| |

05 July 2025: The Hindu Editorial

Get Your PDF Download Pdf

1. Is China’s Tech Sector Entering a New Era of Growth?

Source – Page 6, The Hindu UPSC IAS Edition, 05 July 2025

Topic: GS Paper 2 (International Relations) & GS Paper 3 (Science & Technology, Economy)

Context
  • China’s tech industry is rebounding after years of regulatory crackdowns. This editorial explores the dynamics of China’s digital economy, innovation drivers, and geopolitical implications for global technology and India’s strategic interests.

I. Background of Tech Crackdown:

  • Started in late 2020 with Ant Group’s IPO halt.

  • Series of regulations targeting data privacy, monopolistic practices, and ed-tech sectors.

  • Caused a slump in investor confidence and capital outflows.

II. Signs of Recovery:

  • Renewed government support for AI, semiconductor, and 5G sectors.

  • Softened regulatory stance to attract foreign investment and domestic innovation.

  • Tech companies like Huawei, Baidu, and Alibaba investing in frontier technologies.

III. Strategic Shift and Policy Implications:

  • Focus shifting from consumer internet to deep tech and manufacturing.

  • Emphasis on self-reliance amid US sanctions on chips and software.

  • ‘Techno-nationalism’ as a defining feature of Chinese policy.

IV. Implications for India:

  • Opportunity to attract firms exiting China (‘China Plus One’ strategy).

  • Need for India to strengthen indigenous capabilities in AI, semiconductors, and 5G.

  • Balancing trade relations with China while securing critical digital infrastructure.

V. Global Impact:

  • Geopolitical rivalry in tech between US and China set to deepen.

  • Role of BRICS and RCEP in shaping digital norms and supply chains.

Conclusion:
China’s recalibration towards innovation-led growth marks a strategic shift. For India, it offers both challenges and opportunities to redefine its tech and foreign policy.

Practice Question: China’s renewed push for technology self-reliance presents both a challenge and an opportunity for India.” Discuss in light of recent developments in China’s digital economy and India’s strategic responses.

2. No Common Language

Source – Page 6, The Hindu UPSC IAS Edition, 05 July 2025

Topic: GS Paper 2 (Polity and Governance), GS Paper 1 (Indian Society)

Context
  • The editorial discusses the implications of recent political developments around promoting Hindi as a common language and the broader challenges of linguistic diversity in India’s federal setup.

I. Linguistic Federalism in India:

  • India recognizes 22 languages in the 8th Schedule of the Constitution.

  • The Official Languages Act, 1963 allows continued use of English along with Hindi.

  • Language is a sensitive issue tied to identity and autonomy.

II. Recent Developments:

  • Political debates reignited over making Hindi a link language.

  • Southern and Northeastern states resist imposition, citing linguistic pluralism.

  • Concerns raised about marginalization of non-Hindi speakers in governance and education.

III. Constitutional and Legal Framework:

  • Article 343: Hindi as official language, but with provision for English.

  • Article 351: Directive for promotion of Hindi, but not mandatory.

  • Sarkaria Commission and Punnayya Committee advocated cooperative federalism in language policy.

IV. Societal and Administrative Challenges:

  • Language barriers in All India Services exams, central administration, and judiciary.

  • Educational disadvantage for non-Hindi students in competitive exams.

  • Erosion of cultural heritage and regional literature.

V. Way Forward:

  • Promote multilingualism in governance and education.

  • Encourage use of regional languages in higher judiciary and Parliament.

  • Use technology to enable real-time translation and digital inclusion.

Conclusion:
India’s linguistic diversity is its strength. Imposing a single language risks alienation and regional discord. A pluralistic approach based on respect and cooperation is essential for national unity.

Practice Question: The imposition of a common language in a multilingual country like India poses serious challenges to federalism and national integration.” Examine with reference to recent developments and constitutional provisions.

Read more about –04 July 2025: The Hindu Editorial Analysis

Similar Posts