IMPORTANT NEWSCLIPPINGS (28 june 19)
13
www.afeias.com IMPORTANT NEWSCLIPPINGS (28‐june‐19) 1 Date:28-06-19 Beyond tariffs Indo ‐ US partnership’s full potential remains untapped, mutual tradeoffs will be worthwhile TOI Editorials Prime Minister Narendra Modi is scheduled to attend two informal meetings on the sidelines of the ongoing G20 summit in Osaka, Japan. He will host the Russia, India, China group meeting. Separately, he will participate in a meeting of the Japan, America, India group. These independent meetings encapsulate the delicate balancing act India is currently carrying out in a world where developments are increasingly influenced by big power rivalry. India’s challenge is to safeguard its strategic interests in this setting. US secretary of state Michael Pompeo this week in New Delhi made a case for a tighter trade and defence relationship between the two countries. On trade and investment, US is already India’s largest partner. In defence, ties have been on the upswing. On the heels of the purchase of heavy‐lift helicopters by India, the US military for the first time will participate in a tri‐service exercise with Indian defence forces this year. In this upbeat backdrop, a tweet by US President Donald Trump yesterday showed why this is a tricky moment in the bilateral relationship. He complained about India’s “high tariffs” and promised to take it up with Modi in Osaka. India, as a member of WTO, harmonises its tariffs and relevant laws with its international obligations. However, this hasn’t been enough for Trump. Increasingly, there are bilateral attempts to bring changes in India’s structure that synchronise with American interests. This is clearly not possible. Therefore, the way out for both sides is to negotiate and arrive at positions which are mutually acceptable. As Pompeo pointed out, neither country will get everything they want. Both sides have to make tradeoffs. Since tradeoffs are a foregone conclusion, the question is the framework within which these should be made. External affairs minister S Jaishankar said that points of friction between the two sides will be discussed in the framework of the big picture. The big picture, as Pompeo observed, is that the two countries share both common interests and values. This is the right framework to help resolve differences. In areas such as flow of data, both sides have common interests. Privacy, for instance, is where there can largely be convergence even while India upholds its legitimate interests. On issues pertaining to Indo‐Pacific, the countries have compatible aims. However, on the Indo‐Russian missile deal there can be no compromise. Indo‐US partnership is one for the long‐term. That’s why US now needs to be more accommodating.
Transcript of IMPORTANT NEWSCLIPPINGS (28 june 19)
Microsoft Word - 28-06-19-newsclips1
Date:28-06-19
Beyond tariffs Indo US partnership’s full potential remains untapped, mutual tradeoffs will be worthwhile
TOI Editorials
Prime Minister Narendra Modi is scheduled to attend two informal meetings on the sidelines of the ongoing G20 summit in Osaka, Japan. He will host the Russia, India, China group meeting. Separately, he will participate in a meeting of the Japan, America, India group. These independent meetings encapsulate the delicate balancing act India is currently carrying out in a world where developments are increasingly influenced by big power rivalry. India’s challenge is to safeguard its strategic interests in this setting.
US secretary of state Michael Pompeo this week in New Delhi made a case for a tighter trade and defence relationship between the two countries. On trade and investment, US is already India’s largest partner. In defence, ties have been on the upswing. On the heels of the purchase of heavylift helicopters by India, the US military for the first time will participate in a triservice exercise with Indian defence forces this year. In this upbeat backdrop, a tweet by US President Donald Trump yesterday showed why this is a tricky moment in the bilateral relationship. He complained about India’s “high tariffs” and promised to take it up with Modi in Osaka.
India, as a member of WTO, harmonises its tariffs and relevant laws with its international obligations. However, this hasn’t been enough for Trump. Increasingly, there are bilateral attempts to bring changes in India’s structure that synchronise with American interests. This is clearly not possible. Therefore, the way out for both sides is to negotiate and arrive at positions which are mutually acceptable. As Pompeo pointed out, neither country will get everything they want. Both sides have to make tradeoffs. Since tradeoffs are a foregone conclusion, the question is the framework within which these should be made.
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Formally, an informal solution
Sachin Jain, [The writer is dean, Bennett University, Greater Noida, UP]
With half of India’s population under 25 years, and more than one crore turning 18 every year, unemployment is a looming concern. NITI Aayog, in its ‘Strategy for New India@75’ report, indicated the need to create 8090 lakh jobs annually to deploy the country’s youth coming into the workforce every year, besides absorbing those moving from the farming to nonfarming sectors.
Some studies have pegged the contribution of the informal sector as over 54% to India’s gross value added (GVA) (200809 estimates). According to International Labour Organisation (ILO) data, the total share of informal employment in India has increased to 81% in 201617 as compared to 78% in 1999 2000, despite more than 7% GDP growth during the same period.
According to Economic Survey 2018, 87% of firms, representing 21% of total turnover, are purely informal, outside both the tax and social security nets. Given the massive base, shouldn’t the informal sector be promoted through ‘ease of doing business’, labour reforms et al, thereby making it an equally potent arm of the economy to drive growth and address the issue of unemployment?
With some of the pillars already casted by the first Narendra Modi government in the form of Jan Dhan AadhaarMobile (JAM), Digital India, Skill India, Pradhan Mantri MUDRA (Micro Units Development and Refinance Agency) Yojana (PMMY) and the Apprenticeship Act, this may be the time to build a solid informal economy platform on this foundation, thereby addressing issues of unemployment at three levels.
One, with 44% of India’s about 50 crore workforce currently deployed in agriculture, contributing only 15% of GVA, there is an urgent need to transition labour out of the farming sector.
With mobile internet reaching 500 million Indians across India, GoI’s plan of setting up one lakh digital villages, hybrid (onlineoffline teaching) skilling centres for rural youngsters on farmbased valueadded products, or nonfarmbased traditional crafts — coupled with funding support through PMMY for successful participants — can help shift rural youth from agriculture to entrepreneurial valueadded products and services. This has an added advantage of restricting overurbanisation.
With support from ecommerce and organised retail players through policy interventions and incentives, these rural products can be delivered at our doorsteps.
Two, with the gross enrolment ratio in higher education being only 26%, India needs to reinvent secondary education curricula, with more emphasis on developing an entrepreneurial mindset, design thinking and skillbased education for the 74% of two crore Class 12 students who never make it to a college. While some states have taken steps in introducing entrepreneurship and skillbased learning at the higher secondary level, such curricula along with skilling centres should be mandated by the HRD ministry across all 52 education boards.
www.afeias.com IMPORTANT NEWSCLIPPINGS (28june19)
4
The Apprenticeship Act should be further strengthened for all organisations above a certain threshold (say,.`50 crore in revenue) to hire at least 45% of its workforce annually as apprentices.
Of this lot, half should be students not pursuing higher education. This will ensure handson learning in the students’ area of interest, which will help them move into employment (selfemployed or otherwise) faster.
Finally, as according to the All India Survey Higher Education (AISHE) 201718 Report, out of 3.7 crore students pursuing higher studies across 900 universities and 50,000 colleges or standalone institutions, close to 80% students are pursuing undergraduate programmes of which the highest number (36.4%) of students are enrolled in arts, humanities and social sciences courses. The curricula of these programmes are out of sync with industry expectations, resulting in suboptimal outcomes for students and a massive drain on the public exchequer in subsidising fees and maintaining public universities.
India Skill Report 2018 corroborates this, stating that 53% of those coming out of higher education institutions are unemployable. Further, National Skill Development Policy estimates only 5% of India’s workforce having gone through formal skilltraining.
This is extremely low when compared to countries like South Korea (96%) and Germany (75%). If a portion of these HRD ministry grants to public universities is redeployed in introducing future skills and entrepreneurial thinkingbased curricula at universities and colleges, the outcome for students can be enhanced at zeroincremental cost.
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If the legislators have not agreed to the merger, there is no merger under Para 4. The lawmakers have used words very carefully. The words “twothirds of the Members. have agreed to such merger”, used in Para 4(2), make it abundantly clear that the merger takes place between two parties and the requisite number of legislators of that party must agree to such merger. Thereafter, the speaker exempts those legislators from disqualification. It may be noted here that the legislators do not merge, they only agree to the merger done by their original political party. Thus, a merger between the political parties concerned has to take place first. Only then can the legislators “agree to such merger”.
Date:28-06-19
Beyond tariffs Indo US partnership’s full potential remains untapped, mutual tradeoffs will be worthwhile
TOI Editorials
Prime Minister Narendra Modi is scheduled to attend two informal meetings on the sidelines of the ongoing G20 summit in Osaka, Japan. He will host the Russia, India, China group meeting. Separately, he will participate in a meeting of the Japan, America, India group. These independent meetings encapsulate the delicate balancing act India is currently carrying out in a world where developments are increasingly influenced by big power rivalry. India’s challenge is to safeguard its strategic interests in this setting.
US secretary of state Michael Pompeo this week in New Delhi made a case for a tighter trade and defence relationship between the two countries. On trade and investment, US is already India’s largest partner. In defence, ties have been on the upswing. On the heels of the purchase of heavylift helicopters by India, the US military for the first time will participate in a triservice exercise with Indian defence forces this year. In this upbeat backdrop, a tweet by US President Donald Trump yesterday showed why this is a tricky moment in the bilateral relationship. He complained about India’s “high tariffs” and promised to take it up with Modi in Osaka.
India, as a member of WTO, harmonises its tariffs and relevant laws with its international obligations. However, this hasn’t been enough for Trump. Increasingly, there are bilateral attempts to bring changes in India’s structure that synchronise with American interests. This is clearly not possible. Therefore, the way out for both sides is to negotiate and arrive at positions which are mutually acceptable. As Pompeo pointed out, neither country will get everything they want. Both sides have to make tradeoffs. Since tradeoffs are a foregone conclusion, the question is the framework within which these should be made.
Dou Rs 2 Rs 1 RBI
Prom loan anal sand wide
MSM buye to pa atten
Editorials
RBIappoin sible recomm tackling di ude the ab lenecks, mu
goods and malisation o gestion to b e importan tives, suppl
bling collat 20 lakh, crea 10,000 crore has raised m
moters of M ns made libe lytics, have dbox for fint ely, not only
ME working er pays the ay tax and w ntion it dese
enges of
l report has
nted U K Si mendations stress, the sence of fo ust be resolv
services ta of the econo base credit nt is diligen iers and cus
eralfree loa ating a stres e to support misgivings a
MSMEs must eral by fiat — greater lat tech. These y to raise de
g capital wo tax on inpu wait for the erves.
f the Sm
s much usef
nha panel o s. From a ne report cove ormalisation ved.
ax creates a omy and be decisions o nt mining stomers.
ans for MSM ssed asset fu t MSME equ about such l
t have skin — are not s titude in le enterprises ebt directly
ould get a b t purchases e buyer to se
mall Sec
eful advice
on micro, s ew code to ers a lot of n, stilted a
audit trails a tter measur on cash flow by banks
MEs to Rs 2 und of Rs 5, uity are amo loans turnin
in the game siphoned of ending to ti s also need but also via
boost if the s and takes ettle the bil
ctor
mall and m rid the sect ground. Mu ccess to cr
across the res of MSM w rather tha of unstruct
20 lakh, rais ,000 crore a ong the pan ng nonperf
e to ensure ff. Letting fin iny enterpr active bond a nonbanki
e reverse ch credit for it ll to repay t
IMP
sing the loan and a gover nel’s suggest forming.
that funds — ntech comp rises is a g d markets an ng financial
harge mech t, sparing th the loan. Org
PORTANT NEW
erprises (M ctor raj to i lenges face yed paymen
d productio dition and c al makes em on compa
n limit sanc rnmentspon tions. Mudr
— venture panies, whic good idea, n nd derivativ l companies
hanism expa e seller the ganised reta
www WSCLIPPINGS
Da
MSME) make mproving c ed by the se nts and inf
n chain, an cash flow. T minent sens anies, prom
ctioned und nsored fund a loans call
capital, as w ch employ m now with a ves that dist s.
ands, unde need to bor ail, though,
w.afeias.com S (28june19
ate:28-06-19
es a slew o credit access ector, which frastructura
nd is driving The report’s se. But even moters, their
er Mudra to d of funds o for caution
well as bank modern data a regulatory tribute risks
r which the rrow money escapes the
m 9)
3
Formally, an informal solution
Sachin Jain, [The writer is dean, Bennett University, Greater Noida, UP]
With half of India’s population under 25 years, and more than one crore turning 18 every year, unemployment is a looming concern. NITI Aayog, in its ‘Strategy for New India@75’ report, indicated the need to create 8090 lakh jobs annually to deploy the country’s youth coming into the workforce every year, besides absorbing those moving from the farming to nonfarming sectors.
Some studies have pegged the contribution of the informal sector as over 54% to India’s gross value added (GVA) (200809 estimates). According to International Labour Organisation (ILO) data, the total share of informal employment in India has increased to 81% in 201617 as compared to 78% in 1999 2000, despite more than 7% GDP growth during the same period.
According to Economic Survey 2018, 87% of firms, representing 21% of total turnover, are purely informal, outside both the tax and social security nets. Given the massive base, shouldn’t the informal sector be promoted through ‘ease of doing business’, labour reforms et al, thereby making it an equally potent arm of the economy to drive growth and address the issue of unemployment?
With some of the pillars already casted by the first Narendra Modi government in the form of Jan Dhan AadhaarMobile (JAM), Digital India, Skill India, Pradhan Mantri MUDRA (Micro Units Development and Refinance Agency) Yojana (PMMY) and the Apprenticeship Act, this may be the time to build a solid informal economy platform on this foundation, thereby addressing issues of unemployment at three levels.
One, with 44% of India’s about 50 crore workforce currently deployed in agriculture, contributing only 15% of GVA, there is an urgent need to transition labour out of the farming sector.
With mobile internet reaching 500 million Indians across India, GoI’s plan of setting up one lakh digital villages, hybrid (onlineoffline teaching) skilling centres for rural youngsters on farmbased valueadded products, or nonfarmbased traditional crafts — coupled with funding support through PMMY for successful participants — can help shift rural youth from agriculture to entrepreneurial valueadded products and services. This has an added advantage of restricting overurbanisation.
With support from ecommerce and organised retail players through policy interventions and incentives, these rural products can be delivered at our doorsteps.
Two, with the gross enrolment ratio in higher education being only 26%, India needs to reinvent secondary education curricula, with more emphasis on developing an entrepreneurial mindset, design thinking and skillbased education for the 74% of two crore Class 12 students who never make it to a college. While some states have taken steps in introducing entrepreneurship and skillbased learning at the higher secondary level, such curricula along with skilling centres should be mandated by the HRD ministry across all 52 education boards.
www.afeias.com IMPORTANT NEWSCLIPPINGS (28june19)
4
The Apprenticeship Act should be further strengthened for all organisations above a certain threshold (say,.`50 crore in revenue) to hire at least 45% of its workforce annually as apprentices.
Of this lot, half should be students not pursuing higher education. This will ensure handson learning in the students’ area of interest, which will help them move into employment (selfemployed or otherwise) faster.
Finally, as according to the All India Survey Higher Education (AISHE) 201718 Report, out of 3.7 crore students pursuing higher studies across 900 universities and 50,000 colleges or standalone institutions, close to 80% students are pursuing undergraduate programmes of which the highest number (36.4%) of students are enrolled in arts, humanities and social sciences courses. The curricula of these programmes are out of sync with industry expectations, resulting in suboptimal outcomes for students and a massive drain on the public exchequer in subsidising fees and maintaining public universities.
India Skill Report 2018 corroborates this, stating that 53% of those coming out of higher education institutions are unemployable. Further, National Skill Development Policy estimates only 5% of India’s workforce having gone through formal skilltraining.
This is extremely low when compared to countries like South Korea (96%) and Germany (75%). If a portion of these HRD ministry grants to public universities is redeployed in introducing future skills and entrepreneurial thinkingbased curricula at universities and colleges, the outcome for students can be enhanced at zeroincremental cost.
-
. , ( )
, , .
www.afeias.com IMPORTANT NEWSCLIPPINGS (28june19)
5
, - - - '-
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www.afeias.com IMPORTANT NEWSCLIPPINGS (28june19)
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Date:28-06-19
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www.afeias.com IMPORTANT NEWSCLIPPINGS (28june19)
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, (
, 1967
, , 83, 172
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’ -
1998 2 356 2015
15-1
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, , -
- - 1999
6
’
, ,
, ‘
,
,
- ,
50
IMP
1952, 1957
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The serio tend the C heel and gene third inter
The as su cons Sabh case
The prov legal merg two parti
Para his p natu origi agre two othe
Afte proc merg
e antidefe
T Achary, [T
10th Sched ous challeng dency to igno Congress Leg s of this def became me eral has app ds of the leg rpretation of
10th Schedu uch a seriou stitutional la ha, who act s under the
spate of de vision of this l hitch? This ging in the T third of the ies, without
2(1)(a) of th party. So any ure of an exc nal political ed to such a conditions. er party. But
r all, the en cess is very ger shall be
Pasture
ection law
The writer
ule of the C ge yet in its 3 ore the law a gislature Par ection, four embers of th proved of th islators of a f the law.
ule was enac us menace t w. Constitut as tribunals 10th Schedu
efections ta s law actuall s question TRS and the e total numb incurring di
he 7th Sched y MLA or M ception. It ex party has m a merger. Th This makes a mere mer
tire 10th Sc crucial. Thu deemed to
w is routin
is a former
Constitution 34 years of e and defect t rty in Telang members o he legislatur his act of de party merge
cted to put a to the stabil tional autho in defection ule.
king place n y allow any has assume TDP MPs of ber of mem squalificatio
dule disqual MP is liable to xempts such merged with he Speaker it clear that rger betwee
chedule rela us, this Para have taken p
nely misin
r secretary
, commonly existence. T o the partie gana “merge f the Rajya S e party of th efection as a e with anoth
an end to th ity of the d orities such a n cases, have
now have b legislator to d great imp f Rajya Sabh bers of thei on.
ifies a legisla o be disqua legislators f h the other can exempt t any merge n two partie
y general of
y referred to he challenge s in power. ed” with the Sabha, from he BJP in th a valid exerc her party, it
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tidefection cial, but pol month, 12 o ling party in Desam Party bha. Quite su rdance with legally valid
The politica the antidef Rajya Sabha the spirit of
s to this law and join an t of the Te P. They seem eans they ca
untarily give arty volunta on fulfilling of the legisla ation only on n the origina oking the pro
Therefore, xempting a d ators have a
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ng the mos ators show a members o Close on the with the BJP the media in that if two is is a wrong
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13
If the legislators have not agreed to the merger, there is no merger under Para 4. The lawmakers have used words very carefully. The words “twothirds of the Members. have agreed to such merger”, used in Para 4(2), make it abundantly clear that the merger takes place between two parties and the requisite number of legislators of that party must agree to such merger. Thereafter, the speaker exempts those legislators from disqualification. It may be noted here that the legislators do not merge, they only agree to the merger done by their original political party. Thus, a merger between the political parties concerned has to take place first. Only then can the legislators “agree to such merger”.