
advertisement
In his piece for The Indian Express, Praveen Chakravarty – chairman of the All India Professionals’ Congress, critiques the 2025-26 Union Budget, following its presentation by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Saturday, 1 February. The budget, argues Chakravarty, has fallen short of ushering in transformative reforms akin to 1991, leaving critical challenges – including, but not restricted to, GDP growth not translating into employment opportunities, and the ever-widening regional economic disparities – going unaddressed.
Whilst the increase in income tax exemption to Rs 12 lakh has been widely celebrated by the proponents of the ruling party, Chakravarty claims the measure will be beneficial for merely 1.5 million Indians – a yardstick too insignificant to gauge the budget’s success, and a sample size too minute to ignite any significant consumption growth.
Former Union Minister of Home Affairs and Finance, P Chidambaram explains how Uttarakhand’s Uniform Civil Code (UCC) stands in direct contradiction with the Indian constitution, wherein Article 44 mentions the State must secure UCC for its citizens across the nation. Writing for The Indian Express, Chidambaram predicts Uttarakhand’s UCC, which has addressed issues like marriage and LGBTQ+ rights, will be challenged in court for territorial overreach, with citizens likely to circumvent its provision by moving out of the state.
Per Chidambaram’s argument, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has used Uttarakhand as a testing ground ahead of implementing a nationwide UCC, reinforcing majoritarian norms instead of fostering equality.
Writing for The Times of India, Jaspreet Bindra – founder of The Tech Whisperer and AI&Beyond – opines Marc Andreessen’s assessment of DeepSeek R1’s launch as Artificial Intelligence’s (AI) ‘Sputnik moment’ is indeed justified, given the profound disruption caused by the Chinese open-source AI model. Comparable to GPT-4o but built with only a minimal fraction of its American counterpart’s cost, reportedly only $5.6 million, DeepSeek R1’s impact has been so seismic that it triggered a $600 billion loss in Nvidia’s valuation in only a single day.
Commenting on its geopolitical ramifications, Bindra states DeepSeek R1’s release – coinciding with Donald Trump’s $500 billion Stargate initiative – will result in an American-Chinese duel for global dominance in AI, although there is provision for multiple players to operate on a global scale.
In his The Times of India piece, Sumit Baudh, a professor at the OP Jindal Global University, writes about the persistent public-private divide within India’s legal ecosystem. Notably, the Bombay High Court recently ruled that caste-based violence will not be judged to have violated the SC/ST Act, if they were made in a private setting and not in public view.
With the ruling having flagrant disregard for the psychological toll of racial slurs, be it in a private setting, Baudh explains how India’s judiciary has been unsuccessful in implementing what the Indian constitution states. According to Article 15(2)(a), non-discrimination is supposed to be upheld in both public and private places.
Despite attempts of an optimistic portrayal of economic health in the Economic Survey, India’s economy continues to grapple with stagnation, writes University of Massachusetts Amherst professor Jayati Ghosh in her piece for The Telegraph. Ghosh highlights how India’s MSME sector, which is responsible for providing jobs to 85% of the nation’s paid workers, has yet to recover from the severe impact of demonetisation and GST.
Proposing a pathway to economic rejuvenation, Ghosh advocates for government policies that level the playing field in the MSME sector, and increase expenditure on essential social services, whilst revenues for such undertakings can be generated by levying additional taxes on the ultra-rich.
Unlike the Economic Survey, the Annual Status of Education Report (Rural) indeed elicits optimism, with the nation’s learning outcome not only meeting, but surpassing expectations. Writing for Hindustan Times, columnist Namita Bhandare explains the growth in India’s education sector, especially in government channels, despite threats of widespread stagnation since the pandemic.
Since the implementation of the Right to Education Act in 2009, the nation has seen the lowest percentage of out-of-school children in the 6-14 age group, at only 1.6%. Instead of being a disruptor, the pandemic has resulted in a staggering acceleration of digitisation in rural sectors, with 84% of rural households having smartphones for online classes.
In Deccan Herald, Gurucharan Gollerkeri, Joint Secretary (International Migration Policy and Financial Services) in the Ministry of Overseas Indian Affairs, discusses the impact of climate change on the Indian agricultural sector. With the global temperature on the rise, each 1 °C leads to a risk in the reduction of global wheat yields by 6% and rice yields by 3%. Moreover, per the IPCC Framework Report 2024, India remains highly vulnerable to both floods and droughts.
Proposing potential solutions, Gollerkeri advocates for regenerative agricultural measures, with the focus on improving soil health and biodiversity. With climate change likely to exacerbate rural challenges, Gollerkeri stresses on the importance of the local communities’ participatory involvement in climate action.
Columnist Tavleen Singh, whilst writing for The Indian Express, underscores the stark incongruity between the ground reality of India’s developmental progress, and Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s ambitious vision of ushering the nation into a “fully developed” status by 2047. Heralded by populist measures, Tavleen explains how schemes such as the Swacch Bharat Abhiyaan have had an impact on rural sanitation, albeit waste disposal remains a pressing concern.
Drawing parallels vis-à-vis the fully developed nations, Singh highlights how India’s public services, unlike the countries we strive to emulate, fall short of fundamental qualitative benchmarks. With government hospitals lacking hygiene, government schools providing minimal education, and clean drinking water still inaccessible to millions, India’s ‘Viksit Bharat’ plans might only remain a pipe dream, argues Singh.
Is Ravan Bollywood’s very own amalgamation of Jack the Ripper & Keyser Soze – enigmatic yet distinct, unambiguous yet malleable? Mythologist and author Devdutt Pattanaik, in his piece for Mid-Day, delves into the numerous iterations the Ramayana character has had in films, ranging from a devout to a lover, an antagonist to – almost along the lines of claiming Winston Churchill was a communist – a muslim!
At its core, Ravan might be a dissentient tool. For, he has been used to portray the staunchest of Brahminical principles by some, whilst the left-leaning writers have over-valorised him to contradict with Ram’s right-wing ideologies. Will the real Ravan please stand up?