Reading Comprehension 2
Advanced skipping and keyword association techniques for tackling complex RC passages.
Advanced Skimming: The Keyword Association Method
In the previous lesson, we learned the "Zigzag" method. Now, we will look at Keyword Association. This is crucial for passages that are dense with details, like policy analyses, banking reports, or economic commentaries.
Instead of just skimming for nouns and verbs, look for Linkages:
- Cause → Effect words: (Due to, led to, because, sparked by, resulting in)
- Contrast words: (However, yet, unlike, despite, on the flip side, while)
- Sequence words: (First, eventually, then, finally, subsequently)
These words act as signposts. They tell you where the story changes direction.
Practice Passage 1 — The UPI Revolution and Financial Inclusion
Directions: Read the passage carefully and answer the questions given below. Certain words are given in bold to help you locate them while answering some questions.
The Passage
When the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) launched the Unified Payments Interface in April 2016, few anticipated the scale of transformation it would catalyse within a decade. Built on the Immediate Payment Service infrastructure, UPI allows any bank account holder with a smartphone to send and receive money instantly, at zero cost, using only a virtual payment address — eliminating the need to share sensitive account details. The architecture was open and interoperable by design: any bank, fintech, or third-party app could plug into the network, creating fierce but productive competition that drove user experience improvements at remarkable speed.
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Advanced Skimming: The Keyword Association Method
In the previous lesson, we learned the "Zigzag" method. Now, we will look at Keyword Association. This is crucial for passages that are dense with details, like policy analyses, banking reports, or economic commentaries.
Instead of just skimming for nouns and verbs, look for Linkages:
- Cause → Effect words: (Due to, led to, because, sparked by, resulting in)
- Contrast words: (However, yet, unlike, despite, on the flip side, while)
- Sequence words: (First, eventually, then, finally, subsequently)
These words act as signposts. They tell you where the story changes direction.
Practice Passage 1 — The UPI Revolution and Financial Inclusion
Directions: Read the passage carefully and answer the questions given below. Certain words are given in bold to help you locate them while answering some questions.
The Passage
When the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) launched the Unified Payments Interface in April 2016, few anticipated the scale of transformation it would catalyse within a decade. Built on the Immediate Payment Service infrastructure, UPI allows any bank account holder with a smartphone to send and receive money instantly, at zero cost, using only a virtual payment address — eliminating the need to share sensitive account details. The architecture was open and interoperable by design: any bank, fintech, or third-party app could plug into the network, creating fierce but productive competition that drove user experience improvements at remarkable speed.
The adoption curve was steep, but two external shocks supercharged it. The demonetisation of high-denomination currency notes in November 2016 created an overnight shortage of cash, compelling millions of urban traders, kirana stores, and consumers to experiment with digital payments out of necessity rather than choice. Then the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 made contactless transactions a public health preference, accelerating rural adoption in ways that years of financial literacy campaigns had failed to achieve. By 2023, UPI was processing over 10 billion transactions monthly, accounting for nearly 75 percent of all retail digital payments in India — a share larger than credit cards, debit cards, and net banking combined.
Yet the story of UPI is not simply one of urban middle-class convenience. The Jan Dhan–Aadhaar–Mobile (JAM) trinity provided the foundational architecture: Jan Dhan accounts brought unbanked populations into the formal financial system, Aadhaar provided a biometric identity layer that enabled digital authentication, and affordable mobile internet — powered by the entry of Jio in 2016 — put smartphones in the hands of rural and semi-urban populations at unprecedented scale. UPI built its last-mile reach on this infrastructure, enabling street vendors, migrant workers, and self-help group members to send remittances, receive government subsidies directly, and make payments without visiting a bank branch.
Nevertheless, genuine inclusion remains a work in progress. Transaction data reveals a pronounced urban-rural skew: the top five metropolitan cities still account for a disproportionate share of UPI transaction value, even if transaction volume is more evenly distributed. Feature phone users — still a significant segment in remote districts — are served by UPI 123PAY and USSD-based payments, but these interfaces are less intuitive and less widely adopted. Merchant onboarding in rural areas is uneven, and digital literacy barriers mean that elderly and semi-literate users remain vulnerable to fraud and phishing attacks that erode trust in the system. True financial inclusion through digital payments will require not just infrastructure but sustained education, consumer protection, and last-mile merchant support.
Questions
Q1. What is the primary focus of this passage?
(a) The technical architecture of the UPI payment system and its superiority over global rivals (b) The role of demonetisation in forcing India to adopt digital payments (c) The growth of UPI as a financial inclusion tool, its achievements, and remaining challenges (d) The competition between fintech companies and traditional banks in India's payments market (e) How the COVID-19 pandemic permanently changed consumer behaviour in India
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (c)
How to identify the primary focus: Map each paragraph. Para 1 = UPI's design and launch. Para 2 = adoption shocks and scale. Para 3 = JAM trinity and inclusion architecture. Para 4 = remaining inclusion gaps. The passage is clearly about UPI as an inclusion story — not just technology, not just demonetisation, not just COVID. Option (c) captures all four paragraphs.
| Option | Why correct/incorrect |
|---|---|
| (c) UPI growth as inclusion tool + achievements + challenges | Correct — covers the full arc of all four paragraphs |
| (a) Technical architecture + global comparison | Incorrect — architecture is briefly mentioned; no global comparison is made |
| (b) Demonetisation forcing digital payments | Incorrect — demonetisation is one detail in Para 2, not the focus |
| (d) Fintech vs banks competition | Incorrect — mentioned in Para 1 briefly, not the subject |
| (e) COVID permanently changing behaviour | Incorrect — COVID is one catalyst; the passage is broader |
Q2. According to the passage, which TWO external events significantly accelerated UPI adoption?
(a) The launch of Jio and the global financial crisis of 2008 (b) The demonetisation of 2016 and the COVID-19 pandemic of 2020 (c) The introduction of Aadhaar and the passage of the Payment and Settlement Systems Act (d) The COVID-19 pandemic and India's 2019 general elections (e) The demonetisation of 2016 and the rollout of 4G networks nationally
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b)
Para 2 explicitly identifies both shocks:
"two external shocks supercharged it. The demonetisation... in November 2016... Then the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020..."
This is a direct-fact question. The passage names both events by year and describes their specific effect.
| Option | Why correct/incorrect |
|---|---|
| (b) Demonetisation 2016 + COVID-19 2020 | Correct — directly stated in Para 2 |
| (a) Jio launch + 2008 financial crisis | Incorrect — Jio is mentioned in Para 3, not as an "adoption shock"; 2008 crisis not mentioned |
| (c) Aadhaar + Payment Act | Incorrect — Aadhaar is part of JAM infrastructure, not an "external shock" |
| (d) COVID + 2019 elections | Incorrect — 2019 elections not mentioned anywhere |
| (e) Demonetisation + 4G rollout | Partially correct (demonetisation yes), but 4G rollout is not cited as an "external shock" |
Q3. What does the word "catalyse" mean as used in Paragraph 1?
(a) To slow down or regulate a process (b) To initiate or accelerate a process or change (c) To document or measure a change (d) To oppose or resist a transformation (e) To replace one system with another entirely
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b)
Context from Para 1:
"...few anticipated the scale of transformation it would catalyse within a decade."
The author is saying UPI would bring about or speed up a large transformation. "Catalyse" (like a catalyst in chemistry) means to cause or accelerate a reaction or process.
Vocabulary builders — synonyms for catalyse: trigger, spark, accelerate, precipitate, propel
| Option | Why correct/incorrect |
|---|---|
| (b) Initiate or accelerate a process | Correct — catalyse means to set in motion or speed up |
| (a) Slow down or regulate | Incorrect — opposite meaning |
| (c) Document or measure | Incorrect — unrelated meaning |
| (d) Oppose or resist | Incorrect — opposite of what the passage implies |
| (e) Replace entirely | Incorrect — catalysing a transformation ≠ replacing one system |
Q4. What is the author's tone in the final paragraph of the passage?
(a) Triumphant — the author celebrates India's achievement as a global payments leader (b) Dismissive — the author argues that UPI has failed its rural users (c) Measured and cautionary — the author acknowledges progress but highlights persistent gaps (d) Pessimistic — the author believes digital financial inclusion is unachievable in India (e) Indifferent — the author presents statistics without any evaluative comment
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (c)
Para 4 opens with a contrast signal:
"Nevertheless, genuine inclusion remains a work in progress."
The word "Nevertheless" signals the author is about to qualify the success described in Paras 1–3. The author then lists real problems (urban-rural skew, feature phone limitations, fraud vulnerability) but ends with a constructive suggestion: "will require not just infrastructure but sustained education, consumer protection, and last-mile merchant support."
This is neither triumphant nor pessimistic — it is cautionary and realistic. Option (c).
| Option | Why correct/incorrect |
|---|---|
| (c) Measured and cautionary — progress + persistent gaps | Correct — "Nevertheless... remains a work in progress" signals this tone |
| (a) Triumphant | Incorrect — Para 4 explicitly lists failures |
| (b) Dismissive / UPI has failed | Incorrect — too strong; author acknowledges progress earlier |
| (d) Pessimistic | Incorrect — the author offers a path forward, not hopelessness |
| (e) Indifferent | Incorrect — "genuine inclusion remains a work in progress" is evaluative |
Q5. Which of the following can be concluded from the passage about the relationship between the JAM trinity and UPI's reach?
(a) JAM was created specifically to support UPI and had no independent purpose before 2016. (b) Without the Jan Dhan accounts, Aadhaar authentication, and affordable mobile internet, UPI's penetration into rural and unbanked populations would have been severely limited. (c) The JAM trinity made UPI adoption mandatory for all bank account holders in India. (d) Jio's entry in 2016 was the sole factor responsible for rural UPI adoption. (e) The JAM trinity eliminated all barriers to financial inclusion by the time UPI was launched.
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b)
Inference chain from Para 3: Passage states → "The Jan Dhan–Aadhaar–Mobile (JAM) trinity provided the foundational architecture" → Jan Dhan = brought unbanked into system, Aadhaar = identity layer, Mobile internet = smartphones at scale → "UPI built its last-mile reach on this infrastructure."
Logic: UPI relied on JAM as its foundation. Without JAM, the unbanked and rural population would not have had accounts, identity verification, or affordable smartphones — so UPI's rural penetration would have been limited. This is (b).
| Option | Why correct/incorrect |
|---|---|
| (b) Without JAM, UPI's rural penetration would be severely limited | Correct — JAM is called the "foundational architecture" UPI built upon |
| (a) JAM was created specifically for UPI | Incorrect — Jan Dhan and Aadhaar predated and were independent of UPI |
| (c) JAM made UPI mandatory | Incorrect — no such compulsion is mentioned |
| (d) Jio alone responsible for rural adoption | Incorrect — Jio is one part of the JAM trinity; the passage credits all three components |
| (e) JAM eliminated all barriers | Incorrect — Para 4 explicitly says inclusion "remains a work in progress" |
Q6. Which of the following statements about UPI is TRUE according to the passage?
(a) UPI requires users to share their full bank account number to complete a transaction. (b) By 2023, UPI processed over 10 billion transactions per month, representing about 75 percent of retail digital payments. (c) UPI was launched by the Reserve Bank of India in 2018. (d) Credit cards account for a larger share of retail digital payments than UPI in India. (e) UPI 123PAY was designed exclusively for metropolitan users.
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b)
Check each option:
- (a) False — Para 1 says UPI uses "only a virtual payment address — eliminating the need to share sensitive account details."
- (b) True — Para 2: "By 2023, UPI was processing over 10 billion transactions monthly, accounting for nearly 75 percent of all retail digital payments."
- (c) False — Para 1: UPI was launched in April 2016 by NPCI, not RBI in 2018.
- (d) False — Para 2: UPI's share is "larger than credit cards, debit cards, and net banking combined."
- (e) False — Para 4: UPI 123PAY serves feature phone users in remote districts, not metropolitan users.
| Option | Why correct/incorrect |
|---|---|
| (b) 10 billion/month, 75% of retail digital payments | Correct — directly stated in Para 2 |
| (a) Requires sharing account number | Incorrect — passage says account details are not needed |
| (c) Launched by RBI in 2018 | Incorrect — launched by NPCI in 2016 |
| (d) Credit cards have larger share | Incorrect — UPI's share is larger than credit cards, debit cards, and net banking combined |
| (e) UPI 123PAY for metropolitan users | Incorrect — it serves remote/feature phone users |
Q7. What does "authentication" mean as used in Paragraph 3?
(a) The process of recording a financial transaction (b) The process of verifying or confirming a person's identity (c) The act of opening a bank account for the first time (d) The transfer of money between two accounts (e) The encryption of personal data to prevent hacking
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b)
Context from Para 3:
"Aadhaar provided a biometric identity layer that enabled digital authentication..."
Aadhaar stores biometric data (fingerprints, iris scans) and is used to verify that a person is who they claim to be before granting access to services. "Authentication" = confirming identity.
Vocabulary builders — synonyms for authentication: verification, validation, identification, confirmation
| Option | Why correct/incorrect |
|---|---|
| (b) Verifying or confirming a person's identity | Correct — Aadhaar's biometric layer confirms who the user is |
| (a) Recording a transaction | Incorrect — that would be "documentation" or "logging" |
| (c) Opening a bank account | Incorrect — that is "enrolment" or "account creation" |
| (d) Transfer of money | Incorrect — that describes a payment, not authentication |
| (e) Encryption of personal data | Incorrect — encryption protects data; authentication verifies identity |
Practice Passage 2 — Non-Performing Assets in Indian Banking
Directions: Read the following passage carefully and answer the questions given below. Certain words are given in bold to help you locate them while answering some questions.
The Passage
A Non-Performing Asset, or NPA, is a loan or advance on which the borrower has not made interest or principal repayments for a period of 90 days or more. When banks lend money and those loans stop generating income, they are reclassified from "standard assets" to non-performing assets — a transition that has significant implications for a bank's balance sheet, profitability, and capital adequacy. The Reserve Bank of India mandates that banks set aside provisions against NPAs, meaning a portion of a bank's capital is frozen and unavailable for fresh lending. A bank burdened by high NPAs therefore faces a double constraint: it earns less interest income on its loan book and is forced to lock away capital as a buffer, creating a spiral that can choke credit growth across the entire economy.
India's NPA crisis reached crisis proportions between 2015 and 2019, when the gross NPA ratio of public sector banks peaked at over 14 percent — meaning roughly one in every seven rupees lent by government-owned banks had gone bad. The roots lay partly in the infrastructure and steel lending binge of the mid-2000s, when banks — many of them state-owned — disbursed large loans to promoter-heavy conglomerates on the basis of optimistic project forecasts that failed to materialise. Poor credit appraisal, political pressure to fund flagship projects, and inadequate monitoring of loan end-use created a toxic brew. When commodity prices collapsed globally and infrastructure projects stalled, borrowers defaulted en masse, and banks found themselves holding large positions in companies that could neither repay nor restructure their debt easily.
The government and the RBI responded with a multi-pronged remediation strategy. The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), enacted in 2016, provided a time-bound legal framework to resolve stressed assets — shifting the balance of power from recalcitrant promoters to creditors and giving banks a credible threat of resolution proceedings to incentivise settlements. The Asset Quality Review of 2015–16 forced banks to recognise hidden NPAs that had been masked by evergreening — the practice of rolling over loans to avoid classification. Simultaneously, public sector banks received capital infusions through the Indradhanush programme and later the ₹2.11 lakh crore bank recapitalisation plan, rebuilding their capital buffers.
By 2023, the gross NPA ratio of scheduled commercial banks had declined to below 4 percent — a remarkable recovery by any measure. Credit growth rebounded, bank profitability returned to multi-year highs, and several public sector banks were re-rated by credit agencies. Yet observers caution that the cleanup was achieved partly through technical resolution under IBC and partly through write-offs that remove NPAs from the balance sheet without necessarily recovering money from borrowers. The underlying governance gaps — political influence over lending decisions in public sector banks, weak independent boards, and insufficient risk culture — have not been fully addressed. A future credit cycle could reopen the same wounds unless structural reforms in bank governance are pursued alongside the balance sheet repairs already achieved.
Questions
Q8. According to the passage, what is the most precise definition of a Non-Performing Asset?
(a) Any loan on which the borrower has missed a single instalment payment (b) A loan or advance where repayment of interest or principal has not been made for 90 days or more (c) A bank investment that has declined in market value by more than 10 percent (d) A loan disbursed to a company that subsequently files for bankruptcy (e) Any asset held by a bank that does not generate income, including equity investments
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b)
Para 1 opens with the definition:
"A Non-Performing Asset... is a loan or advance on which the borrower has not made interest or principal repayments for a period of 90 days or more."
Direct-fact question — go to the first sentence of Para 1 and match exactly.
| Option | Why correct/incorrect |
|---|---|
| (b) 90 days or more, interest or principal unpaid | Correct — exact match with Para 1 definition |
| (a) Single missed instalment | Incorrect — one missed payment does not create an NPA; 90 days is the threshold |
| (c) Market value decline of 10% | Incorrect — NPAs are about repayment failure, not market price |
| (d) Borrower files for bankruptcy | Incorrect — NPA classification precedes and is separate from bankruptcy |
| (e) Any non-income-generating asset | Incorrect — too broad; NPAs are specifically loans/advances, not equity |
Q9. What does the word "binge" mean in the context of Paragraph 2?
(a) A careful, phased approach to lending (b) A period of excessive or unrestrained activity (c) A formal review process for loan approvals (d) A shortfall in available capital for lending (e) A strategy for recovering bad loans
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b)
Context from Para 2:
"...infrastructure and steel lending binge of the mid-2000s, when banks... disbursed large loans to promoter-heavy conglomerates on the basis of optimistic project forecasts..."
The author is describing a period when banks lent recklessly and in excess — driven by optimism rather than caution. "Binge" captures this sense of excessive, unrestrained behaviour.
Vocabulary builders — synonyms for binge (in this sense): spree, splurge, excess, indulgence, frenzy
| Option | Why correct/incorrect |
|---|---|
| (b) Excessive or unrestrained activity | Correct — banks lent excessively with poor discipline |
| (a) Careful, phased lending | Incorrect — opposite; the passage describes the opposite of caution |
| (c) Formal review process | Incorrect — the passage implies reviews were absent or weak |
| (d) Shortfall in capital | Incorrect — a shortfall is the opposite of a binge |
| (e) Strategy for recovering bad loans | Incorrect — that describes remediation, not the cause |
Q10. What is the author's primary purpose in Paragraph 3?
(a) To criticise the government for acting too slowly on the NPA crisis (b) To describe the measures taken by the government and RBI to address the NPA problem (c) To explain why the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code was inadequate (d) To argue that bank recapitalisation alone can resolve the NPA problem (e) To compare India's NPA resolution with international best practices
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b)
Para 3 begins: "The government and the RBI responded with a multi-pronged remediation strategy."
The entire paragraph then lists the measures: IBC, Asset Quality Review, capital infusions through Indradhanush and recapitalisation. The purpose is to describe government/RBI actions — not to criticise them, not to compare internationally, and not to argue one measure is sufficient.
| Option | Why correct/incorrect |
|---|---|
| (b) Describe government and RBI measures to address NPAs | Correct — the paragraph lists remediation steps |
| (a) Criticise government for slow action | Incorrect — no criticism of timing in Para 3 |
| (c) Explain why IBC was inadequate | Incorrect — IBC is presented as a key solution, not a failure |
| (d) Argue recapitalisation alone is enough | Incorrect — multiple measures are listed; Para 4 later questions sufficiency |
| (e) Compare with international practices | Incorrect — no international comparison is made |
Q11. Which of the following can be inferred from the passage about the practice of "evergreening"?
(a) Evergreening is a legal method banks use to improve their credit ratings. (b) Evergreening masked the true scale of the NPA problem by allowing banks to defer recognising bad loans. (c) Evergreening was introduced by the RBI as a temporary relief measure during the 2008 financial crisis. (d) Evergreening exclusively affected private sector banks in India. (e) The Asset Quality Review endorsed evergreening as an acceptable banking practice.
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b)
Inference chain from Para 3: Passage says → "The Asset Quality Review of 2015–16 forced banks to recognise hidden NPAs that had been masked by evergreening — the practice of rolling over loans to avoid classification."
Logic: If evergreening hides NPAs by rolling over loans to avoid classification, and the Asset Quality Review had to "force" banks to recognise hidden NPAs, then evergreening was masking the true scale of the NPA problem. This is option (b).
| Option | Why correct/incorrect |
|---|---|
| (b) Evergreening masked the true NPA scale | Correct — passage says NPAs were "hidden" and "masked" by evergreening |
| (a) Legal method to improve credit ratings | Incorrect — the passage implies it was problematic, not a legitimate tool |
| (c) Introduced by RBI during 2008 crisis | Incorrect — not stated; the AQR 2015–16 was designed to expose and end it |
| (d) Only affected private sector banks | Incorrect — context is public sector banks; no exclusive private sector link stated |
| (e) AQR endorsed evergreening | Incorrect — AQR was designed to counteract evergreening |
Q12. Which of the following statements is TRUE according to the passage?
(a) India's gross NPA ratio peaked at over 14 percent between 2015 and 2019 for public sector banks. (b) The IBC was enacted in 2019, three years after the Asset Quality Review. (c) By 2023, the gross NPA ratio of scheduled commercial banks had risen above 10 percent. (d) The Indradhanush programme involved writing off all NPAs from public sector bank balance sheets. (e) Private sector banks in India were equally affected by the NPA crisis of 2015–2019.
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (a)
Checking each option:
- (a) True — Para 2: "...gross NPA ratio of public sector banks peaked at over 14 percent" between "2015 and 2019." ✓
- (b) False — Para 3: "The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), enacted in 2016..." — not 2019.
- (c) False — Para 4: "By 2023, the gross NPA ratio... had declined to below 4 percent."
- (d) False — Indradhanush was a capital infusion programme (rebuilding capital buffers), not a write-off scheme.
- (e) False — The passage discusses public sector/government-owned banks specifically; private sector banks are not mentioned.
| Option | Why correct/incorrect |
|---|---|
| (a) NPA peaked over 14% for public sector banks 2015–2019 | Correct — directly stated in Para 2 |
| (b) IBC enacted 2019 | Incorrect — passage says 2016 |
| (c) NPA ratio above 10% in 2023 | Incorrect — passage says below 4% |
| (d) Indradhanush = write-off scheme | Incorrect — it was a capital infusion programme |
| (e) Private banks equally affected | Incorrect — passage focuses on public sector banks |
Q13. What does the word "remediation" mean as used in Paragraph 3?
(a) The act of studying or researching a problem (b) The process of correcting or fixing a problem (c) The act of ignoring a problem until it resolves itself (d) The process of reporting a problem to a higher authority (e) A financial penalty imposed on banks for poor lending
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b)
Context from Para 3:
"The government and the RBI responded with a multi-pronged remediation strategy."
The paragraph that follows lists actions taken to fix the NPA crisis: IBC, Asset Quality Review, capital infusions. "Remediation" means the process of remedying or correcting a problem.
Vocabulary builders — synonyms for remediation: correction, resolution, rectification, rehabilitation, cure
| Option | Why correct/incorrect |
|---|---|
| (b) Process of correcting or fixing a problem | Correct — multi-pronged strategy to fix the NPA crisis |
| (a) Studying or researching | Incorrect — the AQR involved some analysis, but "remediation" refers to the fixing actions |
| (c) Ignoring the problem | Incorrect — opposite meaning |
| (d) Reporting to higher authority | Incorrect — unrelated meaning |
| (e) Financial penalty on banks | Incorrect — the measures described are supportive (capital infusions), not punitive |
Q14. Which of the following best describes the author's view about the sustainability of India's NPA recovery by 2023?
(a) The recovery is complete and durable because IBC and recapitalisation have permanently fixed governance in public sector banks. (b) The recovery is impressive in numbers but fragile because underlying governance problems remain unresolved. (c) The recovery is illusory — the gross NPA ratio is still too high for banks to lend profitably. (d) The recovery is entirely due to write-offs and therefore does not represent real improvement. (e) The recovery will reverse unless India completely privatises its public sector banks.
Answer & Explanation
Answer: (b)
Para 4's concluding lines:
"Yet observers caution that the cleanup was achieved partly through technical resolution under IBC and partly through write-offs... The underlying governance gaps... have not been fully addressed. A future credit cycle could reopen the same wounds unless structural reforms... are pursued."
The author acknowledges the NPA ratio falling to below 4% is "remarkable" — so the recovery is real. But the caution about "governance gaps" and the risk of wounds "reopening" signals fragility. This is option (b): impressive in numbers but fragile.
| Option | Why correct/incorrect |
|---|---|
| (b) Impressive but fragile — governance gaps remain | Correct — author says "remarkable recovery" but "could reopen the same wounds" |
| (a) Complete and durable | Incorrect — author explicitly says governance gaps "have not been fully addressed" |
| (c) Recovery is illusory | Incorrect — too strong; author calls it "remarkable" |
| (d) Entirely due to write-offs | Incorrect — passage says "partly through write-offs" and "partly through IBC" |
| (e) Requires full privatisation | Incorrect — privatisation is not mentioned or implied in the passage |
Summary Cheat Sheet
| Concept / Topic | Key Details / Explanation |
|---|---|
| Keyword Association Method | Advanced skimming: actively look for logical linkages between sentences, not just nouns/verbs |
| Cause → Effect words | Due to, led to, because, resulting in — signal why something happened |
| Contrast words | However, yet, nevertheless, despite, on the flip side — signal a direction change |
| Sequence words | First, eventually, then, finally, subsequently — signal chronological order |
| "Primary focus" questions | Must span all paragraphs — a narrow option covering one paragraph is wrong |
| "Author's purpose" questions | Look at how the paragraph is structured — list of measures = descriptive; pros + cons = balanced |
| Tone in closing paragraphs | "Nevertheless... remains a work in progress" = cautionary; "could reopen wounds" = cautiously pessimistic |
| Catalyse → trigger or accelerate | Synonyms: spark, precipitate, propel, set in motion |
| Authentication → verifying identity | Synonyms: verification, validation, confirmation |
| Binge → excessive/unrestrained activity | Synonyms: spree, splurge, frenzy, indulgence |
| Remediation → correcting a problem | Synonyms: correction, resolution, rectification, rehabilitation |
| NPA definition | Loan/advance with no repayment (interest or principal) for 90+ days |
| Evergreening | Rolling over loans to avoid NPA classification — masks true bad loan scale |
| JAM trinity | Jan Dhan + Aadhaar + Mobile internet — foundational infrastructure UPI built on |
| UPI 2023 stat | 10+ billion transactions/month; ~75% of retail digital payments |
| India NPA peak | 14%+ for public sector banks (2015–2019); recovered to below 4% by 2023 |
| Inference questions | Chain: Passage says X → therefore Y. Never go beyond what the passage implies. |
| True/False strategy | Verify every option against exact passage lines; one wrong detail makes the whole option false |
| Vocabulary-in-context | Read the full sentence; use surrounding clues (lists, contrast words) to pin down meaning |
| Common trap — Partial truth | An option correct in one detail but wrong in another detail is still wrong overall |
| Common trap — Too strong | Words like "entirely," "solely," "permanently," "completely" are almost always wrong unless the passage uses identical language |
| Common trap — Out of scope | Real-world knowledge not mentioned in the passage cannot be used to select an answer |
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