Cloudburst, Special Intensive Revision and World Bank’s poverty line


Pahalgam terror attack kept out, Rajnath doesn’t sign SCO draft

Syllabus:

Preliminary Examination: Current events of national and international importance.

Mains Examination: General Studies II: Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India’s Interests.

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What’s the ongoing story: DEFENCE MINISTERS of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation meeting in Qingdao in China, failed to issue a joint statement Thursday after Defence Minister Rajnath Singh declined to sign the draft statement which omitted a reference to the April 22 Pahalgam terror attack in J&K.

Key Points to Ponder:

• What is Shanghai Cooperation Organisation?

• What kind of a grouping is the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation?

• Know the members and observer countries in Shanghai Cooperation Organisation

Map Work-Mark Shanghai Cooperation Organisation member countries with their capital

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• Why defence Minister Rajnath Singh refused to sign the SCO draft statement?

• The absence of a joint SCO communique at Qingdao reflects what?

• ‘India’s decision to withhold its signature on the SCO draft statement at Qingdao’-What does this indicate about India’s stance on terrorism in regional fora?

• What is the role of consensus in multilateral bodies like the SCO?

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• How did India’s refusal to sign demonstrate both limitations and strengths of consensus protocol?

Key Takeaways:

• Government sources told The Indian Express that the document, while leaving out the reference to the Pahalgam attack, mentioned the hijacking of the Jaffar Express by the Balochistan Liberation Army in March — Pakistan has been struggling to contain the unrest in the Balochistan province.

• According to the sources, no joint statement was issued because Singh refused to sign the draft statement, protesting the absence of a common standard for terrorism.

• Stating that the Defence Minister participated in the two-day SCO meeting, Randhir Jaiswal, spokesperson for the Ministry of External Affairs, confirmed the development and said, “I understand that they could not adopt a joint statement.”

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• Besides India, the SCO includes Belarus, China, Iran, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, Russia, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan.

• At the meeting, Singh said the region’s biggest challenges are related to peace, security and trust deficits, with increasing radicalisation, extremism and terrorism being the root cause of these problems.

• The meeting of the SCO Defence Ministers took place weeks after Operation Sindoor which had India striking terror targets in Pakistan and PoK. The SCO leaders are scheduled to meet at the Summit in Tianjin in China this autumn

Do You Know:

• According to the Shanghai Cooperation Organization’s website, ‘the SCO is a permanent intergovernmental international organization established on June 15, 2001 in Shanghai (PRC) by the Republic of Kazakhstan, the People’s Republic of China, the Kyrgyz Republic, the Russian Federation, the Republic of Tajikistan and the Republic of Uzbekistan. Its predecessor was the mechanism of the Shanghai Five.’

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• In 2002, the Charter of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization was signed at the meeting of the Council of Heads of States in St. Petersburg, which entered into force on September 19, 2003. It is a statute that stipulates the goals, principles, structure and major areas of activities of the organization.
The goals of the SCO are:

• To strengthen mutual trust, friendship and good-neighbourliness between the Member States;

• To encourage the effective cooperation between the Member States in such spheres as politics, trade, economy, science and technology, culture, education, energy, transport, tourism, environmental protection, etc;

• To jointly ensure and maintain peace, security and stability in the region; and

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• To promote a new democratic, fair and rational international political and economic international order.

• The SCO countries includes:
10 Member States — the Republic of India, the Islamic Republic of Iran, the Republic of Kazakhstan, the People’s Republic of China, the Kyrgyz Republic, the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, the Russian Federation, the Republic of Tajikistan, the Republic of Uzbekistan, the Republic of Belarus
2 Observer states – the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, Mongolia.

Other Important Articles Covering the same topic:

📍What is the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation Summit?

Previous year UPSC Mains Question Covering similar theme:
📍Terrorist activities and mutual distrust have clouded India-Pakistan relations. To what extent the use of soft power like sports and cultural exchanges could help generate goodwill between the two countries? Discuss with suitable examples.(UPSC CSE GS2, 2015)

GOVT & POLITICS

India in touch with China on rare earth supply issue amid export curbs: MEA

Syllabus:

Preliminary Examination: Current events of national and international importance.

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Mains Examination: General Studies II: Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India’s interests.

What’s the ongoing story: India on Thursday said it has been in touch with China on the issue of rare earth magnet supply, as Beijing has imposed restrictions on their exports.

Key Points to Ponder:

• What are rare earths?

• Why has China restricted rare earth exports?

• What is the role of critical minerals in national security and technological advancement?

• How does China’s dominance in rare earth elements influence global geopolitics?

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• What are the challenges faced by countries heavily reliant on imports of critical minerals?

• Rare-earth supply are crucial for which sectors?

• Explain the strategic vulnerabilities exposed by India’s dependence on Chinese rare-earth magnets amid Beijing’s export curbs.

Key Takeaways:

• This is the first time that the Indian government has officially acknowledged raising the matter with China, at a time when Delhi and Beijing are working towards normalising the relationship after six years of border standoff.

• Responding to questions, MEA official spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal said, “On rare earths, yes, we have been in touch with the Chinese side both in Delhi as also in Beijing and we are talking to them as to how we can streamline the supply chain issue on rare earths.”

• China, which controls over 90% of global processing capacity for the magnets used for automobiles, clean energy and home appliances,
enacted restrictions in April requiring companies to obtain import permits from Beijing.

• China’s export curbs — meant as a response to US President Donald Trump’s tariffs — is likely to impact car manufacturers worldwide.

• The Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers (SIAM), an industry group, has sought the Indian government’s intervention.

Do You Know:

• While rare earth magnets are a crucial component in electric vehicle motors, they are also required for parts like power windows and audio speakers used in petrol or diesel-run cars.

• India’s auto sector imported 460 tons of rare earth magnets, mostly from China, in the fiscal year ending March 31 and expects to import 700 tons worth $30 million this year, according to industry estimates.

• On April 2, Trump unveiled his policy of reciprocal tariffs, targeting most of America’s trading partners. Two days later, China responded by announcing a 34% tariff on all US imports, while also placing export restrictions on rare earths.

• Critical minerals and rare earth elements, which are used across several key sectors, ranging from electronics to renewables, automobiles and defence, are increasingly playing a vital role in the economy. For instance, lithium, nickel and cobalt are used in lithium-ion batteries. Dysprosium and neodymium, and tellurium, indium, and gallium are used in wind turbines and photovoltaic cells respectively.

• As per the International Energy Agency, China accounts for a 35% share in the refining of nickel, 50-70% of lithium and cobalt and around 90% for rare earth elements. China not only dominates the production of rare earths, but also has the most reserves. As per data from the US Geological Survey, the country’s reserves have been estimated at 44 million metric tons. Brazil’s reserves have been pegged at 21 million metric tons, India’s at 6.9 million, Australia’s at 5.7, Russia’s at 3.8 million and Vietnam’s at 3.5 million.

Other Important Articles Covering the same topic:

📍Explained: What are rare earth elements, and why is India keen to join a global alliance to ensure their supply?

EXPRESS NETWORK

5 dead in Himachal flash floods

Syllabus:

Preliminary Examination: Indian and World Geography-Physical, Social, Economic Geography of India and the World.

Mains Examination: General Studies I: Important Geophysical phenomena such as earthquakes, Tsunami, Volcanic activity, cyclone etc., geographical features and their location-changes in critical geographical features (including water-bodies and ice-caps) and in flora and fauna and the effects of such changes.

What’s the ongoing story: Three bodies were recovered in Kangra on Thursday, taking the toll from flash floods triggered by cloudbursts to five, said officials.

Key Points to Ponder:

• What is a cloudburst?

• What is the reason of cloudburst?

• How common are cloudbursts?

• Why do cloudbursts occur in Himachal Pradesh?

• Can we predict cloudbursts?

• What is a ‘Highly local cloud’?

• What is flash flooding?

• Why is Himachal Pradesh fragile?

• What are the ecological problems faced by the Himachal Pradesh?

• How disaster management is done in the landslide and subsidence-hit zone?

• Run-of-the-river (RoR) hydropower projects in the Himachal Pradesh-what are the issues and challenges?

• What Ravi Chopra committee which was constituted by the Supreme Court says about the developmental project in Himalayan States?

Key Takeaways:

• Search operations are on to find the missing persons — three each from Kullu and Kangra. Meanwhile, an unknown person died after drowning in a rivulet in Kullu on Thursday. The flash floods occurred in Kangra and Kullu districts on Wednesday.

• “Out of five, four were identified. As per the information provided to us by the contractor at the Hydroelectric power project, three people are still missing. Separately, a man, who had climbed up and entered a forest area to save himself yesterday from the increased water at the hydro power project site, was traced today,” said Deputy Commissioner (Kangra) Hemraj Bairwa.

• The three deceased have been identified as Chain Singh, a resident of Jammu & Kashmir, Aditya Thakur from Chamba, and Pardeep Verma and Chandan from Uttar Pradesh, Kangra SP Shalini Agnihotri said.

• Deputy Commissioner (Kullu)Torul S Raveesh, said a search was on for three persons who had gone missing on Wednesday in Sainj valley. “We have called the teams of National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) to assist,” he said.

Do You Know:

• While episodes of heavy rain are often termed “cloudburst”, a cloudburst has a specific technical definition — rainfall of 10 cm or more in an hour, over a roughly 10 km x 10 km area.

• Cloudbursts are more common in hilly areas because of a phenomenon called ‘orographic lift’, which basically means warm air rising up the side of a mountain. As warm air ‘climbs’ a mountain, it expands because of the low pressure above. The expanding air cools, releasing the moisture it was holding as rain. But if more and more warm air keeps rising, it prevents that rain, till a large amount of rain builds up and bursts out in a massive shower all at once.

• Because cloudbursts happen in localised areas ( over a roughly 10 km x 10 km area), they are difficult to capture accurately.

• As the name suggests, a flash flood happens quickly, when a lot of rain suddenly enters into the drainage systems (waterbodies, drains), and water overflows. Flash floods are again more common in hills, because rocky terrain does not absorb water very well. While river floods, the kind normally seen in plains, last longer and cause more damage to property, the sudden flash floods are more likely to lead to loss of life.

• In India, flash floods are often associated with cloudbursts – sudden, intense rainfall in a short period of time. Himalayan states further face the challenge of overflowing glacial lakes, formed due to the melting of glaciers, and their numbers have been increasing in the last few years.

Other Important Articles Covering the same topic:

📍Cloudbursts & heavy localised rainfall — why hills are at risk

Previous year UPSC Mains Question Covering similar theme:
📍Describe the various causes and the effects of landslides. Mention the important components of the National Landslide Risk Management Strategy. (2021, GS3)
📍Discuss the recent measures initiated in disaster management by the Government of India departing from the earlier reactive approach. (2020, GS3)
📍Disaster preparedness is the first step in any disaster management process. Explain how hazard zonation mapping will help disaster mitigation in the case of landslides. (2019, GS3)

Funding nod for 1-yr pilot to manage human-tiger conflict outside reserves

Syllabus:

Preliminary Examination: General issues on Environmental ecology, Bio-diversity and Climate Change – that do not require subject specialization.

Main Examination: General Studies III: Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment.

What’s the ongoing story: With recurring human-tiger conflicts in certain forest divisions in the country, the Union Environment Ministry has given approval for funding for ‘tigers outside of tiger reserve’ pilot scheme to manage such conflict better through enhanced monitoring and protection.

Key Points to Ponder:

• What is ‘tigers outside of tiger reserve’ pilot scheme?

• Why the pilot scheme in managing human–tiger conflict in areas outside notified reserves is important?

• Discuss the strengths and limitations of funding wildlife mitigation efforts through the National CAMPA mechanism.

• How technology—such as apps and surveillance tools—can enhance conflict management in peripheral forest zones?

• What are the persisting threats facing the tiger across its habitats?

• ‘Project Tiger’-Why Significant?

• What year does Project Tiger begin?

• Where was Project Tiger launched?

• Under which Prime Minister was Project Tiger launched?

• “Status of Tigers in India” report-Key Highlights

• What is India’s tiger population?

Key Takeaways:

• As per official documents, the executive committee of the National Compensatory Afforestation Fund Management and Planning Authority (CAMPA), under the Environment Ministry, approved in-principle funding on a pilot basis for one year for the scheme, under which 80 forest divisions across 10 states, identified initially on the basis of data of recurring human-tiger conflict, will get funds.

• This will be for technical interventions for protection and monitoring of tigers and co-predators, strengthening forest managers to address conflict with technology, collaborations with civil society and expert veterinarians, and augmentation of prey base.

• On ground, the scheme will be implemented by the Chief Wildlife Wardens of state forest departments, in close collaboration with the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA). Asked about the initial rollout of the pilot, a government official said that NTCA was finalising the list of forest and wildlife divisions.

• The CAMPA’s executive committee also directed the NTCA, the scheme’s proponent, to furnish revised year-wise estimates and then seek approval from the governing body of CAMPA. The scheme’s proposed outlay till 2026-27 is `88 crore and it was initially announced and discussed on March 3 during the National Board for Wildlife meeting chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Do You Know:

• The National CAMPA authority manages the monies collected in the national compensatory afforestation fund, in lieu of diversion of forest land for non-forest activities. The fund has also partly financed other wildlife projects such as the Great Indian Bustard recovery project and Project Cheetah.

• Outside tiger reserves, territorial and wildlife divisions are in-charge of wildlife protection. With nearly 30% of the country’s over 3,600 tigers outside tiger reserves, these tigers often prey on cattle and herbivores near human settlements, increasing chances of human interface and conflict. Being territorial, they also push out co-predators like leopards to areas outside forests, thus adding to the conflict risk. Official data shows that 382 people were killed in conflict with tigers between 2020 and 2024, including 111 in 2022 alone.

• According to officials, this trend is often seen outside territorial forests in Chandrapur near Tadoba Tiger Reserve, Maharashtra, in the sugarcane fields near Dudhwa, Pilibhit in Uttar Pradesh, some divisions near Ranthambore, and Wayanad in Kerala.

Other Important Articles Covering the same topic:

📍Fifty years of ‘Project Tiger’: How the programme saved Indian tigers

THE WORLD

US pulls funding from global vaccines group, RFK Jr says it has ‘ignored science’

Syllabus:

Preliminary Examination: Current events of national and international importance

Main Examination: General Studies II: Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India’s interests

What’s the ongoing story: U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. says the country is pulling its support from the vaccines alliance Gavi, saying the organization has “ignored the science” and “lost the public trust.”

Key Points to Ponder:

• What is Gavi?

• Know the implications of the U.S. halting funding to Gavi for global immunisation efforts.

• What is the role of public-private partnerships like Gavi in achieving global health security?

• How could the U.S. withdrawal affect this model?

• Evaluate the tension between vaccine safety concerns and the urgency of mass immunisation in low-income countries.

• How Gavi’s funding collapse could disrupt global disease prevention strategies, including for malaria and Ebola.

• Examine the role of the WHO, UNICEF and the Gates Foundation in addressing potential funding gaps at Gavi.

Key Takeaways:

• Kennedy, a longtime vaccine skeptic, mentioned Gavi’s partnership with the World Health Organization during COVID-19, accusing them of silencing “dissenting views” and “legitimate questions” about vaccine safety. His speech also cast doubt on the diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis vaccine — which WHO and other health agencies have long deemed to be safe and effective.

• Gavi said in a statement Thursday that its “utmost concern is the health and safety of children,” adding that any decision it makes on
vaccines to buy is done in accordance with recommendations issued by WHO’s expert vaccine group.

• Some doctors in the United States criticized the decision. Dr. Paul Offit, director of the Vaccine Center at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, said it was “incredibly dangerous” and warned that defunding immunization would put millions of children at risk.

Do You Know:

• Gavi is a public-private partnership including WHO, UNICEF, the Gates Foundation and the World Bank, and it is estimated that the vaccination programs have saved 18 million lives. The United States has long been one of its biggest supporters; before President Donald Trump’s re-election, the country had pledged $1 billion through 2030.

• In just under four minutes, Kennedy called on Gavi “to justify the $8 billion America has provided in funding since 2001,” saying officials must “consider the best science available, even when that science contradicts established paradigms.” Kennedy said until that happens, the U.S. won’t contribute further to Gavi.

• Gavi said scientists had reviewed all available data, including any studies that raised concerns, and that the diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis vaccine has “played a key role in helping halve childhood mortality.”

• Some observational studies have shown that vaccinated girls do have a higher death rate compared to unvaccinated children, but there is no evidence the deaths are caused by the vaccine. But Offit said the studies cited by Kennedy were not convincing and that research examining links between vaccinations and deaths did not prove a causal connection.

Other Important Articles Covering the same topic:

📍Under Trump, US withdraws from WHO: Impact, what this means for India

EXPLAINED

Revision of Bihar electoral rolls: Why, how

Syllabus:

Preliminary Examination: Indian Polity and Governance-Constitution, Political System, Panchayati Raj, Public Policy, Rights Issues, etc.

Mains Examination: General Studies II: Salient features of the Representation of People’s Act

What’s the ongoing story: The Election Commission of India (ECI) has asked for the electoral rolls for Bihar to be prepared afresh. All electors must submit an enumeration form, and those registered after 2003 have to additionally provide documentation establishing their citizenship.

Key Points to Ponder:

• Under which provision does the Election Commission of India (ECI) conduct a “Special Intensive Revision” (SIR) of electoral rolls?

• What is the primary objective of the “Special Intensive Revision” (SIR) of electoral rolls?

• Explain the constitutional and legal mandates empowering the ECI to carry out Special Intensive Revision.

• Evaluate the potential impact of SIR on electoral integrity, citing both benefits and risks.

• What are the challenges and implications of requiring birth date/place proof for different age cohorts during roll revision?

• How digital integration via ECINET can enhance transparency and accountability in electoral roll management.

• Compare the SIR measures in Bihar with Assam NRC exercise.

Key Takeaways:

• This “special intensive revision” of rolls will eventually cover all states and Union Territories, the ECI has said. The process in Bihar, where Assembly elections are due before November, began on Wednesday (June 25), and will end with the publication of the final electoral roll on September 30

• Article 324(1) of the Constitution gives the ECI the power of “superintendence, direction and control of the preparation of the electoral rolls for, and the conduct of” elections to Parliament and state legislatures.

• Under Section 21(3) of The Representation of the People Act, 1950, the ECI “may at any time… direct a special revision of the electoral
roll for any constituency or part of a constituency in such manner as it may think fit”.

• The Registration of Electors’ Rules, 1960, says the revision of rolls can be carried out “either intensively or summarily or partly intensively and partly summarily, as the [ECI] may direct”. In an intensive revision, the electoral roll is prepared afresh; in a summary revision, the roll is amended.

• Summary revisions take place every year, and a special summary revision is carried out before each Lok Sabha and state Assembly election. Intensive revisions have been carried out in 1952-56, 1957, 1961, 1965, 1966, 1983-84, 1987-89, 1992, 1993, 1995, 2002, 2003 and 2004, the ECI said in its order issued on Tuesday.

• The ECI order says that “during the last 20 years significant change in electoral roll has taken place due to additions and deletions on a large scale”, and “rapid urbanisation and frequent migration of population from one place to another… have become a regular trend”.

• Electors who move often “register themselves at another place without getting their names deleted from the electoral roll of the initial place of residence”, which increases chances of “repeated entries” in the rolls. “Thus”, the order said, “the situation warrants an intensive verification drive to verify each person before enrolment as an elector.”

• The ECI also underlined its constitutional obligation to ensure that only citizens are enrolled as electors. It said it had decided to conduct a special intensive revision for the whole country “for the discharge of its constitutional mandate to protect the integrity of the electoral rolls”.

Do You Know:

• During previous special intensive revisions, Block Level Officers (BLOs) would go house to house with an “enumeration pad” to be filled by the head of a household.
This time around, each existing elector will have to submit an individual enumeration form. Those added to the roll after January 1, 2003 — the year of the last intensive revision — will additionally have to provide proof of citizenship. (Those already on the electoral roll before the cut-off date would be presumed to be citizens, unless Electoral Registration Officers receive any input to the contrary).

bihar elections Documents for proof of citizenship.

• The ECI’s Form 6, which registers new electors, requires applicants to simply sign a declaration that they are citizens, and not furnish documentation proving the fact (only age and address proofs are needed). The ECI has added a new declaration form requiring proof of citizenship for the exercise in Bihar.

• According to the ECI, starting on Wednesday till July 26, BLOs will be required to visit every household with existing electors to get pre-filled forms signed and collect additional documentation if needed. BLOs will be making at least three attempts per household, the ECI said. Electors will also have the option of downloading their forms from the ECI’s website or ECINET app, and submitting them online.

Other Important Articles Covering the same topic:

📍Starting with Bihar, fresh electoral rolls: Proof of birth date for those not in 2003 list

World Bank says 5.75% Indians live in abject poverty: How to read this data

Syllabus:

Preliminary Examination: Economic and Social Development-Sustainable Development, Poverty, Inclusion, Demographics, Social Sector Initiatives, etc.

Mains Examination: General Studies I: Poverty and developmental issues, urbanization, their problems and their remedies.

What’s the ongoing story: Over the past few months, there’s been a flurry of news about India’s poverty rate, or the ratio of people who are considered officially poor.

First, on April 25, the Government of India came out with a press release titled “India’s Triumph in Combating Poverty”, where it used the World Bank’s “Poverty and Equity Brief” of April 2025 to state that “171 million lifted from extreme poverty in 10 years”.

Key Points to Ponder:

• What has the latest World Bank data shown on poverty in India?

• What is a poverty line?

• What is the point of a poverty line?

• Why is India using the World Bank’s poverty line to estimate poverty?

• What is the World Bank’s poverty line? How is it calculated?

• What were India’s domestic poverty lines in the past?

• Why are poverty estimates about India contested by many?

• What is Poverty?

• How poverty is defined by different international institutions??

• What has the Multidimensional Poverty Index stated about India’s poverty levels?

• Classifications of poverty-Know in Detail (Hint: Absolute and Relative)

• Poverty estimation in India-How Poverty is defined in India?

• Alagh Committee (1979) Lakdawala Committee (1993), Tendulkar Committee (2009), Rangarajan committee (2012) and their poverty estimation.

Key Takeaways:

• According to new WB estimates, India’s poverty levels in the past were actually lower than previously estimated (see TABLE 1). For instance, in 1977-78, India’s poverty level was not 64% but 47%. The dialling back of poverty rates continues through the decades.

Table 1. Table 1.

The second key change in the WB update was the adoption of a new poverty line — $3 a day — and according to this new income level, the proportion of Indians living in abject or extreme poverty has fallen from 27% in 2011-12 (around 344.4 million or 34.44 crore Indians) to just under 6% (around 75.22 million or 7.5 crore) in 2022-23.

• Poverty line is the level of income used as a cut-off point for deciding who is poor in any economy. It is important to note here that the context (both time period and location) is critical to arriving at a meaningful poverty line.
For instance, an Indian receiving a salary of Rs 1,000 a month may not have been considered poor in 1975, but today that income (Rs 33 a day) will barely buy anything.
Similarly, a monthly salary of Rs 1,00,000 (or Rs 3,333 a day) in today’s Patna will be comfortable for a person to live by, but the same salary in Paris or New York may not buy the same lifestyle.

Do You Know:

• Governments, especially in developing and poor countries, want to identify the extent of poverty in their countries. This has two uses.
One, to help them gauge the extent of poverty and shape welfare policies for the poor.
The second use is for governments, policymakers and analysts to understand whether a set of policies has actually worked over time to reduce poverty and improve wellbeing.

• Historically, India had been a leader in poverty estimation and India’s poverty line methodology and data collection influenced the rest of the world in how to study poverty.

• However, India’s last officially recognised poverty line was in 2011-12. It was built on a 2009 formula suggested by a committee led by noted Delhi School economist Suresh Tendulkar. Since then, there has been no update on the method.
In 2014, a committee led by former RBI Governor C Rangarajan was commissioned to provide a new method, but this recommendation was never officially accepted.
Since then, thanks to gaps and changes in relevant data collection, India has increasingly used either the Niti Aayog multidimensional poverty index (which is fundamentally different in how it measures poverty) or relied on the World Bank’s poverty line.

• poverty lines make sense only when they can capture the context, like the purchasing power at a particular time and place. That is why for WB’s poverty line to make sense, it has to be based on the purchasing power parity calculations.

Other Important Articles Covering the same topic:

📍Declining poverty, and the data that shows it

How Shubhanshu Shukla’s Dragon spacecraft docked with the ISS

Syllabus:

Preliminary Examination: Current events of national and international importance

Main Examination: General Studies III: Achievements of Indians in science & technology and Awareness in the fields of IT, Space.

What’s the ongoing story: Marking a major milestone for India’s space ambitions, Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla of the Indian Air Force successfully arrived at the International Space Station (ISS) aboard the SpaceX Dragon spacecraft on Thursday.

Key Points to Ponder:

• Who is Shubhanshu Shukla?

• What is the Axion Mission 4?

• What is India’s human spaceflight program?

• What is International Space Station (ISS)?

• What is the significance of Shubhanshu Shukla’s ISS mission in the context of India’s long-term human spaceflight ambitions like Gaganyaan?

• How does participation in private-led missions like Axiom-4 complement national agencies such as ISRO in enhancing India’s space capabilities?

• Know the scientific benefits of conducting plant biology and microalgae experiments in microgravity aboard the ISS for India’s space research ecosystem.

• What is the role of international collaboration (NASA, Axiom Space, SpaceX, ISRO, DBT) in shaping India’s current space diplomacy and soft power?

• Compare Shubhanshu Shukla’s mission with that of Rakesh Sharma’s in terms of mission design, objectives, and geopolitical context.

Key Takeaways:

• The spacecraft achieved a smooth docking—known as a soft capture—with the ISS on Thursday, the PTI reported. The journey onboard the SpaceX Dragon began a day earlier from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center.

• Shukla is part of a four-member crew on the Axiom Mission 4 (Ax-4), a private astronaut flight arranged by Axiom Space. This mission is particularly significant as it brings astronauts from India, Poland, and Hungary to the ISS for the first time in over four decades.

• The arrival of Shubhanshu Shukla on board the ISS is not just a personal triumph but a symbolic return for India to human spaceflight after 41 years.

Do You Know:

• The Axiom-4 mission, originally scheduled to launch in May, faced multiple delays because of weather and technical problems. A small uncertainty hung over the launch Wednesday as well, even after the astronauts had entered the capsule, as some updated data took time to get uploaded to the spacecraft’s software. Shukla was seen shuffling and shaking his legs as he waited, and exulted mildly when the all-clear was announced.

• ISRO chairman V Narayanan who, along with a ISRO team, had been in the US since the start of this month for the launch, said he was extremely happy that the mission had finally launched after all technical problems had been addressed.

• The crew will remain at the orbiting laboratory for two weeks, during which they will carry out an extensive slate of scientific experiments and research activities.

• The Ax-4 mission is commanded by Peggy Whitson, America’s most experienced astronaut and now a senior official at Axiom Space. Alongside Shukla, the team includes Tibor Kapu, a mechanical engineer from Hungary, and Slawosz Uznanski-Wisniewski, a radiation specialist and European Space Agency project astronaut from Poland.

Other Important Articles Covering the same topic:

📍What Shubhanshu Shukla’s trip to ISS means for India’s space program

📍Who is Shubhanshu Shukla, the first Indian set to travel to International Space Station?

For any queries and feedback, contact priya.shukla@indianexpress.com

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