2nd June 2023 CNA
2nd June 2023 CNA
2nd June 2023 CNA
Prelims Bytes
4. India, Nepal sign pacts on energy, transport- Page 12
5. India-Russia joint venture on Vande Bharat trains hits hurdle- Page 12
6. ‘Half of electricity to be from renewable sources by 2027’- Page 14
At the root of India’s manufacturing challenge
• The first advance estimates of the national income for 2022-23 show
manufacturing growth to be 1.3% for the year, less than that for
agriculture and all main segments of services.
• The relationship between per capita income and the share of food in
household expenditure is strongly negative globally, with the richest
countries, such as the United States and Singapore, having low such
shares. Of the large economies of the world, the share of food is the
largest in India, and its GDP per capita the lowest.
Education
• But it is with respect to education that India has fallen most behind the countries
that are the manufacturing successes of the world.
• India’s universities expanded to serve the aspiration of its middle class who wish
to avoid manual work. However, for those headed for a life as a skilled worker,
ranging from carpenters to plumbers and mechanics, university is not an aspiration
at all.
• The trade and industrial policy regime had been overhauled. However, it
overlooked the need for an entire ecosystem, including schooling, training and
infrastructure for manufacturing to flourish. This has to be built.
• The access to and control over rare minerals, such as lithium and
cobalt, will play a crucial role in these epochal changes.
Issues of Ownership
• Yet, large areas of land, including forests — which make up more than
22% of India’s landmass — hills, mountains, and revenue wasteland
are publicly owned.
• The Supreme Court also recalled that the Union government could
always ban private actors from mining sensitive minerals, as is already
the case with uranium under the Atomic Energy Act 1962.
Overall Picture
• The stories of two South American countries, Chile and Bolivia — which have the
largest known reserves of lithium — are particularly instructive.
• In Chile, the government has designated lithium as a strategic resource and its
development has been made the exclusive prerogative of the state. The state has
licensed only two companies — SQM and Albemarle — to produce lithium in the
country.
• The new strategy calls for public-private partnerships for future lithium projects,
which will allow the state to regulate the environmental impact of lithium-mining,
distribute the revenue from lithium production more fairly among local
communities, and promote domestic research into lithium-based green
technologies.
• Bolivia’s new constitution, gave the state “the control and direction over the
exploration, exploitation, industrialisation, transport, and commercialisation of
natural resources.”
Way Forward
• Much of India’s mineral wealth is mined from regions with very high
levels of poverty, environmental degradation, and lax regulation.
Effective and careful management of the sector should be paramount if
India’s rare minerals development is to meet its multiple goals —
social wellbeing, environmental safety, and national energy security.
How has Dhaka reacted to the U.S. threat on visas?
On May 24, the U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken
announced a “new visa policy” which threatens to restrict
visas to Bangladeshis who undermine the democratic
election process at home. The notification said the restriction
would apply to current and former Bangladeshi officials,
members of pro-government and opposition political parties,
and members of law enforcement, the judiciary and security
services.
GS Paper II – Page 10
• There were allegations of rigging in elections held in 2014 and 2018,
which the government of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina had denied.
Bangladesh responded immediately to the U.S. threat, with the
government saying it would take steps to prevent any interference in
elections.
• The U.S. is the third largest trading partner of Bangladesh and is the
largest recipient of the garments produced in Bangladesh. With China
taking a keen interest in Bangladesh, the U.S. feels the need to look
beyond trade ties. The importance of the Indo-Pacific strategy also
makes Bangladesh politically indispensable for the U.S.
• Prime Minister Hasina has followed a policy of zero tolerance against
terrorism and extremism since being sworn to power in 2009.
• Not all parts of the much-touted ‘Make in India’ Vande Bharat train sets
are manufactured indigenously. “Many of these parts have to be
imported from Western European and American manufacturers,” a
senior RVNL official said. On May 22, the U.S. imposed sanctions on
Metrovagonmash, a division of TMH, which specialises in
manufacturing rolling stock for the railways. It is also responsible for
the maintenance of the rolling stock and spare parts
‘Half of electricity to be from renewable sources by
2027’