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Online Test
27 Apr 2026
CAMP-ST-02
Questions : 50 Questions
Time Limit : 60 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.
Online Test
27 Apr 2026
CAMP-ST-02
Questions : 50 Questions
Time Limit : 0 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.
Article
27 Apr 2026
Why in the News?
- The Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls has led to reduced voter lists but higher turnout percentages across several states.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Electoral Roll (Basics, Importance, Types, etc.)
- News Summary (Impact of SIR)
Electoral Roll in India: Basics and Importance
- The electoral roll is a constituency-wise list of eligible voters, maintained by the Election Commission of India.
- It forms the foundation of India’s electoral democracy, as only those registered in the roll can exercise the right to vote.
- The Constitution mandates that all citizens above 18 years of age, subject to certain disqualifications, must be included in the roll.
- Accuracy of the electoral roll is crucial for ensuring free, fair, and credible elections.
Types of Electoral Roll Revisions
- Electoral rolls are updated through two main processes.
- Summary Revision is conducted annually with limited corrections and additions.
- Special Intensive Revision (SIR) involves a comprehensive re-verification of voters, often requiring fresh enumeration and documentation.
- SIR is more rigorous and aims to eliminate inaccuracies accumulated over time.
Growth of India’s Electorate
- India’s electorate has expanded significantly since independence.
- From about 17 crore voters in 1951, it has grown to over 96 crore in recent years, reflecting population growth and improved voter registration.
- At one point, the total electorate was projected to approach 100 crore, highlighting the scale of India’s democratic system.
News Summary: Impact of Special Intensive Revision
- Reduction in Electoral Roll Size
- The SIR exercise has led to a significant trimming of electoral rolls by removing names of absent, shifted, dead, and duplicate voters (ASDD).
- Across 13 States and Union Territories, the number of electors declined from about 51 crore to below 46 crore during the revision process.
- This marks a notable departure from the usual trend of continuous growth in the electorate.
- Higher Voter Turnout Despite Smaller Electorates
- States such as Tamil Nadu recorded over 85% turnout, significantly higher than previous elections.
- Similarly, West Bengal witnessed turnout levels above 90% in certain phases.
- This trend is partly attributed to the removal of “ghost voters,” which increases turnout percentages when calculated on a reduced voter base.
- Reasons for Deletion of Names
- The primary reason for the decline in voter numbers is the removal of ASDD entries.
- Additional deletions occurred due to non-submission of enumeration forms, inability to verify identity, and failure to meet eligibility criteria.
- In many cases, the burden of proof shifted to citizens to re-establish their eligibility.
- Partial Recovery through Fresh Enrolment
- While initial drafts showed sharp reductions, final rolls witnessed some recovery due to new registrations and corrections.
- For example, Uttar Pradesh saw a drop from 15.44 crore to 12.55 crore in draft rolls, later rising to 13.39 crore in final rolls.
- This indicates that SIR is not purely a deletion exercise but also includes the re-inclusion of eligible voters.
- Possible Decline in National Electorate Size
- After covering nearly 60 crore voters, the overall electorate has already declined by around 6 crore.
- Once completed nationwide, the total electorate could fall to around 90 crore, reversing the earlier trend towards a billion voters.
- Concerns over Exclusion and Disenfranchisement
- The SIR process has raised concerns about the accidental exclusion of genuine voters, especially vulnerable groups lacking documentation.
- There are apprehensions that strict verification procedures may lead to disenfranchisement on technical grounds.
- Need for Balancing Accuracy and Inclusion
- While SIR improves the accuracy of electoral rolls, it must ensure that no eligible voter is left out.
- The Election Commission now faces the challenge of restoring confidence by focusing on inclusion alongside verification.
Article
27 Apr 2026
Context
- Universities and colleges showcase attractive brochures, polished websites, and carefully curated success stories.
- Yet, despite this apparent abundance of information, students are often required to make some of the most important decisions of their lives with limited, uneven, and sometimes unreliable data.
- This disconnect points to a deeper structural issue in India’s higher education system, information asymmetry.
Expansion of Higher Education and Rising Complexity
- Enrolment increased from 3.42 crore in 2014–15 to 4.33 crore in 2021–22, alongside improvements in the Gross Enrolment Ratio.
- The academic landscape has also evolved from traditional standalone degrees to multidisciplinary programmes offered under diverse institutional models.
- While this expansion has improved access and widened choices, it has simultaneously made decision-making more complex.
- Students and families now face a broader array of options, making it harder to evaluate institutions effectively.
The Problem of Information Asymmetry
- At the core of this issue lies the imbalance of information between institutions and students.
- Universities possess detailed knowledge about their faculty, infrastructure, teaching processes, and placement outcomes.
- In contrast, students rely on brochures, advertisements, informal advice, and selective data, sources that are often incomplete or difficult to verify.
- This situation reflects the concept of information asymmetry, explained by George Akerlof through his theory of the market for lemons.
- According to this theory, when one party has more information than the other, lower-quality providers can imitate higher-quality ones, distorting decision-making.
- In the context of higher education, institutions with weaker academic standards can still appear attractive through marketing and selective disclosure.
- This leads to adverse selection, where high-quality institutions struggle to distinguish themselves, and students may end up making suboptimal choices.
Implications for Students and Society
- Choosing an unsuitable institution can affect learning outcomes, employability, and career prospects.
- On a broader scale, it undermines trust in the education system and hampers national goals such as building a skilled workforce and ensuring inclusive, quality education.
- Thus, information asymmetry is not merely a personal challenge but a systemic issue with far-reaching implications.
Information Overload vs. Information Quality
- In today’s digital age, one might assume that greater access to information solves this problem, however, the reality is more complex.
- Institutional websites, rankings, and social media platforms provide large volumes of data, but not necessarily reliable or comparable information.
- Much of this data is self-reported and often promotional. Indicators such as faculty strength, research output, and placement rates are not uniformly defined across institutions.
- Additionally, some ranking systems lack transparency in their methodologies.
- As a result, students tend to rely on easily visible signals such as brand reputation, campus infrastructure, or fees.
- While these factors are accessible, they do not always reflect true academic quality.
- This can encourage institutions to prioritise visibility over substantive improvements in education.
Role of Public Ranking Frameworks and Data Portals
- To address these challenges, standardised and verified information systems have become increasingly important.
- The National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF), introduced in 2016, represents a key initiative in this direction.
- It evaluates institutions based on common indicators such as teaching resources, research output, graduation outcomes, outreach, and perception.
- By requiring structured data disclosure, NIRF enhances comparability and helps students make more informed decisions.
- Similarly, centralised data portals that provide verified information on enrolment, accreditation, and faculty strength can reduce reliance on informal and unreliable sources.
Limitations of Existing Systems
- Rankings depend on how indicators are selected and weighted, which can incentivise institutions to focus on improving scores rather than actual quality.
- Moreover, many important aspects of education, such as classroom experience, mentorship, and practical learning, are difficult to measure.
- There is also a tendency to overinterpret rankings, even when differences between institutions are minimal.
- This highlights the need for methodological transparency and the use of rank bands instead of rigid rankings.
The Way Forward: Strengthening Information Systems
- To build a strong and inclusive higher education system, India must prioritise the development of robust information systems.
- This includes improving data verification processes, standardising definitions, ensuring transparency in ranking methodologies, and presenting information in accessible formats.
- Better visualisation tools and user-friendly platforms can also help students and families interpret complex data more effectively.
- Strengthening these systems will not only support informed decision-making but also enhance institutional accountability and credibility.
Conclusion
- The central question remains: can students make sound choices if they cannot clearly understand what they are choosing?
- Until the gap in information is reduced, India’s higher education system will continue to reward not only genuine quality but also the ability to present it convincingly.
- Addressing information asymmetry is therefore essential, not just for improving individual outcomes, but for strengthening the entire education ecosystem and achieving broader national development goals.
Article
27 Apr 2026
Context
- As India enters another summer, extreme heat is no longer an occasional phenomenon but a recurring feature of the country’s climate.
- Consequently, the central concern has shifted from whether heatwaves will occur to whether India is adequately prepared to manage their broader consequences.
- While public health impacts have received attention, the economic implications, especially for gig and delivery workers, remain significantly underexplored.
Rising Heatwaves and Expanding Gig Economy
- Increasing Frequency of Heatwaves
- Recent meteorological data highlight a clear trend: heatwaves in India are becoming more frequent, longer-lasting, and more severe.
- The year 2022 alone recorded significant heat-related mortality, reinforcing the urgency of the issue.
- These patterns indicate that extreme heat is no longer an isolated risk but a persistent climatic challenge.
- Growth of the Gig Workforce
- According to NITI Aayog, approximately 77 lakhs individuals were engaged in gig work in 2020–21, a number expected to rise to over 23 million by 2029–30.
- This workforce includes delivery riders, e-commerce couriers, app-based drivers, and logistics personnel who play a crucial role in sustaining urban economies.
Economic Impact of Heat on Gig Workers
- Income Linked to Productivity
- Gig workers’ earnings are directly tied to their output, such as the number of deliveries completed or hours spent on digital platforms.
- Unlike salaried employees, they lack fixed wages, paid leave, or the option to work remotely.
- Heat as an Income Shock
- High temperatures slow physical movement, increase fatigue, and elevate health risks such as dehydration and heat exhaustion.
- As a result, workers face a difficult choice: reduce working hours and lose income, or continue working and risk their health.
- Thus, heatwaves act not only as a public health hazard but also as a direct economic shock for gig workers.
Limitations of Current Preparedness Measures
- Health-Centric Approach
- India has made progress in addressing heatwaves through Heat Action Plans, early warning systems, and emergency responses.
- However, these measures primarily treat heat as a public health issue.
- Advisories often recommend staying indoors, reducing physical exertion, and taking frequent breaks.
- Inadequacy for Gig Workers
- Such recommendations are impractical for gig workers whose livelihoods depend on continuous mobility.
- Even infrastructural measures like water kiosks, shaded rest areas, and cooling centres are rarely designed for highly mobile workers.
- Consequently, while these interventions may reduce mortality, they do little to prevent income loss.
Policy Recommendations for Inclusive Adaptation
- Recognising Heat as a Labour Issue
- Heat must be viewed not only as a health concern but also as a labour and productivity issue.
- This would justify measures such as:
- Mandatory rest periods during peak heat hours
- Access to shaded waiting areas
- Provision of drinking water at common work locations
- Addressing Income Volatility
- Policymakers must acknowledge that heatwaves create income instability.
- Mechanisms such as labour protections, insurance schemes, or integration with welfare programs are necessary to cushion income losses.
- Role of Digital Platforms
- Digital labour platforms should actively contribute to climate adaptation by:
- Reducing delivery pressure during peak heat hours
- Introducing flexible performance metrics
- Incorporating climate-sensitive algorithms
- Strengthening Institutional Coordination
- Effective adaptation requires collaboration among labour departments, urban local bodies, disaster management authorities, and platform regulators.
- A coordinated approach would ensure that heatwaves are addressed as an economic as well as a seasonal challenge.
The Way Forward: Rethinking Climate Resilience
- India’s urban systems increasingly rely on gig and delivery workers for essential services such as food and medicine delivery.
- These workers absorb significant risks to keep cities functioning. As temperatures rise, their exposure to these risks will intensify.
- True resilience must go beyond issuing advisories or setting up cooling centres.
- It must ensure that workers can operate safely and maintain stable incomes without compromising their health.
Conclusion
- India’s approach to heatwave preparedness remains incomplete as long as it overlooks the economic vulnerabilities of gig and delivery workers.
- With rising temperatures and a rapidly expanding gig economy, the need for inclusive and coordinated adaptation strategies is more urgent than ever.
- Protecting this essential workforce is not only a matter of social justice but also critical to sustaining the functioning of urban economies in an era of climate uncertainty.
Article
27 Apr 2026
Context:
- India signed its Free Trade Agreement (FTA) with New Zealand, becoming the latest in a series of landmark trade pacts with developed economies — following agreements with the United Kingdom (UK) and the European Union (EU).
- This agreement is being projected as a model of inclusive, development-oriented trade diplomacy, rooted in the Indian PM's vision of leveraging global commerce for domestic empowerment.
Key Highlights of the Agreement:
- Market access and tariff elimination:
- New Zealand has committed to the immediate elimination of tariffs on all Indian products, a significant gain given that key Indian exports currently face duties of up to 10% in that market.
- This gives Indian goods a direct competitive advantage.
- Sectors set to benefit are garments, carpets, yarn, fabrics, footwear, bags, belts, automobile components, machinery, tools, gems and jewellery, and handicrafts.
- These sectors form the backbone of India's MSME ecosystem and labour-intensive manufacturing clusters.
- Agricultural cooperation with safeguards:
- New Zealand will support agricultural productivity action plans for kiwi, apples, and honey — covering research collaboration, improved planting material, post-harvest improvements, food safety systems, and Centres of Excellence (CoE).
- Crucially, India has ring-fenced sensitive agricultural products from tariff concessions, including -
- Dairy products — milk, cream, whey, yoghurt, cheese
- Vegetables — onions, chana, peas, corn
- Other items — almonds, sugar, select oils and fats
- This reflects India's consistent stance across all trade negotiations - farmer and fishermen interests are non-negotiable.
- A first - Women-led negotiation:
- In what is being described as India's first women-led FTA, nearly the entire negotiating team comprised women — including the Chief Negotiator, Deputy Chief Negotiator, sectoral leads, and India's Ambassador to New Zealand.
- This is a significant marker of Nari Shakti in governance and aligns with India's broader push for women's leadership in decision-making.
- Mobility and opportunities for Indian youth:
- This agreement carves out unprecedented pathways for India's youth in the global arena.
- For example,
- No numerical caps on Indian students in New Zealand.
- Students are permitted to work at least 20 hours per week during studies.
- Post-study work rights - up to 3 years for STEM graduates, up to 4 years for doctoral scholars.
- Temporary Employment Entry Visa for up to 5,000 Indian professionals at any given time (3-year stays) in IT, engineering, healthcare, education, construction, and traditional fields like yoga, Ayurveda, Indian cuisine, and music.
- Working Holiday Visa - 1,000 young Indians annually for up to 12 months.
- Investment commitments:
- New Zealand has pledged to facilitate $20 billion of investment into India, targeting manufacturing, infrastructure, renewable energy, digital services, and innovation ecosystems.
- A notable rebalancing clause has been built in — allowing India to take corrective action if investment commitments fall short, ensuring accountability beyond paper pledges.
Challenges:
- Monitoring: Investment inflows of $20 billion requires robust institutional mechanisms; the rebalancing clause is promising but untested.
- Ensuring: Trickle-down benefits to artisan communities and small enterprises demands targeted policy support beyond the FTA itself.
- Managing: The diaspora and mobility pathways effectively without creating brain-drain pressures in critical sectors like IT and healthcare.
- Threats of dilution: Dairy and agricultural exclusions, while protective domestically, may face pressure in future review rounds as New Zealand is a global dairy powerhouse.
- Broader challenge: Ensuring that MSME clusters are export-ready to actually capitalise on zero-tariff access.
Way Forward:
- Strengthening: Export infrastructure in labour-intensive sectors to absorb and scale up the market access gains.
- Fast-tracking: The Centres of Excellence in agriculture to boost productivity in horticulture and beekeeping.
- Building: Institutional frameworks to track and enforce the $20 billion investment commitment.
- Using this FTA as a template: For ongoing negotiations with other developed economies, especially around student mobility and professional visa frameworks.
- Mainstreaming: Women's leadership in trade diplomacy as a stated policy priority.
Conclusion:
- The India–New Zealand FTA is not merely a bilateral trade deal — it is a statement of intent.
- It signals that India today negotiates from a position of strength, securing meaningful market access for its workers and exporters while firmly defending its agricultural sensitivities.
- The agreement's unique features (like, a women-led negotiation) position it as a model for 21st-century trade diplomacy.
- As India marches towards Viksit Bharat 2047, agreements like this demonstrate how trade policy, when anchored in inclusivity and strategic foresight, can become a powerful engine of employment, empowerment, and economic resilience.
Online Test
27 Apr 2026
CAMP-HINDI-CSAT-77
Questions : 40 Questions
Time Limit : 60 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.
Online Test
27 Apr 2026
CAMP-HINDI-CSAT-77
Questions : 40 Questions
Time Limit : 0 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.
Article
27 Apr 2026
Why in news?
- Recent explosions in firecracker units in southern India have once again highlighted the recurring safety crisis in the industry.
- In Kerala’s Thrissur district, blasts at a fireworks unit killed at least 14 people ahead of the Thrissur Pooram, leading to cancellation of the event’s fireworks.
- Days earlier, a major explosion in Tamil Nadu’s Virudhunagar—India’s main fireworks hub producing about 90% of the country’s firecrackers—claimed at least 23 lives.
- While investigations are ongoing, such incidents are not isolated and point to systemic issues.
- Key contributing factors include the highly combustible nature of raw materials, climatic conditions, safety lapses, and weak enforcement of regulations, making firecracker manufacturing a persistently hazardous sector.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- How Fireworks Work: Chemistry and Mechanism
- Climate and Firecracker Safety: How Weather Increases Explosion Risks?
- Human Factors Behind Firecracker Accidents: Systemic Risks
How Fireworks Work: Chemistry and Mechanism
- A firework is built from four essential elements: an oxidiser, fuel, ‘stars’, and a binder.
- The oxidiser (such as nitrates, chlorates, or perchlorates) supplies oxygen for combustion, while the fuel—typically black powder made of sulfur, charcoal, and potassium nitrate—releases energy when ignited.
- The ‘stars’ are small chemical pellets containing metals like barium, strontium, and copper that produce vivid colours, and the binder holds the mixture together until ignition.
- Ignition and Explosion Process
- When the fuse is lit, heat travels through the firework shell placed inside a mortar.
- It ignites the lift charge, generating gas pressure that propels the shell into the air.
- At a set height, a timed fuse triggers the burst charge, which explodes and ignites the ‘stars’, creating the familiar bright patterns in the sky.
- Risks and Toxic Effects
- The process involves highly reactive chemicals and heavy metals.
- During combustion—or mishandling—these substances can release toxic microscopic particles, making fireworks inherently hazardous in terms of manufacturing, storage, and usage.
Climate and Firecracker Safety: How Weather Increases Explosion Risks?
- Firecracker manufacturing is highly sensitive to climatic conditions because it involves volatile chemical mixtures.
- While warm, dry weather is generally preferred for production, extreme summer heat increases instability, making chemicals more prone to ignition.
- Low humidity further worsens the situation by preventing the dissipation of static electricity, allowing even minor movements—like mixing powders—to generate sparks capable of triggering explosions.
- Role of Moisture and Temperature Fluctuations
- It is not just dryness that poses risks. Fluctuations between dry heat and humid conditions can introduce moisture into chemical compounds.
- When such damp chemicals are later exposed to intense heat, they can undergo exothermic reactions or even spontaneous combustion.
- Improper drying practices, especially when chemicals are alternately exposed to moisture and sunlight, significantly increase the likelihood of accidents.
- Environmental Conditions in Firecracker Hubs
- Regions like Virudhunagar, despite not being extremely low in humidity, experience hot, arid conditions with low rainfall, creating an environment conducive to instability in chemical handling.
- These climatic factors contribute to the frequency of accidents in such manufacturing clusters.
- Additional Hazards: Toxic Dust Accumulation
- Apart from explosion risks, stagnant summer heat traps toxic chemical dust near the ground, increasing the oxidative potential of the air inside factories.
- This not only raises fire hazards but also poses serious health risks to workers.
Human Factors Behind Firecracker Accidents: Systemic Risks
- While climatic and chemical risks are well understood, the human factor is often the decisive trigger behind major accidents.
- A key issue is the piece-rate wage system, where workers are paid based on output.
- This creates pressure to prioritise speed over safety, leading to shortcuts in handling highly volatile materials.
- Weak Enforcement and Regulatory Gaps
- Despite existing regulations under the Explosives Act, enforcement remains weak.
- Non-compliance is widespread, especially in areas like safe storage, ventilation, and handling protocols, increasing the likelihood of accidents.
- Dangerous Storage Practices
- A major risk arises from the stockpiling of raw chemicals and finished fireworks in confined, poorly ventilated spaces, often far exceeding legal limits.
- These unsafe practices turn minor ignition sources into large-scale disasters.
- In such conditions, even a small static spark—common in hot weather—can trigger a chain reaction, rapidly escalating into deadly explosions due to the presence of unregulated and densely packed combustible materials.