{GS2 – Vulnerable Sections} Addressing Women’s Safety in India **
- Context (PIB): The Ministry of Women and Child Development recently highlighted legal, institutional, and financial measures addressing women’s safety in India.
Current Landscape of Women’s Safety in India
- Crime Rates: Increased to 4,48,211 cases, averaging nearly 51 FIRs every hour. [NCRB 2023]
- Nature of Crime: The majority of crimes involve cruelty by husbands or relatives (29.8%), followed by kidnapping (19.8%) and assault with intent to outrage modesty (18.7%).
- India reports about 81 rapes daily, roughly one every 18 minutes nationwide. [NCRB 2023]
- Global Standing: India ranks 128th out of 177 countries in the Women, Peace, and Security Index 2023.
- Women Trafficking: Registered cases under the Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act, 1956, increased by about 44.7% between 2022 and 2023. [NCRB 2023]
- Regional Variation: Uttar Pradesh has the highest number of cases, while Telangana reports the highest crime rate at 124.9 per lakh females.
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Key Challenges in Implementing Safety Measures
- Judicial Delay: Judicial pendency in crimes against women exceeds 90%, weakening deterrence.
- Low Conviction: Conviction rates in rape cases fell to 22.7% in 2023 from 27-28% (2018-2022), due to weak investigations and poor forensic evidence collection.
- Patriarchal Mindsets: Cultural norms normalise male dominance and victim-blaming, discouraging nearly 80% of victims from reporting incidents.
- Fund Underutilisation: Despite large Nirbhaya Fund allocations, bureaucratic delays stall grassroots projects like Safe City and helplines.
- Institutional Gaps: Only 11.7% of India’s police are women, limiting gender-sensitive trauma response and investigations.
Legal Framework and Key Govt Interventions
- Constitutional Provisions: Articles 15(3) and 21 protect dignity and allow affirmative action, forming the basis of gender-protective laws and state safety measures.
- PoSH Act 2013: Mandates Internal Committees in workplaces with over ten employees; SHe-Box portal monitors compliance and handles workplace sexual harassment.
- Mission Shakti: Operates as an umbrella scheme with two components, Sambal for safety measures and Samarthya for women’s empowerment interventions.
- Nirbhaya Fund: It is a non-lapsable corpus that supports projects such as Safe City initiatives in eight major cities and Fast Track Special Courts (FTSCs).
- Emergency Response: Women Helpline 181, integrated with the Emergency Response Support System 112, has helped over 9.9 million distressed women nationwide.
- Localised Justice: Grassroots Nari Adalats offer dispute resolution, while Shakti Sadans serve as rehabilitation homes for domestic violence and trafficking.
{GS3 – IE} Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS) 2025
- Context (PIB): National Statistical Office (NSO) has released PLFS 2025 as the first calendar-year (Jan-Dec) based survey with revamped methodology.
- PLFS is a nationwide survey by NSO to measure employment, unemployment, & labour force indicators.
- Objective: The survey aims to generate monthly, quarterly, and annual estimates of key labour indicators across rural and urban areas.
- Methodology: PLFS 2025 introduced a revised sampling design and rotational panels to generate high-frequency labour data.
Highlights of Periodic Labour Force Survey 2025
- Labour Force Participation Rate: LFPR remained stable at 59.3%, with a wide gender gap.
- Worker Population Ratio: WPR stood at 57.4%, indicating stable employment levels.
- Unemployment: Overall unemployment remained low at 3.1%, with declines in educated and urban female unemployment.
- Youth Employment: Unemployment (15–29 years) declined to 9.9%; improved in rural & urban areas.
- Employment Structure: The share of regular salaried jobs increased to 23.6%, while self-employment declined to 56.2%.
- Sectoral Shift: Employment share in agriculture declined; manufacturing & services sectors expanded.
- Gender: Female wages increased more rapidly than men’s; female participation and working hours continue to be lower.
- Education: Average schooling is about 10 years; higher attainment in urban areas and among males.
- Skill Gap: Only 4.2% received formal vocational training, highlighting limited skill development.
- NEET Concern: Around 25% youth (15–29 years) are not in employment, education, or training (NEET).
- Workforce Size: Total employed population (15+) is estimated at 61.6 crore.
- Labour Force Participation Rate (LFPR): Percentage of people in the population who are working, seeking, or available for work.
- Worker Population Ratio (WPR): Percentage of people in the population who are actually employed.
- Unemployment Rate (UR): Percentage of people in the labour force who are not employed but actively seeking work.
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- Context (NOA): Reserve Bank of India (RBI) released the “Payments Vision 2028” policy roadmap with the theme “Shaping India’s Payment Frontier.”
- Transition: It outlines 15 initiatives to shift focus beyond the “4Es” (Everyone, Everywhere, Every time) toward consumer trust, resilience, and global expansion.
Key Initiatives under Payments Vision 2028
- Shared Liability: Both the sender’s bank and the receiver’s bank jointly bear liability for unauthorised digital transactions.
- E-commerce Regulation: E-commerce marketplaces and payment aggregators will be brought directly under RBI regulatory oversight.
- Switch Facility: A universal Switch On/Off facility, currently limited to cards, will expand instant enable/disable controls to all digital payment methods.
- PaSS: The Payments Switching Service (PaSS) will enable customers to seamlessly migrate standing instructions (e.g., EMIs and utility bills) when switching banks.
- e-Cheques: Traditional paper cheques will be digitised into e-cheques, blending legal familiarity with the speed of electronic clearing.
- TReDS Interoperability: Trade Receivables Discounting System (TReDS) will be made fully interoperable to improve credit flow for small businesses.
- Regulatory Sandbox: Small Payment System Providers will operate in a perpetual controlled testing environment to balance fintech innovation with systemic risk mitigation.
- Cyber KRI: A standardised set of Cyber Key Risk Indicators (KRI) will continuously monitor cybersecurity resilience across non-bank payment system operators.
- White-label AePS: Regulated non-bank entities may operate Aadhaar Enabled Payment Systems (AePS) as white-label operators to deepen last-mile financial inclusion in rural areas.
India’s Digital Payments Landscape
- Global Share: India accounts for 48.5% of the world’s real-time payment transactions, recording 22,190 crore digital transactions worth approximately $3.4 trillion in FY 2024-25.
- UPI Dominance: UPI now accounts for nearly 83% of all retail digital payments by volume.
- RBI-DPI: The RBI Digital Payments Index increased from 493.22 in March 2025 to 516.76 in September 2025, signalling deep market penetration.
- Global Footprint: UPI has expanded to 8 countries, including France, the UAE, Singapore, Bhutan, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Mauritius, and Qatar.
- Spending Shift: Credit card usage is growing at 21% annually for high-value transactions, while debit card volumes decline as users shift to UPI for everyday transactions.
- Credit Pivot: Credit line on UPI is democratising access to formal finance, with monthly transaction volumes exceeding ₹10,000 crore by mid-2025.
- Merchant Acceptance: India’s payment network comprises over 709 million active QR codes and 23 million soundboxes, offering near-universal digital access at the point of sale.
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{GS3 – Agri} Resilient Growth in India’s Agriculture Sector **
- Context (TH): Agriculture remains the central pillar of achieving food security, rural prosperity, and inclusive growth under the Viksit Bharat 2047 vision.
Overview of India’s Agriculture Sector
- GVA Contribution: Agriculture and allied activities contribute nearly 20% of India’s Gross Value Added at current prices.
- Sector Growth: The sector recorded an average annual growth rate of 4.4% at constant prices over the past five years.
- Employment Share: About 43% of the workforce is employed in agriculture and allied sectors.
- Export Growth: Agricultural exports increased from $34.5 billion in FY20 to $51.1 billion in FY25, with 8.2% CAGR.
- Export Share: Agriculture contributes 11.2% of total exports, with processed food accounting for 20.4% of agricultural exports.
- Irrigation Coverage: About 55.8% of gross cropped area is irrigated, with net irrigated area at 79.3 million hectares.
- Growth Target: India targets a sustained 5% annual agricultural growth and $100 billion agricultural exports by 2030.
Structural Challenges
- Fragmented Landholdings: About 86% of India’s farmers are small and marginal, with an average holding size of 1.08 hectares, limiting economies of scale and mechanisation.
- Climate Vulnerability: Over 50% of net sown area remains rainfed, exposing nearly 75 million hectares to monsoon variability and yield instability.
- Groundwater Depletion: Agriculture consumes nearly 90% of freshwater, and overexploitation affects about 30% of assessment blocks.
- Post-Harvest Losses: Inadequate cold-chain infrastructure causes annual wastage of nearly 16% of fruits and vegetables, valued at over ₹50,000 crore.
- Market Inefficiency: Despite e-NAM, farmers often receive only 15% to 40% of the final consumer price due to multiple layers of intermediary commissions.
Key Government Initiatives
- Income Security: PM-KISAN has disbursed over ₹4.27 lakh crore in direct income support to 11.2 crore landholding farmers.
- Market Integration: e-NAM integrated 1,389 mandis to reduce regional market rigidities and enable transparent pan-India price discovery.
- Collectivisation: 10,000 Farmer-Producer Organisations (FPOs) are registered to aggregate small producers and strengthen collective bargaining.
- Import Substitution: National Mission on Edible Oils (NMEO–Oilseeds) targets 69.7 MMT oilseeds production by 2030-31 to reduce import dependence.
- Water Efficiency: Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchayee Yojana (PMKSY) has expanded micro-irrigation across 95.58 lakh hectares to improve water efficiency in water-stressed regions.
- Public Distribution: One Nation One Ration Card (ONORC) enables nationwide portability of foodgrain entitlements through digitised integration of the Public Distribution System.
Read More> India’s Farm Sector & Associated Challenges
{GS3 – S&T} Indian Tech Startups Raised $9.1 Billion in 2025
- Context (TH): A recent report titled “Momentum to Maturity’ revealed a structural shift in Indian tech startups from rapid, volume-driven expansion to disciplined, execution-focused growth.
Key Findings of the Report
- Total Funding: Indian tech startups raised $9.1 billion in 2025, a 23% year-on-year increase from 2024.
- DeepTech Funding: DeepTech investments surged 37% to $2.3 billion in 2025, with AI driving 91% of these investments.
- Startup Count: The Indian tech startup ecosystem comprises an estimated 31,000-34,000 startups.
- Exit Momentum: Over 140 M&A deals were recorded in 2025, nearly double the count from the previous year, signalling maturing exit pathways.
- Tech Hubs: Bengaluru accounts for 28% of India’s DeepTech startups, followed by Delhi-NCR (21%) and Mumbai (10%).
Structural Challenges
- Stage Fragility: The Seed-to-Series A transition is the most fragile funding stage; 85% of Indian startups fail to reach Series A within five years.
- Funding Concentration: Early-stage deals accounted for 74% of total deal volume in 2025, while late-stage deal flow remained weak.
- Commercial Gap: Startups frequently achieve technical readiness before commercial readiness, struggling to secure early customers and clear pilot-to-revenue pathways.
- M&A Deals: Mergers and Acquisitions are financial transactions in which ownership of companies, business units, or operating assets transfers to, or is consolidated with, another entity.
- Seed Funding: First equity funding stage, where a startup raises institutional capital to transition from a prototype to a market-ready product.
- Series A: First significant venture capital financing round, typically raised once a startup has a proven product and initial market traction.
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Read More > National Deep Tech Startup Policy (NDTSP)
{GS3 – S&T} India’s First Sahiwal Cattle Breeding Using Advanced IVF Technology *
- Context (IE): ICAR-Indian Veterinary Research Institute (IVRI), Bareilly, has for the first time produced five healthy Sahiwal calves using advanced OPU-IVF-ET technology.
- ICAR: Indian Council of Agricultural Research, established in 1929, is an autonomous body under Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers Welfare (MoAFW) that coordinates agricultural research & education.
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About OPU-IVF-ET Technology
- It is a three-stage assisted reproductive technology consisting of Ovum Pick-Up (OPU), In Vitro Fertilisation (IVF), and Embryo Transfer (ET).
- OPU: Oocytes are collected from elite cows using ultrasound guidance without heavy hormonal stimulation; this allows frequent use in both pregnant and prepubertal animals.
- IVF: Fertilises oocytes in the lab with selected superior semen for controlled genetic improvement.
- ET: Developed embryos are transferred into a recipient cow’s uterus, enabling rapid multiplication.
- Key benefit: While natural breeding produces one calf per year, this technique allows for about 20 calves annually per cow and 10 per buffalo.
About Sahiwal Cattle
- Sahiwal is one of India’s top indigenous cattle breeds, known for its high heat tolerance, disease resistance, and adaptability to tropical climates.
- It originated in the Montgomery region (present-day Pakistan) and is mainly found in Punjab (Ferozepur, Amritsar), Haryana, and Rajasthan (Sri Ganganagar).
- The breed is commonly known by traditional names such as Lola, Lambi Bar, Multani, and Teli.
- It has a high milk yield, averaging 2,000-3,000 litres per lactation. Its milk is rich in butterfat and contains A2 beta-casein protein linked to health benefits.
{Prelims – A&C} Balirajgarh Fort Excavation *
- Context (IE): Archaeological Survey of India has begun excavation at Balirajgarh in Bihar to explore the history of ancient Mithila.
- Locations: Balirajgarh is located in the Madhubani district of Bihar.
- History: Site is believed to be linked to King Bali and an administrative centre of the Videha Kingdom.
- Cultural Continuity: Evidence shows continuous habitation across the Mauryan, Sunga, Kushan, Gupta, and Pala periods.
- Fortification: Earlier explorations revealed a fortified settlement, indicating large-scale urban planning.
- Archaeological Findings: Artefacts like beads, copper objects, terracotta figurines, and punch-marked coins suggest a rich and advanced civilisation.
- Videha Kingdom was an ancient kingdom in the Mithila region (present-day Bihar and Nepal).
- It is associated with King Janaka and was a major centre of Vedic learning and philosophy.
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{Prelims – Species} Euthalia zubeengargi
- Context (TH): Scientists have discovered a new butterfly species, Euthalia zubeengargi, in the Leparada district of Arunachal Pradesh.
- Naming: It is named in honour of the late Assamese cultural icon Zubeen Garg. The proposed common name is “Basar Duke“.
- Appearance: The species has olive-brown upper wings with distinctive white spots and markings.
- Habitat Preference: It thrives in humid understories of cool, shaded semi-evergreen forests at an elevation between 600 and 750 metres.
- Distribution: E. zubeengargi is highly localised, currently known only from the Basar region in Arunachal Pradesh.
- Diet: Adults mainly feed on tree sap and engage in mud-puddling to obtain vital minerals from moist soil near streams.
- Ecological Role: It serves as a bio-indicator of the overall health and stability of the forest ecosystem.
- Key Threats: Habitat fragmentation, shifting (Jhum) cultivation, and climate change.
- Context (TH): A recent study has found that extracellular RNA (exRNA) from bacteria persists even after water disinfection.
- exRNA refers to RNA molecules that exist outside cells in various body fluids such as blood, saliva, urine, and cerebrospinal fluid.
- Origin: exRNA is actively released by cells, rather than simply leaking out due to cell damage.
- Protection: It is transported in protective vesicles that prevent enzymatic degradation.
- Communication Role: Acts as a cell-to-cell communication molecule, influencing gene expression.
- Physiological Roles: It plays key roles in immune response, tissue repair, and development.
- Role in Diseases: exRNA can contribute to disease progression, including promoting tumour growth.
- Medical Significance: Serves as a non-invasive biomarker for detecting diseases like cancer and cardiovascular disorders.
Ribonucleic Acid (RNA)
- RNA is a single-stranded nucleic acid that plays a central role in gene expression & protein synthesis.
- It is made up of ribose sugar, a phosphate group, & bases (A, U, G, C), with uracil replacing thymine.
- RNA is found in both the nucleus and cytoplasm and is less stable than DNA.
- In some organisms, like RNA viruses, it acts as the genetic material and is widely used in modern medicine (e.g., mRNA vaccines).
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{Prelims – Defence} Tunguska Air Defence Missile Systems *
- Context (TOI): Ministry of Defence signed a contract with Russia to procure Tunguska Air Defence Missile Systems.
- Tunguska (NATO designation SA-19 “Grison“) is a Soviet-origin, mobile, self-propelled anti-aircraft weapon system.
- It integrates surface-to-air missiles and high-speed anti-aircraft guns on a single tracked chassis to provide low-altitude protection.
- Dual Capabilities: It can combine 9M311 missiles for long-range engagement (up to 8–10 km) and twin 30 mm autocannons for close-in defence.
- Detection: The system employs a 360-degree target acquisition radar with an 18 km detection range.
- Resilience: Supported by an optical backup system, it sustains tracking even during intense electronic warfare (jamming).
- Key Role: Functions as Short-Range Air Defence (SHORAD), bridging the gap between man-portable systems (MANPADS) and medium-range air defence systems.
- Significance for India: It will strengthen India’s multi-layered air defence against threats like drone swarms, which can bypass systems like the S-400.
{Prelims – Defence} Integration of ASRAAM with MiG-29 Fighter Jets *
- Context (NDTV): Ministry of Defence issued a request for proposals to integrate the Advanced Short Range Air-to-Air Missile (ASRAAM) with the Indian Air Force’s MiG-29 fighter jets.
- Objective: To replace ageing Soviet-era R-73 missiles and enhance the fleet’s close-combat capability.
About ASRAAM
- It is a fourth-generation, short-range air-to-air missile developed by MBDA, a European multinational defence consortium.
- Speed and Range: It can fly at speeds exceeding Mach 3 and engage targets beyond 25 km.
- Guidance: Uses a fire-and-forget system with advanced Imaging Infrared (IIR) homing, enabling the pilot to launch and quickly move away.
- Advanced Targeting: It has Lock-On After Launch (LOAL) and Lock-On Before Launch (LOBL) capabilities, allowing firing even if the target is outside the seeker’s view.
- Manoeuvrability: Its aerodynamic design and powerful rocket motor help it to hit rapidly turning, highly agile enemy aircraft.
- Current Integrations: ASRAAM is already integrated with the LCA Tejas and the upgraded SEPECAT Jaguar in the Indian Air Force.
{Prelims – Awards} Rashtriya Vigyan Puraskar (RVP) 2026
- Context (DDN): Government opened nominations for the Rashtriya Vigyan Puraskar (RVP) 2026 through the National Awards Portal of the Ministry of Home Affairs.
- RVP is India’s highest award in science, technology, and innovation, first awarded in 2024.
- The awards are managed by the RVP Secretariat at Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), guided by the Principal Scientific Adviser to the Government of India.
- CSIR is India’s leading scientific and industrial research organisation, founded in 1942 by Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar, operating as an autonomous body under the Ministry of Science and Technology.
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- Eligibility: Scientists, technologists, and innovators from government, private institutions, or working independently; Persons of Indian Origin (PIOs) are eligible if their contributions benefit Indian society.
- Recognition Domains: Covers 13 domains, including Physics, Chemistry, Medicine, Engineering Sciences, Agricultural Science, Mathematics and Computer Science.
- Award Categories: It is presented in four categories —
- Vigyan Ratna (VR): Recognises lifetime achievements.
- Vigyan Shri (VS): Given for distinguished contributions.
- Vigyan Yuva-Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar (VY-SSB): Recognises young scientists up to 45 years old.
- Vigyan Team (VT): Honours collaborative excellence by teams of three or more researchers.
- Key Awards 2025: Vigyan Ratna was conferred posthumously on Prof. Jayant Vishnu Narlikar, while the Vigyan Team award went to CSIR Aroma Mission.
Read More > Rashtriya Vigyan Puraskar