Financial Devolution in India : Overview Constitutional Basis Current Structure of Tax Devolution Criteria Used for Horizontal Devolution Major Issues in Financial Devolution Way Forward
Free Content Access for LLMs Suggested in Policy Paper | Tech GS3
Large Language Model (LLM)A Large AI model trained on huge text datasets that can understand and generate human-like language. (Examples: ChatGPT, Gemini) DPIIT Working Paper:! Free access to public online contentLLMs should be allowed to train on all publicly available internet data so India’s AI models get enough training material.” Copyright society for royaltiesA new body will collect royalties from AI companies and distribute them to content creators → ensures creators are paid when AI uses their work. No “opt-out” for publishers Publishers cannot block AI from using their publicly available content.Reason: impractical + restricts data for AI training.$ AimBalance creator protection with AI development in India.% Based on compulsory licensingAI can use content without permission, but must pay regulated royalty (sameprinciple used for FM radio).
IMF Bailout for Pakistan Approved at $1.2 Billion | GS2 IR News
ContextIMF approved $1.2 bn for Pakistan as part of its bailout package, citing “significant progress” in stabilizing its crisis-hit economy. What is an IMF Bailout?IMF bailout = Emergency loan given to a country facing severe economic trouble (low forex, high debt, inflation) to prevent economic collapse.Comes with conditions:• Fiscal tightening• Subsidy cuts• Tax/structural reforms
Right to Health in India: Charting a Policy Agenda | GS2 Health
Context• The National Convention on Health Rights (Dec 11–12, 2025) brings together health professionals and civil society from 20+ States to shape a national agenda on the Right to Health.• Held around Human Rights Day and Universal Health Coverage Day, it reflects a push to strengthen public health systems post-COVID-19. Key Issues HighlightedA. Rising Privatisation of Healthcare• Expansion of public–private partnerships and transfer of medical institutions to private players has made healthcare unaffordable.• Despite the Clinical Establishments Act (2010), regulation remains weak → overcharging, unnecessary procedures, opaque pricing, violation of patient rights.• Privatisation widens inequality as millions rely on weak public systems. B. Low Public Financing• India spends only 2% of the Union Budget on health and about $25 per capita annually — among the lowest globally.• High out-of-pocket expenditure persists despite government insurance schemes.• Convention will examine the gap between scheme promises and reality, and argue for higher public spending, equitable access, and reduced OOPE. C. Justice for Health Workers• COVID-19 revealed essential roles of doctors, nurses, ASHAs, paramedics.• Yet they continue to face low wages, insecure contracts, poor working conditions, and inadequate social protection.• The convention demands respect, fair pay, safety, and workforce strengthening to build resilient health systems. D. Access to Medicines• Medicines form half of household health spending.• 80% of drugs in India remain outside price control → irrational pricing, unethical marketing, high markups.• The convention advocates stronger price regulation, GST reform on medicines, and expansion of the public sector production of essential drugs. E. Inclusion and Non-Discrimination• Social hierarchies restrict access to care.• A special session will highlight barriers faced by:Dalits, Adivasis, Muslims, LGBTQ+ persons, persons with disabilities, and women.• Emphasis on embedding equity and non-discrimination in health systems. F. Public Provisioning & Community-Based Models• Evidence from States shows that community-led, decentralised approaches can revitalise public health systems.• The vision emphasises healthcare as a public good, not a profit-making commodity. G. Broader Determinants of Health• Links health to food security, environmental pollution, climate change.• Calls for inter-sectoral collaboration for long-term health resilience. Purpose of the Convention• To push Parliament and policymakers toward Right to Health–based reforms.• To resist commercialisation of health, reaffirming “healthcare for all, not profits”.• Celebrates 25 years of the Jan Swasthya Abhiyan, showcasing its work with women’s groups, rural movements, and civil society networks. TDF (Mains Question) India’s public health system continues to face challenges of privatization, low public spending, inequity, and weak regulation. In this context, discuss the key concerns highlighted by recent debates on the Right to Health and suggest measures to strengthen public health systems. (150 words)
Aditya L1 Solar Storm Study Explains Unusual 2024 Event | Space GS3
What Was Different in the 2024 Solar Storm (Aditya–L1 Discovery)(a) Collision of Two CMEs• Two coronal mass ejections collided and compressed each other in space.(b) Magnetic Breakup Inside the CME• Magnetic field lines inside one CME snapped and rejoined→ a process known as magnetic reconnection.• This happened inside the CME, not near Earth — first observation of its kind.(c) Massive Reconnection Region• Size: ~1.3 million km (about 100 times Earth’s diameter).• Such a large internal magnetic reconfiguration has never been recorded before.(d) Result → Stronger Storm• This internal magnetic disturbance intensified the CME earlier than expected, making the May 2024 solar storm exceptionally strong.
India Nepal Army Exercise Concludes in Uttarakhand | Defence News for UPSC
SURYA KIRAN–XIX (India–Nepal Military Exercise)• Bilateral exercise: India–Nepal• Edition: 19th (XIX)• Location: Pithoragarh, Uttarakhand• Level: Battalion-level joint training• Observed by: DGMOs of both armies Core Focus• Counter-terrorism operations under UN Charter Chapter VII• Joint mission planning & interoperability• Small-team tactical operations• Intelligence-based surgical missions• Rapid-response capability
Trump Tariffs on Indian Rice May Impact U.S. Market | GS2 Trade News
Important Data & Facts Impact Direction• Tariffs would hurt the U.S. more than India because:• India sends very little rice to the U.S. (3% of our export basket).• But the U.S. depends heavily on Indian rice (over 1/4th of its rice imports).
Indian Statistical Institute Bill 2025
Purpose of the Bill • Replaces the ISI Act, 1959• Converts ISI from a society-based institution into a centrally supervised statutory body.• Aims to modernise governance, administration, and financial structure. Institutional Restructuring • ISI becomes a statutory institution created by Parliament• Existing society structure under a State Act is dissolved• Central oversight increases significantly New Governance Structure • Board of Governors (BoG) becomes the top authority• Majority of BoG members are Central Government nominees• Academic representation is reduced to only three seats• Academic Council becomes advisory instead of decision-making Administrative Changes • BoG can open, merge, relocate, or close ISI centres in India or abroad• No statutory protection for the Kolkata headquarters• Director is appointed, reviewed, and removed directly by the Central Government Financial Framework • Bill mandates revenue generation and financial self-sufficiency• Possible streams include higher student fees, consultancy, sponsored research, IP and patents• BoG gets autonomy to manage funds, grants, and endowments• Accounts audited as per CAG standards Criticisms and Concerns • Reduced autonomy due to strong government control• Limited faculty participation in governance• Seen as weakening cooperative federalism as a State-registered society is replaced without consultation• Fear of shift from fundamental research to commercially driven projects• Potential increase in student fees and research cost burden Government’s Stand • Reforms aim to make ISI a globally competitive, world-class institution• Based on recommendations of the 2020 R. A. Mashelkar Committee• Intended to strengthen governance efficiency and academic expansion
China Trade Surplus: Understanding the $1 Trillion Export Advantage
China Trade Surplus
Tax Devolution Gap: 7 States Face Revenue Shortfall Explained
Tax Contribution vs Devolution Period: 2020-21 to 2024-25 States contributing MORE than they receive (7 States)• Maharashtra: Contributes 36.1%; receives 6.65% (biggest negative gap).• Karnataka: Gap –8.8 pps.• Haryana: Gap –4.3 pps.• Gujarat: Gap –3.5 pps.• Tamil Nadu: Gap –2.95 pps.• Telangana: Gap –1.4 pps.• Goa: Gap –0.04 pps. States receiving MORE than they contribute• Uttar Pradesh: Contributes 4.6%; receives 15.8% (highest positive gap).• Bihar: Gap +8 pps.• Madhya Pradesh: Gap +5.5 pps.• Rajasthan: Gap +3.55 pps.