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Article
13 Jun 2026
Why in News?
- The SEBI has initiated a comprehensive review of several market regulations to enhance corporate governance, market efficiency, investor protection, and capital market depth.
- The reforms cover areas such as disclosure norms, delisting regulations, derivatives markets, independent directors, foreign investor access, AI governance, and debt market development.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Why is SEBI Reviewing Market Regulations?
- Review of Listing and Delisting Frameworks
- Enhancing the Role of Independent Directors (IDs)
- Other Proposals
- Supporting Strategic and Emerging Sectors
- Conclusion
Why is SEBI Reviewing Market Regulations?
- India’s capital markets are expanding rapidly, driven by technological innovation, rising retail participation, and increasing global investor interest.
- To keep pace with evolving market realities, Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) aims to:
- Strengthen corporate governance standards.
- Improve transparency and disclosure mechanisms.
- Facilitate easier access for domestic and foreign investors.
- Enhance market liquidity and risk management.
- Support emerging sectors requiring long-term capital.
- Integrate technological advancements such as Artificial Intelligence (AI) into market regulation.
Review of Listing and Delisting Frameworks:
- Strengthening disclosure norms: SEBI is reviewing the Listing Obligations and Disclosure Requirements (LODR) framework to make it more responsive to emerging governance, compliance, and disclosure challenges.
- Reforming delisting regulations:
- The regulator is also reassessing the delisting framework to ensure that capital markets provide both:
- Fair entry for companies seeking public capital.
- Fair exit for firms wishing to delist.
- This is expected to improve market efficiency and investor confidence.
- The regulator is also reassessing the delisting framework to ensure that capital markets provide both:
Enhancing the Role of Independent Directors (IDs):
- Beyond traditional oversight:
- SEBI emphasized that IDs must move beyond merely questioning management decisions.
- Their responsibilities should include contributing to strategic discussions on AI; cybersecurity; Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) issues; R&D; and technological disruptions.
- Capacity building initiative: To improve board effectiveness, SEBI plans to establish a scalable capacity-building network for IDs.
- Protection of Minority shareholders: IDs are expected to safeguard minority shareholder interests while promoting sustainable long-term value creation.
Other Proposals:
- Facilitating foreign investment:
- Simplified KYC norms: SEBI plans to simplify Know Your Customer (KYC) requirements for: Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs), and Non-Resident Indians (NRIs).
- Risk-based disclosure framework: Disclosure requirements for foreign investors will be reviewed using a risk-based approach, providing greater clarity and ease of participation for global capital.
- Deepening equity and derivatives markets:
- Review of short selling and securities lending:
- SEBI is comprehensively reviewing Securities Lending and Borrowing (SLB) framework, and Short-selling regulations.
- The objective is to strengthen linkages between cash and derivatives markets, improve liquidity, and facilitate better price discovery.
- Development of long-term derivative products:
- SEBI intends to encourage longer-duration futures contracts, and longer-term options contracts.
- This will broaden hedging opportunities and deepen market participation.
- Bond index derivatives: In collaboration with the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), SEBI plans to introduce derivatives based on bond indices, expanding the range of fixed-income market instruments.
- Review of short selling and securities lending:
- Reforms in commodity derivatives:
- SEBI's proposals aim to improve participation and risk management through:
- Extending early pay-in benefits to options contracts.
- Reviewing position limits.
- Gradual shift from cash settlement to physical settlement in selected agricultural commodity contracts.
- These measures are expected to improve market integrity and efficiency.
- SEBI's proposals aim to improve participation and risk management through:
- Review of municipal debt and portfolio management regulations:
- SEBI is also reassessing regulations related to municipal debt instruments, and Portfolio Management Services (PMS).
- The objective is to address operational challenges faced by stakeholders and ensure these frameworks continue to support market development.
Supporting Strategic and Emerging Sectors:
- Revamping the Innovators Growth Platform (IGP):
- SEBI is reviewing the Innovators Growth Platform to facilitate capital raising for high-growth sectors such as AI, semiconductors, clean energy, biotechnology, advanced materials, and defence technology.
- The objective is to improve access to long-term financing for innovation-driven industries.
- Development of debt markets:
- Corporate bond market reforms: SEBI is working on a market-making framework for corporate bonds, greater liquidity in debt markets.
- Municipal bond market expansion: Efforts are underway to deepen the municipal bond market, enabling urban local bodies to access market-based financing for infrastructure development.
- Tokenization of corporate bonds: SEBI is exploring tokenization of corporate bonds, reflecting the increasing role of financial technology in capital markets.
- AI as a regulatory priority:
- Opportunities: AI can significantly improve market surveillance, fraud detection, risk assessment, and investor services
- Risks: SEBI recognizes concerns relating to algorithmic opacity, bias, data privacy, cybersecurity, accountability
- Regulatory framework: SEBI plans to issue detailed guidelines for the responsible use of AI in capital markets and integrate the International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) AI Supervisory Toolkit into its regulatory approach.
Conclusion:
- SEBI’s proposed reforms represent a broad-based effort to modernize India's capital market architecture.
- By combining governance reforms, market deepening measures, technological oversight, and easier investor access, the regulator seeks to create a more resilient, transparent, and globally competitive financial ecosystem.
Article
13 Jun 2026
Why in the News?
- The Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB) has released the Draft Telecommunications (Television, Radio and Associated Services) Rules, 2026, for stakeholder consultation to establish a common regulatory framework for television and radio broadcasting services.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Broadcasting Regulation in India (Background, Need for a Unified Framework)
- Broadcasting Rules 2026 (Key Provisions, Concerns & Way Forward)
Broadcasting Regulation in India
- Broadcasting refers to the transmission of audio and audio-visual content through platforms such as television, radio, Direct-to-Home (DTH), IPTV, and digital broadcasting services.
- Since broadcasting influences public opinion, education, culture, and information dissemination, the sector is regulated through a legal and policy framework administered by the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB).
- Historically, India regulated broadcasting through multiple policy guidelines issued separately for television, FM radio, community radio, DTH, and other services.
- These regulations were primarily rooted in the Indian Telegraph Act, 1885, creating a fragmented compliance system over time.
- The enactment of the Telecommunications Act, 2023, which replaced the colonial-era Telegraph Act, created the need for a modern and harmonised regulatory structure for broadcasting services.
Need for a Unified Broadcasting Framework
- India’s broadcasting ecosystem currently operates under several separate guidelines issued over different periods.
- For example, television uplinking and downlinking, DTH services, FM radio, IPTV, and community radio are governed by different policy documents and licensing systems.
- This fragmented structure creates several challenges:
- Overlapping regulatory requirements
- Multiple approval and licensing procedures
- Higher compliance burden for broadcasters
- Lack of regulatory consistency across broadcasting platforms
- The government argues that a unified framework would simplify administration, reduce ambiguity, and improve ease of doing business while ensuring stronger public service obligations.
Draft Broadcasting Rules 2026: Key Provisions
- The proposed Draft Telecommunications (Television, Radio and Associated Services) Rules, 2026 seek to create a single regulatory framework for broadcasting services.
- The draft rules propose to consolidate multiple earlier guidelines, including:
- Satellite TV Uplinking and Downlinking Guidelines (2022)
- DTH Broadcasting Guidelines (2001)
- Headend-in-the-Sky (HITS) Guidelines (2009)
- FM Radio Phase III Policy Guidelines (2011)
- Community Radio Policy Guidelines (2024)
- Internet Protocol Television (IPTV) Guidelines (2008)
- This consolidation aims to establish a uniform regulatory structure for television and radio broadcasting under the Telecommunications Act, 2023.
- The rules would apply to services such as:
- Television channels
- FM radio broadcasters
- Community radio stations
- DTH operators
- IPTV providers
- HITS platforms
Public Service Broadcasting Obligations
- A major feature of the draft rules is the strengthening of public service broadcasting requirements.
- Under the proposal, television broadcasters would be required to telecast at least 30 minutes of content every day between 6 AM and 11 PM on subjects of national importance and social relevance.
- Similarly, private radio broadcasters would need to air at least one hour of such programming daily.
- The draft identifies themes, including:
- Education and literacy
- Agriculture and rural development
- Health and family welfare
- Women and child welfare
- Science and technology
- Environmental protection
- National integration and cultural heritage
- Welfare of the weaker sections
- Importantly, the draft changes the language from broadcasters “may” carry public service programming to “shall” carry such programming, making it mandatory rather than optional.
- Television channels meant exclusively for foreign audiences may receive exemptions, provided national security or sovereignty concerns are not affected.
Ease of Doing Business Reforms
- The draft rules also seek to reduce procedural complexity in the broadcasting sector. Key reforms include:
- Digital authorisation and approval mechanisms to simplify licensing.
- Removal of the requirement for executing the Grant of Permission Agreement (GOPA) in some cases.
- Streamlined dispute-resolution and adjudication processes.
- Greater regulatory clarity for broadcasters operating across multiple services.
- The government believes these measures will improve investor confidence and reduce compliance costs.
Concerns and the Way Forward
- While the draft rules aim to modernise broadcasting regulation, some concerns remain.
- Critics argue that mandatory public service obligations may increase operational burdens for private broadcasters.
- Questions have also been raised about maintaining editorial independence while complying with prescribed themes.
- At the same time, supporters contend that broadcasters, as public communication platforms, should contribute to awareness regarding education, health, social welfare, and national integration.
- The government has opened the draft for public consultation, and stakeholder feedback may shape the final framework.
Article
13 Jun 2026
Why in news?
PM Modi is on a visit to France — his seventh official visit since 2014 — combining a bilateral summit with President Emmanuel Macron and attendance at the G7 Leaders' Summit in Evian (June 16-17).
The visit follows Macron's visit to India in February 2026, when bilateral relations were elevated to a "Special Global Strategic Partnership" — the highest level of diplomatic engagement between the two countries.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- The Current Visit: Key Highlights
- Historical Foundations of the Partnership
- The Four Pillars of India-France Partnership
- Why France is India's Most Trusted Western Partner?
- Conclusion
The Current Visit: Key Highlights
- The central theme of the bilateral visit is technology and innovation, reflecting the deepening of the relationship beyond traditional defence ties.
- Modi and Macron will jointly inaugurate Bharat Innovates in Nice — an event bringing together over 120 Indian companies and startups alongside French and global business leaders, held as part of the India-France Year of Innovation.
- The bilateral summit in Nice will be the first formal summit since the elevation of ties to Special Global Strategic Partnership.
- Later, both leaders will attend VivaTech Summit in Paris — Europe's largest technology and startup event — where India will have its largest-ever pavilion at the summit.
- G7 Summit: India's Strategic Presence
- At the G7 in Evian, the West Asia conflict and its energy and security implications will dominate the agenda.
- Recent US attacks on ships in the Strait of Hormuz have killed Indian sailors, directly threatening India's energy security and the safety of its diaspora.
- India's presence at the G7 — with US President Trump also attending — gives New Delhi a crucial platform to raise these concerns.
- This will be India's 13th participation at the G7 and PM Modi's seventh consecutive appearance.
Historical Foundations of the Partnership
- France's Consistent Support Through Critical Moments
- The durability of India-France ties is best understood through moments of political courage, not just diplomatic routine.
- In 1976, when India faced global criticism over the Emergency, French Prime Minister Jacques Chirac agreed to be the Republic Day Chief Guest — a bold statement of solidarity.
- He returned 22 years later as President to launch the India-France Strategic Partnership — India's first strategic partnership with any Western nation, and France's first with a non-Western nation.
- Months after this partnership was launched, India conducted the Pokhran-II nuclear tests in May 1998.
- Western powers imposed sanctions. France did not. This single act cemented the trust that has defined the relationship ever since.
- Leadership-Level Trust: The Macron-Modi Dynamic
- The personal chemistry between leaders has been a force multiplier for the relationship.
- A notable example: in December 2023, after US President Biden declined India's Republic Day invitation at the last minute, India quietly reached out to the Élysée Palace.
- Macron accepted immediately, fully aware he was the second choice — a gesture that spoke volumes about the depth of trust. Modi reciprocated in 2025 by headlining France's AI Summit in Paris.
- France has also consistently championed India's participation in G-level forums.
- It was France that first invited India to the G8 in 2003 under President Chirac, when PM Vajpayee attended the Evian summit.
The Four Pillars of India-France Partnership
- Defence
- India-France defence cooperation is among the deepest India has with any Western country.
- It spans the full spectrum — air power, naval assets, missiles, and helicopter engines.
- Flagship examples include the Rafale fighter aircraft, Scorpene submarines, and Shakti helicopter engines.
- These are not just procurement deals — they involve technology transfer and joint production, reflecting India's Atmanirbhar Bharat defence vision.
- Space
- The ISRO-CNES (French national space agency) partnership spans six decades — one of India's oldest and most productive international space collaborations.
- Joint achievements include satellite development — Megha-Tropiques and SARAL — joint launches, and collaboration on India's human spaceflight mission Gaganyaan.
- The two countries are also developing a new joint satellite mission called TRISHNA.
- Nuclear Energy
- With the passage of India's SHANTI Act (Sustainable Harnessing and Advancement of Nuclear Energy for Transforming India), new doors have opened for Indo-French nuclear industry collaboration.
- In February 2025, both countries signed a Declaration of Intent on Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) and Advanced Modular Reactors (AMRs) — a cutting-edge area of next-generation nuclear technology that aligns with India's clean energy transition goals.
- Technology
- The tech partnership is the newest and fastest-growing pillar.
- This trust — built over decades — is now enabling deep collaboration in AI, digital infrastructure, and startups.
Why France is India's Most Trusted Western Partner?
- Several factors make France uniquely valuable for India among Western nations.
- France's tradition of strategic autonomy within the Western alliance aligns naturally with India's own non-alignment and multi-alignment foreign policy.
- France does not lecture India on domestic matters. It supported India during Pokhran-II when others imposed sanctions.
- It has never used bilateral ties as leverage for political pressure. And it has consistently championed India's voice in global forums — from the G8 to the G7 — recognising India's role as a leading voice of the Global South.
Conclusion
- In a world where geopolitical alignments shift with every election and every crisis, India-France ties stand out for their remarkable consistency and depth.
- Built not on compulsion or convenience but on genuine strategic trust, this partnership offers India exactly what it needs — a Western ally that neither lectures nor limits, but enables.
Article
13 Jun 2026
Why in news?
Growing youth unrest — manifesting in new political movements and citizen-led scrutiny of governance failures — has shifted public attention from GDP growth numbers to job creation.
This article uses CMIE (Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy) data to examine what actually happened to employment in India between 2016-17 and 2025-26.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Understanding the Data: Why Employment Rate Matters More Than Unemployment Rate
- Overall Employment Rate: The Headline Finding
- Employment Rate by Age Group
- Employment Rate by Education Level
- Employment Rate by Religion
- Employment Rate by Caste Group
- Why Is This Happening - Structural Explanations
- Conclusion
Understanding the Data: Why Employment Rate Matters More Than Unemployment Rate
- The Unemployment Rate (UER) is calculated as a share of the labour force — those actively seeking work.
- When discouraged workers stop looking for jobs, they exit the labour force, which can artificially reduce the UER even as actual joblessness worsens.
- India's Labour Force Participation Rate (LFPR) fluctuates significantly — unlike developed countries where it remains stable — making the UER a misleading indicator of labour market stress.
- Employment Rate (ER): A More Reliable Metric
- The Employment Rate measures the number of people with a job as a percentage of the total working-age population (15 years and above).
- It bypasses LFPR fluctuations entirely. A falling ER — even when the UER appears low — reveals the true depth of joblessness.
- This is the primary metric used in this analysis.
Overall Employment Rate: The Headline Finding
- India's overall ER fell from 42.7% in 2016-17 to 38.7% in 2025-26.
- In absolute terms, employment rose from 406 million to 438 million — an addition of 32 million jobs.
- However, this was insufficient because India's working-age population grew faster than job creation.
- The ER hit its lowest point around 2020-21 and 2021-22 (COVID impact) and has partially recovered since, but remains well below the 2016-17 baseline.
- Gender Dimension
- The ER decline has been severe across both genders.
- For men, it fell from 70.5% to 64.8%.
- For women, it fell from 11.8% to 9.4% — already very low, now even lower — indicating that women are increasingly being pushed out of the labour market altogether.
Employment Rate by Age Group
- The ER declined across almost all age groups between 2016-17 and 2025-26. The only two cohorts showing marginal improvement were the 25-29 years and 55-59 years groups.
- The most dramatic decline was in the 15-19 age group — from 9.81% to 3.22% — suggesting that young people are either in education, or simply unable to find work.
- The 20-24 age group also saw a steep fall — from 33.28% to 21.36% — making youth unemployment one of the most pressing structural concerns.
- Notably, falls across age groups were sharper than increments, explaining the overall decline.
Employment Rate by Education Level
- All education cohorts show a lower ER in 2025-26 than in 2016-17.
- However, the degree of decline varies:
- The cohort with only primary education saw the sharpest decline.
- Graduates saw the smallest decline — from approximately 51% in 2016-17 to 49% in 2025-26 — suggesting that higher education provides some insulation but is far from a guarantee of employment.
- The broader message is stark: education has not been able to protect workers from declining employment prospects.
Employment Rate by Religion
- All four major religious communities show a decline in ER over the decade.
- In 2025-26, ER stood at 39% for Hindus (down from 43%), 37% for Muslims (down from 40%), 37% for Sikhs (down from 42%), and 41% for Christians — the only group that held roughly steady.
- The near-uniform decline across religious groups confirms that the employment crisis is structural, not community-specific.
Employment Rate by Caste Group
- No caste group escaped the declining trend. In 2025-26, the ER stood at roughly 36% for Upper Castes, 38-39% for OBCs, 40% for Scheduled Castes, and 48% for Scheduled Tribes.
- While STs retain the highest ER (largely due to agricultural and forest-based livelihoods), their ER has also declined from 49.1% in 2016-17.
- The "Intermediate Castes" — Marathas, Jats, Gujjars — who aspire for OBC status partly driven by employment pressures — also show a declining trend.
- The employment crisis cuts across all caste lines.
Why Is This Happening - Structural Explanations
- GDP Growth is Necessary but Not Sufficient
- India has maintained reasonable GDP growth over the decade, yet employment has declined.
- This reflects a lopsided growth model — one that boosts aggregate output without generating proportionate jobs.
- Economists argue that Indian policies are designed more to boost GDP than to create employment.
- Slowbalisation and Trade Insularity
- Slowbalisation refers to the slowing down of globalisation — a trend where the pace of global economic integration (trade, investment, migration, supply chains) is decelerating or even reversing, after decades of rapid expansion.
- A less open global trading environment — Brexit, Trump's tariff policies, India's own withdrawal from RCEP, rising import tariffs, and the "Swadeshi" growth model — reduces export-led job opportunities.
- Countries with large young populations like India need open trade to generate the volume of jobs required.
- The AI Threat
- Artificial Intelligence poses a growing threat to India's labour market — particularly in services, IT, and routine white-collar work — potentially disrupting job creation in the very sectors where India has been competitive globally.
Conclusion
India's employment data tells a sobering story: more people, fewer jobs proportionally, across every gender, age, caste, religion, and education level. GDP growth without job-rich growth is not development — it is statistics masquerading as progress.
For a country with the world's largest youth population, converting the demographic dividend into dignified employment is not just an economic imperative — it is the defining governance challenge of our time.
Article
13 Jun 2026
Context:
- India has built an impressive digital welfare architecture — from DBT to UPI-linked entitlements — and prides itself on last-mile delivery.
- Yet Persons with Disabilities (PwDs) remain one of the most excluded groups from this welfare promise.
- Disability pensions in India are determined not by the nature or severity of disability, but by where a person lives — their state, their district, and the discretion of state governments.
- Against this backdrop, this article argues this is constitutionally untenable and proposes a Minimum Universal Disability Pension Floor Rate (MUDPFR) as the remedy.
The Scale of the Problem
- The 2011 Census recorded 2.68 crore PwDs in India. Accounting for population growth and changing disease profiles, the number is conservatively estimated today at 4.5 to 6 crore.
- Despite this, the welfare net for PwDs is deeply inadequate.
- The Indira Gandhi National Disability Pension Scheme covers only a small fraction of PwDs.
- Monthly pension amounts in most states range from a mere ₹300 to ₹500, with only a few states offering ₹1,000–₹3,000.
- India spends just 0.02% of GDP on disability welfare including pensions — a figure that stands in stark contrast to South Africa (0.12–0.15%), Brazil (0.45–0.50%), Australia (0.35–0.40%), and OECD countries (2.2%).
- India spends 110 times less than the OECD average on disability welfare.
Why This is Not Just a Welfare Issue — It is an Economic One
- The exclusion of PwDs carries a measurable economic cost.
- The World Bank and UNDP estimate that low- and middle-income countries lose 3–7% of GDP when PwDs are excluded from education, employment, and social security.
- Disability pensions improve household stability, rural consumption, and labour market participation.
- Studies show fiscal multipliers of 1.4–1.6 for disability spending — meaning every rupee spent generates more than a rupee in economic activity.
- A 2025 report found that the socio-economic returns from disability pensions exceed their costs by nearly 48%.
- Disability pensions are not a welfare expense — they are an economic investment.
The Constitutional and Legal Mandate
- The Supreme Court has recognised the right to live with dignity as a fundamental right.
- The Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016 (Section 24) guarantees adequate social security including pension benefits.
- Article 41 of the Constitution directs the state to provide public assistance to persons with disabilities within the limits of its economic capacity.
- The current system — fragmented, discretionary, and state-dependent — violates the spirit of all three.
- A MUDPFR would transform disability pensions from a matter of charity and political discretion to a matter of citizenship and constitutional right.
The Proposal: Minimum Universal Disability Pension Floor Rate (MUDPFR)
- Experts call for establishing a nationally mandated minimum pension floor that guarantees every PwD a minimum amount regardless of which state they live in.
- States would remain free to provide additional top-ups over this floor. This shifts the architecture from discretionary state welfare to rights-based entitlement.
- Fiscal Viability
- A MUDPFR of ₹8,000 per month for 40 lakh beneficiaries would cost approximately ₹38,400 crore annually — just 0.08% of GDP.
- Even at ₹15,000 per month, total expenditure would remain below 0.2% of GDP.
- To contextualise, India currently allocates ₹2.05 lakh crore for food subsidies, ₹1.80 lakh crore for rural development, and ₹1.72 lakh crore in tax concessions.
- Disability pensions receive only a tiny fraction of public expenditure by comparison.
- Global Precedents
- Several countries have already demonstrated that a national disability pension floor is both feasible and effective.
- South Africa's SASSA provides a uniform national disability grant; Brazil's BPC guarantees a national minimum income; Australia's NDIA operates a nationwide disability pension system.
- International experience consistently shows that centrally set standards deliver uniformity, universality, and portability.
From Fragmentation to Integration: The Need for a National Authority
- Currently, disability pension administration is split between the Ministry of Rural Development and the Department of Empowerment of Persons with Disabilities — leading to duplication, delays, and diffused accountability.
- There is need for a National Disability Pension Authority modelled on similar bodies abroad, to oversee eligibility norms, maintain a national registry, ensure portability, handle grievance redress, and monitor state-wise performance.
- It would work to promote the principle: one standard, one system, one nation.
Linking Pensions to Employment: Moving Beyond Survival
- A pension floor alone is not enough. Analysts call for integrating MUDPFR with employment support — moving PwDs from mere survival to productive participation.
- India's existing Disability Employment Incentive Scheme needs strengthening, drawing from global models such as employer tax incentives (Nigeria), the UK's Access to Work programme, and Australia's wage subsidies.
- Existing Indian schemes like PM-DAKSH and NAPS provide a foundation for expansion.
- Countries like Singapore, South Korea, and Brazil have shown that integrating disability pensions with employment systems delivers far better outcomes.
The Larger Vision: India's Global Commitments
- Implementing MUDPFR would also strengthen India's international standing.
- It would translate India's commitments under:
- Article 28 of the UN Convention on Rights of Persons with Disabilities,
- ILO Recommendation No. 202, SDG 1.3 (universal social protection), and
- G-20 New Delhi Leaders' Declaration into concrete action — reinforcing India's bid for a permanent UN Security Council seat.
Article
13 Jun 2026
Context
- As India moves towards the 8th Central Pay Commission (CPC), public attention has largely focused on salary revisions, fitment factors, and pension benefits.
- However, the more fundamental issue is whether the existing framework for public sector compensation remains equitable, transparent, and fiscally sustainable.
- Public compensation extends beyond employee welfare; it influences governance, institutional effectiveness, and public trust.
- Therefore, the 8th CPC presents an opportunity to address deeper structural concerns rather than merely revising pay scales.
Challenges in the Existing Compensation Framework
- Lack of a Common Evaluation Framework
- The current system lacks a uniform mechanism for assessing risk, responsibility, technical expertise, and career progression across different public services.
- While Pay Commissions play a significant role in determining compensation, decisions often rely on service-specific representations rather than objective benchmarks.
- This creates difficulties in ensuring fairness and consistency.
- Issues of Inter-Service Parity
- Maintaining inter-service parity remains a complex challenge.
- Different services operate under distinct career structures and working conditions, yet compensation is often aligned without clearly defined principles.
- Such an approach can create perceptions of inequity and weaken institutional coherence.
- Civil Services and Armed Forces: Structural Differences
- The comparison between the civil services and the armed forces illustrates the limitations of the current framework.
- Military careers involve a sharply pyramidal structure, limited promotion opportunities, operational risks, and early retirement.
- In contrast, civilian services generally provide longer careers and broader avenues for advancement.
- Compensation parity between these services requires transparent and objective criteria that account for these structural differences.
Concerns Related to Career Progression and Allowances
- Balancing Efficiency with Experience
- Efforts to accelerate promotions and reduce experience requirements for senior administrative positions aim to improve efficiency.
- However, effective governance depends not only on speed but also on institutional memory, accumulated expertise, and informed judgment.
- A balanced approach is necessary to ensure both dynamism and administrative competence.
- Rationalisation of Allowances
- Allowances are intended to compensate employees for hardship, remoteness, and operational risks.
- However, the absence of a transparent and standardised assessment framework often results in disparities across services.
- Establishing clear criteria would enhance fairness, consistency, and credibility.
- Debate Over Non-Functional Upgradation (NFU)
- Non-Functional Upgradation (NFU) allows financial advancement without a corresponding increase in responsibility.
- Although introduced to address limited promotional opportunities, it weakens the link between accountability, performance, and compensation.
- This raises important questions regarding equity and institutional rationale.
The Growing Pension Challenge
- Multiple Pension Systems
- India currently operates multiple pension arrangements, including defined-benefit pensions, contributory pension schemes, and separate provisions for elected representatives.
- The coexistence of different systems creates concerns regarding uniformity and fairness.
- Fiscal Sustainability and Inter-Generational Equity
- Rising expenditure on salaries, pensions, and interest payments places increasing pressure on government finances.
- This reduces the fiscal space available for developmental expenditure and social investment.
- Consequently, ensuring fiscal sustainability and inter-generational equity has become a major policy challenge.
- Fragmentation Across Government Institutions
- Compensation frameworks for the executive, legislature, and judiciary evolve through different mechanisms.
- While constitutional independence must be preserved, excessive fragmentation can create inconsistencies and reduce transparency.
- Greater coherence would improve public understanding and strengthen confidence in government institutions.
The Path Forward: Towards a New Compensation Architecture
- Learning from International Practices
- Many countries have shifted from periodic pay revisions to institutionalised review mechanisms supported by independent authorities and regular assessments.
- Such systems promote stability, predictability, and better fiscal planning.
- Establishing a National Compensation Authority
- A National Compensation Authority could provide a more coherent framework for evaluating responsibility, experience, hardship, and career progression across public services.
- Rather than centralizing decision-making, it would establish common principles to enhance consistency and transparency.
- Respecting India’s Federal Structure
- Any reform must uphold federalism by allowing States sufficient autonomy in implementation.
- At the same time, a common framework based on fiscal discipline, transparency, and accountability would promote comparability and strengthen institutional credibility.
Conclusion
- The debate surrounding the 8th CPC should extend beyond salary increases and pension benefits.
- Public compensation is closely linked to administrative efficiency, institutional coherence, fiscal responsibility, and democratic legitimacy.
- Addressing structural weaknesses in the existing framework can create a more transparent, equitable, and sustainable compensation system.
- The 8th CPC therefore offers a valuable opportunity to reform public sector remuneration in a manner that strengthens governance and enhances long-term public trust.
Current Affairs
June 12, 2026
About SOLAR-1:
- It is the first United States satellite designed exclusively for continuous operational space weather observation.
- It is operated by theS. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
- Originally named Space Weather Follow On – Lagrange 1 (SWFO-L1), the satellite was renamed to Space Weather Observations at L1 to Advance Readiness – 1 (SOLAR-1).
- Primary Mission: Continuous monitoring of solar activity and space weather.
- Launch Date: 24 September 2025
- Launch Vehicle: SpaceX Falcon 9
- Orbit:
- Positioned at the Sun-Earth Lagrange Point 1, about 1.6 million kilometres from Earth towards the Sun, SOLAR-1 enjoys a constant, unobstructed view of solar activity.
- From this vantage point, it continuously measures solar wind and tracks coronal mass ejections (CMEs) before they reach Earth.
- The location’s gravitational stability allows the spacecraft to maintain position with minimal fuel use.
- It uses a special telescope, called a compact coronagraph, to monitor the sun's activity in addition to a suite of instruments to make real-time measurements of the solar wind.
- It can transmit CME images to NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center within 30 minutes, compared to up to eight hours for older systems.
- Its enhanced capabilities are expected to improve aurora forecasts and strengthen the protection of power grids, navigation, communications, and space missions from severe space weather.
Current Affairs
June 12, 2026
About Vitamin C:
- Vitamin C (also known as L-ascorbic acid or ascorbate) is a water-soluble vitamin.
- Function:
- It is a powerful antioxidant that can neutralize harmful free radicals.
- It is needed for the growth and repair of tissues in all parts of your body.
- It helps make several hormones and chemical messengers used in the brain and nerves.
- It is used to:
- Form an important protein called collagen, used to make skin, tendons, ligaments, and blood vessels.
- Heal wounds and form scar tissue.
- Repair and maintain cartilage, bones, and teeth.
- Aid in the absorption of iron.
- Sources:
- Unlike most mammals and other animals, humans do not have the ability to synthesize vitamin C and must obtain it from the diet.
- Vitamin C comes from fruits and vegetables.
- Good sources include berries, cantaloupe, tomatoes, peppers, potatoes, cabbage, Brussels sprouts, broccoli, spinach, and citrus fruits, such as oranges.
- Some juices and cereals have added vitamin C.
- Vitamin C is sensitive to heat, so some of its nutritional benefits can be lost during cooking. Raw foods are more beneficial as dietary sources.
- Vitamin C Deficiency:
- Vitamin C is not stored in body, so deficiency can happen quickly.
- Vitamin C deficiency is more likely in people who:
- Smoke or are around secondhand smoke.
- Have certain conditions of the digestive tract or certain types of cancer.
- Have a diet that doesn't include enough fruits and vegetables.
- Not having enough vitamin C can lead to a condition called scurvy.
- Scurvy causes anemia, bleeding gums, bruising, and poor wound healing.