Current Affair

Back
[DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS, 31 MAY 2023]

INDIA'S GROWING POPULATION

 

1. Context

The annual State of World Population report from the UN Population Fund (UNFPA) says that India will have 1,428 million people by the middle of 2023. India's population has been slowly growing over the years, and experts have different views about whether this is a dividend or a burden.

2. Demographic Dividend

  • According to United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), demographic dividend means, the economic growth potential that can result from shifts in a population’s age structure.
  • India has one of the youngest populations (62.5% of its population in the age group 15-59) in an ageing world.
  • The demographic dividend leads to an increased labour supply that will increase the production of goods and boost savings and investment on the other.

3. Opportunities related to Demographic Dividend 

  • The first benefit of the young population is the increased labour supply, as more people reach working age. However, the magnitude of this benefit depends on the ability of the economy to absorb and productively employ the extra workers.
  •  As the number of dependents decreases individuals save more. This increase in national savings rates increases the stock of capital in developing countries and provides an opportunity to create the country’s capital through investment.
  • Decreases in fertility rates result in healthier women and fewer economic pressures at home. This provides an opportunity to engage more women in the workforce and enhance human capital.
  • Another opportunity is produced by increased domestic demand brought about by the increasing GDP per capita and the decreasing dependency ratio.
  • This leads to demand-driven economic growth. Growth, education, better economic security, and a desire for more durable goods are the cause and consequences of young demographics.
  • Increased fiscal space created by the demographic dividend enables the government to divert resources from spending on children to investing in physical and human infrastructure.
  • Most sectors of the Indian economy would require a more skilled workforce than the present. It would be both a challenge and an opportunity for India to provide its workforce with the required skill sets and knowledge to enable them to contribute substantially to its economic growth.

4. The Pattern of Demographic Shift in India

  • India's working-age population is rising and stood at 68% compared with 67.3% in 2020 and 66% in 2015, according to the UNFPA's State of World Population Report 2023.
  • China, on the other hand, has a working-age population of 69%, but it is declining from 70.3% in 2020 and 73% in 2015.
  • India's population in 2023 stood at 1,428.6 million compared to China's 1,425.7 million, according to the UN report on world population.
  • While India is a young country, the status and pace of population ageing vary among states, according to the UNFPA. Southern states, which are advanced in demographic transition, already have a higher percentage of older people.
  • These differences in age structure reflect differences in economic development and health, and remind us of states very different starting points at the outset of the 2030 sustainable development goals Agenda, according to the UN report.

5. Challenges of Demographic Dividend

  • India ranks 130 out of 189 countries in UNDP's Human Development Index, which is alarming. Life expectancy at birth in India (68 years) is much lower than in other developing countries. The mean years of schooling and expected years of schooling need to be improved.
  • Poor human capital formation is reflected in low employability among India's graduates and postgraduates. According to ASSOCHAM, only 20-30% of engineers find a job suited to their skills. Thus, a low human capital base and a lack of skills are a big challenge.
  • The informal nature of the economy in India is another challenge in reaping the benefits of demographic transition in India. Nearly 216 million people are engaged in the agriculture sector and are in the informal economy where not only do they earn lower wages, but with little social security and few days of employment in a year.
  • There is a mounting concern that future growth could turn out to be jobless due to deindustrialisation, de-globalization, the fourth industrial revolution and technological progress. As per the NSSO periodic labour force survey 2017-18, India's labour force participation rate for the age group 15-59 years is around 53%, that is around half of the working-age population is jobless.
  • The growth in the working-age ratio is likely to be concentrated in some of India's poorest states and the demographic dividend will be fully realised only if India can create gainful employment opportunities for this working-age population.
  • Declining female labour force participation: According to data from the International Labour Organisation and World Bank, India's female labour force participation rates have fallen from 34.8% in 1990 to 27% in 2013. Without women's participation India cant dream of reaping a demographic dividend.
For Prelims: United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), Demographic Dividend, Human Development Index, ASSOCHAM, Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
For Mains: 1. Discuss various opportunities and challenges of demographic dividend in India.

Previous year Question

1. India is regarded as a country with a "Demographic Dividend". This is due to (UPSC 2011)
A. Its high population is in the age group below 15 years.
B. Its high population is in the age group of 15-64 years.
C. Its high population is in the age group above 65 years.
D. Its high total population.
Answer: B
 
2. To obtain the full benefits of demographic dividend, what should India do? (UPSC 2013)
A. Promoting skill development
B. Introducing more social security schemes
C. Reducing infant mortality rate
D. Privatization of higher education
Answer: A
Source: The Indian Express

DE-RISKING

 

1. Context

The Trump ­era focus of the U.S. to decouple from China is being phased out by a new concept. The U.S. has expressed that it is shifting its policy on China from decoupling to de­risking. The EU has already declared that its approach to China will be based on de­risking. The recently concluded G­7 summit at Hiroshima, through its Leader’s Communique, has also expressed the grouping’s consensus on de­risking.

2. What is De-risking?

  • De-risking, a finance concept that is a diplomatic buzzword currently, refers to a reduction of reliance on China in the economic sphere while not turning inwards or trying to prevent Chinese growth. Decoupling is used here as an alternative to an economic boycott.
  • The US State Department describes de-risking as the phenomenon of financial institutions terminating or restricting business relationships with clients or categories of clients to avoid, rather than manage risk.
  • Simply put, de-risking is to move businesses away from areas that are considered risky in terms of the returns they could generate.
  • In the context of China, de-risking can be interpreted as a reduction of the reliance on China in the economic sphere- for the supply of materials or as a market for finished goods- so that potential risks to trade and disruption of supply chains are reduced.

3. What is Decoupling?

  • The objective is to sever or significantly reduce economic and trade ties with a specific country or region.
  • Decoupling Focuses on reducing economic interdependence for political, security, or strategic reasons.
  • Emphasizes the creation of alternative supply chains, markets, and partnerships outside the targeted country or region.
  • This may have negative economic consequences for both the target country and the decoupling country.

4. How is de-risking different from Decoupling?

  • Decoupling refers to the deliberate dismantling- and eventual re-creation elsewhere of some of the sprawling cross-border supply chains that have defined globalization.
  • An expert has explained the two terms using an analogy from an investment perspective: Decoupling means cashing out your whole portfolio; de-risking means selling what you consider the riskiest assets, say, deleveraging on your margins.
  • Derisking ties with China became a more regular part of the diplomatic conversation after the European Commission president said that it is neither viable nor in Europe's interest to decouple from China.
  • India too has endorsed de-risking. India's Foreign Minister said, " In this era of volatality and uncertainity, its important to de-risk the global economy and yet to ensure that there is very responsible growth.

5. China's view on recent shift of US

  • China considers the actions of US to actually be of de-coupling nature and not de-risking.
  • It has been facing pressure from the US in fields of information technology and manufacturing.
  • US ban on export of certain advanced chips- which have military or AI applications to China.
  • Histroy of de-risking in context of financial sector, but same sense applies to China also.
  • Banks de-risk by  denying services to aid agencies that work in places like syria that are under sanction.
  • With regard to finance as per experts De-risking can create further risk and opacity into the global financial system, as the termination of account relationships has the potential to force entities and persons into less regulated or unregulated channels.

6. Why does G7 prefer De-risking and Not Decoupling?

  • Economic Interdependence: The G7 countries recognise the significant economic interdependence between themselves and china. Decoupling would result in major disruptions to global supply chains and trade, potentially causing economic harm to all parties involved.
  • Market Opportunities: China represents a large and growing market for G7 countries exports. By pursuing de-risking instead of decoupling, the G7 aims to maintain access to the Chinese market and continue benefiting from trade and investment opportunities.
  • Global Economic Stability: Decoupling from China could have adverse effects on global economic stability. The G7 countries understand the importance of maintaining stable and predictable economic relations to promote global growth and prosperity.
  • Diplomatic Engagement: The G7 countries believe in engaing with China diplomatically to address concerns and promote mutually beneficial cooperation. De-risking allows for constructive dialogue and negotiation, which can lead to more favourable outcomes for both sides.
  • Global Interest: The G7 emphasizes that a growing and responsible China, playing by international rules, is in the global interest. They recognise that economic resilience requires a balance between managing risks and fostering economic cooperation with China.
For Prelims: De-Risking, Decoupling, G7 Grouping, Diplomatic Engagement, AI Applications.
For Mains: What is G7's De-risking strategy and discuss why does G7 prefer De-risking and Not Decoupling?
 
Source: The Hindu

SAME-SEX MARRIAGE

1. Context 

In a landmark decision in 2018, the Supreme Court of India decriminalised homosexuality by striking down Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code. Despite the 2018 verdict, members of India’s lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender queer and more (LGBTQ+) community worry about societal rejection and discrimination against LGBTQ+ individuals. Legal rights for LGBTQ individuals in India have grown over the last decade, with the majority of these developments brought about by the Supreme Court’s intervention

2. Petitions

  • The SMA provides a civil form of marriage for couples who cannot marry under their personal law and both the recent pleas seek to recognise same-sex marriage in this Act and not personal laws.
  • The first petition was filed by two men, Supriyo Chakraborty and Abhay Dang, who have been a couple for 10 years.
  • Their petition argued that the SMA was "ultra vires" the Constitution "to the extent it discriminates between same-sex couples and "opposite-sex couples"
  • It stated that the Act denied same-sex couples both "legal rights as well as the social recognition and status" that came from marriage.
  • About 15 legislations which guaranteed the rights of wages, gratuity, adoption, surrogacy and so on were not available to LGBTQ+ citizens.
  • The petitioners emphasised that the SMA "ought to apply to a marriage between any two persons, regardless of their gender identity and sexual orientation".
  • The other petition was filed by a same-sex couple of 17 years Parth Phiroze Mehrotra and Uday Raj Anand.
  • The recognition of same-sex marriage was only a "sequel" or a continuation of the Navtej Singh Johar Judgement of 2018 (decriminalising homosexuality) and the Puttaswamy judgement of 2017 (affirming the Right to Privacy as a fundamental right).
  •  The petition did not touch on personal laws but only sought to make the 1954 Act "gender-neutral".
Their plea pointed out that while Section 4 of the SMA permitted the solemnisation of marriage between any two persons, a subsequent section placed restrictions.
It said " The use, in Section 4 (C) of the words 'male' and 'female', as well as the use of gendered language such as the terms "husband/wife" and "bride/ bridegroom" in other sections of the Act, limit the access to marriage to a couple comprising one 'male' and one 'female".

3. Similar petitions

  • There are currently a total of nine petitions pending before the High Court of Delhi and Kerala, seeking to recognise same-sex marriages under Acts such as the SMA, the Foreign Marriage Act and codified personal laws.
  • The Supreme Court Bench transferred the various pending issues before High Courts to Supreme Court.

4. Navtej Johar judgment (2018)

  • The five-judge Supreme Court Bench had decriminalised homosexuality and unanimously held that the criminalisation of private consensual sexual conduct between adults of the same sex under the more than 150-year-old Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code was unconstitutional.
  • The judgment had apologised to the LQBTQ+ community for the wrongs of history and had also stated: "Sexual orientation is natural. Discrimination based on sexual orientation is a violation of freedom of speech and expression".
  • Besides decriminalising consensual homosexuality, the judgment also made other important observations. 
  • It noted that homosexuals had the right to live with dignity and were "entitled to the protection of equal laws and are entitled to be treated in society as human beings without any stigma being attached to any of them".
  • It stated that a person's bodily autonomy be constitutionally protected and that sharing intimacy in private with a person of choice formed a part of the individual's right to privacy.
  • CJI Chandrachud also emphasised that the case was not solely about striking down Section 377 but also about the rights of the LGBTQ+ community.

5. NALSA vs Union of India judgment (2014)

The Court had said that non-binary individuals were protected under the Constitution and fundamental rights such as equality, non-discrimination, life, freedom and so on could not be restricted to those who were biologically male or female.

6. Government's stand

  • Late last year, while responding to the pleas seeking recognition of same-sex marriages in the Delhi High Court, Solicitor General Tushar Mehta for the Centre had said that as per the law, marriage was permissible between a "biological man" and biological woman".
  • He also argued that there were misconceptions about the Navtej Kaur judgment. "It merely decriminalises It does not talk about marriage," Mr Metha had stated.
  • The Counsel of the petitioner had rejected this by saying that while the 2018 judgement did not mention the words "same-sex marriage" the "inevitable conclusion" favoured recognising it.
  • In its affidavit opposing the pleas, the Centre had said: "The acceptance of the institution of marriage between two individuals of the same gender is neither recognised nor accepted in any uncodified personal laws or any codified statutory laws".
  • It also argued against the urgency of the pleas by saying nobody was "dying" in the absence of a marriage certificate.

7. Other countries 

  • A total of 32 countries around the world have legalised same-sex marriages, some through legislation and others through judicial pronouncements.
  • Many countries first recognised same-sex civil unions as the escalator step to recognise homosexual marriage.
Civil unions or partnerships are similar arrangements to marriages which provide legal recognition of unmarried couples of the same or opposite sex to grant them some of the rights that come with marriage such as inheritance, medical benefits, employee benefits to spouses, managing joint taxes and finances and in some cases even adoption.
 
  • The Netherlands was the first country in 2001 to legalise same-sex marriage by amending one line in its civil marriage law.
  • In some countries, the decriminalisation of homosexuality was not followed for years by the recognition of same-sex marriage, for instance, in the U.S. the former happened in 2003 while the latter was in 2015.
For Prelims & Mains
 
For Prelims: Same-Sex Marriage, Special Marriage Act,  LGBTQ+ citizens, Navtej Singh Johar Judgement, Puttaswamy judgement, NALSA vs Union of India judgment, 
For Mains:
1.  What is same-sex marriage? Discuss the various issues to legalize same-sex marriage in India. (250 Words)
2.  LGBTQ community “are entitled to the full range of constitutional rights”. Comment (250 Words)
 
Previous Year Questions:

Which Article of the Constitution of India safeguards one’s right to marry the person of one’s choice? (UPSC 2019)

(a) Article 19

(b) Article 21

(c) Article 25

(d) Article 29

Answer (b)

Source: The Hindu 

NavIC

 
 

1.Context

The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) launched the first of the second-generation satellites for its navigation constellation successfully on Monday morning. The 2,232 kg satellite, the heaviest in the constellation, was launched by a Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV) rocket that lifted off from Sriharikota at 10:42 am. Each of the seven satellites currently in the Indian Regional Navigation Satellite System (IRNSS) constellation, operationally named NavIC, weighed much less — around 1,425 kg — at liftoff. They all rode the lighter Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV), ISRO’s workhorse launch rocket.

2.What is NavIC?

  • NavIC, or Navigation with Indian Constellation, is an independent stand-alone navigation satellite system developed by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO).
  • NavIC was originally approved in 2006 at a cost of $174 million. It was expected to be completed by late 2011 but only became operational in 2018.
  • NavIC consists of eight satellites and covers the whole of India’s landmass and up to 1,500 km (930 miles) from its boundaries.
  • Currently, NavIC’s use is limited. It is being used in public vehicle tracking in India, for providing emergency warning alerts to fishermen venturing into the deep sea where there is no terrestrial network connectivity, and for tracking and providing information related to natural disasters.
  • Enabling it in smartphones is the next step India is pushing for

 3.NavIC vs Others

  • The main difference is the serviceable area covered by these systems. GPS caters to users across the globe and its satellites circle the earth twice a day, while NavIC is currently for use in India and adjacent areas.
  • Like GPS, there are three more navigation systems that have a global coverage – Galileo from the European Union, Russia-owned GLONASS and China’s Beidou. QZSS, operated by Japan, is another regional navigation system covering the Asia-Oceania region, with a focus on Japan.
  • India’s 2021 satellite navigation draft policy stated the government will work towards “expanding the coverage from regional to global” to ensure the availability of NavIC signal in any part of the world.
  • NavIC is “as good as GPS of the United States in terms of position accuracy,” the Indian government said in August.

  4.NavIC backed by India

  • India says NavIC is conceived with the aim of removing dependence on foreign satellite systems for navigation service requirements, particularly for “strategic sectors.”
  • Relying on systems like GPS and GLONASS may not always be reliable, India says, as those are operated by the defence agencies of respective nations and it is possible that civilian services can be degraded or denied.
  • NavIC is an indigenous positioning system that is under Indian control. There is no risk of the service being withdrawn or denied in a given situation
  • India also wants to encourage its ministries to use NavIC applications to promote local industry engaged in developing indigenous NavIC-based solutions

For Prelims: Navigation Systems, NavIC, GPS

For Mains:

1. India’s push for home-grown navigation systems jolts tech companies. Discuss.

 
 
 
 
Source:indianexpress

KHALISTAN MOVEMENT

1. Context 

The year-long farmers’ protest against three central laws has found an echo in the Indian wrestlers’ protest at Jantar Mantar in New Delhi, with their critics labelling them as Khalistanis. The wrestlers, who have received the backing of farmers’ unions and other civil society groups in both Haryana and Punjab, were detained by the Delhi Police on Sunday as they marched towards the new Parliament building and the protest site at Jantar Mantar was cleared

2. Key points

  • He is the assistant of Amritpal Singh named Lovepreet Singh "Toofan", was released from Amritsar Central Jail after a court in Ajnala issued orders to discharge him based on an application by the police.
  • Amritpal Singh, 29 is a follower of the Slani Sikh militant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale and is often dubbed "Bhindranwale 2.0" in Punjab.
  • He returned from Dubai last year to take the reins of the "Waris Punjab De" organisation following the death of its founder, actor-activist Deep Sidhu.

3. Khalistan movement

  • The Khalistan movement is a fight for a separate, sovereign Sikh state in present-day Punjab (both India and Pakistan).
  • Over the years, it has survived in various forms, in various places and amongst different populations.
  • The movement was crushed in India following Operation Blue star (1984) and Operation Black Thunder (1986 and 1988), but it continues to evoke sympathy and support among sections of the Sikh population, especially in the Sikh diaspora in countries such as Canada, the UK and Australia.

4. Reasons for the origin of the movement

  • The origins of the movement have been traced back to India's independence and subsequent Partition along religious lines.
The Punjab province, which was divided between India and Pakistan, saw some of the worst communal violence and generated millions of refugees: Sikha and Hindus stranded in the West (in Pakistan) rushed to the east, whereas Muslims in the east fled westward.
  • Lahore, the capital of Maharaja Ranjit Singh's great Sikh Empire, went to Pakistan as did holy Sikh sites including Nankana Sahib, the birthplace of Guru Nanak, the founder of Sikhism.
  • While most Sikhs found themselves in India, they were a small minority in the country, making up around 2 per cent of the population.
  • The political struggle for greater autonomy began around the time of Independence, with the Punjabi Suba Movement for the creation of a Punjabi-speaking state.
  • The States Reorganisation Commission, in its 1955 report rejected this demand, but in 1966 after years of protest, the state of Punjab was reorganised to reflect the Punjabi Suba demand.
  • The erstwhile Punjab state was trifurcated into the Hindi-speaking, Hindu-majority states of Himachal Pradesh and Haryana and the Punjabi-speaking, Sikh-majority Punjab.

5. The Anandpur Sahib Resolution

  • The Punjabi Suba Movement had galvanised the Akali Dal which became a major force in the new Sikh-majority Punjab and gave Congress hard fights in the Legislative Assembly elections of 1967 and 1969.
  • But in 1972, in the aftermath of Indira Gandhi's resounding victory in the 1971 Lok Sabha elections, the Akali Dal's performance in the state was underwhelming.
  • The party met at the sacred town of Anandpur Sahib the birthplace of the Khalsa, in 1973 and released a list of demands that would guide the political path of the Akali Dal.
  • Among other things, the Anandpur Sahib Resolution demanded autonomy for the state of Punjab, identified regions that would be part of a separate state and sought the right to frame its internal constitution.
  • The Akali Dal was trying to cash in on the growing demand for an autonomous state which had emerged alongside the Punjabi Suba movement and had gone global by 1971 when an advertisement appeared in the New York Times proclaiming the birth of Khalistan.
  • While the Akalis themselves repeatedly made it clear that they were not demanding secession from India, for the Indian state, the Anandpur Sahib Resolution was of grave concern.

6. Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale

  • Many in Punjab sought to go beyond just a demand for greater autonomy.
  • One such man was Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale, a charismatic preacher who soon positioned himself as "the authentic voice of the Sikhs, in contrast to the Akali Dal's lukewarm, vacillating leadership".
  • Some accounts claim that Bhindranwale was propped up by Sanjay Gandhi, Indira's son, to stand against the Akalis for Congress's political benefit.
  • However, by the 1980s the appeal of Bhindranwale had grown so much that he started to become a problem for the government.
  • He found a captive audience in the state's youth, especially those in the lower rungs of the social ladder and massed a massive following. He and his followers were also getting increasingly violent.
  • In the summer of 1982, Bhindranwale, with support from the Akali Dal's leadership, launched a civil disobedience movement called Dharam Yudh Morcha.
  • He took up residence inside the Golden Temple, directing demonstrations and clashes with the Police.
  • The Movement was geared towards the demands first articulated in the Anandpur Sahib Resolution, especially the socio-economic demands, which addressed concerns of the state's rural Sikh population.
  • However, amidst growing religious polarisation, sectarian violence and Bhindranwale's harsh rhetoric against Hindus, Indira Gandhi's government declared the movement tantamount to secession.

7. Operation Blue Star

  • By 1984, the situation in Punjab had become increasingly untenable for the government.
  • Bhindranwale had given a call to arms and instances of violence against Hindus, as well as government officers, had become common.
  • In 1983, a senior police officer was shot dead after praying at the Golden Temple and his body was left to decay in the sun, while the local police station did nothing perhaps both out of fear and sympathy for Bhindranwale's cause.
  • Indira Gandhi took the fateful decision to order the Indian Army to flush out militants from the Golden Temple and neutralise Bhindranwale.
  • Operation Blue Star began on June 1, 1984, but due to fierce resistance from Bhindranwale and his heavily armed supporters, the Army's operation became larger and more violent than had been originally intended, with the use of tanks and air support.
  • The image of Indian Army tanks shelling the holiest shrine of Sikhism was traumatic and the very large number of civilian casualties that occurred during the operation added to the trauma.
  • According to the government, 83 Indian Army soldiers were killed and 249 were injured in the operation.  A total of 493 militants and civilians were killed in the operation.
  • Other estimates peg the number of casualties much higher as much as 3, 000.
  • The operation coincided with the martyrdom day of Guru Arjan Dev, the fifth Guru of the Sikhs; hence the number of pilgrims in the Golden Temple was higher than usual.

8. The aftermath of Operation Blue Star

  • While the operation was ostensibly successful in its aims Bhindranwale was killed and the Golden Temple was freed of militants it gravely wounded the Sikh community around the world. It also galvanised the demand for Khalistan.
  • On October 31, 1984, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was assassinated by two Sikh bodyguards.
  • This triggered the worst communal violence since Partition even according to conservative estimates, over 8, 000 Sikha were massacred in massive anti-Sikh street violence.
  • A year later, Sikh nationalists based in Canada blew up an Air India flight killing 329 people.
  • They claimed that the attack was to "avenge Bhindranwale's killing".
  • Punjab saw the worst violence, becoming the hub of a long-drawn-out insurgency that lasted till 1995.
  • While the movement was allegedly supported by Pakistan to cause internal unrest in its neighbouring country, it would slowly peter out by the 1990s as the violence took its toll, the bulk of the population turned against the militants and India headed towards economic liberalisation

9. The status of the Khalistan movement today

  • Punjab has long been peaceful, but the movement lives among some Sikh communities overseas.
  • The deep-rooted anger over Operation Blue Star and the desecration of the Golden Temple continues to resonate with some of the newer generations of Sikhs.
  • However, even though Bhindranwale is viewed as a martyr by many and the 1980s are remembered as dark times, this has not manifested into tangible political support for the Khalistna cause.

For Prelims & Mains

For Prelims: Khalistan Movement, Operation Bluestar, Golden Temple, Indira Gandhi Assassination, Bhindranwale, Operation Black Thunder, Sikhs, Guru Nanak, States Reorganisation Commission, The Punjabi Suba Movement, Guru Arjan Dev, 
For Mains:
1. What is Khalistan Movement and Explain the consequences which led to Operation Bluestar and its aftermath? (250 Words)
 
Source: The Indian Express
 

G-7

1. Context 

At the Hiroshima Summit 2023, the G7 nations stressed that the peak for global Greenhouse Gas (GHG) emissions should be reached by 2025. They also committed to an “Acceleration Agenda” for G7 countries to reach net-zero emissions by around 2040 and urged emerging economies to do so by around 2050. China has committed to net zero by 2060 and India by 2070.

2. Group of 7

  • The G7 is an informal forum of leading industrialised nations, which include Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States.
  • Representatives of the European Union are always present at the annual meeting of the heads of state and government of the G7. Germany holds the presidency of the G7 in 2022.
  • German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has invited India, along with Argentina, Indonesia, Senegal and South Africa to the 2022 Summit as partner countries.
  • Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy take part virtually, the G7 Presidency has announced.
  • Several international organisations, including the United Nations, the World Health Organization (WHO), the World Trade Organization (WTO), the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank, are also participating in the summit.

3. G6,G8, G7

  • A short history of the grouping on the G7 Germany website says the first "World Economic Summit", which later became the G7, was launched in 1975 by former French President Valery Giscard d'Estaing and then Federal Chancellor Helmut Schmidt.
  • The heads of state and government of Germany, France, Great Britain, Italy, Japan and the US a Group of Six met for a fireside chat at Rambouillet Castle in France.
  • The participants exchanged ideas on the economic problems of the 1970s the first oil crisis and the collapse of the system of fixed exchange rates (Bretton Woods) and agreed on international economic policy and initial measures to fight the global downturn.
  • In 1976, Canada was added to the group and the first G7 met in Puerto Rico.
  • The first talks between the then-European Community and the G7 took place in London in 1977 and since the Ottawa Summit of 1981, the European Community (now European Union) has been part of all working sessions.
  • In the 1980s, the interest of the G7 expanded to include foreign and security policy issues.
  • Then Soviet General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev was invited to talks on the sidelines of the London Summit in 1991.
  • In 1998, the Group of Eight was constituted as Russia became a member.
  • Russia was thrown out of the group after it violated Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity in 2014.
  • Germany has the G7 Presidency for the seventh time in 2022. Japan will be president in 2023

4. G7 numbers

  • As of 2022, G7 countries make up 10 per cent of the world's population, 31 per cent of the global GDP and 21 per cent of global carbon dioxide emissions.
  • China and India, the two most populous countries with the largest GDP figures in the world are not part of the grouping.
  • In all G7 countries, annual public sector expenditure exceeded revenue in 2021.
  • Most G7 countries also had a high level of gross debt, especially Japan (263 Per cent of GDP), Italy (151 per cent) and the US (133 per cent).
  • The G7 countries are important players in global trade. The US and Germany in particular are major export nations. Both sold goods worth well over a trillion US dollars abroad in 2021.
For Prelims: G7, G6, G8, WHO, IMF, WTO, World Bank, World Economic Summit, 
 
Previous Year Questions
 
1. In which one of the following groups are all the four countries members of G20?  (UPSC  2020) 
1. Argentina, Mexico, South Africa and Turkey
2. Australia, Canada, Malaysia and New Zealand
3. Brazil, Iran, Saudi Arabia and Vietnam
4. Indonesia, Japan, Singapore and South Korea
 
Answer:1
 
2. With reference to the "G20 Common Framework", consider the following statements: (UPSC 2022)
1. It is an initiative endorsed by the G20 together with the Paris Club.
2. It is an initiative to support Low-Income Countries with unsustainable debt.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
A.  1 only     B. 2 only      C.  Both 1 and 2      D. Neither 1 nor 2
 
Answer: C
 
3. Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) Heads of State Summit was held on 10th November 2020 in the video conference format. The Summit was hosted by: (OPSC OAS 2021)
A.  Russia
B. India
C. Kazakhstan
D. Uzbekistan
 
Answer: A
 
Source: The Indian Express

Share to Social