Wednesday, July 15, 2020

Comprehensive Current affairs 15 July 2020

GOI aims to increase public expenditure by 2025.

The Union Health Ministry has pushed for an increased expenditure on public health. In a meeting with the 15th Finance Commission, the Union Health Minister Dr. Harsh Vardhan, yesterday highlighted that the government aims at gradually increasing the public health expenditure to 2.5 per cent of the nation's GDP by the year 2025.

The Minister asserted that the outlay for primary health expenditure will also be made nearly two third of the total public health expenditure in the country.

Reiterating the government's target of the National Health Policy 2017, Dr.Vardhan emphasized on the importance of increasing the state’s health sector spending to nearly 8 per cent of their total budget.
The Health Ministry apprised the Finance Commission of the need to further strengthen the public

health sector, surveillance and public health management, preventive and promotive health care system in the country.

The Health Ministry has also revised its requirement of around 4.9 lakh crores to 6.04 lakh crores in view of the COVID pandemic. It has asked for additional resources for the States which would be utilized for achievement of the National Health Policy targets. 

 

Modi  claims India amongst the most opened up economies in the world.

Indian P M Modi has said that India is among the most open economies in the world. He was interacting with the CEO of Google, SundarPichai through video conferencing yesterday. The Prime Minister said that Indians are adjusting to and adopting technology at a rapid pace.

Mr.Modi and Mr.Pichai spoke on a wide range of subjects, particularly leveraging the power of technology to transform the lives of India’s farmers, youngsters and entrepreneurs. Mr.Modi also spoke about the recent steps taken by the government towards reforming agriculture and creating new job opportunities.

The Prime Minister explored the idea of virtual labs that can be used by students as well as farmers. On issue of data security and cyber safety, he said, tech companies need to put in efforts to bridge the trust deficit. 


World Youth Skills Day is observed on 15 July.

World Youth Skills Day is observed on 15 July every year. The day is aimed to recognize the importance of equipping young people across the world with skills for employment and entrepreneurship. The day also aims to highlight the crucial role of skilled youth in addressing current and future global challenges.


Events:
World Youth Skills Day 2020 is to take place in a challenging context. The coronavirus pandemic and lockdown measures have led to the worldwide closure of technical and vocational education and training (TVET) institutions, threatening the continuity of skills development.
Many virtual events focusing on the theme of “Skills for a Resilient Youth” is organized to mark the occasion.

United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO)-International Project on Technical and Vocational Education (UNEVOC) is organizing a Virtual Conference on Skills for a Resilient Youth for a week. It will be held from  6-14 July 2020.

History:
In December 2014, the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) passed a resolution and declared 15th July as World Youth Skills Day. UNGA established the day with an aim to achieve better socio-economic conditions for the youth as a means of addressing the challenges of unemployment and underemployment. World Youth Skills Day is an opportunity for young people, training institutions, public and private sector stakeholders to celebrate and acknowledge the importance of equipping young people with skills for employment, decent work, and entrepreneurship.

Polish President Andrzej Duda wins the 2020 Presidential Election of Poland.

Polish President Andrzej Duda wins the 2020 Presidential Election of Poland

In the first round, Andrzej Duda gained the highest 43.50% of the total valid vote share followed by Rafal Trzaskowski with 30.46% in the second place.

Polish President Andrzej Duda won the 2020 Presidential Election of Poland on 12 July 2020. He has secured another five-year in office. Andrzej Duda’s current term will expire on 6 August 2020.

Duda aligned with the ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party and won 51.2% of the votes and Rafal Trzaskowski from the main opposition center-right Civic Platform party secured 48.7%.

2020 Presidential Election of Poland:

The First Round of the 2020 Presidential Election of Poland was conducted on 28 June 2020. A total of 11 candidates contested for the post of President. In the first round, Andrzej Duda gained the highest 43.50% of the total valid vote share followed by Rafal Trzaskowski with 30.46% in the second place. On 12 July 2020, the Second-Round election was conducted in Poland.

 

Iran kicks India from Chabahar rail project.

Four years after India and Iran signed an agreement to construct a rail line from Chabahar port to Zahedan, along the border with Afghanistan, the Iranian government has decided to proceed with the construction on its own, citing delays from the Indian side in funding and starting the project.

The development comes as China finalises a massive 25-year, $400 billion strategic partnership deal with Iran, which could cloud India’s plans.

The railway project, which was being discussed between the Iranian Railways and the state-owned Indian Railways Construction Ltd (IRCON), was meant to be part of India’s commitment to the trilateral agreement between India, Iran and Afghanistan to build an alternate trade route to Afghanistan and Central Asia.

In May 2016, during indian PM Modi’s visit to Tehran to sign the Chabahar agreement with Iranian President Rouhani and Afghanistan President Ghani, IRCON had signed anMoU with the Iranian Rail Ministry.

 

Indian Army to acquire Raven and Spike Firefly.

The Indian army is to acquire hand-launched, remotely controlled unmanned aerial vehicle Raven from the US and state-of-the-art Israeli Spike Firefly. The aim is to add lethality to its ground infantry apart from long-range precision artillery shells with a range of over 40 kilometers.

Highlights:

·         The first batch of acquisition comprises 4-6 jets are likely to touch down in India on 27 July.

·         Indian Army is set to acquire 200 pieces of RQ-11 UAV. RQ-11 UAV can fly up to 10 kilometers at an altitude of 500 feet and speed up to 95 km per hour. It will help infantry troops conduct reconnaissance of the battle theatre ahead and placement of enemy troops.

·         The Spike Firefly can deliver a precision strike on enemy troops hiding within a range of 1 kilometre. It has the ability to locate a target and will be called back if the target has moved beyond ranger. It is developed under a joint venture (JV) of Israeli company- Rafael Advanced Defense Systems and Israel’s Ministry of Defence.

 

U.S, China and UAE to send unmanned spacecraft to Mars.

Mars is about to be invaded by planet Earth - big time. Three countries - the United States, China and the United Arab Emirates - are sending unmanned spacecraft to the red planet in quick succession beginning this week, in the most sweeping effort yet to seek signs of ancient microscopic life while scouting out the place for future astronauts.

The US, for its part, is dispatching a six-wheeled rover the size of a car, named Perseverance, to collect rock samples that will be brought back to Earth for analysis in about a decade.

Scientists want to know what Mars was like billions of years ago when it had rivers, lakes and oceans that may have allowed simple, tiny organisms to flourish before the planet morphed into the barren, wintry desert world it is today.

 

Govt. support not to fully mitigate negative impact of pandemic,claimsMoodys

The challenging economic and credit conditions stemming from COVID-19 will weigh on ASEAN and Indian banks’ asset quality and profitability, Moody’s Investors Service said in a new report.

Moody’s said the asset quality and profitability will deteriorate from good levels in 2019 across most banking systems, with Singapore, Malaysia and the Philippines having the best asset quality with non-performing loans below 2%. 

While government support measures will offset some of the pressure on banks, they will not fully eliminate the negative impact, the report said.

Despite the challenging outlook, the majority of banks are adequately capitalised, and their funding and liquidity will remain sound and stable in 2020-21.

For instance, regulators in India, Thailand and Vietnam have restricted bank dividends, a credit positive for banks, while the largest banks will continue to benefit from deposit inflows as they are seen as safe-heavens in times of stress.

“Moody’s expects the GDP of most ASEAN economies and India will contract in 2020 and gradually recover in 2021.

 

Indian Railways are going to achieve net zero carbon emissions by 2030.

Indian Railways has stepped up its efforts to become a Green Railway within a span of 10 years. It has set the target to achieve net zero carbon emission by the year 2030. 

Railways has taken a number of initiatives for mitigation of global warming and combating climate change to achieve the Green Railway status. Electrification of lines, improving energy efficiency of trains, green certification for installation and stations, fitting bio toilets in coaches and switching to renewable sources of energy are parts of Railways’ strategy for achieving net zero carbon emission.

Indian Railways has completed electrification of more than 40 thousand route kilometres which is 63 per cent of the total broad gauge routes. More than 18 thousand six hundred kilometre electrification work has been completed during the last six years. 

Railways has fixed a electrification target of seven thousand route kilometres for this financial year. All routes on the broad gauge network have been planned to be electrified by the end of year 2023. In all, 365-kilometre major connectivity work has been commissioned during COVID pandemic period.

 

Yet another challenge to the dalit movement.

Context:
The pandemic is forcing us to understand the changing nature of society. In north India, specifically, it has also reshaped the discourse on marginalisation.Dalit issues are part of this discoursebut are submerged in the broader discussions on economic vulnerabilities highlighted by COVID-19.

This pandemic has brought about two important shifts in the political discourse on the marginalised.

As the lockdown caused untold suffering to poor, migrant labourers, it brought them from the margins to the centre of deliberations.

Second, discussions on the space for the marginalised in the public health system and their safety are in focus.

However, the concerns of Dalits remain hidden under the broader categories of poor, vulnerable, marginal, etc.

Changing vocabulary:

In contemporary debates, there is a reappearance of class-based vocabulary.Caste-based issues have either become invisible or are only visible as part of the wider discourse.
Leaders such as Bahujan Samaj Party supremo Mayawati and Bhim Army chief Chandrashekhar Azad have not been able to engage effectively with these new shifts.They have not been able to carve outa location in these new debates for their own politics.They have to reorient their exclusively caste-based language and reshape their political discourse to be in tune with the times.

There are a large number of Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes among the migrant labourers.But Dalit leaders in north India have not been able to represent their concerns.
It is possible that these shifts in political debates may continue in the post-pandemic phase at least for a few years as vulnerabilitiesof the marginalised will increase.

Key challenges:

The Dalit movement in north India is habituated in using caste-based binaries in its mobilisational language but has failed to respond to the changing political diction.

In fact, leaders have not changed their political diction for 30 years, since the time of the Kanshi Ram-led Bahujan movement.


The movement is facing a crisis of agendas and social programmes.

The constant repetition of unfulfilled claims and commitments and slogans and promises create disillusionment among a section of their support base.

Another issue is that the Dalit movement in north India is grappling with a leadership crisis.In States such as U.P., Bihar, Punjab and Rajasthan, Dalit assertions are mostly centred around the electoral politics of Dalit-Bahujan political groups and parties.Even alternative social movements led by Jignesh Mevani and Mr. Azad seem to be caught in the logic of electoral politics.

Leadership crisis:

During the Bahujan movement in the 1990s, the idea was that the movement and the party could facilitate each other.

But the BSP, which emerged from the Bahujan social movement, developed gradually as a party structured like a pyramid. Under Ms. Mayawati, it has stopped its reciprocal relationship with the Dalit movement.

In the BSP, the emergence of political leaders of various Dalit-Bahujan castes at different levels became frozen.

This caused erosion in the broader social base and ultimately weakened the Dalit movement.The Dalit movement is constantly facing new challenges but its leaders are not able to change their strategies and grammar of politics to respond to them.

Under the influences of the Ambedkarite ideology and the Dalit-Bahujan movements, an assertive and politically aware Dalit consciousness was being formed among a section of Dalit groups.In the meantime, interventions by Hindutva leaders among Dalits mobilised a section of the most marginalised Dalits under the Hindutva flag.Now the pandemic has posed a new challenge for the Dalit movement.

Conclusion:
Caste-based identities formed the ideological resource base, but now concerns have gone beyond caste and religion, thus posing a different challenge.The challenge may be temporary but it may

lead to a paradigm shift for Dalit politics.The Dalit movement has to evolve new social strategies for its expansion in order to keep up with the changing times.


Gains from rains: on monsoon performance.

Context:
As of the most recent data available from the India Meteorological Department (IMD), rainfall during the season has been 14% more than what is usual for this period.
The month of June only accounts for about 17% of the monsoon rainfall spanning June-September.
It is the month during which the monsoon sets in and that process can sometimes be delayed for as much as a week.

Two branches:

June is also when the monsoon begins its journey from two extremities of the country.
One branch starts its journey northwards from Kerala and the other wing — called the Bay of Bengal branch — enters India from the southeast.

Both branches eventually converge in the north and usually, this merging and strengthening of the monsoon currents over the mainland takes at least until July 15.

The IMD never forecasts the possible rainfall likely during June because of the vagaries involved in onset and the pace of the journey.

This year, two significant things happened. The monsoon set in at a textbook date of June 1.This was even after concerns that Cyclone Amphan that had ravaged West Bengal would delay the monsoon’s entry into India from the Andaman Sea.


The second factor was the record pace at which the monsoon covered the country. Along with the monsoon onset this year, the IMD announced a revision to the onset and withdrawal dates across several cities.According to this, the monsoon covered India’s northern and western borders no later than July 8 as opposed to the previous historical date of July 15.

This year, however, the monsoon broke even this speed limit and covered the country by June 25 — at a pace that was unprecedented since 2013.

Signalling farmers:

The net result of all this: more rainy days in June and a fairly even distribution across the country.
The IMD’s records show that only on four days in that month did daily rainfall drop below its historical normal.
Except for northwest India, which is staring at a 3% deficit, the rainfall in east, south and central India has posted surpluses of 13%-20%.While good rains in June signal farmers to prepare the soil and sow kharif crop, the most important months are July and August.These two months account for two-thirds of the monsoon rain. This is also the time the monsoon goes into so-called ‘break’ conditions.
Breaks:
Prolonged breaks, or an absence of rainfall, can even lead to drought.
In spite of significant improvements in data gathering and technological advancement, meteorological agencies cannot yet reliably forecast the advent of a break or how long it can last.

What is critical is that ‘normal rains’ also obscurethe possibility of heavy rains or severe droughts in districts or over larger areas.

Therefore, short and medium range forecasts need to be strengthened and effectively communicated to the people.

Conclusion:
A steady, well-spread monsoon spells good news for farmers and the economy.So far, India appears to be having a good run with the monsoon.


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