-5.7 C
New York
Tuesday, December 9, 2025
Home Blog

Ukraine developing new peace strategy as Zelensky refuses to relinquish territory

0

Reuters A Ukrainian soldier carrying a gun on patrol in Donetsk Reuters

While peace talks continue, so does fighting along the front line in eastern Ukraine

Ukraine is preparing to present a revised peace plan to the White House, as it seeks to avoid making territorial concessions to Russia.

Kyiv is set to propose alternatives to the US after President Volodymyr Zelensky again ruled out surrendering land, saying he had “no right” to do so under Ukrainian or international law.

He made the comments as he met European and Nato leaders on Monday, part of a collective push to deter the US from backing a peace deal which includes major concessions for Ukraine, and which allies fear would leave it vulnerable to a future invasion.

Meanwhile, the city of Sumy in north-western Ukraine was left without power overnight after a Russian drone attack.

The region’s governor said more than a dozen drones had hit power infrastructure, the latest in Russia’s nightly attacks. No deaths were reported.

Zelensky’s ongoing diplomatic tour of Europe comes after days of intensive talks between US and Ukrainian negotiators over the weekend, that failed to produce a deal Kyiv could agree to.

Zelensky was due to be briefed on that private summit on Monday by his chief aide Rustem Umerov, who wrote on Telegram that he would feed back details of direct talks between the US and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The Ukrainian president told a news conference that his team could send a new proposal to the Americans as soon as Tuesday, AFP news agency reported.

On the subject of surrendering land, Zelensky said: “Russia is insisting that we give up territories, but we don’t want to cede anything.”

He continued: “We have no legal right to do so, under Ukrainian law, our constitution and international law. And we don’t have any moral right either.”

Zelensky has long maintained that any changes to Ukraine’s borders would need to be authorised by a public referendum.

A map showing front line control in Ukraine

Elsewhere, he told reporters that the initial 28-point plan proposed by the US – and rejected by Kyiv and European leaders as being too favourable to Russia – had been cut down to 20 points, according to Interfax-Ukraine news agency.

He said no “pro-Ukrainian” points had been removed from the draft, though there had also been no “compromise” on the subject of territory.

Zelensky singled out control of the eastern Donbas region and the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant as being among the “most sensitive” issues.

The original leaked version of the US-backed plan proposed that Ukraine hand over total control of the Donbas to Russia, despite the fact that Kremlin forces have been unable to capture it in full after almost four years of war.

Energy produced at Zaporizhzhia, the largest nuclear power plant in Europe, would be split between Russia and Ukraine, the draft plan said.

Leaders in Kyiv and across Europe have indicated there has been progress in refining that draft in recent weeks, and have praised the Trump administration for seeking to mediate an end to the fighting.

But Monday’s hastily arranged Downing Street summit – attended by Zelensky, UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz – was widely viewed as a show of support for Ukraine as it seeks to resist White House pressure.

No 10 said there had been an agreement that the US-led talks represented a “critical moment” to ramp up support for Ukraine, and repeated calls for a “just and lasting peace… which includes robust security guarantees”.

EPA Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky, France's President Emmanuel Macron, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Germany's Chancellor Friedrich Merz on the steps of Downing StreetEPA

The nature of those future security guarantees are another open question in the negotiations.

Efforts continue to assemble an international coalition prepared to offer ongoing military support to Kyiv in the event of a peace deal, though it is not yet clear what form that would take.

While the UK and France have proposed deploying international troops in Ukraine, several key defence players in Europe, including Germany and Italy, have expressed scepticism about that idea.

It is also not clear to what extent the US would be willing to underpin any future defence arrangements for Ukraine.

Following talks in London, Zelensky flew to Brussels to meet Nato chief Mark Rutte and EU chief Ursula von der Leyen, and will meet Prime Minister Georgia Meloni in Italy on Tuesday.

Moscow has also claimed talks with the White House have been constructive, despite little public indication it has moved on any of the goals set out by the Kremlin when it launched its full-scale invasion in February 2022.

On Sunday, Trump indicated that he viewed Zelensky as the main obstacle to securing a peace deal, something he has made a key foreign policy goal and which the president claimed he would be able to achieve rapidly during the 2024 presidential election campaign.

He told reporters that Russia was “fine” with the peace plan outlined to both sides by the US, but that he was a “little disappointed that Zelensky hasn’t read it”.

Almost simultaneously, Zelensky said he was waiting to briefed by his chief negotiator Rustem Umerov who had just taken part in three days of discussions with his US counterparts in Miami.

“Some issues can only be discussed in person,” said Zelensky.

Google Cloud CEO reveals 3-step AI strategy following identification of it as the ‘most challenging issue’

0

The immense electricity needs of AI computing was flagged early on as a bottleneck, prompting Alphabet’s Google Cloud to plan for how to source energy and how to use it, according to Google Cloud CEO Thomas Kurian.

Speaking at the Fortune Brainstorm AI event in San Francisco on Monday, he pointed out that the company—a key enabler in the AI infrastructure landscape—has been working on AI since well before large language models came along and took the long view.

“We also knew that the the most problematic thing that was going to happen was going to be energy, because energy and data centers were going to become a bottleneck alongside chips,” Kurian told Fortune’sAndrew Nusca. “So we designed our machines to be super efficient.”

The International Energy Agency has estimated that some AI-focused data centers consume as much electricity as 100,000 homes, and some of the largest facilities under construction could even use 20 times that amount.

At the same time, worldwide data center capacity will increase by 46% over the next two years, equivalent to a jump of almost 21,000 megawatts, according to real estate consultancy Knight Frank.  

At the Brainstorm event, Kurian laid out Google Cloud’s three-pronged approach to ensuring that there will be enough energy to meet all that demand.

First, the company seeks to be as diversified as possible in the kinds of energy that power AI computation. While many people say any form of energy can be used, that’s actually not true, he said.

“If you’re running a cluster for training and you bring it up and you start running a training job, the spike that you have with that computation draws so much energy that you can’t handle that from some forms of energy production,” Kurian explained.

The second part of Google Cloud’s strategy is being as efficient as possible, including how it reuses energy within data centers, he added.

In fact, the company uses AI in its control systems to monitor thermodynamic exchanges necessary in harnessing the energy that has already been brought into data centers.

And third, Google Cloud is working on “some new fundamental technologies to actually create energy in new forms,” Kurian said without elaborating further.

Earlier on Monday, utility company NextEra Energy and Google Cloud said they are expanding their partnership and will develop new U.S. data center campuses that will include with new power plants as well.

Tech leaders have warned that energy supply is critical to AI development alongside innovations in chips and improved language models.

The ability to build data centers is another potential chokepoint as well. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang recently pointed out China’s advantage on that front compared to the U.S.

“If you want to build a data center here in the United States, from breaking ground to standing up an AI supercomputer is probably about three years,” he said at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in late November. “They can build a hospital in a weekend.”

One Hundred Nigerian Schoolchildren Freed Following Abduction

0

new video loaded: One Hundred Schoolchildren Released After Abduction in Nigeria

transcript

transcript

One Hundred Schoolchildren Released After Abduction in Nigeria

One hundred children who had been kidnapped from a Catholic school in northwestern Nigeria last month were released on Sunday. This is part of a larger trend of kidnappings in Nigeria, where victims are released in exchange for ransom.

“Medical checkup will be very, very critical for them. And then if anything is discovered, any laboratory investigation is conducted and something is discovered, definitely they will need health care.” My excitement is that we have these children, 100 of them, and by the grace of God, we are expecting the remaining half to be released very soon.”

One hundred children who had been kidnapped from a Catholic school in northwestern Nigeria last month were released on Sunday. This is part of a larger trend of kidnappings in Nigeria, where victims are released in exchange for ransom.

By Jamie Leventhal

December 8, 2025

Iconic D.C. punk band Bad Brains signs wide-ranging music rights deal with Trust Records, headed by Matt Pincus

0

Matt Pincus launched a company called Trust Records (alongside co-founder Joe Nelson) in 2020 with a focused mission: to promote, preserve, and protect classic punk and hardcore music.

Now, Trust Records has struck one of its most significant deals to date: an “intellectual property partnership” with influential punk band Bad Brains.

The deal between the band and Trust covers all IP controlled by Bad Brains, including their publishing rights, master recording rights, name and likeness, trademark and visual IP. The deal also includes administration and distribution of the majority of the catalog, including the band’s classic, seminal first-run titles.

This includes the band’s self-titled debut album as well as records Rock For Light, I Against I, and Quickness.

Formed in 1978, the legendary Washington, D.C. band blended fast-paced hardcore punk with reggae and dub, pioneering a sound that has influenced countless artists from Rage Against The Machine and Metallica to the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Foo Fighters.

Under the new deal, Trust Records says that it will continue to ensure that the band’s music is “available for generations to come”.

Matt Pincus, who the Wall Street Journal describes in this new interview about Trust Records and the Bad Brains deal as “The troubled youth turned punk rock label executive,” is well-known in the music industry as a successful entrepreneur, and as the bass player for New York hardcore band Judge.

Pincus founded SONGS Music Publishing in 2004, which signed The Weeknd, Diplo, and Lorde before selling to Kobalt Capital for around $160 million in 2017.

After exiting SONGS, Pincus launched MUSIC, a $200 million investment firm in partnership with Liontree, making strategic investments across music tech (Splice, HIFI, DICE), indie labels (LVRN), and B2B services (Soundtrack Your Brand).

He also launched Trust Records in 2020, “to give classic punk and hardcore records the home that they deserve”.

The company said in its press release about the Bad Brains deal on Monday (December 8), that “the great records of this genre sprung from DIY roots to influence millions of disaffected kids around the world”. It added: “as we now move into the ‘streaming age’, it’s crucial to keep their spirit and legacy alive.”

Trust Records’ catalog also includes 40th Anniversary Deluxe versions of Circle Jerks’ albums Group Sex, Wild in The Streets and 7Seconds’ 1984 “landmark” punk record, The Crew in addition to reissues of Youth Brigade’s Sound and Fury and DFL’s My Crazy Life, SSD’s The Kids Will Have Their Say, Ink & Dagger’s The Complete Works and more.

As part of the latest partnership, Trust Records has established an Artist Advisory Board, with Bad Brains’ bassist Darryl Jenifer serving as a member to help guide the company’s future creative vision.

The original Bad Brains lineup consisted of H.R. (vocals), Dr. Know (guitar), Darryl Jenifer (bass), and Earl Hudson (drums).

“TRUST’s love and knowledge of Bad Brains and the PMA ethos makes them a perfect match to partner with as we keep Bad Brains Sailin’ On.”

Darryl Jenifer, Bad Brains

“After 40 plus years of forging the spirit PMA through our brand of progressive punk rock aka Hardcore, I’m happy that Bad Brains will be sharing the wheel with TRUST in our ongoing quest to keep Bad Brains alive in the hearts and minds of our supporters as we step into the future,” said Bad Brains bassist, Darryl Jenifer.

“TRUST’s love and knowledge of Bad Brains and the PMA ethos makes them a perfect match to partner with as we keep Bad Brains Sailin’ On.  Stay tuned for what’s next to come. One love and a hefty dose of PMA.”

“It is the highest honor partner with Darryl and Bad Brains in the stewardship of their iconic work.”

Matt Pincus

“We started Trust Records to promote, preserve, and protect punk and hardcore music and the culture that surrounds it.” said Trust Records Founder, Matt Pincus.

He added: “Bad Brains is the absolute top of the mountain in punk and hardcore.  They taught the rest of us how to do it. It is the highest honor partner with Darryl and Bad Brains in the stewardship of their iconic work.

“Bad Brains’ are an iconic and legendary band whose impact on global culture cannot be overstated.”

Joe Nelson, Trust Records

Joe Nelson, Co-founder of Trust Records, said: “Bad Brains’ are an iconic and legendary band whose impact on global culture cannot be overstated.

“We are thrilled that they’ve chosen Trust Records as their home and we look forward to working with them to continue to build their fan base around the world.”Music Business Worldwide

Emanuel Steward ranks Muhammad Ali as the second greatest fighter of all time in his top 10 list.

0

When Emanuel Steward spoke, the boxing world tended to listen.

He passed away on October 25, 2012, aged 68, but left behind a legacy that will continue to be revered for generations. Famed for his work at Detroit’s world-renowned Kronk Gym, Steward guided countless fighters to world titles –– including Thomas Hearns, Lennox Lewis and Wladimir Klitschko –– and carved out an equally celebrated career as an HBO analyst alongside Jim Lampley and Max Kellerman.

A few months before his death, Steward was asked by journalist James Slater to name his top 10 fighters of all time. Lists of that nature are common, but some carry more weight than others –– and Steward’s certainly does.

From numbers 10 to 5, the legendary trainer selected Roberto Durán, Manny Pacquiao, Sam Langford, George Foreman and Marvelous Marvin Hagler, the latter having famously toppled Steward and Hearns in their 1985 war.

His top five featured exclusively American fighters from eras spanning the 1930s to the 1980s. Former heavyweight champion Joe “The Brown Bomber” Louis headed the group at No. 5, followed by featherweight maestro Willie Pep at No. 4. The bronze position went to Henry Armstrong, the only man ever to hold three world titles simultaneously, while “The Greatest,” Muhammad Ali, claimed the No. 2 spot.

At No. 1 sat the mesmeric fists and dancing feet of Sugar Ray Robinson, the former welterweight and middleweight champion widely regarded as the standard against which all others are measured.

Explaining his choice, Steward said:

“The best welterweight ever! A phenomenal record at a time when records were real!”

Robinson remains the consensus pick not only for Steward but for much of the boxing community. Once dubbed “The Mayor of Harlem,” he had it all –– natural fighting instincts, artistry, and a jaw-dropping résumé of 201 bouts, ending with 174 wins, fought from 1940 through his final victory in 1965.

ICEBlock, the agent-tracking app, files lawsuit against Trump administration in battle for free speech | Latest Donald Trump Updates

0

The Trump administration has accused ICEBlock of making federal agents vulnerable to attack and called for its removal.

The developer of a popular app used to monitor and share alerts about immigration enforcement activities has sued the administration of United States President Donald Trump for pressuring Apple to remove it.

ICEBlock, whose name refers to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), had one million users before it was dropped from Apple’s app store, according to a lawsuit filed on Monday.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

Developer Joshua Aaron alleged in the complaint that the Trump administration’s campaign against the tracking app amounted to a violation of free speech.

“When we see our government doing something wrong, it’s our duty as citizens of this nation to hold them accountable, and that is exactly what we’re doing with this lawsuit,” Aaron said in the lawsuit.

The suit calls on the district court system to protect the Texas-based software company from “unlawful threats” under the Trump administration.

It also names as defendants some of Trump’s highest-level officials, including Attorney General Pam Bondi, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and ICE’s acting director, Todd Lyons.

First released in April, ICEBlock quickly became a widely used tool across the US as communities sought ways to share information about immigration raids.

Since returning to office for a second term, Trump has pushed a campaign of mass deportation, targeting a wide range of immigrants, many of whom are in the country legally.

Those raids, many carried out by heavily armed immigration agents in military-style attire, have also faced repeated accusations of human rights abuses.

Critics have questioned the violence used in some arrests, as well as the ICE officers’ use of face masks and plainclothes to conceal their identities.

There have also been reports of inhumane conditions once immigrants are in custody, including overcrowding, a lack of sanitation and faeces-smeared walls.

Human rights advocates have also questioned the speed with which deportations are being carried out, claiming the immigrants arrested have no opportunity to exercise their due process rights and are often prevented from contacting lawyers.

Even US citizens have been accidentally detained in the immigration sweeps. Some immigrants have been deported despite court orders mandating that they remain in the US.

The Trump administration has faced fierce criticism and judicial rebukes for its tactics.

But it maintains that software like ICEBlock puts federal immigration agents in danger of retaliation.

“ICEBlock is designed to put ICE agents at risk just for doing their jobs, and violence against law enforcement is an intolerable red line,” Attorney General Bondi has said.

In October, ICEBlock was pulled from Apple’s app store, a popular platform for downloading mobile software. The Justice Department confirmed that it had contacted Apple to push for the removal.

The lawsuit states that the tech company told Aaron the app had been removed following “information provided to Apple by law enforcement”.

Aaron has countered that the app is an exercise of essential free speech rights and is meant to help protect people from overbearing government activity.

“We’re basically asking the court to set a precedent and affirm that ICEBlock is, in fact, First Amendment-protected speech and that I did nothing wrong by creating it,” Aaron told The Associated Press news agency in an interview.

“I mean, these are people that are wearing masks — which is the antithesis of everything about this country — and they are not identifying themselves, and they’re zip-tying children, and they’re throwing women into vans.”

The Role of a Single Gene in Childhood Mental Illness

0

In a breakthrough study, scientists have discovered that a variant in one gene, GRIN2A, can directly cause mental illness – something previously believed to be the result of several mutations working together. What’s more, these conditions often present in childhood instead of more commonly during adulthood.

An international study led by the Institute of Human Genetics at the University of Leipzig Medical Center collected data from 235 individuals with known pathogenic GRIN2A variants, and were able to use 196 of the samples. Of these, 121 individuals had clear information about whether they had been diagnosed with a mental disorder. Although the full analysis was on people aged from one to 62 years, because it included parents and other relatives who were only tested after a child was diagnosed, the psychiatric findings come mainly from the originally diagnosed individuals, who were typically children and teenagers (cohort median age of 12 years).

They were split into 84 with GRIN2A “null” variants – which disrupt the gene entirely – and 37 with “missense” mutations, which alter but don’t totally knock out the protein. Among the null carriers, 23 out of 84 – 27.4% – had at least one mental illness, which is a significantly high number given the young average age of participants. These included 13 mood disorders, 12 anxiety disorders and eight psychotic disorders, with some individuals diagnosed with more than one condition. By contrast, only two out of 37 missense carriers had a mental disorder, indicating that the null variants are associated with roughly a six-fold increase in risk compared to those with slightly altered GRIN2A.

“Our current findings indicate that GRIN2A is the first known gene that, on its own, can cause a mental illness,” said lead author Professor Johannes Lemke, Director of the Institute of Human Genetics at the University of Leipzig Medical Center. “This distinguishes it from the polygenic causes of such disorders that have been assumed to date.”

To understand how unusual this level of risk is, the researchers compared their cohort to the country-wide Finnish population database FinRegistry of more than five million people. They restricted their analysis to childhood and early adolescence, because this is when symptoms appeared in the GRIN2A-null cohort (mental illness conditions generally present much later in life). Children with null variants were 87 times more likely to develop a psychotic disorder and six times more likely to have an anxiety disorder by age 12, and around 12 times more likely to develop a mood disorder by age 11. It’s worth noting that childhood-onset psychosis is extremely rare in the general population, meaning these risk statistics are some of the largest ever seen in psychiatric genetics.

“We were able to show that certain variants of this gene are associated not only with schizophrenia but also with other mental illnesses,” said Lemke. “What is striking is that, in the context of a GRIN2A alteration, these disorders already appear in childhood or adolescence – in contrast to the more typical manifestation in adulthood.”

GRIN2A mutations have long been linked to epilepsy, intellectual disability or speech disorders in children, however, in this case the researchers found that six individuals with GRIN2A-null variants had no history or evidence of those neurological conditions but still presented with a psychiatric disorder. The gene itself is key to regulating the electrical excitability of nerve cells – and, in the case of this study, some variants resulted in reduced activity of the NMDA receptor, which plays an important role in signal transmission in the brain.

Because GRIN2A helps build part of the NMDA receptor, which is already known to play a role in disorders like schizophrenia, the researchers tested whether boosting this receptor’s activity might help individuals’ symptoms. Four people with GRIN2A-null mutations and psychiatric symptoms were given high doses of L-serine, a supplement the brain turns into a natural NMDA receptor (NDMAR) activator. While it’s worth noting that this was not a controlled trial, all individuals had improvements – hallucinations and paranoia disappeared, while one had fewer seizures. This, however, needs further study to consider whether L-serine is a viable treatment option.

“As L-serine is known to mediate co-agonistic effects on the NMDAR, we applied it to four individuals with GRIN2A-null-related mental disorders, all of whom experienced improvements of their neuropsychiatric phenotype,” the researchers wrote. “GRIN2A-null appears to be the first monogenic cause of early-onset and even isolated mental disorders, such as early-onset schizophrenia.”

Of course, psychiatric disorders are not all the result of GRIN2A variants, and it still stands that the interplay between various genes as well as external factors (environmental, lifestyle) are behind the development of various mental health conditions. But this new research presents evidence of a single-gene cause – and makes a case for early childhood genetic testing in order to assess risk.

The study was published in the Nature journal Molecular Psychiatry.

Source: University of Leipzig Medical Center

Challenge from the Client

0



Client Challenge



JavaScript is disabled in your browser.

Please enable JavaScript to proceed.

A required part of this site couldn’t load. This may be due to a browser
extension, network issues, or browser settings. Please check your
connection, disable any ad blockers, or try using a different browser.

Compensating for Unpaid Household Labor

0

Soutik BiswasIndia correspondent

Hindustan Times via Getty Images  Women who were beneficiaries of mukhyamantri ladaki bahin yojana showing their bank passbooks and the message of the scheme money received in thier mobile phones at Kisan Nagar on September 10, 2024 in Thane, India. The beneficiaries have recieved Rs three thousand in 2 months. (Photo by Praful Gangurde/Hindustan Times via Getty Images)Hindustan Times via Getty Images

Women in Maharashtra aged 21-65 receive a monthly cash transfer of 1,500 rupees ($16)

In a village in the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh, a woman receives a small but steady sum each month – not wages, for she has no formal job, but an unconditional cash transfer from the government.

Premila Bhalavi says the money covers medicines, vegetables and her son’s school fees. The sum, 1,500 rupees ($16: £12), may be small, but its effect – predictable income, a sense of control and a taste of independence – is anything but.

Her story is increasingly common. Across India, 118 million adult women in 12 states now receive unconditional cash transfers from their governments, making India the site of one of the world’s largest and least-studied social-policy experiments.

Long accustomed to subsidising grain, fuel and rural jobs, India has stumbled into something more radical: paying adult women simply because they keep households running, bear the burden of unpaid care and form an electorate too large to ignore.

Eligibility filters vary – age thresholds, income caps and exclusions for families with government employees, taxpayers or owners of cars or large plots of land.

“The unconditional cash transfers signal a significant expansion of Indian states’ welfare regimes in favour of women,” Prabha Kotiswaran, a professor of law and social justice at King’s College London, told the BBC.

The transfers range from 1,000-2,500 rupees ($12-$30) a month – meagre sums, worth roughly 5-12% of household income, but regular. With 300 million women now holding bank accounts, transfers have become administratively simple.

Women typically spend the money on household and family needs – children’s education, groceries, cooking gas, medical and emergency expenses, retiring small debts and occasional personal items like gold or small comforts.

What sets India apart from Mexico, Brazil or Indonesia – countries with large conditional cash-transfer schemes – is the absence of conditions: the money arrives whether or not a child attends school or a household falls below the poverty line.

AFP  Women voters stand in queues to cast their ballots at a polling station during the first phase of voting for assembly elections on November 6, 2025, at the Raghopur constituency in the Vaishali district of the Indian state of Bihar.AFP

Bihar transferred 10,000 rupees to women’s bank accounts ahead of polls

Goa was the first state to launch an unconditional cash transfer scheme to women in 2013. The phenomenon picked up just before the pandemic in 2020, when north-eastern Assam rolled out a scheme for vulnerable women. Since then these transfers have turned into a political juggernaut.

The recent wave of unconditional cash transfers targets adult women, with some states acknowledging their unpaid domestic and care work. Tamil Nadu frames its payments as a “rights grant” while West Bengal’s scheme similarly recognises women’s unpaid contributions.

In other states, the recognition is implicit: policymakers expect women to use the transfers for household and family welfare, say experts.

This focus on women’s economic role has also shaped politics: in 2021, Tamil actor-turned-politician Kamal Haasan promised “salaries for housewives”. (His fledgling party lost.) By 2024, pledges of women-focused cash transfers helped deliver victories to political parties in Maharashtra, Jharkhand, Odisha, Haryana and Andhra Pradesh.

In the recent elections in Bihar, the political power of cash transfers was on stark display. In the weeks before polling in the country’s poorest state, the government transferred 10,000 rupees ($112; £85) to 7.5 million female bank accounts under a livelihood-generation scheme. Women voted in larger numbers than men, decisively shaping the outcome.

Critics called it blatant vote-buying, but the result was clear: women helped the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led coalition secure a landslide victory. Many believe this cash infusion was a reminder of how financial support can be used as political leverage.

Yet Bihar is only one piece of a much larger picture. Across India, unconditional cash transfers are reaching tens of millions of women on a regular basis.

Maharashtra alone promises benefits for 25 million women; Odisha’s scheme reaches 71% of its female voters.

In some policy circles, the schemes are derided as vote-buying freebies. They also put pressure on state finances: 12 states are set to spend around $18bn on such payouts this fiscal year. A report by think-tank PRS Legislative Research notes that half of these states face revenue deficits – this happens when a state borrows to pay regular expenses without creating assets.

But many argue they also reflect a slow recognition of something India’s feminists have argued for decades: the economic value of unpaid domestic and care work.

Women in India spent nearly five hours a day on such work in 2024 – more than three times the time spent by men, according to the latest Time Use Survey. This lopsided burden helps explain India’s stubbornly low female labour-force participation. The cash transfers, at least, acknowledge the imbalance, experts say.

Do they work?

Evidence is still thin but instructive. A 2025 study in Maharashtra found that 30% of eligible women did not register – sometimes because of documentation problems, sometimes out of a sense of self-sufficiency. But among those who did, nearly all controlled their own bank accounts.

Swastik Pal Soma Das sells clothes using the money, supporting her seven-member household in West BengalSwastik Pal

Soma Das sells clothes using the money, supporting her household in West Bengal

A 2023 survey in West Bengal found that 90% operated their accounts themselves and 86% decided how to spend the money. Most used it for food, education and medical costs; hardly transformative, but the regularity offered security and a sense of agency.

More detailed work by Prof Kotiswaran and colleagues shows mixed outcomes.

In Assam, most women spent the money on essentials; many appreciated the dignity it afforded, but few linked it to recognition of unpaid work, and most would still prefer paid jobs.

In Tamil Nadu, women getting the money spoke of peace of mind, reduced marital conflict and newfound confidence – a rare social dividend. In Karnataka, beneficiaries reported eating better, gaining more say in household decisions and wanting higher payments.

Yet only a sliver understood the scheme as compensation for unpaid care work; messaging had not travelled. Even so, women said the money allowed them to question politicians and manage emergencies. Across studies, the majority of women had full control of the cash.

“The evidence shows that the cash transfers are tremendously useful for women to meet their own immediate needs and those of their households. They also restore dignity to women who are otherwise financially dependent on their husbands for every minor expense,” Prof Kotiswaran says.

Importantly, none of the surveys finds evidence that the money discourages women from seeking paid work or entrench gender roles – the two big feminist fears, according to a report by Prof Kotiswaran along with Gale Andrew and Madhusree Jana.

Nor have they reduced women’s unpaid workload, the researchers find. They do, however, strengthen financial autonomy and modestly strengthen bargaining power. They are neither panacea nor poison: they are useful but limited tools, operating in a patriarchal society where cash alone cannot undo structural inequities.

Swastik Pal Women at a cash transfer camp in West BengalSwastik Pal

Women welcome the dignity the cash transfers provide

What next?

The emerging research offers clear hints.

Eligibility rules should be simplified, especially for women doing heavy unpaid care work. Transfers should remain unconditional and independent of marital status.

But messaging should emphasise women’s rights and the value of unpaid work, and financial-literacy efforts must deepen, researchers say. And cash transfers cannot substitute for employment opportunities; many women say what they really want is work that pays and respect that endures.

“If the transfers are coupled with messaging on the recognition of women’s unpaid work, they could potentially disrupt the gendered division of labour when paid employment opportunities become available,” says Prof Kotiswaran.

India’s quiet cash transfers revolution is still in its early chapters. But it already shows that small, regular sums – paid directly to women – can shift power in subtle, significant ways.

Whether this becomes a path to empowerment or merely a new form of political patronage will depend on what India chooses to build around the money.

Icebery Ltd offloads $2m worth of GigaCloud (GCT) shares

0


Icebery Ltd sells GigaCloud (GCT) shares worth $2m