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JUICE’s Lunar-Earth Double Fly-by Manoeuvre, India and Malaysia, Inequality and corruption nexus

Table of Contents

(General Studies III – Economy Section – Indian Economy and issues relating to Planning, Mobilization of Resources, Growth, Development and Employment. Inclusive Growth and issues arising from it.)

  • The quote by Honore De Balzac, “Behind every great fortune there is a crime,” highlights a perspective that wealth accumulation often involves unethical or illegal practices.
  • However, this view only partially captures the broader issue that income and wealth accumulation can also lead to serious offenses, especially in the intersection of government and business.
  • This connection between wealth inequality and corruption has been a growing concern in India, particularly during the period from 2014 to 2022, as highlighted by recent studies and surveys.

Rising Inequality in India: Statistics and Evidence

  1. Income Disparity Growth:
    • Top 1% Wealth Concentration: The top 1% of India’s population controls more than 40% of the total wealth, a sharp increase from 12.5% in 1980.
    • Income Share Increase: The top 1% of income earners now take home 22.6% of the total pre-tax income, up from 7.3% in 1980.
    • Widening Gap: The disparity between the top 1% and the bottom 50% has significantly widened, with the former holding wealth equivalent to the latter’s combined share.
  2. Survey Insights:
    • Gallup World Poll (GWP) Findings: The survey data from 2019-2023 reveals that economic gains have disproportionately benefited the wealthy, while middle and lower-income groups have seen minimal improvements.
    • CMIE’s Consumer Pyramid Household Survey: Highlights a growing gap in consumption patterns, with the wealthy increasing their spending on luxury goods, while the lower-income groups struggle to meet basic needs.
  3. International Comparisons:
    • India Among the Most Unequal: India ranks among the most unequal countries globally, with wealth and income inequality metrics surpassing those of many other large economies.

Linkage Between Inequality and Corruption –

  1. Rent-Seeking Behavior:
    • Definition: Rent-seeking refers to the use of resources to obtain economic gain without reciprocating any benefits to society. This often involves manipulating public policy or government decisions to secure favorable outcomes for the wealthy.
    • Examples in India: Wealthy individuals and corporations have been known to lobby for government contracts or favorable regulations, often through unethical means such as bribery or political donations.
  2. Corruption in Government-Business Intersection:
    • Infrastructure Projects: Large infrastructure contracts (ports, highways) often see corruption, where government officials award contracts to wealthy investors in exchange for bribes or other favors.
    • Regulatory Capture: Powerful business interests influence regulatory bodies to make decisions that favor their investments, often at the expense of public welfare.
  3. Moral Decline and Public Trust:
    • Erosion of Ethics: As wealth becomes increasingly concentrated, the pursuit of more wealth often leads to a decline in moral standards, where corruption becomes normalized.
    • Judicial Trust: While higher conviction rates in the judiciary can curb corruption, the perception that the judiciary is influenced by the wealthy undermines public trust, allowing corruption to persist.

Measures to Overcome Inequality-Induced Corruption –

  1. Progressive Taxation: Implement higher taxes on the wealthy to reduce income and wealth concentration, and use the revenue to invest in public services.
  2. Strengthening Regulatory Bodies: Ensure the independence and transparency of regulatory agencies to prevent their capture by powerful business interests.
  3. Judicial Reforms: Improve the efficiency and independence of the judiciary to ensure that it acts as an effective check on corruption.
  4. Promoting Ethical Business Practices: Encourage businesses to adopt ethical practices through regulations and incentives, including stricter penalties for corruption and insider trading.
  5. Public Awareness and Education: Foster a culture of integrity by promoting awareness of the dangers of corruption and the importance of ethical behavior from a young age.

The growing income inequality in India is not just an economic issue but also a significant contributor to the rise in corruption. As wealth becomes more concentrated, the avenues for corrupt practices multiply, eroding public trust and moral standards. To combat this, India must adopt comprehensive measures that address both the economic roots of inequality and the institutional weaknesses that allow corruption to thrive. Only by doing so can India build a more just, equitable, and prosperous society.

Circulating vaccine-derived Poliovirus
• The oral polio vaccine (OPV) contains an attenuated or weakened form of the virus, which activates an immune response in the body.
• During this time, this vaccine virus is also excreted. On rare occasions, an excreted vaccine virus can continue to circulate for an extended period of time.
• The longer it is allowed to survive, the more genetic changes it undergoes.
• In very rare instances, the vaccine virus can genetically change into a form that can paralyse. This is what is known as a circulating vaccine-derived poliovirus (cVDPV).
  • A case of vaccine-derived polio is suspected in a two-year-old child in the West Garo Hills district of Meghalaya.
  • The two-year-old child was found to have symptoms of polio-myelitis more than a week ago. The child was diagnosed with acute flaccid paralysis.
  • Vaccine-derived infection is an infection some people with low immunity acquire which is different from wild Polio virus.
  • The World Health Organization declared India polio-free in 2014 after the last case of wild poliovirus in the country was reported in 2011.
Poliomyelitis (Polio)
• It is a highly infectious viral disease primarily affecting children under five.
• It spreads mainly through the fecal-oral route or contaminated food and water, multiplying in the intestine and potentially invading the nervous system, causing paralysis.
• In 1988, the World Health Assembly launched the Global Polio Eradication Initiative.
• Of the three strains, type 2 was eradicated in 1999, and type 3 in 2020. As of 2022, wild poliovirus type 1 remains endemic in only two countries: Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Dig Deeper: Read about India’s efforts and initiatives for Polio Eradication.

  • India and Malaysia have upgraded their relationship to a “Comprehensive Strategic Partnership” during a recent visit of Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim to New Delhi.
  • This partnership builds on the 2010 Strategic Partnership and its 2015 enhancement.
  • India will also support Malaysia’s bid to join the BRICS grouping, a key priority for Malaysia.
  • The two leaders discussed geopolitical challenges, including Indo-Pacific tensions, emphasizing freedom of navigation and peaceful dispute resolution in line with international law.
  • This visit marks the first by a Malaysian Prime Minister since 2018.
  • Relations had soured due to
  • Malaysia’s criticism of India’s Citizenship Amendment Act
  • The reorganisation of Jammu and Kashmir
  • India’s extradition request for Zakir Naik
  • India’s detention of Malaysian nationals in attending Tablighi Jamaat in Covid 19 Pandemic.

Dig Deeper: Read about the ‘Malacca Dilemma’ and the prospects of Kra Canal.

  • The India-Japan conducted a ‘2+2’ dialogue in Delhi recently, which is a conference between the Defence and External affairs ministers of both countries.
  • The India-Japan partnership is rooted in a shared commitment to a free, open, and rules-based Indo-Pacific.
  • It was highlighted that the relationship has evolved into a special strategic and global partnership over the past decade.
  • India’s goal of becoming a developed country by 2047, with a focus on building domestic defence capabilities, was also underscored.

Special Strategic and Global Partnership
• The “Acquisition and Cross-Servicing Agreement” (ACSA) for the reciprocal provision of supplies and services between the Japanese and the Indian Armed Forces came into force in 2021.
• Year 2023 was the “India-Japan Year of Tourism Exchange”.
• India and Japan share strategic partnership in Quad.

Dig Deeper: Read about investments of Japan in India and India’s Act East Policy.

  • European scientists successfully attempted a groundbreaking double slingshot manoeuvre, guiding the European Space Agency’s (ESA)Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer (JUICE) toward Jupiter.
  • Launched in April 2023, JUICE returned to Earth to utilize its gravity as a braking effect, enabling a shortcut to Venus and then onward to Jupiter.
  • The “gravity assist” method to gain energy by swinging through the strong gravitational fields of various planets on the way, involves leveraging a planet’s or moon’s gravity to adjust speed and trajectory.
  • This week’s lunar-Earth fly-by marked the first attempt to execute two such manoeuvres consecutively.
  • After this lunar-Earth double flyby of 2024 (LEGA), Juice will first make one flyby of Venus in 2025 and two further flybys of Earth in 2026 and 2029.
  • It will enter Jupiter’s orbit in 2031.
ESA’s Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer (Juice)
• Following NASA’s 1990s Galileo mission, the JUICE mission will orbit Jupiter.
• It will make detailed observations of the giant gas planet and its three large ocean-bearing moons – Ganymede, Callisto and Europa – with a suite of remote sensing, geophysical and in situ instruments.
• The mission will characterise these moons as both planetary objects and possible habitats and explore Jupiter’s complex environment.
• Juice is one of the heaviest interplanetary spacecrafts ever launched, with a total mass of around 6000 kg.

Dig Deeper: Read about important probes and missions of ESA, NASA and JAXA.