Current Affairs for SSC CGL Exams - 12 DECEMBER 2019
::NATIONAL::
IFSC authority bill passed by Loksabha
- The LokSabha today passed the International Financial Services Centres
Authority Bill, 2019.
- It seeks to establish a unified Authority to develop and regulate the
financial services market in the International Financial Services Centres or
IFSC’s in India.
- Currently, multiple agencies are entrusted with regulating the specific
market including the RBI, SEBI, Insurance Regulatory and Development
Authority, IRDA and the Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority,
PFRDA.
- Fourteen Central Acts would be amended including seven relating to the
RBI, three each relating to the SEBI and the IRDA and one on the PFRDA.
- Finance Minister NirmalaSitharaman, in her reply, said, the proposed
authority will be subjected to the scrutiny of the CAG and the CVC. She
said, the Central agencies like the CBI, the ED and the Prevention of Money
Laundering Act-PMLA will have jurisdiction over the proposed authority.
- Ms NirmalaSitharaman asserted that the IFSC’s are not necessarily
restricted to the Gujarat International Finance Tech-City, known as the GIFT
city in Gujarat alone.
- She added that other states can also seek nod for similar centres,
though she referred to her predecessor late ArunJaitley’s standpoint that
the optimal potential of the existing centre be realized fully before
creating new ones.
PM claims passage of citizenship amendment bill as historic
- Prime Minister NarendraModi has termed the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill
as historic, saying it will end religious persecution faced by the
minorities in the neighbouring countries.
- He said the legislation will end instability in the lives of the people
who are residing in India but have not been able to avail the citizenship
right and other facilities.
- The bill seeks to amend the Citizenship Act, 1955 to make illegal
migrants of six communities from Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Pakistan
eligible for Indian citizenship.
- Briefing reporters after the BJP Parliamentary party meeting in New
Delhi today, Parliamentary Affairs Minister, Pralhad Joshi quoted the Prime
Minister as saying that the legislation will be written in the annals of
history with golden letters.
::ECONOMY::
Govt.considering switching to chain based method for GDP calculation
- In a radical change, the government is considering moving to the chain
base method of calculating gross domestic product, from the current practice
of a fixed base year to better reflect changes in the economy and prevent
controversies.
- The chain base method will capture structural changes in the economy
faster by allowing new activity and items to be added every year. Current
GDP estimates are based on data for 2011-12 and are due for an update.
- While discussions on changes are on, no time-frame has been set for a
shift. The statistics office junked the idea of shifting to 2017-18 as base
year as it was not considered a normal year.
Parliamentary panel recommends separate scheme for LPG beneficiaries
- A Parliamentary panel has said that the government should consider a
separate scheme with a higher subsidy so that the LPG cylinders become
affordable to beneficiaries of PradhanMantriUjjwaalaYojana, PMUY.
- A Parliamentary Standing Committee on Petroleum and Natural Gas headed
by Ramesh Bidhuri today presented its report to Parliament on demand for
grants for 2019-20.
- The panel has favoured that the government should introduce smaller
sizes of LPG cylinders like two, three and five kilograms.
- It has said, the government should ensure that the pricing of these
packages is in consonance with the 14.2 kilograms cylinder.
- The panel noted the national average refill of domestic LPG cylinders by
consumers is 6.25 cylinders per year.
- However, it is observed that the average refill of LPG cylinders by PMUY
beneficiaries is 3.08 cylinders during the last one year.
::INTERNATIONAL::
ASSK claims rohingyan genocide as misleading
- Myanmar’s state counsellor Aung San SuuKyi on Wednesday defended the
Myanmar government against the allegations of the genocide of Rohingyas at
the International Court of Justice (ICJ) at the Hague.
- She called the allegations as an incomplete and misleading factual
picture of the situation in Rakhine state. She said that Myanmar’s security
forces responded to the attacks by the insurgent group ArakanRohingya
Salvation Army (ARSA) in October 2016 leading to the death of nine police
officers and hundreds of civilians. This armed conflict led to the exodus of
Muslims from Rakhine into Bangladesh.
- In her 25-minute long defence Aung San SuuKyi said that Myanmar will not
tolerate any human rights violation and the government is working to fix the
domestic accountability.
EU leaders to come up with European Green deal
- The European Union has said that it will not hesitate to take measures,
including a carbon border adjustment tax, to protect the competitiveness of
its industries.
- EU leaders are set to discuss the European Green Deal, a plan that will
commit member states to reduce their net greenhouse gas emissions to zero by
2050, on Wednesday.
- There are concerns that the aggressive policies to reduce economy-wide
emissions by EU member states could put domestic industry at a disadvantage
compared to industries from countries that not undertaking similar policies.
- European Commission Vice-President FransTimmermans that most countries
barring “very very few” have subscribed to Paris Agreement and agrees it is
a good thing and now the “necessity is to translate that into concrete
action.”
- This would require countries to take measures to meet the goals set out
in the 2015 agreement. The European Green Deal is the package of measures
and policy the European Commission is proposing for the EU to achieve these
goals.
::SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY::
Study finds volcanic rock movement might lead to ghg emissions
- Greenhouse gas emissions directly from the movement of volcanic rocks
can create massive global warming effects -- more than previously believed
-- according to a study which may lead to changes in the way scientists
estimate climate change.
- The researchers, including those from the University of Birmingham in
the UK, said one such role in climate change could be played by Large
Igneous Provinces (LIPs) -- extremely large accumulations of rocks forming
when magma travelled through the crust towards the surface.
- They created a model of changes in carbon emissions during the
Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) - a short interval of maximum
temperature lasting around 100,000 years some 55 million years ago.
- As part of the study, the researchers calculated the greenhouse gas
fluxes associated with the North Atlantic Igneous Province (NAIP) - one of
Earth's largest LIPs that spans Britain, Ireland, Norway and Greenland.
- The simulations by the researchers predicted that the volcanic rocks
part of the NAIP could have initiated PETM climate change.
- The link between LIPs and changes in global climate during the Mesozoic
era suggests that greenhouse gases released directly by these rocks could
initiate a domino effect of changes in the Earth's environment which could
persists over 10,000 to 100,000 years.