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RMS - Social Justice - Part III
RMS - Social Justice - Part II
RMS - Social Justice - Part I
RMS - International Relations
RMS - Governance - Part II
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Mentorship Program Introductory Session
RMS - Indian Physiography - Archipelagos of India
RMS - Indian Physiography - Coastal Plains of India
RMS - Art & Culture - Bhakti Movement
RMS - Polity - Elections & Political Parties
RMS - Indian Physiography - The Great Indian Desert
Step-Up RMS - Economic Survey and Budget : Part - 2
Step-Up RMS - Resources - Forests, Soils, Minerals etc : Part - 2
Step-Up RMS - Environment and Biodiversity Current Affairs : Part - 2
Step-Up RMS - History : 1935 - Independence
Step-Up RMS - Science and Technology Current affairs - Part - 2
Step-Up RMS - History : 1921 - 1935
RMS - A&C - Current Affairs
RMS - Indian Physiography - Peninsular Plateau
RMS - Polity - Services under the Union and the States & Pressure Groups
RMS - Economy - Balance of Payments
RMS - Economy - Trade & Important Government Schemes
RMS - Modern History - 1830 AD to 1857 AD
RMS - Economy - Fiscal Policy & Budgeting
RMS - Economy - Inflation
RMS - Polity - Local-Self Government & Co-Operative Societies
Step-Up RMS - Environment and Biodiversity Current Affairs : Part - 1
Step-Up RMS - Science and Technology Current affairs - Part - 1
Step-Up RMS -History : 1906 - 1920
Step-Up RMS - History 1857-1905
Step-Up RMS - Geomorphology - Types and Distribution
Step-Up RMS - Evolution + Interior of earth + oceanography
Step-Up RMS - History - Constitutional reforms
Step-Up RMS - Medieval History - kingdom chronology + terminology (Part - 2)
RMS - Indian Physiography - The Great North Indian Plain
RMS - Indian Physiography - Intro & The Himalayas
Step-Up RMS - Indian geography - location , landforms
Step-Up RMS - Drainage system + Rivers (India and world)
RMS - Art & Culture - South India
RMS - Economy - Taxation
RMS - Economy - Money and Banking - Part II
RMS - Polity - Union Legislature - Part III
Step-Up RMS – Indian Culture: Architecture + Literature (Part-2)
Step-Up RMS - Human geography
Step-Up RMS - Delhi sultanate + mughal administration
Step-Up RMS - Resources - Forests, Soils, Minerals etc
Step-Up RMS - Climatology + Indian monsoon
Step-Up RMS - Medieval History - kingdom chronology + terminology
Step-Up RMS - Indian school of philosophy -Buddhism & Jainism
Step-Up RMS - Indian Culture : Architecture + literature
Step-Up RMS - Ancient history - chronology + terminology
Step-Up RMS - Economic Survey and Budget
Step-Up RMS - Polity - Miscl-Imp Judgements , Amendments, Miscl concepts etc
Step-Up RMS - Agriculture and related concepts
Step-Up RMS - Polity - Constitutional and Non-Constitutional Bodies
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Step-Up RMS - Polity - Judiciary- SC/HC/Lower courts
Step-Up RMS - Economics - Fiscal policy and Financial Markets
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Step-Up RMS - Polity - Union and State Executives
Step-Up RMS - Economics - Basic Economics and Terminology
Step-Up RMS - Polity - State, Citizenship, FR/FD and Emergency Provisions
RMS - Polity - Judiciary - Part II
RMS - Geography - Biomes and Natural Resources
RMS - Economy - Money and Banking - Part I
RMS - Geography - Oceanography
RMS - Medieval History - 646 AD to 1192 AD
RMS - Art & Culture - Post Mauryan Period
RMS - Polity - Union Legislature - Part II
RMS - Economy - Financial Markets
RMS - Polity - Judiciary Part I
RMS - Polity - Separation of Powers & Federal System
RMS - Geography - Atmospheric Circulation
RMS - Polity - Union Legislature - Part I
RMS - Geography - Air Mass, Fronts & Cyclones
RMS - A&C - Pre-Historic to Mauryan Period
RMS - Economy - Fundamentals of Economy & NIA
RMS - Polity - Emergency Provisions
RMS - Geography - Humidity, Clouds & Precipitation
RMS - Economy - Demography, Poverty & Employment
RMS - Modern History - 1813 AD to 1857 AD
RMS - Polity - Union & State Executive
RMS - Modern History - 1932 AD to 1947 AD
RMS - Geography - Basics of Atmosphere
RMS - Polity - Fundamental Rights - Part III
RMS - Economy - Planning and Mobilisation of Resources
RMS - Modern History - 1919 AD to 1932 AD
RMS - Modern History - 1757 AD to 1813 AD
RMS - Economy - Financial Organisations
RMS - Geography - Major Landforms
RMS - Polity - Constitutional and Statutory Bodies
RMS - Geography - EQ, Faulting and Fracture
RMS - Polity - Fundamental Rights - Part II
RMS - Economy - Industry, Infrastructure & Investment Models
RMS - Polity - DPSP & FD
RMS - Economy - Indian Agriculture - Part II
RMS - Geography - Rocks & Volcanoes and its landforms
RMS - Geography - Evolution of Oceans & Continents
RMS - Polity - Fundamental Rights - Part I
RMS - Modern History - 1498 AD to 1757 AD
RMS - Modern History - 1858 AD to 1919 AD
RMS - Geography - Interior of the Earth & Geomorphic Processes
RMS - Geography - Universe and Earth and Basic concepts on Earth
RMS - Economy - Indian Agriculture - Part I
RMS - Economy - Fundamentals of the Indian Economy
RMS - Polity - Union & its territories and Citizenship
RMS - Polity - Constitution & its Salient Features and Preamble
Learning Support Session - ANSWER writing MASTER Session
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Social Issues Doubts and Mentoring Session
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Geography & Environment Doubts and Mentoring Session
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How to Read Newspaper and Make Notes?
Mains Support Programme 2025-(2)
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RMS - Geography - World Mapping
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General Mentoring Session (GMS )
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हिंदी माध्यम से IAS: भ्रम, बाधाएँ और 2027 के लिए सटीक रणनीति
Start Time : June 12, 2026, 5 p.m.
Teacher : Vajiram And Ravi
Subject : General Studies
UPSC 2027- ANSWER WRITING SKILLS LECTURE 5
Start Time : June 13, 2026, 5:30 p.m.
Teacher : Vajiram And Ravi
Subject : General Studies
Anthropology - Your Best Choice for Optional
Start Time : June 14, 2026, 5:30 p.m.
Teacher : Kartic Godavarthy
Subject : Optional Subject
Current Affairs
June 12, 2026
About Jordan:
- Location: It is a landlocked country located in the rocky desert of the northern Arabian Peninsula.
- Bordering Countries: It is bordered by 5 Nations: Syria in the north, Iraq in the east, Saudi Arabia in the south and southeast and Israel and West Bank in the west.
- Water bodies: Dead Sea, the Gulf of Aqaba and the Sea of Galilee.
- The Dead Sea is located along the western borders of the country.
- Capital City: Amman
- Geographical Features of Jordan:
- Terrain: It has arid desert plateau; a great north-south geological rift along the west of the country is the dominant topographical feature.
- Highest Point: Jabal Umm ad Dami is the highest point of Jordan.
- Rivers: The Jordan River which drains into the Dead Sea.
- Ports: Al-Aqabah, the only port of Jordan is located in the south-western part of the country along the coasts of the Gulf of Aqaba.
- Natural Resources: It mainly consists of phosphates, potash and shale oil.
Current Affairs
June 12, 2026
About Network Survey Vehicle:
- It is a specialized infrastructure management tool comprising vehicles equipped with advanced sensors and data acquisition systems.
- These vehicles systematically collect data on road inventory and condition of National Highways.
- Key Features:
- It is equipped with laser profilers, GPS and cutting-edge imaging technology.
- It is equipped with advanced 3D laser-based systems across all states and its network.
- With advanced technology, NSV surveys up to 300 km daily.
- It is usually a specialised van or SUV equipped with multiple sensors and instruments.
- It consists of Laser, Global Positioning System (GPS), Video image processing tools, High-resolution cameras, Inertial Measurement Units (IMU), and DMI (Distance Measuring Indicator).
- Working of Network Survey Vehicle:
- The survey will capture 13 types of defects, including crack measurement, ravelling, patch area, potholes, edge break, roughness, rutting, lane marking, etc.
- It will also cover details like carriageway type, road type, pavement and shoulder width, topography, median details, right of way, utilities, land use, etc.
- The data will be collected for all projects involving 2/4/6 and 8 lanes with NSV before the start of work and thereafter at regular intervals of six months.
- Data collected through NSV survey will be uploaded on NHAI’s ‘AI’ based portal Data Lake, where it will be analysed to transform data into knowledge and subsequent actionable insights.
- Raw survey data is encrypted and transmitted to the centralised NSV centre within 48 hours.
- Expert teams, strategically deployed across five zones, monitor and report findings systematically.
- Within 10 days, raw data is transformed into actionable insights — a process that earlier stretched to 4-6 months.
Current Affairs
June 12, 2026
About Oilseeds Kisaan Mitra:
- It is a WhatsApp-based artificial intelligence-powered advisory service.
- It is developed by the ICAR-Indian Institute of Oilseeds Research (ICAR-IIOR), Hyderabad.
- It aimed at strengthening oilseed (groundnut, mustard, sesame, sunflower, soybean, niger, and other oilseed crops) cultivation and improving farmers’ access to scientific guidance.
- Features:
- It provides round-the-clock, research-based support to oilseed farmers in multiple Indian languages.
- The AI-powered chatbot responds instantly with research-based guidance on variety selection, crop management, pest and disease control, irrigation, and post-harvest practices, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, free of cost.
- How It Works?
- It uses advanced AI and a robust knowledge base developed from the collective scientific expertise of multiple ICAR institutes.
- It understands questions typed or sent in regional languages and provides precise, crop-specific answers.
- Farmers need no special app or internet browser; the familiar WhatsApp interface is all that is needed.
- The chatbot covers the entire crop cycle including variety selection, agronomic practices, pest and disease management, irrigation scheduling, and post-harvest guidance and seed availability.
- The knowledge base has been built collaboratively with ICAR-National Soybean Research Institute, Indore (ICAR-NSRI), ICAR-Indian Institute of Groundnut Research, Junagadh (ICAR-IIGR), ICAR-Indian Institute of Rapeseed and Mustard Research, Bharatpur (ICAR-IIRMR) and PC-Unit (Sesame & Niger).
Video
12 Jun 2026
Law Optional Test series workshop 10-06-2026
Article
12 Jun 2026
Context
- The Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Amendment (FCRA) Bill, 2026, introduced in the Lok Sabha on 25 March 2026, represents a major shift in India's regulation of foreign-funded organisations.
- While the government presents the Bill as a measure to enhance transparency, accountability, and national security, its provisions significantly expand executive authority over NGOs, charitable trusts, educational institutions, and religious organisations.
- The proposed amendments raise concerns about due process, institutional autonomy, and the future of civil society in India.
Background: The Evolution of the FCRA Regime
- The FCRA framework was already among the most restrictive systems governing foreign contributions.
- The 2020 amendments required all foreign funds to be routed through a single SBI branch in New Delhi, reduced the permissible limit on administrative expenditure from 50% to 20%, prohibited sub-granting, and expanded government suspension powers.
- These measures disproportionately affected smaller NGOs, faith-based organisations, and charitable institutions working among vulnerable communities.
- The 2026 Bill builds upon these restrictions and introduces a more extensive framework of government oversight and intervention.
Key Provisions of the 2026 Amendment Bill
- Automatic Cessation of Registration
- One of the most controversial provisions is Section 14B, which introduces automatic cessation of FCRA registration.
- Organisations may lose registration not only when renewal is denied but also when renewal applications are delayed, remain pending, or are not submitted within the prescribed period.
- Provisional and Permanent Vesting of Assets
- The most significant change is the introduction of Section 16A under a new chapter governing the management of organisational assets.
- Under this provision, when an organisation's registration is cancelled, surrendered, or deemed to have ceased, all foreign contributions and assets derived from them automatically undergo provisional vesting in a government-appointed Designated Authority.
- Since cancellation can be based on broad grounds such as public interest, organisations may lose control over their assets even in cases involving procedural or disputed violations.
- Expanded Powers of the Designated Authority
- The Designated Authority is empowered to manage institutions, supervise finances, control assets, and alter organisational operations.
- If registration is not restored within the prescribed period, the vesting may become permanent. Assets may then be transferred or sold, with the proceeds credited to the Consolidated Fund of India.
Impact on Civil Society and Community Institutions
- Restrictions During Suspension and Investigation
- Organisations are prohibited from managing their assets without prior approval, effectively paralysing their operations.
- Changes to enforcement procedures further centralise authority within the Union Government, while broader definitions of key functionaries increase personal liability for office-bearers.
- Together, these measures may discourage civic participation and create a climate of uncertainty within the non-profit sector.
- Impact on Minority Institutions
- Many of these institutions receive support from churches, humanitarian agencies, and diaspora communities abroad.
- Registration lapses, administrative delays, or cancellation proceedings could expose such institutions to government takeover.
- Since these organisations provide services to people irrespective of religion, any disruption could affect broader society and not merely minority communities.
- Economic and Social Consequences
- The civil society sector plays a vital role in education, healthcare, child protection, nutrition, skills development, and social welfare.
- It also contributes substantially to employment generation and volunteer engagement.
- The cancellation of licences and disruption of foreign funding may adversely affect millions who depend on these services.
Constitutional and Democratic Concerns
- The Bill raises important constitutional concerns regarding the balance between regulation and fundamental freedoms.
- The broad and undefined use of public interest may permit action against organisations engaged in minority rights, tribal welfare, environmental protection, human rights advocacy, or public-interest work.
- Several constitutional provisions may be implicated, including Article 14 (equality before law), Article 19(1)(c) (freedom of association), Articles 25 and 26 (religious freedom), Articles 29 and 30 (minority rights), and Article 300A (property rights).
- By concentrating extensive powers within the executive branch, the Bill risks undermining freedom of association, institutional autonomy, and democratic accountability.
- The possibility of administrative action leading to asset confiscation without adequate safeguards raises serious concerns regarding fairness and the rule of law.
Conclusion
- Although the objectives of ensuring transparency and preventing misuse of foreign contributions are legitimate, the proposed amendments grant unprecedented powers to the executive through provisions relating to registration, suspension, investigation, and asset control.
- Effective regulation must be accompanied by due process, independent oversight, and constitutional safeguards.
- Without such protections, the amendments risk transforming regulatory oversight into extensive state control over organisations that play a crucial role in India's social and democratic development.
Article
12 Jun 2026
Why in news?
The Andaman and Nicobar Islands (A&NI) administration has notified draft rules proposing formal constituency-based elections for Nicobarese tribal councils — a move that has sparked urgent concern among tribal leaders.
The Tribal Welfare Department has set June 15, 2026 as the deadline for suggestions and objections.
The proposal has reignited a deeper debate about indigenous self-governance, cultural autonomy, and the administration's motives — particularly in the context of the ₹91,000 crore Great Nicobar development project.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Background: Who Are the Nicobarese
- How Do Nicobarese Choose Their Leaders?
- What Do the Draft Rules Propose?
- Why Are Tribal Leaders Concerned?
- Constitutional and Legal Dimensions
- Conclusion
Background: Who Are the Nicobarese
- The Nicobarese are a Scheduled Tribe with a total population of about 30,000 spread across the Nicobar group of islands.
- They are represented by seven Tribal Councils — covering Car Nicobar, Nancowry, Kamorta, Teressa, Little Nicobar, Great Nicobar, and others.
- Below the Tribal Councils sits the village leadership structure of three Captains per village — a First Captain assisted by a Second and Third Captain.
- The concept of "captaincy" is centuries old — originating in the 16th century when Nicobarese who negotiated with passing colonial ships began calling themselves captains.
- The British later formalised this structure for their own administrative convenience in the late 19th century.
- The tribal council structure itself is more recent, emerging in the 1990s primarily to facilitate community participation in Central government poverty alleviation schemes.
How Do Nicobarese Choose Their Leaders?
- The current system is consensus-based and community-driven, not bureaucratically fixed.
- Elections for village Captains happen whenever the community feels the need, not on a fixed schedule. The process is strikingly organic:
- Village residents gather at a community meeting, nominate names through popular consensus, prepare their own ballot papers, appoint their own polling officer from within the community, and elect the Captain by majority vote.
- The Tribal Council Chairperson is similarly chosen by popular consensus — and in some councils, no formal election has been held for decades, with the position continuing on the basis of community acceptance.
- Crucially, even elected Captains are not autonomous decision-makers. As per the experts, decisions are taken through popular community consultation — Captains are neither lawmakers nor unilateral leaders.
- The community values candidates for their education, Hindi fluency (for dealing with government officials), exposure to the outside world, and practical "smartness" in navigating bureaucracy.
- Experts note that the existing system has real problems — in several Island Tribal Councils, it is unclear when the Chairperson was last elected and what authority they actually hold.
What Do the Draft Rules Propose?
- The Andaman and Nicobar Islands Tribal Councils (Preparation of Electoral Rolls and Conduct of Elections) Rules, 2026 — notified in May 2026 — prescribe a formal, structured electoral system for five-yearly elections to Village Councils and Island Tribal Councils.
- Key features include:
- Villagers would elect five to nine Captains per village and directly vote for the Chief Captain of each Island Tribal Council.
- The First Captains of all villages on a given island would then vote for the Vice-Chief Captain.
- The Island Tribal Council would comprise the Chief Captain, Vice-Chief Captain, and all First Captains of that island.
- The rules also introduce delimitation of constituencies, preparation of voter rolls, and reservation of seats for women.
- These rules are framed under the Andaman and Nicobar Islands (Tribal Councils) Regulation, 2009 — a Presidential regulation intended to bring autonomous self-governance to the Nicobarese.
- However, that same 2009 Regulation gave the district administration (through the Deputy Commissioner and Assistant Commissioner) an absolute veto over any council decision deemed a threat to public order or likely to cause "annoyance".
Why Are Tribal Leaders Concerned?
- Bureaucratisation of a Living Tradition - Tribal leaders fear that imposing a fixed electoral calendar and formal administrative procedures will disrupt their organic, consensus-based governance.
- The Great Nicobar Development Project: The Political Subtext - The timing of these rules has not gone unnoticed. The Tribal Council of Great Nicobar has been actively opposing the Centre's ₹91,000 crore mega-project involving a container port, international airport, and township on Great Nicobar Island.
- Analysts noted that there is a real possibility the rules have been brought forward precisely because of this opposition.
- Consultation Deficit - Opponents cited the absence of prior consultation with the community and the non-recognition of the Tuhet system — the traditional joint family structure that forms the social backbone of Nicobarese community life.
Constitutional and Legal Dimensions
- The Nicobarese are a Scheduled Tribe and thus entitled to constitutional protections under the Fifth Schedule of the Constitution (though Andaman and Nicobar Islands, being a Union Territory, is technically outside the Fifth Schedule framework — a significant legal nuance).
- The 2009 Presidential Regulation that underlies these rules retains significant administrative override powers, which means the proposed "self-governance" is structurally limited from the outset.
Conclusion
True self-governance for tribal communities cannot be delivered through a standardised electoral template designed for mainland India.
When a community has governed itself — effectively and organically — for generations, formalisation without consultation is not reform; it is substitution.
Article
12 Jun 2026
Why in news?
At least 15 people have been killed in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK) as violent protests rage just a month before scheduled local elections.
Pakistani authorities have responded with a crackdown — banning the protest-leading organisation, announcing bounties for leaders' arrest, and clashing with locals.
India has condemned the "police brutality" and called on the international community to hold Pakistan accountable.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Background: A Region Long Restless
- The Immediate Flashpoint: The 12 Seats Controversy
- Pakistan's Response: Crackdown Over Dialogue
- Gilgit-Baltistan: A Parallel Crisis
Background: A Region Long Restless
- PoK protests are not new. Unrest began in 2023 when residents mobilised against rising electricity bills and shortages of subsidised wheat.
- The Mangla Dam — a major hydropower project built on PoK's rivers — displaced local communities but the region continues to pay high power tariffs, a long-standing grievance.
- Chronic underdevelopment, heavy security deployment due to militancy, and the dominance of Islamabad-appointed bureaucrats over the Legislative Assembly have deepened public anger over the years.
- The protest movement is spearheaded by the Joint Awami Action Committee (JAAC) — a coalition of traders, professionals, and civil society activists.
The Immediate Flashpoint: The 12 Seats Controversy
- The current flash point is a Pakistan Supreme Court verdict upholding 12 seats in the 53-member PoK Assembly reserved for Jammu and Kashmir migrants settled in different parts of Pakistan — some in Punjab, some in Sindh, and so on.
- The polling for these seats is conducted outside PoK, and the local Election Commission has no role in it.
- In effect, out of 53 seats in the PoK Assembly, local voters directly elect only 33 members.
- Besides the 12 refugee seats, there are 5 seats reserved for women, 1 for Ulamas (religious scholars), 1 for overseas Kashmiris, and 1 for technocrats.
- Why Do Locals Oppose These Seats?
- Local PoK residents argue that these 12 seats are effectively used by the federal government in Islamabad to plant its loyalists in the PoK Assembly — people with no genuine connection to Kashmir.
- They complain that MQM members — representing Urdu-speaking immigrants — end up in their Assembly through these seats.
- There is also a financial grievance: the salaries and expenses of these 20 centrally-controlled representatives (12 refugee + 8 other reserved seats) are funded from PoK's own budget, even though local voters have no say in electing them.
- India's Parallel: An Important Distinction
- Supporters of this reservation draw a comparison — India too has reserved seats in the J&K Assembly for people displaced from Pakistan-occupied territories.
- However, a crucial difference exists: India keeps those seats vacant, unlike Pakistan which actively fills them.
Pakistan's Response: Crackdown Over Dialogue
- Rather than addressing core grievances, Pakistan's response has been repressive.
- JAAC has been banned and its leaders booked under stringent charges including sedition and terror laws.
- The crackdown has drawn international attention — a significant PoK diaspora in the UK has been vocal, and Bradford East MP along with other UK parliamentarians wrote to the British Foreign Secretary demanding restoration of communications and resumption of peaceful talks.
Gilgit-Baltistan: A Parallel Crisis
- Gilgit-Baltistan (GB) — the other part of the former princely state of Jammu and Kashmir under Pakistan's illegal occupation — shares many of PoK's problems.
- These include: chronic underdevelopment, dominance by the federal government, and denial of full political rights.
- Key Differences
- Unlike PoK, GB has a large Shia Muslim population, which has led to sectarian strife.
- It is also more isolated — even from the Pakistani mainstream — and receives far less media attention.
- Some sections in GB have demanded full integration with Pakistan as a province, a move Islamabad has resisted because granting full provincial status would complicate its demand for a plebiscite over the broader J&K dispute.
- India's Position
- India strongly protested the recent elections held in GB.
- MEA reiterated that the entire Union Territories of J&K and Ladakh, including Gilgit-Baltistan, are integral and inalienable parts of India by virtue of the complete and irrevocable Instrument of Accession signed in 1947.
- India has consistently opposed the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), which passes through GB, on grounds of sovereignty violation.
- After India revoked Article 370 in 2019, there were talks of Pakistan granting GB full provincial status as a reciprocal political move, but those plans were never implemented.
Conclusion
PoK's unrest is the inevitable consequence of occupation without representation — a region exploited for its resources, denied its political voice, and governed by a distant power's interests.
As protests spread across PoK and Gilgit-Baltistan, the crisis underscores the challenges of managing contested territories through coercion rather than dialogue. For India, it also reinforces its longstanding position that these regions remain integral parts of the erstwhile princely state of Jammu and Kashmir.
Article
12 Jun 2026
Context:
- India's four Labour Codes — enacted during 2019-20 — finally have their implementation rules notified in May 2026, completing the legislative framework after nearly six years.
- The four codes are:
- The Code on Wages (2019),
- The Industrial Relations Code (2020),
- The Code on Social Security (2020), and
- The Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code (2020).
- Trade unions and academics had hoped that the Rules — which lay down standard operating procedures for implementing a law — would moderate some of the more contentious provisions.
- This article highlights the completion of the implementation framework for India's four Labour Codes with the notification of Rules in May 2026.
- It examines whether the Rules address long-standing concerns regarding worker protection, job security, wages, social security, trade union rights, and workplace safety.
- The article argues that despite completing the legislative process, several critical gaps remain, leaving workers vulnerable and weakening labour protections.
What Are Rules and Why Do They Matter?
- Rules cannot contradict the parent legislation, but they become critical wherever a law is broad or open-ended.
- They fill gaps, define procedures, and protect against misuse.
- Given the sustained opposition to several provisions in the four codes, the Rules offered a meaningful opportunity to address workers' concerns — an opportunity the author believes has been squandered.
Critical Gaps in the Labour Codes
- Fixed-Term Employment: A Door Left Wide Open
- The Industrial Relations Code formally introduced Fixed-Term Employment (FTE) into India's labour law framework.
- However, the Code specifies neither a minimum tenure nor a cap on contract renewals. The Rules maintain the same silence.
- A minimum tenure of one year could have protected workers from exploitatively short contracts.
- Without any renewal limit, even permanent positions can potentially be converted into FTEs with unlimited renewals — a significant regression for job security.
- Minimum Wages: Vague and Biased
- The Code on Wages Rules provide only a vague definition of "floor wage" without clearly distinguishing it from the minimum wage.
- The Rules prescribe consultation with state governments but specify no framework for how such consultations should work — raising fears they will remain symbolic.
- More troublingly, the Rules perpetuate a gender bias baked into the existing wage-fixing convention: a four-member family is treated as comprising three consumption units, where an adult female is assigned a weight of 0.8 against 1.0 for an adult male.
- The Rules do nothing to correct this.
- The Rules also define hourly wage as simply the daily wage divided by eight — a conceptually flawed approach.
- Internationally, hourly minimum wages are fixed independently of daily wages, because part-time or hourly workers may not find work for the remaining hours of the day.
- This matters greatly given India's large domestic worker population and the rising gig economy.
Gig Workers: Left in a Legal Grey Zone
- The Social Security Code Rules make no attempt to clarify the employment status of gig and platform workers.
- They continue to be treated as self-employed and remain part of the unorganised workforce — outside the protective ambit of formal labour law.
- The Rules are also silent on mandatory gratuity insurance — a safeguard envisaged under the Code to protect workers from employers who fail to pay gratuity.
- By not specifying how this insurance would work, an important worker protection remains undefined on paper.
Trade Union Recognition: A Higher Bar, Less Protection
- The Industrial Relations Code Rules require that a sole registered trade union must have at least 30% membership to be recognised.
- Crucially, this 30% threshold does not even appear in the Code itself — it has been introduced through the Rules.
- In large establishments, smaller or newly formed unions may struggle to meet this bar, further eroding workers' collective bargaining power at a time when union membership has already been declining for decades.
Missing Safeguards: Safety, Contract Labour, and Plantations
- The Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code Rules omit certain occupation-specific welfare measures — notably housing and medical facilities for plantation workers.
- The Rules also do not specify which activities can be performed by contract labour, nor do they distinguish between core and non-core activities.
- This ambiguity facilitates growing informalisation, as employers can engage contract labour even in core operations without legal clarity constraining them.
Conclusion
- Labour reform must balance ease of doing business with dignity of work.
- When rules that could have protected millions are left deliberately vague, it is not a legislative oversight — it is a policy choice that the working class will live with for years.
Article
12 Jun 2026
Context:
- India’s low investment in Research and Development (R&D) is often attributed to policy and institutional weaknesses. However, the issue cannot be explained solely through economic structures or cultural factors.
- India’s R&D deficit emerges from the interaction of historical, structural, financial, and political factors, some of which have shaped the behaviour and risk appetite of Indian businesses over time.
Large Domestic Market - A Double-Edged Advantage:
- The “captive market” effect:
- India’s vast domestic market provides businesses with a large consumer base, reducing the pressure to compete internationally.
- Firms can achieve growth by serving domestic demand without entering highly competitive global markets.
- This weakens incentives for technological upgrading, quality enhancement, and frontier innovation.
- Export competition has historically driven innovation in countries such as South Korea, Japan, and Germany.
- R&D version of “Dutch disease”:
- Just as resource abundance can reduce industrial competitiveness, a large domestic market may discourage firms from investing in costly and uncertain R&D activities.
- Key insight: Easy market access can diminish the urgency to innovate.
Colonial Legacy and the Weak Manufacturing Tradition:
- Impact of colonial de-industrialisation:
- Economic historians have documented how colonial policies undermined India’s indigenous manufacturing sectors, particularly textiles.
- Traditional manufacturing capabilities were weakened or destroyed. Commercial communities increasingly shifted towards trade, intermediation, and arbitrage rather than production.
- Long-term consequences:
- The decline of manufacturing ecosystems shaped business preferences and capabilities for generations.
- Innovation-oriented industrial entrepreneurship remained limited.
- Business communities became more comfortable with commerce than technological production.
Premature Financialisation of the Corporate Sector:
- Shift from productive investment to financial returns:
- Financialisation refers to prioritising shareholder returns and stock market performance over long-term productive investment.
- It is perhaps the most significant factor behind weak R&D spending.
- Lessons from developed economies: Research highlights how major U.S. corporations increasingly diverted profits toward share buybacks and dividend payments, instead of investing in innovation and capability-building.
- The shareholder-value problem:
- The doctrine of maximising shareholder value often translates into maximising short-term stock prices.
- This creates disincentives for R&D because research spending reduces current profits, benefits emerge only after 5–10 years, and corporate executives are rewarded based on short-term performance.
- Executive incentives and short-termism:
- Studies show that stock-option-based compensation encourages earnings management rather than long-term investment.
- Similarly, research found that publicly listed firms invest less than comparable private firms because of pressure from quarterly financial reporting.
India’s Premature Adoption of Financialised Capitalism:
- A sequencing problem:
- Countries such as Germany, Japan, and South Korea first built strong manufacturing and technological foundations before becoming heavily financialised.
- India followed a different trajectory. For example,
- Financial-market pressures emerged before the country developed deep industrial capabilities.
- Firms faced incentives to prioritise financial returns over technological investment at an earlier stage of development.
- Consequence: India now exhibits R&D intensity that remains significantly below what is required for its economic and strategic ambitions.
Democracy, Uncertainty, and Long-Term Investment:
- High uncertainty in a complex democracy:
- India’s political economy presents unique challenges:
- Large and diverse electorate.
- Multiple layers of governance.
- Competing stakeholder interests.
- Security challenges from a difficult neighbourhood.
- These factors make long-term policy and economic outcomes harder to predict.
- India’s political economy presents unique challenges:
- Impact on business decisions:
- Businesses respond to uncertainty by applying higher discount rates to future returns.
- As a result, investments with distant payoffs appear less attractive, long-term projects such as R&D suffer the most, and firms prefer investments that generate quicker and more predictable returns.
- The R&D dilemma:
- Research spending requires sacrificing current profits for uncertain future gains.
- In an environment of high uncertainty, underinvestment becomes a rational business response, even though it harms long-term national competitiveness.
Conclusion:
- India’s R&D deficit cannot be explained by a single factor. It stems from the interaction of:
- A large domestic market that reduces competitive pressure.
- The historical legacy of colonial deindustrialisation.
- Premature financialisation and short-term shareholder capitalism.
- Political and economic uncertainty that discourages long-horizon investments.
- Addressing the problem requires more than increasing R&D subsidies.
- It demands strengthening manufacturing capabilities, promoting export competitiveness, reforming corporate incentives, and creating a stable environment that encourages long-term innovation-led growth.