Daily Current Affairs

May 18, 2023

Current Affairs

World Meteorological Organization

Context: In the final report released by the expert group setup by WMO  highlighted a general negative association between temperature and Covid 19 transmission. The expert group was setup in 2020 to assess whether meteorological factors like heat and humidity had any role to play in transmission of Covid 19 virus.

About WMO

  • WMO is a specialized agency of the United Nations (UN) with 193 Member States and Territories.
  • It is the UN system's authoritative voice on the state and behaviour of the Earth's atmosphere, its interaction with the land and oceans, the weather and climate it produces and the resulting distribution of water resources.
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Origin

  • WMO originated from the International Meteorological Organization (IMO), which was founded in 1873 to facilitate the exchange of weather information across national borders.
  • Established in 1950, the WMO became a specialized agency of the United Nations in 1951. Its mandate is in the areas of meteorology (weather and climate), operational hydrology and related geophysical sciences.
  • It has fostered collaboration between the National Meteorological and Hydrological Services of its Members and furthered the application of meteorology in many areas.
  • In collaboration with other United Nations agencies and National Meteorological and Hydrological Services, WMO supports the implementation of a number of environmental conventions and is instrumental in providing advice and assessments to governments on related matters. These activities contribute towards ensuring the sustainable development and well-being of nations.

Governance Structure

  • Secretariat: The Secretariat, headquartered in Geneva, is headed by the Secretary-General.
  • In June 2019, the World Meteorological Congress approved a reform of the WMO governance and a vision for 2030 as well as other changes that called for an overhaul of the structure of the Secretariat. One of the most important changes implemented thus far is the creation of a Board of Directors.
  • WMO undertakes this task through the National Meteorological and Hydrological Services of its Members, which own and operate the systems for collecting, processing and analysing information from thousands of observation systems, including satellites and ships. It also ask Services to develop climate change detection tools and software to compute indices that reflect the best estimate of climate trends within the countries.
  • WMO issues Annual, Five-Year and Decadal Statements on the Status of the Global Climate. These statements document extreme weather and climate events in the regional context and provide a historical perspective on the variability and trends of climate, particularly surface temperatures that have occurred since the 19th century.
  • India is a member of WMO. It has been the member since 1949 and India’s permanent representative is the head Director General of Meteorology of the IMD.

WMO reports

  1. Green House Gas Bulletin 
  2. Status of World Climate

Canada-China Kerfuffle

Context: The Canadian government declared Chinese diplomat Zhao Wei “persona non grata,” for allegedly targeting a Canadian lawmaker critical of China’s human rights record. Hours later, China announced a “reciprocal countermeasure” by asking Jennnifer Lynn Lalonde, a top diplomat in the Canadian consulate in Shanghai, to leave the country by May 13. Tensions soared with China saying it holds the “right to take further actions in response”, while Prime Minister Justin Trudeau put out a strongly worded statement, reiterating that Canada will not be intimidated.

History of straining Canada-China ties?

  • Diplomatic ties between China and Canada have been unsteady for the past few years, especially after Canadian police arrested Huawei Technologies executive Meng Wanzhou on charges of fraud in 2018. A few days after her arrest, China detained two Canadians on spying charges a move then called “hostage diplomacy”
  • China had suspended imports of canola from Canada, alleging pests in the shipment
  • Canada has also alleged that the Chinese government attempted to interfere in the 2019 and 2021 federal elections a charge Beijing vehemently denies.
  • The two countries are also engaged in a technology battle. While Canada has limited the presence of Chinese firms in its communications infrastructure, Beijing believes the restrictions were imposed without any solid evidence.
  • The tension between the leadership was also visible at the G-20 summit in Indonesia last year, when Chinese President Xi Jinping and the Canadian PM exchanged barbs over leaked details of their meeting about Chinese interference in domestic affairs.

The Recent Spat:

  • At the centre of the latest spat is a report from the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS)
  • A series of media reports also highlighted about growing Chinese interference in Canada, a report on an intel document from 2021 which detailed potential threats to opposition lawmaker Michael Chong and his family in Hong Kong over the latter’s criticism of Beijing. Citing an anonymous national security official as its source, the newspaper reported that Chinese consul Zhao Wei was involved in gathering information about Mr. Chong and his family in Hong Kong to target him over his anti-Chinese sentiments 
  • Michael Chong was targeted because he led legislative efforts in Canada’s House of Commons to declare China’s treatment of Uyghurs and other minorities in Xinjiang as “genocide”. In response, Beijing barred his entry into China.
  • After details of the CSIS report were revealed, the Canadian government was heavily criticised for its inaction against China. Internal deliberations followed about the future course of action, seemingly to prepare for any economic repercussions since China is Canada’s second-biggest trade partner.
  • Canada declared diplomat Zhao Wei “persona non grata” (Latin for an unwelcome person). Canada reiterated that it would “not tolerate any form of foreign interference in our internal affairs.”
  • China also responded strongly on actions of Canada, warning of retaliatory measures. 
  • Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin had urged Canada to stop “unreasonable provocations”. Later China issued an order asking Ms. Lalonde to leave the country.

Conclusion:

The future course of diplomatic relations between the two countries will be sharply observed by neighbouring countries like USA, India etc which are themselves having contentious relationship with China and are apprehensive of aggressive rise of China at regional and global level.

Merchant Discount Rate

Context: The Payments Council of India (PCI), an industry body representing payment fintechs in the country, has requested finance minister to restore Merchant Discount Rate (MDR) for RuPay debit cards, as payment aggregator fintechs continue to lose on revenue lines for processing payments through the card infrastructure.

Merchant Discount Rate:

  • MDR (Merchant Discount Rate) refers to a fee that a merchant is charged by their issuing bank for accepting payments from their customers via credit and debit cards. ‌It is also known as Transaction Discount Rate (TDR). While the card-issuing bank gets a share of it, the remaining amount is distributed between the payment network and point-of-sale terminal providers. 

Push for Digitalisation: 

  • The Government had mandated that large businesses (With turnover greater than ₹50 crore) provide customers with low-cost digital modes of payment and had asked banks to levy zero charges on the same.
  • The finance minister gave this initiative a further push by mandating that no MDR charges will be applicable on digital transactions via the Rupay and UPI platforms. 

Concerns of Fintechs:

  • Payment aggregator fintechs are claiming that a loss of Rs 5,500 crore from no revenue being earned on UPI and RuPay debit card transactions. To compensate for this, the body has sought an incentive of Rs 4,000 crore in its representations to the ministry.
  • Zero MDR is also seen as a hindrance in attracting more players to adopt these payment modes and invest more in the development of the tech infrastructure to handle the huge volumes of transactions.

Maternal Health

Context: In May, a United Nations report showed that India was among the 10 countries that together accounted for 60% of global maternal deaths, stillbirths and new born deaths. India accounted for over 17% of such deaths in 2020. 

Reasons for Poor Maternal Health:

  • Malnutrition: Undernourished girls have a greater likelihood of becoming undernourished mothers who in turn have a greater chance of giving birth to low-birth-weight babies, perpetuating an intergenerational cycle of undernourishment.
  • Low literacy: According to 2011 census, around 35% of female is illiterate in India. Lack of adequate literacy deprives women awareness about nutrient-rich diet, good feeding practices and personal hygiene which ultimately impacts their maternal health.
  •  Child Marriages: According to NFHS-5, about 25% of women aged 18-29 got married before reaching the minimum legal age of marriage. Increasing incidences of teenage pregnancies due to child marriages and inadequate access to contraceptives impacts their maternal health and one of the leading causes for Maternal mortality in India.
  • Climate change: 
  • Studies shows that soaring temperatures due to heatwaves severely impact the maternal health of pregnant women. Women suffer more from yeast infections and UTIs (Urinary Tract Infections) in hot summers. Dietary habits that keep changing according to temperatures also impact Menstrual cycle. 
  • Rapid climate changes globally have given rise to climate-driven food insecurities which disproportionately impacts the nutritional health of women in a patriarchal society. 

A special bulletin was released by Registrar general of India on Maternal mortality ratio. Key findings of the report are:

  • Maternal mortality ratio (MMR) of India has declined by 10 points. It has declined from 113 in 2016-18 to 103 in 2017-19, an 8.8% decline.
  • The country has been witnessing a progressive reduction in the MMR from 130 in 2014-16, 122 in 2015-17 and 113 in 2016-18 to 103 in 2017-19. 
  • With this persistent decline, India is on the verge of achieving the National Health Policy (NHP) target of 100 per lakh live births by 2020 and certainly on the track to achieve the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) target of 70 per lakh live births by 2030. 

This improvement has been possible due to continued efforts of government of India like

Janani suraksha yojana: 

  • Implemented by Ministry of Health and family welfare
  • It is a safe motherhood intervention under the National Health Mission. It is being implemented with the objective of reducing maternal and neonatal mortality by promoting institutional delivery among poor pregnant women.
  • Cash incentives are given to beneficiaries for undergoing institutional deliveries.
  • The scheme focuses on poor pregnant woman with a special dispensation for states that have low institutional delivery rates, namely, the states of Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Bihar, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Assam, Rajasthan, Orissa, and Jammu and Kashmir. While these states have been named Low Performing States (LPS), the remaining states have been named High Performing states (HPS).

Janani shishu suraksha karyakram:

  • A scheme under MoH&FW
  • It is an initiative to provide completely free and cashless services to pregnant women including normal deliveries and caesarean operations.
  • Free entitlements to pregnant women under this scheme are
  • Free and cashless delivery
  • Free c-section
  • Free drugs and consumables
  • Free diagnostics
  • Free diet during stay in the health institutions
  • Free transport from home to health institutions

Pradhan Mantri Surakshit Matritva Abhiyan (PMSMA):

  • launched by the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare (MoHFW)
  • Under PMSMA, all pregnant women in the country are provided fixed day, free of cost assured and quality Antenatal Care.
  • As part of the campaign, a minimum package of antenatal care services (including investigations and drugs) is being provided to the beneficiaries on the 9th day of every month. 
  • The Abhiyan also involves Private sector’s health care providers as volunteers to provide specialist care in Government facilities.

LaQshya:

Labour Room & Quality Improvement Initiative (LaQshya) program will benefit every pregnant woman and newborn delivering in public health institutions. Program will improve quality of care for pregnant women in labour room, maternity Operation Theatre and Obstetrics Intensive Care Units (ICUs) & High Dependency Units (HDUs).

National food security act: 

  • Special provisions have been made for pregnant women and lactating mothers by entitling them to receive nutritious meal through a wide network of ICDS centres.
  • Pregnant women and lactating mothers are further entitled to receive cash maternity benefit of not less than Rs. 6000 to partly complement the wage loss during the period of pregnancy and also to supplement nutrition.

Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) Scheme:

  • Under Ministry of women and child development
  • The scheme provides Supplementary nutrition, immunizations and regular health check-ups of pregnant and lactating mothers.

PM Matru Vandana yojana:

  • Pradhan Mantri Matru Vandana Yojana (PMMVY) is a Maternity Benefit Programme that is implemented in all the districts of the country in accordance with the provision of the National Food Security Act, 2013.
  • All eligible Pregnant & Lactating Mothers would receive a Cash incentive of Rs 5000 in three instalments for first childbirth.  Conditions attached to these instalments are
  • Early registration of pregnancy at the Anganwadi Centre (AWC)
  • Receiving at least one ante-natal check-up (ANC)
  • Registration of childbirth and vaccination of first cycle vaccines (BCG, OPV, DPT and Hepatitis-B).

Maternity Benefit Amendment Act:

  • Duration of the maternity leave increased to 26 weeks from 12 weeks.
  • Maternity leaves were extended to adopting and commissioning mothers. A commissioning mother is defined as a biological mother who uses her egg to create an embryo implanted in another woman.
  • The act provided that the employer may permit a nursing woman (after 26 weeks of maternity leave) to work from home if the nature of work permits.
  • All organizations with 50 or more employees are required to provide a Creche facility and during working hours, the concerned female employee must be allowed four visits to the crèche.

Why late onset is not a worry

Context: While the IMD has predicted that the monsoon will be delayed this year, that’s not a cause for concern. Regional variations in rainfall, extreme rainfall events, and the developing El Nino are bigger worries.

What is onset of monsoon?

The monsoon season in India typically lasts from June to September, although its timing and intensity can vary across different regions.

The monsoon in India is primarily influenced by the seasonal reversal of winds, known as the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD), and the movement of the Inter-Tropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ). 

  • Pre-monsoon period (March to May): During this time, temperatures rise across the country due to the increasing solar radiation. As summer approaches, the landmass of the Indian subcontinent heats up faster than the surrounding oceans, causing a low-pressure area to develop over the region.
  • Arrival of the southwest monsoon (end of May to mid-June): The southwest monsoon is responsible for the majority of the rainfall in India. It begins with the onset of the monsoon over the Andaman Sea and the Bay of Bengal. Moisture-laden winds from the Indian Ocean are drawn towards the low-pressure area over the Indian subcontinent, creating a monsoon trough.
    • Factors affecting onset of monsoon:
      • Intense heating of the Indian landmass and formation of intense low pressure.
      • Shifting of ITCZ over Gangetic plain.
      • Withdrawal of sub-tropical westerly Jetstream.
      • Deflection of SE trades after crossing the equator towards Indian west coast.
  • Advancement of the monsoon (June to July): The monsoon winds gradually advance across the country, starting from the southernmost state of Kerala and progressing northwards. This northward progression is known as the "monsoon onset line" and is closely monitored by meteorological departments.
  • Onset over different regions: The onset of the monsoon occurs at different times across various regions of India. The western coast and northeastern states receive the monsoon rains first, followed by the central and northern parts of the country. The Himalayan region experiences the monsoon last.
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  • Monsoon progression and rainfall: Once the monsoon sets in, it brings heavy rainfall to different parts of India. The amount and distribution of rainfall vary from region to region. The western coast and north eastern states generally receive more rainfall compared to the arid regions in the northwest.

What is Indian ocean dipole?

IOD measures differences in sea surface temperatures between the western and eastern parts of the Indian Ocean. It is basically like the El Nino weather system that develops in the Pacific Ocean. It is characterized by an irregular oscillation of sea-surface temperatures in the eastern and western Indian Ocean

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Impact on weather patterns: IOD alters the wind, temperature, and rainfall patterns in the Indian Ocean region. 

  • Positive IOD event is known to bring floods to eastern Africa and droughts and bushfires to eastern Asia and Australia. Ex. 2020 Australian Bushfires. 
  • Positive IOD is known to increase the intensity of Monsoon in the Subcontinent and leads to above normal rainfall. A simultaneous occurrence of Positive IOD and El Nino balances the negative impact of El Nino on the Indian Monsoon rainfall. Ex. above normal rainfall in India in 2019. 
  • In contrast, Negative IOD coupled with El - Nino leads to poor Monsoon rainfall. Ex. Deficient rainfall in 1992.

Washington Consensus

Context: As Prime Minister Narendra Modi steps up engagement with the US and its allies — at the G7 summit in Hiroshima this week, the Quad summit in Canberra week after, and bilateral visits to Washington and Paris in June and July— the restructuring of the global economic order will figure high on India’s bilateral and multilateral agenda. In the geopolitical domain and so in the geoeconomic, there is a growing convergence of interests between Delhi and Washington. Translating that into concrete outcomes will demand much hard work and some creative solutions

  • The United States today is seeking wider international consensus on the new economic approach from its allies and partners, including India. The Unites states is pushing its efforts to build a “New Washington Consensus” as there is also a  geoeconomic competition between Washington and Beijing which had begun to develop in the Trump years and President Joe Biden has intensified it and lent a plausible ideological framework to it.
  • The term “Washington Consensus”, which gained ground in the late 1980s, referred to the shared prescriptions from the International Monetary Fund, World Bank, and US Treasury on deregulation, privatisation, and free trade for economic modernisation. By the 1990s, these recommendations gained widespread policy traction in the chancelleries of the world, including in India.

However the Washington Consensus has started showing fissures and the lacunas in the approach which are highlighted by the following reasons: 

  • The conviction that the “markets know best” approach led to the hollowing out of the US industrial base. It was argued that in the name of oversimplified market efficiency, entire supply chains of strategic goods along with the industries and jobs that made them moved overseas. It was realised that deep trade liberalisation though helped America export goods, but not jobs and capacity.
  • Secondly the notion that “all growth was good growth”, led to the privileging of some sectors like finance “while other essential sectors, like semiconductors and infrastructure, atrophied”.
  • Thirdly, the old assumption “that economic integration would make nations more responsible and open, and that the global order would be more peaceful and cooperative”, also led to distortion wherein Unites States referred to the premise underlying China’s admission into the WTO in 2001 wherein admitting countries into the rules-based order should have incentivised them to adhere to its rules”. However  the problems triggered by the integration of a “large non-market economy” like China into the WTO.

It was realised that the America’s economic policy must confront the urgent need for a “just and efficient transition” to green economic growth and the political imperative of reducing economic inequality at home that has undermined American democracy. Thus for this purpose the United States has offered a five-fold policy framework under the New Washington Consensus 

  • The first is to return to industrial policy that was the hallmark of US economic development historically, but dismissed by economic neoliberalism in the last few decades. For this the US has restored the role of the state in pumping investments into semiconductor production and promoting the development and deployment of green technologies.
  • Second, the United States under its new approach is not seeking autarky or promoting protectionism. The US is not going alone, and wants to develop a joint effort with US allies and partners, including India.
  • Third, United States wants its friends and partners to look beyond traditional trade policies. Wherein he highlighted the US-proposed Indo-Pacific Economic Framework is not a free trade agreement.
  • Fourth, the US is trying to mobilise “trillions in investment into emerging economies with solutions that those countries are fashioning on their own, but with capital enabled by a different brand” of US economic diplomacy. This primarily involves offering an alternative to China’s Belt and Road Initiative, addressing the global debt crisis, and reforming multilateral development banks.
  • Lastly United States is also pushing the efforts to develop a new set of export controls on sensitive technology that will limit national security threats from China and other rivals.

ABOUT WASHINGTON CONSENSUS

A list of policies that had gained support among Latin American policymakers in response to the macroeconomic turbulence and debt crisis of the early to mid-1980s. These policies also had the backing of experts at Washington's international institutions—especially the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, as well as the US Treasury—to help the recovery from the debt crisis and popularly came to be known as Washington Consensus

  1. Fiscal Policy discipline, with avoidance of large fiscal deficits relative to GDP;
  2. Redirection of public spending from subsidies ("especially indiscriminate subsidies") toward broad-based provision of key pro-growth, pro-poor services like primary education, primary health care and infrastructure investment;
  3. Tax reform broadening the tax base and adopting moderate marginal tax rates;
  4. Interest Rates that are market determined and positive (but moderate) in real terms;
  5. Competitive exchange rates  
  6. Trade liberalization: liberalization of imports, with particular emphasis on elimination of quantitative restrictions (licensing, etc.); any trade protection to be provided by low and relatively uniform tariffs. 
  7. Liberalization of inward foreign direct investment
  8. Privatization of state enterprises 
  9. Deregulation: abolition of regulations that impede market entry or restrict competition, except for those justified on safety, environmental and consumer protection grounds, and prudential oversight of financial institution 
  10. Legal security for property rights. 

INDIA AND WASHINGTON CONSENSUS

  • Pursuit of this policy resulted in annual economic growth breaking out of the 3 to 5 percent band of the pre-1991 era. But redistribution of the extra wealth has been skewed. Those already better off have improved their living standards further whereas the large majority who lagged behind before have stagnated or grown poorer.
  • The emphasis of the WTO and the IMF on export-led growth encouraged cultivators to switch from food crops to fertilizer-intensive cash crops like cotton, coffee, sugarcane, groundnuts, pepper and vanilla. As a consequence, the daily per capita availability of food grains declined from 510 grams in 1991 to 422 grams in 2005.

Conclusion

It is for India to understand that the common themes in the economic strategies are many and these include China’s geoeconomic challenge, the dangers of dogmatic commitment to globalisation, the need for industrial policy to develop national manufacturing, technological cooperation among like-minded partners, building resilient supply chains, addressing the economic concerns of the Global South, and reforming the global financial institutions.

It is also important to understand that there will also be many disagreements on the identification of priorities as well as on the details of the specific outcomes in rearranging the global economic order. But Building on new opportunities and resolving new problems must be viewed as a historic opportunity for India’s economic statecraft. As the US is ready for substantive engagement with its partners and Delhi must be ready to respond.

Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation (CDSCO)

Context: Recently, the Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation (CDSCO) put out a list of over 50 medicines that were either found to be spurious or ‘not of standard quality’, raising a furore.

What is CDSCO

  • India takes pride in its pharmaceutical industry, being the largest global producer of generic medicines that benefit the global poor.
  • However, the industry has faced challenges, including struggles to achieve scale and defamatory claims about the ineffectiveness and harm caused by Indian drugs. 
  • Quality concerns persist, with numerous drugs failing to meet standards, leading to substandard drugs in routine use and adverse events. 
  • Global regulators have raised issues with compliance, potentially damaging India's reputation. Recommendations include amending regulations, centralizing the drug regulatory system, enhancing transparency, and focusing on producing quality generics and innovative drugs.

About Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation (CDSCO)

  • It functions as India's national regulatory body overseeing cosmetics, pharmaceuticals, and medical devices. 
  • The CDSCO is organized with the Drug Controller General of India (DCGI) overseeing pharmaceuticals and medical devices. 
  • It is assigned duties under Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940.
  • The DCGI is situated within the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare and receives guidance from the Drug Technical Advisory Board (DTAB) and the Drug Consultative Committee (DCC). 
  • The CDSCO operates through zonal offices that conduct inspections prior to licensing, post-licensing inspections, post-market surveillance, and, if necessary, initiates drug recalls. 
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  Reproductive Rights

Reproductive Rights and Population control:

The right to reproductive choice means that women have a right to choose whether or not to reproduce, including the right to decide whether to carry or terminate an unwanted pregnancy and the right to choose their preferred method of family planning and contraception.

Women need some means to enforce these Reproductive rights:

  • Education: Education creates awareness among women and encourages them to adopt health family planning methods.
  • Financial Independence: Financial independence among women guarantees women the agency over reproduction. 
  • Access to Contraceptives reduces unwanted pregnancies  
  • Legal machinery: Strong laws to address the issues like Child marriages and vesting agency over their reproductive choices.
    • E.g., Prohibition of child marriages Act (2006), Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act.

The above-mentioned means not only ensures women enforcing their Reproductive rights but also reduces Total fertility rates and hence arrests population growth. Thus, guaranteeing reproductive rights to women is essential to control population growth. 

Reproductive rights and Gender justice:

India placed 130 out of 155 nations in the Gender Inequality Index (GII) 2020 released by the UNDP. One of the index's measurement pillars is "Reproductive Health “. This implies that reproductive rights are important for ensuring overall gender equality.    

  • Maternal Health: Access to antenatal and postpartum care that is safe and of high quality will lower MMR.
  • Agency over reproduction: "Unwanted daughters" emerged in India as a result of women's lack of agency about reproductive choices and son-meta preference. This illustrates how crucial reproductive rights are to achieving gender equality.
  • Maternity leave: Providing maternity leave entitlements would ensure that young mothers’ ability to participate in the workforce is not hindered because of childbearing and child-rearing responsibilities. 
  • Access to Contraceptives: High fertility is both a cause and symptom of poverty. Thus, the core causes of poverty would be addressed by making contraceptives and safe & legal abortion options accessible.
  • Menstrual leave: Menstrual leave and access to basic sanitation facilities for working women improve health outcomes and remove the stigma associated with the menstrual cycle in society. 

What is LIBOR and why RBI has asked the banks to Move away from it

Context: The Reserve Bank of India has directed the banks and other financial institutions to move away from the LIBOR (London Interbank Offered Rate) and move to any Alternative Reference Rates (ARR).

What is LIBOR?

LIBOR stands for the London Interbank Offered Rate. It is a benchmark interest rate that indicates the average rate at which major banks in London are willing to borrow from each other in the interbank market. LIBOR serves as a reference rate for a wide range of financial products and transactions, including loans, derivatives, and other financial contracts.

  • The British Bankers' Association (BBA) used to administer LIBOR until 2014, after which the Intercontinental Exchange Benchmark Administration (ICE Benchmark Administration) took over the responsibility.
  • LIBOR is calculated for various currencies and different borrowing periods, ranging from overnight to one year.
  • The calculation of LIBOR involves a panel of major banks submitting their borrowing rates, which are then used to determine an average rate. These rates are supposed to reflect the rates at which banks can borrow funds in the London wholesale money market.

How Is Libor Calculated?

  • Each day, 18 international banks submit their ideas of the rates they think they would pay if they had to borrow money from another bank on the interbank lending market in London.
  • To safeguard against extreme highs or lows, the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) Benchmark Administration strips out the four highest submissions and the four lowest submissions before calculating an average.
  • It’s important to note that Libor isn’t set on what banks actually pay to borrow funds from each other. Instead, it’s based on their submissions related to what they think they would pay. As a result, it’s possible for banks to submit lower rates and manipulate Libor fairly easily.

Libor Scandals and the 2008 Financial Crisis

  • During the crisis, banks manipulated the LIBOR rates for their own benefit. They understated or manipulated their reported rates to create an illusion of financial health and to appear more creditworthy than they actually were.
  • By manipulating LIBOR rates, banks were able to lower their borrowing costs and increase their profits. This also gave them a false sense of security and credibility in the eyes of investors and counterparties.
  • The manipulation of LIBOR distorted the true pricing of financial products, leading to mispricing and increased risk in the global financial system.
  • Many financial institutions around the world relied on LIBOR as a benchmark for pricing and valuing their financial products. The manipulation of LIBOR undermined the integrity of these markets and eroded trust among market participants.
  • The impact of the LIBOR manipulation was far-reaching. It affected trillions of dollars' worth of financial contracts globally, including loans, mortgages, and derivatives. This, in turn, had a significant impact on individuals, businesses, and the overall economy.
  • The revelation of the LIBOR manipulation sparked a wave of investigations, lawsuits, and regulatory actions against banks involved in the scandal. Several major financial institutions faced substantial fines and penalties for their involvement.
  • The 2008 financial crisis exposed the vulnerabilities and weaknesses in the LIBOR benchmark system. It highlighted the need for reform and the development of alternative, more robust benchmark rates to ensure the integrity and stability of financial markets.
  • In response to the crisis, efforts were made to transition away from LIBOR as a benchmark rate. Various alternative reference rates, such as the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR) in the United States, were introduced to replace LIBOR and mitigate the risk of manipulation.

The RBI has directed all banks in India to end all contracts with LIBOR by 31 Dec and use the Mumbai Interbank Forward Offer rate (MIFOR).

What is MIFOR?

  • MIFOR stands for Mumbai Interbank Forward Offer Rate. It is a benchmark interest rate used in India to determine the pricing of various financial instruments, particularly forward rate agreements (FRAs) and interest rate swaps (IRS).
  • MIFOR is derived from a combination of the Mumbai Interbank Offered Rate (MIBOR) and the corresponding foreign currency benchmark rate. MIBOR is the interest rate at which banks in Mumbai, India, lend to one another in the interbank market.
  • The foreign currency benchmark rate used in the calculation of MIFOR depends on the currency involved in the transaction.
  • MIFOR is commonly used in India for hedging and pricing purposes in the derivatives market. It reflects the market's expectations of future interest rates in India and provides a reference point for interest rate-related transactions.
  • It's worth noting that the information provided is accurate up until my last knowledge update in September 2021. There might have been updates or changes in the financial landscape since then, so it's always a good idea to consult up-to-date sources and experts for the most recent information.