बच्चों की मौत को लगातार कैसे मात दे रहा भारत, जानें दुनिया के मुकाबले कैसे मिली यह कामयाबी?

बच्चों की मौत को लगातार कैसे मात दे रहा भारत, जानें दुनिया के मुकाबले कैसे मिली यह कामयाबी?


How India Reduced Child Mortality Rate: पिछले एक दशक में भारत ने बाल स्वास्थ्य के क्षेत्र में ऐसी उपलब्धि हासिल की है, जिसकी चर्चा अब दुनिया भर में हो रही है. संयुक्त राष्ट्र की हाल ही में जारी यूएन इंटर-एजेंसी ग्रुप फॉर चाइल्ड मॉर्टेलिटी एस्टिमेशन 2025 रिपोर्ट के मुताबिक, वर्ष 2014 से 2024 के बीच भारत में पांच साल से कम उम्र के बच्चों की मृत्यु दर में 41 प्रतिशत की कमी दर्ज की गई है. वहीं नवजात शिशु मृत्यु दर में 37 प्रतिशत की गिरावट आई है. खास बात यह है कि यह उपलब्धि वैश्विक औसत से कहीं बेहतर है, जहां इसी अवधि में बाल मृत्यु दर में 18 प्रतिशत और नवजात मृत्यु दर में 15 प्रतिशत की कमी दर्ज की गई. 

क्या है इस सफलता के पीछे का कारण?

एक्सपर्ट का मानना है कि यह सफलता किसी एक योजना का परिणाम नहीं, बल्कि माताओं और बच्चों के लिए लगातार मजबूत की गई स्वास्थ्य सेवाओं का नतीजा है. भारत ने पिछले कुछ वर्षों में गर्भावस्था से लेकर बच्चे के शुरुआती वर्षों तक स्वास्थ्य देखभाल को प्राथमिकता दी है. हाल ही में जारी NFHS-6 (2023-24) रिपोर्ट के अनुसार, 76.2 प्रतिशत महिलाओं को गर्भावस्था की पहली तिमाही में ही प्रसवपूर्व देखभाल मिल गई. वहीं संस्थागत प्रसव का आंकड़ा बढ़कर 90.6 प्रतिशत तक पहुंच गया है, जो पहले 88.6 प्रतिशत था. इसी तरह प्रशिक्षित हेल्थकर्मियों की निगरानी में होने वाले प्रसव भी 89.4 प्रतिशत से बढ़कर 91.3 प्रतिशत हो गए हैं. 

इसे भी पढ़ें – Summer Fatigue: गर्मियों में बार-बार महसूस हो रही थकान, जान लें यह किस बीमारी का संकेत?

देखभाल में काफी सुधार दर्ज किया गया?

जन्म के तुरंत बाद का समय बच्चों के लिए सबसे सेंसिटिव माना जाता है. इसी को ध्यान में रखते हुए भारत ने नवजात शिशुओं की देखभाल के लिए बड़े पैमाने पर स्वास्थ्य सुविधाओं का विस्तार किया है. देशभर में 1,100 से अधिक स्पेशल न्यूबॉर्न केयर यूनिट और नियोनेटल इंटेंसिव केयर यूनिट स्थापित की गई हैं. इनके साथ 2,868 न्यूबॉर्न स्टेबिलाइजेशन यूनिट भी काम कर रही हैं, जो हर साल 15 लाख से अधिक बीमार और कमजोर नवजातों को विशेष देखभाल प्रदान करती हैं.

टीकाकरण का भी रोल

बच्चों के स्वास्थ्य में सुधार का एक बड़ा कारण टीकाकरण भी रहा है. NFHS-6 के अनुसार, 12 से 23 महीने की उम्र के बच्चों में पूर्ण टीकाकरण कवरेज 76.6 प्रतिशत से बढ़कर 82.6 प्रतिशत हो गया है. वहीं रोटावायरस वैक्सीन कवरेज में जबरदस्त उछाल देखा गया है, जो 36.4 प्रतिशत से बढ़कर 85.4 प्रतिशत तक पहुंच गया. पोषण के क्षेत्र में भी भारत ने महत्वपूर्ण प्रगति की है. पांच साल से कम उम्र के बच्चों में स्टंटिंग यानी उम्र के हिसाब से कम लंबाई की समस्या 35.5 प्रतिशत से घटकर 29.3 प्रतिशत रह गई है. वहीं गंभीर कुपोषण की दर भी 7.7 प्रतिशत से घटकर 5.5 प्रतिशत हो गई है.

 लाखों बच्चों की जिंदगी बचाई जा सकती है

पूर्व सदस्य (स्वास्थ्य एवं पोषण), नीति आयोग डॉ. विनोद के. पॉल का मानना है कि भारत की यह उपलब्धि सिर्फ राष्ट्रीय सफलता नहीं है, बल्कि दुनिया के विकासशील देशों के लिए एक उदाहरण बन चुकी है. उनका कहना है कि मजबूत स्वास्थ्य व्यवस्था, फ्रंटलाइन स्वास्थ्यकर्मियों की भूमिका और तकनीक के बेहतर इस्तेमाल ने भारत को बाल मृत्यु दर कम करने में बड़ी सफलता दिलाई है. भारत की यह उपलब्धि दिखाती है कि सही नीतियों और निरंतर प्रयासों से लाखों बच्चों की जिंदगी बचाई जा सकती है और आने वाली पीढ़ियों को बेहतर स्वास्थ्य दिया जा सकता है.

इसे भी पढ़ें- हो गए हैं इरेक्टाइल डिसफंक्शन का शिकार, समझ लीजिए बढ़ गया है हार्ट अटैक, शुगर और स्ट्रोक का खतरा

Disclaimer: यह जानकारी रिसर्च स्टडीज और विशेषज्ञों की राय पर आधारित है. इसे मेडिकल सलाह का विकल्प न मानें. किसी भी नई गतिविधि या व्यायाम को अपनाने से पहले अपने डॉक्टर या संबंधित विशेषज्ञ से सलाह जरूर लें.

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Sensex gains 544 pts, Nifty ends near 24,000 as softer crude lifts market for third day, metal stocks lag

Sensex gains 544 pts, Nifty ends near 24,000 as softer crude lifts market for third day, metal stocks lag


BSE Sensex settled 544.15 points or 0.71 per cent higher at 76,808.48, while the NSE Nifty 50 advanced 135.25 points or 0.57 per cent to close at 23,989.15, touching an intraday high of 24,002.60.
| Photo Credit:
istock.com

Equity benchmarks extended their winning streak to a third consecutive session on Tuesday, supported by improving global risk sentiment after a preliminary US-Iran peace deal eased concerns over energy supply disruptions and pushed crude oil prices lower.

Vinod Nair, Head of Research at Geojit Investments, said domestic markets continued their recovery momentum amid growing optimism around a de-escalation in US-Iran tensions and softening crude oil prices.

Markets are now expecting a gradual reduction in geopolitical risks and smoother movement of global oil supplies through the Strait of Hormuz, a Bonanza analyst said.

BSE Sensex settled 544.15 points or 0.71 per cent higher at 76,808.48, while the NSE Nifty 50 advanced 135.25 points or 0.57 per cent to close at 23,989.15, touching an intraday high of 24,002.60.

The gains followed Monday’s strong rally, when the Sensex had surged 736.38 points and the Nifty 50 climbed 231 points.

Ponmudi R, CEO of Enrich Money, said the preliminary US-Iran peace agreement significantly reduced concerns over geopolitical instability and energy supply disruptions, helping improve global risk appetite and supporting equities.

“Investor sentiment remains measured ahead of the upcoming US Fed policy meeting, the first under the newly appointed Chair. While the benchmark interest rate is widely anticipated to hold steady, market participants will pay close attention to the forward guidance and commentary on the trajectory of monetary policy,” Nair said.

IT stocks lead gains; metals emerge as biggest drag

Broader markets also participated, with both the midcap and smallcap indices gaining modestly around 0.4 per cent each. Investor confidence improved further as the volatility index declined nearly 7 per cent to slip below the 14 mark.

Sectoral performance remained mixed. Realty and IT emerged as the top performers. Media, FMCG and oil & gas indices also ended higher, while banking and financial stocks provided moderate support to benchmark indices.

Metal stocks, however, witnessed sharp selling pressure and ended as the worst-performing sector. Market participants attributed the weakness to a pullback in global metal prices. Auto, pharma, healthcare, PSU bank and cement stocks also closed marginally lower.

HCL Tech, TCP lead gainers; Hindalco, JSW Steel top losers

Among Nifty 50 constituents, HCL Tech, Tata Consumer Products, NTPC, Bajaj Finserv and Hindustan Unilever led the gainers. Hindalco Industries, JSW Steel, Eicher Motors, Maruti Suzuki and InterGlobe Aviation were among the top losers.

Market breadth remained firmly positive. Of the 3,416 stocks traded on the National Stock Exchange, 1,956 advanced, 1,356 declined and 104 remained unchanged, indicating broader participation in the market rally. As many as 83 stocks touched their 52-week highs, while 28 hit fresh 52-week lows. Additionally, 124 stocks were locked in the upper circuit, compared with 64 that hit their lower circuit limits.

Midcaps, smallcaps see stock-specific action

Within the midcap space, Coforge, Suzlon Energy, SBI Cards, Prestige Estates Projects and ICICI Lombard General Insurance gained 3-4 per cent. On the downside, National Aluminium Company (NALCO), Groww, Vishal Mega Mart, Vodafone Idea and Exide Industries declined 2-4 per cent.

Among smallcaps, PG Electroplast, Aditya Birla Real Estate, Netweb Technologies, Brigade Enterprises and Chambal Fertilisers rallied 3-7 per cent, while Ramco Cements, Ather Energy, Ola Electric and Pine Labs fell up to 3 per cent.

On the BSE, Sonata Software was the standout performer, soaring 20 per cent. Lloyds Engineering Works and Embassy Developments advanced 8-12 per cent. GIC Re, Rain Industries and PTC Industries featured among the major laggards.

Brokerage firm Monarch Networth Capital maintained a constructive outlook on Indian equities, projecting the Nifty 50 to rise to 27,000-28,000 during CY2026, supported by earnings recovery, India’s structural growth story and a favourable monetary policy environment.

Global cues remained supportive throughout the session. Wall Street had rallied overnight, with the Nasdaq, S&P 500 and Dow Jones gaining 3.1 per cent, 1.7 per cent and 0.9 per cent, respectively, after investors welcomed the US-Iran agreement.

Asian markets largely ended positive, with Japan’s Nikkei 225 briefly crossing the 70,000 mark for the first time before paring gains following the Bank of Japan’s decision to raise its key interest rate to 1 per cent.

European indices were also trading in positive territory.

FIIs also turned net buyers on Monday for the first time this month, as falling crude oil prices and the rupee’s recovery provided support, Ankur Punj, MD & Business Head at Equirus Wealth, emphasised.

Rupee also appreciated for the third straight day. Separately, Jateen Trivedi, Vice President Research Analyst – Commodity and Currency at LKP Securities, said the rupee’s near-term trajectory will depend on the outcome of the US Federal Reserve’s policy decision and foreign institutional investor flows. He added that the technical outlook for the domestic currency remains positive as long as geopolitical developments continue to remain constructive.

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REUTERS/PAWAN KUMAR
Metal stocks emerged as the biggest drag on the market, with the Nifty Metal index declining 2.16 per cent to 12,800.35. The sell-off followed a sharp decline in aluminium prices on LME  after the US-Iran interim agreement eased concerns over supply disruptions.

Published on June 16, 2026



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Mixed impact for South Indian plantation exports due to West Asian turmoil: UPASI

Mixed impact for South Indian plantation exports due to West Asian turmoil: UPASI


(representative image) Tea exports during January–April declined by 18.9 per cent, from 86.08 million kg to 69.81 million kg, according to the Tea Board.
| Photo Credit:
REUTERS/AKILA JAYAWARDENA

The West Asian conflict has exposed the varying levels of dependence that South Indian plantation commodities have on the region’s markets, resulting in sharply contrasting export outcomes.

Tea exports suffered a steep decline due to conflict-affected destinations such as Iraq and the UAE, while cardamom exports defied expectations and posted exceptional growth. Pepper remains significantly exposed to the region, whereas coffee exports have largely escaped direct disruption due to their diversified market base.

The experience underscores the growing importance of export diversification, supply-chain flexibility and global market dynamics in safeguarding India’s plantation sector against geopolitical shocks, said R. Sanjith, secretary general of UPASI.

Tea shipments down 41%

Tea exports during January–April declined by 18.9 per cent, from 86.08 million kg to 69.81 million kg, according to the Tea Board. However, a closer examination reveals that exports to the conflict-affected region fell by as much as 41.0 per cent, significantly higher than the overall decline, Sanjith said.

Among the affected markets, exports to Iraq registered the sharpest contraction (67 per cent), followed by UAE (21 per cent). The comparatively lower decline in total tea exports suggests that the Indian tea industry was able to partially offset losses in its traditional West Asian markets by diversifying into alternative destinations and strengthening exports to other established markets.

Among the plantation commodities, cardamom exports exhibit the highest dependence on conflict-zone markets. However, export during January–March 2026 remained largely unaffected and, in fact, recorded an impressive growth of 216.22 per cent. Exports increased from 1,108 tonnes during January–March 2025 to 3,506 tonnes during the corresponding period in 2026. The bulk of this increase was driven by Saudi Arabia, whose imports of Indian cardamom rose by 201.39 per cent, from 398.8 tonnes to 1,202 tonnes.

Cardamom supply shortage

The resilience of cardamom exports can largely be attributed to supply-side constraints in competing origins, particularly Guatemala, the world’s largest producer and exporter of cardamom. Guatemala reportedly experienced a substantial crop decline of nearly 50 per cent owing to adverse climatic conditions and pest infestations. The resulting shortage in global supplies appears to have more than compensated for the logistical disruptions arising from the West Asian crisis, enabling Indian cardamom exports to expand significantly despite prevailing geopolitical uncertainties.

Pepper also exhibited considerable exposure, with exports to the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Oman accounting for around 44.46 per cent. Similarly, the UAE, Iraq, Iran, and Saudi Arabia collectively accounted for about 43.91 per cent of India’s tea exports.

Coffee was the notable exception. Exports to the region accounted for only 7.79 per cent of total coffee shipments, as the bulk of Indian coffee exports are destined for European markets and routed primarily through the Suez Canal or, alternatively, the Cape of Good Hope. Consequently, the sector remained relatively insulated from the direct trade disruptions experienced by other plantation commodities.

Published on June 16, 2026



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Social media ban for children spreading to more countries. Is India next?

Social media ban for children spreading to more countries. Is India next?



United Kingdom is the latest country to decide that children under 16 have no business being on social media. On June 15, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer confirmed at a Downing Street press conference that Britain would ban social media access for all children under 16, with legislation expected before the end of the year and the ban itself in place by early 2027. The announcement, reported by the New York Times, covered platforms including TikTok and Instagram, while leaving messaging services like WhatsApp outside the scope of the restrictions.

 


Britain joined what is rapidly becoming a global movement. Australia was first, enforcing its ban in December 2025. Malaysia and Indonesia followed in the months after. France, Spain, Greece, Canada, Denmark, and more than a dozen other countries are either legislating or actively drafting restrictions.

 


India has also made some moves. Two southern states have already announced restrictions, while the central government has signalled interest in scaling age-based access limits on social-media platforms for teenagers. However, there is no national policy yet and neither a clear timeline for one.


Social media ban in India


India’s first concrete action on this front came not from New Delhi but from two southern states. On March 6, Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka became the first states in the country to announce social media bans for children, though they drew the line at different ages and with different degrees of specificity.

 

In Andhra Pradesh, Chief Minister N. Chandrababu Naidu addressed the state assembly and committed to barring children below 13 from social media within 90 days, while leaving open the question of whether to extend the restriction to the 13 to 16 age bracket as well. In Karnataka, state government used its budget speech for 2026-27 to announce a ban for all children under 16.

 


What neither state announced alongside the ban was a plan for how it would actually work. As per an ET Education report, when asked how the restriction would be enforced across homes, schools, and colleges, former Karnataka CM, Siddaramaiah said the government would formulate a programme and announce it once finalised. TechCrunch also noted that the Karnataka government had not consulted technology companies before making the announcement, a detail that leaves the operational side of the ban without a clear shape.


National signals without national policy


At the federal level, the signals have been consistent but stop short of commitment. The central government’s Economic Survey for 2025-26, tabled in Parliament in January, flagged a direct link between high screen time and deteriorating mental health in the 15 to 24 age group, citing anxiety, sleep disorders, and declining attention spans as visible symptoms. The Survey specifically called for age-based access restrictions on online platforms and suggested cutting down on online teaching to reduce digital addiction.

 


Union Minister for Electronics and IT Ashwini Vaishnaw went further in February 2026, telling reporters at the India AI Impact Summit that the government had begun discussions with social media intermediaries on enforcing an age-based ban. “This is something which has now been accepted by many countries that age-based regulation has to be there,” Business Standard quoted him as saying. “It was part of our DPDP Act when we created this age-based differentiation on the content which is accessible to young people.”

 


That reference to the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 is significant. The DPDP Act already defines a child as anyone below 18, requires verifiable parental consent before platforms can process a child’s personal data, and prohibits targeted advertising and behavioural tracking of minors. Non-compliance invites penalties of up to Rs 200 crore. However, the DPDP Act is fundamentally a data governance statute. It assumes children will continue to use platforms and seeks to regulate what happens to their data, not whether they can access the platforms at all.

 


The Supreme Court has also been drawn into the debate. Petitions in cases including Zep Foundation versus Union of India and Child Rights Foundation versus Union of India, both from 2025, sought age-specific restrictions on children’s access to social media. The Court, rather than ordering a ban, deferred the question to the legislature, signalling that any national policy would need to come through Parliament rather than judicial intervention.


What the world is doing


The global direction is less ambiguous. Australia became the first country to enforce a sweeping ban when its Online Safety Amendment (Social Media Minimum Age) Act came into effect on December 10, 2025, blocking anyone under 16 from holding accounts on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok, X, YouTube, Reddit, Twitch, Threads, and Kick. Educational tools like Google Classroom and messaging apps like WhatsApp and YouTube Kids were excluded.

 


The law places the burden entirely on platforms, not on children or parents. Companies that fail to take “reasonable steps” to prevent underage access face fines of up to A$49.5 million, for serious or repeated breaches, according to a BBC report.

 


Malaysia joined the enforced category in June 2026, as reported by the Associated Press, requiring all platforms with at least 8 million users to implement age-verification systems and block users under 16 from creating accounts. Companies that fail to comply face penalties of up to 10 million ringgit, or roughly $2.5 million. Indonesia had moved in March 2026, banning children under 16 from what it classified as “high-risk platforms” including TikTok and YouTube.

 


Canada also introduced digital safety legislation in June 2026, that would bar children under 16 from social media unless platforms could demonstrate sufficient safeguards. As per the Associated Press, the bill also covers AI chatbots and creates a new regulator, the Digital Safety Commission of Canada.

 


Unlike other countries, Canada’s approach includes a pathway for platforms to earn exemptions by proving safety.


Besides, there have been proposals and announcements regarding social media restrictions across countries like France, Spain, Greece, Denmark, Brazil and more. As TechCrunch noted, the UK announcement brings the total number of countries that have either implemented or are actively legislating these restrictions to well over a dozen.


How enforcement actually works


The architecture of these bans shares a common logic: shift the compliance burden away from families and onto platforms. As the BBC’s report on the Australian model described, governments require what they call “age assurance technologies,” which include facial assessment scans, voice recognition, document-based ID verification, and age inference, a system that analyses a user’s online behaviour and interactions to estimate their age. Australia explicitly prohibits platforms from relying on simple self-certification, where a child can tick a box claiming to be 16.

 


Platforms in Australia have responded with different approaches. Meta, which owns Facebook, Instagram, and Threads, began closing accounts it identified as belonging to under-16s from December 4, 2025, and offered users who were mistakenly removed the option to verify their age through government ID or a video selfie. Snapchat offered bank accounts, photo ID, or selfies as verification options.

 


YouTube denied being a social media platform in order to resist inclusion, and Google reportedly considered a legal challenge before not following through. Snap also denied social media status. These definitional disputes are not trivial: they expose a genuine problem in enforcement, which is that the boundaries of what counts as “social media” are contested and exploitable.


How has this affected social media platforms


The commercial implications for social media companies are substantial, and the numbers tell a layered story. In Australia, the immediate accounting looked dramatic. Within the first month of the ban, regulators announced that platforms had collectively deactivated, removed, or restricted approximately 4.7 million accounts identified as belonging to children under 16. According to the BBC, Meta alone blocked roughly 550,000 accounts in the first days after the December 10 launch.

 


But critics question whether even the largest possible fines will function as genuine deterrents. The BBC’s report on the Australian ban quoted former Facebook executive Stephen Scheeler, who told the AAP news agency that “it takes Meta about an hour and 52 minutes to make A$50 million in revenue,” making even the maximum Australian penalty look less like a consequence and more like a rounding error in quarterly earnings. The pressure this creates on regulators to eventually escalate fines or enforcement mechanisms is significant.

 


The platforms are responding to the regulatory wave with a strategy that looks like managed retreat. Meta has rolled out what it calls Teen Accounts globally, a feature that automatically places users under 16 in restricted content modes with limited advertising, capping personalised ad targeting to only age and location data rather than behavioural profiles.

 


Meta expanded Teen Account protections to Facebook and Messenger internationally, following their earlier debut in markets including the US, UK, Australia, and Canada. The product is partly a defensive play: by offering a restricted experience, Meta pre-empts the argument that only a full ban can protect young users.


How will it affect social media platforms in India


When India banned TikTok in June 2020 along with 58 other Chinese applications, citing data security concerns, ByteDance reported financial losses of up to $500,000 per day according to a Reuters report citing the company’s Supreme Court filing. The platform was losing close to one million new users per day at the time of the ban, and six million download requests went unfulfilled. At the time of the ban, India represented the largest market for TikTok globally, with the platform having commanded over 600 million downloads in the country. ByteDance eventually shut its India operations down to a skeletal staff and never returned.

 


India’s top 100 TikTok influencers collectively lost an estimated Rs 120 crore in annual revenue, according to a report by The Indian Institute of Human Brands (IIHB).

 


A nationwide or even coordinated state-level social media ban for children in India would replicate elements of that dynamic, but at a different scale and with different stakes. India had approximately 900 million internet users at the end of 2025, according to a report by the Internet and Mobile Association of India, and a young, growing population that represents the most valuable long-term advertising market for every major global platform.


Removing or restricting access for the under-16 cohort would not cause the same immediate revenue collapse as the TikTok ban because these are largely not revenue-generating users in any significant direct sense. However, they are the pipeline. They are the users who form brand habits and platform loyalties that carry into adulthood. Losing access to that cohort during formative years carries long-term market implications that the platforms understand very well, which is why their opposition to bans is as vigorous as it is.


Why India is different


Supporters of a ban in India can point to a genuine and worsening problem. The central government’s Economic Survey noted a measurable deterioration in mental health among the 15 to 24 age group tied to high screen time. University vice-chancellors raised the alarm at a February 2026 conclave in Karnataka about digital addiction eroding academic performance and physical fitness.

 


But India’s circumstances are different enough from Australia’s or the UK’s that a direct policy transplant carries serious risks. The first and most fundamental is what Aparajita Bharti, Founding Partner at The Quantum Hub, described to ET Education as the “shared device” reality. In a very large proportion of Indian households, particularly outside major urban centres, a single smartphone is shared among multiple family members. A ban premised on individual account ownership and device-level age verification assumes a model of digital access that describes a minority of Indian households. Age verification through facial scans or government IDs requires that a child have a device registered to them, an account they own, and a platform that can reliably distinguish their usage from that of the adult whose phone they are borrowing. In rural and semi-urban India, none of these conditions reliably hold.

 


The educational dimension is equally complicated. As the Bar and Bench analysis of the Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh announcements noted, smartphones and social media in India are not purely recreational tools for many children. For first-generation learners in areas with poor infrastructure, digital access through a smartphone may be the primary or only window to educational content, career information, and basic digital literacy. A blanket ban that removes this access is not equivalent to what a similar ban achieves in countries where alternatives exist in abundance.

 


Dr. Victoria Nash, senior policy fellow at Oxford’s Internet Institute, made a related point in her comments to CNBC in April 2026: bans risk pushing children toward less regulated parts of the internet, where there are no safety filters at all. The evidence from Australia supports this concern. A BBC report documented how VPN downloads surged in Australia in the days before the ban took effect, as teenagers prepared to route around restrictions.

 


Teenagers also drew on fake birthdays, older siblings’ accounts, and even drew on their faces to fool facial recognition scans. A National Bureau of Economic Research working paper cited by Harvard’s Gazette found that nearly 75 percent of Australian 14 and 15-year-olds were not complying with the ban in its early months, in large part because they perceived so few others were doing so. A broader study found that 61 percent of under-16s reported “no or little change” in their social media use following the ban.


A different path: Safety by design


Sonia Livingstone, a social psychology professor and director of the Digital Futures for Children centre at the London School of Economics, explained to CNBC that there is an alternative framework known as “Safety by Design” that could be applied. This approach shifts responsibility away from users and onto platforms themselves, proposing that social media features be treated more like pharmaceutical products—meaning they would require rigorous premarket testing to prove their safety before being released.

 


As highlighted in CNBC’s report, Livingstone argues that such standards already exist across most consumer industries, and the lack of similar safeguards for social media represents a fundamental regulatory failure.

 


Concretely, this would mean legally forbidding specific addictive design elements: infinite scroll, which removes natural stopping points from feeds; “Quick Add” features on Snapchat that algorithmically suggest new contacts for teenagers; streak mechanics that create anxiety about daily engagement; and autoplay sequences that make it effortful to stop watching. Josh Golin, executive director of the non-profit Fairplay, told CNBC he would rather see “privacy and safety by design legislation rather than blanket bans,” including passing legislation to end personal data-driven advertising targeted at children, removing the financial incentive for platforms to engineer addictive experiences for young users.


The road ahead


The global direction is clear. Social media access for children is being restricted by governments at pace. The Australian model is being studied, adapted, and enforced in other regions.

 


The domestic situation is not so clear. Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh have announced bans without enforcement plans, while the central government has signalled intent without a clear timeline.

 


What India needs, before it announces a policy, is an accounting of its own conditions: the shared device problem, the digital literacy gap, the educational dependency on digital access, and the enforcement vacuum that turned Australia’s landmark legislation into a measure that the majority of affected teenagers ignored.

 


That is not an argument against protecting children from social media’s demonstrated harms. It is an argument for protecting them effectively, which is a considerably harder thing to do.



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RBI launches awareness campaign against cyber financial frauds

RBI launches awareness campaign against cyber financial frauds


RBI launched ‘RBI Reelathon 2026,’ a statewide campaign targeting students against cyber fraud.

In a first-of-its-kind initiative Reserve Bank of India (RBI), Thiruvananthapuram, has launched RBI Reelathon 2026, a state-wide mass awareness campaign targeting college students to combat the growing menace of cyber-enabled financial frauds.

Ravada Chandrasekhar, Director General of Police highlighted the alarming rise in cybercrimes and stressed that cyber fraud is no longer merely a technological issue but a serious social challenge affecting people across all sections of society.

The DGP cautioned against emerging cyber threats such as fraudulent investment schemes, digital arrest scams, illegitimate loan applications, fake job offers and mule account networks. Cybercriminals increasingly target young people through social engineering and misuse of digital platforms, he said.

Praveen Kumar Vasantha Ramachandran, Regional Director, RBI Thiruvananthapuram said Kerala has witnessed a sustained rise in cyber-enabled financial frauds, particularly those involving illegitimate loan applications and mule accounts. Highlighting the rationale behind the campaign, he said social media platforms have become the primary medium through which young people consume information and that RBI Reelathon seeks to leverage student creativity to create awareness content capable of reaching audiences far beyond conventional financial literacy campaigns.

RBI Reelathon 2026 is designed as a three-phase state-wide awareness initiative. During the first phase, awareness programmes on smart borrowing and safe digital banking will be conducted across approximately 150 colleges. The second phase will feature a reel-making competition in which students will create short videos on themes such as illegitimate loan applications, mule accounts, digital financial frauds and cyber hygiene. Following multiple rounds of evaluation, shortlisted entries will compete in a Gala Finale scheduled later this year.

Published on June 16, 2026



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