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(The Gist of PIB) National Test Abhyas


(The Gist of PIB) National Test Abhyas

 [JUNE-2020]

National Test Abhyas

  • Union Human Resource Development (HRD) Minister launched a new mobile app called the ‘National Test Abhyas’.

About:

  • The AI-powered mobile App has been developed by National Testing Agency (NTA) to enable candidates to take mock tests for upcoming exams such as JEE Main, NEET under the NTA’s purview.
  • The app has been launched to facilitate candidates’ access to high-quality mock tests in their homes since there was a demand for making up the loss to students due to closure of educational institutions and NTA’s Test-Practice Centers (TPCs) due to the continuing lockdown.

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(The Gist of PIB) Special Liquidity Scheme for NBFCs/HFCs


(The Gist of PIB) Special Liquidity Scheme for NBFCs/HFCs

 [JUNE-2020]

Special Liquidity Scheme for NBFCs/HFCs
 

  • The Union Cabinet has approved the proposal of the Ministry of Finance to launch a new Special Liquidity Scheme for Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs) and Housing Finance Companies (HFCs) to improve the liquidity position of the NBFCs/HFCs.

About:

  • A large public sector bank would set up a Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) to manage a Stressed Asset Fund (SAF) whose special securities would be guaranteed by the Government of India and purchased by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) only.
  • The SPV would issue securities as per requirement subject to the total amount of securities outstanding not exceeding Rs. 30,000 crore to be extended by the amount required as per the need.
  • The securities issued by the SPV would be purchased by RBI and proceeds thereof would be used by the SPV to acquire the debt of at least investment grade of short duration (residual maturity of up to 3 months) of eligible NBFCs / HFCs.
  • The Scheme will be administered by the Department of Financial Services.
  • The direct financial implication for the Government is Rs. 5 crores, which may be the equity contribution to the Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV).

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(The Gist of PIB) Pradhan Mantri Matsya Sampada Yojana


(The Gist of PIB) Pradhan Mantri Matsya Sampada Yojana

  •  [JUNE-2020]

Pradhan Mantri Matsya Sampada Yojana

  • The Union Cabinet has given its approval for implementation of the Pradhan Mantri Matsya Sampada Yojana (PMMSY) – a scheme to bring Blue Revolution through sustainable and responsible development of the fisheries sector in India.

About:

  • The Scheme will be implemented during a period of 5 years from FY 2020-21 to FY 2024-25.
  • The PMMSY will be implemented as an umbrella scheme with two separate Components namely Central Sector Scheme (CS) and Centrally Sponsored Scheme (CSS).
  • Under the Central Sector Scheme Component an amount of 1720 crores has been earmarked.
  • Under the Centrally Sponsored Scheme (CSS) Component, an investment of 18330 crores has been envisaged, which in turn is segregated into Non-beneficiary oriented and Beneficiary orientated sub-components/activities under the following three broad heads: Enhancement of Production and Productivity, Infrastructure and Post-Harvest Management and Fisheries Management and Regulatory Framework.
  • For optimal outcomes, ‘Cluster or area-based approach’ would be followed with requisite forward and backward linkages and end to end solutions.
  • Collectivization of fishers and fish farmers through Fish Farmer Producer Organizations (FFPOs) to increase the bargaining power of fishers and fish farmers is a key feature of PMMSY.

Expected Benefits:

  • Augmenting fish production and productivity at a sustained average annual growth rate of about 9% to achieve a target of 22 million metric tons by 2024-25.
  • Creation of direct gainful employment opportunities to about 15 lakh fishers, fish farmers, fish workers, fish vendors, etc.
  • Doubling of fishers, fish farmers, and fish workers’ incomes by 2024.

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(The Gist of PIB) Ecologically Sensitive Area of Western Ghats


(The Gist of PIB) Ecologically Sensitive Area of Western Ghats

 [JUNE-2020]

Ecologically Sensitive Area of Western Ghats

  • Union Minister of Environment interacted with Chief Ministers & State Government Officers of six states viz, Kerala, Karnataka, Goa, Maharashtra, Gujarat, and Tamil Nadu to discuss issues relating to notification of Ecologically Sensitive Area (ESA) pertaining to the Western Ghats.

About:

  • To protect the biodiversity of Western Ghats while allowing for sustainable development of the region, the Government of India had constituted a High-Level Working Group under the Chairmanship of Dr. Kasturirangan.
  • The Committee had recommended that identified geographical areas falling in the six States of Kerala, Karnataka, Goa, Maharashtra, Gujarat, and Tamil Nadu may be declared as Ecologically Sensitive Areas.
  • A draft notification was issued in October 2018 mentioning the areas to be notified in the ESA.
  • The states expressed their desire to expedite early notification while protecting the interest of ecology and environment.

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THE GIST of Editorial for UPSC Exams : 9 July 2020 Social Injustice(Indian Express)



Social Injustice(Indian Express)


Mains Paper 2:Polity 
Prelims level: Reservation system 
Mains level: Mechanisms, laws, institutions and Bodies constituted for the protection and betterment of these vulnerable sections

Context: 

  • Reservations have been one of the most effective techniques of positive discrimination in India. 
  • Reservation was never been conceived as a mass employment scheme but as the best way to redress of whole history of oppression. 
  • Gradually, it has created a group of Dalits that validated some criteria of the middle class in terms of education and occupation. 

Data:

  • While quotas were not fulfilled among the “upper classes” of the public sector till the 1980s.
  • In the Central Administrative Services, SCs (about 16% of India’s population) reached 14% of the Class C in 1984, 14.3% of the Class B in 2003 and 13.3% of the Class A in 2015. 
  • In the Central Public Sector Enterprises (CPSEs), their proportion rose from 14.6% in 2004 to 18.1% in 2014. 
  • In parallel, the SCs’ literacy rate jumped from 21.38% in 1981 to 66.1 per cent in 2011.
  • Similar progress was achieved by the OBCs, a category that started to benefit from reservations many years later, after the Mandal Commission report was implemented by V P Singh. 
  • In 2013, OBCs – 52% of India’s population according to the Mandal report – represented 8.37% of the Class A in the Central Government Services, 10.01% of Class B and 17.98% of Class C. 
  • Their percentage in the CPSEs jumped from 16.6%in 2004 to 28.5% in 2014.

Privatisation:

  • Today, these achievements may be affected by the new programme of privatisation that has been announced by Finance Minister in the framework of structural reforms.
  • According to the new Public Sector Enterprises Policy (PSEP), a list of strategic sectors will be notified where there will be no more than four public sector enterprises — the rest would be merged or privatised. 
  • But reservations are already undermined by other developments and policies.
  • While the percentages mentioned above are on the increase, the trend is different if one looks at the number of jobs they represent, as the public sector is shrinking. 
  • First, the number of vacancies has surged, from 5.5 lakh in 2006 to 7.5 lakh in 2014 (no data are available since then) so far as central government employment is concerned. The trend has continued afterwards. 
  • For instance, the number of civil service candidates shortlisted by the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) has dropped by almost 40 per cent between 2014 and 2018, from 1,236 to 759. 
  • Second, the total number of employees has dropped so dramatically between 2003 and 2012, from 32.69 lakh to 26.30 lakh in the Central Government Services, that the number of Dalits benefiting from reservations has been reduced by 16 per cent from 5.40 lakh to 4.55 lakh. 
  • In the CPSEs, in spite of rising percentages, the number of jobs has decreased from 18.1 lakh in 2011 to 14.86 lakh in 2014. 
  • In contrast, the number of OBCs continued to rise, from 1.38 lakh to 4.55 lakh between 2003 and 2012 in the Central Government Services. 
  • But in the CPSEs, the inverted U curve had started: While the number of OBCs benefiting from reservations had jumped from 14.89 lakh in 2008 to 23.55 lakh in 2012, it has dropped to 23.38 lakh the year after.

Lateral entry:

  • Reservations have also been undermined by lateral entry in to the bureaucracy. 
  • By the end of his first term, Narendra Modi implemented one of the promises of the 2014 BJP election manifesto — the creation of lateral entry in the Indian administration. 
  • This reform was intended to “to draw expertise from the industry, academia and society into the services”. 
  • In February 2019, 89 applicants were short listed (out of 6,000 candidates from the private sector) for filling 10 posts of Joint Secretary. 
  • This new procedure undermined the reservations system because the quotas did not apply.

 Judiciary:

  • The judiciary has contributed to the erosion of the reservation system in different ways during the last two years. 
  • In a judgment of the Allahabad High Court, which was later upheld by Supreme Court, the University Grants Commission (UGC) was allowed to issue a notification on March 5, 2018, which sought to shift the unit of provision of reservations from a university as a whole to the departmental level. 
  • Such a shift has reduced the quantum of reserved seats and restricted the entry of lower castes because small departments, where vacancies are few, would be indivisible — thereby no seats would be reserved. 
  • As a result, as per the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment, in the teaching posts advertised by 11 central universities, only 2.5 per cent posts were reserved for SCs, none for STs and 8 per cent for OBCs. 
  • However, the impact of the ordinance and the subsequent Bill passed by the Parliament in March and July 2019, reversing the Supreme Court’s judgment, is yet to be seen.

Undermining the rights:

  • Recently, the Supreme Court made another important decision on February 7. 
  • It ruled that reservation in job promotions was not a fundamental right. 
  • This ruling undermined the effect of an amendment to the Constitution that had been introduced by the Narasimha Rao government in 1995.
  • Amendment resulted in article 16(4A), a provision that circumvented a facet of the 1992 decision of the Supreme Court to allow reservation for SCs and STs in promotions. 
  • Interestingly, this amendment had been further refined under the A B Vajpayee government in 2001 through the 85th amendment.
  • 85th A extended the benefit of reservations in favour of the SCs/STs in matters of promotion with consequential seniority. 
  • This time, in 2020, the Government of India has decided not to contest the decision of the Supreme Court affecting this amendment.
  • It remains to be seen whether the government will react to the even more recent questioning of reservations. 
  • Last month, the National Commission for Backward Classes has issued a notice to the health ministry complaining that the post-Mandal 27% quota was not implemented systematically. 
  • Indeed, since 2017, under the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test, OBCs were not provided the 27% quota in the all-India seats which are pooled from state colleges. 
  • This loss represented about 10,000 seats in three years, which have been transferred to the general category. 

Impact:

  • SCs and OBCs are not only penalised by the decline of the reservation system. They are also affected by other policies. 
  • For instance, the funds earmarked for Dalit education in the Indian budget were reduced during Modi I. 
  • While this budget item, within the Special Component Plan (a subcategory of the annual budget), is supposed to be proportional to the demographic weight of the Dalits, 16.6 per cent, it fluctuated between 9 and 6.5 per cent during Modi’s first term. 
  • As a result, scholarship funds were cut drastically. 
  • According to S K Thorat, nearly five million Dalit students have been affected by this reduction and delays in payment.

 Conclusion:

  • The trajectory of positive discrimination in India suggests that the implementation of this policy is a function of the political clout of Dalits and OBCs. 
  • They gained when parties — including the BSP, SP and RJD — were in a position to put pressure on the governments, especially when they were part of ruling coalitions. 
  • Unsurprisingly, the electoral decline of these parties has resulted not only in the comeback of upper castes in the assemblies but in the questioning of policies in favour of the plebeians.

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Prelims Questions:

Q.1). With reference to the containment zones, consider the following statements:

1. Demarcation of containment zones serves the same purpose as lockdown and classification of districts, but at a more micro level. 
2. Demarcation of containment zones is done within a town, village, or municipal or panchayat area.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both 1 and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2

Answer: C

Mains Questions:

Q.1). What are the scenarios behind the reservation system? Why it needed? Highlights the recommendations made by Mandal Commission regarding reservation system in India. 

 

 

THE GIST of Editorial for UPSC Exams : 9 July 2020 End of a dream(Indian Express)



End of a dream(Indian Express)


Mains Paper 2:International 
Prelims level: Ex-pat quota bill
Mains level: Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India’s interests, Indian diaspora

Context:  

  • Kuwait’s move to reduce the share of expatriates in its workforce has deepened the spectre of an exodus of Indians from the Gulf. 
  • A draft Bill in the National Assembly has proposed that the percentage of Indian citizens in Kuwait should not exceed 15% of its population — nearly 8 lakh Indians may have to leave Kuwait.

Continuing trend:

  • The possibility of a migrant exodus from West Asia is not new. 
  • Many countries in the Gulf region have been trying to replace expats in their workforce with locals. 
  • Saudi Arabia launched nitaqat — a Saudisation scheme which introduced quotas in the workforce — in 2011. 
  • Recently, Oman had proposed a phased reduction of expats in its workforce. 
  • Expat workers flocked to Gulf countries to build and run those economies following the oil boom in the 1960s and ’70s. 
  • They were welcomed mainly because the local population lacked the necessary skills, or the will, to meet the needs of the new economy. 
  • The Subcontinent was a major beneficiary of this economic boom as it exported both skilled and unskilled workers. 

Kerala’s relation with the Gulf:

  • Kerala, for instance, built on its historic relations with the region to plug in to the Gulf economy. 
  • Remittances from the Gulf boosted the Kerala economy, even funding its welfare net, while also helping to check unemployment in the state. 
  • There are many pockets in India that have benefited similarly from the Gulf economy. 
  • Even before the pandemic, two main factors seemed to be driving a change in this symbiotic relationship that has lasted nearly five decades and benefited both regions. 

Factors behind the change:

  • One, the national economies in the Gulf are slowing down, forcing companies to lay off people. 
  • Two, these countries now host a large indigenous population in the working-age segment that needs jobs. 
  • With no economic revival in sight, these nations may have to reduce dependency on expat workers and enforce quotas in the private sector to provide jobs to local youths.
  • Nationalisation of the workforce is an ambitious project. 
  • It is doubtful if the emirates, with small populations and even smaller pools of skilled workers, can keep the largely consumption-driven economies afloat without expat workers. 
  • Saudi Arabia’s experience is instructive. 

Domestic pressure:

  • However, states such as Kerala are gearing to address the influx of migrant workers from the Gulf. 
  • Last week, it announced Dream Kerala, a project to support the returning workers, to augment the existing welfare measures for NRIs. 
  • Over 1.5 lakh people have returned from the Gulf countries after the outbreak of COVID-19, of which close to 70,000 have lost jobs. 

Conclusion:

Prelims Questions:

Q.1). With reference to the Prerak Dauur Samman, consider the following statements:

1. It is part of Swachh Survekshan-2021, the sixth edition of the annual cleanliness survey of urban India conducted by Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs.
2. The Prerak Dauur Samman has a total of five additional sub- categories -Divya (Platinum), Anupam (Gold), Ujjwal (Silver), Udit (Bronze), Aarohi (Aspiring) - with top three cities being recognized in each. 

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both 1 and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2

Answer: C

Mains Questions:

Q.1). What do you mean by ex-pat quota bill? How will it impact Indians?

 

THE GIST of Editorial for UPSC Exams : 9 July 2020 Crisis of the future (Indian Express)



Crisis of the future (Indian Express)


Mains Paper 2:Social Justice 
Prelims level: Mid-day-meal scheme
Mains level: Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections of the population by the Centre and States and the performance of these schemes

Context: 

  • A report in this newspaper highlighted how, in Bihar’s Bhagalpur district, the COVID-19 crisis has affected one of the main weapons in the country’s fight against malnutrition — the Mid-Day Meal (MDM) Scheme. 
  • Children of one of the most marginalised Dalit communities in Bihar, the Musahars, have taken to rag-picking after the scheme, which guaranteed them one stable meal a day, came to a standstillin March.
  • National Human Rights Commission and the Patna High Court which flagged the newspaper’s report, proddedthe state government.

Corrective measures:

  • The state government claims to have taken immediate corrective action has issued a statewide order to ensure distribution of rations to school children for three months.
  • It also allowed transfer of money to their bank accounts, or that of their guardians, in lieu of the food scheme. 
  • But is that enough, given that child health experts have questioned the efficacy of dry rations as a substitute for cooked meals? 
  • The case of the Musahar children of Bhagalpur should lead to conversations about food security for children from underprivileged communities across the country during the pandemic. 
  • With schools closed and anganwadi workers engaged in COVID surveillance work, there is a real danger that the nutrition of such children could be compromised.

Mid-day-meal scheme:

  • Tamil Nadu was the first state to introduce the MDM scheme in the 1960s. 
  • The Central scheme to provide meals to school children began in 1995. 
  • However, initially, most states got away by providing dry rations. 
  • It took a Supreme Court order of 2001 for all states to introduce cooked meals. 
  • The order also specified that the meals should provide children with “at least 300 calories and 8-12 grams of protein each day of school for a minimum of 200 days in a year”. 
  • Since then, a large body of scholarly work has shown how hot, cooked food attracted students to schools and improved their nutritional status. 

Strengthening food security programs:

  • Taking suo motu cognisance of the matter on March 18, the Court asked states to ensure that “schemes for nutritional food for children are not adversely affected”. 
  • Most states, including Bihar, responded by substituting MDM with dry rations. 
  • But such rations may not be sufficient.
  • The pandemic has led to widespread economic distress. 
  • In such times, the need to strengthen food security programmes cannot be overstated, especially in Bihar — amongst the worst performers on child nutrition. 
  • It, and other states, have much to learn from Kerala, which ensured that the MDM scheme remained operational during the pandemic. 
  • States should also heed the SC’s warning: “While dealing with one crisis, the situation may not lead to creation of another crisis.”

Conclusion:

Prelims Questions:

Q.1). With reference to the Dharma Chakra Day / Asaadh Poornima, consider the following statements:

1. The International Buddhist Confederation (IBC), under the aegis of Ministry of Culture, Government of India, is celebrating Asadha Poornima on July 4, 2020, as Dharma Chakra Day. 
2. This day commemorates Buddha's First Sermon to his first five ascetic disciples at the Deer Park, Rsipatana in the present day Sarnath near Varanasi, UP. 

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both 1 and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2

Answer: C

Mains Questions:

Q.1). What is theMid-day meal scheme? Highlight its key features. What are the significance and concern associated with this?

THE GIST of Editorial for UPSC Exams : 9 July 2020 Green-lighting ecological decimation amidst a pandemic(The Hindu)



Green-lighting ecological decimation amidst a pandemic(The Hindu)


Mains Paper 3: Environment 
Prelims level: 
Mains level: Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment

Context: 

  • Few countries are witnessing such severe direct and indirect devastation on account of the COVID-19 pandemic as India. 
  • Yet, there is little attention on the roots of our vulnerability.
  • Our challenge is hardly limited to escaping a virus with lockdowns and masks in the short term, and vaccination in the long term.
  • It would be a mistake to approach the pandemic as a bolt from the blue, or an aberrationthat will eventually pass for ‘normalcy’ to return. 
  • Our vulnerabilities lie in the absence of equitable access to food, healthcare and housing.
  • Heart of global development models that sacrifice environmental resilience for limitless economic growth and wealth accumulation is indeed a huge concern.

Vulnerable to Pandemic outbreaks:

  • The 21st century has seen multiple lethal epidemics. 
  • Two were serious enough for the World Health Organization to designate as pandemics. 
  • The accelerating destruction of wild habitats, forests and diversified food systems for urbanisation, mining, and industry is a matter of concern.
  • The pathogens which were once largely confined to animals and plants in the wild are now better positioned to infect humans. 
  • The expansion of monoculture cropping and livestock farming systems, coupled with dense human settlements dependent on narrow diets of global commodity crops and meat, are eliminating the biodiversity and distance barriers that lent resilience to the human species and domesticated plants and animals. 
  • A virulent pathogen can then trigger an epidemic that much more easily. 
  • As long as we do not address this march to unsustainability, we will remain vulnerable to pandemic outbreaks.

Drawing the wrong lesson:

  • It is troubling then that our governments are drawing the opposite lesson from the COVID-19 challenge. 
  • Through the lockdown, ‘expert’ bodies of the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC) have considered, and in many cases cleared, multiple industrial, mining and infrastructure proposals in critical wildlife habitats, and life and livelihood-sustaining forests. 
  • These include the;
    • Etalin Hydropower Project in the biodiversity-rich Dibang valley of Arunachal Pradesh;
    • a coal mine in Assam’s Dehing Patkai Elephant Reserve;
    • diamond mining in the Panna forested belt;
    • a coal mine to be operated by Adani Enterprises with a coal-fired power plant in Odisha’s Talabira forests;
    • a limestone mine in the Gir National Park;
    • and a geo-technical investigation in the Sharavathi Lion-Tailed Macaque Sanctuary in Karnataka. 
  • As the environment site Mongabay reported in May, authorities considered these projects via video-conferencing in contravention of environmental laws, and without all necessary documents or site inspections, in many cases spending just 10 minutes on a proposal.

Draft environment impact assessment:  

  • No meaningful public consultation can take place amidst a pandemic and repeated lockdown. 
  • Yet, ignoring petitions ranging from environmentalists to students groups, the MoEFCC pressed ahead with a June 30 deadline for feedback on its draft Environment Impact Assessment (EIA) notification. 
  • It took a Delhi High Court ruling to extend the deadline to August 11.
  • As several groups have pointed out to the government, its draft will undermine environmental protection. 
  • As per the draft, starting a project before obtaining environmental approvals will no longer be a violation, and it can be regularised post-facto. 
  • Public hearings are riddled with problems and their content routinely ignored while awarding clearances, but they remain the only opportunity of voice for project-affected peoples and environmental and social experts. 
  • Instead of strengthening them, the notification proposes to exempt a wider range of projects from hearings, including those which authorities can arbitrarily designate as ‘strategic’. 
  • The draft even allows for a class of projects to secure clearance without putting out any information in the public domain.

 Violating environmental laws:

  • Despite demands from environmentalists, the draft notification says virtually nothing on improving monitoring, and compliance with clearance conditions and safeguards. 
  • This when the lockdown period itself has seen a horrific gas leak in Visakhapatnam, and a blowout of an oil well in Baghjan. 
  • In both instances, incalculable damage was caused to human and non-human lives by violating environmental laws.
  • Safeguarding the environment and front-line communities seems nowhere on the government’s agenda. 
  • Rather, its priorities are “unleashing coal”, as tweeted by the Coal Minister, and green clearances for “seamless economic growth”, as tweeted by the Environment Ministry in the lockdown weeks.

Environmental degradation:

  • The sum effect of all the above moves will be further environmental degradation. 
  • India already has an abysmalrecord of environmental destruction and development-induced displacement. 
  • The effects of these are overwhelmingly borne by Adivasi and other marginalised groups.
  • Jharkhand’s Chief Minister, who has moved the Supreme Court against the auctions amidst a pandemic, is a rare political leader flagging some environmental and equity questions. 
  • More typical is the Environment Minister Prakash Javadekar, whose retort to anyone raising environmental concerns over the past years is a sanguine ‘All is well’.

 Conclusion:

  • It takes a steadfastcommitment to ecological illiteracy to argue that wantonenvironmental destruction will deliver never-ending, seamless growth. 
  • These giant leaps backward will not make us atmanirbhar (self-reliant). 
  • Rather, they will further endanger habitats and lives, and intensify our vulnerability to infectious diseases and related socio-economic shocks.

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Prelims Questions:

Q.1). With reference to the International Day of Cooperatives, consider the following statements:

1. International Day of Cooperatives is being celebrated on 1st July under the theme “Let's cooperate and invite everyone to fight for climate action”. 
2. The International Day of Cooperatives is an annual celebration of the cooperative movement that takes place on the first Saturday of July since 1923. 

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both 1 and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2

Answer: B

Mains Questions:

Q.1). What is EIA? What are the process of issue destruction of wild habitats, forests and diversified food systems amidst pandemic? What steps the government should opt?

THE GIST of Editorial for UPSC Exams : 9 July 2020 The pandemic is about eyes shut(The Hindu)



The pandemic is about eyes shut(The Hindu)


Mains Paper 2:Social Justice 
Prelims level:NFSA
Mains level: Issues relating to poverty and hunger

Context: 

  • The contagion spreads rapidly and all those affected by the epidemic are quarantined in an asylum. 
  • Lack of equitable delivery of food, inhospitable and unhygienic living conditions, police brutality and apathyof power structures lead to panic among the blind. 
  • They are on the brink of starvation.

Data and Worker Anonymity:

  • Consider for example, the case of blindness regarding the number of migrant workers. 
  • The government’s own data sources are inconsistent and are a massive underestimate. 
  • The office of the Chief Labour Commissioner stated that there are 26 lakh migrants while various estimates, including the Economic Survey, put this number above 8 crore people. 
  • The anonymityof the workers has been reinforced as governments have not kept records of who they are and where they are working. 
  • This lack of accountability has given a free reinto the complex web of contractors and sub-contractors to exert various forms of exploitation. 
  • The migrant workers, like the characters in Blindness, have been rendered nameless in this unequal power gambit.

Hunger and Deaths:

  • Then, there is the blindness about hunger and deaths. On June 30, Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced free food grains for National Food Security Act (NFSA) beneficiaries till November. 
  • While it is a welcome move, it yet again excludes those without ration cards. 
  • As per estimates of Meghana Mungikar, Jean Drèze, and Reetika Khera, roughly 10 crore eligible beneficiaries continue to be excluded under the NFSA.
  • This is because the central government is still using 2011 Census data and hence underestimates NFSA coverage. 
  • Moreover, migrants and many self-employed workers do not have ration cards. 
  • At a time when the warehouses of the Food Corporation of India have 2.5 times the buffer stock norms, not universalising rations is inexplicable.

Gravity of crisis:

  • Two petitions concerning food and income support for migrants were summarily dismissed by the Supreme Court of India during lockdown. 
  • The Court finally took suo motu cognisanceof the crisis after 20 senior lawyers wrote a letter to the Chief Justice of India to intervene. 
  • The Solicitor General, Tushar Mehta, representing the Union of India, has submitted that there has been no death in the Shramik trains because of lack of water and food, and all deaths took place due to “earlier illnesses”. 
  • On May 15, Union Minister of Railways Piyush Goyal at Bennett University said, “We have gone through the entire three months without a single person starving.” 
  • In reality, there have been at least 850 non-COVID deaths due to an unplanned lockdown. 
  • Indian Railway Protection Force Service data show that there have been 80 deaths in Shramik trains alone between May 9 and May 27; most of these are due to starvation and financial distress. 
  • Numerous ground reports indicated the extent of hunger. 
  • As in Stranded Workers Action Network (SWAN) reports covering more than 34,000 workers, 50% had just one day of rations left and 64% had less than ₹100 when they reached out during the lockdown.
  • In such light, the combination of falsehoods and measured silence by the governing institutions and the judiciary indicate that they have refused to see the gravity of the crisis.

Museum of Misery:

  • As rising cases of COVID-19 suggest, the lockdown did not curbthe spread of the virus. It was a unilateral decision taken, apparently, to buy time to create health-care facilities. 
  • However, the government’s hubrisbackfired. 
  • The resilience and the perseverance of the migrants exerting their fundamental right to return pushed the government to respond this time. 
  • The SWAN report says: ‘While a part of the government’s slow response is due to the lack of empathy towards workers, a part is also the result of inefficiencies resulting from unilateral decision-making. 
  • Consequently, the government has created an archive of distress and a museum of misery.’ 
  • The mazeof obfuscatingtravel orders and the opacity surrounding train schedules was as if the migrants were made to play a cruel game of snakes and ladders. 
  • Even among them, most have had to pay for travel forms, pay bribes and face police brutality. 
  • The unlucky ones stayed back, some evicted from their rented spaces, waiting anxiously for their illusory chance to come. 

Way forward:

  • After continued hostility that workers were forced to endure, it is difficult to pin down the precise analytical reasons for the diverse expressions from migrants. 
  • Some have been resolute about returning immediately while some are unable to return home without earnings. 
  • Surveys cannot do full justice to understanding these amalgamof expressions and would at best create reductive categories. 
  • We definitely do not need piecemeal platitudes coming from the central government. 
  • We need many corrections such as stronger adherence to constitutional values, transparency and accountability from the government and the judiciary. 

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Prelims Questions:

Q.1). With reference to the Surety Bonds, consider the following statements:

1. Surety Bond is a two party agreement.
2. Surety bonds provide financial guarantee that contracts will be completed according to pre-defined and mutual terms.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both 1 and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2

Answer: B

Mains Questions:

Q.1). Analyse the impact of the migrant labour distress in contemporary India.

THE GIST of Editorial for UPSC Exams : 9 July 2020 A case for extension: On rural jobs scheme (The Hindu)



A case for extension: On rural jobs scheme (The Hindu)


Mains Paper 2:Social Justice
Prelims level: MGNREGS
Mains level: Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections of the population by the Centre and States and the performance of these schemes

Context: 

  • The finding that 8.4 lakh poor households have completed at least 80 days of the 100-day limit for work under the MGNREGS and 1.4 lakh among those have completed the full quota, should come as no surprise. 
  • These numbers are a fraction of the 4.6 crore households which have benefited from MGNREGS this year.
  • The fact that many poor households have nearly completed their full quota of employment under the scheme in just the last two months (May-June 2020) is a reflection of the distress that has driven them to take recourse to it. 

Relief measure:

  • With the COVID-19 pandemic and migrant labourers losing jobs in urban areas and returning to their rural homes to avoid destitution, the scheme has come as a huge relief to poor families. 
  • The government’s decision to extend it into the monsoon season has also benefited households. 
  • Data from this year show that in nearly two-thirds of the States, demand for MGNREGS work has doubled or even tripled in a number of districts compared to the previous year. 
  • Only in States where kharif crop was sown, the demand was relatively lower. 
  • But with some States resorting to their own shutdowns to curtail the spread of COVID-19, the prospects of a robust economic recovery that would benefit those engaged in casual labour and daily wage-labour remain dim.
  • The fairly good monsoon this season should help with providing for more agricultural jobs beyond the MGNREGS works as well.
  • The surging rate of demand for work under the scheme suggests that it is time the government thought about extending the limit, at least on a State-by-State basis. 
  • The swell in agrarian employment in the monsoon season notwithstanding, the excess supply of labour owing to reverse migration from the cities could depress wages. 
  • This makes an extension of the limit of work days under the MGNREGS even more imperative.

Insurance:

  • Since its implementation over a decade ago, the scheme has acted as insurance for rural dwellers during crop failures and agrarian crises. 
  • But the Centre’s outlook towards it continues to limit it only as a “fall-back” option for the poor. 
  • Even before the COVID-19-induced crisis, a lack of demand and falling consumption among the poor were constraining the economy. 
  • The MGNREGS, if utilised as more than just an insurance scheme and as a vehicle for rural development, could potentially address that problem. 
  • The lessons from its successes and failures could be used for a more comprehensive job guarantee plan that covers urban India too. 
  • Besides alleviatingdistress, this could also boost consumption and aid economic recovery. 

Conclusion:

  • An extension of the 100-day limit and comprehensive implementation of the scheme in rural areas can be the first step.

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Prelims Questions:

Q.1). With reference to the Heparin, consider the following statements:

1. It is a blood thinner that has been used only in patients having heart related diseases. 
2. It is used to reduce their risk of heart attacks.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both 1 and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2

Answer: B

Mains Questions:

Q.1) Highlights the objective and provision of the MGNREGS. What is the significance of the scheme amidst pandemic? What are the major challenges and reforms needed in this regard

(GIST OF YOJANA) Kisan Sabha App [June-2020]

(GIST OF YOJANA) Kisan Sabha App

[June-2020]

 Kisan Sabha App

  • In present situation of COVID 19, farmers are looking for help in their harvest reaching the market, seed/fertilizer procurement, etc. A robust supply chain management is urgently required to facilitate the timely delivery of the produce at the best possible prices.
  • Kisan Sabha App has been developed by CSIR Central Road Research Institute (CSIR-CRRI), New Delhi to connect farmers to supply chain and freight transportation management system.

About the portal:

  • The portal connects the farmers, transporters, Service providers (like pesticides/ fertilizer/ dealers, cold store and warehouse owner), mandi dealers, customers (like big retail outlets, online stores, institutional buyers) and other related entities for timely and effective solution.
  • The portal acts as a single stop for every entity related to agriculture, be they a farmer who needs better price for the crops or mandi dealer who wants to connect to more farmers or truckers who invariably go empty from the mandis.
  • KisanSabha also works for people in agriculture services sector such as dealers of fertilizers/ pesticides, who can reach out to more farmers for their services.
  • It would also prove to be useful for those associated with cold store(s) or godown(s). KisanSabha also provides a platform for people who want to buy directly from the farmers.
  • Kisan Sabha has 6 major modules taking care of Farmers/Mandi Dealers/Transporters/Mandi Board Members/ Service Providers/Consumers.

Objective:

  • Kisan Sabha aims to provide the most economical and timely logistics support to the farmers and to increase their profit margins by minimizing interference of middlemen and directly connecting with the institutional buyers.
  • It will also help in providing best market rates of crops by comparing nearest mandis, booking of freight vehicles at cheapest cost thereby giving maximum benefit to the farmers.

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(GIST OF YOJANA) Swasth Vayu [June-2020]

(GIST OF YOJANA) Swasth Vayu

[June-2020]

 Swasth Vayu

  • SIR-National Aerospace Laboratories (NAL) Bangalore, a constituent of lab of CSIR has developed a Non Invasive BiPAP Ventilator in a record time of 36 days to treat COVID-19 patients.
  • BiPAP Non Invasive ventilator is a microcontroller-based precise closed-loop adaptive control system with a built-in biocompatible “3D printed manifold & coupler” with HEPA filter (Highly Efficient Particulate Air Filter). These unique features help to alleviate the fear of the virus spread. It has features like Spontaneous, CPAP, Timed, AUTO BIPAP modes with provision to connect Oxygen concentrator or Enrichment unit externally. The system has been certified for safety and performance by NABL accredited agencies. The system has undergone stringent biomedical tests and beta clinical trials at NAL Health Centre.

Advantage:

  • The major advantage of this machine is that it is simple to use without any specialised nursing, cost effective, compact and configured with majority of indigenous components.
  • This is ideal for treating COVID-19 patients in Wards, Makeshift Hospitals, dispensaries and homes in the current Indian COVID-19 scenario.
  • CSIR-NAL is in process of taking it forward with the regulatory authorities for approval and expected to get shortly. CSIR-NAL has already initiated dialogue with major public/private industries as a partner for mass production.

Health:

  • Non-invasive Ventilator with externally connected Oxygen concentrator will be ideal to treat moderate or mid-stage severe COVID-19 patients who do not require intubation and invasive ventilation.

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(GIST OF YOJANA) Tropical Cyclones [June-2020]

(GIST OF YOJANA) Tropical Cyclones

[June-2020]

 Tropical Cyclones

Introduction:

  • Tropical cyclone Amphan intensified rapidly in the Bay of Bengal to become a “Super Cyclonic Storm” – the equivalent of a strong Category 4/weak Category 5 on the Saffir Simpson scale. It weakened ahead of landfall on Wednesday 20 May as a very severe cyclonic storm (strong Category 2 equivalent), bringing dangerous winds, storm surge and flooding to coastal areas of West Bengal in India and Bangladesh.
  • Amphan (pronounced Um-Pun) impacted densely populated areas, including the Indian city of Kolkata (Calcutta) at a time when restrictions due to the COVID-19 pandemic is complicating disaster management – and making it more necessary than ever before.

Tropical Cyclone Naming:

  • Tropical cyclones can last for a week or more; therefore there can be more than one cyclone at a time. Weather forecasters give each tropical cyclone a name to avoid confusion. Each year, tropical cyclones receive names in alphabetical order.
  • Women and men’s names are alternated. The name list is proposed by the National Meteorological and Hydrological Services (NMHSs) of WMO Members of a specific region, and approved by the respective tropical cyclone regional bodies at their annual/bi-annual sessions. Nations in the western North Pacific began using a new system for naming tropical cyclones in 2000.
  • There is a strict procedure to determine a list of tropical cyclone names in an ocean basin by the Tropical Cyclone Regional Body responsible for that basin at its annual/biennial meeting. There are five tropical cyclone regional bodies, i.e. ESCAP/WMO Typhoon Committee, WMO/ESCAP Panel on Tropical Cyclones, RA I Tropical Cyclone Committee, RA IV Hurricane Committee, and RA V Tropical Cyclone Committee.
  • Hurricane Committee determines a pre-designated list of hurricane names for six years separately at its annual session. The pre-designated list of hurricane names are proposed by its Members that include National Meteorological and Hydrological Services in the North/Central America and the Caribbean. Naming procedures in other regions are almost the same as in the Caribbean. In some of the regions, the lists are established by alphabetical order of the names. In other regions, the lists are established following the alphabetical order of the country names. In general, tropical cyclones are named according to the rules at a regional level.
  • World Meteorological Organization maintains rotating lists of names which are appropriate for each Tropical Cyclone basin. If a cyclone is particularly deadly or costly, then its name is retired and replaced by another one.

Objective:

  • It is important to note that tropical cyclones/hurricanes/typhoons are not named after any particular person. The tropical cyclone/hurricane/typhoon names selected are those that are familiar to the people in each region.
  • Obviously, the main purpose of naming a tropical cyclone/hurricane is basically for people easily to understand and remember the tropical cyclone/hurricane/typhoon in a region, thus to facilitate tropical cyclone/hurricane/typhoon disaster risk awareness, preparedness, management and reduction.

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(The Gist of Science Reporter) Electronic Skin — Human-machine Interface  [JUNE-2020]


(The Gist of Science Reporter) Electronic Skin — Human-machine Interface

 [JUNE-2020]


Electronic Skin — Human-machine Interface

  • WeI Gao, assistant professor at Caltech’s Andrew and Peggy Cherng Department of Medical Engineering, has developed an electronic skin, or e-skin, which can be applied directly on top of the real skin.
  • The newly developed e-skin which is made from soft, flexible rubber, can be embedded with sensors. These sensors can monitor information like body temperature, heart rate, levels of blood sugar and metabolic by-products that are indicators of health, and even the nerve signals that control our muscles. It does not require a battery, as it runs solely on biofuel cells powered by one of the body’s own waste products.
  • According to Gao, “One of the major challenges with these kinds of wearable devices is on the power side. Many people are using batteries, but that’s not very sustainable. Some people have tried using solar cells or harvesting the power of human motion, but we wanted to know, ‘Can we get sufficient energy from sweat to power the wearables?’ and the answer is yes.”

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Courtesy: Science Reporter

(The Gist of Science Reporter) GOKADDAL —World’s First-ever Digital Solutions exchange Cloud  [JUNE-2020]


(The Gist of Science Reporter) GOKADDAL —World’s First-ever Digital Solutions exchange Cloud

 [JUNE-2020]


GOKADDAL —World’s First-ever Digital Solutions exchange Cloud

  • GOKADDAL, the world’s first Digital Solutions Exchange in Cloud, was launched in India. gokaddal.com is a cloud-based solution exchange platform. It mainly emphasises on 4A’s – Automation, Artificial Intelligence, Analytics and Augmentative Technologies. It is a Business to Business (B2B), Business to Government (B2G), Business to Consumer (B2C) solution platform connecting solution providers to solution seekers.
  • It is also an innovative platform for Startups and SME companies. It seeks to facilitate how digital solutions are sourced, delivered and managed. Gokkadal Technologies is a Dubai based emerging Technology company and is a part of the Mekado Group at Bangalore, Karnataka.

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(The Gist of Science Reporter) Apple Unveils COVID-19 Information App and Website  [JUNE-2020]


(The Gist of Science Reporter) Apple Unveils COVID-19 Information App and Website

 [JUNE-2020]


Apple Unveils COVID-19 Information App and Website

  • Apple has also launched a website and a new application devoted to the screening of COVID-19.
  • The resources provide an online screening tool, information regarding the disease, and also provides guidance suggesting when to seek testing or emergency care.
  • The site and the application are developed by Apple in collaboration with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), and the White House. The app is available for download on the App Store.

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(The Gist of PIB) Initiatives launched on International Day of Biodiversity  [JUNE-2020]


(The Gist of PIB) Initiatives launched on International Day of Biodiversity

 [JUNE-2020]

Initiatives launched on International Day of Biodiversity

  • On the occasion of the International Day for Biological Diversity 2020, Union Minister of Environment launched five key initiatives towards conservation of biodiversity.
  • The year 2020 is also the “SUPER YEAR FOR BIODIVERSITY”, as the Strategic Plan for Biodiversity with 20 global Aichi targets adopted in 2010 ends in 2020 and all the countries together are in the process of preparation of Post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework.

Biodiversity Samrakshan Internship Program:

  • This is an initiative of National Biodiversity Authority (NBA) and United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).
  • The program proposes to engage 20 students with postgraduate degrees for a period of one year to support the projects of NBA in various State/UTs and to technically assist the State Biodiversity Boards/UTs Biodiversity Council in discharge of their mandates.
  • Not all Animals Migrate by Choice:
  • The Campaign on Illegal Trafficking of Endangered Species: ‘Not all Animals Migrate by Choice’ was launched by the Wildlife Crime Control Bureau, with UNEP.
  • Illegal trade in wildlife carries the risk of spreading dangerous pandemics. It seeks to address these environmental challenges, to raise awareness, and to advocate solutions.

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(The Gist of PIB) Alternative dwarfing genes in wheat can eliminate rice crop residue burning  [JUNE-2020]


(The Gist of PIB) Alternative dwarfing genes in wheat can eliminate rice crop residue burning

 [JUNE-2020]

 Alternative dwarfing genes in wheat can eliminate rice crop residue burning

  • Scientists at Pune based Agharkar Research Institute (ARI), an autonomous institute of the Department of Science and Technology, have mapped two alternative dwarfing genes Rht14 and Rht18 in wheat.

About:

  • These genes are associated with better seedling vigour and longer coleoptiles (sheath protecting the young shoot tip).
  • They have mapped the dwarfing genes on chromosome 6A in durum wheat, and DNA-based markers were developed for a better selection of these genes in wheat breeding lines.
  • The DNA-based markers will help wheat breeders to precisely select wheat lines carrying these alternative dwarfing genes from a massive pool of wheat breeding lines.
  • These DNA based markers are being used at ARI for marker-assisted transfer of these genes in Indian wheat varieties, so as to make them suitable for sowing under rice stubble-retained conditions and dry environments.
  • Wheat lines with these alternative dwarfing genes, apart from reducing crop residue burning, can allow deeper sowing of wheat seeds to avail advantage of residual moisture in the soil under dry environments.

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(The Gist of PIB) Promoting Beekeeping as part of its aim to double farmers’ income  [JUNE-2020]


(The Gist of PIB) Promoting Beekeeping as part of its aim to double farmers’ income

 [JUNE-2020]

 Promoting Beekeeping as part of its aim to double farmers’ income

  • Union Agriculture Minister said that Government of India is promoting Beekeeping as part of its aim to double farmers’ income by 2024.

About:

  • Government has allocated Rs.500 crore towards Beekeeping under the Atma Nirbhar Abhiyan.
  • India is among the world’s top five honey producers.
  • Compared to 2005-06 honey production has risen by 242% and exports shot by 265%.
  • The National Bee Board has created four modules to impart training as part of the National Beekeeping and Honey Mission (NBHM) and 30 lakh farmers have been trained in beekeeping.
  • Government has launched ‘Honey Mission’ as part of ‘Sweet Revolution.’

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