Reservation Policy in India

Why in News: Bihar Opposition leader Tejashwi Yadav has promised to raise reservations up to 85% if elected. The Supreme Court has issued notice to the Union Government on a petition demanding a ‘creamy layer’ exclusion mechanism for SCs and STs.

Constitutional Provisions

Article 15

  • Prohibits discrimination on grounds of religion, race, caste, sex, or place of birth.
  • Empowers the State (Art. 15(4) & 15(5)) to make special provisions for advancement of socially and educationally backward classes (SEBCs), OBCs, SCs, and STs.
  • Allows reservation in educational institutions including private (except minority institutions).

Article 16

  • Guarantees equality of opportunity in public employment.
  • Allows reservation in favour of backward classes inadequately represented in State services.
  • Provides for reservation in promotion for SCs and STs under Article 16(4A).

Evolution of Judicial Interpretation

1. Balaji vs. State of Mysore (1962)

  • Reservations should be “within reasonable limits.”
  • Capped at 50%, treating reservations as an exception to equality.

2. State of Kerala vs. N.M. Thomas (1975)

  • Reservations seen as a continuation of equality of opportunity, not an exception.
  • Emphasis on substantive equality.

3. Indra Sawhney (1992) – Nine-judge bench

  • Upheld 27% OBC reservation.
  • Reaffirmed 50% ceiling except in “extraordinary situations.”
  • Introduced the creamy layer concept for OBCs.

4. Janhit Abhiyan vs. Union of India (2022)

  • Upheld 10% EWS quota.
  • Held that the 50% cap applies to backward classes, but not to separate categories like EWS.

5. State of Punjab vs. Davinder Singh (2024)

  • Court suggested need for creamy layer exclusion in SC/ST reservations, though government rejected it.

Formal vs Substantive Equality

Formal Equality

  • Treats everyone the same irrespective of historical disadvantages.
  • Reservation seen as an exception, capped at 50%.

Substantive Equality

  • Recognises historical discrimination and unequal starting points.
  • Reservation is a tool of equality, not an exception.
  • May justify exceeding the 50% cap to ensure genuine representation.

Present Status of Reservation

  • Central Level (59.5%)
  • Varies across states (e.g., Tamil Nadu exceeds 69%).
  • 40–50% of reserved seats for SCs, STs, and OBCs remain vacant in Central government posts.

Concerns and Debates

1. Exceeding the 50% Cap

  • For: Reflects real demographics, ensures representation of backward classes.
  • Against: Risks undermining equality of opportunity for unreserved sections; may be struck down by courts.

2. Creamy Layer Debate

  • Exists for OBCs (Indra Sawhney).
  • Not applied to SCs/STs due to persistent discrimination.
  • Critics argue absence of creamy layer leads to elite capture.
  • Others fear it will increase backlog vacancies and weaken social justice.

3. Concentration of Benefits

Rohini Commission (OBCs):

  • 97% of jobs/educational seats taken by 25% of OBC castes.
  • ~1,000 OBC sub-castes have zero representation.
  • Similar trends in SCs and STs.

4. Vacancies and Backlogs

  • Large backlog in SC/ST/OBC quotas.
  • Risk that unfilled posts may convert to general seats.

5. Demand for Caste Census

  • Strong demand for empirical data (Census 2027 likely to enumerate caste).
  • Essential to rationalise reservation policies.

Way Forward

1. Evidence-Based Policy

  • Conduct caste census to determine actual population shares and representation gaps.

2. Sub-Categorisation

  • Implement Rohini Commission recommendations to distribute benefits equitably within OBCs.
  • Similar models for SCs/STs (two-tier system prioritising most marginalised).

3. Creamy Layer Debate

  • Explore a context-sensitive creamy layer for SCs/STs without exacerbating backlogs.
  • Ensure no rollback of genuine opportunities for the poorest.

4. Reservation + Development

  • Complement reservations with quality education, skill development, and private sector opportunities.
  • Focus on capacity building, not only quota filling.

5. Judicial and Legislative Balance

  • Revisit the 50% cap debate through a Constitution Bench.
  • Parliament must ensure political consensus and federal dialogue before expanding quotas.

Conclusion

Reservation policy in India represents a tension between formal and substantive equality. While the 50% ceiling embodies caution against overreach, socio-economic realities and caste-based disadvantages necessitate flexible, data-driven, and equitable reforms. 

GS Paper II: Polity, Equality, Social Justice, Fundamental Rights.

GS Paper I (Society): Social empowerment, caste dynamics.

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