Current Affairs for SSC CGL Exams - 17 November 2016


Current Affairs for SSC CGL Exams - 17 November 2016


:: National ::

SC crack down on online pre-natal sex determination advertisements

  • The Supreme Court directed the Central government to constitute a nodal agency to monitor and trigger search engines to crack down on online pre-natal sex determination advertisements.

  • A Bench led by Justice Dipak Misra ordered that the nodal agency should receive complaints about illegal online advertisements under the Pre-Conception and Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques Act of 1994.

  • It should communicate the tip-offs to online search engines like Google, Yahoo and Microsoft, which would delete these advertisements within 36 hours of getting the information.

  • “We direct the Union of India to constitute a nodal agency which would give advertisements on TV, radio and in newspapers, that if anybody comes across anything which identifies a girl or a boy.

  • “Once it is brought to the notice of the nodal agency, it shall inform the search engines and they, after receiving the information, are obliged to delete it within 36 hours and inform the nodal agency,” the court said.

  • It said this interim arrangement would continue till it took a final decision on the continued existence of online sex selection ads.

  • The court was hearing a petition filed in 2008 by Dr. Sabu Mathew George in the background of increasing instances of female foeticide.

  • The petition contended that pre-natal sex determination tests continue with impunity despite being made illegal in 1994.

Advisor to Pak PM will travel to India for Heart of Asia conference

  • Pakistan Prime Minister’s Adviser on Foreign Affairs Sartaj Aziz has said he will travel to India to attend the Heart of Asia Conference on Afghanistan in December.

  • He said the trip could be a “good opportunity” to “defuse” the tension. The conference will be held in Amritsar on December 3.

  • Mr. Aziz would be the first senior Pakistani official to visit India since the September 10 Uri attack, blamed on Pakistan-based militants. The attack led India to pull out of the SAARC Summit planned in Pakistan in November.

  • Mr. Azizi, however, said it was not yet confirmed whether or not he would meet his Indian counterpart on the sidelines of the conference.

  • He said the U.S. President-elect Donald Trump would deserve the Nobel prize if he resolved the Kashmir issue.

Sharp fall reported in property prices

  • Registration authorities report a sharp fall in revenue in leading real estate markets in Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Karnataka, Telangana and Tamil Nadu in the first week after demonetisation.

  • Some small developers in Bengaluru, a segment that makes up an estimated 12 per cent of the market, have reportedly cashed in on the Centre’s decision, making sales in “old currency”, to be regularised using loans later.

  • The real estate sector expects a drop in land price by up to 30 per cent in bigger cities and cheaper housing loans in the coming months.

  • In the “hot” property market of Haryana’s Gurugram, the government’s decision on removing Rs. 1,000 and Rs. 500 notes has adversely hit transactions. The number of conveyance and sale deeds dropped by over 50 per cent.

  • In all, 723 documents were registered from November 1, but the number dropped to 332 over the past one week.

  • Before the currency removal, over 90 per cent registrations involved cash for stamp duty. “Few people used Real Time Gross Settlement or demand draft,” he added.

  • Apartment prices in Mumbai have not dropped since November 8, but land prices could fall by 30 per cent. Luxury apartments could also cost 30-35 per cent less. In the long term, medium and affordable housing is expected to get cheaper.

  • Bengaluru’s massive real estate sector has seen a churn. The normal volume of property registrations at 1,800 a day is now a low 200, a senior revenue official says.

:: Science and Technology ::

Indigenously developed drone, Ruston-2 had a successful flight

  • Rustom-2, indigenously developed drone for surveillance and attack, had a successful first flight.

  • The first prototype of the pilotless or unmanned combat air vehicle was flown for about 10 minutes in the morning at the new second test range of the Defence Research & Development Organisation at Challakere, about 200 km from here.

  • It met the necessary test specifications, according to sources. This is part of a series of routine tests being conducted on the UAV over the past few months.

  • Ostensibly more tests on more prototypes of Rustom-2 would be conducted before its production mode and users are known.

NASA has renewed its search for Antarctic meteorites

  • NASA has renewed its search for Antarctic meteorites to help learn more about the primitive building blocks of the solar system and answer questions about Earth’s neighbours like the Moon and Mars.

  • NASA, the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the Smithsonian Institution (SI) recently renewed their agreement to search for, collect and curate Antarctic meteorites in a partnership known as Antarctic Search for Meteorites Programme (ANSMET).

  • The signing of this new joint agreement advances the programme for an additional decade, replacing an earlier agreement signed in 1980, NASA said.

  • Since the U.S. began searching for meteorites in Antarctica in 1976, the ANSMET programme has collected more than 23,000 specimens, dramatically increasing the number of samples available for study from the Moon, Mars and asteroids.

  • Among them are the first meteorites discovered to come from the Moon and Mars, and the well-known ALH 84001 Martian meteorite, which helped renew interest in Mars exploration in the 1990s. Meteorites are natural objects that fall to Earth from space and survive intact so they can be collected on the ground or on ice. Antarctica provides a unique environment for the collection of meteorites, because the cold desert climate preserves meteorites for long periods of time.

:: Business and Economy ::

Banks to gain the most from demonetisation

  • Banks stand to gain the most from the demonetisation efforts due to the impetus it provides for people to enter the formal banking system, according to Moody’s Investors Service.

  • The demonetisation scheme could result in bank deposits increasing by about 1-2 per cent once the volatility subsides.

  • Moody’s points out that studies have shown that first-time users of banking systems tend to keep using them once they start.

  • “Therefore, we expect a material proportion of the first-time or very infrequent users to become more sticky customers of the banks.”

  • This could benefit banks through an increase in low-cost deposits, although this benefit may not be apparent in the short-term, the note added.

  • Although banks have seen a sharp increase in their deposit levels over the last few days, this is likely to reverse once cash availability increases and restrictions on cash withdrawals go back to normal.

  • Once this volatility subsides and stability is achieved, possibly around three months from now, we estimate that bank deposits will increase by around 1-2 per cent compared to what they would have been without the demonetisation scheme.

  • “The government move has meant that a large proportion of the population will have to access banking channels at least once, so as to convert their existing holdings into the new legal tender,” the note added.

Moody’s Investors Service has retained its positive outlook on India

  • Moody’s Investors Service has retained its positive outlook on India, the company said, predicting a continued reform push and lowering of debt levels.

  • “The positive outlook denotes Moody’s expectation that, over time, India’s credit metrics will likely shift to levels consistent with a Baa2 rating,” Moody’s Investors Service said in a note.

  • “In particular, the outlook reflects our expectation that continued policy reform implementation will allow balanced growth to support a reduction in the government debt burden, currently a constraint on India's rating.”

  • Moody’s further said that a number of policies have already been put in place to moderate inflation and limit the current account deficit.

  • However, Moody’s said that private investment had still not picked up, despite the government’s efforts, which shows the limited effectiveness of government policy in this regard.

  • Moody’s pointed out that there are several factors bolstering India’s up-gradation to a higher rating, including its size, growth potential, and increase in income levels.

  • “GDP per capita in India was 11 per cent of the U.S. levels on a Purchasing Power Parity basis in 2015 - still well below the level in other Baa-rated sovereigns,” the note said.

  • “But this level marks an increase from 6.6 per cent of U.S. levels in 2005 and 9.2 per cent in 2010.”

  • Moody’s also pointed out that India had several constraints that could keep its credit rating where it was, such as income and consumption levels remaining vulnerable to external shocks like a poor monsoon, for example.

  • The high debt levels of the government also play a part in weakening India’s position, the note added.

Govt starts the process of recalibration

  • The uphill task to physically recalibrate each and every one of the almost 2.5 lakh automated teller machines (ATM) in the country to enable them to dispense the new Rs.500 and Rs.2,000 denomination currency notes started.

  • It signalled customers may have to contend with a longer wait to withdraw cash as banks shut many of the ATMs to complete the recalibration.

  • The task force for reactivation of ATMs headed by Reserve Bank of India Deputy Governor S.S. Mundra, met on Tuesday and instructed banks on how to go about the ATM recalibration process.

  • According to officials present at the meeting, banks have been asked to recalibrate 12,500 ATMs every day.

  • The ATM maintenance companies have been asked to follow a specific route that has been decided by the task force so that they can cover different banks’ ATMs that are in close vicinity.

  • While the task of completing the entire process of recalibrating almost 2.5 lakh ATMs may take some time, banks have been told to focus on completing the task in the top 30 cities by the end of this month.

  • ATMs have been dispensing only Rs.100 notes since the ban on the old series of Rs.500 and Rs.1,000 was imposed, and were running out of cash in 2-3 hours.

  • The government has also said that the pain behind non-functional ATMs could continue for some time to come. The government is now focussing on restocking offsite ATMs as well, he added.

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