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Answer: The cumulative loss in GDP required to reduce the inflation rate by 1 percentage point
When a central bank aggressively hikes interest rates to crush inflation, it deliberately depresses aggregate demand, which inevitably causes a slowdown in output and a rise in unemployment. The Sacrifice Ratio quantifies the exact macroeconomic 'pain' or lost economic output a nation must endure to achieve a permanent reduction in the underlying rate of inflation.
Answer: Drones and Remote Sensing for yield estimation
Historically, crop cutting experiments (CCEs) were manual, delayed, and prone to local corruption, causing massive delays in insurance payouts. PMFBY now mandates the use of drones, satellite imagery, and smartphone apps to capture geo-tagged, real-time data of crop damage due to localized calamities like hailstorms or floods, ensuring transparent and rapid direct benefit transfers to farmers.
Answer: A rupee-denominated bond issued by Indian entities in overseas capital markets
Masala Bonds allow Indian corporations or the government to raise foreign capital without taking on currency risk. Because the bond is issued and redeemed strictly in Indian Rupees, the foreign investor bears the risk of Rupee depreciation. This makes it an attractive hedging tool for Indian borrowers who want access to deep global capital markets but fear volatile exchange rates.
Answer: Produce an output level that is less than the output required to minimize average costs, leaving some capacity idle
Because firms in monopolistic competition sell differentiated products, their demand curves are downward sloping. In long-run equilibrium, the firm's demand curve is tangent to the Average Cost curve on its downward-sloping portion, *before* it reaches the minimum point. This means the firm produces less and charges more than a perfectly competitive firm, resulting in structural 'excess capacity' or inefficiency.
Answer: The non-working age population (under 15 and over 60) to the working-age population (15-59)
A lower dependency ratio indicates that there are more productive workers available to support the dependent segments of society (children and the elderly). As a nation transitions through the demographic dividend, the dependency ratio falls, freeing up household savings and government resources that can be redirected from basic sustenance towards long-term capital investments and wealth creation.
Answer: Directorate General of Trade Remedies (DGTR)
The DGTR, operating under the Ministry of Commerce and Industry, is the apex national authority for trade defense. It conducts rigorous, quasi-judicial investigations to determine if domestic industries are suffering 'material injury' due to dumped imports or sudden surges. While DGTR recommends the duties, the actual legal imposition and collection are executed by the Ministry of Finance (CBIC).
Answer: Mode 2: Consumption abroad
Mode 2 (Consumption Abroad) covers scenarios where the buyer moves to the seller's territory to receive the service, such as an Indian patient traveling to the US for surgery, or a student studying at a foreign university. Mode 1 is remote delivery (telemedicine), Mode 3 is setting up a foreign branch (FDI in hospitals), and Mode 4 is the professional traveling to the client (IT consultants flying abroad).
Answer: Corporation Tax on the net profits of a company
A direct tax is levied directly on the income or wealth of the person or entity that ultimately bears the burden of the tax; it cannot be passed on to someone else. Corporation tax is paid directly by the company out of its profits. GST, Customs, and Excise are indirect taxes, where the initial payer (the business) shifts the tax burden to the final consumer via higher prices.
Answer: Exogenous real shocks, such as changes in technology, productivity, or commodity prices, rather than monetary factors
Unlike Keynesian models that blame recessions on drops in demand or sticky wages, RBC theory assumes markets are always perfectly competitive and clear. It posits that booms and busts are simply the efficient, rational responses of workers and firms to real external shocks (like a massive oil price spike or a breakthrough in AI technology) altering the economy's productive capacity.
Answer: To accumulate resources over time specifically for the redemption of the state's outstanding open market borrowings
The CSF acts as a mandatory sinking reserve. States are required to contribute a small percentage of their outstanding debt to this fund annually, which is then invested in safe government securities. When a state's bond matures, it uses the accumulated corpus in the CSF to repay the principal, preventing sudden, massive spikes in the state's fiscal deficit in a single year.
Answer: CPI includes services and tracks retail inflation affecting consumers, while WPI tracks only physical goods at the wholesale level
The most critical structural difference is that the WPI completely ignores the services sector, which constitutes over 50% of India's GDP. The CPI captures retail price changes for both goods and services (like healthcare, education, and housing). Furthermore, since 2014, the RBI uses CPI (Combined), not WPI, as the official anchor for its inflation-targeting mandate.
Answer: Basel, Switzerland
The BCBS was founded in 1974 by central bank governors of the G10 countries. Operating from Basel, Switzerland, it serves as the primary global standard-setter for the prudential regulation of banks, aiming to enhance financial stability worldwide by ensuring that banks maintain adequate capital buffers to absorb unexpected shocks.
Answer: Property rights are clearly defined and transaction costs are negligible or zero
Ronald Coase argued that if people can negotiate cheaply and it is legally clear who owns the right to the resource (e.g., the right to clean air vs. the right to pollute), the affected parties will naturally strike a mutually beneficial deal to internalize the externality. However, in reality, high transaction costs (lawyers, organizing millions of citizens) usually make this impossible, necessitating state regulation.
Answer: Mobilizing rural women into Self-Help Groups (SHGs) and linking them to formal credit and skill development
DAY-NRLM operates on the philosophy that the poor have a strong innate capability to lift themselves out of poverty if organized into robust, participatory institutions. By federating millions of rural women into SHGs, the scheme builds social capital, promotes financial literacy, facilitates access to bank credit, and eventually supports them in setting up micro-enterprises.
Answer: The 'evergreening' of patents by pharmaceutical companies through minor, trivial modifications to existing drugs
Section 3(d) is a critical public health safeguard in Indian law. It mandates that a new form of a known substance (like a new salt or polymorph) is only patentable if it demonstrates a significant enhancement in known 'efficacy'. This prevents big pharma from making tiny, ineffective changes to a drug whose patent is expiring just to secure a new 20-year monopoly and keep generic, affordable versions off the market.
Answer: As an economy industrializes and per capita income rises, the share of public expenditure in the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) tends to increase secularly
Formulated by Adolph Wagner in the late 19th century, this law observes that economic development brings about complex social and economic relationships (like urbanization, monopolies, and externalities) that the free market cannot handle alone. Consequently, the state must expand its role to provide infrastructure, regulate markets, and offer social welfare, causing government spending to grow faster than the economy.
Answer: Decrease, even if absolute expenditure on food rises
Engel's Law is a fundamental observation in development economics. Because human caloric needs are biologically capped, wealthier families quickly satisfy their basic food requirements. As their income grows further, the marginal propensity to consume food drops, and they allocate a progressively larger share of their budget to luxuries, services, healthcare, and education.
Answer: Price Support Scheme (PSS) where NAFED procures pulses and oilseeds
While MSP is announced for 22 crops, procurement is heavily skewed towards wheat and rice by the FCI. PM-AASHA was designed to operationalize MSP for pulses, oilseeds, and copra. Under the Price Support Scheme (PSS), NAFED acts as the central nodal agency to physically procure these crops when market prices fall below the MSP, protecting farmers from distress sales.
Answer: Statement 13
Gender Budgeting is not a separate accounting exercise but a dissection of the existing budget to assess its impact on gender equality. It typically categorizes schemes into two parts: those with 100% allocation for women, and those with at least 30% allocation. In recent budget documents, this critical analytical data is presented in Statement 13.
Answer: Total volume of digital transactions processed
The PCA framework is strictly focused on the financial health and solvency of the bank. The three core trigger parameters are CRAR (capital adequacy), Net NPA (asset quality), and ROA (profitability). A low volume of digital transactions might indicate poor market penetration or technological lag, but it does not threaten the bank's survival or trigger regulatory intervention under PCA.