrial corridors — industry-academia linkage
  • Degree-oriented → outcome-oriented learning; NEP 2020 (Access, Equity, Quality, Affordability, Accountability)

2. Skills and New-Age Sectors

  • "Education to Employment and Enterprise" approach
  • AVGC labs in 15,000 schools and 500 colleges2 million jobs by 2030; creative (orange) economy (Animation, Visual Effects, Gaming, Comics)
  • Healthcare (1 lakh allied professionals); tourism (10,000 trained guides); AI, IT, gaming, design, content creation

3. MSMEs — ₹24,566 Crore + ₹10,000 Crore SME Fund

  • MSMEs as engine of growth and employment; ₹10,000 crore SME Development Fund — Champion MSMEs
  • Corporate Mitra — compliance and advisory support in Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities
  • Revival of 200 heritage industrial clusters; Atmanirbhar Bharat Fund (₹2,000 crore)
  • Integration with GeM and digital platforms; Khadi, handloom, handicrafts, ODOP — rural enterprises

4. Inclusive and Regional Development

  • Bharat VISTAAR; Lakhpati Didi + SHG-based enterprise models; industrial corridors, Buddhist circuit tourism
  • Targets: rural youth, women, farmers, North-East and Purvodaya states

5. Innovation, Digital Economy and Global Competitiveness

  • AI Mission, Quantum Mission, Anusandhan NRF; Bio-Pharma Shakti (₹10,000 crore); India Semiconductor Mission (ISM 2.0)
  • IT services: safe harbour norms, increased thresholds; startups, patents, research ecosystems
💡Value Addition — AVGC Economy, MSME Structural Gap, ODOP & Youth Demographic Window
  • AVGC — India's orange economy: India's AVGC sector worth USD 4.5 billion (2024), growing 20% annually. India supplies 40% of global VFX for Hollywood. Budget 2026-27's 15,000 school AVGC labs and 500 college units position AVGC as India's next IT sector — target USD 40 billion economy and 2 million jobs by 2030. India's advantage: English proficiency, STEM talent, lower costs than US/UK studios.
  • MSME structural gap: India has 7 crore MSMEs employing 120 million people — 90% are micro-enterprises with fewer than 5 workers. The SME Development Fund (₹10,000 crore) to build "Champion MSMEs" addresses the missing-middle problem: India lacks mid-sized companies (100-1,000 employees) — the industrial backbone in Germany (Mittelstand) and South Korea. Champion MSMEs can become export-competitive global suppliers.
  • ODOP (One District One Product): Identifies one distinctive product per district (658 products for 741 districts) — Darjeeling tea, Varanasi silk, Tiruppur knitwear, Mirzapur carpet. ODOP exports crossed ₹1.85 lakh crore (2022-23). Integration with GeM and SHE-Marts creates a farm-to-export pipeline for rural artisans and women entrepreneurs.
  • India's youth demographic window: 850 million people below 35 years — world's largest youth population. Window closes by 2045. India must create 90 million non-farm jobs by 2030. AVGC (2M), MSME SME Fund (Champion MSMEs), startup ecosystem (1.6 lakh DPIIT), skills — together address a fraction. A comprehensive Job and Employment Strategy remains the critical missing policy.
  • University townships near industrial corridors: Mirrors successful models: MIT-Route 128 (USA), Oxford-Cambridge Arc (UK), Shenzhen University Science Park (China), IIT Bombay-Powai ecosystem. University-industry proximity reduces knowledge spillover lag and creates startup ecosystems organically — addressing India's current university-industry disconnect.
Mains Question — Chapter 4
Q. Analyse the role of MSMEs and new-age sectors in transforming India from a job-seeking to a job-creating economy. Examine Budget 2026-27 provisions. (GS III · 15 Marks — from Kurukshetra)
Approach: Context (Yuva Shakti, 850M below 35, 90M non-farm jobs needed by 2030) → Education (₹1.39L Cr, NEP 2020, ATLs 10k→50k, 5 university townships, CoE AI) → New-age skills (AVGC 15k schools+500 colleges, 2M jobs, orange economy USD 40B; healthcare 1L allied; tourism 10k guides; AI/gaming/design) → MSMEs (₹24,566 Cr, 7 Cr MSMEs 120M jobs; SME Fund ₹10K Cr Champion MSMEs; Corporate Mitra Tier-2/3; 200 heritage clusters; GeM integration; ODOP/Khadi/handloom) → Innovation (AI Mission, Quantum, ANRF, Bio-Pharma Shakti, ISM 2.0, IT safe harbour) → Inclusive (Lakhpati Didi, SHGs, NER industrial corridors, Buddhist circuit) → Shift: job-seeking → job-creating; Yuva Shakti as twin engine of Viksit Bharat
05
GS Paper II · Social Justice · Women · Rights · Economy

Women in India — Policy, Power, and Possibility

Gender Budget ₹5.01 Lakh Cr9.37% of Total Expenditure53 MinistriesSHE-Marts + Mission Shakti

Budget 2026-27 marks a significant shift — women at the centre of national development. Gender Budget: ₹5.01 lakh crore (11.55% increase; 9.37% of total expenditure) with 53 ministries mainstreaming gender equity — moving beyond symbolic commitments to structural transformation.

Three Pillars of Women's Empowerment Budget 2026-27

1. Gender-Responsive Governance

  • Transition: women-centric schemes → gender-responsive governance — health, education, rural development, skill, infrastructure, and sanitation all incorporate gender priorities
  • Cross-ministerial gender budgeting (53 ministries); integration of women's needs in infrastructure planning, education, skill, and rural leadership
  • Mission Shakti (₹3,605 crore) — One Stop Centres, safety mechanisms, institutional support systems
  • Systemic shift: gender equity embedded into the architecture of the State

2. Economic Empowerment and Education Access

  • Women as economic agents and growth drivers — welfare → enterprise-led empowerment
  • Girls' hostels in every district — addresses mobility, safety, access barriers in higher education (especially STEM)
  • SHE-Marts — market access, branding, value chain integration for women entrepreneurs; micro-enterprises → scalable businesses
  • Expansion of SHGs, ODOP, rural industries — employment and income opportunities; enhances FLFP; women's role in formal economy

3. Women as Drivers of Inclusive Growth

  • Women not merely as beneficiaries but as key drivers of economic and social transformation
  • Investment in education, enterprise, and leadership; strengthening safety, institutional support, social protection; market integration and financial inclusion
  • Shift: welfare-based → capability and productivity-based approach
  • Lakhpati Didi — 3 crore women targeted to earn ₹1 lakh+ annually through SHG-based enterprises
💡Value Addition — Gender Budget Evolution, FLFP Data, SHE-Marts & Lakhpati Didi
  • Gender Budget evolution: India introduced Gender Budgeting in 2005-06 with the Gender Budget Statement (GBS) — Part A (100% allocation for women), Part B (30-99%), Part C (below 30%, introduced 2024-25). Rise from 6.8% (2024-25) to 9.37% (2026-27) of total expenditure reflects genuine mainstreaming. However, critics note that counting all 53-ministry allocations with any women's component inflates the headline — effective gender-transformative spending (Part A only) requires separate scrutiny.
  • FLFP surge — economic case: India's Female Labour Force Participation Rate rose from 23.3% (2017-18) to 41.7% (2023-24) — one of the fastest increases globally. However, 90% of women workers are in informal employment (agriculture, domestic work, MGNREGA) — without social security or stable income. SHE-Marts, SHG enterprises, and girls' hostels target the transition informal → formal economy. Closing FLFP gap with OECD (60%+) could add 9% to GDP (McKinsey Global Institute estimate).
  • SHE-Marts innovation: Dedicated market spaces and digital platforms for women entrepreneurs — from SHG hand-crafted goods to formal MSME products. Provides: branding support (labels, packaging, GI tags), digital integration (e-commerce), B2B connections (corporate procurement), financial services (MUDRA loans). Mumbai's first SHE-Mart (2024) generated ₹2 crore revenue in the first month — indicating strong market demand for women-led products.
  • Lakhpati Didi — the SHG revolution: India has 83 lakh SHGs with 9 crore women members — world's largest microfinance network. Target: 3 crore women earning ₹1 lakh+ annually through SHG-linked livelihoods (farming, handicrafts, food processing, services). Currently 1.15 crore achieved. When 3 crore women earn ₹1 lakh+ annually, it injects ₹3 lakh crore into rural consumption — a massive rural demand stimulus.
  • Mission Shakti comprehensive architecture: Two sub-missions: Sambal (one-stop centres, helplines, legal aid) and Samarthya (financial independence, skill training). 784 One Stop Centres (24/7), Women Helpline 181, Nari Adalats, Beti Bachao Beti Padhao. Safety, education, and economic empowerment are interdependent — you cannot have women's economic participation without safety infrastructure.
Mains Questions — Chapter 5
Q. Discuss how initiatives such as SHE-Marts and Mission Shakti contribute to enhancing women's economic participation. How does the Gender Budget 2026-27 reflect a structural shift in India's gender policy? (GS II · 15 Marks — from Kurukshetra)
Approach: Gender Budget context (₹5.01L Cr, +11.55%, 9.37%, 53 ministries — structural mainstreaming) → GBS evolution (2005-06, Part A/B/C structure) → Three pillars: (1) Gender-responsive governance (53 ministries, Mission Shakti ₹3,605 Cr, OSCs, gender in infrastructure); (2) Economic empowerment (SHE-Marts — branding/market/B2B/digital for women entrepreneurs; girls hostels every district STEM access; SHG/ODOP/rural industries; FLFP 23%→41.7%); (3) Women as drivers (Lakhpati Didi 3 crore target, capability vs welfare) → Shift: symbolic → structural; women-centric schemes → gender-responsive governance → FLFP economic case (+9% GDP potential) → Challenges (informal employment 90%, gender wage gap, safety barriers) → Way forward
06
GS Paper III · Agriculture · Governance · Technology · Legislation

Seed Act 2026 — Transforming India's Seed Sector

₹30 Lakh Fine3 Years ImprisonmentQR-Based TraceabilityReplaces Seeds Act 1966

The Seed Act 2026 replaces the outdated Seeds Act, 1966 — addressing fake and substandard seeds (15-20% of India's ₹30,000-35,000 crore seed market). Key goals: quality assurance, transparency, and farmer protection.

Three Pillars of Seed Act 2026

1. Regulatory Reforms — Transparency, Accountability and Deterrence

  • QR-based seed traceability system — farmers verify origin, quality, seller credentials; authorities track defective batches — end-to-end digital accountability
  • Mandatory registration of all seed producers, dealers, and sellers — formalisation and accountability
  • Stricter penalties: Fines up to ₹30 lakh and imprisonment up to 3 years (vs Seeds Act 1966: ₹500-₹5,000) — treating seed fraud as serious economic offence

2. Quality Assurance, Oversight and Farmer Empowerment

  • Greater roles for ICAR, agricultural universities, and KVKs — seed quality, adaptability, performance across agro-climatic zones
  • Grievance redressal mechanisms; extension services; QR verification training for farmers
  • Protects farmers' traditional rights to save, use, exchange, and share seeds — balancing modern regulation with PPV&FRA framework

3. Significance for Agriculture and Rural Economy

  • Reduces crop losses and income risks from poor-quality seeds; enhances productivity and yield stability
  • Builds trust in input markets; supports sustainable and resilient agriculture across agro-climatic zones
  • Strengthens the input ecosystem critical for food security, farmer welfare, and rural development
FeatureSeeds Act 1966Seed Act 2026
Penalty for fraud₹500-₹5,000 fineUp to ₹30 lakh fine + 3 years imprisonment
TraceabilityNoneQR-based end-to-end digital traceability
RegistrationOptional/selectiveMandatory for all producers, dealers, sellers
Quality assuranceLimited testingICAR, agriculture universities, KVKs mandated
Farmer rightsNot explicitly protectedTraditional seed saving, exchange rights protected
Grievance redressalWeak/absentStructured grievance mechanisms
Digital integrationNoneQR scanning, digital verification, farmer databases
💡Value Addition — India's Fake Seed Crisis, PPV&FRA, & Digital Agriculture Integration
  • India's fake seed crisis: India's seed market ₹30,000-35,000 crore annually — one of the world's largest. NITI Aayog estimates 15-20% of seeds are fake or substandard. Economic losses: ₹10,000-15,000 crore; affects 2-3 crore farmers annually. Bt cotton seed fraud in Gujarat/Andhra (2002-05) — farmers destroyed crops worth thousands of crores. Seeds Act 1966's ₹500 penalty was meaningless for companies with crore-scale revenues — Seed Act 2026's ₹30 lakh penalty is proportionate deterrence.
  • Seeds Act 1966 — why it failed: Designed for a state-dominated, non-hybrid seed market. Didn't anticipate: private seed companies (now controlling 65% of market); hybrid and GM seeds (higher yielding but non-reproducible); complex distribution chains with 5-7 intermediaries. The Seed Act 2026 corrects all three structural gaps.
  • PPV&FRA and farmers' rights: The Protection of Plant Varieties and Farmers' Rights Act (PPV&FRA, 2001) protects farmers' rights to save, use, sow, resow, exchange, share, and sell farm produce — a pioneering global legislation. Seed Act 2026's explicit protection of traditional seed rights reinforces PPV&FRA. India's position: commercial seed regulation without eliminating informal seed systems sustaining 70% of subsistence farmers.
  • Digital integration potential: The QR traceability system can integrate with: digital farmer databases (14 crore farmers), Bharat-VISTAAR (AI advisory), e-NAM (market prices), Soil Health Cards (crop suitability) — creating a comprehensive agricultural input-output data ecosystem. Connected to PM-KISAN beneficiary data, it could enable precision targeting of agricultural support — moving from universal subsidies to farmer-specific input advisory.
  • ICAR and seed research: ICAR (100+ institutes, 700+ KVKs) has developed 5,000+ improved crop varieties since 1966. But private seed companies now release 80% of commercial varieties (especially cotton, maize, vegetables). Seed Act 2026's ICAR/KVK mandate creates public-private complementarity. However, DARE's reduced funding (₹9,967 crore) undermines the public agricultural research that underpins this mandate.
Mains Question — Chapter 6
Q. "The Seed Act 2026 marks a structural shift in agricultural governance." Critically examine its provisions, significance, and implementation challenges. (GS III · 15 Marks)
Approach: Context (Seeds Act 1966 inadequacy — private sector 65%, hybrids, complex supply chains, ₹500 penalty ineffective) → India's fake seed crisis (15-20%, ₹10-15K Cr losses, 2-3 Cr farmers) → Three pillars: (1) Regulatory (QR traceability, mandatory registration, ₹30L fine+3 years, market formalisation); (2) Quality assurance (ICAR/KVKs, grievance redressal, extension services, QR farmer training); (3) Farmer empowerment (traditional rights PPV&FRA alignment) → Comparative table (1966 vs 2026) → Significance (crop loss reduction, productivity, trust in input markets, private sector accountability, digital integration) → Challenges (farmer digital literacy, rural QR infrastructure, enforcement capacity, small dealer burden) → Way forward (DARE funding, e-NAM integration, state agricultural officer training, ICAR seed testing lab expansion)
Frequently Asked Questions

Kurukshetra March 2026 — All Key Questions Answered

Optimised for Google Featured Snippets and UPSC aspirant searches — Rural Rise, National Growth theme.

The theme is "Rural Rise, National Growth". Six chapters from the Union Budget 2026-27 perspective: (1) Rural Transformation — PMGSY 99.7%, JJM 81.31%, VB-GRM (₹1.51L Cr, 125 days, 50% via GPs), ₹1.97L Cr rural dev (+21%); (2) Agriculture — PM-KISAN ₹60K Cr, PMFBY ₹18.5K Cr, fisheries 8-9%, ₹22L Cr credit, Bharat-VISTAAR, multiplier 1.6-1.8x; (3) Healthcare — ₹1.06L Cr (+10%), 13 pillars, Bio-Pharma Shakti ₹10K Cr NEW, PM-ABHIM +71.9%; (4) Yuva Shakti — Education ₹1.39L Cr, ATLs 10k→50k, AVGC 15k schools, MSME ₹24,566 Cr, SME Fund ₹10K Cr; (5) Women — Gender Budget ₹5.01L Cr (9.37%), SHE-Marts, Mission Shakti ₹3,605 Cr, Lakhpati Didi 3 crore; (6) Seed Act 2026 — QR traceability, ₹30L fine, 3 years, replaces 1966 Act.
The VB-GRM builds on MGNREGA (8.5 crore assets created). Key features: total allocation over ₹1.51 lakh crore (₹95,692 crore central share); ₹30,000 crore for MGNREGA transition; employment from 100 → 125 days; introduces unemployment allowance and wage delay compensation; 50% implementation via Gram Panchayats; covers infrastructure, livelihoods, and climate-resilient works. Budget 2026-27 allocates ₹1.97 lakh crore to the Ministry of Rural Development (+21%); combined agriculture + rural development exceeds ₹4.35 lakh crore.
The Seed Act 2026 replaces Seeds Act 1966. India's seed market is ₹30,000-35,000 crore; 15-20% seeds are fake (NITI Aayog). Key provisions: (1) QR-based seed traceability — farmers verify origin, quality, seller credentials; authorities track defective batches; (2) Mandatory registration of all producers, dealers, sellers; (3) Stricter penalties — fines up to ₹30 lakh + 3 years imprisonment (vs Seeds Act 1966: ₹500-₹5,000); (4) Greater role for ICAR, agriculture universities, KVKs in quality assurance; (5) Grievance redressal mechanisms; (6) Protects farmers' traditional rights to save, use, exchange, share seeds (PPV&FRA alignment).
Gender Budget 2026-27: ₹5.01 lakh crore (11.55% increase; 9.37% of total expenditure) with 53 ministries. Key initiatives: SHE-Marts — market access, branding, value chain integration for women entrepreneurs (micro-enterprises → scalable businesses); Girls' hostels in every district — mobility, safety, STEM access; Mission Shakti (₹3,605 crore) — One Stop Centres, safety mechanisms; Lakhpati Didi — 3 crore women to earn ₹1 lakh+/year through SHGs. Shift: welfare-based → capability and productivity-based approach; women-centric schemes → gender-responsive governance (53 ministries, all sectors).
Health Budget 2026-27: ₹1,06,530.42 crore (~10% increase) — up 194% since 2014-15. 13 pillars. Major allocations: NHM ₹39,390 crore (+6.17%); PM-JAY (UHC insurance); PM-ABHIM ₹4,770 crore (+71.9%); PMSSY ₹11,307 crore (AIIMS expansion); NACO ₹3,477 crore (+30.64%); AYUSH ₹1,300 crore (+66.5%); state support +500.9%; 17 life-saving drugs customs duty exemption. Bio-Pharma Shakti — NEW ₹10,000 crore initiative: biologics and biosimilars production; 1,000 clinical trial sites; NIPERs strengthened. India as global biopharma hub — integrating health policy with industrial policy.
Budget 2026-27 promotes Yuva Shakti — education allocation ₹1.39 lakh crore; "Education to Employment and Enterprise" approach. AVGC (Animation, Visual Effects, Gaming, Comics) labs in 15,000 schools and 500 colleges2 million jobs by 2030; India's creative (orange) economy (currently USD 4.5 billion, growing 20% annually; target USD 40 billion). Other measures: ATLs 10,000 → 50,000 proposed; 5 university townships near industrial corridors; MSME ₹24,566 crore + SME Development Fund ₹10,000 crore (Champion MSMEs); Corporate Mitra (Tier-2/3 cities); 200 heritage cluster revival; AI Mission; Quantum Mission; Anusandhan NRF; Bio-Pharma Shakti; India Semiconductor Mission 2.0.
Kurukshetra March 2026 (Rural Rise, National Growth) is relevant for: GS Paper II — Governance (VB-GRM, cooperative federalism in rural development, gender-responsive governance with 53 ministries, Mission Shakti, health as state subject), Social Justice (healthcare UHC, women empowerment, SHE-Marts, Gender Budget ₹5.01L Cr), Welfare (PM-JAY, NHM, POSHAN 2.0); GS Paper III — Economy (agricultural budget analysis, MSMEs, AVGC orange economy, innovation ecosystem), Agriculture (PM-KISAN, PMFBY, PMKSY, fisheries 8-9%, horticulture 33% GVA, digital agriculture Bharat-VISTAAR, Seed Act 2026, multiplier 1.6-1.8x), Environment (climate-resilient agriculture, natural farming), Science & Technology (Bio-Pharma Shakti, semiconductor mission, AI mission, ABDM digital health); Essay — "From welfare to empowerment", "Rural Rise as foundation of National Growth", "Women as drivers of Viksit Bharat".
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Kurukshetra March 2026 covers Union Budget 2026-27 — Rural Development, Agriculture, Healthcare, Yuva Shakti, Women's Empowerment, and the landmark Seed Act 2026. All high-scoring GS Paper II and III topics. Legacy IAS covers Kurukshetra comprehensively every month under Pavan Sir. UPSC Mains 2026: August 21.

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