Read the following passage carefully and answer the following questions. Some of the words have been highlighted in the passage that will help you locate them to find the appropriate answer according to the questions asked.
Undoubtedly, trafficking is a pernicious offence, one that societies and governments must have zero tolerance for, and yet, handling the offence of trafficking needs precision, not a sledgehammer. In its current form, the draft Trafficking in Persons (Prevention, Care and Rehabilitation) Bill, 2021 seems to be lacking in nuance, even if well intentioned, to stamp out exploitative trafficking. The Bill, which will shortly be introduced in Parliament, aims at preventing and countering trafficking in persons, particularly women and children, to provide for care, protection and rehabilitation to the victims, while respecting their rights, and creating a supportive legal, economic and social environment for them. This is the Bill’s second iteration; the first was passed in the Lok Sabha, in 2018, but then meandered into nothingness as it was never introduced in the Upper House. Notably, the Bill has expanded the area under coverage to include offences taking place, not only within India but also outside it. It envisages the setting up of anti-trafficking committees at the State and national levels to implement the provisions, when passed. In the days the Bill was up in the public domain for comments, civil society activists and legal experts have criticised its various provisions, and submitted that an overzealous approach would blur the nuances and an understanding of the contributing factors, including vicious poverty, debt, lack of opportunity, and development schemes missing their mark.
Vociferous opposition has arisen over the key aspect of handing over investigation in trafficking crimes to the NIA both by those who believe that it would burden the already stretched unit further, and those arguing that this move would be an attack on federalism, by removing local enforcement agencies out of the picture. Another key criticism of the Bill has been its broad definitions of victims, smacking of refusal to consider consensual sexual activity for commerce. This would only land up criminalising sex work and victimisation of the exploited. Bringing pornography into the definition of sexual exploitation would not allow even for any adult consumption of nonexploitative, consensual material. Reporting of offences has been made mandatory with penalties for nonreporting, but those with an understanding of the tortuous processes, point to the fact that victims often do not _________. The mention of the death penalty for various forms of aggravated trafficking offences needs to be flagged too. The Government would do well to scan and incorporate the responses to its Bill in order to ensure that the fence does not eat the crop. While sexual exploitation and trafficking can be ghastly crimes invoking public horror, for the state to not employ a wholesome approach, cognisant of the causative factors, one that would be sensitive and precise, would be equally horrific.
The draft- Trafficking in Persons (Prevention, Care and Rehabilitation) Bill, 2021 aims which of the following points?
Read the following passage carefully and answer the following questions. Some of the words have been highlighted in the passage that will help you locate them to find the appropriate answer according to the questions asked.
Undoubtedly, trafficking is a pernicious offence, one that societies and governments must have zero tolerance for, and yet, handling the offence of trafficking needs precision, not a sledgehammer. In its current form, the draft Trafficking in Persons (Prevention, Care and Rehabilitation) Bill, 2021 seems to be lacking in nuance, even if well intentioned, to stamp out exploitative trafficking. The Bill, which will shortly be introduced in Parliament, aims at preventing and countering trafficking in persons, particularly women and children, to provide for care, protection and rehabilitation to the victims, while respecting their rights, and creating a supportive legal, economic and social environment for them. This is the Bill’s second iteration; the first was passed in the Lok Sabha, in 2018, but then meandered into nothingness as it was never introduced in the Upper House. Notably, the Bill has expanded the area under coverage to include offences taking place, not only within India but also outside it. It envisages the setting up of anti-trafficking committees at the State and national levels to implement the provisions, when passed. In the days the Bill was up in the public domain for comments, civil society activists and legal experts have criticised its various provisions, and submitted that an overzealous approach would blur the nuances and an understanding of the contributing factors, including vicious poverty, debt, lack of opportunity, and development schemes missing their mark.
Vociferous opposition has arisen over the key aspect of handing over investigation in trafficking crimes to the NIA both by those who believe that it would burden the already stretched unit further, and those arguing that this move would be an attack on federalism, by removing local enforcement agencies out of the picture. Another key criticism of the Bill has been its broad definitions of victims, smacking of refusal to consider consensual sexual activity for commerce. This would only land up criminalising sex work and victimisation of the exploited. Bringing pornography into the definition of sexual exploitation would not allow even for any adult consumption of nonexploitative, consensual material. Reporting of offences has been made mandatory with penalties for nonreporting, but those with an understanding of the tortuous processes, point to the fact that victims often do not _________. The mention of the death penalty for various forms of aggravated trafficking offences needs to be flagged too. The Government would do well to scan and incorporate the responses to its Bill in order to ensure that the fence does not eat the crop. While sexual exploitation and trafficking can be ghastly crimes invoking public horror, for the state to not employ a wholesome approach, cognisant of the causative factors, one that would be sensitive and precise, would be equally horrific.
Which of the following is/are incorrect according to the passage?
a. Civil society activists and legal experts have supported the various provisions of the draft- Trafficking in Persons (Prevention, Care and Rehabilitation) Bill, 2021
b. This was the first time when the bill was presented in Lok Sabha
c. Societies and governments must have zero tolerance for trafficking
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Direction: In the following question, one part of the sentence may have an error. Find out which part of the sentence has an error and select the option corresponding to it. If the sentence is free from error, select the option (E) which is the No error option.
The Chairman, along with his colleagues (A)/ were glued to the television (B)/ on the day the budget was announced (C)/ by the Finance Minister. (D)/ No error. (E)
Direction: In the following question, one part of the sentence may have an error. Find out which part of the sentence has an error and select the option corresponding to it. If the sentence is free from error, select the option (E) which is the No error option.
Martina has been working (A)/ on her master's thesis in fits and starts; (B)/ she needs to work on it (C)/ consistently. (D)/ No error (E)
Direction: In the following question, one part of the sentence may have an error. Find out which part of the sentence has an error and select the option corresponding to it. If the sentence is free from error, select the option (E) which is the No error option.
His infatuation for cricket (A)/ led him to neglect his studies (B)/ and he failed to secure admission (C)/ in a good engineering college. (D)/ No error (E).
Direction: In the following question, one part of the sentence may have an error. Find out which part of the sentence has an error and select the option corresponding to it. If the sentence is free from error, select the option (E) which is the No error option.
The famous sportsman and politician (A)/ was trolled on social media (B)/ for not attending any (C)/ session during the Parliament. (D)/ No error (E)
In the following questions two columns are given containing three Sentences/phrases each. A sentence/phrase from the first column may or may not connect with another sentence/phrase from the second column to make a grammatically and contextually correct sentence. Each question has five options, four of which display the sequence(s) in which the sentences/phrases can be joined to form a grammatically and contextually correct sentence. If none the options given forms a correct sentence after combination, mark option (E), i.e. “None of these” your answer.
In the following questions two columns are given containing three Sentences/phrases each. A sentence/phrase from the first column may or may not connect with another sentence/phrase from the second column to make a grammatically and contextually correct sentence. Each question has five options, four of which display the sequence(s) in which the sentences/phrases can be joined to form a grammatically and contextually correct sentence. If none the options given forms a correct sentence after combination, mark option (E), i.e. “None of these” your answer.
In the following questions two columns are given containing three Sentences/phrases each. A sentence/phrase from the first column may or may not connect with another sentence/phrase from the second column to make a grammatically and contextually correct sentence. Each question has five options, four of which display the sequence(s) in which the sentences/phrases can be joined to form a grammatically and contextually correct sentence. If none the options given forms a correct sentence after combination, mark option (E), i.e. “None of these” your answer.
In the following questions two columns are given containing three Sentences/phrases each. A sentence/phrase from the first column may or may not connect with another sentence/phrase from the second column to make a grammatically and contextually correct sentence. Each question has five options, four of which display the sequence(s) in which the sentences/phrases can be joined to form a grammatically and contextually correct sentence. If none the options given forms a correct sentence after combination, mark option (E), i.e. “None of these” your answer.
Direction: In the following question, three phrases/idioms are given, each followed by a case, where the idiom may or may not apply. From the options choose the combinations of idioms which apply in their respective cases.
A. Got your work cut out for you
The life of a king is never just linen and jewels, it is also about decisions and war.
B. Straight from the horse’s mouth
Larry walked towards me in the corridor with roses and champagne, but all I could pay heed to was how much he stunk.
C. Wouldn’t be caught dead
Someone with a sense of style like Katherine would never wear those fluorescent pink boots.
Direction: In the following question, three phrases/idioms are given, each followed by a case, where the idiom may or may not apply. From the options choose the combinations of idioms which apply in their respective cases.
A. Last resort
We had been staying in hotels during the entire vacations, but the one from where we checked out to come back home has been my favorite since last year.
B. You can say that again!
The guide in St. Lorraine of Cincinnati’s Chapel told us that it was the most beautiful Church of its time, and I couldn’t agree more.
C. Wild goose chase
We were told to search the library archives for answers, but with the collection that big, the process seemed unending.
Direction: In the question given below, the sentence is divided into three parts I, II and III. For each part an alternate statement is also given. You have to determine if a part requires correction, and then mark that as your answer.
An increase in the domestic debt ratio would been offsetting by the country's total debt.
A. Has being offset
B. Will be offset
C. Having offset
Read the following passage carefully. There are some words in brackets. You have to find the replacement for each word and mark the corresponding option as your answer. If the word is correct then mark option E as the correct answer.
Nepal has been in (a) tumultuous ever since President Bidya Devi Bhandari dissolved the House of Representatives in December last year on the recommendation of the then Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli. Though the Supreme Court had restored the House in February this year, the defiant President (b) resolved it in May — again as recommended by Oli — and announced snap polls in November. Now, following another intervention by the apex court, Sher Bahadur Deuba has taken charge as the PM. On Monday, a five-member Constitutional Bench rightly pronounced that the President’s decision to dissolve the House was an unconstitutional act. Despite the change of guard, political stability may remain (c) illusive in Nepal in view of the intense power tussle that has been going on even amid the Covid pandemic. As per constitutional provisions, Deuba has to prove his majority in the 275-member House of Representatives within 30 days of his appointment as the PM. Though he has been at the helm four times previously, Deuba’s governance record is patchy. He faces the onerous task of containing the Covid crisis, primarily by (d) decking up vaccine coverage. Though Nepal is not among the worst-hit countries, having recorded around 6.5 lakh coronavirus cases and over 9,400 deaths so far, its number of cases and deaths per million population is alarmingly similar to that of India.
Defence Minister Rajnath Singh was the first foreign leader who called up Deuba and congratulated him on his appointment as the Prime Minister. India should find it easier to deal with Deuba compared to Oli, who has made no secret of his pro-China leanings. Oli has also not (e) shied away from riling India with ‘unjustified cartographic assertions’ in a bid to whip up nationalistic frenzy. Though New Delhi doesn’t want to (f) medal in Kathmandu’s internal affairs, it should spare no effort in helping the neighbour fight the pandemic and recover on the economic front. How the veteran Deuba handles an overbearing China and prepares his country for the General Elections — provided he stays the course — will be keenly watched.
Which of the following can replace the word “medal”?
Read the following passage carefully. There are some words in brackets. You have to find the replacement for each word and mark the corresponding option as your answer. If the word is correct then mark option E as the correct answer.
Nepal has been in (a) tumultuous ever since President Bidya Devi Bhandari dissolved the House of Representatives in December last year on the recommendation of the then Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli. Though the Supreme Court had restored the House in February this year, the defiant President (b) resolved it in May — again as recommended by Oli — and announced snap polls in November. Now, following another intervention by the apex court, Sher Bahadur Deuba has taken charge as the PM. On Monday, a five-member Constitutional Bench rightly pronounced that the President’s decision to dissolve the House was an unconstitutional act. Despite the change of guard, political stability may remain (c) illusive in Nepal in view of the intense power tussle that has been going on even amid the Covid pandemic. As per constitutional provisions, Deuba has to prove his majority in the 275-member House of Representatives within 30 days of his appointment as the PM. Though he has been at the helm four times previously, Deuba’s governance record is patchy. He faces the onerous task of containing the Covid crisis, primarily by (d) decking up vaccine coverage. Though Nepal is not among the worst-hit countries, having recorded around 6.5 lakh coronavirus cases and over 9,400 deaths so far, its number of cases and deaths per million population is alarmingly similar to that of India.
Defence Minister Rajnath Singh was the first foreign leader who called up Deuba and congratulated him on his appointment as the Prime Minister. India should find it easier to deal with Deuba compared to Oli, who has made no secret of his pro-China leanings. Oli has also not (e) shied away from riling India with ‘unjustified cartographic assertions’ in a bid to whip up nationalistic frenzy. Though New Delhi doesn’t want to (f) medal in Kathmandu’s internal affairs, it should spare no effort in helping the neighbour fight the pandemic and recover on the economic front. How the veteran Deuba handles an overbearing China and prepares his country for the General Elections — provided he stays the course — will be keenly watched.
Which of the following can replace the word “shied”?
Read the following passage carefully. There are some words in brackets. You have to find the replacement for each word and mark the corresponding option as your answer. If the word is correct then mark option E as the correct answer.
Nepal has been in (a) tumultuous ever since President Bidya Devi Bhandari dissolved the House of Representatives in December last year on the recommendation of the then Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli. Though the Supreme Court had restored the House in February this year, the defiant President (b) resolved it in May — again as recommended by Oli — and announced snap polls in November. Now, following another intervention by the apex court, Sher Bahadur Deuba has taken charge as the PM. On Monday, a five-member Constitutional Bench rightly pronounced that the President’s decision to dissolve the House was an unconstitutional act.Despite the change of guard, political stability may remain (c) illusive in Nepal in view of the intense power tussle that has been going on even amid the Covid pandemic. As per constitutional provisions, Deuba has to prove his majority in the 275-member House of Representatives within 30 days of his appointment as the PM. Though he has been at the helm four times previously, Deuba’s governance record is patchy. He faces the onerous task of containing the Covid crisis, primarily by (d) decking up vaccine coverage. Though Nepal is not among the worst-hit countries, having recorded around 6.5 lakh coronavirus cases and over 9,400 deaths so far, its number of cases and deaths per million population is alarmingly similar to that of India.
Defence Minister Rajnath Singh was the first foreign leader who called up Deuba and congratulated him on his appointment as the Prime Minister. India should find it easier to deal with Deuba compared to Oli, who has made no secret of his pro-China leanings. Oli has also not (e) shied away from riling India with ‘unjustified cartographic assertions’ in a bid to whip up nationalistic frenzy. Though New Delhi doesn’t want to (f) medal in Kathmandu’s internal affairs, it should spare no effort in helping the neighbour fight the pandemic and recover on the economic front. How the veteran Deuba handles an overbearing China and prepares his country for the General Elections — provided he stays the course — will be keenly watched.
Which of the following can replace the word “decking”?
Read the following passage carefully. There are some words in brackets. You have to find the replacement for each word and mark the corresponding option as your answer. If the word is correct then mark option E as the correct answer.
Nepal has been in (a) tumultuous ever since President Bidya Devi Bhandari dissolved the House of Representatives in December last year on the recommendation of the then Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli. Though the Supreme Court had restored the House in February this year, the defiant President (b) resolved it in May — again as recommended by Oli — and announced snap polls in November. Now, following another intervention by the apex court, Sher Bahadur Deuba has taken charge as the PM. On Monday, a five-member Constitutional Bench rightly pronounced that the President’s decision to dissolve the House was an unconstitutional act. Despite the change of guard, political stability may remain (c) illusive in Nepal in view of the intense power tussle that has been going on even amid the Covid pandemic. As per constitutional provisions, Deuba has to prove his majority in the 275-member House of Representatives within 30 days of his appointment as the PM. Though he has been at the helm four times previously, Deuba’s governance record is patchy. He faces the onerous task of containing the Covid crisis, primarily by (d) decking up vaccine coverage. Though Nepal is not among the worst-hit countries, having recorded around 6.5 lakh coronavirus cases and over 9,400 deaths so far, its number of cases and deaths per million population is alarmingly similar to that of India.
Defence Minister Rajnath Singh was the first foreign leader who called up Deuba and congratulated him on his appointment as the Prime Minister. India should find it easier to deal with Deuba compared to Oli, who has made no secret of his pro-China leanings. Oli has also not (e) shied away from riling India with ‘unjustified cartographic assertions’ in a bid to whip up nationalistic frenzy. Though New Delhi doesn’t want to (f) medal in Kathmandu’s internal affairs, it should spare no effort in helping the neighbour fight the pandemic and recover on the economic front. How the veteran Deuba handles an overbearing China and prepares his country for the General Elections — provided he stays the course — will be keenly watched.
Which of the following can replace the word “illusive”?
Read the following passage carefully. There are some words in brackets. You have to find the replacement for each word and mark the corresponding option as your answer. If the word is correct then mark option E as the correct answer.
Nepal has been in (a) tumultuous ever since President Bidya Devi Bhandari dissolved the House of Representatives in December last year on the recommendation of the then Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli. Though the Supreme Court had restored the House in February this year, the defiant President (b) resolved it in May — again as recommended by Oli — and announced snap polls in November. Now, following another intervention by the apex court, Sher Bahadur Deuba has taken charge as the PM. On Monday, a five-member Constitutional Bench rightly pronounced that the President’s decision to dissolve the House was an unconstitutional act. Despite the change of guard, political stability may remain (c) illusive in Nepal in view of the intense power tussle that has been going on even amid the Covid pandemic. As per constitutional provisions, Deuba has to prove his majority in the 275-member House of Representatives within 30 days of his appointment as the PM. Though he has been at the helm four times previously, Deuba’s governance record is patchy. He faces the onerous task of containing the Covid crisis, primarily by (d) decking up vaccine coverage. Though Nepal is not among the worst-hit countries, having recorded around 6.5 lakh coronavirus cases and over 9,400 deaths so far, its number of cases and deaths per million population is alarmingly similar to that of India.
Defence Minister Rajnath Singh was the first foreign leader who called up Deuba and congratulated him on his appointment as the Prime Minister. India should find it easier to deal with Deuba compared to Oli, who has made no secret of his pro-China leanings. Oli has also not (e) shied away from riling India with ‘unjustified cartographic assertions’ in a bid to whip up nationalistic frenzy. Though New Delhi doesn’t want to (f) medal in Kathmandu’s internal affairs, it should spare no effort in helping the neighbour fight the pandemic and recover on the economic front. How the veteran Deuba handles an overbearing China and prepares his country for the General Elections — provided he stays the course — will be keenly watched.
Which of the following can replace the word “decking”?
Read the following passage carefully. There are some words in brackets. You have to find the replacement for each word and mark the corresponding option as your answer. If the word is correct then mark option E as the correct answer.
Nepal has been in (a) tumultuous ever since President Bidya Devi Bhandari dissolved the House of Representatives in December last year on the recommendation of the then Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli. Though the Supreme Court had restored the House in February this year, the defiant President (b) resolved it in May — again as recommended by Oli — and announced snap polls in November. Now, following another intervention by the apex court, Sher Bahadur Deuba has taken charge as the PM. On Monday, a five-member Constitutional Bench rightly pronounced that the President’s decision to dissolve the House was an unconstitutional act. Despite the change of guard, political stability may remain (c) illusive in Nepal in view of the intense power tussle that has been going on even amid the Covid pandemic. As per constitutional provisions, Deuba has to prove his majority in the 275-member House of Representatives within 30 days of his appointment as the PM. Though he has been at the helm four times previously, Deuba’s governance record is patchy. He faces the onerous task of containing the Covid crisis, primarily by (d) decking up vaccine coverage. Though Nepal is not among the worst-hit countries, having recorded around 6.5 lakh coronavirus cases and over 9,400 deaths so far, its number of cases and deaths per million population is alarmingly similar to that of India.
Defence Minister Rajnath Singh was the first foreign leader who called up Deuba and congratulated him on his appointment as the Prime Minister. India should find it easier to deal with Deuba compared to Oli, who has made no secret of his pro-China leanings. Oli has also not (e) shied away from riling India with ‘unjustified cartographic assertions’ in a bid to whip up nationalistic frenzy. Though New Delhi doesn’t want to (f) medal in Kathmandu’s internal affairs, it should spare no effort in helping the neighbour fight the pandemic and recover on the economic front. How the veteran Deuba handles an overbearing China and prepares his country for the General Elections — provided he stays the course — will be keenly watched.
Which of the following can replace the word “illusive”?
Read the following passage carefully. There are some words in brackets. You have to find the replacement for each word and mark the corresponding option as your answer. If the word is correct then mark option E as the correct answer.
Nepal has been in (a) tumultuous ever since President Bidya Devi Bhandari dissolved the House of Representatives in December last year on the recommendation of the then Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli. Though the Supreme Court had restored the House in February this year, the defiant President (b) resolved it in May — again as recommended by Oli — and announced snap polls in November. Now, following another intervention by the apex court, Sher Bahadur Deuba has taken charge as the PM. On Monday, a five-member Constitutional Bench rightly pronounced that the President’s decision to dissolve the House was an unconstitutional act. Despite the change of guard, political stability may remain (c) illusive in Nepal in view of the intense power tussle that has been going on even amid the Covid pandemic. As per constitutional provisions, Deuba has to prove his majority in the 275-member House of Representatives within 30 days of his appointment as the PM. Though he has been at the helm four times previously, Deuba’s governance record is patchy. He faces the onerous task of containing the Covid crisis, primarily by (d) decking up vaccine coverage. Though Nepal is not among the worst-hit countries, having recorded around 6.5 lakh coronavirus cases and over 9,400 deaths so far, its number of cases and deaths per million population is alarmingly similar to that of India.
Defence Minister Rajnath Singh was the first foreign leader who called up Deuba and congratulated him on his appointment as the Prime Minister. India should find it easier to deal with Deuba compared to Oli, who has made no secret of his pro-China leanings. Oli has also not (e) shied away from riling India with ‘unjustified cartographic assertions’ in a bid to whip up nationalistic frenzy. Though New Delhi doesn’t want to (f) medal in Kathmandu’s internal affairs, it should spare no effort in helping the neighbour fight the pandemic and recover on the economic front. How the veteran Deuba handles an overbearing China and prepares his country for the General Elections — provided he stays the course — will be keenly watched.
Which of the following can replace the word “resolved”?
Read the following passage carefully. There are some words in brackets. You have to find the replacement for each word and mark the corresponding option as your answer. If the word is correct then mark option E as the correct answer.
Nepal has been in (a) tumultuous ever since President Bidya Devi Bhandari dissolved the House of Representatives in December last year on the recommendation of the then Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli. Though the Supreme Court had restored the House in February this year, the defiant President (b) resolved it in May — again as recommended by Oli — and announced snap polls in November. Now, following another intervention by the apex court, Sher Bahadur Deuba has taken charge as the PM. On Monday, a five-member Constitutional Bench rightly pronounced that the President’s decision to dissolve the House was an unconstitutional act.Despite the change of guard, political stability may remain (c) illusive in Nepal in view of the intense power tussle that has been going on even amid the Covid pandemic. As per constitutional provisions, Deuba has to prove his majority in the 275-member House of Representatives within 30 days of his appointment as the PM. Though he has been at the helm four times previously, Deuba’s governance record is patchy. He faces the onerous task of containing the Covid crisis, primarily by (d) decking up vaccine coverage. Though Nepal is not among the worst-hit countries, having recorded around 6.5 lakh coronavirus cases and over 9,400 deaths so far, its number of cases and deaths per million population is alarmingly similar to that of India.
Defence Minister Rajnath Singh was the first foreign leader who called up Deuba and congratulated him on his appointment as the Prime Minister. India should find it easier to deal with Deuba compared to Oli, who has made no secret of his pro-China leanings. Oli has also not (e) shied away from riling India with ‘unjustified cartographic assertions’ in a bid to whip up nationalistic frenzy. Though New Delhi doesn’t want to (f) medal in Kathmandu’s internal affairs, it should spare no effort in helping the neighbour fight the pandemic and recover on the economic front. How the veteran Deuba handles an overbearing China and prepares his country for the General Elections — provided he stays the course — will be keenly watched.
Which of the following can replace the word “tumultuous”?
Read the passage and answer the question that follow.
Finance is the glue that holds all pieces of our life together. Ideal financial societies are those which provide safe and convenient ways of managing these simple monetary affairs. This philosophy is known as financial inclusion. It is providing financial tools to people — tools they can afford, are safe and properly regulated, that people can access conveniently from institutions that treat them with respect.
These tools enable them to save and to responsibly borrow — allowing them to build their assets and improve their livelihoods. The term most buzzed in this respect is “the unbanked”— usually defined as people who don’t have a traditional savings account. These are the people who have to be brought into the orbit of formal finance. Financial services are like clean water and electricity. But opening an account does not ensure the account is used.
Today, digital technology and mobile phones offer an unprecedented opportunity to connect poor people to services such as savings, loans, insurance and payments. But owning a phone or even opening a digital account does not ensure the account is used. Two-thirds of the world’s 299 million mobile money accounts are dormant. India remains among the most cash-intensive economies in the world, with a cash-to-GDP ratio of 12 per cent. Around 97 per cent of all transactions in the country are carried out in cash, which explains why India remains among nations with the lowest access to digital payments. In a digital world, safety and security are important for everyone. Remaining safe is an individual’s own responsibility which has to be taken seriously. Payment providers can put in the most foolproof systems in the world but the human element of payments and hence actions resulting in fraud cannot be emphasised enough. Whether it is reducing risk, improving uptake and usage, enhancing consumer protection or avoiding over-indebtedness. In India, financial inclusion received a steroidal boost with Prime Minister’s Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY). By 4 January 2017, there were over 265 million accounts under the scheme. But a disquieting feature is that public banks, regional rural banks (RRBs) and 13 private lenders have reported that as on 24 March 2017, 92,52,609 accounts were frozen under the PMJDY owing to inactivity. A survey of these accounts found that only 33 percent of all beneficiaries were ready to use their Rupay cards.
Merely opening physical accounts as flag posts of financial identity won’t help unless they are actively used by people for managing their money. To make this possible, people have to be imparted an ability to understand and execute matters of personal finance, including basic numeracy and literacy, budgeting, investing, and risk diversification. This skill is known as financial literacy. It is a combination of financial awareness, knowledge, skills, attitude and behaviours necessary to make sound financial decisions and ultimately achieve individual financial well-being. On account of lack of proper awareness and failure of institutions to properly guide them, people buy insurance policies without proper planning and give up midway because they don’t have money to pay the premium.
It has been found that financial education programmes focused on just imparting knowledge rarely deliver unless they are backed by a suitable product, including the support to use the product. A recent UNDP survey on financial literacy programmes in India revealed that in areas where a service provider was involved in the programmes, the participants had a better understanding of products and they had been using the products regularly. Some banks use a decision tree to help customers open savings accounts that match their needs. The process of going through the decision tree in itself leads to an understanding of improved product features by customers.
Similarly, in one model, a bank undertook a project to deliver financial education training to young women in rural communities through a cascade training model where core trainers trained peer educators, who in turn trained community members. These examples provide evidence that using a model that involves experiential learning and use of products has greater chances of success. To use financial services to their full potential, low-income people need products well suited to their needs and appropriate training and education for adapting to these financial services. Bringing this about requires attention to human and institutional issues, such as quality of access, affordability of products, familiarity and comfort in use, sustainability for the provider of these services, proper training and outreach to the most excluded populations. The issue is a lot more nuanced than what we see today. Nuances change from culture to culture and consumer segment to consumer segment. Consumers will come into the formal financial sector and embrace the new opportunities believing that if they change their behaviour and exert the effort to get into the new world then certain specific pains will disappear. We have thus to address real pains, not just offer benefits.
What needs to be done in order to ensure that financial education programes are effective?
Read the passage and answer the question that follow.
Finance is the glue that holds all pieces of our life together. Ideal financial societies are those which provide safe and convenient ways of managing these simple monetary affairs. This philosophy is known as financial inclusion. It is providing financial tools to people — tools they can afford, are safe and properly regulated, that people can access conveniently from institutions that treat them with respect.
These tools enable them to save and to responsibly borrow — allowing them to build their assets and improve their livelihoods. The term most buzzed in this respect is “the unbanked”— usually defined as people who don’t have a traditional savings account. These are the people who have to be brought into the orbit of formal finance. Financial services are like clean water and electricity. But opening an account does not ensure the account is used.
Today, digital technology and mobile phones offer an unprecedented opportunity to connect poor people to services such as savings, loans, insurance and payments. But owning a phone or even opening a digital account does not ensure the account is used. Two-thirds of the world’s 299 million mobile money accounts are dormant. India remains among the most cash-intensive economies in the world, with a cash-to-GDP ratio of 12 per cent. Around 97 per cent of all transactions in the country are carried out in cash, which explains why India remains among nations with the lowest access to digital payments. In a digital world, safety and security are important for everyone. Remaining safe is an individual’s own responsibility which has to be taken seriously. Payment providers can put in the most foolproof systems in the world but the human element of payments and hence actions resulting in fraud cannot be emphasised enough. Whether it is reducing risk, improving uptake and usage, enhancing consumer protection or avoiding over-indebtedness. In India, financial inclusion received a steroidal boost with Prime Minister’s Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY). By 4 January 2017, there were over 265 million accounts under the scheme. But a disquieting feature is that public banks, regional rural banks (RRBs) and 13 private lenders have reported that as on 24 March 2017, 92,52,609 accounts were frozen under the PMJDY owing to inactivity. A survey of these accounts found that only 33 percent of all beneficiaries were ready to use their Rupay cards.
Merely opening physical accounts as flag posts of financial identity won’t help unless they are actively used by people for managing their money. To make this possible, people have to be imparted an ability to understand and execute matters of personal finance, including basic numeracy and literacy, budgeting, investing, and risk diversification. This skill is known as financial literacy. It is a combination of financial awareness, knowledge, skills, attitude and behaviours necessary to make sound financial decisions and ultimately achieve individual financial well-being. On account of lack of proper awareness and failure of institutions to properly guide them, people buy insurance policies without proper planning and give up midway because they don’t have money to pay the premium.
It has been found that financial education programmes focused on just imparting knowledge rarely deliver unless they are backed by a suitable product, including the support to use the product. A recent UNDP survey on financial literacy programmes in India revealed that in areas where a service provider was involved in the programmes, the participants had a better understanding of products and they had been using the products regularly. Some banks use a decision tree to help customers open savings accounts that match their needs. The process of going through the decision tree in itself leads to an understanding of improved product features by customers.
Similarly, in one model, a bank undertook a project to deliver financial education training to young women in rural communities through a cascade training model where core trainers trained peer educators, who in turn trained community members. These examples provide evidence that using a model that involves experiential learning and use of products has greater chances of success. To use financial services to their full potential, low-income people need products well suited to their needs and appropriate training and education for adapting to these financial services. Bringing this about requires attention to human and institutional issues, such as quality of access, affordability of products, familiarity and comfort in use, sustainability for the provider of these services, proper training and outreach to the most excluded populations. The issue is a lot more nuanced than what we see today. Nuances change from culture to culture and consumer segment to consumer segment. Consumers will come into the formal financial sector and embrace the new opportunities believing that if they change their behaviour and exert the effort to get into the new world then certain specific pains will disappear. We have thus to address real pains, not just offer benefits.
Why is the digital transaction rate in India one of the lowest in the world?
Read the passage and answer the question that follow.
Finance is the glue that holds all pieces of our life together. Ideal financial societies are those which provide safe and convenient ways of managing these simple monetary affairs. This philosophy is known as financial inclusion. It is providing financial tools to people — tools they can afford, are safe and properly regulated, that people can access conveniently from institutions that treat them with respect.
These tools enable them to save and to responsibly borrow — allowing them to build their assets and improve their livelihoods. The term most buzzed in this respect is “the unbanked”— usually defined as people who don’t have a traditional savings account. These are the people who have to be brought into the orbit of formal finance. Financial services are like clean water and electricity. But opening an account does not ensure the account is used.
Today, digital technology and mobile phones offer an unprecedented opportunity to connect poor people to services such as savings, loans, insurance and payments. But owning a phone or even opening a digital account does not ensure the account is used. Two-thirds of the world’s 299 million mobile money accounts are dormant. India remains among the most cash-intensive economies in the world, with a cash-to-GDP ratio of 12 per cent. Around 97 per cent of all transactions in the country are carried out in cash, which explains why India remains among nations with the lowest access to digital payments. In a digital world, safety and security are important for everyone. Remaining safe is an individual’s own responsibility which has to be taken seriously. Payment providers can put in the most foolproof systems in the world but the human element of payments and hence actions resulting in fraud cannot be emphasised enough. Whether it is reducing risk, improving uptake and usage, enhancing consumer protection or avoiding over-indebtedness. In India, financial inclusion received a steroidal boost with Prime Minister’s Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY). By 4 January 2017, there were over 265 million accounts under the scheme. But a disquieting feature is that public banks, regional rural banks (RRBs) and 13 private lenders have reported that as on 24 March 2017, 92,52,609 accounts were frozen under the PMJDY owing to inactivity. A survey of these accounts found that only 33 percent of all beneficiaries were ready to use their Rupay cards.
Merely opening physical accounts as flag posts of financial identity won’t help unless they are actively used by people for managing their money. To make this possible, people have to be imparted an ability to understand and execute matters of personal finance, including basic numeracy and literacy, budgeting, investing, and risk diversification. This skill is known as financial literacy. It is a combination of financial awareness, knowledge, skills, attitude and behaviours necessary to make sound financial decisions and ultimately achieve individual financial well-being. On account of lack of proper awareness and failure of institutions to properly guide them, people buy insurance policies without proper planning and give up midway because they don’t have money to pay the premium.
It has been found that financial education programmes focused on just imparting knowledge rarely deliver unless they are backed by a suitable product, including the support to use the product. A recent UNDP survey on financial literacy programmes in India revealed that in areas where a service provider was involved in the programmes, the participants had a better understanding of products and they had been using the products regularly. Some banks use a decision tree to help customers open savings accounts that match their needs. The process of going through the decision tree in itself leads to an understanding of improved product features by customers.
Similarly, in one model, a bank undertook a project to deliver financial education training to young women in rural communities through a cascade training model where core trainers trained peer educators, who in turn trained community members. These examples provide evidence that using a model that involves experiential learning and use of products has greater chances of success. To use financial services to their full potential, low-income people need products well suited to their needs and appropriate training and education for adapting to these financial services. Bringing this about requires attention to human and institutional issues, such as quality of access, affordability of products, familiarity and comfort in use, sustainability for the provider of these services, proper training and outreach to the most excluded populations. The issue is a lot more nuanced than what we see today. Nuances change from culture to culture and consumer segment to consumer segment. Consumers will come into the formal financial sector and embrace the new opportunities believing that if they change their behaviour and exert the effort to get into the new world then certain specific pains will disappear. We have thus to address real pains, not just offer benefits.
What boosted the financial inclusion in the Indian scenario?
Read the passage and answer the question that follow.
Finance is the glue that holds all pieces of our life together. Ideal financial societies are those which provide safe and convenient ways of managing these simple monetary affairs. This philosophy is known as financial inclusion. It is providing financial tools to people — tools they can afford, are safe and properly regulated, that people can access conveniently from institutions that treat them with respect.
These tools enable them to save and to responsibly borrow — allowing them to build their assets and improve their livelihoods. The term most buzzed in this respect is “the unbanked”— usually defined as people who don’t have a traditional savings account. These are the people who have to be brought into the orbit of formal finance. Financial services are like clean water and electricity. But opening an account does not ensure the account is used.
Today, digital technology and mobile phones offer an unprecedented opportunity to connect poor people to services such as savings, loans, insurance and payments. But owning a phone or even opening a digital account does not ensure the account is used. Two-thirds of the world’s 299 million mobile money accounts are dormant. India remains among the most cash-intensive economies in the world, with a cash-to-GDP ratio of 12 per cent. Around 97 per cent of all transactions in the country are carried out in cash, which explains why India remains among nations with the lowest access to digital payments. In a digital world, safety and security are important for everyone. Remaining safe is an individual’s own responsibility which has to be taken seriously. Payment providers can put in the most foolproof systems in the world but the human element of payments and hence actions resulting in fraud cannot be emphasised enough. Whether it is reducing risk, improving uptake and usage, enhancing consumer protection or avoiding over-indebtedness. In India, financial inclusion received a steroidal boost with Prime Minister’s Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY). By 4 January 2017, there were over 265 million accounts under the scheme. But a disquieting feature is that public banks, regional rural banks (RRBs) and 13 private lenders have reported that as on 24 March 2017, 92,52,609 accounts were frozen under the PMJDY owing to inactivity. A survey of these accounts found that only 33 percent of all beneficiaries were ready to use their Rupay cards.
Merely opening physical accounts as flag posts of financial identity won’t help unless they are actively used by people for managing their money. To make this possible, people have to be imparted an ability to understand and execute matters of personal finance, including basic numeracy and literacy, budgeting, investing, and risk diversification. This skill is known as financial literacy. It is a combination of financial awareness, knowledge, skills, attitude and behaviours necessary to make sound financial decisions and ultimately achieve individual financial well-being. On account of lack of proper awareness and failure of institutions to properly guide them, people buy insurance policies without proper planning and give up midway because they don’t have money to pay the premium.
It has been found that financial education programmes focused on just imparting knowledge rarely deliver unless they are backed by a suitable product, including the support to use the product. A recent UNDP survey on financial literacy programmes in India revealed that in areas where a service provider was involved in the programmes, the participants had a better understanding of products and they had been using the products regularly. Some banks use a decision tree to help customers open savings accounts that match their needs. The process of going through the decision tree in itself leads to an understanding of improved product features by customers.
Similarly, in one model, a bank undertook a project to deliver financial education training to young women in rural communities through a cascade training model where core trainers trained peer educators, who in turn trained community members. These examples provide evidence that using a model that involves experiential learning and use of products has greater chances of success. To use financial services to their full potential, low-income people need products well suited to their needs and appropriate training and education for adapting to these financial services. Bringing this about requires attention to human and institutional issues, such as quality of access, affordability of products, familiarity and comfort in use, sustainability for the provider of these services, proper training and outreach to the most excluded populations. The issue is a lot more nuanced than what we see today. Nuances change from culture to culture and consumer segment to consumer segment. Consumers will come into the formal financial sector and embrace the new opportunities believing that if they change their behaviour and exert the effort to get into the new world then certain specific pains will disappear. We have thus to address real pains, not just offer benefits.
What according to the passage is the greatest advantage of financial inclusion?
Read the following passage carefully and answer the following questions. Some of the words have been highlighted in the passage that will help you locate them to find the appropriate answer according to the questions asked.
Undoubtedly, trafficking is a pernicious offence, one that societies and governments must have zero tolerance for, and yet, handling the offence of trafficking needs precision, not a sledgehammer. In its current form, the draft Trafficking in Persons (Prevention, Care and Rehabilitation) Bill, 2021 seems to be lacking in nuance, even if well intentioned, to stamp out exploitative trafficking. The Bill, which will shortly be introduced in Parliament, aims at preventing and countering trafficking in persons, particularly women and children, to provide for care, protection and rehabilitation to the victims, while respecting their rights, and creating a supportive legal, economic and social environment for them. This is the Bill’s second iteration; the first was passed in the Lok Sabha, in 2018, but then meandered into nothingness as it was never introduced in the Upper House. Notably, the Bill has expanded the area under coverage to include offences taking place, not only within India but also outside it. It envisages the setting up of anti-trafficking committees at the State and national levels to implement the provisions, when passed. In the days the Bill was up in the public domain for comments, civil society activists and legal experts have criticised its various provisions, and submitted that an overzealous approach would blur the nuances and an understanding of the contributing factors, including vicious poverty, debt, lack of opportunity, and development schemes missing their mark.
Vociferous opposition has arisen over the key aspect of handing over investigation in trafficking crimes to the NIA both by those who believe that it would burden the already stretched unit further, and those arguing that this move would be an attack on federalism, by removing local enforcement agencies out of the picture. Another key criticism of the Bill has been its broad definitions of victims, smacking of refusal to consider consensual sexual activity for commerce. This would only land up criminalising sex work and victimisation of the exploited. Bringing pornography into the definition of sexual exploitation would not allow even for any adult consumption of nonexploitative, consensual material. Reporting of offences has been made mandatory with penalties for nonreporting, but those with an understanding of the tortuous processes, point to the fact that victims often do not ________. The mention of the death penalty for various forms of aggravated trafficking offences needs to be flagged too. The Government would do well to scan and incorporate the responses to its Bill in order to ensure that the fence does not eat the crop. While sexual exploitation and trafficking can be ghastly crimes invoking public horror, for the state to not employ a wholesome approach, cognisant of the causative factors, one that would be sensitive and precise, would be equally horrific.
Find the meaning similar to the word- “ghastly”?
Read the following passage carefully and answer the following questions. Some of the words have been highlighted in the passage that will help you locate them to find the appropriate answer according to the questions asked.
Undoubtedly, trafficking is a pernicious offence, one that societies and governments must have zero tolerance for, and yet, handling the offence of trafficking needs precision, not a sledgehammer. In its current form, the draft Trafficking in Persons (Prevention, Care and Rehabilitation) Bill, 2021 seems to be lacking in nuance, even if well intentioned, to stamp out exploitative trafficking. The Bill, which will shortly be introduced in Parliament, aims at preventing and countering trafficking in persons, particularly women and children, to provide for care, protection and rehabilitation to the victims, while respecting their rights, and creating a supportive legal, economic and social environment for them. This is the Bill’s second iteration; the first was passed in the Lok Sabha, in 2018, but then meandered into nothingness as it was never introduced in the Upper House. Notably, the Bill has expanded the area under coverage to include offences taking place, not only within India but also outside it. It envisages the setting up of anti-trafficking committees at the State and national levels to implement the provisions, when passed. In the days the Bill was up in the public domain for comments, civil society activists and legal experts have criticised its various provisions, and submitted that an overzealous approach would blur the nuances and an understanding of the contributing factors, including vicious poverty, debt, lack of opportunity, and development schemes missing their mark.
Vociferous opposition has arisen over the key aspect of handing over investigation in trafficking crimes to the NIA both by those who believe that it would burden the already stretched unit further, and those arguing that this move would be an attack on federalism, by removing local enforcement agencies out of the picture. Another key criticism of the Bill has been its broad definitions of victims, smacking of refusal to consider consensual sexual activity for commerce. This would only land up criminalising sex work and victimisation of the exploited. Bringing pornography into the definition of sexual exploitation would not allow even for any adult consumption of nonexploitative, consensual material. Reporting of offences has been made mandatory with penalties for nonreporting, but those with an understanding of the tortuous processes, point to the fact that victims often do not ________. The mention of the death penalty for various forms of aggravated trafficking offences needs to be flagged too. The Government would do well to scan and incorporate the responses to its Bill in order to ensure that the fence does not eat the crop. While sexual exploitation and trafficking can be ghastly crimes invoking public horror, for the state to not employ a wholesome approach, cognisant of the causative factors, one that would be sensitive and precise, would be equally horrific.
Find the meaning opposite to the words- “pernicious” & “vociferous”?
Read the following passage carefully and answer the following questions. Some of the words have been highlighted in the passage that will help you locate them to find the appropriate answer according to the questions asked.
Undoubtedly, trafficking is a pernicious offence, one that societies and governments must have zero tolerance for, and yet, handling the offence of trafficking needs precision, not a sledgehammer. In its current form, the draft Trafficking in Persons (Prevention, Care and Rehabilitation) Bill, 2021 seems to be lacking in nuance, even if well intentioned, to stamp out exploitative trafficking. The Bill, which will shortly be introduced in Parliament, aims at preventing and countering trafficking in persons, particularly women and children, to provide for care, protection and rehabilitation to the victims, while respecting their rights, and creating a supportive legal, economic and social environment for them. This is the Bill’s second iteration; the first was passed in the Lok Sabha, in 2018, but then meandered into nothingness as it was never introduced in the Upper House. Notably, the Bill has expanded the area under coverage to include offences taking place, not only within India but also outside it. It envisages the setting up of anti-trafficking committees at the State and national levels to implement the provisions, when passed. In the days the Bill was up in the public domain for comments, civil society activists and legal experts have criticised its various provisions, and submitted that an overzealous approach would blur the nuances and an understanding of the contributing factors, including vicious poverty, debt, lack of opportunity, and development schemes missing their mark.
Vociferous opposition has arisen over the key aspect of handing over investigation in trafficking crimes to the NIA both by those who believe that it would burden the already stretched unit further, and those arguing that this move would be an attack on federalism, by removing local enforcement agencies out of the picture. Another key criticism of the Bill has been its broad definitions of victims, smacking of refusal to consider consensual sexual activity for commerce. This would only land up criminalising sex work and victimisation of the exploited. Bringing pornography into the definition of sexual exploitation would not allow even for any adult consumption of nonexploitative, consensual material. Reporting of offences has been made mandatory with penalties for nonreporting, but those with an understanding of the tortuous processes, point to the fact that victims often do not ________. The mention of the death penalty for various forms of aggravated trafficking offences needs to be flagged too. The Government would do well to scan and incorporate the responses to its Bill in order to ensure that the fence does not eat the crop. While sexual exploitation and trafficking can be ghastly crimes invoking public horror, for the state to not employ a wholesome approach, cognisant of the causative factors, one that would be sensitive and precise, would be equally horrific.
Which of the following is/are correct according to the passage?
a. The state not applying the accurate safety measures is equally terrifying as sexual exploitation and trafficking.
b. The mention of the death penalty for various forms of aggravated trafficking offences needs to be snubbed too.
c. the draft Trafficking in Persons (Prevention, Care and Rehabilitation) Bill, 2021 seems to be lacking in quality.
The following sentences form a paragraph. The 1st and last sentence is given. The rest of the sentences are numbered as A, B, C, D and E. These five parts are not given in their proper order. Read the sentences and choose the alternative that arranges them in correct order.
1. One frequently employed method of research or studies is survey.
A. One important feature of surveys is to carefully form its wording and questions.
B. Although, there can still be biases or some confounds that can have an effect on our findings.
C. It is used when the data being studied is large in quantity.
D. Wording refers to the way questions are framed to ensure maximum objectivity and honesty.
E. In simple terms, the survey seeks to investigate multiple cases together and arrive at conclusion.
7. All in all, it still remains one important and often used research tool.
Which of the following should be the THIRD after rearrangement?
The following sentences form a paragraph. The 1st and last sentence is given. The rest of the sentences are numbered as A, B, C, D and E. These five parts are not given in their proper order. Read the sentences and choose the alternative that arranges them in correct order.
1. One frequently employed method of research or studies is survey.
A. One important feature of surveys is to carefully form its wording and questions.
B. Although, there can still be biases or some confounds that can have an effect on our findings.
C. It is used when the data being studied is large in quantity.
D. Wording refers to the way questions are framed to ensure maximum objectivity and honesty.
E. In simple terms, the survey seeks to investigate multiple cases together and arrive at conclusion.
7. All in all, it still remains one important and often used research tool.
Which of the following should be the SECOND after rearrangement?
33 docs|72 tests
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33 docs|72 tests
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