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Article
14 Jul 2026

Holding the Court Accountable Amid Democratic Strain

Context

  • The right to vote is the cornerstone of democracy, ensuring political equality, citizen participation, and constitutional legitimacy.
  • For marginalised communities, voting represents not only a legal entitlement but also dignity, recognition, and equal membership in the political community.
  • Any electoral process that restricts access to voting raises important constitutional concerns regarding electoral integrity, fundamental rights, and the rule of law.

The Right to Vote and Democratic Citizenship

  • Voting is more than an administrative exercise; it is a powerful expression of democratic inclusion.
  • Mukulika Banerjee's account of Rukmini Bai, who compares her vote to individual grains of wheat that sustain her livelihood, illustrates that every vote contributes to the strength of democracy.
  • The metaphor demonstrates that even the smallest political voice has equal value in determining collective outcomes.
  • The Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls has generated concerns because of extensive documentation requirements, strict timelines, and digital verification procedures.
  • These measures disproportionately affect minorities, migrants, women, and the economically disadvantaged, making access to voting more difficult.
  • The idea of digital structural authoritarianism reflects the concern that technological and bureaucratic processes may unintentionally become instruments of political exclusion.

The Constitutional Role of the Judiciary

  • A Counter-Majoritarian Institution
    • The Supreme Court serves as a counter-majoritarian institution entrusted with protecting constitutional rights against excessive exercise of executive power.
    • Effective judicial review depends not only on sound constitutional reasoning but also on timely intervention.
    • Delayed adjudication weakens constitutional safeguards when government actions become irreversible before judicial scrutiny is completed.
    • Situations that become a fait accompli, as witnessed in disputes concerning demonetisation and Jammu and Kashmir's special status, reduce the practical effectiveness of judicial review.
  • Judicial Neutrality
    • Judicial involvement in supervising administrative processes also raises concerns about judicial neutrality.
    • Constitutional courts are expected to review executive action rather than participate in its implementation.
    • Maintaining a clear distinction between adjudication and administration is essential for preserving institutional independence.
  • Framing of Constitutional Disputes
    • Greater emphasis on the Election Commission's administrative powers than on the possible deprivation of voting rights risks overlooking broader constitutional questions.
    • Principles such as proportionality, fairness, non-discrimination, and constitutional rights require careful examination alongside the social realities of poverty, illiteracy, and unequal access to public institutions.

Judicial Accountability

  • Judicial accountability is an essential feature of constitutional governance.
  • Political thinkers such as Murray Rothbard, Charles Black, and J.A.G. Griffith observed that courts may sometimes reinforce governmental authority instead of limiting it.
  • These perspectives underline the continuing importance of safeguarding judicial independence and institutional impartiality.
  • As one of the world's most influential constitutional courts, the Indian Supreme Court significantly shapes both legal interpretation and democratic governance.
  • Constructive public debate and reasoned criticism of judicial decisions complement scrutiny of executive action and strengthen constitutional accountability.

Democracy and the Future of Political Opposition

  • A healthy democracy depends upon independent institutions, free elections, and active civic participation.
  • When institutional neutrality appears weakened, democratic accountability increasingly relies on vibrant political opposition and people's movements that promote constitutional values through peaceful and democratic means.
  • Protecting electoral inclusion, ensuring equal access to voting, and preserving an independent judiciary remain indispensable for sustaining public confidence in democratic institutions.
  • Broad-based civic engagement strengthens both constitutional governance and democratic resilience.

Conclusion

  • The protection of the right to vote remains central to the survival of constitutional democracy.
  • A robust electoral system requires inclusive participation, timely and independent judicial review, and accountable public institutions.
  • Upholding electoral integrity, fundamental rights, and the rule of law ensures that democracy remains participatory, representative, and resilient for all citizens.

 

Editorial Analysis

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Current Affairs

Article
14 Jul 2026

India's Civil Registration System: Near-Universal Coverage of Births and Deaths

Why in news?

India officially recorded over 99% of its estimated births and deaths in 2024, according to the latest data released by the Office of the Registrar General and Census Commissioner.

This marks a significant leap in registration coverage over the past decade, signalling India's movement toward a system where every birth and death can be counted, certified, and used to inform public policy.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • About Civil Registration System (CRS)
  • The Journey to Near-Universal Registration
  • What Explains the Rapid Improvement?
  • Persisting Gaps and Challenges

About Civil Registration System (CRS)

  • Data on births, deaths, and stillbirths are recorded under a continuous, compulsory mechanism called the Civil Registration System.
  • It serves as a foundational source of India's population data, informing accurate estimation of mortality, fertility, and sex ratio at birth.
  • The CRS has been legally operational since 1970 under the Registration of Births and Deaths Act, 1969, amended in 2023.
  • Births and deaths must ordinarily be reported within 21 days. In hospitals, the medical officer in charge or an authorised official reports such events; for home-based events, the household head or a prescribed informant is responsible.

The Journey to Near-Universal Registration

  • Registration coverage has improved dramatically over the decades:
    • Until 2000: Only 56% of births and 48% of deaths were registered.
    • By 2014: Coverage rose to around 86.6% (births) and 72.5% (deaths).
    • In 2024: Birth registration reached 99.1% and death registration reached 99.4%.
  • Death registration, which historically lagged behind birth registration, has now caught up rapidly.
  • In 2024, 18 states and Union Territories achieved 100% birth registration, while 21 states and UTs achieved 100% death registration.
  • Coverage has historically varied by rural-urban location and across states, though states like Kerala, Arunachal Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh, and Goa achieved universal birth registration as early as the 2000s.
  • Significance of Near-Universal Registration
    • A complete CRS is one of the most important sources of vital statistics, crucial for:
      • Administrative use and assessing the impact of health and social policies
      • Understanding trends in fertility, mortality, and population change
      • Real-time demographic information, such as during the Covid-19 pandemic, when timely death reporting helped identify high-risk areas
      • Tracking seasonal mortality driven by high temperatures and pollution
      • Decentralised governance, since district and sub-district level data are far more useful for local programme design than national or state estimates
      • Legal identity proof for individuals
    • India has traditionally relied on the Census (conducted once every 10 years), the Sample Registration System (SRS), and household surveys for demographic estimates, since these do not provide reliable annual, district-level data.
    • A complete CRS fills this critical gap.

What Explains the Rapid Improvement?

  • For births:
    • Rising institutional deliveries in hospitals, incentivised by post-delivery benefits.
    • Birth certificates becoming mandatory for school admission, identity documents, and welfare benefits.
  • For deaths:
    • Greater access to formal healthcare through expanded health insurance and public health schemes, particularly PM-JAY, which increased coverage among poorer households.
    • Death certificates being required for pensions, insurance, inheritance, property transfer, and banking.
  • Structural factors:
    • Digitisation, aided by the Registration of Births and Deaths (Amendment) Act, 2023, which made birth certificates essential for education, Aadhaar, and voter ID enrolment.
    • State-level variations attributed to differences in socioeconomic development, public awareness, institutional delivery, health-system access, and administrative capacity (registration machinery is a state responsibility).

Persisting Gaps and Challenges

  • Despite the impressive headline numbers, several concerns remain:
    • Regional disparities: Coverage still varies significantly across states.
    • Timeliness: Many births and deaths are not registered within the prescribed 21-day period.
    • Infant death under-registration: 84.2% of registered infant deaths occurred in urban areas versus only 15.8% in rural areas, despite higher early-age mortality and larger populations in rural India, suggesting significant under-registration of infant deaths in rural regions.
    • Data quality: Registering a death is not the same as recording a medically certified cause of death; many deaths still lack reliable medical certification, limiting CRS's usefulness for disease and mortality analysis.
    • Measurement circularity: The completeness of death registration is itself estimated using SRS figures, but studies show SRS undercounts both births and deaths, potentially leading to overestimation of actual CRS coverage.

The Way Forward

  • Future improvements must focus not just on coverage but on quality, including timely registration, accurate records, and responsible use of digital data.
  • India could also consider developing a system for recording internal migration to further strengthen administrative planning.

Conclusion

India's near-universal registration of births and deaths marks a genuine administrative achievement, offering a robust foundation for evidence-based governance. However, addressing regional gaps, improving data quality, and ensuring medically certified death records remain essential to fully realise the CRS's potential for policy planning.

Editorial Analysis

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Current Affairs

Article
14 Jul 2026

Biogas as a Pathway to India's Energy Security

Why in news?

Continued tensions in West Asia keep global energy markets on edge, exposing India's vulnerability given its heavy dependence on crude oil imports.

This has renewed focus on compressed biogas (CBG) as an alternative fuel, and despite years of policy push, progress in India's biogas sector remains limited, prompting calls for stronger government support and incentives.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • India's Energy Vulnerability
  • Understanding Biogas and Its Potential
  • Policy Push and Ground Reality
  • Global Lessons: The Cultivation Trap
  • Government's Action Plan

India's Energy Vulnerability

  • India imports nearly 85% of its crude oil needs, much of it from West Asia, and supplies were disrupted during the Israel-US-Iran war.
  • Although the government has diversified crude oil suppliers, around 90% of India's LPG imports still transit through the Strait of Hormuz, making any regional instability a direct risk to India's energy security.

Understanding Biogas and Its Potential

  • Biogas is a mixture of methane, CO2, and trace gases produced through anaerobic digestion of organic matter.
  • When processed and compressed, it becomes Compressed Biogas (CBG), chemically identical to CNG.
    • CBG is renewable, carbon-neutral, produced from waste, and usable for electricity generation, heating, or cooking.
  • India has pursued biogas blending for over a decade to reduce fuel imports, manage agricultural waste, and support rural incomes.

Policy Push and Ground Reality

  • SATAT (2018): The Sustainable Alternative Towards Affordable Transportation initiative aimed to establish 5,000 CBG plants by 2023. Only 132 plants were completed as of June 3, 2026.
  • GOBARdhan Scheme: Launched to boost CBG production under a "waste to wealth" model, offering grants up to ₹50 lakh per district for community biogas plants. ₹564 crore was earmarked for biomass collection machinery and ₹994 crore for pipelines connecting biogas plants to the gas grid.
  • Challenges: Poor infrastructure, weak private investment, difficulty accessing formal credit, and high upfront technology costs have stalled progress. Financial support, accelerated depreciation, and tax holidays could help attract private players.

Global Lessons: The Cultivation Trap

  • Biogas development remains uneven globally, with Europe, China, and the US accounting for 90% of world production.
  • Germany, a leader in Europe, incentivised biogas through its 2000 Renewable Energy Sources Act, guaranteeing producer income and encouraging small-scale plants.
  • However, this triggered a "corn mania," with maize cultivation replacing food crops due to high profitability, forcing the government to later cap maize use in biogas plants.
  • India faces a similar risk
    • The Economic Survey 2026 noted a sharp rise in maize cultivation, potentially threatening crop diversity and food security.
    • Maize yields rose from about 2.56 tonnes/hectare (FY16) to 3.78 tonnes/hectare (FY25), while yields of soybean, sunflower, rapeseed, peanuts, and millets stagnated or declined.
    • This is linked to India's administered ethanol pricing system, where maize-based ethanol commands a higher price than rice- or molasses-based ethanol.
    • Between FY22 and FY25, maize-based ethanol prices grew at a CAGR of 11.7%, making maize increasingly attractive to farmers, while pulses output declined and oilseeds/cereals saw only modest growth.
    • This shift is visible in states like Maharashtra and Karnataka, where maize competes with pulses, oilseeds, soyabean, millets, and cotton for land and resources, potentially deepening India's import dependence on pulses and edible oils.
  • Denmark offers an alternative model
    • Denmark, which is targeting to use only biomethane in its gas system by 2030, offers a solution.
    • The government discouraged the use of crops as feedstock, and the primary source is livestock manure and agricultural waste.

Government's Action Plan

  • In 2023, the National Biofuels Coordination Committee approved a mandatory CBG blending obligation for gas distributors, starting at 1% in FY26 and rising to 5% by FY29.
  • Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced in her February 2024 Budget speech that phased CBG blending in CNG (transport) and Piped Natural Gas (domestic use) will be mandated.
  • As per government data (August 2025), only 36 medium-sized biogas plants were installed under the MNRE's Biogas Programme over three years.
  • The comparison being drawn is with India's ethanol blending success: from just 1.5% blending in 2014 to 20% by December 2025, achieving the target five years ahead of the original 2030 deadline, raising the question of whether similar momentum can be replicated for CBG.

Conclusion

Biogas holds genuine promise for India's energy security, but replicating the ethanol success story will require overcoming infrastructure gaps, ensuring adequate incentives, and learning from Germany's cultivation-pattern mistakes by prioritising waste-based feedstock over food crops to safeguard both energy and food security.

Economics

Article
14 Jul 2026

The Right Path for India’s Nuclear Power Development

Context:

  • International sanctions were imposed on India after its peaceful nuclear test of 1974.
  • The India-US civil nuclear deal of 2008 ended restrictions on uranium and nuclear plant imports, with some critical exceptions, enabling India's nuclear programme to grow through free uranium imports.
  • Negotiations with major Western nuclear plant suppliers were later abandoned as their plants proved far too expensive.
  • As India now sets an ambitious target of 100 GW nuclear capacity by 2047, this article examines whether the country should rely on its own proven technology or import expensive foreign alternatives.

India's Homegrown Nuclear Advantage

  • Sanctions forced India to innovate domestically. Every component in India's nuclear plants has been designed, developed, tested, and manufactured within the country through sustained partnerships between the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) and Indian firms.
  • Unit sizes have grown from 200 MW to 500 MW, with 700 MW units now developed, four under construction, and ten more in the pipeline.
  • India today builds the world's cheapest nuclear power plants at approximately $1,700 per kW, compared to South Korea's $2,200, France's over $5,500, and the US's $15,000 per kW.
  • This gives India strong potential to become a major global exporter of nuclear power plants, making any move toward importing costlier foreign technology questionable.

Technological Leadership and the LWR Gap

  • India has strengthened its technological standing further with its 500 MW commercial fast breeder reactor nearing commissioning.
  • Currently, India operates Pressurised Heavy Water Reactors (PHWRs), which use natural uranium.
  • However, Light Water Reactors (LWRs), which use enriched uranium and are more widely deployed globally, remain undeveloped
  • Since the Nuclear Suppliers Group waiver permanently bars transfer of enrichment and reprocessing technology to India, the country must develop its own LWR capability through a dedicated, well-resourced programme.

Scaling Up While Staying Self-Reliant

  • To meet the 100 GW target by 2047, India has opened the nuclear sector to new public and private entrants through investor-friendly legislation. Nuclear power is now cost-competitive with thermal power.
  • Using proven domestic technology for this expansion would be the most cost-effective approach, leveraging scale effects to lower production costs further, while new entrants could also help reduce project execution time and costs.
  • Importing expensive foreign technology streams would undermine this advantage and should not be seriously considered.

Small Modular Reactors: Proceed with Caution

  • To power AI data centres' massive energy needs, Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) are being explored in the West, though their designs remain under development with no commercial deployment yet.
  • The AEC has already offered 200 MW plant technology to new entrants, and smaller reactors can be developed domestically through AEC-industry partnerships.
  • For foreign-designed SMRs, a cautious regulatory approach is advisable: such reactors should have a proven operational track record elsewhere before deployment in India, rather than being tested experimentally on Indian soil.

Safety as the Non-Negotiable Priority

  • India's nuclear safety record has been exemplary and must be preserved amid rapid expansion.
  • This is a significant challenge given India's broader industrial safety culture, where accidents at construction and operational sites remain frequent.
  • A single nuclear mishap could trigger public backlash similar to the post-Chernobyl slowdown in the West.
  • New entrants should therefore start with a few plants, build rigorous internal safety cultures backed by continuous external audits, and scale up gradually rather than rushing expansion.

Conclusion

  • India's nuclear journey shows how sanctions bred self-reliance and cost leadership.
  • Achieving 100 GW by 2047 is achievable, but only through calibrated growth that prioritises domestic technology, safety culture, and gradual scaling, ensuring India emerges as both energy-secure and globally competitive.
Editorial Analysis

Article
14 Jul 2026

Supreme Court on Fair Procedure for Citizenship Determination

Why in the News?

  • The Supreme Court has set aside 27 judgments of the Gauhati High Court that upheld Foreigners Tribunal orders declaring individuals as foreigners, emphasising that citizenship must be determined through a fair, lawful, and reasonable process.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • About the Case (Background, Origin of the Dispute, Supreme Court’s Key Observations)

Background of the Case

  • The case arose from a batch of appeals filed by 27 individuals from Assam who had been declared foreigners by the Foreigners Tribunals (FTs) through exparte proceedings (decisions made in the absence of the concerned person).
  • One of the lead cases involved Sabitri Dey and her husband Sambhu Dey.

How the Dispute Originated?

  • In May 1997, the then Illegal Migrants (Determination) Tribunal declared the couple to be illegal migrants after they failed to appear before the tribunal despite notices being issued.
  • The tribunal relied primarily on the report of an Enquiry Officer, as no documentary evidence or written statement was presented by the petitioners.
  • The petitioners later claimed that they had never received proper notice and became aware of the tribunal's order only in 2019.
  • They subsequently challenged the order before the Gauhati High Court, arguing that:
    • The proceedings had violated the principles of natural justice.
    • No legal aid or amicus curiae had been provided.
    • The order was based largely on hearsay evidence rather than substantive proof of foreign nationality.
    • They possessed government-issued documents supporting their claim to Indian citizenship.
  • However, in 2020, the Gauhati High Court dismissed their petitions, observing that:
    • They had failed to appear before the tribunal.
    • There was no written statement or documentary evidence before the tribunal.
    • The challenge was filed after an unexplained delay of nearly 23 years.
    • The High Court also relied upon Section 9 of the Foreigners Act, 1946, which places the burden of proving Indian citizenship on the person concerned.
  • The matter was subsequently appealed before the Supreme Court.

Key Observations of the Supreme Court

  • Citizenship Requires a Fair and Reasonable Procedure
    • The Supreme Court observed that questions relating to citizenship have profound constitutional and human rights implications.
    • The Court held that an individual cannot be deprived of citizenship except through a fair, lawful, and reasonable procedure, consistent with the guarantees under Article 21 of the Constitution.
    • The Bench emphasised that citizenship is a matter of immense constitutional significance and cannot be decided solely on procedural defaults.
  • Ex Parte Orders Require Greater Judicial Scrutiny
    • The Court expressed concern over declarations of foreigner status through ex parte proceedings, particularly where individuals claim they were unaware of the proceedings.
      • An ex parte proceeding - only one party is present before the court, without the opposing party being notified or given a chance to participate.
    • The Court observed that before confirming such declarations, tribunals must carefully examine whether:
      • Proper notice was effectively served.
      • The individual received a genuine opportunity to present evidence.
      • Principles of natural justice were followed throughout the proceedings.
  • Natural Justice Must Guide Citizenship Proceedings
    • The Court reiterated that audi alteram partem, the principle that every person must be given an opportunity to be heard, is an essential component of fair procedure.
    • Where the consequences involve the possible loss of citizenship and the risk of detention or deportation, procedural safeguards assume even greater importance.
  • Documentary Evidence Must Be Properly Considered
    • The Supreme Court noted that the appellants claimed to possess government-issued documents supporting their Indian citizenship.
    • Instead of rejecting such claims solely because of earlier procedural lapses, the appropriate course is to examine the evidence on its merits.
    • The Court observed that citizenship disputes should be decided on substantive evidence rather than technical procedural deficiencies.
  • Section 9 of the Foreigners Act Does Not Override Due Process
    • While acknowledging that Section 9 of the Foreigners Act, 1946, places the burden of proving citizenship on the individual concerned, the Court clarified that this statutory provision does not dispense with the requirement of a fair adjudicatory process.
    • Even where the burden lies on the individual, tribunals remain duty-bound to conduct proceedings in accordance with constitutional principles.
  • Cases Remanded for Fresh Adjudication
    • Instead of deciding the citizenship claims itself, the Supreme Court set aside all 27 Gauhati High Court judgments and remanded the matters to the respective Foreigners Tribunals for fresh adjudication.
    • The Court directed that the claims be reconsidered after providing the appellants with a meaningful opportunity to:
      • File written statements.
      • Produce documentary evidence.
      • Present witnesses, if necessary.
      • Be heard in accordance with the law.

Significance of the Judgment

  • The ruling reinforces several constitutional principles:
    • Citizenship determination must adhere to the due process of law.
    • The Foreigners Tribunals must strictly follow the principles of natural justice.
    • Procedural defaults alone cannot become the basis for depriving an individual of citizenship.
    • Courts should carefully balance statutory requirements with constitutional guarantees under Article 21.
  • The judgment is expected to influence the functioning of Foreigners Tribunals in Assam and strengthen procedural safeguards in citizenship-related adjudication.

 

Polity & Governance

Article
14 Jul 2026

Beyond Labour - Why Gender Wealth Inequality Must Be Counted

Context:

  • The World Inequality Report (WIR) 2026 by the World Inequality Lab, Paris School of Economics, and the UN report Counting What Counts (May 2026) examine inequality and gender disparities.
  • However, both reports largely equate women’s economic status with labour market participation, while overlooking gender inequality in wealth and asset ownership, thereby underestimating the true extent of economic inequality.

The Missing Dimension - Gender Wealth Inequality:

  • Both reports primarily assess women's economic status through employment, labour force participation and wage differentials.
  • They neglect ownership of wealth and productive assets, despite devoting significant attention to household wealth inequality in general.
  • This creates a misleading impression that wealth belongs to men while women are viewed mainly as labour providers. 

Why Wealth Ownership Matters?

  • Improves social and human development outcomes:
    • Evidence from studies across the Global South (1994–2024) shows that when women own assets:
      • Child survival, nutrition, health and education outcomes improve significantly.
      • Women face a lower risk of domestic violence.
      • Asset ownership provides protection against poverty following marital breakdown.
    • Thus, women's ownership of assets contributes to welfare beyond what employment alone can achieve.
  • Enhances productivity and economic growth:
    • Studies, including those compiled by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), show that giving women access to farmland, agricultural inputs, and productive assets can substantially increase -
      • Agricultural productivity.
      • National economic growth.
    • Asset ownership therefore has macroeconomic significance, not merely social value.
  • Essential for livelihoods in the informal economy:
    • In developing countries, particularly India, most women work in the informal sector, where earnings depend on ownership of productive assets rather than wages.
    • Productive assets include agricultural land, livestock, farm equipment, street vending carts, and small business infrastructure.
    • Without ownership of such assets, women's earning capacity remains severely constrained.

Indian Scenario - Labour Without Assets:

  • PLFS 2023–24 findings:
    • 86% of all women workers are employed informally.
    • 91% of rural women workers are in the informal sector.
    • 77% of rural women workers are engaged in agriculture.
    • 73% of rural women workers are self-employed, largely as unpaid family workers.
  • Hence, only about 25% of rural women, and one-third of all women workers receive wage employment (regular or casual).
  • For the rest (who are self-employed), asset ownership—not wages—is the primary determinant of sustainable income.

Persistent Gender Gap in Land Ownership:

  • Despite women increasingly functioning as de facto farmers due to male migration, data (from NFHS, ICRISAT and IHDS) show women own land in only 12–16% of rural land-owning households.
  • Lack of ownership limits access to institutional credit, investment decisions, productivity, and economic independence.

Limitations of Existing Measurement Approaches:

  • Over-reliance on hourly earnings:
    • Both reports use the female-to-male hourly earnings ratio as the principal indicator of gender inequality.
    • This is inadequate because:
      • Most self-employed workers do not earn by the hour.
      • Farmers, shopkeepers and street vendors cannot meaningfully calculate hourly wages.
      • Annual earnings would provide a more realistic measure.
  • Incomplete understanding of unpaid work:
    • The reports largely equate unpaid work with the domestic chores and care work.
    • They overlook women's unpaid productive work on family farms, household enterprises, and small businesses.
    • This results in further underestimation of women's economic contribution.
  • Ignoring wealth as a driver of inequality:
    • The WIR attributes lower female employment mainly to lack of affordable childcare, poor transport, inadequate family leave, and hiring discrimination.
    • While important, these explanations overlook asset ownership, even though research by the World Inequality Lab itself identifies inheritance as a major source of wealth inequality.
  • Data unavailability - Not an adequate excuse:
    • The argument that wealth data by gender are unavailable is increasingly untenable.
    • Existing sources already provide:
      • Gender-wise pension wealth data in several developed countries.
      • Gender distribution among the richest 1%.
      • Gender-disaggregated land ownership data from the FAO and World Bank for many developing countries.
    • Moreover, the World Inequality Lab has successfully encouraged governments to improve wealth data collection.

Policy Priorities:

  • Reducing gender inequality requires moving beyond labour-market reforms.
  • Policy priorities should include:
    • Equal inheritance rights and implementation.
    • Expanding women's ownership of land and productive assets.
    • Improved access to credit through secure property rights.
    • Recognition of women as farmers and entrepreneurs.
    • Collection of gender-disaggregated wealth and asset data.
    • Policies addressing intra-household wealth inequalities, not merely household-level disparities.

Conclusion:

  • Measuring gender inequality solely through employment and wages presents an incomplete picture of women's economic status.
  • Wealth and productive asset ownership are fundamental determinants of empowerment, productivity, bargaining power and long-term economic security.
  • A comprehensive approach to inequality must therefore integrate gendered wealth distribution alongside labour-market indicators, ensuring that women's role as owners of capital as well as contributors of labour is fully recognised.
Editorial Analysis

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Current Affairs
July 13, 2026

Key Facts about Thamirabarani River
Nobody has the right to pollute a water body in the name of religion, the Madras High Court recently said while flagging the large-scale dumping of clothes and other articles in the Thamirabarani river during rituals for the dead.
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About Thamirabarani River:

  • The Thamirabarani River – also known as the Tamraparni River or Porunai River, a rare perennial river in southern India flowing entirely through the Tamil Nadu
  • The river contains a small amount of copper, which gives the river water a distinct reddish tinge.
  • In Tamil, copper is called Thamiram and hence the river is named Thamirabarani.
  • Porunai is its classical name in Sangam literature, where it has extensive literary references.
  • Course:
    • It originates from the Agastyarkoodam peak of the Pothigai hills of the Western Ghats.
    • It flows entirely within Tamil Nadu before meeting the Gulf of Mannar near Tuticorin.
  • Major Tributaries: Gadananathi River, the Manimuthar River, and the Pachaiyar River.
  • Prominent dams include:
    • Papanasam Dam
    • Karaiyar Dam
    • Manimuthar Dam
    • Servalar Dam
    • Gadananathi Dam
  • Major Waterfalls:
    • Banatheertham Falls
    • Agasthiyar Falls
    • Kalyana Theertham
  • Temples like Papanasam Temple and Agasthiyar Temple are located along its banks.
    • Biodiversity:
      • It is one of the richest rivers in the world with fish.
      • All the three species of otters in India, the Eurasian otter, the smooth-coated otter, and the Asian small-clawed otter, inhabit the Thamirabarani River.
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