Prelims
Global Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) 2025

Key Highlights
- Global Headcount
- Of 6.3 billion people across 109 countries, 1.1 billion (18.3%) live in acute multidimensional poverty.
- 43.6% face severe poverty (deprived in half or more MPI indicators).
- 83.2% live in sub-Saharan Africa (565 million) and South Asia (390 million).
- India
- Multidimensional poverty fell to 16.4% (2019-21) from 55.1% (2005-06).
- ~414 million people lifted out of poverty.
- Common Deprivations
- Lack of clean cooking fuel, inadequate housing, poor sanitation.
- Climate Hazards
- Over 80% of poor live in climate hazard-prone regions.
- South Asia has highest number of poor in climate hazard areas.
- Small Island Developing States (SIDS)
- 22 SIDS have collective poverty rate of 23.5% (higher than developing world average: 18.3%).
- Sea-level rise by up to 70 cm by 2080-99 poses critical threat (Belize, Comoros, Samoa).
Global Multidimensional Poverty Index
- Released by: UNDP and Oxford Poverty & Human Development Initiative (OPHI) annually since 2010.
- Methodology: Based on 3 dimensions with 10 indicators:
- Health
- Nutrition: Any person under 70 is undernourished.
- Child Mortality: Child under 18 died in household in last 5 years.
- Education
- Years of Schooling: No member completed 6 years of schooling.
- School Attendance: School-aged child not attending school up to class 8 completion age.
- Living Standards
- Access to clean energy, sanitation, drinking water, etc.
Codex Committee on Spices and Culinary Herbs (CCSCH)

Codex Committee on Spices and Culinary Herbs (CCSCH)
- Established 2013 at India’s behest under Codex Alimentarius Commission (CAC).
- Secretariat: India’s Spice Board (Ministry of Commerce and Industry), Kochi.
Codex Standards
- Definition
- International food texts (standards, hygiene codes, guidelines) to protect consumer health and ensure fair food trade practices.
- Collection adopted by CAC known as Codex Alimentarius (CA).
- Nature
- Not binding on national food legislation; adopted by consensus among members.
- WTO’s SPS Agreement identifies Codex standards as international benchmark for food safety.
- Codex Alimentarius Commission (CAC)
- HQ: Rome.
- Established jointly by FAO and WHO in 1963.
- Objective
- Protecting consumer health, ensuring fair food trade practices.
- Membership
- 189 members: 188 countries (including India) + 1 organization (EU).
- Meetings
- Meets annually, alternating between Geneva and Rome.
India’s Gold Reserves

Context: India’s gold reserves reached $102.3 billion (RBI data), raising gold’s share in foreign reserves to ~15% from ~7% a decade ago.
Why RBI Increasing Gold Reserves?
- Diversification: Diversify foreign currency assets base; reduce US dollar dependency (de-dollarization).
- Risk Mitigation: Protect against currency volatility and revaluation risks to forex stockpile.
- Hedge Against Inflation: Protects purchasing power of foreign reserves.
- Safe Haven Asset: Provides buffer during economic/geopolitical turmoil and financial crises.
Risks of Increasing Gold in Reserves
- Reduced Liquidity: Gold to cash conversion is slower and costlier.
- Zero Yield: Gold yields no interest (unlike currency deposits).
- Storage and Security Costs: Physical gold requires secure storage, increasing costs.
Components of Foreign Exchange Reserves
- Foreign Currency Assets (FCA) maintained in
- US dollar, euro, pound sterling, Australian dollar, Japanese yen.Â
- Gold Reserves: Held with RBI.Â
- Holdings with IMF
- Special Drawing Rights (SDR): Interest-bearing reserve asset created by IMF to supplement members’ reserve assets.
- Reserve Tranche Position (RTP): Difference between member’s quota and IMF’s holdings of member’s currency; readily available for withdrawal without strict conditions.
Zombie Deer Disease

About
- Progressive, fatal neurological disease affecting deer, elk, moose, reindeer.
- Affects central nervous system (brain, spinal cord).
Cause
- Caused by infectious proteins called prions.
- Prions are misfolded proteins (no DNA/RNA, unlike bacteria/viruses).
- Cause other brain proteins to misfold, leading to brain damage.
- Protein accumulation creates spongy holes in brain tissue, causing severe neurological dysfunction.
Transmission
- Highly contagious; spread via body fluids (saliva, feces, blood, urine) through direct contact or environmental contamination.
- Prions remain infectious in soil, water, plants for years, posing long-term risk.
Symptoms
- Incubation period: 18-24 months (animals appear normal during this time).
- Progressive weight loss (most obvious sign).
- Behavioral changes: Decreased social interaction, loss of awareness, loss of fear of humans.
- Increased drinking, urination, excessive salivation.
- Final stage: Animals become debilitated, ultimately die.
- Progression speed depends on species and genetics.
Treatment
- Always fatal; no vaccine or treatment.
Human Risk
- No confirmed human transmission so far; experts remain cautious.
Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)

Context: India and FAO celebrated 80 years of partnership on World Food Day 2025.
About FAO
- UN specialized agency leading international efforts to defeat hunger.
- Oldest permanent UN specialized agency; established October 1945.
- HQ: Rome, Italy.
- Mandate
- Improve nutrition, increase agricultural productivity, raise rural living standards, contribute to global economic growth.
- Functions
- Coordinates government and technical agency efforts in agriculture, forestry, fisheries, land/water resources development.
- Leads international efforts to fight hunger.
- Forum for negotiating agreements between developing and developed countries.
- Source of technical knowledge and information for development.
- Membership
- 195 members: 194 countries + European Union.
- India is founding member.
- Key Reports
- SOFO (State of World’s Forests).
- SOFIA (State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture).
- SOCO (State of Agricultural Commodity Markets).
- SOFI (State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World).
Rakchham Chitkul Wildlife Sanctuary

Context: International bird-watching programme organized at Rakchham area of Rakchham-Chitkul Wildlife Sanctuary, Himachal Pradesh.
Location and Geography
- Kinnaur district, Himachal Pradesh; part of Western Himalayan range.
- Area: 30.98 sq. km.
- Elevation: 3,200 to 5,486 meters above sea level.
- Surrounded by snow-capped mountains, lush green valleys, gushing rivers.
Features
- Lamkhanga Pass (perilous trekking route) passes through sanctuary; connects Kinnaur (HP) to Gangotri (Uttarakhand).
- Located in dry zone; does not experience monsoons (unlike other HP sanctuaries).
Flora
- Rhododendrons, oak, pine trees, medicinal herbs.
Fauna
- Snow leopards, Himalayan black bears, musk deer, numerous bird species.
Tuvalu Island

Context: Tuvalu became 90th State Member of International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).
About Tuvalu
Location and Geography
- Island country in west-central Pacific Ocean; formerly Ellice Islands.
- 4th smallest country (26 sq. km land area).
- Located halfway between Australia and Hawaii.
- Neighbors: Kiribati (north), Fiji (south).
- Collection of small islands and atolls (coral reefs, volcanic rock).
- All islands low-lying; no point above 4.5m sea level — threatened by sea level rise.
- No rivers; hot and rainy climate.
Demographics
- Fewest inhabitants of any independent nation (except Vatican City).
Administrative
- Capital: Funafuti.
- Languages: Tuvaluan (most spoken), English widely used.
- Currency: Tuvalu dollar (equivalent to Australian dollar).
Nauru

Context: Australia defended A$2.5 billion, 30-year agreement with Nauru to resettle deported non-citizens, criticized by human rights groups for shifting refugee responsibility to aid-dependent Pacific nations.
Nauru
- Micronation in southwestern Pacific Ocean
- World’s third-smallest country by land area and population.
- Unitary parliamentary republic with 19-member legislature.
Geographic Location
- Located 25 miles south of Equator in southeastern Micronesia.
- About 800 km northeast of Solomon Islands, 300 km west of Kiribati’s Banaba Island.
- Land area: Only 21 sq. km (most compact sovereign states).
Administrative Centre
- No official capital
- Yaren district hosts Parliament, Presidential offices, administrative institutions (de facto capital).
Geological and Environmental Features
- Raised coral atoll with fertile coastal land encircling Buada Lagoon (only inland water body).
- Interior plateau (~100 feet above sea level) rich in phosphate rock (from ancient bird guano deposits).
- Phosphate mining degraded 80%+ of land, creating limestone pinnacles, limiting agriculture.
- Severe freshwater scarcity; relies on rainfall-dependent reservoirs, imported water.
Significance
- Economy relies on phosphate exports, Australian aid, offshore asylum processing revenues.
- Key geopolitical partner for Australia, hosting detention and resettlement facility under migration and defence cooperation framework.


