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Current Affairs
June 18, 2026

National Statistical Commission
Recently, the Government of India has appointed a new Chairperson and three Members to the National Statistical Commission.
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About National Statistical Commission:

  • It was set up in 2005 on the recommendations of Rangarajan Commission (2000).
  • Mandate: It was established to serve as a nodal body for all core statistical activities of the country and also evolve, monitor and enforce statistical priorities and standards and to ensure statistical co-ordination.
  • Composition:
    • It consists of a part-time Chairperson, four part-time Members having specialization and experience in areas of statistics,
    • CEO of NITI Aayog as an ex-officio Member.
    • Chief Statistician of India is the Secretary of the Commission. (He is also the Secretary to the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation).
  • Functions of National Statistical Commission:
    • To identify the core statistics, which are of national importance and are critical to the development of the economy;
    • To constitute professional committees or working groups to assist the Commission on various technical issues;
    • To evolve national policies and priorities relating to the statistical system;
    • To evolve standard statistical concepts, definitions, classifications and methodologies in different areas in statistics and lay down national quality standards on core statistics;
      • To evolve national strategies for the collection, tabulation and dissemination of core statistics, including the release calendar for various data sets 
Polity & Governance

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Current Affairs

Article
18 Jun 2026

RBI’s Latest Measures to Attract NRI Deposits

Why in the News?

  • The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has temporarily withdrawn interest rate ceilings on certain FCNR(B) and NRE deposits, while also introducing a special swap facility to encourage higher foreign currency inflows from Non-Resident Indians (NRIs).

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • About FCNR, NRE and NRO Accounts
  • News Summary (RBI’s New Guidelines, Benefits, Implications for Indian Economy)

FCNR(B), NRE and NRO Accounts

  • India offers specialized banking accounts for Non-Resident Indians (NRIs) to facilitate savings, investments, and remittances.
  • Foreign Currency Non-Resident (Bank) [FCNR(B)] Account
    • An FCNR(B) account is a fixed deposit account maintained in foreign currency.
    • Key features include:
      • Deposits are maintained in designated foreign currencies such as the US Dollar, Pound Sterling, Euro, Australian Dollar, Canadian Dollar, and Singapore Dollar.
      • Depositors are protected from exchange rate fluctuations because both principal and interest are repaid in the same foreign currency.
      • Interest earned is exempt from Indian income tax.
      • Deposits are generally available for maturities ranging from one to five years.
  • FCNR(B) deposits are particularly attractive for NRIs seeking foreign currency returns without taking exchange rate risk.
  • Non-Resident External (NRE) Account
    • An NRE account is a rupee-denominated account used to park foreign earnings in India. Key features include:
      • Deposits are made using foreign currency and converted into Indian rupees.
      • Both principal and interest are fully repatriable.
      • Interest income is tax-free in India.
      • Available as savings, current, recurring, or fixed deposit accounts.
    • NRE accounts are primarily used by NRIs to maintain and manage overseas earnings in India.
  • Non-Resident Ordinary (NRO) Account
    • An NRO account is meant for managing income earned in India. Sources of funds may include Rent, Dividends, Pension, Interest income and Other domestic earnings.
    • Key features include:
      • Account is maintained in Indian rupees.
      • Interest income is taxable in India.
      • Repatriation is permitted subject to prescribed limits and regulatory conditions.
    • NRO accounts are generally used to manage domestic income streams while residing abroad.

News Summary

  • The RBI has temporarily withdrawn interest rate ceilings on:
    • Fresh FCNR(B) deposits with maturities between three and five years.
    • Fresh NRE deposits with maturities of three years and above.
  • The relaxation is effective from June 17, 2026, to September 30, 2026.
  • The measure is aimed at attracting larger foreign currency inflows at a time when policymakers are seeking to strengthen external sector stability and support the rupee.
  • The RBI has clarified that transfers from NRO accounts to NRE accounts will not qualify for the exemption.

Special Swap Facility for FCNR(B) Deposits

  • A key element of the RBI's strategy is the introduction of a concessional foreign exchange swap facility for FCNR(B) deposits.
  • Traditionally, when banks receive FCNR(B) deposits in foreign currency, they convert these funds into rupees for lending purposes.
  • This creates exchange rate risk because the bank must eventually repay the deposit in foreign currency.
  • To manage this risk, banks hedge their currency exposure, which typically costs around 2.9% to 3% annually.
  • Under the new arrangement, the RBI effectively absorbs a significant part of this hedging burden, reducing costs for banks and enabling them to offer higher interest rates to NRI depositors.

Sharp Increase in Deposit Rates

  • Following the RBI's announcement, several major banks significantly increased FCNR(B) deposit rates. Leading banks such as HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, Axis Bank and Bank of Baroda are now offering interest rates of around 5.75% to 7% on three-to-five-year FCNR(B) deposits.
  • Some banks raised rates by more than 300 basis points, making FCNR(B) deposits substantially more attractive than before.
  • According to market experts, the yield advantage over comparable overseas deposits has widened to nearly 200-300 basis points.

Attractiveness Compared to Overseas Deposits

  • The revised rates have made Indian FCNR(B) deposits highly competitive relative to foreign fixed-income products. For example:
    • Large US banks currently offer around 0.03% to 2% on comparable long-term certificates of deposit (CDs)
    • Smaller US banks offer approximately 4% to 4.2%
    • Indian FCNR(B) deposits are now offering as much as 7%
  • This differential has significantly improved the attractiveness of FCNR(B) deposits for NRIs, especially those residing in regions such as the Gulf where foreign interest income may not face additional taxation.

Expected Capital Inflows

  • Banks and analysts expect substantial inflows under the scheme. According to RBI data:
    • Outstanding NRE deposits stood at around $7.94 billion in FY26.
    • Outstanding FCNR(B) deposits stood at approximately $946 million.
  • Goldman Sachs estimates that the latest measures could attract between $30 billion and $50 billion in inflows during 2026.
  • For comparison, a similar FCNR(B) mobilisation programme launched during the 2013 currency crisis generated nearly $25 billion in deposits.

Implications for the Economy

  • The RBI's measures are expected to:
    • Strengthen foreign exchange reserves
    • Improve dollar liquidity in the banking system
    • Support the rupee against external pressures
    • Lower funding costs for banks
    • Facilitate overseas borrowing by public sector entities
  • At a time of global uncertainty and volatile capital flows, attracting stable NRI deposits can provide an important buffer for India's external sector.
Economics

Article
18 Jun 2026

Women’s Representation in the Supreme Court - Breaking the Last Glass Ceiling

Context:

  • The appointment of Justice V. Mohana as a judge of the Supreme Court marks a significant milestone in India’s judicial history.
  • She is only the second woman advocate to be directly elevated from the Bar to the Supreme Court, after Justice Indu Malhotra (2018).
  • Despite this achievement, women remain severely underrepresented in India’s higher judiciary, necessitating structural reforms to ensure gender equality.

Persistent Gender Gap in the Higher Judiciary:

  • Women’s journey to the highest levels of the legal profession has been marked by systemic barriers.
  • Direct appointments from the Bar:
    • The Supreme Court has directly appointed nine male judges from the Bar, many of whom enjoyed long tenures.
    • Some, such as Justice S.M. Sikri and Justice U.U. Lalit, became Chief Justices of India (CJI).
    • Current judges Justice P.S. Narasimha and Justice K.V. Viswanathan are also expected to become CJIs.
    • In contrast, Justice Indu Malhotra, the first woman directly elevated from the Bar, served for less than three years and never became part of the Collegium.
  • This reflects the limited opportunities available to women for meaningful representation and leadership within the judiciary.

Global Best Practices for Gender Representation:

  • Several countries have introduced constitutional or legal mechanisms to ensure gender balance in their apex courts.
  • Belgium:
    • In 2014, Belgium amended Article 34(5) of the Special Act of 1989 governing its Constitutional Court.
    • The amendment mandates that at least one-third of judges must belong to each gender.
    • Until the quota is achieved, after every two male appointments, the third appointment must be a woman.
    • The court also follows linguistic and professional representation quotas.
  • South Africa:
    • Section 174(2) of the Constitution requires the judiciary to reflect the country’s racial and gender composition.
    • The Constitutional Court currently has 6 women out of 11 judges and is headed by a woman Chief Justice.
    • It is among the world’s first women-majority constitutional courts.

Representation Quotas - Not a New Concept:

  • The representation-based appointments already exist in India.
  • For example, Supreme Court appointments often consider regional representation from different High Courts.
  • Recent judicial appointments have factored in such geographical diversity.
  • Therefore, introducing a gender-based quota would not be conceptually unprecedented.
  • The argument is that if regional representation is accepted as a legitimate criterion, gender representation should also receive institutional recognition.

India’s Poor Record on Women’s Representation:

  • Despite Justice Mohana’s appointment, women remain grossly underrepresented in the Supreme Court.
  • Current status: Only 2 women judges out of 37 judges, constituting merely 5.4% of the Supreme Court’s strength.
  • International comparison: South Africa have 54.5% of women Judges in apex Court, Canada (50%), Belgium (50%), Germany (50%), US (44.4%), Australia (42.85%), France (33.33%), Singapore (~24%), Nepal (~17%), and UK (~17%).
  • India lags significantly behind both developed and developing democracies in ensuring gender diversity in its highest court. 

Suggested Reforms:

  • Constitutional amendments:
    • Amend Article 124 (Establishment and appointment of judges of the Supreme Court) and Article 217 (Appointment and conditions of judges of High Courts).
    • This will mandate that judicial appointments reflect the gender and social composition of Indian society, ensuring representation of women, minority communities, SCs, STs, and OBCs.
  • Judicial policy on gender representation: Until constitutional amendments are enacted, the Supreme Court should adopt a written policy committing itself to 33.3% women judges.
  • Targeted appointment mechanism: India could emulate Belgium’s model -
    • After every two male appointments, the next appointment must be a woman.
    • Continue this process until one-third representation is achieved.

Conclusion:

  • Justice V. Mohana’s elevation is an important symbolic and institutional However, the appointment of a few individual women judges cannot substitute for systemic gender inclusion.
  • With women comprising only 5.4% of the Supreme Court, India remains far behind global standards.
  • Achieving meaningful representation requires a clear roadmap involving constitutional reforms, institutional commitment, and targeted appointments.
  • Gender-balanced courts are not merely a matter of representation but are essential for strengthening the legitimacy, inclusiveness, and democratic character of the judiciary.
Editorial Analysis

Article
18 Jun 2026

The RBI and Its Growing Fiscal Role

Why in news?

The RBI approved a record surplus transfer of ₹2.87 lakh crore to the Union Government for FY2025-26. This is the highest-ever such transfer: FY 2024-25: ₹2.69 lakh crore; FY 2023-24: ₹2.11 lakh crore; FY 2022-23: ₹87,416 crore.

The scale of this transfer has sparked a serious debate about the evolving role of the RBI — from a monetary authority to a fiscal instrument of the government.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • Background: How Does the RBI Generate Surplus?
  • The Economic Capital Framework (ECF): The Legal Basis
  • India vs. Advanced Economies: A Different Path
  • The Federal Blind Spot: States Left Out
  • The Central Bank Independence Question
  • Conclusion

Background: How Does the RBI Generate Surplus

  • The RBI earns income through:
    • Interest on government securities held in its portfolio
    • Foreign exchange transactions — buying and selling currencies
    • Returns on foreign assets — including gold and foreign currency holdings
    • Reserve management operations — portfolio rebalancing
  • The RBI's balance sheet grew 20.6% in a single year to ₹91.97 lakh crore by March 2026. Gross income rose by over 26% in the same period.
  • The recent surplus also included gains from the RBI reportedly selling ~$12 billion worth of gold and purchasing ~$7.5 billion in foreign currency assets to manage rupee pressures.

The Economic Capital Framework (ECF): The Legal Basis

  • The surplus transfer is made under the Economic Capital Framework (ECF), revised in 2019 following the Bimal Jalan Committee
  • The ECF defines how much capital the RBI needs to retain for risk buffers and how much surplus can be transferred to the government.
  • The transfer is fully within the legal framework. The concern is not legality — it is scale and systemic implication.

A Structural Shift: From Monetary Guardian to Fiscal Instrument

  • Traditional government financing relies on three sources:
    • taxation (requires political consent),
    • borrowing (disciplined by markets and repayment obligations), and
    • economic growth (requires real productive capacity).
  • Central bank surplus transfers are fundamentally different — they generate fiscal space without new taxes, new borrowing, or real economic growth. This is what makes the current situation significant.
  • The ₹2.87 lakh crore transfer alone exceeds the annual budgets of several Indian States.
  • The concern the experts raise: when does a stabilising institution begin to act as a fiscal instrument?

India vs. Advanced Economies: A Different Path

  • In advanced economies like the US and EU, central banks became entangled with fiscal policy through quantitative easing — buying large quantities of government bonds to inject money into the economy.
  • India's case is different. Here, the fiscal-monetary link has emerged through the increasing fiscal value of central bank earnings from reserve management and foreign assets — not through bond-buying programmes.
  • The pathway is different, but the destination — growing fiscal dependence on the central bank — is similar.

The Federal Blind Spot: States Left Out

  • This is the least discussed but critically important dimension of the debate. The ₹2.87 lakh crore surplus is classified as non-tax revenue of the Union Government.
  • It therefore falls outside the divisible pool — the pool of income tax and GST revenues that are shared with States through Finance Commission formulas.
  • This means:
    • States get no automatic share of RBI surplus transfers
    • States carry significant expenditure obligations — health, education, welfare schemes
    • States face borrowing restrictions under Article 293 of the Constitution
    • Yet one of the largest public sector resource transfers in recent years bypasses fiscal federalism entirely
  • The analysts are careful to note that States have no legal claim to RBI profits.
  • But the question they raise is deeper: should a central institution acting on behalf of the entire monetary union indirectly deepen fiscal centralisation without any framework of accountability or federal balance?

The Centralisation Pattern: A Bigger Picture

  • Viewed in isolation, the RBI surplus transfer appears routine. But placed alongside other fiscal instruments, a pattern emerges:
    • Cesses and surcharges — collected by the Centre but kept outside the divisible pool
    • RBI dividend transfers — non-tax revenue, not shared with States
    • Borrowing restrictions on States under Article 293
    • Finance Commission devolution — subject to political negotiation
  • Together, these represent a progressive shift in India's fiscal landscape towards the Centre — at the expense of cooperative fiscal federalism.

The Central Bank Independence Question

  • Central bank independence rests on institutional distance from the government's fiscal compulsions.
  • This independence is not merely a legal design — it is a question of operational culture and practice.
  • As surplus transfers grow larger and the government's fiscal reliance on RBI earnings deepens, maintaining that independence becomes both more difficult and more important.
  • The RBI currently retains substantial operational autonomy and functions within a well-defined framework. But the trend line bears watching.

Conclusion

The RBI's record surplus transfer is not a crisis — but it is a signal. A central bank increasingly relied upon as a fiscal cushion risks blurring the line between monetary independence and government financing.

Combined with the exclusion of such transfers from federal revenue sharing, it raises a question India's policymakers must eventually answer: how much fiscal work can a monetary institution be asked to carry?

Economics

Article
18 Jun 2026

Every Fifth Seafarer is Now an Indian: India's Maritime Workforce Story

Why in news?

The US-Iran conflict and the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz since early March 2026 has put thousands of Indian seafarers at risk in the Gulf region.

This has drawn attention to India's massive and rapidly growing maritime workforce — and its changing composition.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • India's Maritime Workforce: The Big Picture
  • The Shift in Workforce Composition
  • What Kind of Work Are Indians Doing at Sea?
  • Indian Seafarers on Foreign Ships: The Dominance of Foreign Flags
  • The Hormuz Crisis and Indian Seafarers at Risk
  • Key Concerns Emerging from These Trends

India's Maritime Workforce: The Big Picture

  • India has emerged as one of the world's top three suppliers of seafarers, alongside the Philippines and China.
    • Indian seafarers (2024) - 3,07,901
    • Indian seafarers (2010) - 62,267
    • Growth - More than fivefold in 14 years
    • Share of global workforce - ~17% (1 in 5 seafarers globally is Indian)
    • Global seafaring workforce - 1.89 million

The Shift in Workforce Composition

  • The most significant structural change is the reversal of the officer-to-rating ratio.
    • 2010 - 60:40
    • 2024 - 35:65
    • Global average (2024) - 45:55
  • India's ratio has moved well below the global average, indicating a workforce increasingly dominated by lower-ranked, non-officer crew — known as ratings
  • Engineering vs. Nautical Crew Growth
    • Both engineering and nautical (non-engineering) crew have grown substantially, but nautical crew has grown much faster:
      • Engineering crew - 25,844 (2010); 1,00,792 (2024) - ~4x growth
      • Nautical crew - 36,423 (2010); 2,07,109 (2024) - ~5.7x growth

What Kind of Work Are Indians Doing at Sea?

  • In 2024, half of the non-engineering Indian crew worked in roles such as cooks, hospitality staff, salon ratings, cruise vessel staff, wipers, cleaners, painters, and lookout staff.
    • In 2010, less than 37% were in such roles.
  • This signals a downward shift in the skill profile of India's maritime workforce.
  • Not all the growth is at the bottom. There has been notable expansion in mid-level non-officer positions too:
    • Bosuns (senior-most non-officer deckhands): 0 in 2010 → 4,324 in 2024
    • Able Seamen: 708 in 2010 → 16,568 in 2024
  • Decline in Officer Representation
    • In 2010, nearly 46% of non-engineering Indian crew held the rank of Third Officer or above.
    • By 2024, this had fallen to under 20% — as Indians increasingly joined ships in non-officer capacities.

Indian Seafarers on Foreign Ships: The Dominance of Foreign Flags

  • Most Indian seafarers work on foreign-flagged vessels — a trend that has deepened over time:
    • 2016 - 1,23,729 out of 1,43,940 (86%)
    • 2024 - 2,78,466 out of 3,07,901 (90%)
  • This structural dependence on foreign-flagged ships makes Indian seafarers disproportionately exposed to risks in hostile maritime environments — with limited protection from the Indian state.

The Hormuz Crisis and Indian Seafarers at Risk

  • The US-Iran war and the Hormuz closure brought this vulnerability into sharp focus:
    • Mid-March 2026: 23,000 Indian seafarers facing uncertainty in the Gulf region; 753 aboard 27 Indian-flagged vessels
    • June 11, 2026: Numbers reduced to 18,000 under uncertainty; 562 aboard 13 Indian-flagged vessels — 329 in the Persian Gulf (west of Hormuz) and 233 in the Gulf of Oman (east of Hormuz)
    • The 13 Indian-flagged vessels included crude oil tankers, container ships, bulk carriers, LPG tankers, chemical tankers, and a dredger
    • At least one tanker safely exited the Strait on June 15, following the peace deal announcement
  • EAM Jaishankar formally protested attacks on ships carrying Indian sailors, and the US responded that violations would not be tolerated.

Key Concerns Emerging from These Trends

  • Skill downgrade risk: India is supplying a growing share of low-skill, non-officer crew. Without active skilling efforts, India risks losing its competitive edge at higher officer ranks to countries like the Philippines and China.
  • Dependence on foreign flags: 90% of Indian seafarers work on foreign-flagged ships. This limits India's ability to protect them diplomatically in hostile maritime zones.
  • Geopolitical vulnerability: As one of the world's largest suppliers of maritime labour, disruptions in key chokepoints like the Strait of Hormuz have an outsized impact on Indian workers and their families.
  • Remittance and economic stakes: Indian seafarers are significant remittance earners. Their safety and employment conditions directly affect household incomes, especially in coastal states like Kerala, Goa, Maharashtra, and Andhra Pradesh.

Conclusion

India's rise as a global maritime labour power is remarkable — but its foundation is shifting. A workforce growing fastest at the lower end of the skill ladder, overwhelmingly employed on foreign ships, and exposed to geopolitical flashpoints like Hormuz, demands a serious national maritime skilling and diplomatic protection strategy.

Economics

Article
18 Jun 2026

Water Security is Central for a Viksit Bharat

Context

  • Water is central to human dignity, public health, economic growth, agriculture, and environmental sustainability.
  • As the world's most populous nation, India faces the challenge of meeting growing water demands while managing limited freshwater resources.
  • Recognising that water-related issues are interconnected, India has adopted an integrated approach that combines drinking water supply, sanitation, conservation, groundwater management, and river restoration.

Water as a National Development Priority

  • For decades, water management suffered from fragmented planning and implementation.
  • A comprehensive approach has now emerged, treating water as a shared national responsibility involving governments, communities, and institutions.
  • Investments in water infrastructure, conservation, and sanitation have transformed the sector into a key pillar of national development and climate resilience.

Expanding Access to Safe Drinking Water

  • Jal Jeevan Mission: Transforming Rural India
    • The Jal Jeevan Mission has significantly improved access to safe drinking water in rural areas.
    • Rural households with tap water connections have increased from about 17% to over 81%, bringing reliable water supply directly to millions of homes.
  • Social and Economic Benefits
    • Access to household tap connections has reduced the burden on rural women, who previously spent considerable time collecting water.
    • The saved time is now available for education, livelihoods, childcare, and productive activities.
    • Improved access to safe water has also helped reduce water-borne diseases and associated healthcare costs.

Revolutionizing Sanitation and Public Health

  • Swachh Bharat Mission
    • The Swachh Bharat Mission has become one of the largest sanitation movements in the world.
    • Through behavioural change, public participation, and sustained implementation, sanitation coverage expanded rapidly across rural India.
  • Improving Dignity and Health
    • The construction of household toilets enhanced dignity, privacy, and safety, particularly for women.
    • Better sanitation practices contributed to improved public health outcomes and reduced the spread of infectious diseases.
    • The programme has also advanced solid waste management and liquid waste management for long-term sustainability.

Strengthening Water Conservation and Groundwater Recharge

  • Large-Scale Conservation Efforts
    • India has undertaken extensive water conservation initiatives through rainwater harvesting and groundwater recharge
    • Millions of conservation structures have been created to improve water availability and reduce pressure on groundwater resources.
  • Role of Community Participation
    • The success of these initiatives highlights the importance of community participation in environmental management.
    • Collective efforts have helped improve groundwater conditions in several regions and strengthened local water security.

River Rejuvenation and Environmental Sustainability

  • Namami Gange Programme
    • The Namami Gange Programme represents a major effort to restore one of India's most important rivers.
    • Investments in sewage treatment, pollution control, and monitoring have improved water quality and reduced environmental degradation.
  • Balancing Development and Conservation
    • The programme demonstrates that environmental restoration and economic development can progress together.
    • Cleaner rivers contribute to ecological sustainability, public health, and economic opportunities.
  • Advancing Strategic Water Infrastructure: Ken-Betwa River Linking Project
    • The Ken-Betwa River Linking Project aims to improve water availability in drought-prone regions such as Bundelkhand.
    • By transferring water from surplus to deficit areas, the project seeks to support agriculture, livelihoods, and regional development.

Addressing Future Challenges

  • Climate Change and Water Scarcity
    • India faces increasing pressure from climate change, population growth, and urbanisation.
    • Despite housing nearly 18% of the global population, the country possesses only about 4% of global freshwater resources.
    • These challenges make sustainable water management a national necessity.
  • Building Long-Term Resilience
    • Future efforts must focus on water-use efficiency, recycling, improved governance, and technological innovation.
    • Strengthening institutional capacity and encouraging citizen participation will be crucial for ensuring long-term national resilience.

Conclusion

  • India's transformation in the water sector demonstrates the importance of integrated and sustainable resource management.
  • Programmes such as the Jal Jeevan Mission, Swachh Bharat Mission, Namami Gange, and large-scale conservation initiatives have expanded access to clean water, improved sanitation, strengthened environmental protection, and enhanced social welfare.
  • As water challenges become more complex in the coming decades, continued commitment to conservation, efficiency, and public participation will be essential for securing a resilient and sustainable future.
Editorial Analysis

Article
18 Jun 2026

Health Data Must Drive Action, Not Just Headlines

Context:

  • Three major health surveys were recently released in India — the National Family Health Survey (NFHS-6), the NSO 80th Round Household Consumption Survey on Health, and the National Health Accounts Estimates for India 2022-23.
  • Together, they should have triggered serious national stocktaking. Instead, they generated headlines but little policy action — exposing a deep structural problem in how India uses its health data.
  • This article highlights the disconnect between India's extensive health data collection and the limited policy action that follows.
  • It argues that health surveys should serve as instruments of accountability and course correction rather than merely generating headlines, political claims, or commercial opportunities.

The Paradox of Health Surveys in India

  • India's health surveys follow a predictable and unproductive cycle:
    • The government highlights achievements and celebrates positive indicators
    • Newspapers amplify numbers without sustained critical analysis
    • Academics wait for raw data, which arrives late
    • Industry identifies market opportunities from every health challenge flagged
  • The result: surveys confirm what is already known, fail to spotlight what has stagnated, and rarely trigger immediate programmatic reform.
  • A health survey is meant to be an instrument of course correction — not a ritual of self-congratulation.

What the Surveys Reveal: Old Problems, New Numbers

  • The NFHS-6 data — collected in 2023-24 but released in mid-2026 — flags the rise of obesity, diabetes, hypertension, and other non-communicable diseases (NCDs) across all social and economic groups, not just urban and affluent populations.
  • Anaemia remains persistent. Out-of-pocket health expenditure stays high. Child nutrition has stagnated in several areas.
  • None of this is new. The surveys merely put fresh numbers to old warnings that were never adequately acted upon.

How Industry Exploits Health Data?

  • Where public health messaging is weak, private markets are quick to fill the gap:
    • Rising obesity → weight-loss products, apps, gyms, diagnostic packages
    • Rising diabetes → monitoring devices, private clinics, test packages
    • Rising NCDs → medicalisation, screening drives, private sector expansion
  • Survey data, instead of driving public health reform, ends up fuelling commercial health markets. This is a failure of governance, not of data.

The Temporal Problem: Convenient Lag

  • The gap between data collection (2023-24) and public release (2026) creates a politically convenient loophole.
  • Governments can claim credit for positive trends as proof of current policy success, while dismissing troubling findings as "old data" linked to COVID-19 disruptions or past administrative failures.
  • Similarly, raw data are released late, meaning peer-reviewed academic analysis often takes three to five years after data collection.
  • By then, policymakers dismiss the findings as outdated. Data lose their impact precisely when they are needed most.

From Data to Action: Five Reforms Needed

  • Mandatory Action Notes within 30–45 Days
    • Every major health survey must be followed by a national and state-level action note — jointly prepared by government and independent institutions — candidly identifying what improved, what stagnated, and what deteriorated.
    • Each finding must be linked to a specific programme and a clearly accountable authority.
  • State-Level Working Reviews — Not Ceremonial Events
    • Health Secretaries, Finance Departments, district officials, public health experts, and civil society must review findings together.
    • The core question should not be "what can we highlight?" but "what must we change?"
  • Integrated Data Systems
    • Survey data, HMIS (Health Management Information System) data, and the Integrated Health Information Platform (IHIP) data must be combined for coherent analytical output. Fragmented data produce fragmented policy.
  • Early Release of Raw Data as a Public Good
    • Primary source data must be made available promptly so independent researchers can produce rapid analysis.
    • Data should not be treated as a guarded file — they must function as a public good.
  • Data Must Influence Budget Allocations
    • Survey findings must directly shape how money is spent. Rising NCDs must mean larger primary care budgets.
    • High out-of-pocket medicine costs must mean stronger public drug availability.
    • Data without budgetary consequence are merely information.

Conclusion

  • India collects vast health data but harvests little accountability from it.
  • A survey that triggers no programme change, no budget reallocation, and no official accountability is not a public health tool — it is a public relations exercise.
  • The true measure of any health survey is not the headlines it generates, but the reforms it compels.
Editorial Analysis

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Current Affairs
June 17, 2026

Manas National Park
Recently, the Chief Minister of Assam announced that Manas National Park has recorded zero rhino and tiger poaching cases for three consecutive years.
current affairs image

About Manas National Park:

  • Location: It is located in the foothills of the Himalayas in Assam. 
  • It shares a border with Bhutan’s Royal Manas National Park.
  • The park’s elevation ranges from 60 to 1,500 meters (200 to 4,900 feet) above sea level, contributing to its rich biodiversity.
  • River: The Manas River (A major tributary of the Brahmaputra River), from which its name has been derived, flows through the west of the park and is the main river within it. 
  • The area has the unique distinction of being a United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) World Heritage Site, a Tiger Reserve, an Elephant Reserve, a Biosphere Reserve, and an Important Bird Area.
  • It is one of the first reserves included in the tiger reserve network under Project Tiger in 1973.
  • The park is inhabited by several indigenous communities, including the Bodo.
  • Vegetation: It consists of semi-evergreen and mixed deciduous forests, interspersed with grasslands and riparian vegetation (in the core area).
  • Flora: The most presiding plant species found here are hoolong trees. Some other prominent species available here are Amari, Dewa Sam, Himolu, Garjan, etc.
  • Fauna: It is home to Hispid Hare, Pygmy Hog, Golden Langur, Indian Rhinoceros, Asiatic Buffalo, etc.
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