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Article
28 Mar 2026
Why in the News?
- The Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS) 2025 shows higher wage growth for women than men, but persistent gender wage inequality.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Gender Wage Gap (Definition, Causes, Significance, etc.)
- News Summary (PLFS 2025 Data, Employment Levels, Employment Structure, Market Trends, etc.)
Gender Wage Gap in India
- The Gender Wage Gap refers to the difference in earnings between men and women for similar work or across sectors.
- In India, this gap reflects structural inequalities in employment opportunities, skill access, and labour market participation.
- Nature of the Wage Gap
- Women earn less than men across all job categories.
- The gap varies by type of employment, such as salaried jobs, casual labour, and self-employment.
- Informal sector dominance and occupational segregation worsen the disparity.
- Causes of Wage Inequality
- Lower female labour force participation.
- Concentration of women in low-paying and informal jobs.
- Limited access to education, skills, and capital.
- Social norms and unpaid care responsibilities.
- Significance
- Reducing the gender wage gap is essential for inclusive economic growth.
- It enhances household incomes, boosts productivity, and improves gender equality outcomes.
News Summary
- The PLFS 2025 data presents a mixed picture of progress and challenges in India’s labour market, particularly with respect to gender-based wage disparities.
- Employment Levels
- About 61.6 crore people were employed in India in 2025.
- Male workers: 41.6 crore.
- Female workers: 20.0 crore.
- This indicates a significant gender gap in overall employment levels.
- Higher Wage Growth for Women
- According to the data, women’s wages grew faster than men’s across all job categories in 2025.
- Salaried jobs: Women’s wages grew by 7.2% compared to 5.8% for men.
- Self-employment: Women’s earnings rose by 8.8%, slightly higher than men’s 8%.
- Casual labour: Women’s wages increased by 5.4%, while men’s wages declined marginally by 0.2%.
- This indicates a positive trend in wage growth for women, suggesting gradual improvements in labour market conditions.
- Persistent Wage Inequality
- Despite faster growth, the wage gap remains substantial.
- In salaried jobs, women earned only 76% of male earnings.
- In casual labour, women earned 69% of male wages.
- In self-employment, women earned just 36% of what men earned.
- This highlights that higher growth rates are not sufficient to bridge the existing disparity.
- Changes in Employment Structure
- The survey also shows improvements in the nature of employment.
- The share of women in salaried jobs increased to 18.2% in 2025 from 16.6% in 2024.
- Self-employment among women declined, indicating a shift toward better-quality jobs.
- Casual labour participation also increased slightly.
- Salaried jobs are considered more secure as they provide social security benefits and a stable income.
- Overall Labour Market Trends
- The broader labour market indicators also show gradual improvement.
- Rural unemployment declined to 2.4% from 2.5%.
- Urban unemployment fell to 4.8% from 5%.
- Youth unemployment declined to 9.9% from 10.3%.
- However, female youth unemployment increased slightly, indicating persistent gender-specific challenges.
- Labour Force Participation
- Labour force participation trends present a mixed picture.
- Rural LFPR declined slightly to 62.8%.
- Urban LFPR remained stable at 52.2%.
- A decline in LFPR suggests that fewer individuals, especially in rural areas, are actively seeking employment.
- Informal Sector Concerns
- The data also reflects slowing momentum in the informal sector.
- Wage growth in the informal sector was only 3.9% in 2025.
- Job creation slowed significantly, with fewer establishments being added.
- Since a large proportion of women are employed in the informal sector, this has important implications for gender equality in earnings.
Article
28 Mar 2026
Context:
- India recently announced its updated Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) for 2030–2035 under the Paris Agreement.
- These targets emerge amid a fragile global order marked by geopolitical conflicts, weakening multilateralism, and renewed reliance on fossil fuels by developed nations.
India’s Enhanced Climate Targets:
- Emissions intensity reduction:
- Emissions intensity of GDP growth has now been set at 47% reduction by 2035 (from 2005 levels) against the previous target of 45% and the actual figure of 36% already achieved.
- Insight: Incremental gains become harder as efficiency improves, yet India is likely to overachieve.
- Non-fossil fuel energy capacity:
- The previous target of 50% for 2030 has already been overtaken, as the current figure is 52.5%. The target of 60% for 2035 is realistic, given a much more challenging energy outlook.
- Key concern: Installed capacity is not equal to actual generation, as renewable energy contributes only ~20% of electricity generation currently.
- Need: To improve grid integration, storage, and dispatch efficiency.
- Carbon sink expansion through afforestation:
- Against the previous target of adding 2.5-3 billion tonnes of CO2 equivalent by 2030, the current achievement is estimated to be 2.296 billion tonnes of CO2 equivalent.
- The target for 2035 has now been set at 3.5-4 billion tonnes of CO2 equivalent, which appears realistic.
- Risks: Biodiversity loss, monoculture impacts, and inclusion of plantations may undermine ecological integrity.
Adaptation - A Strategic Priority:
- Why does adaptation matter? Even with zero emissions, climate impacts persist due to accumulated greenhouse gases.
- Key measures:
- Heat Action Plans (HAPs) for rising temperatures.
- Monitoring Himalayan glaciers and Glacial Lake Outburst Floods (GLOFs).
- Protection of Mangroves (coastal defense), marine ecosystems (fish stocks, biodiversity).
- Regional cooperation: Collaboration with neighbours essential for Himalayan ecosystem monitoring, and maritime ecological security.
Clean Energy Transition Pathways:
- Green hydrogen:
- India’s green hydrogen mission holds great promise in meeting the twin challenge of climate change and energy security.
- Challenge: Currently, hydrogen is a byproduct from petrochemical production, so its generation is carbon intensive.
- Solution: Hydrogen can be produced through electrolysis, but whether this process uses fossil energy or renewable energy will determine how “green” and clean hydrogen can be as a fuel.
- Nuclear energy push:
- The government has set an ambitious target of 100 GW of nuclear power by 2047, coinciding with the Viksit Bharat target, against the current installed capacity of only 8.8 GW.
- Policy support:
- The SHANTI Act 2025 opens this hitherto sensitive sector to the private sector, permitting up to 49% FDI in nuclear power generation.
- It has also amended the liability clause in the existing legislation to bring it in line with international practice.
- Promotes Small Modular Reactors (SMR) [200-250 MW capacity currently under development], providing decentralised and distributed power.
Structural Challenge - Energy Poverty:
- India's annual per capita electricity consumption is 1,460 KWh as against a world average of 3,800 KWh.
- The challenge lies in significantly increasing this consumption but in as ecologically sustainable a manner as possible.
Global Context and Constraints:
- Meagre climate finance: Less than $100 billion a year (developed countries promised $100 billion a year since the Paris Agreement).
- Challenges: This meagre climate finance will be further squeezed under the impact of war, incipient inflation and competing demands of national security and relief from economic distress.
- Need: The world needs to recognise that energy transition requires resources that are limited in the absence of international support.
Key Challenges for India:
- Domestic: Bridging the gap between capacity and generation. Ensuring ecological integrity in afforestation. Scaling clean technologies affordably. Managing energy transition with limited resources.
- External: Lack of adequate climate finance. Weak global cooperation mechanisms. Pressure on developing countries to bear disproportionate burden.
Way Forward:
- Policy and technology: Invest in energy storage, smart grids, and transmission. Promote truly green hydrogen via renewables. Accelerate SMR-based nuclear expansion.
- Ecological balance: Prioritise natural forests over plantations. Strengthen coastal and marine ecosystem protection.
- Adaptation and resilience: Scale up HAPs nationwide. Enhance disaster preparedness (GLOFs, cyclones).
- Diplomacy and cooperation: Push for climate justice and finance accountability. Strengthen regional climate cooperation frameworks.
Conclusion:
- India’s updated NDCs present a credible and balanced climate strategy, tackling the twin challenges of climate change and energy security with its own limited resources, and navigating the dual imperatives of development and sustainability.
- India’s approach offers a pragmatic model for the Global South, but without robust international support, the transition risks being slower and more uneven.
Online Test
28 Mar 2026
CAMP-ET-04
Questions : 50 Questions
Time Limit : 0 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.
Online Test
28 Mar 2026
CAMP-ET-04
Questions : 50 Questions
Time Limit : 60 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.
Online Test
28 Mar 2026
CAMP-HINDI-GT-01
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Online Test
28 Mar 2026
CAMP-HINDI-GT-01
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Online Test
28 Mar 2026
GS Test - 13 (V7713)
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Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, midnight
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28 Mar 2026
GS Test - 8 (V7708)
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Online Test
28 Mar 2026
GS Test - 8 (V7708)
Questions : 100 Questions
Time Limit : 0 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, midnight
Online Test
28 Mar 2026
GS Test - 13 (V7713)
Questions : 100 Questions
Time Limit : 0 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, midnight