Prelims-Pinpointer-for-06-12-2025 Current-Affairs Notes

Prelims Oriented

Director General of Civil Aviation (DGCA)

About DGCA

  • Regulatory body in civil aviation primarily dealing with safety issues ensuring air transport security nationwide.
  • Attached office of Ministry of Civil Aviation functioning under administrative control for policy implementation.
  • Headquarters: New Delhi serving as central hub for civil aviation regulation in India.

Mandate

  • Responsible for regulation of air transport services to/from/within India and enforcement of civil air regulations.
  • Enforces air safety and airworthiness standards ensuring compliance by airlines and aircraft operators comprehensively.
  • Coordinates regulatory functions with International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) for global aviation standards alignment.

Functions and Responsibilities

  • Safety Oversight
      • Main function: ensure safety of passengers and crew members on all flights operating in India comprehensively.
      • Investigates incidents/accidents within Indian airspace; takes appropriate action to prevent similar incidents in future ensuring accountability.
  • Industry Development
  • Crucial role in growth and development of Indian aviation industry working closely with airlines and airport operators.
  • Plays crucial role in developing new airports, modernizing existing facilities ensuring they meet growing aviation demands effectively.
  • Air Traffic Regulation
  • Responsible for regulation of air traffic in India; works closely with Airports Authority of India (AAI) ensuring coordination.
  • Ensures air traffic managed safely and efficiently across Indian airspace preventing congestion and accidents comprehensively.
  • Licensing and Certification
  • Issues licenses and certificates to pilots, aircraft maintenance engineers, and other aviation personnel ensuring qualified workforce.

Repo Rate

Meaning of the Repo Mechanism

  • The Repo Rate, or Repurchase Agreement Rate, denotes the interest charged by the central bank when commercial banks borrow short-term funds.
  • It enables banks to address temporary liquidity shortages by pledging securities and agreeing to repurchase them later at an interest-inclusive price.

How Repo Adjustments Influence Borrowing

  • When repo rates rise, banks face higher borrowing costs, prompting them to raise lending rates, which dampens loans to households and businesses.
  • A lower repo rate makes credit cheaper for banks, leading to reduced EMIs, increased borrowing, and stronger consumption demand.

Repo Rate as a Tool of Monetary Regulation

  • The repo instrument allows the central bank to modulate money supply, steer inflation dynamics, and stabilise overall economic activity.
  • It influences the cost of funds across the financial system and shapes lending behaviour.

Consequences of a Repo Rate Reduction

  • Growth Momentum
      • Reduced interest costs facilitate business expansion, capital investment, and employment generation.
      • Affordable credit boosts consumer spending and production across sectors.
  • Financial Market Behaviour
    • Lower deposit returns may shift household savings towards stocks, mutual funds, or real estate, affecting capital allocation patterns.
  • Currency and Trade Effects
    • A lower repo rate may diminish investment returns, potentially causing capital outflows, weakening the currency, and raising import prices.
    • A softer currency can enhance export competitiveness.
  • Inflationary Pressure
    • Increased borrowing and consumption can elevate prices, risking a breach of the 4% inflation anchor, with a permissible ±2% band.

Evolution of India’s 4% Inflation Benchmark

  • Chakravarty Committee Insights (1982–85)
    • Established under RBI Governor Manmohan Singh and chaired by Sukhamoy Chakravarty.
    • It emphasised price stability as central to monetary policy.
    • Proposed 4% average WPI inflation as a balanced long-term target.
    • Called for market-based government borrowing, an active securities market, and monetary targeting (M3) for inflation control.
    • M3 = M1 (currency with public + demand deposits) + net time deposits.
  • Urjit Patel Committee (2014)
    • Institutionalised flexible inflation targeting, endorsing the 4% ±2% band originally proposed by the Chakravarty Committee.
    • Its recommendations shaped the 2016 inflation-targeting framework, aligning India with global monetary norms.

Monetary Policy Committee (MPC)

Understanding Monetary Policy

  • Monetary policy refers to the central bank’s use of interest rates, money supply tools, and credit regulations to influence economic activity.
  • Under the Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934, the RBI is legally empowered to frame and conduct monetary policy.
  • Its foremost objective is to ensure price stability, while also supporting economic growth.
  • Price stability is viewed as essential for achieving sustained long-term expansion.

Evolution of India’s Inflation Targeting Framework

  • In May 2016, the RBI Act was amended to give a statutory basis to the flexible inflation targeting system.
  • The inflation target is finalized by the Government of India in consultation with the RBI, once every five years.
  • This framework guides monetary policy by providing a numerical anchor for inflation expectations.

Role and Mandate of the Monetary Policy Committee

  • The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), established under Section 45ZB of the amended RBI Act, determines the policy interest rate needed to achieve the inflation target.
  • Its central function is to set the benchmark repo rate, ensuring inflation remains within the prescribed band.
  • The MPC replaced the earlier Technical Advisory Committee, creating a more structured decision-making mechanism.

Composition and Decision-Making Structure

  • The MPC consists of six members:
    • The RBI Governor (Chairperson).
    • The Deputy Governor responsible for monetary policy.
    • One RBI Board nominee.
    • Three external members nominated by the Central Government.
  • External members serve a four-year term.
  • The quorum requires at least four members, including the Governor or, in his absence, the Deputy Governor.
  • Decisions are based on majority voting; in the event of a tie, the Governor exercises a casting vote.
  • MPC decisions are binding on the RBI and guide monetary operations.
  • The Monetary Policy Department (MPD) of the RBI provides analytical support for policy formulation.
  • The MPC must convene a minimum of four times annually.

Open Market Operations (OMO)

Context: RBI announced OMO purchases of ₹1 lakh crore G-Secs and $5 billion USD-INR swap this month for liquidity injection; Governor Malhotra says tariffs’ impact minimal.

Open Market Operations (OMO)

  • Meaning and Purpose
    • Open Market Operations (OMOs) refer to the central bank’s sale or purchase of government securities in the open market.
    • They serve as a key monetary policy instrument for regulating money supply, liquidity, and inflation in the economy.
    • The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) conducts OMOs to manage rupee liquidity on a durable and long-term basis.

How OMOs Function

  • OMO – Sale of Government Securities
    • RBI sells securities when it assesses excess liquidity in the financial system.
    • Sale of securities withdraws money from circulation, reducing banking system liquidity.
    • Lower liquidity pushes interest rates upward, making borrowing costlier for businesses and households.
    • Higher interest rates slow economic activity by discouraging credit growth.
    • Bond market impact: Increased supply of government securities raises bond yields, as investors demand higher returns.
  • OMO – Purchase of Government Securities
    • When liquidity is tight, RBI purchases government securities from banks and market participants.
    • This injects funds into the economy and increases liquidity.
    • Additional liquidity lowers interest rates, making loans cheaper for consumers and firms.
    • Lower borrowing costs stimulate investment and consumption, supporting economic expansion.

Significance for Monetary Policy

  • OMOs help RBI maintain price stability by controlling inflation through liquidity management.
  • They support smooth functioning of financial markets by modulating liquidity shocks.
  • OMOs influence bond yields, credit conditions, and investment climate, shaping broader macroeconomic outcomes.

Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs)

Context: Foreign institutional investors are showing renewed interest in Indian markets with $414 million inflow (six-month high) as US flows lose steam, and focus shifts to emerging markets.

Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs)

  • FIIs constitute a category within Foreign Portfolio Investors comprising large global institutional entities.
  • These include mutual funds, pension funds, insurance companies, hedge funds, and similar institutions.
  • They follow structured, research-driven investment strategies in foreign markets, supplying long-term capital.
  • Their inflows strengthen emerging economies, while sudden withdrawals can destabilise financial markets.
  • Hence, FIIs remain subject to strong regulatory oversight to preserve macro-financial stability.

Regulatory Architecture in India

  • FIIs are governed primarily under FEMA, 1999, and SEBI’s FPI Regulations.
  • The RBI supervises sector-wise foreign investment limits and monitors compliance daily.
  • The framework ensures transparency, market discipline, and controlled exposure to foreign capital.

Investment Limits and Eligibility Rules

  • A single FII may invest up to 10% equity in one Indian company.
  • Combined FII/NRI/PIO holdings are capped at 24%, unless raised by shareholders.
  • Eligible entities include university endowment funds, charitable trusts, and long-standing institutional organisations.
  • FIIs may deploy proprietary capital and also invest in unlisted securities within permitted norms.

Macroeconomic Factors Influencing FII Flows

  • Increased FII participation recently correlates with a weaker U.S. Dollar Index, falling from 104–105 to around 99–100.
  • A softer dollar improves the relative strength of the rupee, attracting foreign investors.
  • The RBI’s stable policy stance and macroeconomic resilience boosted FII interest in banking and financial services.
  • Conversely, FIIs reduced exposure to IT sectors due to concerns over a possible U.S. slowdown affecting tech revenues.

Digital Hub for Reference and Unique Virtual Address (DHRUVA)

Overview of DHRUVA

  • DHRUVA is a national-level Digital Address Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) designed to standardise, digitise, and virtualise physical addresses.
  • It introduces a UPI-style addressing system, allowing citizens to share address “labels” such as name@entity instead of full physical addresses.
  • The initiative is proposed through a draft amendment released by the Department of Posts in 2025.
  • It expands upon the existing DIGIPIN digital geocoding framework.

Objectives

  • To build a unified, interoperable, and secure digital address ecosystem for India.
  • To treat address-data management as a core public infrastructure, similar to Aadhaar, UPI, and DigiLocker.
  • To enable Address-as-a-Service (AaaS) for government agencies, businesses, and citizens.
  • To support seamless address sharing for delivery, verification, and governance services.

Key Features

  • UPI-like Address Labels
    • Each user receives a virtual address handle (e.g., name@entity) acting as a digital proxy for their physical location.
    • Eliminates repeated entry of full addresses across services.
  • Consent-Based Data Access
    • Organisations may access a user’s geocoded or textual address only after explicit, time-limited consent.
    • Ensures strong privacy and data-protection safeguards.
  • DIGIPIN Backbone
    • DIGIPIN is a 10-character alphanumeric geocode representing latitude–longitude.
    • It maps every 14 sq. metre unit of India, generating ~228 billion unique address points.
    • It is open-sourced, with high accuracy for rural and unmapped regions.
  • AaaS Architecture
    • Provides secure APIs enabling integration of verified address data with logistics, e-commerce, fintech, and government platforms.
    • Widens adoption across public and private sectors.
  • Institutional Framework
    • A Section 8 not-for-profit entity, similar to NPCI, will govern DHRUVA.
    • Address Service Providers (ASPs) will issue virtual labels.
    • Address Information Agents (AIAs) will manage user consent and authorisation workflows.
  • Interoperability & Stakeholder Participation
    • The system is voluntary, encouraging participation by gig platforms, e-commerce companies, fintech networks, and logistics providers.
    • Designed to create a nationally consistent addressing standard for governance, service delivery, and commerce.

Vultures

Context

  • BNHS will release six critically endangered vultures—slender-billed and white-rumped—in Assam in January 2026.
  • The initiative is part of India’s long-term vulture population recovery strategy.

Slender-billed Vulture (Gyps tenuirostris)

  • Profile
    • A critically endangered Old World vulture once widely distributed in South Asia.
    • Survives today in fragmented habitats across Assam, Gangetic plains, Nepal, Bangladesh, Myanmar, and Cambodia.
    • Prefers tall nesting trees near settlements, slaughterhouses, and riverine ecosystems.
  • Status & Traits
    • IUCN Status: Critically Endangered with fewer than ~870 mature individuals.
    • Characterised by a narrow bill, long bare neck, grey body, and pale rump.
    • Wingspan ranges from 196–258 cm with body length between 80–95 cm.
    • Breeds slowly, producing only one egg per year; feeds mainly on carrion.

White-rumped Vulture (Gyps bengalensis)

  • Profile
    • Once extremely common across India, now among the world’s fastest-declining birds.
    • Nests on large trees or cliffs, frequently roosting near human habitation.
  • Status & Traits
    • IUCN Status: Critically Endangered due to diclofenac-contaminated livestock carcasses.
    • Displays a white neck ruff, dark plumage, and a prominent white rump patch.
    • Wingspan measures 180–210 cm, with weight reaching up to 7.5 kg.
    • Breeds between October and March, laying a single thick-shelled egg.
    • Feeds in mixed scavenger groups, relying heavily on carcass availability.

AstroSat is India’s first dedicated multi-wavelength astronomy satellite

About AstroSat

  • AstroSat is India’s first dedicated multi-wavelength astronomy satellite, enabling simultaneous observations in UV, optical, soft X-ray and hard X-ray ranges.
  • Launched in 2015 aboard PSLV-C30, it was placed in a 650 km orbit for long-duration astrophysical studies.
  • Objective: To observe high-energy cosmic phenomena, study compact objects, map stellar evolution processes, and generate publicly accessible astronomical data.
  • Payload Suite:
    • Five scientific instruments covering 0.3–100 keV and UV wavelengths, allowing integrated spectral analysis.
    • Unique capability for simultaneous multi-band observations, uncommon among global space observatories.
  • Technical Features:
    • High pointing accuracy and stable attitude control allow extended exposure times.
    • Mission operations handled by ISTRAC, Bengaluru; data archived at ISSDC, Bylalu.
  • Mission Life: Designed for 5 years, yet has significantly exceeded its intended lifespan, continuing to generate high-quality astrophysical data.

Ultra-Violet Imaging Telescope (UVIT)

  • Overview
    • UVIT is a dual-channel ultraviolet imaging telescope mounted on AstroSat, capable of observing in far-UV (FUV), near-UV (NUV) and visible bands.
    • Marks India’s first UV space telescope, and globally, the second in FUV capability after the Hubble Space Telescope.
  • Key Features
    • Provides spatial resolution better than 1.5 arcseconds, placing it among the world’s most precise UV imagers.
    • Comprises two co-aligned telescopes with FUV and NUV+Visible channels.
    • Developed through a national collaboration coordinated by the Indian Institute of Astrophysics (IIA) with major ISRO centres.
  • Scientific Significance
    • Enabled major discoveries in stellar and galactic astrophysics, including:
      • Detection of hot companions of Be stars.
      • Identification of blue stragglers in clusters with high precision.
      • Mapping of UV disks in dwarf galaxies and novae in Andromeda.
      • Establishing correlations between AGN UV and X-ray emissions.
    • Celebrated 10 years of successful operation, marking a decade of significant contributions to global space science.

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