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Current Affairs – August 29, 2025

{GS2 – Vulnerable Sections – Women} Gender Perspective on India’s Economic Vulnerabilities

  • Context (TH): The 50% US tariffs threaten Indian women’s employment, making India’s economic disregard for half its population a strategic liability.

Women’s Employment Landscape

  • Female Participation: Remains between 37% and 41.7%, below the global average and China’s 60%.
  • Vulnerability: 78% work in apparel, textiles, tobacco, and food, increasing exposure to shocks.
  • Urban–Rural Gap: Rural women’s employment increased mainly in unpaid, low-productivity jobs, while urban growth stayed at 43%.

Need for Women’s Participation

  • GDP Potential: The IMF estimates that closing the gender gap could increase GDP by 27%.
  • Demographic Dividend: The window closes by 2045, necessitating full female workforce integration.
  • Export Competitiveness: Tariff shocks cause a 30–35% cost disadvantage in women-dominated sectors.
  • Poverty Alleviation: Enhanced participation helps reduce feminisation of poverty and supports SDGs.
  • Informal Insecurity: Over 95% of working women remain in informal jobs without security or benefits.

Roadmaps for Closing the Gender Gap

  • China Reforms: Post-1978 economic reforms maintained 60% female participation via state-backed care.
  • Japan Policy: Targeted labour reforms raised female participation to 70%, adding 4% to GDP per capita.
  • Netherlands Model: Part-time work with equal benefits aligns with women’s employment preferences.
  • Karnataka Shakti Scheme: increased female bus ridership by 40%, enhancing workplace connectivity.
  • Rajasthan Scheme: Indira Gandhi Urban Employment Guarantee generated four crore jobs, with 65% benefiting women.
  • Gig Engagement: Urban Company empowered 15,000 women to earn income with safety protections.

Read More > Female Labour Force Participation Rate in India

{GS2 – Governance – Initiatives} India to Host 3GPP RAN Meetings

  • Context (PIB): Telecommunications Standards Development Society of India (TSDSI) is hosting 3GPP RAN meetings in Bengaluru, commencing 6G standardisation work under Release 20.
  • RAN Meeting: They set technical standards for networks linking user devices to telecom cores.
  • Release 20: It defines foundational specifications for 6G global communication networks.
  • India’s Gain: First-ever hosting gives India direct exposure in 6G standardisation efforts.

About 3GPP

  • The 3rd Generation Partnership Project develops global mobile communication standards.
  • Partnerships: Includes 7 organisational partners from India, USA, Europe, Japan, China, & S. Korea.
  • Outputs: Publishes technical specifications in Releases that serve as global telecom benchmarks.

About TSDSI

  • TSDSI is India’s recognised Standards Development Organisation for telecom technologies.
  • Partnership: It is one of seven organisational partners steering global 3GPP standardization.
  • Focus: Develops standards addressing India-specific telecom needs such as rural connectivity.

{GS2 – IR – Asia} PM Modi’s Visit to Japan

  • Context (IE): Prime Minister Modi’s visit to Japan for the 15th India-Japan Annual Summit reaffirmed the Special Strategic Partnership amid regional volatility and the changing global order.

Island of Japan

Key Pillars of the India-Japan ‘Special Strategic Partnership’

Defence and Security

  • Consultations: 2008 Defence Declaration and 2+2 Dialogue institutionalised security consultations.
  • Logistics: 2020 Reciprocal Services Agreement enables joint logistics and humanitarian operations.
  • Exercises: Malabar, Dharma Guardian, JIMEX exercises enhance interoperability & Indo-Pacific security.
  • Intelligence: 2015 Information Protection Agreement institutionalised intelligence-sharing mechanism.
  • Technology: Collaboration includes UNICORN mast, strengthening maritime surveillance cooperation.

Trade, Investment, and Economic Security

  • Trade: ~$23 billion bilateral trade remains deficit-heavy despite CEPA tariff reductions since 2011.
  • FDI: Japan, the fifth-largest source with ~$43B cumulative investment, anchors Indian manufacturing.
  • EconSec: 2024 Economic Security Dialogue advances semiconductors, minerals, & digital cooperation.
  • Firms: 1,400 Japanese firms in India strengthen supply chains and industrial competitiveness.

Development, Infrastructure, and Energy

  • ODA: Japan, the largest ODA donor with $36 billion, supported transport, energy, and urban projects.
  • Bullet Train: Mumbai-Ahmedabad bullet train exemplifies flagship India-Japan transport cooperation.
  • Energy: Clean Energy Partnership (2022) expands hydrogen, renewables, and climate cooperation.
  • Sustainability: Joint projects promote aquaculture, biodiversity, and forest sustainability.

Multilateral and Regional Cooperation

  • Quad: Quad coordination ensures Indo-Pacific stability through collective maritime commitments.
  • SCRI: Supply Chain Resilience Initiative reduces dependency on China for the supply of critical goods.
  • Forums: India and Japan cooperate in G20, ISA, CDRI, and IPEF, strengthening multilateral governance.
  • Space: ISRO-JAXA LUPEX mission exemplifies frontier collaboration in space exploration.

People, Culture, and Education

  • Academia: 665 academic linkages deepen bilateral research, teaching, and institutional collaborations.
  • Skills: TITP and SSW programmes channel Indian workers into Japanese industries.
  • Tourism: 2023-24 Year of Tourism Exchange promoted bilateral travel and cultural awareness.
  • Diaspora: 54,000-strong Indian diaspora supports technology cooperation and cultural exchange.
  • ODA: Official Development Assistance is a concessional govt. aid supporting sustainable development.
  • TITP: Technical Intern Training Programme transfers industrial skills through overseas practical training.
  • SSW: Specified Skilled Worker visa permits foreign workers in designated skilled labour sectors.

Overview of India-Japan Relations

Evolution of Bilateral Ties

  • Buddhism: Buddhism fostered cultural ties between India and Japan since the 6th century.
  • Peace Treaty: The 1952 Treaty of Peace restored post-war diplomatic relations between the two nations.
  • Summits: India–Japan share one of Asia’s oldest annual summit mechanisms since 2000.
  • Partnership: From Global Partnership in 2000, elevated to Special Strategic Partnership in 2014.

Areas of Strategic Convergence

  • Indo-Pacific: India’s Act East, IPOI align with Japan’s FOIP, reinforcing Indo-Pacific strategic convergence.
  • UNSC Reform: Shared advocacy for reforms strengthens joint leadership in multilateral governance.
  • Rules-Based: Commitment to democratic values reinforces cooperation in global strategic affairs.

Key Bilateral Divergences

  • China Policy: India avoids criticising Taiwan tensions while Japan confronts Beijing directly.
  • Russia Stance: Japan supports sanctions on Moscow, whereas India maintains strategic neutrality.
  • Digital Rules: India opposed the Osaka Track, resisting Japan’s digital governance framework.
  • Act East: The Act East Policy promotes India’s strategic engagement with Southeast Asia.
  • IPOI: Indo-Pacific Oceans Initiative strengthens maritime cooperation, connectivity, & growth.
  • FOIP: The Free and Open Indo-Pacific vision advances a rules-based order and secure trade.
  • Osaka Track: Osaka Track proposed plurilateral rules for digital trade and data flows.

{GS2 – Social Sector – Education} Universal Access to Research Knowledge

  • Context (TH): The Delhi High Court ordered ISPs to block Sci-Hub, revealing the dilemma between copyright enforcement and equitable research access.

Current State of Academic Publishing

  • High Costs: Indian institutions spend ₹1,500 crore annually, severely straining their research budgets.
  • Profit Margins: Publishers retain 30–35% profits, reflecting rent-seeking and access inequities.
  • Research Payments: Indian scholars spent $17 million on publishing fees, burdening limited grants.
  • Unauthorised Access: Around 60% researchers use shadow repositories, exposing affordability gaps.
  • Global Openness: Nearly half of articles worldwide are open access, shifting publishing norms.

Arguments for Universal Knowledge Access

  • Public Funding: Since taxpayers finance research, society deserves unrestricted access to knowledge.
  • Equity Principle: Universal access reduces disparities, ensuring fairness across all researchers.
  • Innovation Catalyst: Open access fosters collaboration, accelerating discoveries and advancing research.
  • Royalty Absence: Without royalties for authors, access restrictions merely protect publisher profits.
  • Monopoly Check: Free access curbs monopolies, promoting fairer, competitive scholarly ecosystems.

Constraints on Free Knowledge Access

  • Copyright Mandate: Diluted copyright undermines global frameworks protecting intellectual property.
  • Quality Assurance: Removing subscriptions risks weakening peer review and editorial accountability.
  • Financial Viability: Free access cuts revenue, threatening publishing infrastructure and sustainability.
  • Piracy Risk: Openness legitimises shadow repositories, encouraging unlawful research distribution.
  • Disruption: Openness destabilises publishing, risking fragmentation of scholarly communication.

Way Forward

  • Rights Retention: Enact policies that preserve author rights and expand research dissemination.
  • Flexible Models: Adopt pay-per-article systems, improving affordability for specialised niche journals.
  • Indigenous Publishing: Expand Indian journals to reduce reliance on foreign publishers’ monopoly.
  • Open Access Funding: Redirect public funds to strengthen sustainable open-access publishing.
  • Collaboration: Build government–academia–publisher partnerships for sustainable publishing models.

About One Nation One Subscription (ONOS)

  • ONOS is a Central Sector Scheme providing unified journal access to public institutions.
  • Nodal Ministry: Implemented by Ministry of Education through Department of Higher Education.
  • Key Features: Provides 13,000 journals via national digital portal managed by INFLIBNET.
  • Evaluation: ANRF monitors usage and research outputs to measure ONOS effectiveness.
  • Significance: Reduces subscription duplication, cuts research costs, and strengthens access equity.

Read More> One Nation One Subscription Scheme

{GS3 – IE – Exports} Impact of US Tariff Hike on Indian Exports

  • Context (IE): The US has raised tariffs on several Indian goods to 50% (effective August 27, 2025), which may cut India’s exports to the US by 43% in FY26, from $86.5 billion to $49.6 billion.

Key points

Sectoral Impact

  • MSMEs: MSMEs contribute ~45% of India’s exports; they will be disproportionately affected.
  • Textiles & Apparel: Tariffs on ready-made garments (RMG) rise from 13.9% to 61%.
  • Diamonds & Jewellery: Duties increased from 2.1% to 52.1%; Surat-based MSMEs, which account for nearly 80% of India’s diamond exports, face major disruptions.
  • Seafood (Shrimp): Tariff increases to 60%, severely hurting India’s largest shrimp market.

Macroeconomic Impact

  • India’s GDP growth may slip from 6.5% to 5.6%.
  • Exports to the US may decline significantly, but overall, India’s exports are expected to increase to $839.9 billion in FY2026.
  • Exports form only 20% of GDP, limiting vulnerability compared to Vietnam or Bangladesh.

Way Forward

  • Support Measures: Revive Interest Equalisation Scheme and credit lines for affected sectors.
  • Market Diversification: Trade missions to the EU, the Gulf, East Asia, “India+1” export hubs in the UAE & Mexico to bypass tariffs.
  • New Markets: Tap EU, UK (post-FTA), and East Asia.
  • Product Strategy: Focus on sustainable seafood, designer jewellery, and premium textiles.
  • Digital Push: Expand through e-commerce and B2B platforms to reduce reliance on US buyers.

Read More> India-US Trade Tensions | US Tariff Hike & Implications for India

{GS3 – Agri – Food Security} Wheat Stock Limits Reduced

  • Context (TH): The Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution has reduced wheat stock limits to prevent hoarding, secure PDS supplies, and ensure food security.
  • Objective: To moderate wheat prices ahead of festive demand, trader limits are reduced by 33% to 2,000 MT, and retailer limits are lowered by 20% to 8 MT.

Wheat Production

  • India ranks as the second-largest wheat producer in the world after China.
  • Wheat spans around 31 million hectares, accounting for one-third of India’s cereal production.
  • Wheat production increased by 3.7% from 2023–24 to 2024–25, reaching 1,175.07 LMT.

Read More> Wheat in India

{GS3 – IS – Issues} Demographic Changes Along Borders

  • Context (IE): Union Home Minister warned of deliberate demographic shifts in border areas, urging action through Vibrant Villages Programme.

Determinants of Demographic Shifts in Border Areas

Pull Factors

  • Economic Magnetism: Border trade and transport corridors draw a steady outsider influx.
  • Kinship Networks: Common ethnicity and language encourage permanent settlement by kin.
  • Welfare Incentives: Government scheme access attracts undocumented settlers into border villages.

Push Factors

  • Livelihood Deficit: Limited opportunities in jobs, healthcare, and education drive migration.
  • Security Threats: Insurgency and border tensions accelerate exodus from frontier settlements.
  • State Neglect: Central-state overlap and security restrictions hinder infrastructure delivery.

Adverse Impacts of Demographic Transformation

  • Security Issues: Infiltration settlements enable smuggling and weaken counterinsurgency efforts.
  • Governance Strain: Demographic shifts burden welfare delivery and overstretch local policing.
  • Strategic Imbalance: Population decline reduces India’s civilian buffer in contested boundaries.
  • Cultural Erosion: Outsider influx erodes languages, traditions, & heritage in border communities.
  • Resource Strain: Population growth fuels competition for agrarian and ecological resources.

Institutional Responses

  • Vibrant Villages Programme: prevents migration & delivers full welfare coverage in border villages.
  • Border Area Development Programme: Improves roads, schools, & health facilities in frontier districts.
  • SSB Civic Action Programme: Provides basic services and builds trust in border communities.
  • ITBP Livelihood Initiatives: Support jobs through local procurement & village training programmes.
  • NESIDS: Funds power, roads, and connectivity projects in northeastern border regions.

Way Forward

  • Geospatial Monitoring: Track border populations using EU Frontex-style risk analysis systems.
  • Community Finance: Deliver tailored microfinance in border villages to strengthen livelihoods.
  • Border Haats: Scale India–Bangladesh Border Haats model to regulate trade and migration.
  • Land Records: Implement biometric land titles following Kenya’s successful reform programme.
  • Security-Civil Integration: Expand CIBMS, using smart fencing integrated with community engagement.

{GS3 – S&T – Tech} Integrated Air Drop Test

  • Context (TH): Recently, ISRO successfully conducted the first Integrated Air Drop Test (IADT-1), a crucial step towards India’s maiden human spaceflight mission, Gaganyaan.
  • Dropped a 4.8-tonne dummy crew module from a 3 km altitude using an IAF Chinook helicopter.

Significance

  • Validated the parachute-based deceleration system, essential for safe astronaut recovery.
  • Tests one of the riskiest phases in human spaceflight, descent and landing.
  • Integral to human-rating mission systems (requires thousands of tests).

Position in Gaganyaan Roadmap

  • Part of a series of safety tests before human flight (H1, likely beyond 2027).
  • Supports TV-D2 (Abort Test Mission-2).
  • Precedes Gaganyaan-1 (G1), uncrewed mission with humanoid Vyommitra.

Long-term goals

  • Establish Bharatiya Antariksh Station (BAS) by 2035.
  • Achieve an Indian crewed lunar landing by 2040.
  • Ongoing indigenisation of spaceflight technologies like Integrated Vehicle Health Management System IVHMS), Environmental Control and Life Support System (ECLSS), Human-rated LVM3.

{GS3 – S&T – BioTech} One Year of BioE3 Policy

  • Context (PIB): To mark one year of the BioE3 (Biotechnology for Economy, Environment & Employment) Policy, the government launched the BioE3 Challenge for Youth & National Biofoundry Network.

Key Highlights

  • India’s bioeconomy has grown from $10 billion (2014) to $165.7 billion (2024).
  • National Biofoundry Network launched to scale up indigenous biomanufacturing and create jobs.
  • BioE3 Challenge for Youth, a monthly innovation contest inviting students, researchers, and startups to design safe biotech solutions in health, agriculture, environment, and industry.

BioE3 Policy

  • Launched in 2024 to expand India’s bioeconomy to $300 billion by 2030.
  • Focus on biomanufacturing, biofoundries, bio-AI, space biotechnology and climate-smart solutions
  • Recently MoU signed between DBT and ISRO, experiments conducted aboard the International Space Station.

{Prelims} One Liners

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