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SMART CA Scholarship Test Result (19.04.2026)

SMART CA Scholarship Test Result (19.04.2026)

Article
02 May 2026

Rupee Under Pressure: Echoes of the ‘Fragile Five’ Era

Why in news?

The Indian rupee has depreciated sharply, touching an all-time low of ₹95.33 against the US dollar on April 30, 2026, meaning it now takes over ₹95 to buy one dollar.

This marks a steep decline compared to the beginning of 2026, when the exchange rate was around ₹90 per dollar, and less than ₹85 a year ago.

Overall, the rupee has fallen by about 12% in just 12 months, significantly higher than its typical annual depreciation of 3–4%.

The magnitude of this fall is reminiscent of the 2013 currency crisis, when the rupee similarly weakened by around 12% within a short span, indicating heightened pressure on the currency in recent times.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • ‘Fragile Five’ Economies and Currency Depreciation
  • Rupee in 2026: Revisiting the ‘Fragile Five’ Comparison
  • Rupee Depreciation: Comparing 2026 with the 2013 Crisis

‘Fragile Five’ Economies and Currency Depreciation

  • In 2013, a leading global financial services firm Morgan Stanley identified five emerging market economies—India, Indonesia, Brazil, South Africa, and Turkey—as the “Fragile Five” due to their vulnerable currencies.
  • During this period, their currencies saw sharp declines against the US dollar, including the Indian rupee, Indonesian rupiah, Brazilian real, South African rand, and Turkish lira.
  • Role of US Monetary Policy
    • The primary trigger behind this depreciation was the rollback of Quantitative Easing (QE) by the Federal Reserve.
    • Under QE, low interest rates in the US encouraged investors to borrow cheaply in dollars and invest in higher-yielding emerging markets.
    • However, when the US signalled tightening of monetary policy, capital flows reversed as investors shifted funds back to safer US assets like government bonds.
  • Underlying Structural Weakness
    • These economies were particularly affected because they ran current account deficits—importing more than they exported—and relied heavily on foreign capital inflows to finance this gap.
    • When global investment flows reversed, the demand for their currencies fell sharply relative to the US dollar, leading to significant depreciation.

Rupee in 2026: Revisiting the ‘Fragile Five’ Comparison

  • While India has projected itself as a leading global economy, even reaching the top five in GDP rankings in recent years, recent trends show renewed pressure on the rupee.
  • Over the past 12 months, the Indian currency has depreciated by about 12.1% against the US dollar, making it the second-worst performer among the original “Fragile Five” economies.
  • Comparative Performance of Other Economies
    • Unlike 2013, the current scenario shows divergence among these economies.
    • Brazil and South Africa have witnessed currency appreciation—around 12% and 10% respectively—indicating stronger external positions or capital flows.
    • Indonesia has experienced only a modest depreciation of about 4%, suggesting relative stability.
    • Turkey remains the worst performer, with its currency—the lira—falling by 17% in the past year.
      • More significantly, the lira has undergone a prolonged crisis, losing over 1000% of its value since 2018, highlighting deep structural economic issues.

Rupee Depreciation: Comparing 2026 with the 2013 Crisis

  • The rupee’s fall in 2026 closely mirrors the decline seen during the 2013 crisis in terms of scale.
  • It depreciated by about 9.6% in FY 2025–26, almost identical to the 9.5% fall recorded in FY 2013–14.
  • However, a key difference lies in the trend: the 2013 decline came after consecutive sharp falls in the preceding two years (around 13% in FY12 and 6% in FY13), whereas the recent depreciation followed a period of relatively moderate currency movement.
  • Underlying External Sector Pressures
    • The drivers of the current depreciation resemble those of 2013, particularly in terms of balance of payments stress.
    • Both periods witnessed a widening current account deficit, indicating higher outflows on imports of goods and services.
    • At the same time, the capital account also weakened, with reduced or negative inflows, reflecting capital outflows from the economy.
    • The simultaneous occurrence of deficits in both current and capital accounts created significant pressure on the rupee in both periods.
    • This meant that not only was India spending more foreign exchange on imports, but it was also losing capital to global markets, intensifying the currency’s decline.
  • Role of Forex Reserves
    • In such situations, the only buffer available is the drawdown of foreign exchange reserves.
    • As in 2013, India has had to rely on its reserves to manage the imbalance between inflows and outflows, highlighting the structural similarity between the two episodes despite differences in preceding trends.
Economics

Article
02 May 2026

Hike in Commercial LPG Prices and Its Impact

Why in news?

The govt announced a sharp ₹933 jump in commercial LPG cylinder prices (19-kg cylinder), taking the price in Delhi to ₹3,071.50.

While domestic LPG, petrol, and diesel prices remain unchanged, the hike has sent shockwaves through India's vast ecosystem of small food businesses — restaurants, roadside eateries, caterers, bakeries, and cloud kitchens.

The hike is directly linked to the disruption of global energy supply chains caused by the US-Iran war and the blockade of Iranian ports.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • What is Commercial LPG and Why Does it Matter?
  • The Timing Makes It Worse
  • The Chain Reaction — How One Price Hike Spreads
  • Government's Approach — Shielding Households, Exposing Businesses
  • The PNG Alternative — Opportunity and Constraint
  • The Deeper Structural Concern

What is Commercial LPG and Why Does it Matter?

  • Domestic LPG (14-kg cylinder) is used by households for cooking — it is subsidised and politically sensitive.
  • Commercial LPG (19-kg cylinder) is used by businesses — restaurants, hotels, caterers, cloud kitchens, bakeries, and canteens. For millions of small food businesses, cooking gas is not just an input cost — it is the business itself.
  • A spike in commercial LPG prices therefore hits the informal economy far more severely than headline inflation data suggests.

The Timing Makes It Worse

  • The price hike arrives at a particularly vulnerable moment. India's smaller enterprises were already struggling with:
    • Weak consumer demand
    • Elevated raw material costs
    • Thinning profit margins due to global supply disruptions from the US-Iran war
  • Adding a sharp fuel cost increase on top of these existing pressures risks triggering a chain reaction across the economy.

The Chain Reaction — How One Price Hike Spreads?

  • The economic impact of this hike is not confined to restaurants alone. It sets off a cascade of consequences across multiple layers of the economy.
  • For businesses — Restaurants and eateries face higher operating costs. Those with wafer-thin margins and dependence on daily cash flows — particularly small operators, roadside stalls, and cloud kitchens — have little financial cushion to absorb the shock. Several operators are already scaling down or shutting temporarily.
  • For workers —If restaurants and eateries are unable to do business, the first ones to get hit will be people down below. Informal workers — paid daily or weekly — face reduced shifts and lower earnings.
  • For consumers — Businesses will either reduce portion sizes or quietly increase prices, passing costs on to consumers. This fans food inflation — which economists note is a tax that hurts the poor the most.
  • For the broader economy — Small suppliers that depend on restaurants — vegetable traders, dairy vendors, transporters, packaging units, and local wholesalers — begin seeing weaker orders. SMEs linked to hospitality and food services face slower cash flows. This weakens local demand cycles that support small businesses across urban and semi-urban India.

Government's Approach — Shielding Households, Exposing Businesses

  • The government's decision to keep domestic LPG prices unchanged has helped avoid immediate public anger and household inflation.
  • However, experts highlights that the economic pain is simply arriving through a side entrance — through commercial kitchens, small enterprises, and the informal sector.
  • They noted that a supply shock is apparent in the economy and warned that accompanying demand compression is a serious concern given high prices, rising inflation, and a reduced pace of economic activity.

The PNG Alternative — Opportunity and Constraint

  • The commercial LPG price shock could accelerate the transition from cylinders to Piped Natural Gas (PNG) — a shift that policymakers and city gas distributors have been pushing since the war broke out.
  • Advantages of PNG over Commercial LPG
    • Continuous 24/7 supply through pipelines — no repeated refills or storage logistics needed.
    • No risk of sudden shortages during periods of disruption.
    • Safer — PNG is lighter than air and disperses quickly in the event of a leak, unlike LPG which can accumulate in enclosed spaces.
    • Operationally smoother and potentially less price-volatile.
  • Limitations of PNG Transition
    • PNG connectivity remains patchy outside major urban clusters.
    • For thousands of small eateries, roadside establishments, and informal businesses, shifting infrastructure and obtaining approvals is itself an added financial burden at a time when operating costs are already surging.

The Deeper Structural Concern

  • Analysts highlight a troubling structural pattern in India's economy — formal sectors and large corporations continue to expand, while smaller businesses struggle with profitability and weak consumption demand.
    • Large restaurant chains can weather the storm through scale and pricing power. Small operators cannot.
  • India's growth model still relies heavily on millions of low- and middle-income consumers spending small amounts frequently.
  • Any sustained rise in everyday food and service costs chips away at discretionary spending — weakening local demand cycles across urban and semi-urban India.
  • One cylinder price hike may not look dramatic in macroeconomic data. On the ground, however, it can quietly become a shock that spreads everywhere.
Economics

Article
02 May 2026

India’s Water–Energy–Food Nexus - Silent Crisis Beneath Growth Aspirations

Why in News?

  • The World Bank (WB) report “Nourish and Flourish” highlights a global misalignment between food systems and hydrological realities.
  • Simultaneously, the International Energy Agency (IEA) report “Sheltering from Oil Shocks” (2026) warns of energy disruptions cascading into food and water crises.
  • For India, striving for high economic growth and food security for 1.4 billion nexus presents an immediate structural challenge.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • The Core Problem
  • Worsening Energy–Water–Food Interlinkages
  • Key Challenges
  • Way Forward - Integrated Nexus Approach
  • Conclusion

The Core Problem:

  • Mismanagement, not absolute scarcity:
    • Agricultural water systems can sustainably support only about 1/3rd of the global population by 2050 if inefficiencies persists.
    • India exemplifies the paradox -
      • A water-stressed food exporter
      • Produces water-intensive crops (rice, sugarcane) in depleted regions
    • This leads to export of “virtual water”, worsening domestic water stress.
  • Regional hotspots of groundwater crisis - Punjab–Haryana model:
    • Groundwater depletion exceeding 1 metre/year, driven by free or subsidised or solar electricity for irrigation, which leads to near-zero marginal cost energy, resulting in over-extraction.
    • This drives nexus failure, for example, energy policy (free power) distorting water usage and agricultural incentives (MSP, procurement) reinforcing unsustainable cropping patterns.

Worsening Energy–Water–Food Interlinkages:

  • Energy shocks and agriculture:
    • Food security is deeply dependent on energy stability.
    • For example, mod­ern eco­nom­ies like India remain deeply vul­ner­able to energy dis­rup­tions, because it imports nearly 85–90% of its crude oil.
    • Oil shocks increase diesel prices, and irrigation and transport costs. Power shortages disrupt agricultural operations.
    • IEA’s insight: Demand-side measures (remote work, reduced transport) indirectly stabilize energy systems, and reduce inflationary pressures on food systems.
  • Fiscal and policy distortions:
    • India spends ₹1.5 lakh crore annually on electricity subsidies for agriculture. Yet, a significant share of this expenditure perpetuates inefficiency.
    • Globally, out of approximately ₹55 lakh crore spent on agri­cul­ture in 2023, only about ₹2.2 lakh crore was dir­ec­ted toward irrigation infrastructure.
    • Also, rising oil prices during global shocks place additional pressure on India’s import bill, fiscal deficit, and infla­tion.
    • The linkage is clear: inefficient water use amplifies energy vulnerability and energy shocks exacerbate food insecurity.
  • Climate change as a risk multiplier:
    • Erratic monsoons, droughts, and extreme rainfall disrupt agricultural cycles.
    • Combined with oil shock—triggering higher fuel costs and supply disruptions—can compound existing vulnerabilities.

Key Challenges:

  • Structural: Fragmented governance (water, energy, agriculture in silos), and distorted price signals (free electricity).
  • Economic: High subsidy burden, rising import bill and inflation during oil shocks.
  • Environmental: Groundwater depletion and unsustainable cropping patterns.
  • Technological and institutional: Lack of water accounting systems, and weak integration of renewable energy with regulation.

Way Forward - Integrated Nexus Approach:

  • Crop diversification:
    • Shifting away from water-intensive crops in stressed regions is simultaneously a water strategy, an energy-saving measure, and a hedge against fuel price shocks.
    • It must move from pilot schemes to mainstream agricultural policy.
  • Energy-water pricing reform:
    • Transitioning from blanket electricity subsidies to targeted Direct Benefit Transfers (DBT) combined with smart metering would restore rational economic signals while protecting small farmers.
    • This aligns with both WB efficiency principles and IEA demand-side management logic.
  • Precision irrigation and solar-powered systems: Promote drip or sprinkler systems, scale up schemes like PM-KUSUM. Add smart controls, and water-use regulation to prevent overuse.
  • Urban energy demand management:
    • Promoting public transport, remote work, and efficient logistics.
    • This will reduce oil dependence, stabilise energy systems, and indirectly ease inflationary pressure on food supply chains — connecting urban policy to rural resilience.
  • Nexus-based institutional framework: A dedicated institutional architecture integrating the Ministries of Agriculture, Jal Shakti, and Power — with unified data systems and joint planning processes — is the structural prerequisite for everything else.

Conclusion:

  • India’s challenge is not merely about water scarcity or energy dependence, but about managing their deep interdependence.
  • Therefore, a nexus-based approach is essential to ensure sustainable agriculture, energy security, and long-term economic resilience.
  • Without transitioning from sectoral policymaking to systems approach (aligning incentives, reforming subsidies, and leveraging technology), India cannot build a robust and future-ready development model.
Social Issues

Article
02 May 2026

RBI’s Expected Credit Loss Norms for Bank Provisioning

Why in the News?

  • The Reserve Bank of India’s new Expected Credit Loss framework may cause a one-time capital impact of up to 120 basis points on banks’ Common Equity Tier-1 ratios, according to CRISIL Ratings.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • About ECL Framework (Basics, Need for ECL Norms, 3-Stage Asset Classification, Impact on Banks, Significance, etc.)

Expected Credit Loss Framework

  • The Expected Credit Loss (ECL) framework is a method used by banks to estimate possible future losses from loans and other credit exposures.
  • It requires banks to make provisions not only after a loan turns bad, but also on the basis of expected future credit risk.
  • At present, Indian banks broadly follow the incurred loss model, where provisions are made after signs of stress appear or when a loan becomes a non-performing asset (NPA).
  • Under the ECL framework, banks will follow a more forward-looking approach. This means they will assess the probability of default, possible loss if default occurs, and exposure at the time of default.
  • The RBI’s new norms will come into effect from April 1, 2027. They are broadly aligned with global accounting practices such as IFRS 9, which was adopted internationally after the global financial crisis to make banking systems more resilient.

Need for ECL Norms

  • The ECL framework is important because the traditional incurred-loss model often recognises loan stress too late.
  • Banks may continue to show healthy books until a loan actually defaults, even when early warning signs are visible.
  • A forward-looking model helps banks prepare for future risks in advance. It also improves transparency, strengthens risk management, and reduces the chance of sudden shocks to bank balance sheets.

Three-Stage Asset Classification

  • Under the new framework, loans will be classified into three stages based on the level of credit risk.
    • Stage I includes loans with low or no significant increase in credit risk. For these assets, banks will recognise provisions based on 12-month expected credit loss.
    • Stage II includes loans where credit risk has increased significantly, although they have not yet become NPAs. For these loans, banks will have to make provisions based on lifetime expected credit loss.
    • Stage III includes credit-impaired assets or NPAs. These are high-risk loans where banks will also have to recognise lifetime expected credit loss.
  • This classification marks a major shift because banks will now have to provide more for stressed loans that have not yet crossed the traditional 90-day overdue threshold for NPAs.

Impact on Banks

  • According to CRISIL Ratings, the transition to ECL could have a gross impact of up to 170 basis points on the Common Equity Tier-1 (CET-1) ratio of most banks. After factoring in provisions already made, the net impact may be up to 120 basis points.
    • CET-1 is the highest quality capital of a bank and acts as a cushion during financial stress. A fall in this ratio means that banks may have less capital available for lending or absorbing losses.
  • However, the impact is expected to remain manageable because Indian banks are currently well capitalised.
  • Their CET-1 ratio stood at around 14% as of March 31, 2026, supported by steady profitability and improved asset quality.
  • Banks will also be allowed to spread the transition impact over four financial years, which will reduce the immediate pressure on capital. Additional provisioning buffers already maintained by some banks may further cushion the effect.

Higher Provisioning and Credit Costs

  • The most significant impact is expected from Stage II assets, where provisioning requirements will rise sharply compared to the current system.
  • However, CRISIL has noted that Stage II assets form only about 2-2.2% of the banking system, which will help contain the overall burden.
  • The new framework will also cover off-balance-sheet exposures and undisbursed credit limits, increasing the provisioning requirement.
  • This means banks must consider risks not only from loans already disbursed but also from committed credit lines.
  • Experts believe that the ECL regime may lead to a structural rise in credit costs. Banks with higher exposure to microfinance, unsecured retail loans, and other riskier segments may face a greater impact.
  • Some of these costs may be passed on to borrowers through higher interest rates or charges.

New NPA Classification Rules

  • The new norms also strengthen NPA classification. The duration for classifying a loan as an NPA will continue to be 90 days overdue. However, classification will be at the borrower level, not merely the account level.
  • This means that if one loan of a borrower turns bad, all loans of that borrower from the same bank may be treated as NPAs. Once classified as an NPA, the borrower will have to clear all liabilities before being upgraded back to standard asset status.
  • This provision is expected to improve credit discipline among borrowers and prevent selective repayment of loans.

Significance for Financial Stability

  • The RBI’s ECL norms come at a time when Indian banks are enjoying one of their best asset-quality phases, with net NPA ratios below 1% for most major banks. This makes the transition less disruptive.
  • The new norms will help banks detect stress earlier, build buffers in advance, and improve accountability in credit risk assessment. They will also make banking supervision more robust by reducing under-reporting of potential risks.
Economics

Article
02 May 2026

Abu Dhabi’s OPEC Exit Begins Its Ascent of ‘Peak Oil’

Context

  • The decision of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to withdraw from the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) marks a significant development in global energy politics.
  • Although the UAE had previously expressed dissatisfaction with the organisation, the suddenness and timing of its announcement surprised observers.
  • Occurring amid geopolitical tensions and disruptions in oil supply routes, the move reflects deeper economic ambitions, strategic calculations, and regional rivalries.

Background and Immediate Context

  • The UAE’s withdrawal was notable for its abruptness, with only a few days’ notice given before its implementation.
  • This timing coincided with heightened tensions in the Gulf region, including disruptions in oil exports through critical routes such as the Strait of Hormuz.
  • Despite issuing a formal statement emphasising stability and responsible market behaviour, the UAE’s explanation remained vague, prompting analysts to examine deeper structural and geopolitical motivations.

Economic Motivations

  • Oil Reserves and Production Constraints
    • The UAE possesses one of the largest oil reserves globally, estimated at over 100 billion barrels, primarily located in Abu Dhabi.
    • The country has invested heavily in expanding its production capacity to around five million barrels per day.
    • However, OPEC’s quota system limited its production to approximately 3.45 million barrels per day.
    • This gap between capacity and permitted output created dissatisfaction, as it restricted the UAE’s ability to fully utilize its resources.
  • Frustration with OPEC Dynamics
    • OPEC’s policies are widely perceived to be influenced by Saudi Arabia, which acts as a swing producer by adjusting output to stabilise global prices.
    • While this approach benefits the collective stability of the cartel, it often conflicts with the individual economic interests of member states like the UAE.
    • The restrictions imposed by OPEC hinder the UAE’s broader economic strategy, which depends on increased oil revenues to finance its transition toward a diversified, technology-driven economy.

Strategic and Long-Term Considerations

  • The Peak Oil Perspective
    • A key factor in the UAE’s decision is its anticipation of a future decline in global oil demand, often referred to as Peak Oil.
    • Policymakers believe that demand for crude oil will eventually decrease due to the rise of renewable energy and alternative fuels.
    • Consequently, the UAE aims to maximise its oil production and revenue in the short term before global demand diminishes.
  • Impact of Global Conflicts
    • Ongoing geopolitical tensions, particularly involving Iran, have contributed to fluctuations in oil prices.
    • While conflicts tend to drive prices higher, they also risk accelerating the global shift away from fossil fuels.
    • By exiting OPEC, the UAE gains the flexibility to respond independently to market conditions and capitalize on high prices without being bound by production limits.

Geopolitical Factors

  • Regional Rivalries
    • The UAE’s exit from OPEC must also be understood within the context of Gulf geopolitics. Rivalries with Saudi Arabia and tensions with Iran have intensified in recent years.
    • By leaving an organization perceived to be dominated by Saudi interests, the UAE signals its desire for greater strategic autonomy.
  • Assertion of Foreign Policy Independence
    • The decision also reflects the UAE’s broader ambition to pursue an independent and nationalistic foreign policy.
    • Within the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), the UAE seeks to assert its influence and distinguish its strategic priorities.
    • Its exit from OPEC can thus be interpreted as a demonstration of political and economic self-determination.

Global Implications

  • Impact on OPEC
    • As one of OPEC’s largest producers, the UAE’s departure weakens the organisation’s cohesion and influence.
    • Although OPEC is unlikely to collapse, its ability to control global oil supply may diminish, especially with the growing role of non-OPEC producers such as the United States, Canada, Brazil, and Norway.
  • Shifting Market Dynamics
    • The UAE’s exit may lead to increased competition among oil exporters, particularly in key markets such as Asia.
    • Greater competition could result in more flexible pricing and reduced dominance of traditional oil cartels, thereby reshaping global energy dynamics.

Implications for India

  • Opportunities for Energy Security
    • For India, the UAE’s decision offers potential benefits. As one of the world’s largest and fastest-growing importers of crude oil, India may gain from increased supply and competitive pricing.
  • Strengthening Bilateral Relations
    • India shares strong economic and strategic ties with the UAE.
    • The shift in the UAE’s oil policy provides an opportunity for deeper collaboration, particularly through joint investments in downstream energy projects.
    • Such initiatives could enhance India’s energy security while strengthening long-term bilateral relations.

Conclusion

  • Driven by economic ambitions, strategic foresight, and geopolitical considerations, the decision reflects a broader shift toward national interest-driven policies.
  • While its immediate impact on global markets may be limited, the move signals a gradual transformation in the structure and influence of OPEC.
  • For countries like India and other global stakeholders, the development presents both opportunities and challenges in navigating an evolving energy landscape.
Editorial Analysis

Online Test
02 May 2026

Paid Test

CAMP-CSAT-88

Questions : 40 Questions

Time Limit : 60 Mins

Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.

This Test is part of a Test Series
Test Series : Prelims CAMP 2026 - Online Batch 7
Price : ₹ 8000.0 ₹ 7500.0
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Online Test
02 May 2026

Paid Test

Full Length Test - 5 (R7724)

Questions : 100 Questions

Time Limit : 0 Mins

Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, midnight

This Test is part of a Test Series
Test Series : Online - PowerUp Prelims Test Series 2026 Batch 9
Price : ₹ 8000.0 ₹ 7500.0
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Online Test
02 May 2026

Paid Test

Full Length Test -5 (R7724)

Questions : 100 Questions

Time Limit : 0 Mins

Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, midnight

This Test is part of a Test Series
Test Series : Offline - PowerUp Prelims Test Series 2026 Batch 9
Price : ₹ 9000.0 ₹ 8500.0
See Details
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