The Economic and Social Issues (ESI) paper in Phase II can skyrocket your overall Phase 2 score. It will not only test your knowledge but also examine your ability to connect concepts with current realities and write structured, data-backed, clear answers under pressure. Promising a maximum of 50 marks, this section can be the real turning point in Phase II. Therefore, you should be well aware of how to smartly prepare ESI. And to help you master this part, we’ve compiled the 30 most important topics, categorized, so you can practice answers to get exam-ready. Read on to know the topics to equip yourself to tackle any question, no matter how it’s framed.
Before you dive into the list, remember that nearly 70% of descriptive questions come from the Indian Economy and Growth & Development. These themes dominate the paper and overlap heavily with current affairs. If you build conceptual clarity here and learn to integrate data and schemes, you’ll be ready for even the toughest prompts.
The topics below are arranged by categories, so you know exactly where to focus first.
This category dominates the descriptive answers. So, be ready to face at least two descriptive questions directly from here.
Here are the topics you need to prepare:
The topics below will test your ability to link theory with India’s development journey.
Global connections are increasingly tested in this descriptive part of the exam. Especially India’s role in global forums.
Pay heed to these important topics:
Social issues are descriptive favorites because they demand analysis and examples.
So, these topics form the backbone of your ESI preparation:
If you are well aware of the schemes, you can directly answer and fetch a good score. But for that, you need to know the objectives, outcomes, and challenges of the schemes.
These are the topics that you should never skip:
Questions related to the environment are gaining weight with India’s climate commitments.
Every topper will tell you that the ESI paper is not about how much you read, but how smartly you prepare. With limited time before Phase 2, you cannot afford to scatter your energy. You need to know what matters most, how to connect it with current affairs, and how to present it in a structured, data-backed way.
Below are five preparation tips that many aspirants often miss or neglect, but those who follow them perform very well.
If you look at previous years’ papers, one thing is clear that the Indian Economy and Growth & Development dominate the ESI paper. Questions on fiscal policy, monetary policy, inclusive growth, and SDGs appear almost every year. These areas are not just high-scoring, but they also overlap with current affairs, making them doubly important.
Instead of juggling multiple topics, focus here first. Mastering these topics ensures you cover the backbone of ESI, and once you’re confident, you can move to secondary areas like globalization or environment.
Static knowledge alone won’t fetch marks. The examiner wants to see if you can connect theory with today’s realities. For example, when writing about poverty alleviation, don’t just define it but link it with PM-KISAN or MGNREGA.
Similarly, if the topic is globalization, connect it with India’s G20 presidency or WTO negotiations. This integration shows analytical depth and proves you understand the subject in context.
And this is what sets toppers apart. They can blend current events into theory, and that, too, effortlessly.
In descriptive answers, data is your credibility. Quoting India’s HDI rank, fiscal deficit targets, or unemployment figures from the Periodic Labour Force Survey instantly strengthens your argument. Examiners reward answers that are evidence-based and not vague.
Make it a habit to extract key statistics from the Economic Survey, RBI Annual Report, World Bank indices, and the IMF’s World Economic Outlook. Even one or two well-placed figures can transform your essay from generic to authoritative.
Don’t forget that in ESI, data is not just for decoration of your content but the backbone of your answer.
Many aspirants know the content but fail to express it under exam pressure. The solution is simple: write one essay daily for 30 days before the exam. This builds speed, clarity, and stamina. You’ll learn how to structure answers quickly, avoid repetition, and manage time effectively. By the end of this routine, you’ll find yourself writing with confidence and flow.
Think of it as training for a marathon, daily writing is your practice run, and the exam is race day. Without this, even strong content falls flat.
You should also invest sufficient time in RBI Grade B Phase 2 Mock Test for ESI 1 to master ESI.
Government schemes are direct scoring opportunities, but only if you can recall their objectives, outcomes, and challenges. The mistake most aspirants make is reading them once and moving on. Instead, you should revise schemes every week. A good preparation strategy is to group them by themes like financial inclusion, employment, agriculture, and social justice. And also, update them with recent data.
This way, you’ll always have fresh, exam-ready points. Schemes like PMJDY, Atmanirbhar Bharat, and Digital India are favorites in descriptive questions. Weekly revision ensures you don’t blank out when asked to evaluate their effectiveness.
Going through a lot of ESI preparation resources now isn’t practical with just over a month left for the RBI Garde B Phase 2 exam. Right now, what you need is content that smartly connects theory with current affairs.
That’s where PIB Sutra and the Phase 2 non-video Course come in. They simplify reports, offer ready-to-use descriptive questions, and provide sample answers that mirror the exam.
Then, resources like visleshan (analysis of important articles on the economy and other areas from major newspapers) ease complicated topics. They can help you revise faster and write better.
If you master Indian Economy, Growth & Development, and one social or globalization theme, you’ll already cover 70% of what matters. Add daily descriptive writing and weekly scheme revision, and you’ll be exam-ready. The ESI paper doesn’t reward scattered preparation. So, it’s time to train your brain to pen answers that are focused, well-structured, and backed by data.
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It’s the real score-booster. With 50 marks at stake, your ability to write structured, analytical answers decides your final rank. It’s not just what you know but how you express it.
Start with the Indian Economy and Growth & Development. These two areas dominate the paper and overlap with current affairs. Master them before moving to secondary themes.
Use data from trusted sources like the Economic Survey, RBI reports, and World Bank indices. One well-placed stat can turn a generic answer into a top-scoring one.
Revise schemes every week and group them by theme, like financial inclusion or employment, and update them with recent outcomes and challenges. Schemes are scoring, but only if you recall details under pressure.
Write one essay daily for 30 days before the exam. It builds speed, clarity, and confidence. Daily writing practice is important.
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