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Article
19 Jun 2026
Why in news?
The US and Iran formally signed a 14-clause Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) recently - the US signing at the Palace of Versailles, France, and Iran signing in Tehran.
The MoU initiates a 60-day negotiation window for a final comprehensive deal. Unlike the 2015 JCPOA (which only addressed Iran's nuclear programme), this MoU covers the entire US-Iran political relationship — making it potentially the most significant West Asia agreement since 1979.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- The Big Picture: What Makes This MoU Different
- Clause-by-Clause Summary
- Conclusion
The Big Picture: What Makes This MoU Different?
- The 2015 JCPOA was purely a nuclear deal — Iran capped enrichment, the US eased sanctions. The 2026 MoU goes much further. It covers:
- War termination and ceasefire
- Hormuz navigation rights
- Sanctions relief
- Economic reconstruction
- Nuclear status quo
- Military withdrawal
- Non-interference in internal affairs
- Crucially, ballistic missiles and Iran's regional proxy networks (Axis of Resistance) are NOT mentioned in any clause — a major gain for Tehran.
- The Axis of Resistance is an informal, Iran-led military coalition of state-controlled forces and armed militant groups operating across the Middle East.
- It includes – Iran, Hezbollah, The Houthis, Palestinian Militant Groups, Iraqi Militias.
- The expert's key assessment: these terms could make Iran stronger than at any point since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
Clause-by-Clause Summary
Clause 1 — End to Hostilities on All Fronts, Including Lebanon
- This is the principal war termination clause. The key advance over the April 8 ceasefire is that Lebanon is now explicitly included in the cessation of hostilities — something Israel had consistently resisted.
- The risk of Israel resuming strikes on Lebanon remains during the 60-day period.
- Iran has already demonstrated its flexibility — on June 14, it accepted US concessions (naval blockade removal) and held back from retaliating against Israel's Beirut bombing, setting a new precedent.
Clause 2 — No US Interference in Iran's Internal Affairs
- Between January and February 2026, the Trump administration oscillated between two justifications for military action — regime change and de-nuclearisation.
- This clause removes the regime change rationale permanently. For Tehran, this is historically significant given decades of US interventionism in Iranian internal politics.
Clause 3 — Option to Extend the 60-Day Period
- Both sides can mutually agree to extend the 60-day negotiation window before finalising a deal.
- However, any extension also prolongs the period during which Iran must keep Hormuz unconditionally open and the US must continue its military drawdown — creating domestic pressure on Tehran.
Clause 4 — Removal of US Naval Blockade
- The US Navy has already effectively withdrawn its blockade (by June 16). Full withdrawal refers to the remaining US Carrier Strike Groups deployed to the Strait of Hormuz.
Clause 5 — Passage Through the Strait of Hormuz
- Iran guarantees unconditional transit passage to all commercial shipping through Hormuz.
- However, the clause also allows Iran and Oman to define the future administration of the Strait — Iran's consistent demand that Hormuz cannot return to its pre-war status.
- This is a significant geopolitical gain. Iran and Oman could potentially create a fee-based transit framework similar to Turkey's arrangements for the Dardanelles and Bosphorus under the Montreux Convention.
- Given that 20–25% of global oil and 20% of global gas shipping passes through Hormuz, potential annual revenue could exceed $11–13 billion.
Clause 6 — $300 Billion Reconstruction Plan for Iran
- This is the most economically significant clause and the key difference from the 2015 JCPOA.
- The reconstruction fund is Iran's pathway back into the international economy. It also contains incentives for businesses linked to Trump and Steve Witkoff (US Special Envoy to the Middle East) — suggesting commercial interests in deal durability.
Clause 7 — Full Sanctions Relief in Final Deal
- The final agreement must address multiple categories of US sanctions on Iran — covering energy, shipping, nuclear activities, and counter-terrorism designations.
- A Wall Street Journal estimate suggests Iranian oil and fuel sales post-sanctions relief could generate ~$60 billion annually.
Clause 8 — Iran Commits Not to Develop Nuclear Weapons
- Iran reaffirms its commitment not to pursue nuclear weapons — a position it has maintained since 2003. Two important nuances:
- US strikes on Natanz, Fordow, Arak, and Isfahan (June 2025) have already reduced Iran's future enrichment capacity — making this commitment easier to give.
- However, Iran retains its stockpile of 60% enriched uranium — the MoU does NOT require transfer to a third country, a significant departure from the original US position.
- By late 2025, the IAEA had declared a "loss of continuity of knowledge" on Iran's nuclear programme — meaning international monitoring had effectively broken down. Restoring this oversight will be a key challenge in the final agreement.
Clause 9 — Status Quo Until Final Deal
- Iran maintains the nuclear status quo (no further enrichment) for 60 days pending a final agreement.
- Critically, no clause mentions ballistic missiles or Iran's support for regional non-state actors — Hezbollah, Houthis, Iraqi militias remain outside the MoU's scope.
- Trump himself implied willingness to let Iran retain ballistic missile capabilities.
Clause 10 — Interim Sanctions Waivers
- Acts as a bridge arrangement — sanctions waivers apply immediately while full sanctions removal (Clause 7) is negotiated in the 60-day window.
Clause 11 — Unfreezing Iranian Assets
- Iran holds over $100 billion in frozen funds in foreign banks. Around $12 billion has already been unfrozen, facilitated through banks in Qatar and the UAE.
- Iranian President Pezeshkian stated these funds would be used to pay pending government salaries — indicating the depth of Iran's economic distress.
Clause 12 — Monitoring Mechanism
- Creates an executive mechanism to monitor MoU implementation. This is essential for Clause 3 (extension of 60-day period) to work credibly — both sides need confidence that commitments are being honoured before agreeing to extend.
Clause 13 — Hierarchy of Priorities
- Sets the sequencing and priority order of issues to be negotiated during the 60-day window.
Clause 14 — UN Security Council Endorsement
- The final deal will be endorsed by a UN Security Council Resolution — notable given Trump's general disdain for multilateral institutions.
- The 2015 JCPOA was endorsed by UNSCR 2231 under Article 25 of the UN Charter.
- However, the UNSC's inability to prevent Trump's 2018 unilateral withdrawal from JCPOA proved the limits of such endorsement. This time, Iran may seek stronger fail-safe arrangements within the UNSC framework.
Conclusion
- The 2026 MoU is not just a ceasefire — it is a potential reordering of West Asia's geopolitical architecture.
- Iran emerges from the war not weakened but diplomatically empowered, economically recovering, and militarily unrestrained in its missile and proxy capabilities.
- The next 60 days will determine whether this fragile opening becomes a lasting realignment — or another chapter in the long history of broken US-Iran agreements.
Article
19 Jun 2026
Why in news?
The recently signed US-Iran MoU commits Iran to never develop a nuclear weapon in exchange for sanctions relief and a $300 billion development fund.
A key technical commitment in the MoU is the downblending of Iran's highly enriched uranium stockpile — under IAEA supervision.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- The Nuclear Context: Why Iran's Uranium Stockpile Matters
- Understanding Uranium: The Basics
- What is Downblending?
- The Downblending Process: Step by Step
- Why Downblending Alone Isn't Enough?
The Nuclear Context: Why Iran's Uranium Stockpile Matters
- Iran currently possesses hundreds of kilograms of highly enriched uranium and retains the technical capacity to produce more.
- US strikes on Natanz, Fordow, Arak and Isfahan (June 2025) reduced Iran's enrichment infrastructure — but did not eliminate its stockpile.
- Paragraph 8 of the MoU states that both sides agreed to resolve the disposition of Iran's enriched uranium stockpile through downblending, done on-site under IAEA supervision.
Understanding Uranium: The Basics
- Natural uranium consists of two main isotopes:
- Uranium-238 (U-238): Share in Natural Uranium - 99.28%; Property - Non-fissile.
- Uranium-235 (U-235): Share in Natural Uranium - 0.72%, Property - Non-fissile - Fissile — can sustain a nuclear chain reaction.
- Only U-235 can sustain a nuclear chain reaction. Enrichment is the process of increasing the concentration of U-235 beyond its natural 0.72%.
- 90%+ enriched U-235 is required to produce nuclear weapons grade.
- 3–5% enriched U-235 is used as nuclear reactor fuel to produce electricity.
- 20% enriched U-235 is used by research reactors.
- Iran had enriched uranium to 60% purity — well above reactor-grade, moving dangerously close to weapons-grade.
What is Downblending?
- Downblending is the reverse of enrichment. It is the process of making uranium less pure — mixing enriched uranium with depleted or natural uranium to reduce the concentration of U-235 to below 5%.
- The key concept it serves is breakout time — the time required for a country to convert its civilian nuclear material into enough weapons-grade uranium for a bomb.
- Downblending increases breakout time by reducing available U-235. Longer breakout time = more warning time for the international community to act.
- The 2015 JCPOA allowed Iran to enrich uranium only up to 3.67% — sufficient for reactor use, insufficient for weapons.
The Downblending Process: Step by Step
- Step 1: Preparing the Feedstock
- Enriched uranium is stored as uranium hexafluoride (UF6) — a solid at room temperature.
- UF6 cylinders are placed in an industrial oven called an autoclave and heated to 80–110°C, converting the solid into gas.
- Gases are easier to mix uniformly than solids.
- Step 2: Preparing the Blendstock
- A second, less-enriched uranium source (the blendstock) is prepared — this can be natural uranium (0.7% U-235), depleted uranium (0.2–0.3%), or slightly enriched uranium (~1%)
- The blendstock choice depends on the target enrichment level. Downblending from 90% to 5% requires more depleted uranium than downblending from 20% to 5%.
- Step 3: Mixing at the Blending Tee
- Both gases are pumped into a junction called a blending tee.
- The critical challenge here is mass flow control — the ratio of the two gases must be precise to achieve the target enrichment level.
- Thermal mass flow meters measure heat transfer characteristics to determine gas mass.
- Automated valves adjust the flow in real time.
- Internal mixers called baffles create turbulence to ensure thorough mixing.
- Step 4: Online Enrichment Monitoring (OLEM)
- The mixed gas passes through an Online Enrichment Monitor (OLEM).
- OLEM uses sodium iodide to detect gamma rays emitted by the gas.
- U-235 has a distinctive energy signature at 186 keV.
- If gamma ray intensity exceeds a set limit (indicating too much U-235), fail-safe valves automatically shut off the entire flow.
- The facility is fitted with tamper-proof cameras recording 24/7.
- Step 5: Solidification
- The verified mixed gas is cooled in a product cylinder, solidifying back into UF6.
- Step 6: Reconversion to Uranium Dioxide (UO₂)
- UF6 is not the final form — it is also the feedstock for uranium enrichment.
- To truly reduce the bomb-making potential, UF6 is sent to a reconversion plant where it reacts with steam and hydrogen.
- This replaces fluorine atoms with oxygen, producing uranium dioxide (UO₂) — a dark powder.
- UO₂ cannot be directly enriched — it must first be converted back to UF6, which requires a conversion plant whose emissions are detectable by satellites and ground inspections.
- Step 7: IAEA Verification — The Final and Most Critical Step
- IAEA inspectors collect a physical sample of UO₂ powder.
- It is shipped to the IAEA laboratory in Seibersdorf, Austria.
- Thermal ionisation mass spectrometry confirms the U-235 level to four decimal places.
- IAEA also applies tamper-evident seals on cylinders — any breach leaves detectable signs.
Why Downblending Alone Isn't Enough?
- Downblending reduces Iran's current stockpile — but several verification challenges remain:
- Iran has withdrawn from IAEA monitoring protocols since 2018.
- By late 2025, the IAEA declared a "loss of continuity of knowledge" on Iran's nuclear programme.
- Iran retains the technical knowledge and centrifuges to re-enrich uranium in the future.
- The MoU does not require transfer of enriched uranium to a third country — it stays in Iran under supervision.
- If Iran withdraws from the MoU (as it did from JCPOA commitments after Trump's 2018 withdrawal), re-enrichment becomes possible again.
- The MoU itself acknowledges this: it states that international trust in Iran's nuclear commitment will rest as much on diplomatic assurances as on technical implementation.
Article
19 Jun 2026
Context:
- The National Family Health Survey-6 (NFHS-6) has been released, presenting India's latest health and nutrition report card.
- The survey data — collected during 2023-24 — reveals a mixed picture: measurable gains in healthcare access and child immunisation, but persistent failures in feeding practices, diet quality, and child nutrition outcomes.
- In this context, this article argues that better healthcare alone cannot solve India's deep nutrition challenge.
What NFHS-6 Shows: The Gains
- Stunting (children under 5) - 35.5% (NFHS-5); 29.3% ↓ (NFHS-6)
- Wasting (weight-for-height) - No significant change (NFHS-5); Slight improvement only in severe wasting (NFHS-6)
- Stunting reflects long periods of sub-optimal food intake combined with other deprivations.
- Any decline is welcome given the complexity of factors involved — women's access to resources, water and sanitation, and diet quality.
- Improvements in Healthcare Access
- Institutional births: Reached 90%, with public facilities accounting for 58% of births.
- Skilled birth attendance: 91% of deliveries attended by trained medical personnel.
- Antenatal care: 95% of mothers received at least one health personnel visit during pregnancy.
- Full vaccination (12–23 months): 87% of children are fully vaccinated — a strong performance driven primarily by frontline workers (ASHA, AWW, ANM), with private facilities accounting for only 3% of vaccinations.
- These gains are directly attributed to better healthcare access, immunisation coverage, maternal education, and improvements in housing, water and sanitation.
Where Progress Stalls: Feeding Practices
- Despite strong healthcare metrics, feeding practices remain the weakest link in India's nutrition chain.
- Only 50% of newborns are breastfed within the first hour of birth — despite 90% institutional deliveries
- Only 60% of children aged 6–8 months receive solid or semi-solid food on time
- Only 15% of children aged 6–23 months receive an adequate diet
- This disconnect — strong healthcare access but poor feeding outcomes — is the central paradox of NFHS-6.
- The First 1,000 Days: The Critical Window
- The period from pregnancy to a child's second birthday (first 1,000 days) is the most critical for physical and cognitive development. Most brain growth occurs in the first five years.
- Stunting typically peaks during the second year of life and growth faltering often begins much earlier.
- Yet NFHS-6 does not provide disaggregated data for the 0–2 age group — a significant data gap.
- The Annaprasana Link
- In India, complementary feeding is culturally tied to the annaprasana ritual (first solid food ceremony), typically performed between 6–12 months.
- Any delay in this ritual directly translates into growth faltering. Behaviour change programmes must integrate such cultural practices rather than work around them.
The Processed Food Trap
- Consumer expenditure data reveals a worrying dietary shift:
- Households are spending less on cereals and more on dairy, processed foods, and beverages. This creates an illusion of dietary diversity without nutritional adequacy.
- A genuinely nutritious diet — pulses, millets, fruits, vegetables, animal foods, nuts — following ICMR-NIN dietary guidelines — is unaffordable for a large section of the population.
- Processed foods, by contrast, are cheap, packaged in small affordable units, and easily available.
- This is the nutrition transition trap — households moving away from traditional staples toward energy-dense but nutrient-poor processed foods.
The Hidden Factor: Maternal Time Poverty
- A critically under-examined driver of poor child feeding is maternal time poverty.
- NFHS-6 reports ~30% of women in paid work — but this significantly underestimates the true work burden.
- A large share of women in informal economies engage in unpaid labour — farming, livestock, domestic chores.
- There is no reliable data on what proportion of mothers with children aged 6–23 months are in the workforce.
- In rural areas, in the absence of crèches, women leave infants with older family members or older siblings — most often girls — when working in fields, directly impacting breastfeeding and complementary feeding
What Needs to Be Done: Key Recommendations
- Strengthen Frontline Workers
- AWWs collect monthly anthropometric data on children — their data quality skills must be improved.
- Collected data should be analysed locally and feedback given to ASHAs and AWWs for timely action.
- Recruit a nutritionist and data analyst at district level to enable this.
- Use Digital Tools
- Supplement in-person counselling with digital tools providing practical feeding guidance to frontline workers and mothers, based on locally available, affordable foods.
- Behaviour Change Communication
- Must be culturally grounded — integrate the annaprasana tradition to reinforce timely complementary feeding.
- Joint capacity building of ASHAs, AWWs, and ANMs in assessing feeding practices and counselling families.
- Multisectoral Convergence
- Child nutrition must be a standing agenda item in Gram Sabha and Panchayat meetings.
- Local planning must prioritise Anganwadi infrastructure, safe water, and sanitation.
- POSHAN Abhiyaan currently focuses on rehabilitation of severely malnourished children — greater emphasis must shift to prevention of growth faltering through early identification.
- Crèches as Social Infrastructure
- Crèches are not merely childcare facilities — they are social infrastructure that enables women's economic participation and reduces unpaid care burdens.
- Many NGOs have developed crèche models combining childcare, nutrition and early learning — these must be scaled up.
- Engage Men in Childcare
- Promoting shared domestic responsibilities and engaging men in childcare can significantly improve feeding and caregiving outcomes.
Conclusion
- NFHS-6 tells a tale of two Indias — one where children are being born in hospitals and vaccinated on schedule, and another where half of them are not being fed adequately in their most critical developmental window.
- Better healthcare brought us this far; only better food systems, empowered mothers, and convergent community action can take us further.
Article
19 Jun 2026
Why in the News?
- Recent analyses and World Bank projections have highlighted how climate change is increasingly contributing to higher household expenses through rising food, energy, water, and healthcare costs in India.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Climate Change (Cost of Living, Impact on Food Prices, Energy Costs, Water Scarcity, Health Expenditure, Economic Implications for India, etc.)
Climate Change and Cost of Living
- Climate change is often discussed as a long-term environmental challenge. However, its effects are already being felt through higher living costs.
- Rising temperatures, erratic rainfall, extreme weather events, and increasing climate variability are affecting essential services and commodities that households depend upon every day.
- The World Bank has warned that rising temperatures and changing monsoon patterns could reduce India's GDP by up to 2.8% by 2050 and adversely affect living standards for nearly half of the country's population.
- Climate change therefore, represents not only an environmental challenge but also an emerging economic and social issue.
Impact on Food Prices
- Agriculture remains highly dependent on weather conditions, making food prices particularly vulnerable to climate shocks.
- A delayed or weak monsoon can reduce crop yields, disrupt sowing activities, and lower agricultural output. Similarly, extreme heat can damage crops even when rainfall remains adequate.
- In 2023, India experienced a 6% rainfall deficit, which reduced the sown area under pulses and oilseeds.
- Farmers in several states reported crop losses, while retail prices of rice, wheat, and pulses increased by 6-15% year-on-year by early October.
- This is particularly significant because food and beverages account for 45.86% of India's Consumer Price Index (CPI) basket.
- Consequently, climate-induced disruptions quickly translate into higher food inflation and increased household expenditure.
- Repeated heatwaves, floods, and erratic rainfall patterns are also contributing to persistent food inflation by creating supply bottlenecks and market uncertainty.
Impact on Energy Costs
- Climate change is also increasing household energy expenditure.
- As temperatures rise, demand for cooling appliances such as fans, coolers, and air conditioners grows rapidly.
- This places additional pressure on electricity grids and increases power generation costs.
- During the May 2026 heatwave, India's electricity demand reached a record 270.8 gigawatts, driven largely by cooling requirements. Utilities often meet this surge through expensive coal-based generation and imported fuels, costs that may eventually be passed on to consumers through higher tariffs and surcharges.
- For low-income households, rising electricity bills often result in reduced spending on other essential needs such as food and education.
Impact on Water Security
- Water is emerging as another major channel through which climate change affects household finances.
- Erratic rainfall patterns and groundwater depletion are causing wells and local water sources to dry up more frequently in several regions. As a result, rural households often spend more time and money securing water.
- Urban areas are witnessing the growth of a parallel "tanker economy", where households without reliable municipal water supplies purchase water from private vendors. This significantly increases monthly household expenditure.
- The burden is particularly severe for vulnerable communities living in informal settlements and water-stressed regions.
Impact on Health Expenditure
- Climate change is also increasing healthcare costs.
- Heat stress, poor air quality, changing disease patterns, and climate-sensitive illnesses are contributing to higher out-of-pocket medical expenditures.
- Rural women often bear a disproportionate burden because they spend longer hours collecting water, working under extreme temperatures, and caring for family members affected by climate-related illnesses.
- For households living close to the poverty line, even minor increases in healthcare expenditure can significantly affect financial stability and consumption patterns.
Climate Change and Inequality
- The economic burden of climate change is not distributed equally.
- According to studies cited in the analysis, marginalised communities often have lower access to climate-adaptation technologies such as irrigation systems and resilient farming practices. Consequently, they face greater vulnerability to climate shocks.
- States such as Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, and Maharashtra are projected to witness significant declines in living standards because of their high climate vulnerability and dependence on agriculture.
- As a result, climate change increasingly functions like a regressive economic burden, disproportionately affecting those who possess the fewest resources to adapt.
Economic Implications for India
- The long-term implications extend beyond household budgets.
- The Indian Institute for Human Settlements (IIHS) has noted that a large section of India's population remains vulnerable to even small economic shocks despite improvements in incomes over recent decades. Climate change is making such shocks more frequent and persistent.
- If climate-related disruptions continue to intensify, they could lead to:
- Higher inflation
- Reduced agricultural productivity
- Increased health expenditure
- Greater rural distress
- Slower economic growth
- These outcomes could undermine progress toward inclusive and sustainable development.
Way Forward
- Addressing climate change requires moving beyond short-term crisis management.
- Policy priorities should include:
- Promoting climate-resilient agriculture, including initiatives such as Andhra Pradesh Community Natural Farming (APCNF)
- Strengthening urban heat action plans
- Improving water conservation and groundwater management
- Expanding affordable healthcare and social protection systems
- Investing in climate-resilient infrastructure and public services
- Recognising climate change as a cost-of-living issue can help integrate adaptation measures into broader economic policymaking.
Article
19 Jun 2026
Context:
- India’s economy and society have transformed over the last 12 years under the leadership of the current Prime Minister (PM) of India.
- Over these years, employment generation, youth empowerment, social security expansion, and the launch of the PM Viksit Bharat Rozgar Yojana (PMVBRY) acted as key pillars of India's journey towards Viksit Bharat (Developed India).
India’s Transformation - From Fragile Economy to Growth Engine:
- Over the past decade, India has evolved from being grouped among the “Fragile Five” economies in 2013 to becoming the world’s fastest-growing major economy.
- The country has emerged as a global leader in Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI), startup ecosystem development, innovation and technology adoption, and global economic and diplomatic influence.
- This transformation has been supported by a governance model centred on empowerment, inclusion, and economic opportunity.
Youth as the Driver of Growth:
- Recognising the importance of its demographic dividend, the government launched several flagship initiatives aimed at enhancing employability and entrepreneurship.
- Key initiatives are Make in India, Digital India, Startup India, Skill India, PM Mudra Yojana, and National Career Service (NCS) Portal.
- These programmes, coupled with investments in infrastructure and technology, have expanded opportunities for:
- Employment generation
- Skill development
- Entrepreneurship
- Formalisation of the economy
Employment Growth - Key Trends:
- Rising employment elasticity:
- Employment elasticity measures the responsiveness of employment to economic growth.
- For example, in the period of 2011-12 to 2017-18, it was 0.008, while for 2017-18 to 2023-24, it was 1.11.
- This implies that a 1% increase in Gross Value Added (GVA) generated a 1.11% rise in employment, indicating stronger job creation alongside economic growth.
- Employment indicators:
- According to RBI KLEMS data,
- Over 17 crore jobs were created between 2014 and 2024. In comparison, around 2.9 crore jobs were created between 2004 and 2014.
- The employment rate increased from 46.8% (2017-18) to 57.4% (2025).
- The unemployment rate declined to around 3.1%, below the global average of 4.8%.
- EPFO payroll data indicate addition of over 8 crore formal-sector jobs between 2017 and 2025.
- These trends are presented as evidence of expanding labour-market opportunities and increasing formalisation.
- According to RBI KLEMS data,
Expansion of Social Security Coverage:
- A major dimension of India's development journey has been the expansion of social protection.
- Growth in social security coverage:
- 2015: 25 crore people covered (19% of population).
- 2025: More than 94 crore people covered (64.3% of population).
- This substantial increase reflects efforts to extend welfare benefits and social-security protection to larger sections of society.
- Global recognition: India received the International Social Security Association (ISSA) Award for Outstanding Achievement in Social Security (2025), recognising progress in expanding social-security coverage.
Pradhan Mantri Viksit Bharat Rozgar Yojana (PMVBRY):
- About: Introduced (1 August 2025) in the first Budget of the present government's third term with a financial outlay of nearly ₹1 lakh crore, PMVBRY is projected as one of India's largest employment-generation initiatives.
- Employment target: Creation of more than 3.5 crore employment opportunities over two years.
- Key features:
- Part A (Support for first-time employees): Financial assistance of up to ₹15,000 disbursed in two instalments.
- Part B (Incentives for employers):
- Up to ₹3,000 per employee per month applicable for each additional worker hired.
- Incentives available: Up to 4 years for manufacturing sector employers. Up to 2 years for employers in other sectors.
- Expected benefits:
- Encourages workforce participation, reduces hiring costs for employers, and supports industrial growth through employment-linked incentives.
- Enhances income security for workers and families, and strengthens the virtuous cycle of production, employment, and consumption.
- Implementation and outreach:
- To mark the implementation of PMVBRY, incentives worth ₹2,400 crore are being disbursed through Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) to approximately 15 lakh beneficiaries.
- Events, distributing appointment letters to beneficiaries, recognising employers generating employment opportunities, are being organised across 200 major industrial clusters.
Towards Viksit Bharat 2047:
- As India approaches the centenary of Independence in 2047, the country’s greatest asset is its young population.
- The government views both employees and employers as equal partners in nation-building, seeking to balance worker welfare with enterprise growth.
- The broader vision of Viksit Bharat rests on:
- Employment-led growth
- Skill development
- Entrepreneurship promotion
- Social-security expansion
- Formalisation of the workforce
- Inclusive economic development
Conclusion:
- India's development trajectory is a combination of economic reforms, youth empowerment, employment generation, and social protection.
- Schemes such as PMVBRY seek to strengthen the relationship between labour and industry, positioning employees and employers as the twin engines driving India’s journey towards a prosperous, inclusive, and developed nation by 2047.
Article
19 Jun 2026
Context
- International trade negotiations have traditionally been judged by reductions in tariff rates and customs duties, however, the structure of global trade has evolved significantly.
- While tariffs remain politically visible, the most important determinants of market access today are Non-Tariff Barriers (NTBs) such as technical regulations, quality standards, licensing requirements, and testing procedures.
- As economies become increasingly interconnected, addressing NTBs has become more critical than merely reducing tariffs.
Understanding NTBs
- What are NTBs?
- They refers to regulations and procedures that goods must satisfy before entering a foreign market.
- These include:
- Technical standards
- Health and safety regulations
- Environmental requirements
- Product certification
- Packaging and labeling norms
- Licensing and approval procedures
- Unlike tariffs, which are transparent and measurable, NTBs operate through regulatory systems and often increase compliance costs for exporters.
- Growing Importance of NTBs
- Since the establishment of the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 1995, global tariff rates have fallen considerably.
- However, governments have increasingly relied on NTBs to regulate trade. Today, NTBs affect nearly 90% of global trade, while thousands of new regulatory measures are introduced every year.
- As a result, exporters face a complex web of compliance requirements that often restrict market access more effectively than tariffs.
NTBs as Instruments of Economic Power
- The European Union's Regulatory Framework
- The European Union (EU) has developed one of the world's most extensive regulatory systems. Its trade policies rely heavily on:
- Environmental regulations
- Chemical safety standards
- Product conformity requirements
- Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM)
- EU Deforestation Regulation
- Although designed to promote sustainability and consumer protection, these measures also function as powerful filters for imports.
- The European Union (EU) has developed one of the world's most extensive regulatory systems. Its trade policies rely heavily on:
- The United States' Strategic Approach
- The United States increasingly employs NTBs to advance strategic and security interests. Key instruments include:
- Export controls
- Technology restrictions
- Semiconductor regulations
- Advanced computing and AI controls
- These measures influence global supply chains and restrict access to critical technologies.
- The United States increasingly employs NTBs to advance strategic and security interests. Key instruments include:
- India's Evolving Trade Strategy
- India has traditionally relied on tariffs for trade protection. However, recent industrial policies indicate a shift toward:
- Quality Control Orders (QCOs)
- Product standards
- Import regulations
- Domestic manufacturing support measures
- This reflects India's growing recognition of the importance of regulatory tools in international trade.
- India has traditionally relied on tariffs for trade protection. However, recent industrial policies indicate a shift toward:
India's Experience with Free Trade Agreements
- Challenges in Existing FTAs
- India's experience demonstrates that tariff reductions alone do not guarantee increased trade.
- Despite Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) with ASEAN, Japan, and South Korea, exporters continue to face significant regulatory barriers. Examples include:
- Lengthy pharmaceutical approval processes in Japan.
- Complex registration requirements in ASEAN countries.
- Restrictive customs procedures affecting Indian exports.
- Consequently, India's FTA utilisation rate remains significantly lower than that of many developed economies.
- Impact on Trade Competitiveness
- These barriers increase transaction costs, delay market entry, and reduce the practical benefits of tariff concessions.
- As a result, agreements that appear successful on paper often fail to generate their full economic potential.
Emerging Solutions: The New Generation of Trade Agreements
- India-UAE CEPA
- The Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) between India and the UAE incorporates measures such as:
- Mutual recognition of standards
- Acceptance of international testing and certification
- Reduced duplication of compliance procedures
- These provisions lower costs and improve market access for businesses.
- The Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) between India and the UAE incorporates measures such as:
- India-EFTA TEPA
- The Trade and Economic Partnership Agreement (TEPA) with the European Free Trade Association (EFTA) goes further by including:
- Mutual recognition agreements
- Streamlined conformity assessments
- Institutional mechanisms to address NTBs
- Legally binding commitments on regulatory cooperation
- Such provisions represent a significant shift toward addressing the real barriers to trade.
- The Trade and Economic Partnership Agreement (TEPA) with the European Free Trade Association (EFTA) goes further by including:
Key Themes and Significance
- Transformation of Global Trade
- The focus of international trade has shifted from tariff reduction to regulatory governance.
- Compliance with standards and regulations now determines competitiveness in global markets.
- Hidden Protectionism
- While many NTBs serve legitimate purposes such as consumer protection, public health, and environmental sustainability, they can also function as indirect forms of protectionism by limiting foreign competition.
- Regulatory Power and Influence
- Modern trade relationships are increasingly shaped by those who establish global standards.
- Regulatory frameworks have become instruments of economic influence and strategic leverage.
Conclusion
- While tariffs continue to dominate political discussions, Non-Tariff Barriers (NTBs) have become the primary determinants of market access and competitiveness.
- For India and other emerging economies, future trade success depends not merely on securing lower tariffs but on achieving greater regulatory cooperation, transparency, mutual recognition of standards, and reduction of unnecessary compliance burdens.
- In the twenty-first century, overcoming regulatory barriers is the key to unlocking the full potential of international trade.
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Current Affairs
June 18, 2026
About Mombasa Declaration:
- It was adopted by 15 countries from Africa, Asia, Europe, the Caribbean, and the Pacific to step up efforts to combat illegal fishing.
- It calls on governments to improve access to information on fishing vessels, ownership, and licensing, and to strengthen data sharing to better track fishing activities and enforce regulations.
- It is named after the Kenyan city hosting the 11th Our Ocean Conference (OOC).
- Out of the more than 30 countries represented in the summit, Belgium, Cameroon, Chile, the Dominican Republic, France, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Liberia, Panama, Papua New Guinea, Peru, the Republic of the Congo, Somalia, and South Korea signed the agreement.
- It is intended to curb illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing, also known as IUU fishing, which threatens marine ecosystems and the livelihoods of millions of people who depend on fisheries.
- The declaration builds support for the Global Charter for Fisheries Transparency, a set of 10 policy principles aimed at improving governance through low-cost reforms, including modernizing vessel registries and publishing fishing authorizations.
Key Facts about Our Ocean Conference (OOC):
- Launched in 2014 by the U.S. Department of State and former Secretary of State John Kerry, the OOC is a major international platform that unites governments, businesses, NGOs, and academic institutions to drive ocean-related action and ambition.
- The conference focuses on six critical areas:
- Marine protected areas.
- Sustainable blue economy
- Climate change
- Maritime security
- Sustainable fisheries
- Marine pollution.
- 2026 OCC: Mombasa (Kenya) - Marking the first time the global summit was held on African soil, themed "Our Ocean, Our Heritage, Our Future"