25 March 2026 The Hindu Editorial
What to Read in The Hindu Editorial ( Topic and Syllabus wise)
Article 1: Cowardly bully
Why in news: The issue is in news due to Trump’s sudden policy shift, rising tensions in West Asia, disruption risks to global oil supply, and increasing debate over diplomacy versus military escalation.
Key Details
U.S. postpones strikes on Iran’s power plants, signalling strategic hesitation
Iran maintains control over Strait of Hormuz and continues missile attacks
Conflict marked by continuous retaliation cycle across West Asia
Initial objectives unmet—nuclear rollback and missile dismantling remain distant
Rising global economic costs, especially in energy markets
Signs of Strategic Failure
Postponement of strikes on Iran’s power plants shows deviation from initial aggressive stance
Despite claims of victory, Iran retains military and strategic capacity
Iran continues missile attacks on Gulf countries and Israel
Control over the Strait of Hormuz remains with Iran, limiting U.S. leverage
Cycle of Escalation
Iran has followed a pattern of counter-escalation to every attack
U.S. strike on Kharg Island → retaliation on American bases
Israeli strike on South Pars → attacks on Gulf energy infrastructure
Targeting of Natanz → Iran strikes Dimona
Threats to power plants led to warnings against global energy and financial assets, forcing a U-turn
Unmet War Objectives
Initial goals included:
Ending Iran’s nuclear programme
Stopping support to regional militias
Destroying missile capabilities
After weeks of conflict, focus has shifted to reopening the Strait of Hormuz
Limited options:
Diplomatic negotiations
Risky ground invasion (deployment of marines)
Need for Diplomatic Exit
Iran demands:
Security guarantees against future attacks
Reparations for damages
Recognition of legitimate rights (sanctions relief)
U.S. shows signs of softening stance (partial sanctions easing)
Progress requires restraining Israel’s continued aggression
Military approach has clear limits; diplomacy offers the least costly exit
Conclusion
The ongoing conflict highlights the limits of military solutions in complex geopolitical crises. Despite initial aggression, the U.S. faces strategic and economic constraints, while Iran has shown resilience. A diplomatic settlement, though challenging, remains the most viable path to de-escalation, ensuring regional stability and safeguarding global economic interests, particularly energy security and trade through the Strait of Hormuz.
Descriptive question:
“The limits of military power are evident in the U.S.–Iran conflict.” Discuss with reference to recent developments and examine the role of diplomacy in conflict resolution. (10 marks, 150 words)
Article 2: Deepening global corruption as a pointer for India
Why in news: The Corruption Perceptions Index 2025 highlights worsening global corruption trends and India’s stagnant performance, raising concerns about governance quality, economic efficiency, and its impact on investment and growth prospects.
Key Details
Global corruption worsening, with CPI average falling to 42 and most countries below 50
India scores 39 (rank 91), showing decade-long stagnation despite economic growth
Corruption increases economic costs, uncertainty, and reduces productivity & investment
Complex compliance system with 26,000+ legal provisions increases scope for discretion and rent-seeking
Digital reforms (DBT, GST, digital payments) have helped reduce leakages and improve transparency
Global Corruption Trends
The Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) 2025 shows corruption is worsening globally
Global average score dropped to 42/100, lowest in over a decade
122 out of 182 countries scored below 50 → widespread governance concerns
Only 5 countries scored above 80, compared to 12 earlier
Weak oversight and shrinking civic freedoms are linked to rising corruption
India’s Position and Performance
India scored 39 and ranked 91 out of 182 countries
Over the last decade, score remained stagnant (38–41 range)
Economic growth (4th largest economy) has not matched governance improvements
Performs better than some neighbours but lags behind many emerging and developed nations
Countries with stronger institutions show better CPI outcomes over time
Economic and Governance Implications
CPI reflects perceived public sector integrity, not just actual corruption
Low score signals weak transparency, accountability, and institutional safeguards
Corruption impacts:
Investment decisions
Sovereign risk perception
Long-term economic growth
Globally, corruption costs about 5% of GDP (~$2.6 trillion annually)
In India:
Direct loss ~0.5% of GDP
Total impact ~1–1.5% of GDP → billions in lost resources
Structural Challenges in Compliance System
India’s regulatory system has high complexity and criminalisation
Around 26,134 imprisonment provisions exist in business laws
Example:
Pharma start-up must meet 998 compliance requirements
Nearly 49% carry criminal liability
Consequences:
Increased cost of doing business
Greater discretionary power
Higher chances of rent-seeking and corruption
Positive Reforms and Way Forward
Digital initiatives have reduced leakages:
Direct Benefit Transfers (DBT)
Digital payments growth (RBI-DPI rising)
GST network improving transparency
E-procurement and digitisation reduce human discretion
Key insight:
Corruption is not just ethical issue → economic constraint
Future path:
Strengthen transparency, judicial efficiency, and regulatory simplicity
Focus on continuous reforms rather than one-time actions
India has strong foundations → gradual improvements can significantly improve outcomes
Conclusion
The CPI 2025 underscores that corruption remains a critical challenge affecting governance and economic efficiency in India. While digital reforms offer promising improvements in transparency, structural issues like regulatory complexity and weak oversight persist. Sustained institutional reforms, simplification of compliance frameworks, and strengthening accountability mechanisms are essential for improving governance credibility and supporting India’s long-term economic ambitions.
Article 3: The judicial push for environmental CSR
Why in news: The Corruption Perceptions Index 2025 highlights worsening global corruption trends and India’s stagnant performance, raising concerns about governance quality, economic efficiency, and its impact on investment and growth prospects.
Key Details
Global corruption worsening, with CPI average falling to 42 and most countries below 50
India scores 39 (rank 91), showing decade-long stagnation despite economic growth
Corruption increases economic costs, uncertainty, and reduces productivity & investment
Complex compliance system with 26,000+ legal provisions increases scope for discretion and rent-seeking
Digital reforms (DBT, GST, digital payments) have helped reduce leakages and improve transparency
CSR Framework and Environmental Neglect
India mandated CSR through the Companies Act, 2013, promoting profit-sharing for social good
Despite climate commitments (net-zero by 2070), environmental concerns remain sidelined
Issues like air pollution, water scarcity, and waste mismanagement are rising
CSR spending prioritises social sectors over ecological sustainability
Environment is still treated as secondary to immediate human needs
Judicial Intervention and Constitutional Duty
The Supreme Court reframed environmental CSR as a constitutional responsibility
Based on Article 51A(g) – duty to protect and improve the environment
Business rights are now linked with environmental restoration obligations
Case of Great Indian Bustard habitat destruction triggered this shift
Marks a move from voluntary charity – mandatory accountability
Skewed CSR Spending Patterns
CSR funds distribution:
Education – 38%
Healthcare – 22%
Rural development – 10%
Environment – only 7–9%
Indicates imbalance and underfunding of sustainability efforts
Corporates prefer short-term visible projects over long-term ecological work
Some notable positive examples:
Mahindra – 25 million trees planted
ITC – 1.3 million acres afforestation
Tata – water conservation initiatives
However, most firms still focus on “quick wins” instead of deep restoration
Challenges in Environmental Restoration
India aims to restore 26 million hectares by 2030, but progress is limited
Private sector contribution is only ~2% of restored land
Key barriers:
Long gestation period of restoration projects
Need for scientific expertise (soil, biodiversity, ecology)
Preference for easy, report-friendly initiatives
Practices like Miyawaki plantations may harm native ecosystems
Additional issues:
Urban-centric CSR focus
Weak policy support for degraded lands
Poor collaboration with forest authorities
Way Forward: Ecosystem-Centric CSR
Shift from compliance-based CSR – ecosystem recovery model
Focus on measurable outcomes:
Soil carbon storage
Water conservation
Biodiversity restoration
Promote partnerships:
Forest departments
Universities
NGOs and local committees
Create restoration funds/escrow mechanisms for long-term financing
Transform corporate governance:
From shareholder-centric – environment-centric approach
Make sustainability a core business responsibility, not optional activity
Conclusion
The CPI 2025 underscores that corruption remains a critical challenge affecting governance and economic efficiency in India. While digital reforms offer promising improvements in transparency, structural issues like regulatory complexity and weak oversight persist. Sustained institutional reforms, simplification of compliance frameworks, and strengthening accountability mechanisms are essential for improving governance credibility and supporting India’s long-term economic ambitions.
Descriptive question:
“Corruption is not merely a governance issue but an economic constraint.” Examine in the context of India using insights from the Corruption Perceptions Index 2025. (250 words, 15 marks)
![]()
