Is it time for India to introduce a Universal Basic Income?
In News
- Many countries are considering Universal Basic Income (UBI) due to jobless growth, where output and labor productivity increase without proportional job creation.
- The International Labour Organization (ILO) links decreased job growth and rising inequality to increased automation and the use of artificial intelligence (AI).
Universal Basic Income (UBI)
Forms in India:
- India has various forms of UBI, including cash transfer schemes for farmers and women.
- Some states are implementing cash transfers for unemployed youth, though universal basic income need not be universal.
Historical Perspective:
- In the 1980s, the World Bank warned of potential setbacks for many Indians and recommended creating safety nets.
Investments Made
Capital Investments:
- Budgetary capital investment has increased but is directed towards capital-intensive sectors such as railway freight corridors, highway projects, and the power sector, which do not create substantial direct employment.
Cuts in Labour-Intensive Sectors:
- Real-term cuts have occurred in labour-intensive sectors like education, health, and rural employment guarantee schemes, which are crucial for job generation.
Impact on Trade Sector:
- The trade sector, India’s second-largest employer after agriculture, is being affected by the growth of e-commerce, impacting local stores.
Way Ahead
- Social safety nets are unevenly distributed between and within states.
- Central and state governments should focus more on universalizing social safety nets rather than implementing Universal Basic Income.
What does dissolution of SCoS entail?
The Story So Far
- The Union Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation has dissolved the 14-member Standing Committee on Statistics (SCoS).
- The dissolution was attributed to overlapping responsibilities with the Steering Committee for National Sample Surveys.
- SCoS members had raised concerns about delays in the census, highlighting its importance for providing reliable data for policymakers.
Key Responsibilities of SCoS
Advisory Role:
- The SCoS advised on survey methodology, including sampling frames, design, and survey instruments.
- It played a critical role in finalizing survey tabulation plans and reviewing existing frameworks.
- Provided technical guidance to Central and State agencies for conducting surveys.
Role of the New Committee
- The Steering Committee, which replaces SCoS, comprises 17 members and one non-member secretary.
- It has a two-year tenure.
- Its Terms of Reference are similar to SCoS, including reviewing survey results, methodology, and questionnaires for National Sample Surveys.
- It will also advise on survey methodology and finalize survey tabulation plans.
- The new committee has more official members compared to the SCoS, which had several non-official members.
Flaws in Administrative Data
- The Centre relies on data from EPFO, ESIC, and RBI’s KLEMS to represent India’s employment scenario.
- Issues have been raised regarding administrative data, particularly its threshold-based nature and susceptibility to manipulation.
- Concerns include limitations in analytical rigor and potential biases in government-generated data.
The Next Census
- Decennial censuses have been conducted every ten years since the 1870s, with the last one in 2011.
- The 2021 census was postponed due to COVID-19, and a roadmap for the next census has yet to be provided.
- Economists and policymakers are concerned that reliance on outdated 2011 census data could adversely affect decision-making.
What role does CSTT play in standardising technical terms?
The Story So Far
- The government has launched initiatives to offer technical education, including engineering and medicine, in Indian languages, in line with the National Education Policy, 2020.
- The goal is to enhance understanding and improve teaching-learning outcomes through education in local languages.
- The Commission for Scientific and Technical Terminology (CSTT) has introduced a website providing technical terms in all 22 official Indian languages for various educational subjects.
What is CSTT?
- The CSTT was established on October 1, 1961.
- It focuses on creating standardized scientific and technical terminology in Indian languages.
- The CSTT publishes bilingual, trilingual, and multilingual glossaries, definitional dictionaries, and monographs, as well as quarterly journals named ‘Vigyan Garima Sindhu’ and ‘Gyan Garima Sindhu’.
- It also produces university-level textbooks through its Granth Academies, textbook boards, and publication cells across India.
CSTT Operations
- The CSTT has launched a glossary search website called “Shabd,” which features all CSTT glossaries in a digital, searchable format.
- Other institutions preparing dictionaries can also digitize and host their work on this platform.
- The objective is to provide a central repository for all terminologies developed in or for Indian languages.
Panic in the time of cholera: issues critical to managing a resurgence
Cholera Disease
- Cholera is an acute diarrheal disease caused by ingesting water or food contaminated with vibrio cholerae.
- Symptoms include severe diarrhea, vomiting, leg cramps, and weakness, affecting vulnerable groups like malnourished children and people with HIV/AIDS.
- If untreated, it leads to rapid dehydration, which can result in death.
Recent Data:
WHO reported a 17% increase in cholera deaths last year compared to 2022, and a 13% rise in cases.
Adding to the Problem
- Geographical Distribution: Cholera cases in the Middle East and Asia declined by one-third, while cases in Africa more than doubled.
- Vaccine Shortage: The global cholera crisis has led to a shortage of cholera vaccines.
- Although vaccines are crucial, long-term solutions lie in ensuring access to safe drinking water, sanitation, and hygiene.
- Contributing Factors: Conflict, climate change, limited development investment, and population displacement exacerbate the cholera situation.
Global Front
- The Global Task Force for Cholera Control (GTFCC), developed by WHO, aims to end cholera by 2030 through multisectoral interventions.
- The roadmap emphasizes sustainable funding to improve water, sanitation, and hygiene services, strengthen disease surveillance in hotspots, and boost local oral cholera vaccine production.