Key Facts about Canada

Key Facts about Canada

Canada Latest News

Recently, India and Canada signed a Joint Statement on Energy Cooperation on the sidelines of India Energy Week (IEW) 2026 in Goa.

About Canada

  • Location: It is located in the northern part of North America.
  • It is the second largest country in the world in area (after Russia).
  • Bordered by: It shares borders with Alaska, a non-contiguous US state, to the northwest, and 12 other US states to the south.
    • The border of Canada with the US is the longest bi-national land border in the world.
  • Maritime Borders: It is bounded by the Arctic Ocean to the north, by the Atlantic Ocean to the east and the Pacific Ocean to the west.
    • It also shares maritime borders with the island of Greenland in the northeast and the French island regions of Saint Pierre and Miquelon in the southeast. 
  • Capital City: Ottawa

Geographical Features of Canada

  • Climate: Canada has seven climatic regions or zones: the Arctic, Subarctic, Prairie, Great Lakes, Cordilleran, plus the East and West Coasts. 
  • Major Mountains: ​Rocky Mountain, the St. Elias Mountains  and the Laurentian Mountains.
  • Major Rivers:  Mackenzie River, Yukon River, Saint Lawrence River
  • Lakes: The five Great Lakes namely Superior, Michigan, Huron, Ontario, and Erie form a natural boundary between Canada and the United States. (Amongst these five, only Lake Michigan lies entirely within the US).
  • Natural Resources: Bauxite, Iron ore, Nickel, Zinc, copper, gold, lead, uranium, rare earth elements, potash, diamonds etc.

Source: DD News

Canada FAQs

Q1: Which country borders Canada to the south?

Ans: United States

Q2: How many Great Lakes form a natural boundary between Canada and the US?

Ans: 5

Q3: Which Great Lake lies entirely within the US?

Ans: Lake Michigan

NPS Swasthya Pension Scheme (NSPS)

NPS Swasthya Pension Scheme (NSPS)

NPS Swasthya Pension Scheme (NSPS) Latest News

The Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA) recently rolled out the NPS Swasthya Pension Scheme (NSPS) on a pilot basis.

About NPS Swasthya Pension Scheme (NSPS)

  • It is a new initiative launched by the Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA) as a Proof of Concept (PoC) under its Regulatory Sandbox Framework. 
  • The initiative aims to integrate health-related financial benefits with the existing National Pension System (NPS) framework.
  • The scheme, launched for a limited and controlled period, is designed to provide financial support for out-patient and in-patient medical expenses. 
  • The scheme will function as a sector-specific contributory pension scheme within the Multiple Scheme Framework (MSF) of NPS and will be offered to Indian citizens on a voluntary basis.
  • It will be launched by Pension Funds after obtaining prior approval from PFRDA. 
  • As it is being implemented as a pilot project, only a restricted number of subscribers will be enrolled during the PoC phase.
  • To facilitate the pilot, certain provisions of the PFRDA (Exits and Withdrawals under NPS) Regulations, 2015, have been relaxed. 
  • Pension Funds may also collaborate with FinTech firms and health service administrators to implement the scheme.

NPS Swasthya Pension Scheme (NSPS) Features

  • Any Indian citizen is eligible to join the scheme, but a Common Scheme Account under NPS is mandatory.
  • Subscribers can contribute any amount, in line with existing NPS guidelines applicable to the non-government sector.
  • Subscribers aged above 40 years (excluding government sector subscribers) may transfer up to 30% of their contributions from the Common Scheme Account to the Swasthya Pension Scheme.
  • Partial withdrawals are permitted for medical expenses up to 25% of the subscriber’s own contributions, with no limit on the number of withdrawals, subject to a minimum accumulated corpus of ₹50,000.
  • In cases of critical inpatient treatment, where medical expenses exceed 70% of the available corpus, subscribers may opt for 100% premature withdrawal solely to meet such medical costs.
  • Claim Settlement and Safeguards:
    • Amounts withdrawn under the scheme will be paid directly to the Health Benefit Administrator (HBA), Third Party Administrator (TPA), or hospital, based on valid claims and supporting bills. 
    • Any surplus remaining after settlement of medical expenses will be transferred back to the subscriber’s Common Scheme Account.

Source: BS

NPS Swasthya Pension Scheme (NSPS) FAQs

Q1: Which authority launched the NPS Swasthya Pension Scheme?

Ans: The Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA).

Q2: What is the main objective of the NPS Swasthya Pension Scheme?

Ans: To integrate medical expense support with the existing NPS framework.

Q3: What types of medical expenses are covered under the scheme?

Ans: Out-patient and in-patient medical expenses.

Q4: Is participation in the NPS Swasthya Pension Scheme mandatory?

Ans: No, it is offered on a voluntary basis.

Tehri Lake

Tehri Lake

Tehri Lake Latest News

Two paraglider pilots were rescued by the State Disaster Response Force (SDRF) recently after they lost control and fell into Tehri Lake during the three-day Acro Festival & SIV Championship Tehri 2026.

About Tehri Lake

  • It is an artificial dam reservoir located in the Tehri Garhwal town of Uttarakhand.
  • It came into existence during the construction of Tehri Dam when the water from the Bhagirathi River was diverted to fill the dam reservoir. 
  • It lies at an elevation of 1,700 meters.
  • The depth of Tehri Lake is around 262 meters, and the length is 42 kms. 
  • Filled with multi-purpose rock and earth, Tehri Dam Lake was created with the motive of supplying water for generating electricity, drinking, and irrigation.
  • It is surrounded by the majestic Himalayan mountains, making it a picturesque destination.

Key Facts about Tehri Dam

  • It is a multipurpose dam built on the Bhagirathi River (one of the source streams of the Ganges River) in the Garhwal district of Uttarakhand.
  • Reaching a height of 260 meters, it is one of the tallest dams in the world and the tallest dam in India.
  • The construction of the Tehri Dam was completed in 2006. 
  • It is an earth and rock-fill dam, and its primary purpose is to generate hydroelectricity.
  • The installed hydro capacity is 1,000 MW along with an additional 1,000 MW of pumped storage hydroelectricity. 
  • It is managed by Tehri Hydro Development Corporation (THDC) India Limited, a subsidiary of the National Thermal Power Corporation (NTPC) Limited.

Source: TOI

Tehri Lake FAQs

Q1: What is Tehri Lake?

Ans: It is an artificial reservoir created by the Tehri Dam.

Q2: Where is Tehri Lake located?

Ans: Near Tehri Garhwal town in Uttarakhand.

Q3: At what elevation is Tehri Lake situated?

Ans: At about 1,700 metres above sea level.

Q4: What type of dam is associated with Tehri Lake?

Ans: A multi-purpose rock and earth-filled dam.

Pechora Missile System

Pechora Missile System

Pechora Missile System Latest News

Bengaluru-based defence equipment manufacturer Alpha Design Technologies Ltd (ADTL) has completed a major upgrade of the ’s (IAF) Pechora, a surface-toair missile (SAM) system, in line with the Centre’s push for modernising ageing military hardware through indigenous capability.

About Pechora Missile System

  • The Pechora, officially known as the S-125 Neva/Pechora, is a Soviet-origin, medium-range surface-to-air missile (SAM) system designed to intercept low- to medium-altitude targets.
  • It has been a mainstay of India’s air defence network since the 1970s.

Pechora Missile System Features

  • The system consists of a radar-guided missile launcher and a fire control unit, typically employing the V-600 missile. 
  • It uses the 4R90 Yatagan radar, equipped with five parabolic antennas, to detect, track, and lock onto targets.
  • Once a threat is identified, the system can launch missiles to intercept and destroy it mid-air.
  • It is particularly effective against slow-moving or low-flying targets, making it well-suited for countering drones and cruise missiles. 
  • It can operate independently or as part of a larger, integrated air defence network, and is capable of functioning even in environments with heavy electronic jamming.
  • Range: The Pechora system has an operational firing range of up to 30–35.4 km, with some upgraded versions reaching 35.4 km.
  • Altitude: It can engage targets flying at altitudes from as low as 20 meters up to 20–25 km, making it versatile for both low and medium-altitude threats.
  • Detection: The system’s radar can detect targets up to 100 km away, providing early warning and engagement capability.
  • Accuracy: The Pechora boasts a high kill probability of around 92% and can engage up to two targets simultaneously at speeds up to 900 m/s.

Source: TOI

Pechora Missile System FAQs

Q1: What is the Pechora Missile System?

Ans: It is a Soviet-origin, medium-range surface-to-air missile (SAM) system.

Q2: What is the official designation of the Pechora Missile System?

Ans: S-125 Neva/Pechora.

Q3: Which missile is typically employed by the Pechora system?

Ans: The V-600 missile.

Q4: What is the operational firing range of the Pechora missile system?

Ans: Up to about 30–35.4 km.

Q5: What is the maximum radar detection range of the Pechora system?

Ans: Up to about 100 km.

PAIMANA Portal

PAIMANA Portal

PAIMANA Portal Latest News

The Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) has operationalised a new web-based portal, PAIMANA portal for the mandated monitoring of Central Sector Infrastructure Projects worth ₹150 crore and above.

About PAIMANA Portal

  • The Project Assessment, Infrastructure Monitoring & Analytics for Nation-building (PAIMANA) is a flagship initiative of the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI).
  • It functions as a centralised national repository of infrastructure projects, enabling web-generated analytical reports and enhancing data accuracy, and operational efficiency.
  • It is integrated with DPIIT’s Integrated Project Monitoring Portal (IPMP/IIG-PMG) through APIs.

Key Features of the PAIMANA Portal

  • Centralized Project Monitoring: It serves as a centralized project monitoring system, providing a single-window interface for ministries, departments, and implementing agencies to upload, track, and review project information.
  • Real-time Dashboards: It features real-time dashboards with drill-down capabilities, enabling users to monitor progress across sectors, states, and timelines.
  • Advanced Data Analytics: It includes advanced data analytics, role-based user access, interactive dashboards, reporting and query modules, and review cases for identification of data gaps.
  • It is mandated to monitor Central Sector Infrastructure Projects worth ₹150 crore and above.

Source: PIB

PAIMANA Portal FAQs

Q1: What is the primary objective of PAIMANA Portal?

Ans: To monitor infrastructure projects

Q2: Which ministry launched the PAIMANA Portal?

Ans: Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation

Kyasanur Forest Disease

Kyasanur Forest Disease

Kyasanur Forest Disease Latest News

A 29-year-old man in Karnataka has tragically lost his life recently after contracting Kyasanur Forest Disease (KFD), commonly known as monkey fever, bringing fresh attention to a disease that often goes unnoticed until it turns fatal.

About Kyasanur Forest Disease 

  • It is a tick-borne viral haemorrhagic disease mostly found in southern India.
  • The disease was first reported from the Kyasanur Forest of Karnataka in India in 1957; hence, it is known as KFD.
  • The causal agent, KFD Virus (family Flaviviridae, genus Flavivirus), is a member of the tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) complex. 
  • It is also known as “monkey disease/monkey fever” because of its association with monkey deaths. 

Kyasanur Forest Disease Transmission

  • Hard ticks (Hemaphysalis spinigera) spread the KFD virus to people and to animals, like monkeys and rodents.
  • Transmission to humans may occur after a tick bite or contact with an infected animal, most importantly a sick or recently dead monkey.
  • KFD does not spread between people.
  • The epidemic period usually begins in October or November and peaks from January to April, then declines by May and June.

Kyasanur Forest Disease Symptoms

  • Sudden onset of high-grade fever, prostration, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and occasionally neurological and haemorrhagic manifestations.
  • Between 5 and 10% of people who are known to be affected by KFD die.

Kyasanur Forest Disease Treatment

  • There is no cure for KFD.
  • Supportive care is crucial, including fluid balance, providing oxygen, managing blood pressure, and treating additional infections.
  • With quick medical care, many patients recover from KFD without complications. 

Kyasanur Forest Disease  Vaccine

A vaccine for KFD is available and recommended in the parts of India where KFD is found.

Source: TOI

Kyasanur Forest Disease FAQs

Q1: What is Kyasanur Forest Disease (KFD)?

Ans: It is a tick-borne viral haemorrhagic disease found mainly in southern India.

Q2: Where was Kyasanur Forest Disease first reported?

Ans: In the Kyasanur Forest of Karnataka.

Q3: Why is Kyasanur Forest Disease also called “monkey disease” or “monkey fever”?

Ans: Because it is associated with deaths of monkeys.

Q4: Which vector transmits Kyasanur Forest Disease?

Ans: Hard ticks, mainly Hemaphysalis spinigera.

Q5: Can Kyasanur Forest Disease spread from person to person?

Ans: No, it does not spread between humans.

Economic Survey 2025–26 Preface – Towards an Entrepreneurial State in an Uncertain World

Economic Survey 2025-26

Economic Survey 2025-26 Latest News

  • The Economic Survey 2025–26, tabled in Parliament by the Union Minister for Finance and Corporate Affairs, Smt. Nirmala Sitharaman, reflects on India’s post-Covid economic resilience amid rising global geopolitical and economic uncertainties. 
  • The Preface departs from conventional macroeconomic commentary and makes a strong normative case for transforming India into an “entrepreneurial state” capable of navigating uncertainty while pursuing the goal of Viksit Bharat.

Reconfigured Economic Survey

  • Structural changes:
    • The Economic Survey 2025-26 expanded to 17 chapters - indicating greater depth and breadth.
    • Chapters are rearranged based on national priority and relevance, not convention.
  • Special essays on:
    • Evolution of Artificial Intelligence
    • Quality of life in Indian cities
    • State capacity, private sector and households in achieving strategic resilience and strategic indispensability.

Core Theme - Entrepreneurial Policy Making under Uncertainty

  • Fundamental shift in the role of the State: From risk-averse, compliance-driven governance to risk-structuring, capability-driven and adaptive governance.
  • Key features of an ‘Entrepreneurial State’:
    • It acts before certainty emerges, structures and manages risk, rather than avoiding it.
    • It will learn from systematic experimentation, and correct course without policy paralysis.
  • Significance: This vision is presented as practical and already unfolding, not merely aspirational.

Early Signals of the Entrepreneurial State

  • The Survey highlights ongoing initiatives as evidence of this shift. For example,
    • Mission-mode platforms (e.g., Semiconductors, Green Hydrogen).
    • Public procurement reforms enabling first-of-a-kind domestic innovation.
    • State-level deregulation compacts, replacing inspection-based controls with trust-based compliance.
  • These initiatives mark a transition from regulation to capability building.

India’s Macroeconomic Resilience in a Turbulent World

  • Despite the Covid-19 shock, US tariffs imposed (in April 2025), rising global fragmentation, India has demonstrated strong macroeconomic fundamentals.
  • For example, expected real GDP growth of over 7% in 2025–26, with momentum continuing into the next year.
  • However, the Survey identifies a “Paradox of 2025”:
    • India’s strongest macroeconomic performance in decades coincides with a global system that no longer rewards macroeconomic prudence with currency stability, capital inflows, or insulation from shocks.

Global Headwinds vs India’s Aspirations

  • India, with 145 crore people, aims to become a high-income country within a generation, within a democratic framework—a path with no ready-made global template.
  • The Survey notes:
    • Retreat of the global dominant power from earlier commitments.
    • Rising trade frictions, geopolitical rivalries, and economic nationalism.
  • These headwinds can become tailwinds only if the State, private sector, and households align and commit to sustained effort.

Three Possible Global Scenarios for 2026

  • Managed disorder:
    • Less coordinated world
    • Higher risk aversion
    • Integrated yet distrustful global system
    • Narrower margin of safety
  • Disorderly multipolar breakdown:
    • Intensified strategic rivalry
    • Coercive trade, sanctions, supply chain realignments
    • Greater trade-offs between autonomy, growth, and stability
  • Systemic shock cascade (low probability, high impact): Financial, technological, and geopolitical shocks amplify each other - potentially worse than the 2008 Global Financial Crisis.

India’s Relative Strengths

  • India is better placed than many countries due to:
    • Large domestic market
      • Less financialised growth model
      • Strong foreign exchange reserves
      • Credible strategic autonomy
  • Yet, a common risk across all scenarios remains:
    • Disruption of capital flows
    • Sustained pressure on the rupee

Running a Marathon and Sprint Simultaneously

  • External sector imperative: Rising incomes will inevitably lead to rising imports. Therefore, India must generate export earnings, and foreign investor confidence.
  • Policy stance for 2026:
    • Focus on supply stability, resource buffers, diversification of routes and payment systems.
    • Adopt strategic sobriety, not defensive pessimism.
  • India must “India must run a marathon and sprint simultaneously, or run a marathon as if it were a sprint”—maximising growth while absorbing shocks.

Challenges

  • India’s central challenge - Policy and process reforms:
    • The Survey underlines that policy reforms are necessary, and process reforms are even more critical.
    • Why? Processes govern state–citizen interaction. They determine whether policy intent succeeds or fails.
    • Positive signals: State-led deregulation and smart regulation, and shift from control to enabling governance.
  • Other challenges:
    • Global geopolitical fragmentation and economic coercion
    • Capital flow volatility and exchange rate pressures
    • Need for rapid institutional adaptation
    • Balancing growth with resilience and stability

Way Forward

  • Integrating 3 pillars for Viksit Bharat:
    • The Survey integrates three pillars: state capacity, societal participation, and deregulation.
    • In a democracy, the State remains the principal development agent, but must upskill and reskill, be mentally prepared for a hostile and uncertain global terrain, and adapt to the reality that old rules no longer apply.
  • Strategic opportunity amid global crises:
    • Potential global crises may open space for India to shape the emerging global order, and enhance strategic influence and indispensability.
    • This demands the most agile, flexible and purposeful governance since Independence.
  • Delayed gratification over short-term fixes:
    • The Survey advocates resilience over quick wins, innovation and persistence over short-term pressure management.
    • This will help India to stay committed to Viksit Bharat amid prolonged global churn.
  • Other suggestions:
    • Deepen entrepreneurial governance.
    • Strengthen process reforms and deregulation.
    • Build buffers, redundancy, and liquidity.
    • Align state, market, and society towards long-term national goals.
    • Invest in state capacity and institutional learning.

Conclusion

  • The Economic Survey 2025–26 Preface redefines India’s economic strategy for an era of uncertainty. 
  • It calls for an entrepreneurial, adaptive and resilient State that can sustain high growth while absorbing shocks. 
  • In a volatile global order, India’s path to Viksit Bharat lies not in quick fixes, but in patient resilience, relentless innovation, and strategic sobriety—running the marathon of development at the pace of a sprint.

Source: PIB

[youtube url="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wu66P3clSAU" width="560" height="315"]

Economic Survey 2025–26 FAQs

Q1: What does the Economic Survey 2025–26 mean by an “entrepreneurial state”?

Ans: It is one that acts before certainty emerges, structures risk instead of avoiding it, learns through experimentation.

Q2: What is the “Paradox of 2025”?

Ans: India achieved its strongest macroeconomic performance while operating in a global system that no longer rewards such success.

Q3: What are the common macroeconomic risks for India?

Ans: Disruption of capital flows leading to sustained pressure on the rupee.

Q4: Why does the Economic Survey emphasise process reforms over policy reforms?

Ans: Because administrative processes shape state–citizen interaction and determine whether policy intent translates into effective outcomes.

Q5: What is meant by the metaphor of “running a marathon and sprint simultaneously”?

Ans: It signifies India’s need to maximise domestic growth while simultaneously building buffers, liquidity, and shock-absorption capacity.

Solar Cycles

Solar Cycles

Solar Cycles Latest News

Recently, the IIT-Kanpur team developed a new way to predict solar cycles.

About Solar Cycles

  • The solar cycle describes an approximately 11-year cycle of solar activity driven by the sun's magnetic field.
  • It is indicated by the frequency and intensity of sunspots visible on the surface. 
  • Every 11 years or so, the Sun's magnetic field completely flips.
  • This means that the Sun's north and south poles switch places. Then it takes about another 11 years for the Sun’s north and south poles to flip back again.
  • The solar cycle affects activity on the surface of the Sun, such as sunspots, which are caused by the Sun’s magnetic fields.
  • As the magnetic fields change, so does the amount of activity on the Sun’s surface.
  • It can be tracked by counting the number of sunspots.
  • Cycle Stages
    • Solar minimum: It is the beginning of a solar cycle or when the Sun has the least sunspots.
      • Over time, solar activity—and the number of sunspots—increases.
    • Solar maximum: It is the middle of the solar cycle or when the Sun has the most sunspots.
      • As the cycle ends, it fades back to the solar minimum, and then a new cycle begins.
  • Impact: The solar cycle has the potential to impact Earth’s climatic conditions through changes in solar radiation, cosmic rays, and ozone distribution.

Source: TH

Solar Cycles FAQs

Q1: What is the primary driver of the solar cycle?

Ans: Sun's magnetic field

Q2: What is the term for the period of maximum sunspot activity?

Ans: Solar Maximum

Has Health Spending by the Centre Increased in India?

Health Spending

Health Spending Latest News

  • Recent data show that while States have increased health expenditure, the Union government’s health spending as a share of GDP has declined in the post-pandemic period.

Background: Health Financing Commitments in India

  • India’s health financing framework has long acknowledged the need for higher public investment. 
  • The National Health Policy (NHP), 2017, committed to increasing total public health expenditure from 1.15% of GDP to 2.5% by 2025. 
  • A key pillar of this commitment was enhancing the Union government’s contribution, envisaged at 40% of total public health spending.
  • However, the policy target has not been achieved. As of 2025-26, India remains significantly below the stated goals, raising concerns about fiscal prioritisation of health in national budgeting.

Trends in Public Health Spending in India

  • India’s public health expenditure remains among the lowest globally. 
  • Comparative data show that countries such as Bhutan, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and Malaysia spend several times more per capita on health than India. Even among BRICS nations, India’s per capita public health spending is markedly lower.
  • During the COVID-19 pandemic, public health spending as a percentage of GDP rose temporarily. 
  • However, this increase was driven largely by State governments, not by sustained expansion in Union government allocations.

Union Government Health Spending: Declining Priority

  • According to Reserve Bank of India data, the Union government’s health expenditure declined from 0.37% of GDP in 2020-21 to 0.29% in 2025-26 (Budget Estimates). 
  • In real terms, the 2025-26 health allocation is 4.7% lower than actual spending in 2020-21, after adjusting for inflation.
  • This decline indicates that the modest priority accorded to health during the pandemic has not been sustained. 
  • The share of health in the total Union Budget has also fallen from 2.26% to 2.05% during this period, signalling a relative de-prioritisation.

State Governments Driving Health Expenditure Growth

  • In contrast, States and Union Territories have increased health spending consistently since 2017-18. 
  • Health expenditure by States rose from 0.67% of GDP in 2017-18 to 1.1% in 2025-26, with the share of health in State budgets increasing from 5% to 5.6%.
  • This trend highlights a structural imbalance: while health is primarily a State subject, the fiscal capacity of States depends heavily on Union transfers. Reduced Central spending, which directly affects frontline healthcare delivery.

Health and Education Cess: Limited Impact on Health Budgets

  • The Health and Education Cess (HEC), introduced in 2018-19 at 4% of taxable income, was intended to augment health spending. 
  • However, evidence suggests that cess collections have largely been absorbed into general revenues rather than used to expand health budgets.
  • In FY 2023-24, only about one-fourth of the Rs. 71,180 crore collected through HEC was allocated to health. 
  • Excluding cess contributions, the Union government’s health spending declined by 22.5% in real terms between 2020-21 and 2023-24.

Cuts in Centrally Sponsored Health Schemes

  • Another major concern is the declining share of Union spending transferred to States through Centrally Sponsored Schemes (CSS)
  • This share fell from 75.9% in 2014-15 to about 43% in 2024-25.
  • Key schemes such as the National Health Mission (NHM), which has been central to strengthening rural and urban health infrastructure since 2005, have seen stagnation or real-term declines in funding. 
  • During the second tenure of the NDA government, NHM spending declined by 5.5% annually in real terms, weakening public health system capacity.

Implications for Public Health Outcomes

  • Low and declining Central investment has several implications:
    • Increased out-of-pocket expenditure for households
    • Strain on State finances, especially poorer States
    • Weakened preventive and primary healthcare systems
    • Reduced preparedness for future health emergencies
  • These trends undermine India’s ability to achieve Universal Health Coverage and meet Sustainable Development Goal targets related to health.

Source: TH

Health Spending FAQs

Q1: What was the health spending target under the National Health Policy, 2017?

Ans: It aimed to raise public health expenditure to 2.5% of GDP by 2025.

Q2: Has Union government health spending increased since COVID-19?

Ans: No, it has declined from 0.37% to 0.29% of GDP post-pandemic.

Q3: Which level of government has driven recent increases in health spending?

Ans: State governments and Union Territories.

Q4: Has the Health and Education Cess significantly boosted health budgets?

Ans: No, most cess proceeds have not translated into higher health allocations.

Q5: Why is reduced Central health spending a concern?

Ans: It weakens State health systems and limits access to affordable public healthcare.

Vishwamitri River

Vishwamitri River Latest News

The Vishwamitri River passes through the city of Vadodara in Gujarat and is commonly known as India’s Crocodile River due to the presence of mugger crocodiles in and around the urban area.

About Vishwamitri River

  • It is a small non-perennial river located in Gujarat.
  • Course
    • It originates from the western and southern slopes of the Pavagadh hills in eastern Gujarat. 
    • The river flows westward, through Gujarat’s third-largest city, Vadodara, after which it meets the two tributaries of Dhadar and Jambuva before draining into the Arabian Sea via the Gulf of Khambhat.
  • Total Length: 200 km
  • The highly meandering, sinuous river has a unique ecosystem bearing a plethora of beautiful ravines right from its beginning till its end.
  • Porcupines, the common Indian civet, the jungle cat, cobras, pythons, the checkered keelback, and the Bengal monitor are some of the species found in the ravines on the banks of this river. 
  • Vishwamitri is also where the protected and vulnerable species of the Indian crocodile (Crocodylus palustris), also known as the mugger, resides.
  • A 2025 census recorded 442 mugger crocodiles within a 21-kilometre stretch flowing through Vadodara.
  • Historically, the river has been central to Vadodara’s development, with human settlements along its banks dating back to 1000 B.C.

Key Facts about Mugger Crocodiles

  • It is one of the 24 extant species of crocodilians found globally.
  • The crocodile’s common name comes from magar, which translates loosely to “water monster” in the Hindi and Urdu languages.
  • Distribution
    • The mugger’s geographic range extends from extreme southeastern Iran eastward to Bangladesh and from Nepal and northern India south to Sri Lanka.
    • In India it is found in 15 Indian states, with the largest populations in the middle Ganges (Bihar-Jharkhand) and Chambal (Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat and Rajasthan) basins.
  • Habitat
    • It is most commonly found in freshwater environments such as rivers, lakes, hill streams, and village ponds. 
    • It can live in fresh water and coastal saltwater lagoons.
    • This species makes burrows on land in a wide variety of habitats.
  • Features:
    • The maximum length for this crocodile is 4-5 meters, and maximum weight is 700 kg. 
    • It has rough, thick scales covering the whole body with a muddy brown coloring. It has the widest snout among all crocodile species. 
    • The length of an adult crocodile’s tail is about 1.8 meters long. 
  • Conservation Status:
    • IUCN Red List: Vulnerable

Source: IE

Vishwamitri River FAQs

Q1: What is the Vishwamitri River?

Ans: It is a small, non-perennial river in Gujarat.

Q2: From where does the Vishwamitri River originate?

Ans: From the western and southern slopes of the Pavagadh hills in eastern Gujarat.

Q3: Which major city does the Vishwamitri River flow through?

Ans: Vadodara, Gujarat’s third-largest city.

Q4: Into which water body does the Vishwamitri River finally drain?

Ans: The Arabian Sea via the Gulf of Khambhat.

India’s New CPI Series: Food Weight Cut, Housing Gains

New CPI Series

New CPI Series Latest News

  • According to documents released by the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI), India’s revised Consumer Price Index, with 2024 as the base year, will significantly lower the weight of food and beverages from 45.86% to 36.75%. 
  • At the same time, housing will account for a larger share of the CPI basket. Along with improved methods to measure rent increases, this change is expected to push up measured housing inflation and place upward pressure on headline retail inflation.

Why Food’s High Weight in CPI Has Been a Concern

  • Food items account for a large share of India’s Consumer Price Index (CPI), meaning sharp swings in food prices often dominate headline inflation, pushing it up or down irrespective of broader price trends.
  • From June 2025, food inflation turned negative, with prices consistently lower than a year earlier. 
  • This sharply pulled down headline CPI inflation, which fell to an all-time low of 0.25% in October 2025, alongside record-low food inflation of –5.02%.

Impact of New CPI Weights on Inflation Readings

  • According to experts, recalculating CPI with new weights but unchanged indices suggests:
  • Overall CPI could be 20–30 basis points higher when food inflation is low.
  • In periods of high food inflation, CPI could be 20–30 basis points lower than under the current series.

Why RBI Has Been Uneasy with the Current CPI

  • For the Reserve Bank of India, the heavy food weight is problematic because the existing CPI is based on 2011–12 consumption patterns, making it outdated and less representative of today’s economy.
  • As per Ernst Engel’s economic theory, the share of income spent on food declines as incomes rise. This trend is reflected in recent Indian data.
  • The updated CPI basket draws on the MoSPI’s 2023–24 Household Consumption Expenditure Survey (HCES):
    • Rural households: food share fell from 52.9% (2011–12) to 47.04% of monthly per capita consumption.
    • Urban households: food share declined from 42.62% to 39.68%.
  • Falling food shares in household spending underline why reducing food’s weight in the CPI is seen as necessary—to make inflation data more stable, current, and reflective of actual consumption patterns in India today.

Relief for RBI from Lower Food Weight in CPI

  • The RBI influences inflation mainly by managing demand through interest rates. 
  • However, it has limited ability to address supply-side shocks in food prices, as rate changes cannot quickly alter the supply of vegetables, cereals, or other food items.
  • In the past, episodes of high food inflation have kept headline inflation elevated, preventing the RBI from cutting interest rates even when underlying demand conditions were weak. This has complicated monetary policy decision-making.
  • Against this backdrop, the Economic Survey 2023–24 suggested exploring whether India’s inflation targeting should focus on inflation excluding food items
  • The RBI opposed this idea. 
    • Then Governor Shaktikanta Das said that while the central bank can look through temporary food inflation, it cannot ignore persistently high food inflation.

Current Inflation Targeting Framework

  • By law, the RBI must target CPI inflation at 4%, within a tolerance band of 2–6%, under the Flexible Inflation Targeting (FIT) framework. 
  • This framework is currently under review, with the new target for the next five years, starting April, expected to be announced by March.
  • Most economists expect the FIT framework to be retained in its current form, but changes in CPI composition—especially a lower food weight—could give the RBI greater operational comfort in managing inflation and interest rates.

New CPI Basket: What Is Changing

  • Timeline for the New CPI Series - The broad weights of categories in the new CPI basket have been released ahead of the first inflation data under the new series, which will come out on February 12 for January. Detailed item-wise weights will be published before that.
  • Expanded Coverage: More Items in the Basket - The new basket will include 358 items, up from 299 earlier—reflecting changes in consumption patterns.
  • Reclassification of Categories - The MoSPI has reorganised CPI categories, making one-to-one comparisons (with earlier version) difficult. For example, education services now carry a 3.33% weight as a standalone category, whereas earlier education was a sub-group under “miscellaneous” with a 4.46% weight.
  • Linking Old and New CPI Series - To ensure continuity, the expert group recommended releasing a linking factor between CPI 2012 and CPI 2024 for all-India, rural, and urban indices with the first CPI 2024 release. 
  • Food Weight Falls; Housing Gains Prominence - While food’s weight declines in the new series—expected to reduce headline inflation volatility—housing’s weight rises sharply from 10.07% to 17.66%.

Why Housing Weight Is Rising

  • The increase is driven by:
    • Expanded coverage to include residential utilities (water, electricity, gas, other fuels).
    • Higher spending on rent, per the 2023–24 HCES:
    • Rural rent share rose to 0.56% (from 0.45% in 2011–12).
    • Urban rent share increased to 6.58% (from 6.24%).

Implications for Inflation

  • Lower food weight should reduce volatility in headline CPI. 
  • However, the higher housing weight, combined with methodological changes—such as excluding employer-provided accommodation from rent measurement—could push housing inflation higher, adding upward pressure to overall inflation.

Source: IE | BS

New CPI series FAQs

Q1: What is changing in the new CPI series?

Ans: The new CPI series reduces food weight sharply, increases housing weight, expands item coverage, and updates inflation measurement to reflect current consumption patterns.

Q2: Why is food weight lower in the new CPI series?

Ans: In the new CPI series, food weight falls because households now spend a smaller share of income on food, as shown by the latest consumption survey data.

Q3: How does the new CPI series affect inflation volatility?

Ans: The new CPI series is expected to reduce headline inflation volatility by limiting the outsized impact of sharp food price swings on overall inflation.

Q4: Why does housing gain importance in the new CPI series?

Ans: Housing gains weight in the new CPI series due to expanded coverage of utilities, higher rent spending, and improved methods to measure housing inflation accurately.

Q5: How does the new CPI series help the RBI?

Ans: The new CPI series gives the RBI a clearer inflation signal by reducing food-driven distortions, making interest rate decisions more aligned with underlying demand conditions.

Gandhi’s Gram Swaraj Ideal and the Limits of Decentralisation

Gram Swaraj

Gram Swaraj Latest News

  • Recently a President of a prominent political party criticised the Union government for renaming the MGNREGS as VB-G RAM G ahead of Parliament’s Budget session. 
  • He alleged that the name change was an attempt to erase Mahatma Gandhi’s presence from public memory and weaken the idea of Gram Swaraj, or village self-rule.

Background to the Remarks on MGNREGS

  • Origins of the Employment Guarantee Scheme - The MGNREGS was introduced in 2005 and notified in February 2006. Its objective was to provide basic livelihood security in rural India amid rising concerns, including farmer suicides.
  • Addition of Mahatma Gandhi’s Name - The “Mahatma Gandhi” prefix was added to the scheme on October 2, 2009, linking it explicitly to Mahatma Gandhi’s philosophy of village self-reliance and rural empowerment.
  • Recent Legislative Changes - In December 2025, the Union government introduced a Bill to repeal the MGNREGA and replace it with VB-G RAM G. 
  • Ideological Objection - The main opposition party criticised both the repeal and the removal of Gandhi’s name, arguing that it undermines Gandhi’s vision of Gram Swaraj, which emphasised rural self-sufficiency as central to the nation’s well-being.

Gram Swaraj: Gandhi’s Vision of Village Self-Rule

  • Across his writings and actions, Mahatma Gandhi envisioned Gram Swaraj as the all-round development and self-reliance of villages
  • He believed excessive urbanisation harmed society and that cities had historically exploited villages, draining their resources and vitality.
  • Critique of Urban-Centric Development
    • In a June 23, 1946 writing, Gandhi argued that the growth of cities was “unfortunate for mankind,” stating that the prosperity of cities was built on the exploitation of villages. 
    • He wanted this flow reversed, so prosperity returned to rural India.
  • From Thought to Action
    • Gandhi’s ideas were reflected in practice. 
    • His first major satyagraha in Champaran (1917) addressed rural injustice, while Sevagram, the self-sufficient ashram he founded, served as a living experiment in rural self-reliance.
  • Village Swaraj as a ‘Complete Republic’
    • Writing in Harijan on July 26, 1942, Gandhi described Gram Swaraj as a “complete republic”—independent in meeting its basic needs but interdependent with others where necessary. 
    • Each village, he said, should prioritise growing its own food and cotton for clothing.
  • Social Equality and Non-Violence
    • Gandhi’s Gram Swaraj rejected caste hierarchies and graded untouchability. 
    • Non-violence, along with Satyagraha and non-cooperation, was to be the moral foundation of village life and governance.
  • Democratic Village Governance
    • Village administration, Gandhi proposed, should rest with a Panchayat of five members, elected annually by adult villagers—men and women alike—forming what he called a “perfect democracy based on individual freedom.”
  • Equality Between Village and City
    • In a November 13, 1945 letter to Jawaharlal Nehru, Gandhi stressed that every individual must have equal rights and opportunities, arguing for parity between villages and cities in India’s social and economic imagination.
    • Together, these ideas form Gandhi’s vision of Gram Swaraj—an ethical, democratic, and self-sufficient village-centred model for India’s development.

What Happened to Gandhi’s Gram Swaraj Vision

  • In the years after Independence, India’s development strategy prioritised urban and industrial growth. 
  • This widened the rural–urban divide and pushed large-scale migration to cities, often resulting in slum settlements and poor living conditions for rural migrants.
  • Rural Policies, But Limited Transformation
    • Rural-focused measures were not absent. 
    • Reforms such as the abolition of the Zamindari system (though uneven across states) and employment schemes like Jawahar Rojgar Yojana and the Employment Assurance Scheme sought to address rural distress. 
    • However, their impact was limited in creating sustained rural livelihoods.
  • Infrastructure Gains Without Social Foundations
    • While roads and electricity have reached many villages and improved daily life, quality education and healthcare have lagged
    • Persistent caste-based divisions and limited job opportunities mean migration often remains the best path to upward mobility.
  • Demographic Change and Migration
    • India remains predominantly rural, but the share of people living in villages has declined—from about 82% in 1960 to around 65% today—reflecting long-term migration trends driven by economic necessity.
  • Missing Push for Rural Entrepreneurship
    • Rural entrepreneurship has not received the policy backing needed to generate large-scale employment. 
    • As a result, villages remain dependent on external job markets rather than becoming self-sustaining economic units.
  • Decentralisation Without True Devolution
    • Although the 73rd Constitutional Amendment gave constitutional status to Panchayati Raj institutions, real self-reliance—as envisioned by Gandhi—has remained elusive. 
    • Financial, political, and administrative powers largely remain concentrated at higher levels of government.
  • Mixed Results from Village-Centric Initiatives
    • Activists and leaders have attempted grassroots change with mixed outcomes. 
    • In 2014, PM Modi launched the Sansad Adarsh Gram Yojana, urging MPs to adopt and develop villages. 
    • However, most MPs showed limited engagement, curbing its impact.
  • The Core Constraint: Political Will
    • Genuine devolution of power continues to depend on the willingness of higher authorities to relinquish control. 
    • Without this shift, policy measures and funding alone are insufficient to realise village self-rule.
  • A Lifelong Project
    • As Mahatma Gandhi himself acknowledged, building a truly self-sufficient village could take a lifetime. 
    • For India’s 6.74 lakh villages, his vision of Gram Swaraj remains an unfinished and long-term endeavour.

Source: IE | MG

Gram Swaraj FAQs

Q1: What did Gandhi mean by Gram Swaraj?

Ans: Gram Swaraj was Gandhi’s vision of self-reliant villages with local democracy, economic independence, social equality, and panchayat-based governance forming the foundation of India’s development.

Q2: Why did Gandhi oppose urban-centric development under Gram Swaraj?

Ans: Under Gram Swaraj, Gandhi believed cities exploited villages, drained their resources, and created inequality, arguing that prosperity must return to villages for national well-being.

Q3: How was Gram Swaraj reflected in Gandhi’s actions?

Ans: Gram Swaraj shaped Gandhi’s work in Champaran, his writings in Harijan, and the establishment of Sevagram as a living experiment in village self-sufficiency.

Q4: Why did Gram Swaraj weaken after Independence?

Ans: Gram Swaraj weakened as India prioritised industrialisation and urban growth, widening rural–urban gaps, encouraging migration, and limiting sustained investment in rural livelihoods.

Q5: Why has Gram Swaraj remained unfulfilled despite decentralisation?

Ans: Gram Swaraj remains unfulfilled because genuine financial, political, and administrative devolution has not occurred, with higher authorities reluctant to relinquish control to local institutions.

Sunabeda Wildlife Sanctuary

Sunabeda Wildlife Sanctuary Latest News

Sunabeda Wildlife Sanctuary in Odisha, recently declared 'Maoist-free', is emerging as a promising habitat for leopards, with an estimated population of over 70 individuals, according to forest officials

About Sunabeda Wildlife Sanctuary

  • Location: It is located in the Nuapada district of Odisha.
  • It was declared a sanctuary in 1983.
  • It adjoins the Sitanadi and Udanti sanctuaries of Chhattisgarh. 
  • Terrain: The sanctuary harbors a great diversity of wildlife habitats, with a vast plateau, canyons, and 11 waterfalls.
  • Rivers: It also forms the catchment area of the Jonk River (tributary of the Mahanadi River), over which a dam has been constructed to facilitate irrigation.
  • Vegetation: The important vegetation of this sanctuary comprises dry deciduous tropical forests.
  • Flora: Bija, Teak, Sisoo, Asan, Dharua, Mahul, Char, Sandalwood, Sidha, etc.
  • Fauna:It is an ideal habitat for the Barasingha (swamp deer).
    • Other important animals found are tigers, Leopards, hyenas, Barking Deer, Chital, Gaur, Sambar, Sloth Bear, Hill Myna, etc.

Source: TOI

Sunabeda Wildlife Sanctuary FAQs

Q1: Where is Sunabeda Wildlife Sanctuary located?

Ans: Odisha

Q2: What is the main river flowing through Sunabeda Wildlife Sanctuary?

Ans: Jonk River

National Legal Services Authority

National Legal Services Authority

National Legal Services Authority Latest News

Recently, the Minister of State of the Ministry of Law and Justice informed the Rajya Sabha about district legal services clinics established by the National Legal Services Authority.

About National Legal Services Authority

  • It was established under the Legal Services Authorities (LSA) Act, 1987.
  • Purpose: To provide free and competent legal services to the poor and marginalised sections of the society including Scheduled Caste (SC) and Scheduled Tribe (ST).
  • Structure 
    • NALSA is housed at Supreme Court of India, New Delhi 
    • In every State, a State Legal Services Authority and in every High Court, a High Court Legal Services Committee has been constituted.
    • District Legal Services Authorities and Taluk Legal Services Committees have been constituted in the Districts and most of the Taluks to give effect to the policies and directions of the NALSA.
  • The free legal services include
    • Payment of court fees, process fees, and all other charges payable or incurred in connection with any legal proceedings
    • Providing the service of lawyers in legal proceedings;
    • Obtaining and supply of certified copies of orders and other documents in legal proceedings.
    • Preparation of appeal, paper book, including printing and translation of documents in legal proceedings.
  • Persons eligible for free legal services includes:
    • Women and children
    • Members of SC/ST
    • Industrial workmen
    • Victims of mass disasters, violence, flood, drought, earthquake, and industrial disaster
    • Disabled persons
    • Persons in custody
    • Persons whose annual income does not exceed Rs. 1 lakh (in the Supreme Court Legal Services Committee the limit is Rs. 5,00,000).
    • Victims of trafficking in human beings 

Source: PIB

National Legal Services Authority FAQs

Q1: Under which Act was NALSA constituted?

Ans: Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987

Q2: What is the primary objective of NALSA?

Ans: To promote justice on the basis of equal opportunity

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