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Step-Up RMS - Environment and Biodiversity Current Affairs : Part - 1
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RMS - Polity - Union Legislature - Part III
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Step-Up RMS - Human geography
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Step-Up RMS - Polity - Union and State Executives
Step-Up RMS - Economics - Basic Economics and Terminology
Step-Up RMS - Polity - State, Citizenship, FR/FD and Emergency Provisions
RMS - Polity - Judiciary - Part II
RMS - Geography - Biomes and Natural Resources
RMS - Economy - Money and Banking - Part I
RMS - Geography - Oceanography
RMS - Medieval History - 646 AD to 1192 AD
RMS - Art & Culture - Post Mauryan Period
RMS - Polity - Union Legislature - Part II
RMS - Economy - Financial Markets
RMS - Polity - Judiciary Part I
RMS - Polity - Separation of Powers & Federal System
RMS - Geography - Atmospheric Circulation
RMS - Polity - Union Legislature - Part I
RMS - Geography - Air Mass, Fronts & Cyclones
RMS - A&C - Pre-Historic to Mauryan Period
RMS - Economy - Fundamentals of Economy & NIA
RMS - Polity - Emergency Provisions
RMS - Geography - Humidity, Clouds & Precipitation
RMS - Economy - Demography, Poverty & Employment
RMS - Modern History - 1813 AD to 1857 AD
RMS - Polity - Union & State Executive
RMS - Modern History - 1932 AD to 1947 AD
RMS - Geography - Basics of Atmosphere
RMS - Polity - Fundamental Rights - Part III
RMS - Economy - Planning and Mobilisation of Resources
RMS - Modern History - 1919 AD to 1932 AD
RMS - Modern History - 1757 AD to 1813 AD
RMS - Economy - Financial Organisations
RMS - Geography - Major Landforms
RMS - Polity - Constitutional and Statutory Bodies
RMS - Geography - EQ, Faulting and Fracture
RMS - Polity - Fundamental Rights - Part II
RMS - Economy - Industry, Infrastructure & Investment Models
RMS - Polity - DPSP & FD
RMS - Economy - Indian Agriculture - Part II
RMS - Geography - Rocks & Volcanoes and its landforms
RMS - Geography - Evolution of Oceans & Continents
RMS - Polity - Fundamental Rights - Part I
RMS - Modern History - 1498 AD to 1757 AD
RMS - Modern History - 1858 AD to 1919 AD
RMS - Geography - Interior of the Earth & Geomorphic Processes
RMS - Geography - Universe and Earth and Basic concepts on Earth
RMS - Economy - Indian Agriculture - Part I
RMS - Economy - Fundamentals of the Indian Economy
RMS - Polity - Union & its territories and Citizenship
RMS - Polity - Constitution & its Salient Features and Preamble
Learning Support Session - ANSWER writing MASTER Session
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Mastering Art of writing Ethics Answers
Mastering Art of Writing Social Issues Answers
Answer Review Session
UPSC CSE 2026 Form Filling Doubt Session
Mentoring Session (2024 - 25) - How to Write an ESSAY?
Social Issues Doubts and Mentoring Session
Ethics & Essay Doubts and Mentoring Session
Geography & Environment Doubts and Mentoring Session
History Doubts and Mentoring Session
Economy & Agriculture Doubts and Mentoring Session
Online Orientation Session
How to Read Newspaper and Make Notes?
Mains Support Programme 2025-(2)
Mains Support Programme 2025- (1)
Polity & International Relations Doubts and Mentoring Session
Mentoring Sessions (2024-25) - How to DO REVISION?
Learning Support Session - How to Start Preparation?
RMS - Geography - World Mapping
Mentoring Session (2024-25) - How to Make Notes?
General Mentoring Session (GMS )
Mentoring Session (2025-26) - How to write an Answer?
Upcoming Live Classes
Current Affairs
April 20, 2026
About Amber Fort:
- Amber Fort, also known as Amer Fort, is located in Amer in Rajasthan.
- It was constructed atop a hill. The fort was strategically situated on the Aravalli Range, providing a commanding view of the surrounding region.
- It was originally built by Raja Man Singh I, the Kachwaha Rajput ruler, in the late 16th century.
- Man Singh was one of the trusted generals of Emperor Akbar and one among the Navaratnas of his court.
- Prior to shifting their capital to Jaipur, Amer was the capital of the Kachhwaha Rajputs.
- The original construction of the fort began in 1592.
- It underwent significant expansion and renovation under the reign of Jai Singh I, who ruled from 1621 to 1667.
- He is credited with constructing the impressive Diwan-i-Khas (Hall of Private Audience) and the Sheesh Mahal (Mirror Palace) within the fort complex.
- Following Jai Singh I's enhancements, successive rulers of the Kachwaha dynasty continued to contribute to Amer Fort's development, until the capital was shifted to Jaipur in 1727.
- It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
- Architecture:
- Its architecture is a noteworthy fusion of Rajput (Hindu) and Mughal (Islamic) styles.
- It was built using pink and yellow sandstones.
- With its large ramparts, series of gates and cobbled paths, the fort overlooks the Maota Lake, at its forefront.
- It has splendid palaces, courtyards, and the famous Sheesh Mahal.
Current Affairs
April 20, 2026
About Mansar Lake:
- It is a freshwater lake located in the Samba district of Jammu and Kashmir.
- It lies in the foothills of the Shivalik
- It is oval in shape and surrounded by green hills and forests.
- It is one of the largest lakes in the region.
- The lake is mainly fed by rainwater and underground springs.
- It has been a center of faith for many generations.
- On the eastern side of the lake stands the Sheshnag Temple, where devotees offer milk and prayers to the serpent god.
- Other temples such as Durga Temple and Umapati Mahadev Temple are also located around the lake.
- Mansar Lake is ecologically rich, housing about many species of algae and supporting diverse fauna including several species of fish and waterfowl.
- Together with its twin lake, Surinsar, it was designated under Ramsar Convention in November 2005.
Current Affairs
April 20, 2026
About Col. Sher Jung National Park:
- Sher Jung National Park, also known as Simbalbara National Park, is located in the Paonta Valley of the Sirmaur (Sirmour) district in Himachal Pradesh along its border with Haryana.
- It is named after the famous freedom fighter and ardent environmentalist Colonel Sher Jung.
- The park is located in the lower Shiwalik region and extends into the middle and upper Shiwaliks.
- Geographically, it is at the confluence of three biogeographic regions: the Himalayas, the Gangetic plain, and the semi-arid region.
- It touches Kalesar National Park of Haryana to its south and west.
- The Simbalbara River flows through Simbalbara National Park and is a lifeline for the park’s plants and animals.
- Vegetation: It is characterized by its dense Sal forests with grassy glades.
- Flora:
- Sal (Shorea robusta) and Terminalia tomentosa are the principal species that form the top canopy here.
- On the riverine side, Jamun (Syzygium cumini), Cassia siamea, and Eucalyptus are present.
- Fauna:
- Some key species include Nilgai, Sambar deer, spotted deer, wild boar, goral, barking deer, and Rhesus macaque.
- The park also serves as a significant bird habitat, home to species like the Indian roller, dollar bird, kingfishers, and three types of hornbills.
- Predatory birds such as the crested serpent eagle and Brahminy kite also inhabit this area.
Current Affairs
April 20, 2026
About Yangtze River:
- The Yangtze River, known in China as the Chang Jiang or Yangzi, is the longest river in both China and Asia and the third-longest river in the world after the Nile River and the Amazon River.
- It is also considered the longest river to exclusively flow within the borders of a single nation.
- Course:
- It begins in the mountains of Tibet.
- The Yangtze empties into the East China Sea near Shanghai in east-central China.
- It has eight principal tributaries. On its left bank, from source to mouth, these are the Yalung, Min, Jialing, and Han rivers; those on the right bank include the Wu, Yuan, Xiang, and Gan rivers.
- The Yangtze has been an important traffic route since the 1200s. The river connects inland and coastal ports with major cities, including Nanjing, Wuhan, and Chongqing.
- Its basin is China’s great granary. Nearly half of China’s crops are grown in this area.
- The Yangtze basin provides about half of all the fish eaten in China.
- Industries and farming there contribute as much as 40% of China's whole economy.
- The region is also responsible for the housing of 400 million people, about one-third of the country’s population.
- Many of China's largest cities, including Shanghai, Wuhan, and Chongqing, are situated along the river.
Current Affairs
April 20, 2026
About Apis mellifera:
- Apis mellifera, the Western bee or European bee, is the most common species of honey bee worldwide.
- It is the most widely distributed and well-known domesticated species of insect in the world.
- It is commercially exploited for products such as honey, wax, and propolis, and it is used for pollination of multiple crops.
- Habitat and Distribution:
- It is native to Europe, Western Asia, and Africa.
- Human introduction of Apis mellifera to other continents started in the 17th century, and now they are found all around the world, including East Asia, Australia, and North and South America.
- They prefer habitats that have an abundant supply of suitable flowering plants, such as meadows, open wooded areas, and gardens.
- They can survive in grasslands, deserts, and wetlands if there is sufficient water, food, and shelter.
- They need cavities (e.g. in hollow trees) to nest in.
- Features:
- Like all honey bees, the western honey bee is eusocial, creating colonies with a single fertile female (or "queen"), many normally non-reproductive females or "workers," and a small proportion of fertile males or "drones."
Article
20 Apr 2026
Why in the News?
- India has extended OCI card eligibility to the sixth generation of Indian-origin people in Sri Lanka.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- About OCI Scheme (Features, Eligibility, Significance, Merger between OCI and PIO)
- News Summary (Key Highlights of the Visit)
Overseas Citizen of India (OCI) Scheme
- The OCI scheme was introduced in 2005 through an amendment to the Citizenship Act, 1955.
- It provides a form of long-term residency and travel facility to persons of Indian origin who are citizens of other countries.
- Eligibility and Features
- OCI status is granted to foreign nationals who can prove Indian ancestry. Earlier, eligibility was generally limited to up to the fourth generation in certain cases.
- OCI cardholders enjoy multiple-entry, lifelong visa access to India. They are exempt from registering with local police authorities for long stays.
- They are also granted parity with Non-Resident Indians (NRIs) in areas such as education and economic opportunities, except for political rights.
- However, OCI is not dual citizenship. OCI holders cannot vote, hold constitutional posts, or acquire agricultural land.
- Significance of OCI Scheme
- The OCI scheme strengthens India’s engagement with its diaspora. It promotes cultural ties, facilitates investment, and enhances people-to-people connections.
- It also plays a strategic role in foreign policy, particularly in regions with significant Indian-origin populations such as Sri Lanka, Mauritius, and Southeast Asia.
- Merger of PIO and OCI
- The Person of Indian Origin (PIO) scheme and the OCI scheme were both introduced to facilitate engagement with the Indian diaspora.
- However, the PIO scheme was later merged with OCI in 2015 to simplify administrative processes and remove duplication between the two schemes.
- It also strengthened India’s engagement with its diaspora by offering a unified and more beneficial framework under OCI.
News Summary
- During a two-day visit to Sri Lanka, Vice-President C.P. Radhakrishnan announced that OCI card eligibility will now be extended to the sixth generation of Indian-origin people in Sri Lanka.
- Previously, eligibility was restricted to the fourth generation. The new policy significantly expands the coverage of the Indian diaspora in Sri Lanka.
- OCI cards will now be issued based on documents provided by the Sri Lankan government in many cases, which simplifies the application process.
Key Highlights of the Visit
- During the visit, the Vice-President held discussions with Sri Lankan President Anura Kumara Dissanayake on bilateral issues, including economic cooperation, housing projects, and fishermen-related concerns.
- Both countries emphasised strengthening cooperation in sectors such as energy, trade, education, and tourism. A key focus was the proposed energy hub in Trincomalee, including infrastructure like fuel pipelines and oil tank farms.
- The discussions also included India-funded housing projects and assistance under a $450 million package for cyclone recovery. Several MoUs were signed to advance these projects.
- Fishermen’s issues, a sensitive aspect of India-Sri Lanka relations, were addressed with an emphasis on a humanitarian approach that considers the livelihoods of fishing communities on both sides.
- Additionally, India reiterated its commitment to Sri Lanka under its “Neighbourhood First” policy.
- Sri Lanka acknowledged India’s role as a “first responder” during crises, including economic assistance during the 2022 financial crisis and disaster support.
Article
20 Apr 2026
Context:
- In the backdrop of India's ambition to be a global manufacturing hub and a $4 trillion economy, a series of violent worker protests — most recently in Noida (UP), and earlier in Manesar and Bhiwadi (Haryana) — have exposed a deepening fault line between economic growth narratives and ground-level labour realities.
- These incidents are not isolated law-and-order failures; they are symptomatic of a structural breakdown in India's industrial relations framework.
Causes of Workers Revolt:
- When workers abandon negotiations and resort to arson and stone-pelting at their own workplaces, it signals a complete collapse of trust between employers and employees.
- Such acts reflect a workforce that sees itself as dispensable, disrespected, and without a stake in the enterprise it sustains.
- This is not spontaneous criminality — it is the last resort of a people pushed beyond the threshold of dignity.
- The recurring nature of such unrest across multiple industrial corridors marks it as a systemic crisis, not a localised grievance.
The "Conspiracy" Theory vs Reality:
- Authorities have routinely attributed labour unrest to "conspiracies" by outside elements. This narrative conveniently sidesteps structural causes.
- The reality is stark -
- Workers in the National Capital Region (NCR) earn as little as ₹10,000 per month — below the statutory minimum wage and far below any reasonable living wage standard.
- The Supreme Court has itself flagged such conditions as amounting to "forced labour" — where workers are compelled to work for less than the minimum wage mandated by law.
- The myth of labour "unavailability" is exposed — labour is present, but under conditions of extreme precarity.
The New Labour Codes - Reform or Regression?
- The four Labour Codes — consolidating 29 central labour laws — officially came into effect on April 1, 2026.
- While projected by the government as modernising legislation that eases business, critics and trade unions across the political spectrum argue otherwise.
- For example,
- The Codes prioritise "ease of doing business" over "ease of labouring."
- They extend legal cover to deregulated and unregulated work environments.
Workers' Rights Under Threat:
- Minimum wage - A promise on paper:
- Wage violations are widespread. For example, wages have stagnated for three consecutive years in Rajasthan.
- The Anoop Satpathy Committee (2019) had recommended a national floor wage of ₹375/day (at 2018 prices), along with a housing allowance for urban workers. These recommendations remain unimplemented.
- MGNREGA — a critical safety net — has been undermined. The transition to the new VBGRAMG scheme imposes a two-month "blackout period," weakening rural workers' bargaining power.
- For the first time in 15 years, MGNREGA wages have not been revised for inflation at the start of a financial year, resulting in declining real wages for rural workers.
- The 8-hour workday - A legal fiction:
- Workers are routinely forced to work beyond 8 hours without overtime pay.
- Post-riot government orders mandating "double pay" reveal a troubling truth: it takes a riot to enforce an existing law.
- With a largely unorganised and union-less workforce, such orders remain paper promises.
- Right to organise - Systematically dismantled:
- The Labour Codes have erected structural barriers to collective bargaining. The state's immediate response to the Noida protests was to round up union leaders — a counterproductive move.
- Unions serve as safety valves in industrial relations. Without them, grievances accumulate invisibly until they explode in unorganised, unpredictable, and often violent ways.
The Gig Economy - The Next Flash Point:
- The crisis is not confined to factory floors. The digital gig economy replicates and deepens labour precarity.
- Workers are atomised through individual micro-contracts, with no employer formally acknowledged.
- Conditions worsen over time — shorter delivery deadlines, falling pay, no grievance redress mechanisms.
- Labour Codes offer only lip-service social security provisions through schemes that are impractical and underfunded.
- The central government has reportedly collaborated with platform aggregators to resist state-level regulatory legislation protecting gig workers. Without regulation, the gig economy is incubating the next wave of industrial unrest.
Post-Pandemic Recovery Deficit:
- The pandemic exposed India's migrant labour crisis in its starkest form — millions walking hundreds of kilometres home when city gates shut on them.
- When they returned, they came back to the same conditions of precarity, but now compounded by:
- Escalating cost of living (including skyrocketing LPG cylinder prices)
- Stagnant or declining real wages
- No institutional safety nets
Challenges:
- Wage enforcement gap: Statutory minimum wages exist on paper but are widely flouted without consequences.
- State-capital collusion: Governments at both Centre and state levels have prioritised investor sentiment over worker welfare.
- Inequality and dignity deficit: Extreme income inequality fuels frustration that goes beyond material demands.
Way Forward:
- Implement: The Anoop Satpathy Committee recommendations — establish a nationally enforceable floor wage indexed to inflation.
- Restore: And strengthen MGNREGA — ensure timely wage revisions and remove disruptive transition schemes.
- Revisit: Labour Codes through genuine tripartite consultation involving workers, employers, and government.
- Legalise: And protect collective bargaining — unions must be recognised as industrial stabilisers, not threats.
- Regulate: Gig and platform work — extend social security, minimum wage protections, and grievance mechanisms to platform workers.
- Enforce: Existing laws rigorously — overtime pay, minimum wage compliance, and workplace safety must be monitored and penalised where violated.
- Shift: The lens from "law and order" to "social justice" when responding to labour unrest.
Conclusion:
- Noida is not an aberration — it is a warning. A nation cannot sustain 6–7% GDP growth on the back of a workforce denied basic dignity, legal protections, and a living wage.
- If India's growth story is to be inclusive and stable, the worker must be given not just a wage, but a stake — in the enterprise, in the economy, and in the republic itself.
Article
20 Apr 2026
Context
- In contemporary democratic politics, development has become a central electoral promise, often presented as a universal goal that transcends ideological divides.
- Political actors deploy the language of development to signal commitments to economic growth, infrastructure expansion, employment generation, and improved public services.
- In India, such narratives frequently emphasise visible and tangible outcomes, roads, housing, and large-scale infrastructure, as markers of progress.
Understanding Welfare and Development
- Conceptual Differences
- Welfare refers to redistributive interventions aimed at addressing immediate needs such as poverty alleviation, food security, and income support.
- These measures are typically short-term and consumption-oriented.
- Development, on the other hand, is a long-term process involving structural transformation, economic growth, productivity enhancement, and the expansion of human capabilities.
- It is production-oriented and requires sustained investment over time.
- The Source of Confusion
- In practice, the boundaries between welfare and development often blur.
- This is particularly evident in India, where large-scale welfare programmes coexist with ambitions of rapid economic growth.
- Political narratives frequently present welfare schemes as indicators of development, even when their long-term impact is limited.
- This confusion arises largely from differing time horizons, welfare delivers immediate, visible benefits, while development unfolds gradually.
- Electoral cycles tend to favour the former, reinforcing the conflation of the two.
Welfare and Development as Complementary Forces
- A more coherent policy approach requires recognising welfare and development as complementary rather than interchangeable.
- Well-designed welfare programmes can support development by enhancing human capabilities, reducing inequality, and enabling broader participation in economic processes.
- However, tensions emerge when welfare provisioning becomes excessive or inefficient.
- Poorly designed schemes may lead to leakages, exclusion errors, and limited effectiveness.
The Temporal Nature of Development
- Development as a Long-Term Process
- Development is not a series of short-term achievements but an incremental and cumulative process.
- It involves the gradual transformation of economic structures, institutional capacities, and social outcomes over extended periods, often decades.
- Improvements in productivity, education, health, governance, and technology adoption occur slowly and require consistent policy support.
- Unlike visible infrastructure projects, these changes are less immediate but far more consequential.
- The Fallacy of Quick Development
- Political discourse often promotes the idea of rapid or quick development.
- However, such expectations overlook the complexity and path-dependent nature of development processes.
- Sustainable progress depends on the steady consolidation of institutions, norms, and state capacity.
- This perspective highlights the limitations of evaluating development through short-term outcomes or electoral cycles, and instead emphasises continuity, persistence, and gradual improvement.
Public Goods vs Welfare Populism
- Role of Public Goods in Development
- Public goods, such as quality education, healthcare systems, infrastructure, and rule of law, are fundamental to long-term development.
- They generate positive externalities, enhance productivity, and produce inclusive and durable benefits across society.
- Because they are non-excludable and broadly accessible, their impact tends to be cumulative and sustainable over time.
- Risks of Welfare Populism
- In contrast, populist welfare measures, such as free electricity, loan waivers, and unconditional cash transfers, are often driven by short-term political considerations.
- While they may provide immediate relief, they typically prioritise consumption over productive capacity.
- When overused, such measures can strain public finances and reduce the resources available for investment in public goods. This can ultimately hinder long-term development.
- Distinguishing Productive Welfare
- Well-designed programmes, such as nutrition support, employment guarantees, and basic income floors, can enhance human capital, reduce vulnerability, and improve productivity.
- The issue lies not in welfare itself, but in populist and fiscally unsustainable approaches that substitute for, rather than complement, development.
Policy Challenges and the Way Forward
- Balancing immediate social needs with long-term economic objectives requires careful design and implementation of policies.
- Welfare systems must be fiscally sustainable, efficiently targeted, and aligned with broader developmental goals.
- Moreover, political discourse and election manifestos need to adopt a more nuanced understanding of development.
- Rather than promising quick results, they should emphasise long-term strategies, institutional strengthening, and sustained investment in public goods.
Conclusion
- Development remains a powerful and necessary aspiration in democratic politics; however, its meaning has often been diluted by political rhetoric that conflates it with short-term welfare measures and visible achievements.
- Recognising the distinction between welfare and development, and their complementary roles, is essential for achieving sustainable and inclusive progress.
- Ultimately, true development requires moving beyond electoral cycles and simplistic narratives toward a long-term vision grounded in structural transformation, institutional strength, and human capability expansion.