Current Affairs for SSC CGL Exams - 02 FEBRUARY 2019
::NATIONAL::
Interim budget to empower the poor and energise the nation : PM
- In a series of Tweets and the statement after the presentation
of interim budget 2019-20, PM said that over 12 crore farmers and their
families, over 3 crores middle class tax payers professionals and their
families and 30-40 crore labourers will gain thanks to the Budget for
New India.
- PM said, the development initiatives of the NDA government
have touched several lives which have been reflected in the budget
proposals from farmer welfare to middle class, from income tax relief to
infrastructure, from manufacturing to MSME, from housing to healthcare
and from the increased pace of development to the New India.
- He expressed happiness that it is good to see more people
being removed from the shackles of poverty. Our Neo-middle class is
rising and so are their dreams. PM congratulated the middle class for
the relief in taxes.
- About the pro-farmer initiatives in the budget, he lamented
that for years, many initiatives have been initiated for farmers but
sadly, lot of farmers never came under the ambit of these schemes. He
said that PM KisanNidhi is a historic step for farmer welfare which will
help the farmers who have under 5 acres of land. PM added that the
animal husbandry sector, fisheries have been taken care of in the Budget
for New India.
- Underlining the importance of safeguarding the interests of
the unorganised sector, he said PM Shram Yogi Man DhanYojana will be of
great help. This sector needed more safeguarding of their interests and
the Budget for New India. has done so. Ayushman Bharat Yojana and social
security schemes are also going to touch their lives, PM added.
::ECONOMY::
Govt. lo launch mega pension scheme for unorganised sectors
- The Government proposes to launch a mega pension yojana namely
'PradhanMantriShram-Yogi Maandhan' for the unorganised sector workers
with monthly income uptoRs. 15,000.
- While presenting the Interim Budget 2019-20 in Parliament
today, the Union Minister for Finance, Corporate Affairs, Railways and
Coal, ShriPiyushGoyal said that half of India’s GDP comes from the sweat
and toil of 42 crore workers in the unorganised sector.The Government
must provide them comprehensive social security coverage for their old
age.
- Therefore, in addition to the health coverage provided under
‘Ayushman Bharat’ and life & disability coverage provided under
‘PradhanMantriJeevanJyotiBimaYojana’ and ‘PradhanMantriSurakshaBimaYojana’,
our Government proposes to launch a mega pension yojana namely 'PradhanMantriShram-Yogi
Maandhan' for the unorganised sector workers with monthly income uptoRs.
15,000.
- ShriGoyal said that this pension yojana shall provide them an
assured monthly pension of Rs. 3,000 from the age of 60 years on a
monthly contribution of a small affordable amount during their working
age.
- An unorganised sector worker joining pension yojana at the age
of 29 years will have to contribute only Rs. 100 per month till the age
of 60 years. The Government will deposit equal matching share in the
pension account of the worker every month.
- It is expected that at least 10 crore labourers and workers in
the unorganised sector will avail the benefit of 'PradhanMantriShram-Yogi
Maandhan' within next five years making it one of the largest pension
schemes of the world. A sum of Rs. 500 crore has been allocated for the
Scheme.
Centre’s revision of fiscal deficit target, a cause of concern says
econmists
- Finance Minister PiyushGoyal said that the government would be
missing its fiscal deficit target for 2018-19 and 2019-20, a fact that
economists flagged as a matter of concern.
- “The estimate of incomes and expenditure, which I am
presenting today, pegs the fiscal deficit of year 2019-20 at 3.4% of
GDP,” Mr.Goyal said in his Interim Budget speech.
- Terming the Interim Budget as an exercise that ‘prioritised
populism over fiscal prudence’, Angel Broking said the fiscal slippage
could have an impact on the Reserve Bank of India’s decisions on
interest rates.
- “There are two things playing out for the banking sector from
the Union Budget,” JaikishanParmar, senior equity research analyst –
BFSI, Angel Broking said. “On the one hand, the higher fiscal deficit
target set at 3.4% for 2018-19 and at 3.4% for 2019-20 will mean that
the RBI may not be too keen to cut rates in the immediate future,” he
said.
- Economists also expressed concern over the disinvestment
target being retained at ₹80,000 crore for 2018-19 and increased to
₹90,000 crore for 2019-20. So far, the government had raised about
₹36,000 crore
- The actual deficit numbers will depend on the realised GST
collections over the next two months and the government’s ability to
meet disinvestment target over a time line of one month left for action
before election code kicks in.
::INTERNATIONAL::
U.S now backs out of Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) treaty
- The U.S is suspending its obligations under the
Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty effective February 2 and
will withdraw from the treaty in six months, Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo said at a press briefing that lasted less for about eight
minutes.
- The treaty, signed during the Cold War in 1987, bans
ground-launched missiles with a range of 500 km-5,500 km. It was key to
ending the arms race between the (then) two superpowers and helped
protect the U.S.’s NATO allies in Europe from Soviet missile attacks.
- “We cannot be the only country in the world unilaterally bound
by this treaty, or any other,” President Donald Trump said in a
statement issued by the White House on Friday.
- However, the Secretary left open the possibility that the
treaty could be rescued in the six-month withdrawal period. “If Russia
does not return to full and verifiable compliance with the treaty within
this six-month period by verifiably destroying its INF-violating
missiles, missile launchers and associated equipment, the treaty will
terminate,” he added.
- The U.S. has also been concerned that China has been gaining a
strategic advantage over it as it is not party to the treaty and bound
by its terms. Withdrawal from the treaty will increase the weapons
options for the U.S. in the Pacific, where China has increased its
influence.
Majority of U.S visa fraudsters arrested are Indians
- In the evolving case of the University of Farmington sting
operation that The Hindu has been closely monitoring, 129 of the 130
arrested “students” are Indian nationals, Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE) said in an email. One of them is Palestinian, Voice of
America quoted official sources as saying.
- “As of yesterday morning, ICE had administratively arrested
130 foreign nationals enrolled at the University of Farmington for civil
immigration violations. Of the 130, 129 were Indian nationals. These
individuals have been placed in removal proceedings, and ICE will seek
to maintain them in its custody pending the outcome of those
proceedings,” the email from ICE said.
- Three indictments, unsealed on Wednesday in the U.S. District
Court of the Eastern District of Michigan in Detroit, charged eight
individuals of Indian origin with recruiting students to keep their
immigration status in the U.S. valid and provide them with work permits
by abusing the F-1 student visa scheme and associated curricular
practical training (CPT) opportunities
- The authorities alleged that each of the foreign citizens who
enrolled and made “tuition” payments to the university knew that they
would not attend any actual classes, earn credits, or make academic
progress towards an actual degree in a particular field of study it was
a “pay-to-stay” scheme.”
::SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY::
Key ocean mixing area found in Labrador sea
- One of the key drivers of the world’s climate is an area in
the North Atlantic Ocean, where warmer and colder water mix and swirl.
- When scientists went for their first close look at this
critical underwater dynamo, they found they were looking in the wrong
place. By hundreds of miles.
- The consequences are not quite yet understood, but eventually
it could change forecasts of one of the worst-case global warming
scenarios still considered unlikely this century, in which the mixing
stops and climate chaos ensues.
- It’s called the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation,
and scientists describe it as a giant ocean conveyor belt that moves
water from Greenland south to beyond the tip of Africa and into the
Indian Ocean.
- The area where warm water turns over in the North Atlantic is
considered to be the engine of the conveyor belt. Scientists thought it
was in the Labrador Sea west of Greenland
- But then a new international science team measured
temperature, saltiness and the speed of ocean currents throughout the
North Atlantic to try to better understand the conveyor belt.
- Ms. Lozier and several outside experts said this doesn’t
change their trust in the models, especially because when the models are
checked with what is happening in the real world, they are found to be
generally accurate.
::SPORTS::
Indian captain Mithali Raj becomes first female to play 200 ODI’s in
cricket
- India captain Mithali Raj today became the first female
cricketer to play 200 ODIs, adding another achievement to her
illustrious career.
- The 36-year-old is also the highest run-getter in ODIs with
6622 runs at an average of 51.33, including seven hundreds.
- Mithali could not make a big impact in her 200th game, scoring
nine off 28 balls as India were bowled out for 149 in the third and
final ODI against New Zealand at Hamilton. She had hit an unbeaten 63 in
the second ODI, helping India take an unassailable 2-0 lead in the
series.
- Mithali made her ODI debut way back in 1999 and has featured
in 200 games out of the 263 ODIs India have played.She has also played
10 Tests and 85 T20s.