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09 May 2026

Tagore and Gandhi’s Debate Over the Charkha Revisited

Why in news?

Rabindranath Tagore and Mahatma Gandhi shared a close friendship for nearly three decades, but they also differed sharply on several political and social questions. One of their most significant debates centred on the charkha, or spinning wheel.

While Gandhi viewed spinning as a symbol of self-reliance, discipline, and national regeneration, Tagore was uncomfortable with the idea that every Indian must adopt it as a moral duty.

Their disagreement reflected deeper philosophical differences on nationalism, individual freedom, and the direction of India’s freedom movement.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • The Gandhi–Tagore Intellectual Conflict
  • The Gandhi–Tagore Debate on the Charkha
  • Tagore’s Uneasy Dissent on the Charkha

The Gandhi–Tagore Intellectual Conflict

  • Jawaharlal Nehru once remarked that few people differed as profoundly as Mahatma Gandhi and Rabindranath Tagore.
  • Despite mutual respect and friendship, their contrasting worldviews made ideological conflict almost inevitable.
  • The first major differences emerged in 1915 when Gandhi visited Shantiniketan after returning from South Africa. They differed on issues such as nationalism, education, and political strategy.
  • Debates Over Nationalism and Protest
    • Their disagreements widened after the Jallianwala Bagh Massacre.
    • Gandhi launched the Non-Cooperation Movement, while Tagore feared that mass political mobilisation could encourage blind nationalism.
    • Instead of joining the movement, Tagore renounced his British knighthood in protest against colonial repression.
  • Differences on Religion and Social Reform
    • The two leaders also clashed over Gandhi’s interpretation of the 1934 Bihar earthquake as divine punishment for untouchability.
    • Tagore rejected linking natural disasters with moral or religious explanations, arguing against associating cosmic events with ethical judgments.
  • Contrasting Philosophies
    • Historians have described Gandhi and Tagore as representing contrasting ideals:
      • Gandhi as the ascetic, nationalist, and mass mobiliser
      • Tagore as the artist, internationalist, and individualist thinker
    • Their debates reflected deeper disagreements on politics, spirituality, nationalism, and the future direction of Indian society.

The Gandhi–Tagore Debate on the Charkha

  • Rabindranath Tagore strongly opposed what he viewed as the “cult of the charkha” and the growing moral pressure surrounding the khadi movement promoted by Mahatma Gandhi.
  • In 1924, Gandhi and Congress leaders resolved that party members should wear khadi at political functions and contribute hand-spun yarn every month. Gandhi believed spinning would promote self-reliance and morally discipline Congress workers.
  • Tagore criticised the movement in his essay The Cult of the Charkha, arguing that it encouraged blind obedience and suppressed individual freedom and diversity.
  • He feared Indians were being pushed into uniformity under moral pressure from revered leaders.
  • Concerns About Mechanical Labour
    • Tagore believed repetitive spinning involved “muscles and not the mind,” reducing creative and intellectual engagement.
    • He argued that turning spinning into a ritual diluted its original purpose of helping the poor secure clothing.
    • Tagore rejected the idea of withdrawing from science and modern technology.
    • Using the examples of Sparta and Athens, he argued that societies flourish through openness, creativity, and intellectual development rather than rigid uniformity.
  • Gandhi’s Defence of the Charkha
    • In response, Gandhi defended the spinning wheel in The Poet and the Charkha, arguing that Tagore misunderstood its social and ethical value.
    • Gandhi believed spinning connected people with the struggles of the poor and restored dignity to manual labour.
    • For Gandhi, the charkha represented more than cloth production.
    • It symbolised self-reliance, cooperation, rural upliftment, and resistance to exploitative industrial systems, while still allowing limited use of machinery where necessary.

Tagore’s Uneasy Dissent on the Charkha

  • Rabindranath Tagore was not opposed to the charkha as a practical means of helping people meet basic clothing needs.
  • However, he was uncomfortable with the central moral and political importance it acquired in Mahatma Gandhi’s programme.
  • Despite his disagreements, Tagore expressed them with reluctance and respect, admitting that opposing Gandhi on principles or methods was personally painful for him, even though he believed intellectual disagreement was legitimate.
History & Culture

Article
09 May 2026

SC Questions Election Commission Appointment Process

Why in news?

The Supreme Court of India has criticised Parliament’s long delay in enacting a law governing appointments to the Election Commission of India, describing it as a “tyranny of the elected.”

The SC bench was hearing petitions challenging the Chief Election Commissioner(CEC) and Other Election Commissioners Act, 2023. The law replaced the Chief Justice of India with a Union Cabinet minister in the selection panel for appointing Election Commissioners.

The issue gained further attention when Leader of Opposition formally dissented during the appointment process of current Chief Election Commissioner Gyanesh Kumar, urging the government to wait for the Court’s decision on the legality of the new system.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • How Election Commissioners Are Appointed
  • Supreme Court’s 2023 Anoop Baranwal Ruling
  • What the 2023 Law on Election Commission Appointments Provides

How Election Commissioners Are Appointed?

  • Article 324(2) of the Constitution states that the appointment of Election Commissioners(ECs) should be made according to a law enacted by Parliament.
  • Although the Election Commission (Conditions of Service of Election Commissioners and Transaction of Business) Act, 1991 regulated salaries, tenure, and functioning of the Commission, it did not prescribe any appointment procedure.
  • Executive-Controlled Appointment Process
    • In the absence of a parliamentary law, appointments remained effectively under the control of the executive. Traditionally:
      • the Union Law Ministry prepared a panel of names,
      • the Prime Minister recommended candidates, and
      • the President formally made the appointments.
    • Most Election Commissioners were senior bureaucrats, and the senior-most Election Commissioner usually became the Chief Election Commissioner (CEC).
  • Challenge Before the Supreme Court
    • In Anoop Baranwal v. Union of India (2022), petitioners argued that the existing system gave excessive control to the government of the day, threatening the independence of the Election Commission of India.
    • During the hearings, former IAS officer Arun Goel was appointed as Election Commissioner in a process reportedly completed within a single day.
    • The apex court expressed surprise over the speed of the appointment and questioned Parliament’s prolonged silence on establishing a transparent appointment mechanism.

Supreme Court’s 2023 Anoop Baranwal Ruling

  • In this case, the Supreme Court of India established an interim procedure for appointing the CEC and ECs until Parliament enacted a dedicated law.
  • The Court directed that appointments should be made by the President on the advice of a three-member committee comprising:
    • the Prime Minister,
    • the Leader of Opposition in the Lok Sabha (or leader of the largest opposition party), and
    • the Chief Justice of India (CJI).
  • The judgment also broadened the understanding of voting rights, holding that the right to vote flows from the Constitution and that casting a vote forms part of freedom of expression under Article 19(1)(a).
  • Ensuring Independence of the Election Commission
    • The ruling emphasised that free and fair elections require an independent Election Commission of India insulated from executive influence.
    • The Court referred to Constituent Assembly debates and Dr. B. R. Ambedkar’s warning that election authorities should not come “under the thumb of the executive.”
    • The Court described the Election Commission as a “guardian of democracy” and stressed that those supervising elections must function impartially, independently, and honestly.
  • Call for Institutional Reforms
    • The Supreme Court urged Parliament to strengthen the Election Commission institutionally and financially by:
      • creating an independent secretariat, and
      • charging its expenditure to the Consolidated Fund of India.
    • The Court warned that financial dependence on the executive could indirectly compromise the Commission’s independence.

What the 2023 Law on Election Commission Appointments Provides?

  • Following the Anoop Baranwal v. Union of India judgment, Parliament enacted the Chief Election Commissioner and Other Election Commissioners Act, 2023.
  • The law replaced the Chief Justice of India in the selection committee with a Union Cabinet minister nominated by the Prime Minister.
  • Executive Dominance in the Panel
    • Under the new arrangement, the three-member selection committee consists of:
      • the Prime Minister,
      • a Union Cabinet minister nominated by the PM, and
      • the Leader of Opposition.
    • This effectively gives the executive representation in two out of three seats.
    • Further, under Section 7(2), the Act ensures that an appointment “shall not be invalid merely by reason of any vacancy in or any defect in the constitution of the Selection Committee.”
    • The Act creates a two-stage appointment process:
      • a search committee headed by the Law Minister prepares a panel of names, and
      • the selection committee makes the final choice.
    • However, the law allows the selection committee to choose “any other person” meeting eligibility conditions, even outside the search committee’s shortlist.
    • Critics argue this grants broad discretion and reduces the significance of the formal search process.
  • Legal Challenge to the 2023 Law
    • The law was challenged in 2024 by petitioners including Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR).
    • The petitions argue that the law restores executive dominance over appointments and weakens the independence of the Election Commission of India.
Polity & Governance

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Article
09 May 2026

NITI Aayog Report on School Education - Dropout Crisis and Policy Reforms

Why in the News?

  • NITI Aayog has released a comprehensive report highlighting India's school education challenges, including sharp dropout rates after Class 10, weak learning outcomes, teacher shortages, and fragmented school structures.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • NITI Aayog Report (Overview, Key Findings of the Report)
  • Key Recommendations of the Report

Overview of India's School Education System

  • India's school education system is one of the largest in the world, comprising 14.71 lakh schools serving 24.69 crore students.
  • While the country has achieved near-universal enrolment at the primary level, the system continues to face deep structural problems affecting quality, retention, and learning outcomes.
  • The new NITI Aayog report titled "School Education System in India: Temporal Analysis and Policy Roadmap for Quality Enhancement" draws on data from UDISE+, PARAKH Rashtriya Sarvekshan 2024, National Achievement Survey (NAS) 2017 and 2021, and the Annual Status of Education Report (ASER) 2024.

Key Findings of the NITI Aayog Report

  • The Pyramid Problem: Fragmented School Structure
    • India's school system resembles a sharp pyramid rather than a continuous structure.
    • While the country has 7.3 lakh primary schools (Classes 1-5), the number drops drastically to 1.64 lakh higher secondary schools (Classes 11-12).
    • Only about 5% of schools offer continuous education from Grade 1 to Grade 12.
    • This fragmentation forces students to change schools multiple times, after Class 5, Class 8, and Class 10, contributing to poor retention and high attrition rates.
  • Sharp Dropout Rates After Elementary Education
    • While primary-level dropout has fallen to just 0.3%, it rises to 3.5% at the upper primary level and jumps to 11.5% at the secondary stage.
    • The report notes that four out of every ten children who enter the system drop out before completing higher secondary education.
    • The transition from secondary (Classes 9-10) to higher secondary (Classes 11-12) remains a critical point of attrition.
    • Although the national transition rate improved from 67.7% in 2014-15 to 75.1% in 2024-25, the Gross Enrolment Ratio (GER) at the higher secondary level stands at only 58.4% nationally.
    • States like Bihar (38.1%), Meghalaya (39.7%), Nagaland (39.8%), and Assam (43.5%) report the lowest GER at this level.
    • The report identifies financial constraints, early workforce entry, and social pressures as key factors impeding progression beyond Class 10.
    • The Right to Education Act guarantees free education only until age 14, leaving families to bear costs for older children.
  • Weak Learning Outcomes
    • Despite rising enrolment, learning outcomes remain a serious concern.
    • Reading proficiency among Grade 8 students has declined, from 74.7% in 2014 to 71.1% in 2024, for students who could read a Grade 2 text.
    • In mathematics, only 45.8% of Grade 8 students can solve a basic division problem.
    • Even private schools, often perceived as offering better education, show weak outcomes.
    • The report found that 35% of Class 5 students in low-fee private schools cannot read a Class 2 textbook, while 60% are unable to solve a basic division problem.
  • Teacher Shortages and Single-Teacher Schools
    • India has approximately 1.01 crore teachers, but significant shortfalls persist, particularly in rural and underserved areas.
    • Bihar alone has over 2.08 lakh vacancies at the elementary level, besides 36,035 vacancies in secondary schools and 33,035 in senior secondary schools. Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, and Karnataka also report large shortages.
    • Around 1.04 lakh schools, over 7% of all schools, operate with just one teacher, who must handle multiple grades while managing administrative duties and mid-day meals.
    • Nearly 14% of planned teaching days are lost to non-academic work such as elections and surveys.
  • Weak Teacher Preparation
    • Data from NITI Aayog's SATH-E programme found that many teachers score below 60-70% in subject papers of the grades they teach.
    • Only 10-15% of candidates appearing for CTET and State TETs score above the 60% qualifying threshold. Average marks in primary-level mathematics hover around just 46%.
  • Infrastructure Gaps
    • According to UDISE+ 2024-25, 1.19 lakh schools lack access to functional electricity. While 99% of schools now have drinking water facilities, 14,505 schools still lack functional water sources, and nearly 59,829 lack handwashing facilities.
    • More than one-third of schools have fewer than 50 students, operating with minimal infrastructure and staff.
    • Additionally, 7,993 schools reported zero student enrolment, with the highest numbers in West Bengal (3,812) and Telangana (2,245).
  • Shift Toward Private Schools
    • Government school enrolment has fallen from 71% in 2005 to 49.24% in 2024-25, while private schools now account for 44.01% of all secondary institutions.
    • Parents increasingly perceive private schools as offering better discipline, English-medium instruction, and employability.
    • However, the report criticises the weak regulation of private schools, noting that many low-fee institutions lack proper infrastructure, trained teachers, and oversight.

NITI Aayog's Recommendations

  • Cylindrical Schooling Model
    • The report recommends shifting from the current pyramidal structure to a cylindrical model built around composite schools offering education from Grades 1 to 12 under one roof.
    • This would reduce unnecessary transitions and support smoother academic progression.
  • Foundational Learning Over Textbook Completion
    • NITI Aayog calls for a shift from "textbook completion to foundational mastery," recommending that children be taught at their actual learning level rather than strictly by grade.
  • Teacher Reforms
    • The report recommends that professional development move beyond occasional lecture-based sessions toward sustained, practice-centred learning.
    • It proposes structured career pathways, from senior to master to mentor-teacher roles, and urges that teachers be freed from non-teaching duties.
  • Balanced AI Integration
    • While advocating for AI literacy from upper primary onwards, the report cautions against overuse.
    • It recommends that AI should assist teachers rather than replace them and calls for ethical frameworks and age-appropriate safeguards to sustain learners' creativity and independent thinking.
  • Sushikshit Bharat Abhiyaan
    • Framing reforms as part of a proposed "Sushikshit Bharat Abhiyaan", NITI Aayog emphasises that piecemeal reforms will no longer suffice.
    • "Incremental change will not be sufficient; meeting the aspirations of a resurgent India will demand a system-wide transformation of school education," the report states.

 

Social Issues

Article
09 May 2026

Governor’s Discretion and Constitutional Morality - Tamil Nadu Crisis in Focus

Context:

  • The role of the Governor has once again come under scrutiny following Tamil Nadu Governor Rajendra Vishwanath Arlekar's prolonged delay in inviting the leader of the single largest party — Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam's (TVK) C Joseph Vijay — to form a government after the state assembly election results.
  • The issue raises critical questions regarding constitutional conventions, gubernatorial discretion, federalism, democratic morality, and judicial precedents governing government formation.

Constitutional Position of the Governor:

  • B. R. Ambedkar had described the Governor as a “representative not of a party, but of the people as a whole of the state.”
  • This statement was later quoted by the Supreme Court in the landmark Nabam Rebia Judgment case (2016).
  • The constitutional expectation is that the Governor should function as a neutral constitutional head rather than a political actor.

Constitutional Provisions on Government Formation:

  • Article 164(1): It merely states that the Chief Minister shall be appointed by the Governor.
  • Article 164(2): The Council of Ministers is collectively responsible to the Legislative Assembly, not to the Governor.
  • Interpretation: Thus, the Governor’s role is limited to identifying who is most likely to command majority support in the Assembly.

Importance of Constitutional Conventions:

  • Why Conventions matter?
    • Constitutional conventions are unwritten, non-legal rules, practices, and traditions that guide the functioning of government institutions, bridging gaps in the written constitution.
    • The Constitution does not explicitly provide a detailed mechanism for every political contingency, especially fractured mandates. Hence, constitutional conventions evolve over time.
  • Thinkers on Constitutional conventions:
    • John Stuart Mill described conventions as “unwritten maxims of the Constitution”.
    • William Anson called them “constitutional customs”.
    • Ivor Jennings argued that conventions provide “flesh which clothes the dry bones of the law”.
  • These conventions become essential for maintaining democratic continuity and constitutional morality, which refers to adherence to democratic values, conventions, and constitutional spirit beyond legal text, ensuring legitimacy and fairness in governance.

Tamil Nadu Political Situation:

  • Electoral verdict: In the 234-member Tamil Nadu Assembly,
    • C Joseph Vijay-led TVK emerged as the single largest party with 108 seats.
    • No pre-poll alliance secured a majority.
    • Indian National Congress later extended support to TVK.
    • Left parties and smaller parties also indicated support.
  • Under established convention, the Governor should ordinarily have invited the single largest party leader claiming majority support to form the government and prove majority on the floor of the House.

Supreme Court Judgments on Governor’s Role:

  • Nabam Rebia case (2016): The judgment emphasised constitutional neutrality of Governors and restricted arbitrary discretionary powers.
  • S. R. Bommai case (1994):
    • The judgment established that the majority must be tested on the floor of the House. Constitutional machinery cannot be assessed subjectively by the Governor.
    • The judgment also discussed the hierarchy (in case no political party enjoys a clear majority/ hung assembly) of pre-poll alliances, post-poll alliances, and the single largest party.
    • In the present case, TVK qualifies both as the single largest party and as the nucleus of a post-poll alliance.
  • Rameshwar Prasad case (2006): The judgment warned Governors against partisan misuse of office.
  • Raghukul Tilak case (1979): The judgment held that gubernatorial discretion must be reasonable, in good faith, non-arbitrary, and constitutionally restrained.

Historical Precedents Supporting the Convention:

  • Vajpayee government (1996): Atal Bihari Vajpayee was invited to form the government despite the BJP lacking a majority because it was the single largest party in the Lok Sabha. The government later resigned after failing to prove its majority.
  • Karnataka example (2018):
    • B. S. Yediyurappa was invited (and was given 15 days to prove the majority) by the then Governor Vajubhai Vala to form the government despite a post-poll alliance between Congress and JD(S).
    • The SC ordered an expedited floor test (within 36 hours), and the government eventually collapsed.

Core Constitutional Issues Raised:

  • Politicisation of the Governor’s office: The Governors increasingly behave as partisan actors rather than neutral constitutional authorities.
  • Erosion of constitutional morality:
    • Delaying invitation to the largest claimant despite evident support is viewed as undermining democratic ethics and constitutional conventions.
    • Any possible alliance between rival parties like DMK and AIADMK merely to prevent TVK from forming government despite the electorate rejecting both, will be portrayed as political opportunism, that is,
      • Ethically questionable
      • Contrary to democratic spirit
      • Violative of constitutional morality
  • Threat to federalism: Frequent gubernatorial interventions deepen Centre-State tensions and weaken cooperative federalism.
  • Misunderstanding of majority principle:
    • The Governor reportedly demanded “absolute majority”.
    • However, confidence motions require a simple majority of members present and voting.
    • A government survives through a simple majority of members present and voting, not necessarily 50% plus one of total House strength.
    • This means, abstentions reduce the effective majority mark.

Recommendations:

  • Codification of conventions: India should evolve clearer statutory or constitutional guidelines regarding government formation in hung assemblies.
  • Implement Sarkaria and Punchhi commission recommendations:
    • For example, the Punchhi Commission recommended limiting gubernatorial discretion under Article 164.
    • A transparent order of preference for inviting parties should be institutionalised.
  • Ensure political neutrality of Governors: Governors should function as constitutional umpires rather than agents of ruling parties at the Centre.
  • Mandatory time-bound floor tests: The SC’s evolving jurisprudence on immediate floor tests should become standard constitutional practice.
  • Strengthening constitutional morality: Public offices must operate not merely within constitutional text but also within democratic ethics, conventions, and spirit.

Conclusion:

  • The Tamil Nadu episode highlights the recurring constitutional tensions surrounding the office of Governor in India.
  • These controversies underline the urgent need to depoliticise the gubernatorial office and reinforce constitutional morality, federal balance, and democratic conventions.
  • As constitutional scholar Ivor Jennings observed, conventions give life to constitutional text; without adherence to them, democratic institutions risk losing legitimacy and public trust.
Editorial Analysis

Article
09 May 2026

A Watershed Moment in India’s Defence Posture

Context

  • Operation Sindoor, launched on May 7, 2025, marked a turning point in India’s national security and military strategy.
  • Conducted in response to the Pahalgam attack, the operation reflected a decisive shift from India’s earlier policy of reactive restraint to a doctrine of zero tolerance against cross-border terrorism.
  • Through coordinated military action, strong political leadership, and advanced defence systems, India projected itself as a more assertive and strategically confident power.

Emergence of a New Indian Doctrine

  • From Reactive Restraint to Zero Tolerance
    • For decades, India followed a cautious approach toward cross-border terrorism, relying on diplomatic pressure and the dossier approach.
    • Military restraint was often justified due to fears of escalation with a nuclear-armed neighbour.
    • However, Operation Sindoor established a new framework in which terrorism would be treated as an act of war.
    • Under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, India demonstrated strategic resolve by rejecting external pressure and refusing to submit to nuclear blackmail.
    • This policy shift introduced new red lines in regional security and indicated that future terrorist attacks would provoke direct retaliation.
  • Strategic and Political Transformation
    • The government provided the armed forces with operational freedom, showing confidence in their capabilities.
    • This created a new normal in India’s defence posture, where military action became an accepted instrument of national policy.
    • The strikes on terrorist hubs in Bahawalpur and Muridke symbolized India’s willingness to challenge previously untouchable targets.
    • These actions reshaped perceptions of India’s military limitations and strengthened its image as a rising regional power.

Military Audaciousness and Operational Excellence

  • Joint Warfare and Integrated Operations
    • The coordinated strikes demonstrated the effectiveness of joint warfare, precision planning, and advanced military coordination.
    • Despite Pakistan remaining on high alert, India successfully executed attacks on multiple terrorist and military targets.
    • The Indian Air Force played a major role in countering Pakistan’s retaliatory attempts on May 9 and 10.
    • Rapid airstrikes on bases such as Nur Khan, Sargodha, Murid, and Bholari showcased India’s ability to respond in near real time with exceptional precision targeting.
  • Technological Superiority and Escalation Control
    • The deployment of advanced systems such as the S-400 missile system strengthened India’s air defence capabilities and denied Pakistan operational space.
    • Simultaneously, Indian Army operations along the Line of Control neutralized drone attacks and reinforced border security.
    • India’s handling of the escalation ladder was particularly significant because the conflict unfolded under a nuclear overhang.
    • Through careful calibration, India maintained control while achieving military dominance.

Strategic Significance and Political Messaging

  • Message to Terror Groups and Pakistan
    • The operation warned terrorist organizations and their supporters that future attacks would invite immediate retaliation.
    • At the same time, it conveyed a message to Pakistan regarding the consequences of supporting cross-border militancy.
    • India’s response projected confidence, discipline, and military readiness and the operation reinforced the idea that India would no longer remain passive in the face of repeated provocations.
  • Nationalism and Public Perception
    • The operation generated strong feelings of patriotism and national pride across the country.
    • Descriptions of high-impact operations and massive destruction strengthened public trust in the armed forces and political leadership.
    • At the same time, the sudden ceasefire surprised sections of the population who expected continued military action.
    • However, strategic conflicts require rational calculations rather than emotional decisions.
    • The timing of the ceasefire reflected India’s confidence in having already established military and psychological superiority.

Indigenous Defence Growth and Atmanirbharata

  • Need for Defence Self-Reliance
    • Operation Sindoor emphasised the importance of Atmanirbharata in defence production.
    • The success of indigenous technologies encouraged greater focus on innovation, design, and large-scale manufacturing in defence and aerospace sectors.
    • The operation demonstrated that technological independence is essential for maintaining long-term national security and military preparedness.
  • Role of Industry and Technology
    • Government reforms in defence, cyber security, space, and Artificial Intelligence gained renewed significance after the operation.
    • Institutions such as the Defence Research and Development Organisation and Defence Public Sector Undertakings were expected to collaborate more effectively with private industries, MSMEs, and startups.
    • A whole-of-nation approach became necessary to strengthen India’s defence ecosystem and reduce dependence on foreign technologies.
    • The changing geopolitical environment further reinforced the need for modernization and self-reliance.

Conclusion

  • Operation Sindoor represented a decisive shift in India’s military and political strategy and it established a doctrine based on deterrence, rapid retaliation, and uncompromising action against terrorism.
  • Through coordinated military power, technological superiority, and strong political leadership, India projected itself as a confident and capable regional power.
  • The operation also accelerated discussions on defence modernization and indigenous capability development.
Editorial Analysis

Article
09 May 2026

The Elephant in India’s Data Room

Context

  • As another session of Parliament concluded, Members of Parliament continued raising questions regarding the number of schools with toilets, pensions distributed, and beneficiaries under welfare schemes.
  • Although these issues are significant, such information should already exist in a transparent, accessible, and standardised public database.
  • The repeated demand for basic statistics exposes a deeper weakness in India’s data governance system.
  • Despite generating vast amounts of information, India struggles with fragmented and non-interoperable datasets that weaken policy-making, accountability, and administrative efficiency.

Anatomy of the Problem

  • Fragmented Data Ecosystem
    • India’s data ecosystem remains highly fragmented, with Ministries and government departments using different definitions for indicators such as regions, time periods, and beneficiary categories.
    • The absence of common standards creates major barriers to interoperability, making it difficult to integrate datasets across institutions.
    • As a result, large volumes of data exist, but much of it lacks practical usability.
  • Fiscal Leakages and Administrative Inefficiency
    • The consequences of weak data systems are particularly visible in welfare programmes. Multiple databases often record the same beneficiary repeatedly, resulting in serious fiscal leakages.
    • The removal of 17.1 million ineligible names from the PM-KISAN scheme was expected to save nearly ₹90 billion in FY2024.
    • Similarly, deleting 35 million bogus LPG connections and 16 million fake ration cards could save hundreds of billions annually.
    • These examples demonstrate how poor data management directly affects public expenditure and governance efficiency.
  • Impact on Public Health Policy
    • Childhood tuberculosis cases are frequently recorded separately in the Health Management Information System, disease surveillance networks, and immunisation registries.
    • Such duplication creates conflicting estimates and reduces confidence in official statistics.
    • When policymakers cannot rely on accurate data, decision-making often shifts toward anecdotal evidence or political convenience instead of scientific analysis.

Global and Economic Consequences

  • In the Global Innovation Index 2024, India suffered from missing and outdated indicators because agencies failed to provide updated statistics.
  • This exposes weaknesses in inter-agency coordination and reduces the credibility of national performance assessments.
  • Economically, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) estimates that improved public-sector data sharing could increase GDP by up to 1.5%, with even greater gains if private-sector data is included.
  • Thus, weak data governance not only distorts policymaking but also limits economic growth and innovation.

Common Standard for Data

  • Strengthening the India Data Management Office (IDMO)
    • A major solution lies in the National Data Governance Framework Policy and the proposed IDMO.
    • The IDMO could become the central institution responsible for enforcing common rules, definitions, and standards across Ministries and States.
    • However, such reforms require genuine authority. The institution must have the power to audit compliance, resolve disputes, and ensure uniform methodologies nationwide.
    • Without binding enforcement, inefficiencies and inconsistencies will persist.
  • Alignment with Global Standards
    • India also needs alignment with global statistical frameworks such as the United Nations System of National Accounts.
    • A unified National Statistical Standards Manual could harmonise definitions and practices across sectors, improving consistency, reliability, and comparability of national data.
  • Expanding Open Data Infrastructure
    • The expansion of data.gov.in into a comprehensive and schema-consistent repository is equally important.
    • Ministries should regularly upload datasets in standardised formats so that parliamentarians, researchers, and citizens can access accurate real-time and district-level information.
    • Such reforms would improve transparency, strengthen accountability, and reduce duplication across government databases.

Accountability as a Benchmark

  • Role of the Data Governance Quality Index
    • The Data Governance Quality Index developed by NITI Aayog should become an annual benchmark tied to performance reviews and incentives for Ministries and States.
    • Healthy competition in maintaining high-quality data standards can encourage long-term improvements in governance practices.
  • Data as the Grammar of Governance
    • Data standardisation is not merely a technical exercise; it is the foundation of modern governance.
    • A country aspiring to become a $5 trillion economy cannot rely on inconsistent and unreliable datasets.
    • Effective governance depends upon accuracy, coordination, efficiency, and responsible stewardship of information systems.

Conclusion

  • Data serves as the grammar of governance and without coherent standards and reliable systems, policymaking becomes uncertain, public resources are wasted, and national development slows.
  • Strengthening institutional reforms, improving digital infrastructure, and ensuring accountable data practices are essential for building an efficient and evidence-based governance framework.
  • By committing to robust standardisation, interoperability, and transparent information systems, India can create a governance model that is future-ready, economically sustainable, and globally competitive.
Editorial Analysis

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09 May 2026

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