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Article
15 May 2026
Why in news?
The Indian government has banned sugar exports until September 30, 2026, driven mainly by concerns over two risks—Iran-related geopolitical uncertainty and the possible impact of El Niño on agriculture.
Despite adequate domestic sugar availability at present, policymakers are acting cautiously to safeguard future food security and supply stability. Only limited exports under special quota commitments to the EU and U.S. will continue.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Sugar Industry in India
- India’s Sugar Supply Position Remains Comfortable, But Stocks Are Tightening
- Why the Government Took No Chances on Sugar Exports?
- India’s Sugar Export Ban to Hit Major Overseas Buyers
Sugar Industry in India
- India is the world's second-largest producer of sugar (after Brazil) and the largest consumer.
- The industry employs millions of farmers and workers, making it one of the most socially significant agro-based industries in the country.
- Factors Responsible for Location
- Raw Material Availability — Sugarcane is the primary raw material. Since it is bulky, perishable, and loses sucrose content rapidly after cutting, mills must be located close to cane-growing areas.
- Climate — Sugarcane thrives in tropical and subtropical climates with a long growing season, high rainfall or irrigation, and warm temperatures. This naturally concentrates the industry in fertile plains and coastal regions.
- Labour — The industry is labour-intensive — both in farming and processing.
- Transport — Efficient road and rail networks are essential to bring cane quickly to mills and dispatch sugar to markets. Poor transport directly reduces the quality of extracted sugar.
- Water and Power — Sugar mills consume enormous quantities of water for washing and processing.
- Market and Government Policy — A large, dense domestic population ensures consistent demand. The government plays a significant role through the Fair and Remunerative Price (FRP) mechanism for sugarcane and by regulating sugar release into the market.
- Geographical Distribution
- North India Belt — Uttar Pradesh dominates and accounts for the largest number of mills. Bihar, Punjab, Haryana, and Uttarakhand also form part of this belt, spread across the fertile Ganga-Yamuna plain. However, the crushing season here is shorter (November–April) and cane yield per hectare is relatively lower.
- South India Belt — Maharashtra, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, and Andhra Pradesh form a highly productive southern belt. The sugarcane grown here has a higher sucrose content, the crushing season is longer, mills are more modern and cooperative-run, and overall efficiency is greater.
India’s Sugar Supply Position Remains Comfortable, But Stocks Are Tightening
- India is expected to produce 279 lakh tonnes of sugar in 2025-26. Combined with opening stocks of over 50 lakh tonnes, total availability stands at 329 lakh tonnes.
- The government had initially allowed 15 lakh tonnes of sugar exports, later increasing the quota by 5 lakh tonnes, taking the total permitted exports to 20 lakh tonnes.
- However, only about 6.5 lakh tonnes are likely to be exported.
- After accounting for domestic consumption of 280 lakh tonnes and exports of 6.5 lakh tonnes, India’s closing sugar stocks are projected to fall to 42.5 lakh tonnes.
- Although closing stocks would be the lowest since 2016-17, they still represent around 1.8 months of domestic consumption—sufficient to meet demand until the next crushing season begins around November.
Why the Government Took No Chances on Sugar Exports?
- El Niño Threat to Future Sugar Production - The biggest concern is the possible emergence of El Niño, which could weaken monsoon rains and raise temperatures in India. While the current sugar crop is safe, the next planting cycle for 2027-28 could face serious production risks.
- Fertiliser Supply Risks from West Asia Crisis - Sugarcane is a water- and fertiliser-intensive crop. Ongoing geopolitical tensions in West Asia could disrupt fertiliser supplies, increasing the risk of lower sugarcane yields in upcoming seasons.
- Doubts Over Actual Sugar Stocks - The government may be uncertain whether all sugar mills actually hold the stock quantities they officially report. Any mismatch between declared and physical stocks could create unexpected supply shortages.
- Inflation Management as a Priority - The government wants to avoid any future shortage that could push up sugar prices and worsen broader inflation concerns, especially at a time of uncertainty over fuel, fertiliser, and food prices.
- Export Economics Already Weak - Indian sugar exports were already commercially unattractive, as domestic sales offered better returns than exports after accounting for transport and port handling costs. The ban mainly closes an already narrow export window.
India’s Sugar Export Ban to Hit Major Overseas Buyers
- India is the world’s second-largest sugar producer and exporter after Brazil.
- Sugar exports grew sharply after 2020, peaking at ₹45,132 crore in 2022 before steadily declining in subsequent years.
- Sugar exports dropped significantly—to ₹30,688 crore in 2023, ₹18,906 crore in 2024, and ₹18,586 crore in 2025—indicating weakening export momentum even before the latest ban.
- Majority of Export Trade Affected
- The exemption for limited quota-based exports to the United States and European Union offers little relief, as these markets account for only a small portion of India’s sugar exports.
- Since nearly 90% of India’s sugar exports go to other regions, the export ban will significantly disrupt trade flows and impact major importing nations.
- India’s biggest sugar buyers include Somalia, Sudan, Djibouti, Yemen, UAE, Bangladesh, Kenya, Sri Lanka, and Iran, with African countries accounting for a particularly large share of exports.
Article
15 May 2026
Context:
- The Israel-Iran conflict has created a far bigger global disruption for India than Trump’s tariff wars.
- India has long depended on stable ties with Iran for energy security, regional influence, and maintaining an independent foreign policy.
- While India successfully navigated the Ukraine war, the current West Asia crisis presents an even more serious long-term strategic challenge.
- Recent economic and defence partnerships with Europe, once seen as strengthening India’s global position, now appear insufficient in giving India leverage in this rapidly escalating regional conflict.
India’s Strategic Autonomy Under Pressure in a Changing Global Order
- Europe Deals Offer Limited Strategic Cushion
- India’s recent major agreements—such as the Rafale fighter jet deal with France and progress on the India-EU Free Trade Agreement—were seen as milestones toward a more multipolar world order.
- However, the emerging West Asia crisis shows that these partnerships offer limited protection against American unilateral actions.
- U.S. Unilateralism is Reshaping Global Politics
- The U.S. attack on Iran and its disregard for wider consequences on global trade and security demonstrate that American dominance remains strong.
- Hopes of a balanced multipolar order appear premature.
- Economic Autonomy Becoming Harder
- Previously, India enjoyed considerable freedom in economic policymaking because the U.S.-led economic system was relatively open and market-driven.
- Trump’s tariff policies and increasing economic coercion now signal a shift where countries are expected to align their economic choices with American strategic interests.
- Strategic Autonomy Was India’s Key Foreign Policy Strength
- India has successfully maintained relations with competing powers—including the U.S., Russia, China, Iran, Israel, and European nations—without fully aligning with any bloc.
- This balancing act has been the strongest expression of India’s strategic autonomy.
- Trump-Era Pressures Challenge India’s Independent Choices
- U.S. demands that India reduce Russian oil imports, weaken ties with Iran, avoid de-dollarisation initiatives like BRICS alternatives, and align more closely with American interests represent one of the biggest challenges to India’s foreign policy independence in decades.
- India’s Regional Image Faces Strain
- Even temporary U.S. concessions, such as the waiver for Russian oil purchases, came on Washington’s terms, highlighting India’s limited room for manoeuvre.
- The sinking of an Iranian naval ship by a U.S. submarine in the Indian Ocean, shortly after its participation in an Indian naval event, further dented India’s image as a major regional power.
- India’s long-standing strategy of balancing multiple global relationships without choosing sides is becoming increasingly difficult as the U.S. combines military dominance with economic coercion, narrowing the space for genuine strategic autonomy.
Europe Deals Reduce Dependence, But Not Strategic Risks
- India’s Diversification Strategy - India’s FTA with the EU and Rafale fighter jet deal with France are seen as efforts to reduce dependence on the U.S. by diversifying strategic partnerships.
- Rafale Deal: Strategic Gains with Limitations - The Rafale deal benefits both India and France—India gains access to advanced fighter aircraft while France secures a major long-term defence market. Compared to U.S. or Russian options, Rafale appears the most practical choice.
- Technology Transfer Concerns - Despite expectations, doubts remain over the extent of technology transfer. French control over source codes and critical algorithms means India may remain dependent on France for future upgrades, limiting defence self-reliance and weakening the ‘Make in India’ objective.
- EU FTA as a Response to Global Economic Uncertainty - The India-EU FTA can be viewed as an attempt to protect against Trump’s protectionist economic policies and preserve a rules-based liberal economic order through stronger alternative trade partnerships.
- Domestic Political Challenges - The FTA may face resistance within India, particularly from farmers and industrial workers who could fear increased competition and economic disruption, making political acceptance difficult.
- New Dependencies May Replace Old Ones - While these agreements reduce dependence on the U.S., they do not remove risks entirely. Europe may also use trade and strategic partnerships to gain leverage over India, creating a different form of dependency.
Europe’s Strategic Limits and America’s Continuing Dominance
- India strongly supports a genuinely multipolar global order that allows strategic flexibility.
- In contrast, most European countries—except occasionally France—have historically aligned with the U.S., limiting their independence in major geopolitical crises.
- Europe’s recent engagement with India appears driven more by temporary tensions with Trump’s America than by a long-term strategic shift. Historical patterns suggest Europe tends to return to the American fold under pressure.
- Statements from U.S. leadership indicate a push toward a renewed Western economic and strategic bloc built around shared civilisational identity and supply chain control.
- This suggests that countries of the Global South may be treated less as equal partners and more as arenas of geopolitical competition.
- Cultural and Strategic Divergence Limits India-Europe Alignment
- In an era of rising identity politics and geopolitical tribalism, the idea of a deep strategic alignment between India and Europe appears weak, especially when core Western interests are at stake.
- Despite rhetorical reservations over the West Asia conflict, European countries are likely to ultimately support or facilitate American and Israeli strategic objectives, highlighting their limited autonomy from Washington.
Conclusion
- India’s strategic autonomy faces unprecedented pressure as global power politics harden, making diversified partnerships useful but insufficient for preserving genuine independent decision-making.
Article
15 May 2026
Context
- Over the years, India has established advanced hospitals, produced skilled doctors, and improved access to modern medical treatment.
- Despite these achievements, a major challenge continues to threaten national well-being: the growing neglect of preventive care.
- Health is often viewed as something to restore after illness instead of something to protect daily and as a result, India has become more successful at treating diseases than preventing them.
- The need of the hour is a transformation in public thinking and true progress can only be achieved when individuals, families, and society collectively prioritise long-term well-being, healthy lifestyles, and regular medical awareness.
A Civilisational Reckoning
- Rising Burden of Non-Communicable Diseases
- India is witnessing a rapid rise in non-communicable diseases such as diabetes, heart attacks, strokes, and cancer.
- These diseases have now overtaken infectious illnesses as the leading causes of death in the country.
- Millions of Indians suffer from chronic conditions, often without knowing about them until severe complications emerge.
- This situation reflects not only a medical problem but also a social and cultural crisis.
- The lack of awareness, delayed diagnosis, and unhealthy lifestyles have contributed to the spread of preventable diseases.
- Economic and Social Consequences
- The impact of chronic illness extends far beyond hospitals. Preventable diseases reduce productivity, weaken families, and place enormous pressure on the economy.
- Many young and middle-aged adults lose their most productive years battling illnesses that could have been controlled through timely intervention.
- A nation cannot achieve its highest potential if its citizens are physically weak or constantly struggling with health problems.
- India’s future ambitions in economic growth, social development, and global leadership depend on the vitality, strength, and longevity of its population.
The Window for Action
- Importance of Early Adulthood
- The age group between thirty and forty years represents a critical stage for health intervention. During this period, people are usually focused on careers, responsibilities, and family life.
- However, this is also the phase when early metabolic and cardiovascular risks begin to develop silently.
- By the age of forty, many individuals are no longer disease-free. Unfortunately, most people ignore routine check-ups because they do not experience visible symptoms.
- Need for Early Detection
- The absence of symptoms often creates a dangerous false sense of security.
- Diseases like diabetes, hypertension, and heart-related conditions progress gradually and remain unnoticed for years.
- By the time warning signs appear, the body may already have suffered serious damage.
- Therefore, early detection, regular screening, and timely medical intervention are essential. Routine health checks can identify risks before they become life-threatening.
- Possibility of Prevention and Recovery
- There is still strong reason for optimism because the human body responds positively to timely care.
- Healthy food habits, regular exercise, stress management, and medical monitoring can prevent, delay, or even reverse many chronic diseases.
- However, this opportunity does not last forever. Delayed action increases complications and reduces the possibility of recovery. Prevention is most effective when adopted early in life.
Push for Transformation
- The Need for Self-Stewardship
- Prevention should not remain limited to government programmes or temporary campaigns. It must become a lasting philosophy of life.
- Individuals need to recognise that caring for their health is one of their most important responsibilities.
- Personal health choices affect not only individuals themselves but also their families, communities, and future generations.
- Building Healthy Habits
- The real challenge lies in changing habits and attitudes.
- Society must encourage:
- Regular health check-ups
- Balanced nutrition
- Physical fitness
- Mental well-being
- Awareness about chronic diseases
- Role of Families and Society
- Real transformation begins at home. Families shape food habits, routines, and attitudes toward health from an early age.
- Everyday decisions regarding exercise, diet, sleep, and stress management play a crucial role in long-term wellness.
- Preventive care, therefore, becomes both a personal and collective responsibility. A healthier society can only emerge when awareness becomes part of everyday life.
Conclusion
- While the nation has achieved remarkable success in medical treatment and innovation, its long-term future depends on strengthening the culture of prevention, awareness, and healthy living.
- The fight against chronic disease requires more than hospitals and medicines. It demands discipline, responsibility, and social transformation.
- India’s ambitions for sustainable development and global leadership can only succeed when its people remain healthy, productive, and aware.
Article
15 May 2026
Why in News?
- Amid rising external sector pressures triggered by the ongoing West Asia conflict, weakening forex reserves, and sustained foreign portfolio outflows, the GoI and the RBI are considering a series of measures to attract foreign capital inflows.
- One of the key proposals under discussion is reducing — or even eliminating — the withholding tax on interest earned by foreign investors on Indian government bonds.
- The debate reflects India’s broader challenge of balancing exchange rate stability, foreign exchange (forex) reserve conservation, inflation management, and investor confidence in a volatile global environment marked by high US interest rates and geopolitical uncertainty.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Why is India Concerned?
- Proposal Under Discussion - Cutting Withholding Tax on Government Bonds
- Why Policymakers Are Divided?
- Forex Conservation Measures Already Initiated
- RBI’s Forex Intervention Strategy
- Rupee Depreciation and Capital Flight
- Lessons from the 2013 Taper Tantrum
- Positive Developments
- Conclusion
Why is India Concerned?
- Pressure on India’s external sector:
- India is currently facing multiple external vulnerabilities:
- Declining forex reserves
- Persistent foreign portfolio investor (FPI) outflows
- Rising crude oil prices due to the West Asia conflict
- Weakening rupee against the US dollar
- High global interest rates, especially in the United States
- The RBI’s forex reserves reportedly depleted by nearly $38 billion in two months, intensifying concerns over the sustainability of India’s external account.
- India is currently facing multiple external vulnerabilities:
- Key objective: The government aims to conserve forex reserves, stabilise the capital account, prevent excessive rupee depreciation, and improve India’s attractiveness for global investors.
Proposal Under Discussion - Cutting Withholding Tax on Government Bonds:
- What is withholding tax?
- Withholding tax refers to the tax deducted at source on interest income earned by foreign investors from Indian government bonds.
- Currently, foreign investors pay around 20% withholding tax. Earlier, a concessional 5% rate existed until 2023.
- India’s rate is considered among the highest globally. For example, in China it is 10% (temporary exemptions in place since 2018), Vietnam (5%), while Malaysia exempts government bonds from this levy.
- Additional complexities in India:
- Investors from countries with which India has double taxation avoidance agreements (DTAAs) pay lower rates.
- Investors without Indian tax residency certificates face higher burdens.
- Tax is imposed on gross income. Losses cannot be adjusted against gains.
- This reduces the attractiveness of Indian debt markets.
- Objective behind reducing it - To attract FPI:
- Lower taxation could Improve post-tax returns for foreign investors, increase demand for Indian government securities, bring in dollar inflows, strengthen the rupee, and reduce pressure on forex reserves.
- Senior policymakers believe easing tax-related “friction” may improve India’s competitiveness vis-à-vis other emerging markets.
Why Policymakers Are Divided?
- Concerns over effectiveness: A section of policymakers doubts whether tax cuts alone can attract significant inflows under current global conditions.
- Major concerns:
- High US interest rates: US treasury yields remain elevated, making American assets more attractive and reducing risk appetite for emerging markets.
- Geopolitical uncertainty: The ongoing West Asia conflict has increased global risk aversion and oil price volatility.
- Limited immediate impact: Officials fear that foreign inflows may not rise meaningfully even after tax cuts, and India may appear economically vulnerable if the policy fails.
Forex Conservation Measures Already Initiated:
- Import duty hike on gold: The government has increased import duties on gold, precious metals. As India imports large quantities of gold, it increases the current account deficit (CAD), and drains forex reserves.
- PM’s appeal: Reduce gold purchases, avoid extravagant foreign travel, use public transport and carpooling, minimise fuel consumption, etc. These measures reflect a broader strategy of economic austerity and forex conservation.
- Debate on fuel prices and austerity:
- Officials believe India has delayed fuel price adjustments and austerity measures compared to other Asia-Pacific economies (happened in the region 2 months ago).
- As rating agencies and investors closely monitor fiscal discipline, suppressing fuel prices may worsen fiscal pressures, and undermine India’s macroeconomic credibility.
- Thus, controlled fuel price increases are seen as increasingly inevitable.
RBI’s Forex Intervention Strategy:
- Massive intervention in currency markets: The RBI has actively intervened in forex markets to stabilise the rupee.
- Gross forex sales by RBI: < $100 billion each in 2020-21 and 2021-22, $213 billion in 2022-23, $153 billion in 2023-24, $399 billion (record high) in 2024-25, and $166 billion in 2025-26 (first 11 months).
- Additionally: RBI held a net short forward position of $104 billion by February-end.
Rupee Depreciation and Capital Flight:
- Rupee weakened by nearly 11% against the US dollar over the last year. Since the onset of the West Asia war, it has fallen another 5% (reaching a new low of Rs 95.96 against a US dollar on 14th May 2026).
- Foreign portfolio investors withdrew nearly $22.5 billion from Indian financial markets in 2026 so far.
- This has amplified pressure on equity markets, bond markets, and exchange rate stability.
Lessons from the 2013 Taper Tantrum:
- Background:
- When the rupee sharply depreciated due to the US Federal Reserve’s ‘taper tantrums’, RBI had opened a FCNR(B) [Foreign Currency Non-Resident (Bank)] deposit swap window for a period of just under three months.
- During this window, banks raised $26 billion, helping boost the central bank’s forex reserves.
- Proposal for Special Deposit Schemes rejected:
- Officials considered introducing a special foreign deposit mobilisation scheme similar to the RBI’s 2013 FCNR(B) swap window.
- However, policymakers have currently rejected a similar scheme due to changing global conditions and associated risks.
Positive Developments:
- Recovery in FDI: Despite capital market volatility, FDI flows showed improvement.
- Key trends: February 2026 witnessed net FDI inflows of $4.6 billion, highest level in nearly four years, and following the interim India-US trade agreement.
- Overall FDI position: Net FDI inflows during the first 11 months of 2025-26 reached $6.27 billion, compared to only $959 million in 2024-25. This suggests long-term investor confidence in India’s structural growth story remains intact.
Conclusion:
- India’s current economic situation highlights the delicate balance between protecting macroeconomic stability and sustaining growth amid an uncertain global environment.
- While tax reforms may help reduce investment barriers, they alone cannot offset global risk aversion and geopolitical uncertainty.
- A combination of prudent fiscal management, calibrated monetary intervention, structural reforms, and external sector resilience will be essential for India to navigate the present turbulence while preserving long-term investor confidence.
Article
15 May 2026
Why in the News?
- India is witnessing significant capital outflows and depreciatory pressures on the rupee amid rising oil prices and the West Asia conflict, raising concerns about the country's external sector stability.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Capital Flight (Concept, Current Depreciation, Impact on Indian Economy, Govt Response, Vulnerabilities, Way Forward)
Understanding Capital Flight and Currency Depreciation
- Capital flight refers to the large-scale movement of financial assets and capital out of a country, typically triggered by economic instability, geopolitical uncertainty, or unfavourable monetary conditions.
- It often results in currency depreciation, weakening of foreign exchange reserves, and pressure on the domestic economy.
- Currency depreciation occurs when the value of a country's currency falls relative to other currencies.
- In India's case, the rupee has been weakening against major currencies like the US dollar due to a combination of outflows of foreign capital, rising imports, and global uncertainty.
How Capital Flows Affect Emerging Economies?
- Emerging market economies like India typically offer higher returns on investments compared to developed economies, attracting foreign capital.
- However, they also carry currency and inflation risks. A rise in Indian inflation or a depreciation of the rupee can reduce the net return for foreign investors, making Indian assets less attractive.
- The decision of foreign investors to hold Indian assets depends largely on the interest rate differential between India and developed economies, particularly the US.
- If interest rates rise abroad, foreign investors tend to withdraw from Indian markets, leading to:
- Capital outflows from emerging markets.
- Depreciation of the rupee as investors exchange Indian assets for dollars.
- Pressure on the RBI to either raise interest rates or impose capital controls.
Lessons from the 2013 Taper Tantrum
- The current situation echoes the 2013 Taper Tantrum, when the US Federal Reserve announced a possible end to its quantitative easing programme.
- Even before any actual rate hike, the mere expectation of higher US interest rates triggered massive capital outflows from emerging market economies, including India.
- The episode demonstrated that expectations alone can drive capital flight, making emerging economies particularly vulnerable to shifts in global monetary policy sentiment.
- Current Scenario: West Asia Conflict and Capital Outflows
- The outbreak of hostilities in the Persian Gulf and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz have caused significant disruption to global energy markets.
- India, which imports nearly 85% of its crude oil, is particularly vulnerable to these developments.
- Key Observations
- Foreign capital outflows have intensified despite no change in US or UK interest rates.
- The US Federal Reserve and the Bank of England have maintained interest rates at 3.75% since December 2025.
- Central banks initially forecast that the oil price spike would be temporary, making rate hikes unnecessary.
- However, prolonged conflict raises the possibility of persistent inflation, which could force future interest rate hikes.
Why This Time Is Different?
- What makes the current scenario particularly worrying is that capital flight has occurred even without any definitive signal from foreign central banks about raising interest rates. This suggests:
- Foreign investors may have already priced in future rate hikes.
- Markets are responding to profound global uncertainty rather than confirmed policy shifts.
- If interest rates do rise abroad, India could face additional pressure on its external sector.
Impact on the Indian Economy
- Widening Current Account Deficit
- The Current Account Deficit (CAD) is widening due to rising crude oil prices and elevated import bills.
- Crude oil prices have remained above $100 per barrel, significantly increasing India's import expenditure.
- Pressure on the Rupee
- The rupee has witnessed considerable depreciation in recent weeks.
- Combined with capital outflows, this puts significant pressure on India's external balance and foreign exchange reserves.
- Inflationary Pressures
- Rising LPG and petrol prices have caused hardships for working-class households, even triggering reverse migration of workers back to villages.
- Higher energy prices feed into inflationary expectations, potentially affecting wages and broader price levels.
- Monetary Policy Dilemma
- The RBI faces a difficult choice:
- Raising interest rates to defend the rupee and prevent further capital outflows, but at the cost of slowing domestic investment.
- Maintaining current rates to support growth, but risking continued depreciation and inflation.
- Imposing capital controls, which could deter long-term foreign investment.
- The RBI faces a difficult choice:
Government and RBI Response
- The government and RBI have undertaken several measures to address these challenges:
- RBI Intervention: The Reserve Bank has imposed restrictions on certain foreign exchange derivative contracts to curb speculative pressure on the rupee.
- Import Duties on Gold: The government has announced higher import duties on gold to reduce non-essential imports and conserve forex reserves.
- Prime Minister's Austerity Appeal: PM Narendra Modi has urged citizens to reduce consumption of gold and petrol, encouraging the use of public transport, electric vehicles, and locally manufactured goods.
Structural Vulnerabilities
- India's external sector faces several structural challenges:
- High import dependence on crude oil, gold, and electronics.
- Limited export competitiveness in manufacturing compared to peers like Vietnam and Bangladesh.
- Exposure to global monetary policy shifts, particularly US Federal Reserve decisions.
- Geopolitical risks in key trade routes such as the Strait of Hormuz.
- Volatile capital flows that respond quickly to global uncertainty.
- If interest rates were to rise in developed economies in the coming months, these vulnerabilities would come under further stress.
Way Forward
- Short-Term Measures
- Strengthening forex reserves through targeted interventions.
- Diversifying crude oil sources to reduce dependence on West Asian supplies.
- Encouraging gold monetisation to channel idle household gold into the formal economy.
- Promoting domestic tourism to retain forex outflows from foreign travel.
- Long-Term Reforms
- Boosting manufacturing exports through schemes like PLI and Make in India.
- Accelerating the renewable energy transition to reduce crude oil dependence.
- Deepening financial markets to attract stable long-term capital.
- Building strategic petroleum reserves to cushion against supply shocks.
- Enhancing competitiveness through structural reforms in labour, land, and capital markets.
Current Affairs
May 14, 2026
About Lake Tahoe:
- It is a large freshwater lake that is surrounded by the majestic Sierra Nevada mountain range and straddles the boundary between the US states of California and Nevada.
- It is the highest lake in the United States as well as North America’s largest alpine lake.
- Lake Tahoe is the largest lake in the United States after the Great Lakes.
- The lake’s only outlet is the Truckee River that is situated in California’s Tahoe City.
Current Affairs
May 14, 2026
About Cacti:
- Cacti are a type of plant that is known for its thick, fleshy stem and its spines.
- These plants are native to the deserts of North and South America and have adapted to the dry, hot climate.
- Cacti come in a wide variety of shapes and sizes.
- One of the most unique things about cacti is their ability to store large amounts of water in their stems.
- This adaptation helps them to survive in desert conditions where water is scarce.
- When it rains, cacti absorb water through their roots and store it in their stems. This water is used by the plant during dry periods.
- The stem is covered in a layer of protection that helps prevent evaporation.
- Cacti also have specialized roots that are able to absorb water quickly.
- The shape of a cactus also plays a role in its water-saving abilities.
- Most cacti have a columnar shape, which means that they have a narrow base and a wide top.
- This shape allows the plant to minimize its surface area so that less water is lost through evaporation.
- There are two main types of cacti: opuntias and columnar cacti.
- Opuntias, also called prickly pears, are cacti that have flat, fleshy pads instead of the traditional cylindrical stem. These plants are covered in spines, and they produce small, edible fruits.
- Columnar cacti, on the other hand, have a tall, straight stem with ridges running up and down its length.
- These cacti often grow to be quite large, and are home to many species of animals in their native habitats.
- Cacti can be distinguished from other succulent plants by the presence of areoles, small cushionlike structures with trichomes (plant hairs) and, in almost all species, spines or barbed bristles (glochids).
- Areoles are modified branches, from which flowers, more branches, and leaves (when present) may grow.
Current Affairs
May 14, 2026
About Thadou Tribe:
- They are an indigenous people residing primarily in Manipur, as well as in the surrounding regions encompassing parts of other Northeastern Indian States and neighbouring Myanmar.
- In Manipur, they primarily live in the hill country adjacent to the Imphal Valley.
- The Thadous are the second-largest tribe in Manipur, preceded only by the Meiteis, or Manipuris.
- According to the 2011 census, the total Thadou population in Manipur was 190,595.
- The Thadou share many cultural affinities with the many other tribal groups who live near them.
- Thadous share a common culture with all the Chin-Kuki-Mizo community.
- Language: The Thadou language belongs to the Tibeto-Burman family of the Sino-Tibetan languages.
- Thadou settlements are located in forests. Sites on the tops of ridges or just below ridges are preferred.
- Villages are not arranged according to an established urban plan, and there is no marking of the perimeter of a village.
- The village chief’s house is usually the largest dwelling within the village.
- Outside it, there is a platform upon which men gather to discuss matters of importance and to mediate disputes.
- Economy:
- They practice subsistence activities including animal domestication, cultivation, hunting, and fishing.
- Jhum (slash-and-burn) agriculture is predominant.
- Religious Beliefs: The Thadou tribe traditionally practiced an animistic religion centered on nature spirits and a supreme god, Pathen, but today, almost all Thadou people are Christians.
- Festival: The Hun-Thadou cultural festival is an annual celebration of this community, which is celebrated at the arrival of the New Year.
Current Affairs
May 14, 2026
About Psechrus ntu and Psechrus phenshunyu:
- These are two newly discovered spider species from the genus Psechrus.
- Psechrus are a group of spiders belonging to the family Psechridae, commonly known for constructing large horizontal sheet webs in moist forest habitats.
- Both species were discovered in Nagaland and named after the local villages where they were first documented — Ntu and Phenshunyu.
- They exhibit several specialized anatomical characteristics associated with life in humid forest ecosystems:
- Elongated and dorsoventrally flattened body structures.
- Exceptionally long anterior legs adapted for environmental sensing.
- Fine sensory hair structures aiding vibration detection.
- Expanded web-building behavior suited to dense vegetation zones.
- Such traits are considered adaptive advantages for navigating dimly lit forest microhabitats where tactile and vibrational perception become essential for survival.
- The spiders construct expansive horizontal sheet-like webs that function both as prey-capture systems and environmental monitoring platforms.
- A male Psechrus himalayanus was observed sharing a web with Psechrus phenshunyu.
- This behavior, known as a heterospecific association, is extremely rare among spiders because most spider species exhibit territorial or cannibalistic tendencies.
Other Findings:
- The ZSI team also documented the occurrence of Psechrus himalayanus in Northeast India for the first time.
- This represents a major range extension from its previously known Himalayan distribution.
- ZSI researchers completed the first major taxonomic reassessment of Indian whip scorpions in over 100 years.
- Whip scorpions belong to the order Thelyphonida, an ancient and highly specialized arachnid lineage distinct from true scorpions.
- Despite their intimidating appearance, whip scorpions are non-venomous and harmless to humans.
- Whip scorpions possess several unique evolutionary adaptations:
- A long whip-like flagellum used for sensory navigation
- Enlarged pedipalps functioning as grasping appendages
- Acid-spraying defensive glands
- Strong nocturnal and burrowing behavior
- Their common nickname “vinegaroon” derives from the acetic acid-like spray they release when threatened.