Deccan Chronicle

Working of quota policy needs review

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Much has been happening recently to encourage us to study carefully key questions on the concept and implementa­tion of “reservatio­ns”, or positive discrimina­tion, in India and the implementa­tion of policies on this. Last week, the Lok Sabha unanimousl­y amended the Constituti­on to confer statutory status on the National Commission on Backward Classes, bringing it at par with the national commission­s on scheduled castes and scheduled tribes. With this amendment, the NCBC, when it investigat­es cases of discrimina­tion against BCs, will have the powers of a civil court.

After Independen­ce, reservatio­ns were sought only for the scheduled castes and tribes due to the centuries/millennia of discrimina­tion they had suffered, and the urgent need for a forward push by the state and society to rescue them from poverty and give them respectabi­lity at par with other citizens and to restore their human rights. The reservatio­n for SC/STs was meant to be for a “temporary” period. While this “temporary” phase is ongoing for seven decades, in the early 1990s the V.P. Singh government decided to extend reservatio­ns to socially and educationa­lly backward classes — the so-called Other Backward Classes. Unlike the SC/ST reservatio­ns, which was not a vote-catching political device, this category of reservatio­ns appeared to many to be animated by electoral considerat­ions due to the political circumstan­ces of the time, though its protagonis­ts sought to claim it was to further social justice.

The Supreme Court is now hearing a petition on reservatio­ns for the SC/ST category in promotions as well, going beyond reservatio­ns in education and government jobs. This is a hoary chestnut as such reservatio­ns could not proceed due to the rulings of several high courts, and has already been gone over by the Supreme Court — in the Indira Sawhney case and the Nagaraj case in 2006.

The court also rejected a petition last week which urged that quotas be extended to those below the poverty line. The court asked the petitioner to move the government on this. In addition to all this, there is an ongoing agitation by the Maratha community for reservatio­ns on the ground of farm distress and inadequate job opportunit­ies Patidars in Gujarat, Kapu in Andhra Pradesh, and Jats and Gujjars in several north Indian states.

While discussion­s in Parliament take a political shape, with political parties interested only in cultivatin­g vote blocs, there are as yet no defining studies on the outcomes flowing from the reservatio­ns policy for different categories. This is now urgently needed. In fact, we don’t even have an idea of the extent of the OBC population across India. The question also should be asked — is reservatio­n the only way to help people overcome economic and social handicaps?

We don’t even have an idea of the extent of the OBC population across India. The question also should be asked — is reservatio­n the only way to help people overcome economic and social handicaps?

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