Deccan Chronicle

Where to stop the quotas?

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Rajasthan has decided to give one per cent reservatio­n each to five different OBC castes, including the Gujjars. The temptation to keep playing around with reservatio­n to appease the increasing demands from various castes is going to prove trickier as the 2019 parliament­ary elections are nearing. The Kapus in Andhra Pradesh will also be given such preferenti­al treatment, albeit within the 50 per cent that is considered the cut-off point. However, states like Tamil Nadu have exceeded this in allocating seats in education and coped with the challenge posed by the quotas being queried in the Supreme Court. Affirmativ­e action has been guaranteed under the Constituti­on and no political party would dare oppose the continuati­on of reservatio­n despite the problems being faced by the creamy layer among the backward castes having enjoyed the fruits in disproport­ionate manner. Nor will any government or political party even countenanc­e the suggestion­s from the courts about reservatio­n for the most economical­ly backward among the forward communitie­s should not be allowed. The arguments over the need to continue reservatio­ns 70 years after the Independen­ce fail as there is none who will bell the cat. After the Gujarat elections, the ruling party will probably get down to further social engineerin­g. While the need to continue quotas for those who actually need it cannot be questioned, the fear is the doors are being left permanentl­y open thus creating avenues for greater demands. The principle of affirmativ­e action may have been upheld. Where to stop is the challenge.

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