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24 May 2025 : Daily Current Affairs

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1. India’s GDP Growth Forecast Revised Upward by S&P

Source: Page 1, The Indian Express (24 May 2025)

Topic: GS Paper 3 – Economy
Context
  • Global rating agency S&P revised India’s GDP growth forecast for FY26 to 7.2% citing strong domestic demand and robust infrastructure spending.

Content:

  • Economic Outlook:

    • India’s GDP is expected to grow at 7.2% in FY26 (up from 6.8%).

    • Key drivers: Government capex, private consumption, recovery in manufacturing.

  • Structural Trends:

    • Increased formalization of economy.

    • Boost from PLI schemes, digital infrastructure, and logistics reforms.

  • Challenges:

    • High youth unemployment and rural distress.

    • Global uncertainty, oil prices, and monsoon dependency.

  • UPSC Relevance:

    • Demonstrates macroeconomic resilience.

    • Useful for understanding fiscal and monetary interplay.

Way Forward:

  • Maintain policy stability and continue reforms.

  • Invest in labour-intensive sectors for job creation.

  • Strengthen MSMEs and skilling ecosystems.

Practice Question:

“Examine the recent drivers of India’s economic growth and evaluate their sustainability in the face of structural challenges.” (250 words / 15 marks)

2. Karnataka’s Internal Reservation Model Sparks Debate

Source: Page 6, The Indian Express (24 May 2025)

Topic: GS Paper 2 – Polity & Governance; GS Paper 1 – Indian Society

Context
  • The Karnataka government’s new internal quota policy within OBCs has led to protests and political opposition.

Content:

  • Policy Overview:

    • Karnataka has introduced internal reservations among OBCs under the 27% quota.

    • Categories like Kuruba and Vokkaliga have been given distinct sub-quotas.

  • Constitutional and Social Dimensions:

    • Raises questions on equality vs equity in affirmative action.

    • Challenges around judicial scrutiny, especially post Indra Sawhney judgment.

  • Political Fallout:

    • Backlash from communities who feel excluded or underrepresented.

    • Possible implications for electoral politics.

  • Ethical Concerns:

    • Balancing justice for the most backward vs appeasement politics.

    • Issues of data-driven policy vs anecdotal inclusion.

Way Forward:

  • Commission a fresh OBC sub-categorization study.

  • Promote transparency and evidence-based affirmative action.

  • Ensure social cohesion while implementing justice-oriented policies.

Practice Question:

“Discuss the rationale behind sub-categorisation within OBCs in India. How can such internal reservations be balanced with constitutional mandates and social harmony?” (250 words / 15 marks)  

3. India-ASEAN Maritime Exercise Begins in South China Sea

Source: Page 7, Indian Express (24 May 2025)

Topic: GS Paper 2 – International Relations; GS Paper 3 – Security

Context
  • India joined the ASEAN Multilateral Naval Exercise in the South China Sea amid growing tensions in the region involving China.

Content:

  • Strategic Significance:

    • India’s participation marks strategic alignment with ASEAN for free navigation and regional stability.

    • The exercise occurs amid China’s increasing assertiveness in the South China Sea.

  • India’s Indo-Pacific Policy:

    • Reinforces Act East Policy and SAGAR (Security and Growth for All in the Region).

    • Aims to promote rules-based international maritime order.

  • Geopolitical Implications:

    • Demonstrates India’s readiness to engage in multilateral security frameworks.

    • Balances China’s dominance without direct confrontation.

  • ASEAN Centrality:

    • Upholds the centrality of ASEAN in regional architecture.

    • Strengthens India’s role in regional peacekeeping and disaster response initiatives.

Way Forward:

  • Enhance naval diplomacy through regular bilateral and multilateral exercises.

  • Improve maritime domain awareness and information sharing with ASEAN.

  • Deepen cooperation in blue economy and maritime infrastructure.

Practice Question:

“India’s increasing participation in Indo-Pacific maritime engagements reflects a shift in its strategic orientation. Discuss in light of India-ASEAN naval cooperation.(150 words / 10 marks)
Prelims Facts

1. S&P Revises India’s GDP Growth Forecast to 7.2%

Source: Page 11, The Indian Express (24 May 2025)

Topic: GS Paper 3 – Indian Economy
Context
  • S&P Global Ratings upgraded India’s GDP forecast for FY26 to 7.2%, citing a resilient domestic economy supported by infrastructure spending and strong consumer demand.

Analysis of the news:

  • Key Drivers of Growth:

    • High public capital expenditure.

    • Recovery in manufacturing and construction.

    • Strengthening of the services sector post-COVID.

  • Structural Strengths:

    • Benefits from PLI schemes, digital transformation, GST stability.

    • Rapid formalization of economy due to UPI, DBT, and Aadhaar-linked welfare.

  • Risks Ahead:

    • Youth unemployment, global headwinds, climate volatility.

    • Interest rate uncertainty in the global financial system.

2. Karnataka’s Internal Quota Plan Within OBCs

Source: Page 6, Indian Express (24 May 2025)

Topic: GS Paper 2 – Polity & Governance | GS Paper 1 – Indian Society

Context
  • The Karnataka government has implemented sub-categorisation within OBCs under the 27% quota, triggering public and political debate.

Analysis of the news:

  • Policy Move:

    • Creates internal reservation categories among OBCs like Kuruba, Vokkaliga.

    • Aims to ensure equitable distribution of reservation benefits.

  • Legal Backdrop:

    • Must be read in the light of the Indra Sawhney judgment (1992) which allowed sub-classification within backward classes.

  • Concerns Raised:

    • Risk of fragmenting OBC unity.

    • Demands for updated socio-economic caste census to base decisions on empirical data.

3. ASEAN-India Naval Exercise in South China Sea

Source: Page 7, Indian Express (24 May 2025)

Topic: GS Paper 2 – International Relations | GS Paper 3 – Security

Context
  • India is participating in a multilateral naval exercise with ASEAN nations in the South China Sea, amid tensions involving China’s aggressive maritime claims.

Analysis of the news:

  • Strategic Relevance:

    • Part of India’s Act East Policy and SAGAR (Security and Growth for All in the Region) initiative.

    • Emphasizes maritime security, peace, and rules-based order in the Indo-Pacific.

  • ASEAN Engagement:

    • India seeks to build naval interoperability and support freedom of navigation in international waters.

    • Supports ASEAN centrality in regional security architecture.

  • Geopolitical Signal:

    • Counters Chinese expansionism subtly without direct confrontation.

    • Builds India’s role as a responsible stakeholder in Indo-Pacific governance.

Check more: 23 May 2025 : Daily Current Affairs

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