Current Affairs for SSC CGL Exams - 17 January 2019

SSC CGL Current Affairs


Current Affairs for SSC CGL Exams - 17 January 2019


::NATIONAL::

ASER report shows decline in numerical skills among students

  •  While there has been some improvement in the reading and arithmetic skills of lower primary students in rural India over the last decade, the skills of Class VIII students have actually seen a decline.
  •  The Annual Status of Education Report (ASER) 2018, the results of a yearly survey that NGO Pratham has been carrying out since 2006, shows that more than half of Class VIII students cannot correctly solve a numerical division problem and more than a quarter of them cannot read a primary level text.
  •  Noting that the “additional value added in terms of math skills for each year of schooling is low,” Pratham researchers concluded that “without strong foundational skills, it is difficult for children to cope with what is expected of them in the upper primary grades.”
  •  The ASER survey covered almost 5.5 lakh children between the ages of 3 and 16 in 596 rural districts across the country. In an encouraging trend, it found that enrolment is increasing and the percentage of children under 14 who are out of school is less than 4%.
  •  The gender gap is also shrinking, even within the older cohort of 15-and-16-year-olds. Only 13.6% of girls of that age are out of school, the first time that the figure has dropped below the 15% mark.

::ECONOMY::

Reserve Bank eases norms for ECB’s

  •  In a bid to improve ease of doing business, the Reserve Bank of India has decided to liberalise external commercial borrowing (ECB) norms, allowing all companies that are eligible for receiving foreign direct investment, to raise funds through the ECB route.
  •  “The list of eligible borrowers has been expanded. All entities eligible to receive foreign direct investment can borrow under the ECB framework,” the central bank said in a statement on Wednesday. The new framework takes immediate effect.
  •  The RBI has decided to keep the minimum average maturity period at 3 years for all ECBs, irrespective of the amount of borrowing, except for borrowers specifically permitted to borrow for a shorter period. Earlier, the minimum average maturity period was five years. The ceiling for borrowing remains at $750 million.
  •  Any entity who is a resident of a country which is financial action task force compliant, will be treated as a recognised lender. “This change increases lending options and allows various new lenders in ECB space while strengthening the [anti money laundering / combating the financing of terrorism] framework,” it said.
  •  RBI had capped funds raised via ECBs at 6.5% of GDP, at current market prices. Based on GDP figures for March 31, 2018, ‘the soft limit works out to $160 billion,’ RBI had said.

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::INTERNATIONAL::

Theresa may narrowly escapes no confidence vote

  •  The British government led by Theresa May survived a vote of no-confidence by a narrow margin of 19 on Wednesday evening.
  •  The vote came at the end of a five-hour debate on a motion tabled by Opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn, who accused the government of failing the country and turning a deal that had been touted as “the easiest in history” into a “national embarrassment
  •  The vote followed the huge defeat suffered by the government on Tuesday night, when MPs rejected the government’s Brexit withdrawal deal by a margin of 230. The margin was considerably larger than the 166 votes by which the minority government of Ramsay Macdonald lost a vote in 1924, which Mr. Corbyn said would have led any other leader to do the “right thing” and resign.
  •  Ms. May had been hoping that she could go back to Brussels to ask for changes that could then be put to Parliament again in a vote but given the scale of the defeat, EU leaders are likely to see little point in making efforts on this.
  •  Many are now pressing for Britain to request a delay to Brexit, which Ms. May has so far been reluctant to do. In addition, with no political consensus in the U.K. in sight, it is unclear whether European leaders would agree to this.

Land reclaimed in china backed port city of Colombo

  •  Over 650 acres of land off Colombo’s seafront, where a China-backed $1.4 billion port city is currently being built, has been reclaimed, Sri Lankan authorities said on Wednesday.
  •  Beijing attaches great importance to the port city, Chinese Ambassador to Sri Lanka Cheng Xueyuan said at a ceremony held to mark what the Sri Lankan government termed “another milestone” in the mega project.
  •  The total investment is expected to go up to $15 billion when the project is completed.Executed by CHEC Port City Colombo (Pvt) Ltd, the port city, according to government estimates, is likely to draw about $15 billion in investment, when completed.
  •  CHEC is a subsidiary of China Communication Construction Company, in which the Chinese government is a major stakeholder.
  •  The plan for mega port city adjoining Colombo’s iconic sea front called the Galle Face envisages plush offices, residential units, education and hospital facilities and a “central park”, to make it a “financial hub”, linking markets and investors across Asia.

::SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY::

Fasting can help protect against age-related diseases : Study

  • Fasting can boost the body’s metabolism and help protect against age-related diseases, a study has found.
  • The circadian clock operates within the body and its organs as intrinsic time-keeping machinery to preserve homeostasis in response to the changing environment.
  • While food is known to influence clocks in peripheral tissues, it was unclear, until now, how the lack of food influences clock function and ultimately affects the body.
  • While fasting, researchers noted the mice exhibited a reduction in oxygen consumption (VO2), respiratory exchange ratio (RER), and energy expenditure, all of which were completely abolished by refeeding, which parallels results observed in humans.
  • “The reorganisation of gene regulation by fasting could prime the genome to a more permissive state to anticipate upcoming food intake and thereby drive a new rhythmic cycle of gene expression,” a scientist said.
  • “In other words, fasting is able to essentially reprogram a variety of cellular responses. Therefore, optimal fasting in a timed manner would be strategic to positively affect cellular functions and ultimately benefiting health and protecting against ageing-associated diseases.”
  • The study opens new avenues of investigation that could lead to development of nutritional strategies to improve health in humans.

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