CLAT General Knowledge
CCLAT Current Affairs and General Knowledge section tests the depth of
understanding in a range of topics. Candidates are expected to read a particular
news or opinion piece in-depth. Reading at-least one newspaper every day is
necessary. News, events and happenings pertaining to legal issues are
particularly important when it comes to CLAT Current Affairs and General
Knowledge section.
The following passages and questions have been framed with an eye on the
latest samples from the Consortium of NLUs. More importantly, they are
pegged exactly at the level of difficulty of CLAT.
How much of a walking Encyclopedia are you? How knowledgeable are you
with the current happenings? Try the following questions, available for free!
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The Government announced a stimulus package under the Self Reliant India Scheme for the amount of _____________.
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Which of the following is not a goal of the stimulus package announced under the 'Atmanirbhar' India?
- It will help in alleviating the distress of migrants when they return to their villages.
- It will help in achieving the goal of a self-sustainable rural economy.
- It would boost the One Nation One Market objective and help India to become the food factory of the world.
- It will help in elevating quality of life in urban areas.
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Which of the following events can be seen as the stepping stone for the growth of the Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in India?
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Which of the following is not related to the "Vocal for Local" initiative of the Indian Government?
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Under the National Infrastructure Pipeline, the Government plans to invest more than Rs. 102 lakh crore on infrastructure projects by 2024-25, with the Centre, States and the private sector to share the capital expenditure. What is the ratio of such expenditure by each of the stake holders?
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Which of the following has been replaced by [1] in the above passage?
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Which of the following economic policies have been recently used by the RBI to boost the economy during the current Pandemic situation?
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Which of the following statements relate to the Long Term Repo Operations as measure to support the economy in corona pandemic situations?
- It is a measure that is expected to bring down short-term rates and also boost investment in corporate bonds.
- It would encourage banks to undertake maturity transformation smoothly and seamlessly so as to augment credit flows to productive sectors.
- It will enhance liquidity in the banking system by Rs 1 trillion.
- All of the above.
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Which of the following will be used as a platform for core banking solutions to implement the LTRO?
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What is the notified amount of sum offered by the RBI under measures of the Foreign Exchange Swap?
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The Rafale deal between India and France is seen to carry great strategic significance. Which of the following is directly impacted by this deal?
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The Indian Air Force is also in the process of procuring a new generation medium-range modular air-to-ground weapon system Hammer to integrate with the Rafale jets. What does the term Hammer stands for?
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Which of the following has been replaced by [1] in the passage?
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Which of the following indigenous organisations is responsible for the design, assembly and fabrication of combat aircrafts in India?
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Which of the following organisations/institutions is a major offset partner of India in the Rafale Deal?
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Which of the following incidents can be seen as the direct cause of the border dispute between India and Nepal?
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The confusion between Nepal and India consists of a dispute over a trijunture of ____________.
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The treaty of Sugauli was signed between which of the following pairs?
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Recently Nepal has issued a map claiming Lipulekh pass as part of its territory included in the district of:
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Which of the following rivers is called as Narayani River in Nepal?
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Which of the following statements are not true in relation to the changes envisioned by the NEP 2020?
- The NEP 2020 aims at making India a global knowledge superpower.
- The renaming of the Ministry of Human Resource Development to the Ministry of Education.
- The development of National Course Curriculum to provide new curriculum by 2021.
- The New Education Policy aims to facilitate an inclusive, participatory and holistic approach
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The NEP 2020 aims to provide a holistic change to the current education system in India. Which of the following is not related to the aim of NEP 2020?
- Universalization of education from preschool to secondary level with 100% Gross Enrolment Ratio.
- To bring 20 million out of school children back into the mainstream through an open schooling system.
- Vocational Education to start from Class 6 with Internships.
- To achieve 80% Gross Enrolment Ratio at the under graduate level.
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Which of the following is proposed as a change in the structure of institutions responsible for affiliation and accreditation under the NEP 2020?
- Higher Education Commission of India (HECI) will be set up as a single umbrella body for the entire higher education.
- University Grant Commission to be renamed as AICTE.
- National Affiliation and Accreditation Council to be renamed as National Standard Council of India.
- National Council for Education Research and Teaching to be renamed as BCERT.
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Which of the following is not a vertical under the Higher Education Commission of India (HECI)?
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What is the proposed percentage of expenditure for education out of GDP under the NEP 2020?
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Which of the following has been replaced by [1] in the passage?
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Which of the following Nations is part of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation?
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Which of the following has been replaced by [5] in the passage?
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India had not agreed to attend a summit hosted in Pakistan, but it remains an important promoter of the SAARC process. In which of the following years the SAARC leaders‘ summit was held lately?
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The above passage mentions about Pakistan‘s Special Advisor on National Security Moeed Yusuf using a map of Pakistan claiming Indian Territory. Which of the following territory is in context here?
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The US is seen as a major role player in the peace deal between Israel and UAE. Which of the following is not a reason for the involvement of US in the deal?
- The deal grants a diplomatic win to the US President Donald Trump ahead of the Presidential election.
- The efforts of the USA to bring the war in Afghanistan to an end have not been a success yet.
- The efforts of USA to bring peace between Israel and the Palestinians have not been successful yet.
- The deal gives a central strategic rule to USA in the Middle East.
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Which of the following is true in relation to the stake of Palestine in the peace deal between UAE and Israel?
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Which of the following is not a direct impact of the peace deal in the Middle East region?
- The deal smoothens the UAE‘s international campaign to be seen as a beacon of tolerance in the Middle East.
- It puts the UAE as leader in a regional power dynamics among neighbouring Gulf Arab states.
- The deal gives Netanyahu a domestic boost at a time when Israel‘s coalition government is in crisis due to coalition compulsions.
- The deal marks a historic day and a significant step towards peace in the Middle East.
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The peace deal between Israel and UAE can also be seen as a great opportunity for India in the Middle East region. Which of the following is not related to strategic goals of India in the Middle East?
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Which of the following is correct?
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. Israel is a theocratic Jewish state but it follows legal pluralism. Accordingly it has:
CLAT 2020 General Knowledge: Aatmanirbhar Bharat Abhiyan
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday said major global firms are looking at India as a
major investment destination, which is reflected by a robust inflow of Foreign Direct
Investment (FDI) last financial year, and through 'Atmanirbhar Bharat Abhiyan' (SelfReliant India initiative) the country is shifting its focus from 'Make in India' to 'Make for
world'. He said Independent India should be "vocal for local" and asked citizens to glorify
Indian products to promote 'Atmanirbhar Bharat'. Unveiling his vision of a Self-Reliant
India, the Prime Minister said that the government has unveiled over Rs 110 lakh crore
National Infrastructure Pipeline (NIP) to boost the economy and create jobs. "In order to
rapidly modernise India, there is a need to give a new direction to overall infrastructure
development," he said, adding that over 7,000 projects under NIP have been already
identified. "This will be, in a way, a new revolution in the field of infrastructure. This is the
time to end silos in infrastructure. There is a plan to connect the entire country with multimodel connectivity infrastructure," he said. NIP will play a crucial role in overcoming the
adverse impact of Covid-19 on the economy and catapult the economy in a higher growth
trajectory, he said. The government on December 31 last year unveiled the NIP with an aim
to make India a $5 trillion economy by 2024-25. The focus of the infrastructure pipeline is to
accelerate growth and create employment in both urban and rural areas.
Source: Excerpt from Hindustan Times, written by Rajeev Jayaswal. (Dated 15th August,
2020)
CLAT 2020 General Knowledge: Forex Management and Central bank operations
The central bank doesn‘t disclose its foreign exchange management strategy, but it was
evident in the last few years that the rupee was not allowed to appreciate despite healthy
inflows, resulting in a rapid build-up of foreign exchange. From a low of $275 billion in
September of 2013, when rupee came under severe pressure due to so-called 'taper tantrums'
by the US Federal Reserve, India now has record foreign exchange reserves of [1] billion, as
on 21 August — a 95 per cent rise over seven years. Despite the Covid-19 pandemic, the
foreign exchange kitty swelled by $62 billion since March. In this seven-year period, rupee
ended the year with an appreciation against the dollar only once — in 2017. This year, the
rupee is so far down by 2.04 per cent against the dollar. The latest RBI statement suggested
that it is not uncomfortable with the appreciation in rupee, confirming the speculation among
currency analysts that a departure was made in the exchange management policy.
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) said that it will conduct liquidity operations worth Rs
20,000 crore in two tranches through sale and purchase of government securities (G-Secs).
The two open market operations (OMOs) of Rs 10,000 crore each will be conducted on
September 10 and 17, the central bank said in an official release. This is now the second such
announcement in as many weeks. Last week, RBI had announced sale and purchase of GSecs worth Rs 20,000 crore, in two tranches, slated to be conducted on August 27 and
September 3. In another move, RBI announced the infusion of Rs 1 lakh crore in midSeptember through long-term repo operations (LTROs) at floating rates, or the prevailing
repo rate. Moreover, the central bank also gave an option to lenders who have earlier availed
funds through LTROs, to reverse their transactions before maturity.
Source: Excerpt taken from the Print.in, written by Manojit Saha. (Dated 2nd September,
2020.)
CLAT 2020 General Knowledge: Rafale Fighter Jets
The first batch of five Rafale jets flew out of France on July 25 and will arrive in India on
Wednesday, July 29, when the fighter jets will officially be inducted and join the Indian Air
Force fleet in Haryana's Ambala. The fighter jets, built by French aviation firm [1], took off
from the Merignac airbase in southern France's Bordeaux today and landed safely at Al
Dhafra airbase in the UAE after a sortie of more than seven hours. The five aircraft will be the first tranche of the 36 planes bought by India from France in a Rs. 59,000-crore intergovernmental deal in 2016. "Delivery of ten aircraft has been completed on schedule. Five
will stay back in France for training Mission. The delivery of all thirty six aircraft will be
completed on schedule by the end of 2021," the Indian embassy in France said in a statement.
The Rafale fighter jets are capable of carrying a range of highly effective weapons, including
the Meteor air-to-air missile and Scalp cruise missile. The Rafale jets will come with various
India-specific modifications, including Israeli helmet-mounted displays, radar warning
receivers, low-band jammers, 10-hour flight data recording, infra-red search and tracking
systems among others. The Air Force has readied the required infrastructure to welcome the
jets in its line-up.
Source: Excerpt taken from the NDTV, Reported by Vishnu Som, Edited by Shylaja Varma.
(Dated – 27th July, 2020)
CLAT 2020 General Knowledge: India – Nepal border issue
On May 8, India‘s Defence Minister virtually inaugurated a new 80 km-long road in the
Himalayas, connecting to the border with China, at the Lipulekh pass. The Nepali
government protested immediately, contending that the road crosses territory that it claims
and accusing India of changing the status quo without diplomatic consultations. Among the
many escalatory moves since then, Nepal deployed police forces to the region, summoned the
Indian ambassador in Kathmandu, and initiated a constitutional amendment to formalise and
extend its territorial claims over approximately 400 sq km. India, on the other hand, has
conveyed its openness to a dialogue but does not seem to share Nepal‘s sense of urgency: its
initial statement agreed to a dialogue, but only after the COVID-19 crisis. India has been in
effective possession of this territory for at least sixty years, although Nepal claims it
conducted a census there in the early 1950s and refers to the 1815 Sugauli Treaty as
legitimising its claims. But India‘s new road, up to the Lipulekh pass, is not an unprecedented
change in the status quo. India has controlled this territory and built other infrastructure here
before, besides conducting its administration and deploying military forces up to the border
pass with China. The region is of strategic importance, and the new road is now one of the
quickest links between Delhi and the Tibetan plateau. In a 2015 statement, China also
recognised India‘s sovereignty by agreeing to expand trade through the Lipulekh pass.
Source: Excerpt from the brookings.edu, written by Dr. Constantino Xavier. (Dated- 11th
June, 2020)
CLAT 2020 General Knowledge: National Education Policy
One thing struck us as a major difference between the new National Education Policy (NEP)
2020 and its predecessor. The earlier national policies on education (NPE) from 1986 and
1992 presented themselves as attempts to consolidate and build on earlier efforts, particularly
the NPE, 1968. The new NEP 2020 policy, on the other hand, is very keen to establish that it
is different from everything in the past, including in its name. Nowhere does this attitude
come across as starkly as it does in the section on higher education.
It comes across fairly clearly on how the higher education ecosystem will be by 2040. By this
time — if the policy has its way — the Indian higher education ecosystem will be populated
with higher education institutions (HEI). These will comprise Universities and Colleges and
the public and private sectors, all of which will be 'multi-disciplinary', with each populated
by more than 3,000 students, with at least one "in or near every district". Universities will
conduct research and post-graduate and under-graduate teaching, some research-intensive
and others teaching-intensive. Colleges will largely teach at the under-graduate level, with a
number of them having their medium of instruction in either bilingual or local / Indian
languages. The colleges can manifest in clusters around universities as constituent colleges or
may be standalone autonomous ones. Ideally, all HEIs will eventually become "independent
self-governing institutions" with considerable "faculty and institutional autonomy". They will
have complied with a series of regulatory exercises that are "light-but-tight" and will be
operated by a large number of private accreditors, overseen by a new set of regulatory
institutions at the national level.
Source: Excerpt taken from downtoearth.org.in, written by Nitin Mehta & Gagan Mehta.
(Dated 14th August, 2020)
CLAT 2020 General Knowledge: SCO and SAARC
Days after India-Pakistan tensions spilled over into a meeting of the Shanghai Cooperation
Organisation (SCO), External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar and Pakistan Foreign Minister
Shah Mehmood Qureshi are expected to meet via a video conference at the South Asian
Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) meeting on September 24. "All member
countries have confirmed participation in the meeting, to be chaired by Pradeep Kumar
Gyawali, [1] of Nepal. The respective Foreign Ministers will take part," sources familiar with
preparations for the meeting told The Hindu, referring to the eight members of SAARC,
including [2], Bangladesh, [3], India, [4], Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. A senior Indian
official also confirmed that Mr. Jaishankar will attend despite the incident at the SCO virtual
meeting of National Security Advisors on Tuesday. During that meeting, National Security
Advisor Ajit Doval stormed out after he saw that the Pakistan Special Advisor on National
Security Moeed Yusuf had used a map of Pakistan that claimed Indian Territory.
"This was in blatant disregard to the advisory by the host [5] against it and in violation of the
norms of the meeting. After consultation with the host, the Indian side left the meeting in
protest at that juncture," the MEA had said about the incident. When asked, the sources said
that no specific guidelines on background or maps have been issued by the SAARC
Secretariat in Kathmandu that is also the Chair of the SAARC at present, but they hope it
would go "smoothly". A meeting of SAARC Finance Ministers, where an Additional
Secretary represented India instead of Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, and Pakistan
was represented by its Special Advisor on Finance, took place on Wednesday without
incident.
Source: Excerpt taken from The Hindu, written by Suhasini Haider. (Dated 17th September,
2020.)
CLAT 2020 General Knowledge: UAE-Israel relations
In the middle of a pandemic, the geopolitics of the world‘s most troubled region took a
historic turn this week, when the UAE and Israel, under the benevolent gaze of US President
Donald Trump, signed an agreement to 'normalise' relations. The deal opens up new
opportunities for India to play a much larger role in the regional security and stability in the
Gulf, where New Delhi enjoys special relations with both Abu Dhabi and Jerusalem. The
barebones of the deal envisages establishing regular diplomatic relations between the UAE,
the rising influential power in the Gulf, and Israel, the 'Incredible Hulk' of the region, but a
country officially not on speaking terms with most of its Arab neighbours. In his first tweet,
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed said: ‗During a call with President Trump and Prime
Minister Netanyahu, an agreement was reached to stop further Israeli annexation of
Palestinian territories. The UAE and Israel also agreed to cooperation and setting a roadmap
towards establishing a bilateral relationship.' In return, Israel agreed to 'suspend' its
annexation plans for West Bank that would have been deeply destabilising. Benjamin
Netanyahu gets a diplomatic victory, which may be short-lived, given the nature of Israeli
politics. But Israel gets a diplomatic and economic opening with the big power in the Gulf
that could open other doors, give its security interests legitimacy and, perhaps, open the door
to Middle East peace.
Many of the other Arab powers, such as Oman, Bahrain, Egypt and Jordan, apart from the big
global powers, and India, have welcomed the deal. Iran has slammed it, as have Turkey and
Syria. Saudi Arabia has been very quiet. Given the close ties between Mohammed bin Zayed
and Mohammed bin Salman, it is unthinkable that KSA was not consulted, particularly when
the US is the third pole in this agreement. The deal gives UAE pole position as the premier
Gulf Arab power, with diplomatic leverage with Israel and the US. 'This deal is about
positioning in Washington, DC,' said James Dorsey, Gulf and Middle East expert.
Source: Excerpt from the Economic Times, written by Indrani Bagchi. (Dated – 16th August,
2020)
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