Monday, 13 July 2020
Thursday, 9 July 2020
Upsc Environment Books , Thinker Platform
NCERT ENVIRONMENT BOOKS FOR UPSC
Class 11 → Environment Part in Biology
Class 12 ➡️Environment Part in Biology
➡️ Environment Part in Chemistry
Tuesday, 9 June 2020
NCERT Society Book Pdf, Class 11 and 12th (UPSC)
Monday, 1 June 2020
NCERT Economics Book Pdf, Class 9 to 12
Friday, 29 May 2020
NCERT Geography Class 6 to 12 in English - Thinker Platform
NCERT
GEOGRAPHY BOOKS
6 to 12th
Class 6 :- The Earth Our Habitat
(PDF DOWNLOAD)
Class 7:- Our Environment
(PDF DOWNLOAD)
Class 8 :- Resources and Development
(PDF DOWNLOAD)
Class 9 :- Contemporary India I
(PDF DOWNLOAD)
Class 10 :- Contemporary India II
(PDF DOWNLOAD)
Class 11 :- Fundamental of Physical Geography
(PDF DOWNLOAD)
Class 11 :- India Physical Environment
(PDF DOWNLOAD)
Class 12 :- Fundamental of Human Geography
(PDF DOWNLOAD)
Class 12 :- India People and Economy
(PDF DOWNLOAD)
Extra
Disaster Managment
(PDF DOWNLOAD)
Thursday, 28 May 2020
Economics Prelims Notes 2020 ; UPSC: Thinker Platform
CONTENT
Banking
1.1 50 years of Bank Nationalisation
1.2 Non-Banking Financial Companies
1.3 Unregulated Deposits Scheme
1.4 Chit Funds Amendment Act
1.5 Punjab and Maharashtra Co-operative
Bank
1.6 Bank Mergers
1.7 Specialised Supervisory and Regulation
Cadre
1.8 Repo Rate Cut
1.9 RBI Reserve Surplus
1.10 India Ratifies OECD Convention
1.11 Basel Norms
1.12 Merchant Discount Rates
1.13 Utkarsh 2022
1.14 6th Bi-monthly MPC
1.15 Payments Banks
1.16 Small Finance Banks
Financial Markets
2.1 India‘s First Overseas Sovereign Bonds
2.2 National Investment and Infrastructure Fund
2.3 Bharat Bond Exchange Traded Fund
2.4 Manorahan Committee
2.5 Bond Yeild Inversion
2.6 Social Stock Exchange
Taxation
3.1 Akhilesh Ranjan Task Force
3.2 Tax Buoyancy
3.3 Corporate Tax Cuts
3.4 Angel Tax
3.5 2 Years of GST
Agriculture, Farming and Allied Sectors
4.1 PM KISAN
4.2 MArine Fisheries Bill
4.3 Sugar Buffer Stock
4.4 RBI Report on Agri Credit
4.5National Animal Disease Control
Programme
4.6 20th Livestock Census
4.7 APEDA
4.8 NAFED
4.9 Contract Farming
4.10 One Nation, One Ration Card
4.11 New Rubber Policy
4.12 Food Mitra Scheme
4.13 e- NAM
Infrastructure
5.1 National Investment and Manufacturing Zones
5.2 Smart Cities
5.3 K-FON Project
5.4 NAtional Infrastructure Pipeline
5.5 Recent Divestments
5.6 Development Support Services for
States
5.7 PACEsetter Fund
5.8 Railway Restructuring
5.9 Digitisation of Land Records
5.10 Government owned Contractor
Operated
5.11 Give it Up Campaign
5.12 Dholera Special Investment region
5.13 Government e-Marketplace
5.14 North East GAs Grid Project
5.15 Adjusted Gross Revenue
5.16 25k Crore fund for Housing Sector
Industry
6.1 Slowdown in Auto Industry
6.2 Power Generation
6.3 Corporate Social Responsibility
6.4 Index of Industrial Production
6.5 Vehicle Scrappage Policy
Fiscal Policy
7.1 Revision of WPI
7.2 National Statistical Office
7.3 GDP Estimation in India
7.4 Moody‘s Rating
7.5 RBI‘s Operation Twist
Employment and Skill Development
8.1 Kaushal Yuva Samwad
8.2 Jeevan Kaushal Programme
8.3 Periodic Labour Force Survey
8.4 Yuwaah Youth Skilling Programme
8.5 Future Skills Prime
External Sector and Trade
9.1 Elephant Bonds
9.2 NIRVIK Scheme
9.3 Edible Oil Imports
9.4 Forex Reserves
9.5 FDI Policy Reform
Report and Indices
10.1 Broadband Readiness Index
10.2 Global Innovation Index
10.3 Travel & Tourism Competitive Index
10.4 Gold Council Report 2019
10.5 Digital Economy Report 2019
10.6 LEADS Index
10.7 Global Competitive Index
10.8 IMF‘s World Economic Outlook
10.9 India Innovation Index
10.10 Global Wealth Report
10.11 Ease of Doing Business Report
10.12 Global Microscope Report
Committees
11.1 Nandan Nilekani Committee
11.2 Surjit Bhalla Committee
11.3 VG Kannan Committee
12. Miscellaneous
12.1 SEBI Norms for Credit Rating Agencies
12.2 LIBRA
12.3 International Cooperation Scheme
12.4 GAFA Tax
12.5 India International Cooperative Trade
Fair
12.6 Serious Fraud Investigation Office
12.7 India‘s First Women Trade Centre
12.8 Nobel Prize in Economics
12.9 Private Trains
BANKING
1.1 50 Years of Bank Nationalisation
· July 2019 marked 50 years of nationalisation of 14 commercial banks in India.
● State Bank of India was the only public sector undertaking that was nationalised (in 1955) before 1969.
● The SBI nationalisation had happened in the backdrop of private banks going bankrupt at an alarming rate.
● In 1969, the Indira Gandhi government carried out bank nationalisation through the Banking Companies (Acquisition and Transfer of Undertakings) Ordinance, 1969.
● Fourteen big private banks were nationalised, to be taken control of by the government.
The 14 BANKS
Allahabad Bank, Bank of Baroda, Bank of India, Bank of Maharashtra
Central Bank of India, Canara Bank, Dena Bank, Indian Bank, Indian Overseas Bank, Punjab National
Bank, Syndicate Bank, UCO Bank, Union Bank, United Bank of India
Why were they Nationalised?
● To reduce the impacts of Economic Difficulties during the 1960s
● To eliminate those few stakeholders controlling the banks
● Ensure adequate credit for agriculture, small industry and exports
● The impetus to Bank management and administration
● Encourage new ideas and entrepreneurs in the economy
1.2 Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFC)
What?
It has been announced that RBI will be granted more powers to regulate Non-Banking Financial Companies
Why?
● Recent issues of NBFC‘s wherein NBFC‘s have shown liquidity issues and also defaults as in the case of the IL&FS
● The net NPA for NBFC‘s increased marginally to 3.6 per cent in December 2018 from 3.2 per cent in March 2018.
● The GNPA ratio of NBFC sector deteriorated to 6.5 per cent as in December 2018 from 6.1 per cent in March 2018.
● At the end of December 2018, CRAR of the NBFC sector worsened to 22.2 per cent from 22.8 per cent at endMarch 2018.
● Return on Assets and return on equity also declined from March 2018 to December 2018.
What is NBFC’s?
It is a company registered under the Companies Act, 1956 engaged in the
business of loans and advances, acquisition of shares/stocks/bonds/
debentures/securities issued by Government or local authority or other.
marketable securities of a like nature, leasing, hire-purchase, insurance
business, chit business.
Difference between Banks and NBFC’s
● NBFC cannot accept demand deposits;
● NBFCs do not form part of the payment and settlement system and cannot issue cheques
drawn on itself
1.3 Unregulated Deposits Schemes Act 2019
● The Banning of Unregulated Deposit Schemes Bill, 2019 was introduced in Lok Sabha by the Minister of Finance, Ms. Nirmala Sitharaman, on July 19, 2019. The Bill provides for a mechanism to ban unregulated deposit schemes and protect the interests of depositors. It also seeks to amend three laws, i.e., the Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934, the Securities and Exchange Board of India Act, 1992 and the Multi-State Co-operative Societies Act, 2002. With the Presidential assent, it has effectively become an act of the parliament
Why?
● The Act comes in the background of the recent menace of Ponzi scheme scandals like Sarada, Narada, Rose Valley and IMA Jewels Scam in Bangalore.
● The Act seeks to protect investors from the siphoning off of their money and covers the existing loopholes.
The Act
● The act bans unregulated deposit schemes. A deposit-taking scheme is defined as unregulated if it is taken for a business purpose and is not registered with the regulators listed in the act.
● The listed regulators include (i) the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), (ii) the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), (iii) the Ministry of Corporate Affairs, and (iv) state and union territory governments.
● The Act has defined a deposit taker as an individual, a group of individuals, or a company who asks for (solicits), or receives deposits.
● It provides for the appointment of one or more government officers, not below the rank of Secretary to the state or central government, as the Competent Authority.
● It has also The Bill provides for the constitution of one or more Designated Courts in specified areas. This Court will be headed by a judge not below the rank of a district and sessions judge, or additional district and sessions judge.
● A central database has also been proposed along with the various punitive measures to be taken.
1.4 Chit Funds Amendment Act, 2019
● The Act specifies various names which may be used to refer to a chit fund. These include chit, chit fund, and kuri.
The Act additionally inserts ‗fraternity fund‘ and ‗rotating savings and credit institution‘ to this list.
● The Act specifies the maximum amount of chit funds which may be collected. These limits are: (i) one lakh rupees
for chits conducted by individuals, and for
every individual in a firm or association
with less than four partners, and (ii) six
lakh rupees for firms with four or more
partners. The Bill increases these limits to
three lakh rupees and 18 lakh rupees,
respectively.
● The Act does not apply to: (i) any chit
started before it was enacted, and (ii) any
chit (or multiple chits being managed by
the same foreman) where the amount is
less than Rs 100.
● The Act removes the limit of Rs 100 and allows the state governments to specify the base amount over which the
provisions of the Act will apply.
1.5 Punjab and Maharashtra Cooperative (PMC) Bank
● The Reserve Bank of India has ordered Punjab and
Maharashtra Co-operative (PMC) Bank not to do any
business for six months and capped depositor withdrawals at
Rs 1,000.
● Bank was put under regulatory restriction under Section 35A
of the Banking Regulation Act, due to irregularities like
fraudulent loans, excessive lending to Housing Development
& Infrastructure Ltd (HDIL) etc.
● The bank has been barred from granting, renewing and loans
and advances, make any investments and accept fresh
deposits, without the prior written approval from the RBI.
● PMC‘s collapse is unlikely to impact financial markets or
other private or public sector banks as co-operative banks
have meagre dealings in money markets as they largely
depend upon deposits.
1.6 Bank Mergers
What?
● Under the plan, Oriental Bank of Commerce and
United Bank of India will be merged with Punjab
National Bank; Canara Bank with Syndicate Bank;
Andhra Bank and Corporation Bank with Union Bank
of India; and Allahabad Bank with Indian Bank.
● This merger would bring number of public schedule
bank in India from 27 before 2017 to 12.
1.7 Specialised Supervisory and Regulation Cadre
The Reserve Bank of India‘s Central Board has decided to create a ‗Specialised Supervisory and Regulatory Cadre‘
within the RBI.
● The decision to create a Specialised Supervisory and Regulatory Cadre within the RBI was taken at the recent two
day meeting of Reserve Bank of India‘s Central Board which was held under the chairmanship of RBI Governor
Shaktikanta Das in Chennai.
● The cadre creation came with a view of strengthening the supervision and regulation of commercial banks, urban
cooperative banks and Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs).
● The decision for creating an additional oversight mechanism was taken in the wake of recent NBFC crisis such as
large-scale defaults by IL&FS in 2018
1.8 Repo Rate Cut
● In the last few months, repo rates in India have witnessed
a falling trend as the RBI initiated multiple cuts in line
with requirements of the Indian economy. As the current
repo rate, October 2019 stands at 5.15%, it is the lowest in
the last 5 years.
● It has consistently gone decreasing since August 2018
from 6.50% to 5.15% in October.
Impact of the Rate Cut
● Loans to customers at cheaper rates.
● Increase in affordability.
● Increased size of loans from consumers, thus improving liquidity.
● Significant growth in the economy‘s overall consumption
● Increased consumption, driving the economy toward growth.
1.9 RBI Reserve Surplus
● The Reserve Bank of India board on Monday approved to the
transfer of staggering Rs 1.76 lakh crore, nearly double the
budgeted amount of Rs 90,000 crore, to the government.
This is for the first time that RBI has provided such a huge
amount to the government.
● This year's record transfer which includes Rs 1.23 lakh crore
of surplus or dividend and Rs 52,637 crore excess provisions
is because last year the RBI intervened in both markets — the
forex markets where it sold dollars at a huge profit and the
money markets where it conducted record open market
operations (buying bonds), which earned it interest
1.10 India ratifies OECD’s convention to check Tax Evasion
● India has ratified the multilateral convention to implement OECD's project on checking tax evasion, and the
provisions enshrined in the framework will come into effect from fiscal 2020-21 for bilateral tax treaties, the
finance ministry said.
● The Cabinet last month approved ratification of the convention, which will modify India's treaties in order to curb
revenue loss through treaty abuse and base erosion and profit shifting strategies by ensuring that profits are taxed
where substantive economic activities generating the profits are carried out and where value is created.
● After this convention, 90 countries have now implemented the automatic exchange of financial account and tax
information.
● The convention enables all signatories to meet treaty-related minimum standards that were agreed as part of the
BEPS package.
What is Base Erosion and Profit Shifting?
● It refers to corporate tax planning strategies used by multinationals to "shift" profits from higher-tax jurisdictions
to lower-tax jurisdictions, thus "eroding" the "tax-base" of the higher-tax jurisdictions
1.11 Basel Norms
● Basel guidelines refer to broad supervisory standards formulated by this group of central banks called the Basel
Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS).
● Bureau of International Settlement (BIS), which fosters co-operation among central banks with a common goal of
financial stability and common standards of banking regulations.
● The purpose of the accord is to ensure that financial institutions have enough capital on account to meet
obligations and absorb unexpected losses.
● India has accepted Basel accords for the banking system.
● In 2010, Basel III guidelines were released. These guidelines were introduced in response to the financial crisis of
2008. A need was felt to further strengthen the system as banks in the developed economies were under
capitalized, over-leveraged and had a greater reliance on short-term funding
● Basel III norms aim at making most banking activities such as their trading book activities more capital-intensive.
Key Principles of the Basel III
● Minimum Capital Requirements- The Basel
III accord raised the minimum capital
requirements for banks from 2% in Basel II to 4.5%
of common equity, as a percentage of the bank‘s
risk-weighted assets. There is also an additional
2.5% buffer capital requirement that brings the
total equity to 7%
● Leverage Ratio- Basel III introduced a non-risk
based leverage ratio to serve as a backstop to the
risk-based capital requirements. Banks are
required to hold a leverage ratio in excess of 3%.
● Liquidity Coverage Ratio was introduced in
2015 with 60% requirements and is expected to
increase by 10% each year till 2019 when it takes
full effect.
1.12 Merchant Discount Rates
● The government has mandated that neither the customers nor the merchants will have to pay the so-called
Merchant Discount Rate (or MDR) while transacting digital payments.
● Merchant Discount Rate is the sum total of all the charges and taxes that a digital payment entails.
● Customers and merchants don‘t have to pay MDR.
● RBI and Banks will absorb these costs from the savings that will accrue to them on account of handling less cash as
people move to these digital modes of payment
1.13 Utkarsh 2022
● RBI has launched medium-term strategy framework Utkarsh 2022
● The framework has been launched to achieve excellence in the performance of RBI's mandates and strengthening
the trust of citizens and other institutions.
1.14 Sixth Bi-Monthly Monetary Policy (Feb. 2020)
● The six-member monetary policy committee headed by
Shaktikanta Das maintained the status quo for REPO
lending rates at 5.15%.
● It has continued with the accommodative stance in
monetary policy to revive the economy.
● The governor said that now that inflation has peaked, it is
expected to go down in the future. Further, the committee
raised a premium for bank deposits from 10 paise to 12
paise.
● it has projected consumer inflation to rise to 6.5% from
5.1% in the quarter ending at the march 2020.
● RBI has increased the real GDP growth rate forecast from
5% to 6% for the fiscal year 2020-21.
● Further, the committee has decided to maintain the Bank
rate and the Marginal Standing Facility (MSF) at 4.90%.
1.15 Payments Banks
What?
● A payments bank is a bank operating on a smaller
scale without involving any credit risk. In simple
words, it can carry out most banking operations but
can‘t advance loans or issue credit cards. It can accept
demand deposits (up to Rs 1 lakh), offer remittance
services, mobile payments/transfers/purchases and
other banking services like ATM/debit cards, net
banking and third party fund transfers.
● Payment Banks are a result of suggestions given by the Nachiket Mor Committee in 2013
● The main objective of payments banks is to widen the spread of payment and financial services to small business,
low-income households, and migrant labour workforce in a secure technology-driven environment.
1.16 Small Finance Banks
Small finance banks are a type of niche banks in India. Banks with a small finance bank license can provide basic
banking service of acceptance of deposits and lending.
Objectives
1. provision of savings vehicles, and
2. supply of credit to small business units, small and marginal farmers, micro and small
industries and other unorganised sector entities, through high technology-low cost
operations.
Facts
1. The minimum paid-up equity capital for small finance banks shall be Rs. 100 crore.
2. The small finance bank will be subject to all prudential norms and regulations of RBI
as applicable to existing commercial banks including requirement of maintenance of
Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) and Statutory Liquidity Ratio (SLR).
Examples: Ujjivan Small Finance Bank, Janalakshmi Small Finance Bank, Equitas Small
Finance Bank, A U Small Finance Bank,Capital Small Finance Bank.
Why in the news?
● The Reserve Bank of India‘s (RBI)'s new draft guidelines for on-tap licensing of small
finance banks (SFBs) allows payment banks to convert into SFBs after five years of
operations.
● The guidelines have also clarified that SFBs will be given scheduled bank status
immediately upon commencement of operations
● An SFB will be required to manage robust risk management framework by ensuring
that the bank extends loans primarily to small borrowers. Besides, at least 50 per cent
of its loan portfolio should constitute loans and advances of up to Rs.25 lakh on an
ongoing basis.
FINANCIAL MARKETS
2.1 India’s First Overseas Sovereign Bonds
Last years Union Budget 2019 proposed funding the fiscal deficit partially by borrowing from international markets in
foreign currency by issuing its first overseas sovereign bond.
Why?
● Public-sector borrowing is adversely impacting the
market rates, along with liquidity in the system. This is
one of the issues affecting monetary policy transmission.
● India‗s sovereign external debt is less than 5% of its
GDP, one of the lowest in the world. Thus the move is
relatively risk-free
● The basic idea is that by shifting part of its borrowing abroad, the government will reduce the pressure on the
domestic market, and also not inflate the domestic interest rates.
2.2 National Investment and Infrastructure Fund
● National Investment and Infrastructure Fund is India‘s first sovereign wealth fund that was set up by the
Government of India in February 2015.
● It manages over USD 3 billion of capital commitments across three funds, each with its distinct investment
strategy.
The functions of the NIIF are as follows:
● Fundraising through suitable instruments including off-shore credit enhanced bonds, and attracting anchor
investors to participate as partners in NIIF;
● Servicing of the investors of NIIF.
● Considering and approving candidate companies/institutions/ projects (including state entities) for investments
and periodic monitoring of investments.
● Investing in the corpus created by Asset Management Companies (AMCs) for investing in private equity.
● Preparing a shelf of infrastructure projects and providing advisory services.
● It is being considered as an Alternative Investment Fund (AIF) under SEBI regulation.
● It acts as a bankers bank in infrastructure financing. The government owns 49% of NIIF.
Why in the news?
● NIIF of India and Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB) have agreed for CPPIB to invest up to $600
million through the NIIF Master Fund.
● The NIIF Master Fund invests equity capital in core infrastructure sectors in India, with a focus on transportation,
energy and urban infrastructure.
2.3 Bharat Bond Exchange Traded Fund
● The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs has
given its approval for creation and launch of Bharat
BondExchange Traded Fund (ETF)
● Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs) are mutual funds
listed and traded on stock exchanges like shares.
Index ETFs are created by institutional investors
swapping shares in an index basket, for units in the
fund. Usually, ETFs are passive funds where the fund
manager doesn't select stocks on your behalf.
Bharat Bond
● The government has approved the launch of Bharat
Bond ETF, India‘s first corporate bond exchange
traded fund, comprising debt of state-run companies.
● It is a basket of bonds issued by central public sector
enterprises/undertakings or any other government
organization bonds.
● It will have a fixed maturity of three and ten years and will trade on the stock exchanges.
2.4 Manorahan Committee
The committee was set up by the RBI to examine the possibilities of a secondary market for corporate loans in India
submitted its report recently.
What Is a Secondary Market?
● The secondary market is where investors buy and sell securities they already own. It is what most people typically
think of as the "stock market," though stocks are also sold on the primary market when they are first issued.
Recommendations
● The task force headed by Canara Bank chairman T.N. Manoharan recommended setting up of a self-regulatory
body (SRB), which will oversee the proposed secondary market.
● The SRB may be set up as an association by scheduled commercial banks, public financial institutions and other
related entities, and may be incorporated as a Section 8 company under the Companies Act, 2013. It must be set
up within three months from the date of acceptance of the recommendations, the report added.
● The SRB‘s role will be to standardize loan documentation and covenants, periodically review the documentation,
ensure standardization of practices, and promote growth, liquidity, efficiency and transparency of the proposed
secondary market.
● It will also be responsible for setting up a central loan contract registry, which will finalize the detailed design
structure, infrastructure, technological aspects and nature of incorporation, to ensure legal sanctity of its
operations and for executing agreements with other agencies.
2.5 Bond Yield and Inversion
● In India, government bond yields fell sharply in the wake of the Union Budget.
● Yield inversion happens when the yield on a longer tenure bond becomes less than the yield for a shorter tenure
bond.
● A yield inversion typically signals a recession.
● An inverted yield curve shows that investors expect the future growth to fall sharply; in other words, the demand
for money would be much lower than what it is today and hence the yields are also lower.
2.6 Social Stock Exchange
● The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has constituted a working group on Social Stock Exchanges
(SSE) under the chairmanship of Ishaat Hussain, Director, SBI Foundation.
● It would encourage banks, NBFCs and other investors to participate in the growth journey of the social enterprises
● According to a McKinsey study, ‗impact investors‘ in India poured a total of $5.2 billion between 2010 and 2016,
most of which was concentrated in sectors like financial inclusion and clean energy.
TAXATION
3.1 Akhilesh Ranjan Task Force
A committee headed by CBDT member Akhilesh Ranjan on Monday submitted its report on replacing the Income Tax
Act with a new Direct Tax Code, said the finance ministry on Monday.
● For individual taxpayers, One of the main objectives of the committee was to make the I-T Act simpler, with a
focus on easing the burden on individuals and companies as acute slowdown continues to erode economic growth.
● For corporates, The report is also expected to focus on promoting ease of doing business by suggesting a
common tax rate for domestic and foreign companies. The committee may have proposed a special set of
provisions for startups, which are worst-affected when it comes to taxation.
3.2 Tax Buoyancy
Poor responsiveness of tax collection to
economic growth poses new challenges for
norms on sharing taxes with the states.
Trends
● The 2014-19 period saw steady performance in tax buoyancy.
● In the first half of 2019-20, the Centre‗s gross tax revenue grew by just 1.5% over the same period of 2018-19
● The period of 4 years between 2009-10 and 2011-12 saw tax buoyancy quite irregular.
3.3 Corporate Tax Cuts
● The government slashed the corporate tax
rate to 22% from 30% for existing companies,
and to 15% from 25% for new manufacturing
companies.
● Including a surcharge and cess, the effective
tax rate for existing companies would now
come down to 25.17% from 35%. Companies
can opt for the higher tax rates or the new
ones.
● To attract investment in manufacturing, local
companies incorporated after October 2019
and till March 2023, will pay tax at 15 per
cent.
Impact
● Change the profitability making nature of the Indian corporates..
● Given the substantially lower rates would imply that many corporates will break even much ahead than what
would have been the case with the earlier rates.
● Lower taxes should, ideally, the result is higher profit margins. Lower corporate income tax rates and the resultant
change in profitability will likely prompt companies to invest more, raising their capital expenditure.
● Additional capacities will eventually prompt these companies to hire more employees.
3.4 Angel Tax
What?
Angel Tax is the direct income tax levied on start-ups for the funds raised through Angel investors. It is levied on the
value more than what is seen as the 'Fair Value' or 'Fair Market Value'.
How much?
Angel Tax is levied at a hefty rate of 30.9% on net investments in excess of the fair market value. So for example, if a
startup receives 50 crores of investment by issuing 1 lakh shares at Rs.5000 each to an Indian investor and the fair
market value is Rs.2000 per share i.e Rs.20 crore only, then the startup will have to pay angel tax on the amount in
excess of the fair market value i.e Rs. 30 crore. Therefore Angel Tax payable in this transaction will be Rs. 9.27 crore
(30.9% on Rs.30 crore).
Issues
Angel tax in a way wipes away a major part of the investible surplus of the startup hurting its growth prospects and
hitting hard on the viability of the business.
3.5 2 years of GST
● GST was rolled out on July 1 two years ago
as new indirect tax system
● GST subsumed 17 existing indirect taxes
levied under the previous tax regime
● GST collections have improved in two years
despite falling short of budget projections.
● GST is currently levied on every product
except petroleum, alcohol, tobacco and
stamp duty on real estate in four slabs of 5,
12, 18 and 28 per cent. Most of the daily use
articles have zero GST as per the latest
revision of the tax rates last year.
● The government's revenue collection has
also gone up. The average revenue
collection per month in the eight months of
2017-18 was Rs 89,700 crore per month.
● Taxes NOT subsumed under GST: Basic
Custom Duty, Anti-Dumping Duty, Central
Excise on Petroleum Products, VAT on
alcohol for human consumption, Stamp
Duty, Property Tax (levied by local bodies),
Professional Tax etc.
AGRICULTURE, FARMING AND ALLIED SECTORS
4.1 PM KISAN
Overview
The implementation is through the Ministry of Agriculture
& Farmers Welfare
● It provides assured income support to the small and
marginal farmers through direct benefit transfer (DBT)
to their bank accounts.
● Previously only vulnerable landholding farmer families
having cultivable land up to 2 hectares, were to be
provided direct income support of Rs. 6,000 per year.
But it has been extended to include all eligible farmer
families irrespective of the size of land holdings
● It will be transferred in three equal instalments of
Rs.2,000 each.
● The Scheme had been launched by PM Modi from
Gorakhpur,
4.2 Marine Fisheries Bill
● The Bill prohibits fishing by foreign fishing vessels, thus
nationalising EEZ.
An Indian fishing vessel desirous of fishing in the EEZ, outside the TS,
must obtain a permit. No permit is issued unless the fishing vessel is
registered under the Merchant Shipping Act, 1958.
● It proposes social security for fish workers and calls for protection of
life at sea during severe weather events.
4.3 Sugar Buffer Stock
● The government approved the creation of a sugar buffer stock of 4
million tonnes in view of bumper domestic production and pending
sugarcane arrears of more than ₹ 15,000 crore.
● The government will spend an estimated ₹ 1,674 crore for this purpose. The buffer stock will help maintain
demand-supply balance and to stabilise sugar prices.
● The buffer stock will be created for one year from August 1, 2019, to July 31, 2020, for which the government
would be reimbursing the carrying cost of about ₹ 1,674 crore to participating sugar mills
● Indian sugar mills produced 77.95 lakh tonnes of sugar till December 31, that is, the first three months of the
current sugar season (October 2019-September 2020). This is the lowest in five years.
4.4 RBI Report on Agricultural Credit
● Reserve Bank of India (RBI) says it found that in some states, credit disbursal to the farm sector was higher than
their agricultural gross domestic (GDP) product.
● Indicating the possibility of diversion of credit for non-agricultural purposes. Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Telangana,
Karnataka and Punjab came in this category.
● In Kerala and Tamil Nadu, according to the report, agricultural credit was almost 180 per cent more than the
average agriculture GDP of the state in the years 2015, 2016 and 2017.
● In 2018-19, the government had fixed a target of disbursing Rs 11 trillion in agricultural credit. The achievement
was 114 per cent, according to a written reply in Parliament. In previous years, too, banks consistently exceeded
their agricultural credit disbursal target. However, the big question is whether it is going to the right person
● It also notes the neglect of banks to the allied sector — livestock, fisheries, dairying and forestry. Between 2014
and 2016, the allied sector contributed significantly to the agricultural output, with a share of 38-42 per cent.
4.5 National Animal Disease Control Programme
● Prime Minister Narendra Modi launched the National Animal Disease Control Programme (NACDP) to control
and eradicate the Foot & Mouth Disease (FMD) and Brucellosis amongst the livestock in the country, at Mathura
today.
Highlights
1. To vaccinate 600 million cattle and seek to eliminate Brucellosis and foot & mouth disease
2. To control livestock diseases by 2025 and effectively eliminate by 2030
3. cattle, buffalo, sheep, goats, and pigs will be covered under the programme.
● The Prime Minister also launched the National Artificial Insemination Programme and a countrywide workshop in
all the Krishi Vigyan Kendras(KVKs) in all the 687 Districts of the country on vaccination and disease
management, Artificial Insemination and Productivity.
4.6 20th Livestock Census
It is released by The Department of Animal Husbandry & Dairying under Ministry of Fisheries, Animal Husbandry &
Dairying.
Key Highlights
● The total Livestock population is 535.78 million in the country showing an increase of 4.6% over Livestock
Census2012
● Total Bovine population (Cattle, Buffalo, Mithun and Yak) is 302.79 Million in 2019 which shows an increase of
1.0% over the previous census.
● The total number of cattle in the country is 192.49 million in 2019 showing an increase of 0.8 % over the previous
Census.
● There is a decline of 6 % in the total Indigenous (both descript and non-descript) Cattle population over the
previous census.
4.7 Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development
Authority (APEDA)
Background:
● A Farmer Connect Portal has been set up by APEDA on its website for providing a platform for Farmer Producer
Organisations (FPOs) and Farmer Producer Companies (FPCs) to interact with exporters.
About APEDA:
● The Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority (APEDA) was established by the
Government of India under the Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority Act
1985.
● The Authority replaced the Processed Food Export Promotion Council (PFEPC).APEDA, under the Ministry of
Commerce and Industries, promotes export of agricultural and processed food products from India.
4.8 National Agricultural Cooperative Marketing Federation of India (NAFED)
● It is registered as Co-operative Society with the objective to promote Cooperative marketing of agricultural
produce to benefit the farmers.
● It was founded to promote the trade of agricultural produce and forest resources across
● the nation.
● It is the nodal agency to implement price stabilization measures under "Operation Greens‖.
● NAFED along with FCI with proactive role of state governments also physically procures oilseeds, pulses and
copra under the Price Support Scheme (PSS) which in turn is under the umbrella scheme of PM-AASHA
4.9 Contract Farming
Tamil Nadu has become the first state to enact a law on contract
farming, based on the lines of model legislation put out by the
Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers‘ Welfare in May 2018
● The law defines it as a written agreement between a farmer and a
buyer for producing an agricultural produce/product or rearing
livestock. It covers a whole range of activities in the entire agri
value chain — from pre-production to production to post
production.
● No genetically modified crops are permitted. Price, quantity and
the delivery schedule are fixed during negotiations between the
two parties.
● The law, which covers over 110 items of agricultural produce,
requires every purchaser to register himself or herself with a
designated officer.
● The Act, while permitting farmers to lease out their agricultural
land or premises to buyers, however, prohibits the latter from
―raising any permanent structure or creating leasehold rights or
any charge of whatever nature‖ on lands of farmers.
4.10 One Nation, One Ration Card scheme
● The Centre has designed a standard format for
ration cards as it moves ahead with 'one nation,
one ration card' initiative and has asked state
governments to follow the pattern while issuing
fresh ration cards.
● Under the initiative, eligible beneficiaries would
be able to avail their entitled foodgrains under the
National Food Security Act (NFSA) from any Fair
Price Shop in the country using the same ration
card.
● For national portability, the state governments
have been asked to issue the ration card in bi
lingual format, wherein besides the local
langauge, the other language could be Hindi or
English.
● The states have also been told to have a 10-digit
standard ration card number, wherein first two
digits will be state code and the next two digits
will be running ration card numbers.
● Under the NFSA, about 75 crore beneficiaries
have been covered so far against the target of
81.35 crore, as per official data.
4.11 New Rubber Policy
The National Rubber Policy includes several provisions to support the Natural Rubber(NR) production sector and the
entire rubber industry value chain.
The Policy covers -
(a)new planting and replanting of rubber
(b)support for growers
(c)processing and marketing of natural rubber
(d)labour shortage
(e)external trade
(f)Centre-State integrated strategies
(g) research and training
(h)rubber product manufacturing and export (I)climate change concerns and the carbon market.
4.12 Food Mitra Scheme
On the occasion of World Food Day, Union Minister for Health and Family Welfare Dr Harsh Vardhan launched Food
Safety Mitra Scheme strategy and implementation.
● Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) has introduced scheme of Food Safety Mitra (FSM) through
which it plans to engage motivated individuals with the food safety ecosystem at ground level.
● An FSM is an individual professional certified by FSSAI who assists in compliances related to FSS Act, Rules &
Regulations with three avatars- Digital Mitra, Trainer Mitra and Hygiene Mitra depending upon their respective
roles and responsibilities.
4.13 e-NAM
● E-NAM i.e. National Agriculture Market is a pan-India electronic trading (e-trading) portal which seeks to
network the existing physical regulated wholesale market (known as APMC market) through a virtual platform to
create a unified national market for agricultural commodities
● e-NAM platform promotes better marketing opportunities for the farmers to sell their produce through online
competitive and transparent price discovery system and online payment facility.
● It also promotes prices commensurate with the quality of produce.
● The e-NAM portal provides single window services for all APMC related information and services.
● This includes commodity arrivals, quality & prices, buy & sell offers & e-payment settlement directly into farmers‘
account, among other services.
● Farmers can access the information on e-NAM easily through their mobile phones from anywhere.
● 585 Regulated Markets of 16 States and 2 Union Territories have been integrated to e-NAM platform. Government
has also decided to integrate additional 415 markets by March, 2020
INFRASTRUCTURE
5.1 National Investment and Manufacturing Zones
The Government has granted the final approval to three National Investment and Manufacturing Zones (NIMZ),
namely Prakasam (Andhra Pradesh), Sangareddy (Telangana) and Kalinganagar (Odisha).
● The main objective of Special Economic Zones is the promotion of exports, while NIMZs are based on the principle
of industrial growth in partnership with States and focuses on manufacturing growth and employment generation.
● NIMZs are different from SEZs in terms of size, level of infrastructure planning, governance structures related to
regulatory procedures, and exit policies.
5.2 Smart Cities
● The mission was launched by Modi on June 25, 2015.
The number of projects completed has seen a quantum
jump of 182% over one year.
● The projects completed have jumped from 318 in June
2018 to 897
● Even private participation in the mission is increasing.
At the outset, Smart City Mission had set a target of
financing 21% of the total mission cost through private
participation. So far, 15% of the projects under
implementation are under public-private partnership
(PPP) model.
● Ahmedabad is ranked number 1, displacing Surat from
the top spot. Of the top 10 cities, three (Ahmedabad,
Surat and Vadodara) are in Prime Minister Narendra
Modi‘s home state Gujarat.
● Tiruppur (ranked 6) has been the highest and fastest
climber and has caught up with all cities within 18
months of being chosen in round 4 in January 2018.
5.3 K-FON Project
● The government has officially cleared the K-Fon project
aimed at providing free high speed Internet connection
to over 20 lakh BPL families in Kerala.
● A consortium led by Bharat Electronics Limited had bagged the bid for the ambitious project to be completed by
December 2020.
● The scheme is being implemented with financial assistance from the KIIFB as part of an ambitious programme to
ensure all citizens have access to Internet. It envisages a State-wide optical fibre network to be set up by Kerala
State Electricity Board Limited and Kerala State IT Infrastructure Limited to link houses and offices.
5.4 National Infrastructure Pipeline
● National
Infrastructure
Pipeline is the
investment
plan unveiled
by the Central
Government
for enhancing
infrastructure
in identified
sectors for a
period of five
years from
2020-25.
● Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced Rs 102 lakh crore ($1.4 trillion) National Infrastructure Pipeline
to spend in the infrastructure sector over a five-year period (2020-25). The plan will help India to reach $5 trillion
economy by 2025.
5.5 Recent Divestments
The Cabinet Committee on Economic
Affairs has given its approval for
strategic divestment of BPCl and 4
other public sector units.
Why?
1. To meet the mismatch between
revenue and capital receipts.
2. Privatisation may prove even
better management and
administration.
3. To reduce the Fiscal gap
Divestment
● Divestment or divestment in
Public sector units in India, is
process of public asset sales by
President of India on behalf of
Government of India, directly
(offer for sale to the public) or
indirectly (bidding process) in
capitalized market.
Strategic Divestment
● When the government decides to transfer the ownership and control of a public sector entity to some other entity,
either private or public, the process is called strategic divestment.
● Department of Investment and Public Asset management (DIPAM) under Ministry of Finance is the Nodal
department for strategic stake sale.
What is the difference between strategic divestment and divestment
● Selling minority shares of Public Enterprises, to another entity be it public or private is divestment. In this, the
government retains ownership of the enterprise. On the other hand, when the government sells the majority
shares(>50%) in an enterprise, that is strategic divestment/sale. Here, the government gives up ownership of the
entity as well. Government carefully chooses enterprises to be put up for sale.
5.6 Development Support Services for States (DSSS) for Infrastructure
Projects
● NITI Aayog has implemented a structured initiative for ―Development Support Services for States (DSSS) for
Infrastructure Projects‖ with a vision to achieve transformational, sustained delivery of infrastructure projects
with state of art capacity disseminated at all levels of governance. The key objective behind the objective is creating
PPP success stories and rebooting infrastructure project delivery models so a sustainable infrastructure creation
cycle is established.
● The DSSS Infrastructure initiative involves providing project level support from Concept plan till financial closure
to State Governments / UTs.
● NITI Aayog has appointed M/s Ernst & Young LLP (EYLLP) as its consultant
5.7 PACE setter Fund
● The PACEsetter fund was constituted by India and the USA in 2015 as a joint fund to provide early-stage grant
funding to accelerate the commercialization of innovative off-grid clean energy products, systems, and business
models
● The Ministry of New and Renewable Energy awarded Grants to the awardees of the of PACEsetter fund
programme
5.8 Railway Restructuring
● The Union Cabinet approved an organisational restructuring of the Indian Railways, including the merger of eight
Group A services, which is expected to end departmentalism, promote smooth working and expedite decision
making. The Railway Board will be revamped along functional lines and its strength pruned to make it a leaner
organisation.
● The eight Group A services will be merged into a central service called the Indian Railway Management Service.
Currently, the Indian Railways is organised into departments such as traffic, civil, mechanical, electrical, signal &
telecom, stores, personnel, and accounts. These departments are vertically separated and are each headed by a
secretary-level officer (member) in the Railway Board.
● This is going to streamline operations and provide flexibility on how they deploy people. It is another step towards
corporatisation
5.9 Digitisation of Land Records
● About 90 per cent of villages in India have computerised the Records of Right (RoR), the basic primary record that
shows land rights and property transactions.
● About 53 per cent of cadastral maps showing the boundaries and ownership of land parcels have been digitised,
the Ministry of Rural Development told the Rajya Sabha
● Till date, the computerisation of RoR has been completed in 5,91,221 (90 per cent) villages out of 6,55,959 villages
across the country, and 66,60,226 (53 per cent) cadastral maps have been digitised out of 1,24,92,526 cadastral
maps
● Along with some States in the North East, Kerala (43.24 per cent) and Jammu and Kashmir (9.32 per cent) are
lagging behind in the computerisation of land records.
5.10 Government-Owned Contractor-Operated Model (GOCO)
● The Army has recently started its programme to seek potential industry partners to implement the GOCO model
for its base and ordnance depots.
● The GOCO model was one of the recommendations of the Lt. Gen. DB Shekatkar (Retd.) committee to ―enhance
combat capability and re-balancing defence expenditure.‖
What is GOCO?
It is a model where the assets are owned by the government while the working and operations are outsourced to
industry players.
5.11 “Give it Up” Campaign
● After the Give it up campaign in the LPG, Government has now proposed a similar campaign in the railway
ticketing sector.
● The Scheme involves asking passengers to sacrifice the subsidy on train tickets.
● The official said the Indian Railways recovers only 53 per cent of the cost of a ticket from a passenger, which puts
additional pressure on the network in terms of earnings
● The remaining 47 per cent is given as subsidy to the passengers.
● The passengers will have the option of buying the train ticket with or without subsidy.
5.12 Dholera Special investment region
● The Dholera Special Investment Region is one of the several greenfield cities that have been planned on the Delhi
Mumbai Industrial Corridor (DMIC).
● The government had set up the Gujarat Industrial Corridor Corporation (GICC), an SPV to oversee development
on the DMIC
● The Dholera SIR is slated to be bigger than Singapore. It covers an estimated 920 square kilometers,
encompassing 22 villages of Dholera taluka of Ahmedabad district and is strategically located between
Ahmedabad, Vadodara and Bhavnagar
5.13 Government E-Marketplace (GeM)
● Recently the government has announced an MoU between GeM and SIDBI
● The MoU seeks to benefit MSMEs, women entrepreneurs, Self Help Groups (SHGs), Women Self Help Groups and
various loan beneficiaries under MUDRA and Stand-up India scheme
About GeM
● It regulates the procurement of goods and services done by the Government Ministries and Departments, Public
Sector Undertakings and other apex autonomous bodies of the Central Government.
● Being an open platform, GeM offers no entry barriers to suppliers who wish to do business with the Government.
● GeM has been developed by the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology
5.14 NorthEast Gas Grid Project
● The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs has approved a Capital Grant as the Viability Gap Funding to
Indradhanush Gas Grid Ltd for setting up the North East Natural Gas Pipeline Grid.
● A total of ₹5,559 crore has been earmarked as VGF.
● As per the plan, a 1,656-km gas pipeline grid would connect the eight states of the North-Eastern region, namely,
Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Sikkim and Tripura.
● The Capital Grant will provide natural gas supplies to various types of consumers, including Industrial, PNG
(Domestic), and CNG (Transport), among others, and would help in substituting liquid fuels.
● The pipeline grid would ensure reliable and uninterrupted natural gas supplies to consumers who are otherwise
severely affected due to various reasons in this part of the country
5.15 Adjusted Gross Revenue (AGR)
Background:
● Under the National Telecom Policy, 1994 mobile telephone operators were required to share a percentage of their
AGR with the government as annual license fee (LF) and spectrum usage charges (SUC).
● License agreements between the Department of Telecommunications (DoT) and the telecom companies define the
gross revenues of the latter.
● AGR is then computed after allowing for certain deductions spelt out in these license agreements.
Issue:
● Supreme court in 2019 gave a judgement wherein private telecom service providers have to pay out higher sums
towards license fee and spectrum usage fee, which are dependent on the value of AGR
● The definition of AGR has been such a contentious issue because it has huge financial implications for both telcos
and the government.
● The revenue shared by telcos with the government goes into the consolidated fund of India.
● It was estimated, after the SC‘s judgment, that the telecom operators owe the government about ₹92,000 crore in
back charges, interest and penalties on license fee alone.
● While the government has been deprived of the extra revenue, the financial implications for telecom companies
who now have to cough up overdue amounts piled up for years — are serious too.
5.16 25k Crore fund for Housing sector
● The government approved setting up of a Rs 25,000 crore bailout fund to finance 1,600 stalled housing projects as
it looks to boost the economy by kickstarting incomplete projects.
● The government will put in Rs 10,000 crore in this alternative investment fund (AIF) while SBI and LIC would
provide Rs 15,000 crore, taking the total size to Rs 25,000 crore.
● This will finance 1,600 stalled housing projects comprising 4,58,000 housing units across the country.
● Housing projects that are NPA or in NCLT can also be funded by the Rs 25,000 cr alternate real estate fund.
INDUSTRY
6.1 Slowdown in Auto-Industry
The decline is not only seen in a passenger car but in a two-wheeler, commercial vehicle as well as the tractor segment.
Automobile contributes 7.5 per cent of India‘s GDP and also, directly and indirectly, employees approximately 3.5
crore people
Reasons
a. In the current economic environment, banks have
become more strict about giving out loans.
b. Confusion around BS6 emission standards
c. The UBER-OLA Factor
d. Too many back-to-back changes in the industry
e. Overproduction and stocking by companies
f. Economic slowdown
6.2 Power Generation
Highlights
● India is the world's third-largest producer and third-largest
consumer of electricity. The national electric grid in India has
an installed capacity of 368.79 GW as of 31 December 2019
● Renewable power plants, which also include large
hydroelectric plants, constitute 34.86% of India's total
installed capacity.
● major growth drivers have been renewable energy sources
such as solarand wind power
● India proposes to have the capacity of renewable of 175 GW by
2022 and 500 GW by 2030.
● The private sector accounts for almost half the installed power generation capacity.
● In the last 3 years, growth in generation from renewables has been close to 25%.
6.3 Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
● Corporate social responsibility is a type of international private business self-regulation that aims to contribute to
societal goals of a philanthropic, activist, or charitable nature or by engage in or support volunteering or ethically
oriented practices.
● CSR rules mandate that every company with a net worth of Rs 500 crore or more, or turnover of Rs 1,000 crore or
more, or a net profit of Rs 5 crore or more, during any financial year has to constitute a CSR committee and has to
spend 2% of the average net profit over the last three financial years on CSR activities.
Why in the news?
● A recent committee on new CSR norms suggested that violations should be regarded as civil offences that are
liable to monetary penalties along with a number of other suggestions to make CSR provisions more effective and
less burdensome for companies.
● It also suggested providing for imprisonment of up to three years for executives of companies that broke CSR
rules apart from fines.
● However, the government will not operationalise the new corporate social responsibility (CSR) provisions in the
recently amended Companies Act that make violations punishable by jail, following intense lobbying
6.4 Index of Industrial Production
● The Index of Industrial
Production (IIP) is an index
which shows the growth rates in
different industry groups of the
economy in a stipulated period
of time.
● The IIP index is computed and published by the Central Statistical Organisation (CSO) on a monthly basis.
Why in the news?
● The Central Statistics Office (CSO) revised the base year of the all-India Index of Industrial Production (IIP) from
2004-05 to 2011-12 on 12 May 2017.
● Revisions in the IIP are necessitated to maintain representativeness of the items and producing entities and also
address issues relating to continuous flow of production data.
● IIP in the revised series will continue to represent the Mining, Manufacturing and Electricity sectors. The revised
series uses the National Industrial Classification (NIC) 2008 for the purpose of classification of industrial
production.
About IIP
● Index of Industrial Production meaning: IIP is an index that tracks manufacturing activity in different sectors of
an economy.
● Index of Industrial Production India or IIP data is compiled and published by CSO every month.
● It tracks manufacturing activity in different sectors of an economy.
● The IIP number measures the industrial production for the period under review, usually a month, as against the
reference period.
● IIP is a key economic indicator of the manufacturing sector of the economy.
● There is a lag of six weeks in the publication of the IIP index data after the reference month ends.
6.5 Vehicle Scrappage Policy
● The Ministry of Road Transport and Highways has formulated Draft Guidelines for setting up, authorisation and
operation of Authorized Vehicle Scrapping Facility (AVSP) to legalise the industry in India.
● This policy is expected to urge car owners to replace older cars. This will have a two-pronged effect, stir demand in
the automobile sector and reduction of pollution, given that there will be fewer less efficient cars on the road.
● The end-of-life vehicles will also include those that are damaged heavily or are not properly registered. The
guidelines also called for the setting up of environment-friendly scrappage facilities so as to properly process the
discarded vehicles.
FISCAL POLICY 7.1 Revision of WPI
● The government has set up a working group under
Niti Aayog member Ramesh Chand to revise the
current series of Wholesale Price Index (WPI) with
base 2011-12
● The current series of WPI with 2011-12 as base year
was introduced in May 2017.
● Since 2011-12, significant structural changes have
taken place in the economy, thus a new base year is
now required
● The group will also select the most appropriate base year for the preparation of a new official series of index
numbers of WPI and PPI in India and review the existing system of price collection in particular for the
manufacturing sector and suggest changes for improvement.
7.2 National Statistical Office
● It has been announced that the National Sample Survey Office (NSSO) is to be merged with the Central Statistics
Office (CSO) to form the National Statistical office
● It will be headed by the secretary to the ministry of Statistics and programme implementation (MoSPI)
● The move is expected to synchronise and simplify data collection and dissemination
7.3 GDP Estimation in India
● The government is exploring a new
methodology of calculating the gross
domestic product (GDP) which will keep
updating weights assigned to various
products and activities in the economy.
Key Highlights
● The new methodology, called the chain base
method, however, does not change the base
year by itself.
● The chain base method will capture
structural changes in the economy faster by
allowing new activity and items to be added every year.
● The advantage is that new items and factories which are producing can be introduced. In a five-year revision, it
takes 7-8 years to get reflected.
● Chain base index is applied to the current series for the year, say 2019-20, the base year will remain 2011-12. But
with this method, the weights of product and activities will change, depending on their output in the previous
years.
● With 60% of India‘s GDP coming from services, a chain based index will capture the changes faster and reflect the
realities better than a fixed base.
● Such an index will make it easier to compare India‘s growth with other countries
What is the Chain base Method?
Chain Base Method. In this method, there is no fixed base period; the
year immediately preceding the one for which the price index has to
be calculated is assumed as the base year.
7.4 Moody’s Rating 2019
● Global ratings major Moody's Investors Service on Friday changed the outlook on India‘s ratings to ‗negative‘ from
‗stable‘.
● The major reason for it has been slowing economy
● India‘s sovereign ratings. India‘s ratings was upgraded to Baa2 from Baa3 in 2017
● It has however retained India‘s Baa2 rating even with the cut
Impact
● There may be a downgrade of India‘s investment rating from Baa2 in the future.
● Massive Fund Outflows
● May impact FDI flows into the country
7.5 RBI’s “Operation Twist”
● Operation Twist is the name given to a US Federal Reserve monetary policy operation, which involves the
purchase and sale of government securities to boost the economy by bringing down long-term interest rates.
● Reserve Bank of India decided to conduct its version of ‗Operation Twist‘ through simultaneous purchase and sale
of government securities under Open Market Operations (OMOs) for Rs 10,000 crore each
Rationale
● The RBI slashed key interest rate — repo rate — by 135 points to 5.15 per cent this year but banks passed on only
part of it.
● The one-year median marginal cost of funds based lending rate (MCLR) has declined only 49 basis points (bps).
● Operation Twist normally leads to lower longer-term yields, which will help boost the economy by making loans
less expensive for those looking to buy homes, cars and finance projects.
EMPLOYMENT AND SKILL DEVELOPMENT
8.1 Kaushal Yuva Samwad
● Kaushal Yuva Samwaad is aimed at creating an open dialogue with the youth across all skill training centres to
hear their views which could help the Ministry in improving the overall efficiency of its projects
● It is being organized across all Skill India training centres
8.2 Jeevan Kaushal Programme
● The University Grants Commission (UGC) announced the launch of a ―life skills‖ (Jeevan Kaushal) programme in
the curriculum for undergraduate courses across the country.
● The new programme, which for 8 credit points, can be accommodated in any semester and is aimed at inculcating
emotional and intellectual competencies in students develop verbal and non-verbal communication skills.
● The programme will comprise four courses - communication, professional, leadership and universal human values
and skills. The programme will focus on team work, problem-solving and decision-making.
8.3 Periodic Labour Force Survey
The employment survey called the Periodic Labour Force Survey (2017-2018) that had been released recently.
Key Highlights
● The rise in overall unemployment has both locational and gender dimensions, with the highest rise witnessed
among the urban women.
● There has been a sharp decline in women‘s labour force participation rate (LFPR), they have been losing out
heavily due to, women being excluded from the labour force and not being able to access employment
● Educated Employment rate is at 11.4%
● The burden of unemployment is the highest among urban women at 19.8% followed by rural women, rural men
and urban men.
● Youth unemployment rate (unemployment among those in the 15-29 years age category) has reached a high 17.8%.
8.4 Yuwaah Youth Skilling Initiative
● UNICEF has informed that they have launched ‗YuWaah‘ Generation Unlimited in India in collaboration with the
Ministry of Women and Child . According to UNICEF, Generation Unlimited, called YuWaah in India, is a multi
stakeholder alliance which aims to facilitate youth to gain relevant skills for productive lives and the future of
work.
● The target age group of YuWaah includes adolescent girls and boys and its key mission is to promote access to
foundational, transferable and 21stcentury skills for youth inside and outside formal education systems, which
includes defining foundational skills, life skills and flexible learning and identifying and scaling impactful delivery
models.
● YuWaahintends to create platforms to guide youth to market opportunities (career guidance, mentorship,
internships, apprenticeships) and facilitate the integration of career guidance in school education.
8.5 Future Skills Prime
● The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology has approved Rs 436 crore over a period of three years
for Future Skills PRIME, a joint venture between the government and National Association of Software and
Services Companies
● The programme, the next level of the Future Skills platform, seeks to skill 412,000 professionals in new technology
such as artificial intelligence, virtual reality, Internet of Things, Big Data, cybersecurity, social and mobile and so
on.
EXTERNAL SECTOR AND TRADE
9.1 Elephant Bonds
● A high-level government-appointed committee under Surjit Bhalla on trade and industry has suggested it to issue
‗Elephant Bonds' to people for declaring undisclosed income.
● The panel estimates that India could recover up to $500 billion of black money stashed overseas if it implements
its proposal.
● These ‗elephant bonds‘ would be an avenue for people to bring their offshore undisclosed wealth into India
without fear of prosecution.
● Countries like Indonesia, Pakistan, Argentina and the Philippines have already launched their own tax amnesty
schemes for persons to disclose undeclared income without the risk of prosecution.
9.2 NIRVIK Scheme
● Export Credit Guarantee Corporation of India (ECGC) has
introduced ‗NIRVIK‘ scheme to ease the lending process
and enhance loan availability for exporters.
● Under the new ‗NIRVIK‘ scheme, which is also called the
Export Credit Insurance Scheme (ECIS), the insurance
cover guaranteed will cover up to 90 per cent of the
principal and interest.
● The insurance cover is expected to bring down the cost of
credit due to capital relief, less provision requirement and
liquidity due to quick settlement of claims and will ensure
timely and adequate working capital to the export sector.
9.3 Edible Oil Imports
● India is the third-largest consumer of edible oil.
● The government is considering putting restrictions on the import of all
kinds of refined edible oils while continuing to keep crude oils under the
free category.
● This will help India encourage import of more crude oils, facilitating better
utilisation of the refining capacity of the domestic industry.
● The need to amend the existing trade policy has arisen as the duty on both
crude and refined palm oil is going to be lowered from January 1, 2020.
● The duties are set to go down to 37.5% from 40% on crude palm oil and to
45% from 50% on refined palm oil, effecting a low differential of 7.5
percentage points between the import duty of crude and refined palm oil.
● The country imports around 15 million tonnes of edible oil a year, forking
out Rs 70,000 crore.
―Out of this, around 20% is refined oils and the rest is crude. If restrictions
happen, only crude oil will be imported,
9.4 Forex Reserves
● The country's foreign exchange reserves swelled by $4.607 billion to $471.3 billion in the week to January 31,
helped by a rise in foreign currency assets, according to RBI data.
● The special drawing rights with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) were down by $4 million to $1.43 billion.
The country's reserve position with the IMF remained unchanged at $3.615 billion, the data showed.
9.5 FDI Policy Reform
● The Union Cabinet on 28 August 2019 has
issued a press release proposing some
significant changes to the Foreign Direct
Investment ("FDI") policy of the
Government of India
● It is now proposed to clarify that 100%
FDI is also permitted under the automatic
route specifically for contract
manufacturing activities undertaken in
India, previously there was no express
point on contract manufacturing.
● Considering the growing number of
internet users, it has now been decided to
bring digital media at par with print media
and allow 26% FDI under approval route for 'uploading/streaming of news and current affairs' on digital media.
● It is now proposed that the goods sourced could be sold in India or be exported as well, in the previous policy there
was no talk of end sourced goods
● The present FDI policy permits 100% FDI under automatic route in coal and lignite mining for captive
consumption by power projects, iron and steel and cement units and other eligible activities subject to applicable
laws.
● It has now been decided to lift the ban on commercial coal mining activities and permit 100% FDI under
automatic route for sale of coal, for coal mining activities
REPORTS AND INDICES
10.1 Broadband Readiness Index
● The Department of Telecom (DoT) and the Indian Council for Research on
International Economic Relations (ICRIER) signed a Memorandum of
Understanding (MoU) to develop a Broadband Readiness Index (BRI) for Indian
States and Union Territories (UT)
● The National Digital Communication Policy (NDCP) 2018 acknowledged the need for
building a robust digital communications infrastructure leveraging existing assets of
the broadcasting and power sectors including collaborative models involving state,
local bodies and the private sector.
● The index will appraise the condition of the underlying digital infrastructure and
related factors at the State/UT level.
● The BRI consists of two parts. Part I will focus on infrastructure development based
on the measurement of nine parameters. These are provided in the table below. Part
II consists of demand-side parameters which will be captured through primary
surveys.
10.2 Global Innovation Index-2019
● The Global Innovation Index 2019 was
launched by Commerce and Industry
Minister in New Delhi.
● This is for the first time that the GII was
launched in an emerging economy.
● The theme this year is Creating Healthy
Lives - The Future of Medical Innovation,
which aims to explore the role of medical
innovation as it shapes the future of
healthcare.
● The GII global ranking is published by the
World Intellectual Property Organisation
(WIPO) – a specialized agency of the
United Nations in association with Cornell
University and graduate business school INSEAD.
● It published annually since 2007.
● India‘s Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) is one of the knowledge partners which assist the GII team.
● India improved its rank in the Global Innovation Index to 52nd.
10.3 Travel & Tourism Competitiveness Index
● It is released by the World Economic Forum
● India has moved up six places to rank 34th
● India's ranking improved from 40th to 34th, the greatest
improvement over 2017 among the top 25 per cent of all countries
ranked in the report.
● The report states that China, Mexico, Malaysia, Thailand, Brazil and
India which are not high-income economies but rank in the top 35 in
the overall list.
● Spain has topped the index
10.4 World Gold Council Report 2019
● The recent report has ranked India as having the
10th largest Gold Reserves in the world.
● According to the World Gold Council, India has
gold reserves totalling 618.2 tonnes.
● United States (US) has the largest holding with
8133.5 tonnes, followed by Germany with 3366
tonnes and the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) with 2814 tonnes.
● The reports said while the bank bought gold
worth $5.1 billion during the period, sold gold
worth $1.15 billion.
About World Gold Council
● The World Gold Council is the market
development organisation for the gold industry.
It works across all parts of the industry, from gold mining to investment, and their aim is to stimulate and sustain
demand for gold.
● Headquarters- London, UK
● The World Gold Council‘s 25 Members are some of the world‘s most forward-thinking gold mining companies.
They are headquartered across the world and have mining operations in over 45 countries.
10.5 Digital Economy Report 2019- UNCTAD
Key Highlights
● The report states that the size of the global digital economy range from 4.5 to 15.5 per cent of world GDP.
● India ranked fourth in terms of growth in the share of the ICT sector's value-added in GDP between 2010 and 2017
● In terms of the value added in the information and communications technology (ICT) sector, the US and China
together account for almost 40 per cent of the world total.
● The global employment in the ICT sector increased from 34 million in 2010 to 39 million in 2015, with computer
services accounting for the largest share (38 per cent).
● Three developing and transition economies – Brazil, India and Moldova – employed over 50 per cent of ICT sector
employees in computer services.
● China and India are leading in the creation of startups, accounting for 58 per cent of the total for the region
● India ranked 9th in e-commerce sales in 2017 with total sales of $400 billion or 15 per cent as a share of GDP. Of
the total sale, the share of B2B was 91 per cent at $369 billion.
About UNCTAD:
● UNCTAD is a permanent intergovernmental body established by the United Nations General Assembly in 1964. Its
headquarters are located in Geneva, Switzerland, and they have offices in New York and Addis Ababa.
● UNCTAD is part of the UN Secretariat. They report to the UN General Assembly and the Economic and Social
Council but have their own membership, leadership, and budget. They are also part of the United Nations
Development Group.
10.6 LEADS Index
● The LEADS Index is an effort by the
Commerce and Industry Ministry to
establish the baseline of performance in the
logistics sector based on the perception of
users and stakeholders at the State level.
● The top ranking state in the logistics sector
is Gujarat followed by Punjab and Andhra
Pradesh. Among the hilly Eastern States
Tripura is the top performer and among
Union Territories (UTs) Chandigarh was
selected as the best performing UT.
● The State Logistics Performance Index is
arrived at using a ranking methodology
based on a series of meetings with
stakeholders and online surveys.
● The indicators covered in the index are infrastructure, services, timelines, traceability, competitiveness, security,
operating environment and efficiency of regulation.
10.7 Global Competitive Index
Key Highlights
● Singapore has replaced the US as the world's most competitive economy.
● The Global Competitiveness Index (GCI), which was launched in 1979, maps the competitiveness landscape of 141
economies through 103 indicators organised into 12 pillars.
● India, which was ranked 58th in the last report has slipped 10 points to the 68th rank.
● India is among the worst-performing BRICS nations along with Brazil
(ranked even lower than India at 71st this year).
● India is ranked also high at 15th place in terms of corporate governance,
while it is ranked second globally for shareholder governance
● The WEF said the healthy life expectancy, where India has been ranked 109th
out of total the 141 countries surveyed for the index, is one of the shortest
outside Africa and significantly below the South Asian average.
● The report compiles data from (1) Institutions (2) Infrastructure (3) ICT
adoption (4) Macroeconomic stability (5) Health (6) Skills (7) Product
market (8) Labour market (9) Financial system (10) Market size (11) Business
dynamism and (12) Innovation capability.
10.8 IMF’s World Economic Outlook 2019
● India retains its rank as the world‘s fastest-growing major economy, tying with China.
● However, India‘s economy is projected to pick up and grow by 7 per cent in the 2020 fiscal year.
10.9 India Innovation Index
● NITI Aayog with Institute for Competitiveness as the knowledge partner released the India Innovation Index (III)
2019.
● Karnataka is the most innovative major state in India. Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Telangana, Haryana, Kerala,
Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, Gujarat, and Andhra Pradesh form the remaining top ten major states respectively.
● Sikkim and Delhi take the top spots among the northeastern & hill states, and union territories/city-states/small
states respectively.
10.10 Global Wealth Report
● It is released by Credit Suisse
● China has overtaken the US to become the country with most people in the top 10% of global wealth distribution.
● India ranks fifth globally in terms of the number of ultra-high-net-worth individuals.
● The report has said that 78% of India‘s adult population has wealth below $10,000 while 1.8% of India‘s
population has more than $100,000. At the other extreme,1,790 adults have wealth over $100 million.
10.11 Ease of Doing Business report 2020
● The World Bank released its latest Doing Business Report(DBR, 2020) 2019. India has recorded a jump of 14
positions against its rank of 77 in 2019to be placed now at 63rd rank among 190 countries
● India has improved its rank by 79positions in last five years
● The Doing Business assessment provides objective measures of
business regulations and their enforcement across 190 economies
on ten parameters affecting a business through its life cycle
The important features of India's performance this year
are:
1. The World Bank has recognized India as one of the top 10
improvers for the third consecutive year.
2. Recovery rate under resolving insolvency has improved
significantly from 26.5% to 71.6%.
3. The time taken for resolving insolvency has also come down
significantly from 4.3 years to 1.6 years.
4. India continues to maintain its first position among South Asian
countries. It was 6th in 2014.
10.12 Global Microscope Report
● The Global Microscope for Financial Inclusion report is produced
by the Economist Intelligence Unit.
● India is placed among the top nations with the most conducive
environment for financial inclusion in terms of allowing non
banks to issue e-money, proportionate customer due diligence
and effective consumer protection
● Financial inclusion has improved globally with India, Colombia,
Peru, Uruguay and Mexico have the most favourable conditions
for inclusive finance.
COMMITTEES
11.1 Nandan Nilekani Committee
The committee was set up by the RBI for recommendations on digitisation and digital payments.
Major Highlights-
1. Set up an Acceptance development fund for new merchants in badly served areas
2. Reduce the overall cost of the customers
3. Reduce GST on digital transactions
4. Removal of transaction charges
5. Reduce gaps between digital credits and digital debits.
11.2 Surjit Bhalla Committee
Key Highlights
● The high-level panel group, chaired by Surjit Bhalla, has recommended a host of measures and a road map for
doubling India's exports of goods and services to over $1,000 billion by 2025.
● The key suggestions include lowering the effective corporate tax rate, bringing down cost of capital and simplifying regulatory and tax framework for foreign investment funds.
● This is why an aggressive export strategy must be a part of any investment-driven growth model.
● In 2018-19, India's exports to countries with which it has a trade agreement stood at $121.7 billion accounting for
36.9 per cent of India's export to all the countries
11.3 VG Kannan Committee
● RBI has constituted a six-member committee to review the entire gamut of Automated Teller Machines (ATM)
charges and fees.
● It will examine existing patterns of costs, charges and interchange fees by banks for automated teller machines
(ATMs) transactions.
● It will review overall patterns of usage of ATMs by cardholders and also assess the impact (if any) on charges and
interchange fees levied by banks.
MISCELLANEOUS
12.1 SEBI Norms for Credit Rating Agencies
● Markets regulator Sebi has come out with new norms that make it mandatory for companies to provide details on
delayed loan repayments and possible defaults to credit rating agencies.
● The new framework would enable credit rating agencies (CRAs) to get timely information on possible defaults.
● The new framework comes amid several instances of huge loan defaults by corporates, including in cases like
Infrastructure Leasing & Financial Services Ltd (IL&FS)
12.2 LIBRA Cryptocurrency
● Libra is a permissioned blockchain digital currency proposed by the American social media company
Facebook, Inc.
● The currency and network do not yet exist, and only rudimentary experimental code has been released. The launch is planned to be in 2020
About Cryptocurrencies
● A cryptocurrency is a digital asset designed to work as a medium of exchange that uses strong cryptography to secure financial transactions and verify the transfer of assets.
● Some important cryptocurrencies are Bitcoins, Litecoin, Namecoin, Swiftcoin, Bytecoin, Gridcoin
● According to recent studies, it is found that the use of
Bitcoin, a popular virtual currency emits over 22 megatons
of carbon dioxide annually.
12.3 International Cooperation Scheme
● The Ministry of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSME) is implementing International Cooperation (IC)
Scheme.
● The Scheme supports MSMEs by way of participation in international events for exploring export opportunities,
access to international business networks, technology up-gradation/modernization, improved competitiveness,
awareness of better manufacturing practices etc.
12.4 GAFA TAX
● GAFA is an acronym for Google, Apple, Facebook, and Amazon and GAFA Tax refers to the taxes paid by US tech
giants like Google, Apple, Facebook, Amazon etc in Europe.
● French Finance minister Bruno Le Maire had recently announced the introduction of a GAFA tax— named after
Google, Apple, Facebook, Amazon—on large technology and internet companies in France from 1 January 2019.
12.5 Serious Fraud Investigation Office
● The Serious Fraud Investigation Office (SFIO) is a corporate fraud investigating agency in India.
● FIO is a multi-disciplinary organization, consisting of experts in the field of accountancy, forensic auditing, law,
information technology, investigation, company law, capital market and taxation for detecting and prosecuting or
recommending for prosecution white-collar crimes/frauds.
● It is under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Corporate Affairs, Government of India.
12.6 India International Cooperatives Trade Fair
● The first-ever 'India International Cooperatives Trade Fair' got underway in New Delhi
● Organisations from 35 countries are participating in the Fair and they all expressed their happiness at being part
of this mega event.
12.7 India’s First Women Trade Centre
● Kerala is slated to set up India‘s first women trade centre in line with the points of the UN sustainable
development in Kozhikode
● It is expected to be completed by 2022
● It will focus on empowering women to come forward and participate in international trade and reap the economic
benefits.
12.8 Nobel Prize in Economics
● The 2019 Nobel Prize in Economics was awarded to Esther
Duflo, Abhijit Banerjee and Michael Kremer for their work
adapting the method of randomized control trials (RCTs) to
the field of development
● The jury believes this new type of experimentation has
―considerably improved our ability to fight global poverty‖
and ―transformed development economics‖.
12.9 Private Trains
● Ministry of Railways have constituted a Group of Secretaries (GoS) with a term of one year inter-alia to permit
private passenger train operators to operate trains with world class technology over Indian Railways Network.
● Participation of private sector has been allowed in construction and maintenance of Railway lines under various
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