> ## Documentation Index
> Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.upscyatra.in/llms.txt
> Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

# UPSC Mains GS Paper III: Economy & Security Syllabus

> UPSC Mains GS Paper III syllabus — 250 marks. Covers economy, agriculture, science & technology, environment, disaster management, and internal security.

GS Paper III is the most policy-dense paper in UPSC Mains. It covers the nuts and bolts of how India's economy functions, how the state manages its natural resources and environment, how technology is reshaping governance and security, and what internal and external threats challenge India's stability. Where GS Paper II tests your knowledge of how institutions are designed, GS Paper III tests your understanding of how policies perform on the ground — their objectives, their outcomes, and their gaps. Strong answers on this paper combine economic data, policy specifics, and a critical evaluation of implementation challenges. A candidate who can cite GDP growth figures, explain a budget allocation, and assess why a scheme underdelivered will consistently outscore one who only describes what the scheme intends to do.

## Paper at a Glance

<Info>
  | Parameter            | Details                                                 |
  | -------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------- |
  | Total Marks          | 250                                                     |
  | Nature               | Descriptive (written answers)                           |
  | Duration             | 3 hours                                                 |
  | Number of Questions  | Approximately 20 (mix of 10-mark and 15-mark questions) |
  | Medium               | English or any 8th Schedule language                    |
  | Marks in Final Merit | Yes — counts toward 1,750 Mains total                   |
</Info>

***

## Syllabus Sections

### Indian Economy — Planning, Growth, Development and Employment

This is the largest single block in GS Paper III and consistently the source of the most questions.

**Economic Planning and Development**

* Five-Year Plans: Their evolution from Soviet-style planning to NITI Aayog's rolling plans; shift from plan expenditure to non-plan structure post-2017
* Inclusive Growth: Meaning, measurement challenges; NITI Aayog's Multidimensional Poverty Index; SDG progress; Human Development Index and India's rank

**Budgeting and Fiscal Policy**

* Union Budget: Revenue vs. capital expenditure; fiscal deficit, primary deficit, revenue deficit — definitions and targets (FRBM Act)
* Taxation: GST — dual structure, GST Council, input tax credit, compensation cess; direct tax reform (new tax regime)
* Disinvestment and Public Sector: Objectives, methods (strategic sale vs. minority disinvestment), recent transactions

**Agriculture and Food Security**

* Land Reforms: Zamindari abolition; tenancy reforms; land ceiling acts; relevance today (land fragmentation, absentee landlordism)
* Agricultural Marketing: APMC Acts and their reform; e-NAM; Farmer Producer Organisations (FPOs); contract farming; e-technology in the aid of farmers — mobile advisory services, drone-based crop monitoring, precision agriculture platforms
* Food Security: National Food Security Act (2013); PDS — challenges and reforms (DBT, portability); buffer stock norms; food inflation management; economics of animal-rearing
* Food Processing: Food processing and related industries in India — scope and significance; upstream and downstream requirements; supply chain management; PM Kisan Sampada Yojana
* Irrigation: Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchayee Yojana; micro-irrigation (drip, sprinkler); water use efficiency
* Price Support Mechanisms: MSP — calculation methodology, Commission for Agricultural Costs & Prices (CACP); PM-AASHA; procurement operations
* PM-KISAN, PM Fasal Bima Yojana, Soil Health Card Scheme — objectives and implementation gaps

**Industry and Liberalisation**

* Industrial Policy: From Licence Raj to liberalisation (1991 reforms) — causes, components, consequences
* Make in India, PLI Schemes: Sector-wise targets; outcomes in electronics, pharmaceuticals, semiconductors
* MSME Sector: Its contribution to employment and exports; challenges (credit, formalisation, technology); Udyam registration; Emergency Credit Line Guarantee Scheme

**Employment**

* Labour Market: Periodic Labour Force Survey data; gig economy; Social Security Code (2020); formalisation vs. informalisation debate
* Unemployment types: Structural, frictional, disguised (agricultural sector)

<Tip>
  Use UPSCYatra's **Government Schemes** section to cover welfare and economy schemes comprehensively. Many schemes span both GS Paper II (social justice) and GS Paper III (economy, agriculture) — tagging them by paper will prevent duplication in your preparation and help you frame answers from the right angle in the exam.
</Tip>

***

### Infrastructure

Infrastructure is a direct enabler of economic growth, and UPSC tests both the policy framework and the financing models that drive investment.

* **Energy**: India's energy mix (coal-dominated); renewable energy targets (500 GW by 2030); solar and wind capacity additions; Green Hydrogen Mission; National Smart Grid Mission; energy access (Saubhagya, UJALA)
* **Ports and Shipping**: Sagarmala project; port-led development; coastal shipping as alternative to road/rail; major vs. minor ports — jurisdiction and governance
* **Roads**: Bharatmala Pariyojana; National Highways Development Programme phases; toll-operate-transfer model; road safety policy
* **Airports**: UDAN (regional connectivity) scheme; monetisation of airport assets; drone policy and airspace management
* **Railways**: Dedicated Freight Corridors; station redevelopment; Vande Bharat trains; rail land monetisation; private entry in passenger trains; high-speed rail
* **Investment Models**: Public-Private Partnership (PPP) models — BOT, BOOT, HAM (Hybrid Annuity Model); National Infrastructure Pipeline; National Monetisation Pipeline; Gati Shakti Master Plan

***

### Science and Technology

This section is dynamic — UPSC regularly updates the questions to reflect cutting-edge developments. Conceptual understanding is more valued than deep technical knowledge.

**India's S\&T Achievements**

* Space: ISRO milestones — Chandrayaan-3 (lunar south pole), Aditya-L1 (solar observatory), Gaganyaan (human spaceflight); commercial space policy and IN-SPACe; NSIL; future missions
* Defence: DRDO achievements; missile systems (Agni series, BrahMos, Pralay); ATAGS howitzer; indigenous aircraft carrier INS Vikrant; DefExpo
* Nuclear: Three-stage nuclear programme (thorium cycle); civilian nuclear deals; nuclear doctrine (No First Use)

**Emerging Technologies**

* **Artificial Intelligence**: India AI Mission; National AI Strategy; ethical concerns (bias, surveillance, job displacement); applications in governance (fraud detection, crop monitoring)
* **Biotechnology**: Genome India Project; Bt crops debate; gene editing (CRISPR-Cas9); synthetic biology; biosafety regulations
* **Nanotechnology**: Applications in medicine (drug delivery, diagnostics), materials science, and energy
* **Robotics and Automation**: Industrial automation impact; collaborative robots; India's robotics policy gaps
* **Quantum Computing**: India's National Quantum Mission; potential applications in cryptography, drug discovery, materials simulation
* **IT and Digital Economy**: Digital Public Infrastructure (UPI, Aadhaar, DigiLocker — India Stack); Semiconductor Mission; Data Protection Act (DPDP Act 2023); cybersecurity framework

**Intellectual Property Rights**

* TRIPS Agreement; India's patent law (Section 3d of the Patents Act and Novartis case); compulsory licensing; geographical indications (GI tags); copyright and digital content

***

### Environment, Ecology, Biodiversity and Climate Change

This section overlaps with Prelims GS but demands policy-level depth for Mains answers.

* **Conservation**: Protected area network (National Parks, Wildlife Sanctuaries, Biosphere Reserves, Tiger Reserves, Elephant Reserves); Project Tiger and Project Elephant — achievements and challenges
* **Biodiversity**: Biological Diversity Act (2002); National Biodiversity Authority; ABS (Access and Benefit Sharing) mechanism; Nagoya Protocol
* **Environmental Pollution**: Air (NCAP targets, AQI, biomass burning, vehicular emissions); water (river rejuvenation — Namami Gange, NMCG); soil (heavy metal contamination, plastic pollution); noise and light pollution
* **Land and Forest Degradation**: Desertification; UNCCD; India's land degradation neutrality target; Forest Rights Act and forest governance
* **Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA)**: EIA Notification 2006 and proposed amendments; controversy around dilution of environmental safeguards; green clearance process
* **Climate Change Policy**: India's NDCs (Nationally Determined Contributions) under Paris Agreement; net zero by 2070 commitment; International Solar Alliance; Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure (CDRI); Loss and Damage fund (COP28)

***

### Disaster Management

* **Disaster Management Act (2005)**: NDMA, SDMA, DDMA — composition and powers; National Disaster Response Force (NDRF)
* **Types of Disasters**: Natural (earthquakes, floods, cyclones, droughts, landslides, tsunamis) and man-made (industrial accidents, nuclear, chemical, biological); India's vulnerability profile by disaster type
* **International Frameworks**: Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction (2015–2030) — four priorities, seven targets; India's contribution
* **Early Warning Systems**: Doppler radar network; cyclone early warning (IMD); flood forecasting (CWC); earthquake monitoring
* **Disaster-Resilient Infrastructure**: CDRI — India's initiative; build-back-better principle; climate adaptation in infrastructure planning

***

### Internal Security

* **Extremism and Left-Wing Extremism**: Naxal movement — geography, causes, government response (SAMADHAN strategy); declining area under LWE influence
* **Role of External State and Non-State Actors**: Cross-border terrorism; Pakistan-based groups; China's influence operations; proxy wars and hybrid warfare
* **Internal Security Challenges**: Insurgency in Northeast India (state-wise status, peace accords); Jammu & Kashmir — post-Article 370 security situation
* **Cyber Security**: India's National Cyber Security Policy; CERT-In; cyber threats (ransomware, phishing, critical infrastructure attacks); Budapest Convention debate
* **Border Management**: Smart fencing (CIBMS); coastal security post-26/11 (Sagar Kavach); border guarding agencies — BSF, ITBP, SSB, Coast Guard
* **Organised Crime**: Drug trafficking (India as transit country); money laundering (PMLA); hawala; linkages between organised crime and terrorism
* **Security Forces and Intelligence Agencies**: NIA — jurisdiction and powers; RAW and IB — their roles; challenges of intelligence sharing; police reforms (National Police Commission recommendations)
* **Communication Networks**: Encryption policy; social media as a tool for radicalisation; lawful interception

***

## Prepare Smarter

<Tip>
  The Economy and Internal Security sections of GS Paper III overlap heavily with government welfare schemes covered in GS Paper II. Use UPSCYatra's **Government Schemes** section, which tags each scheme by the relevant paper(s), to avoid double preparation and to frame your answers from the correct angle. For Science & Technology, bookmark ISRO's mission pages and PIB's science news — the most reliable source for exam-relevant developments.
</Tip>

<CardGroup cols={1}>
  <Card title="Mains GS Paper III — Previous Year Questions" icon="clock-rotate-left" href="/features/mains-pyq">
    Explore every Mains GS Paper III question, filtered by topic and year. Identify high-yield economy and security questions and study how toppers structure policy-focused answers.
  </Card>
</CardGroup>
