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India Today
23 minutes ago
- India Today
Are engineers taking over India's civil services?
Once the backbone of India's civil services, humanities graduates are now finding themselves edged out by engineers and technocrats. In the 1980s and '90s, subjects like history, political science, and sociology dominated the UPSC ranks. Fast forward to today, and the majority of recruits come from technical streams, with engineers alone making up nearly two-thirds of successful candidates. A recent parliamentary committee report has flagged this imbalance, warning that the nation's bureaucracy may be losing its diversity of thought and, along with it, the empathy and perspective that the humanities once brought to 2023 report by the Department-related Standing Committee on Personnel, Public Grievances, Law and Justice titled 'Review of Functioning of Recruitment Organisations of the Government of India' raised concerns over the growing dominance of candidates from technical backgrounds in the Civil Services The share of successful candidates from engineering backgrounds rose sharply—from 46% in 2011 to 65% in professionals: Their representation dropped from 14% to just 4% over the same While fluctuating between 23–28%, the proportion decreased from 27% in 2011 to 23% in engineers and medical professionals, over 70% of recruits in recent years came from technical streams raising concerns that the country may be losing 'exceptional doctors and engineers' to bureaucracy. Further data from 2017 to 21 echoes this skew:76% of recommended candidates hail from the science stream (engineering, sciences, medicine).Only 23.6% came from the humanities. INSIGHTS BEYOND NUMBERS: HISTORICAL CONTEXT & TRENDSHistorical shifts: Up until the 1980s, the Humanities and Social Sciences dominated the educational backgrounds of IAS recruits. But between 2000–2019, the trend reversed: disciplines such as engineering, medicine, and computer science became more prevalent. For instance, Electrical Engineering and Medicine emerged among the top entry-fields, while Economics and Political Science declined in impact: The 2011 introduction of the Civil Services Aptitude Test (CSAT) recalibrated the landscape:Humanities candidates' IAS success dropped from ~30% in 2009 to 15% by engineering representation surged to ~50%.Humanities aspirants argue CSAT's format disadvantaged non-technical and non–English-speaking though UPSC uses a normalization formula to level scores across optional subjects, the number of engineers remains high. Many engineers still choose humanities subjects (like political science, sociology, geography) as their options due to better familiarity with exam structure and 'model answers.'WHY IT MATTERSLoss of interdisciplinary richness: Humanities graduates often bring critical thinking, empathy, and nuanced analytical capacity—qualities crucial for public mismatch: The committee lamented that the increasing allure of civil services may be depriving sectors like healthcare and engineering of high-caliber in decision-making: A disproportionately technical bureaucracy risks underrepresenting social and cultural perspectives essential for inclusive Table (Note: 2017–21 data shows 76% from science overall, and ~23.6% humanities, approx data)The parliamentary panel's warning is more than a statistical footnote it's a reminder that India's civil services must reflect the country's intellectual diversity. A bureaucracy dominated by technocrats may deliver efficiency, but risks losing the cultural, social, and ethical lenses that humanities graduates naturally bring to governance. Scholars and policy experts have suggested several reforms: revisiting the structure of the CSAT to reduce technical bias, creating differentiated service tracks for domain experts, and encouraging a balanced intake across many countries nurture civil servants from social sciences and liberal arts, valuing their ability to question, contextualize, and connect policies with people. For India, a similar recalibration could ensure that the next generation of administrators are not just problem-solvers with technical acumen, but empathetic leaders who understand the social fabric they serve. After all, governance is not only about efficiency it is also about equity, context, and vision.- Ends


The Hindu
31 minutes ago
- The Hindu
Justice Sudershan Reddy, a man of the masses, says Speaker Appavu
Justifying the DMK's decision to support joint Opposition parties' Vice-Presidential candidate Sudershan Reddy, a 'man of the masses', Tamil Nadu Assembly Speaker M. Appavu has slammed the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance for reposing its faith in a 'RSS man', who has done nothing good for Tamil Nadu and the Tamils even though he is from this State. After garlanding the statue of freedom fighter Ondieervan at the memorial in Palayamkottai on Wednesday, Mr. Appavu said, Justice Reddy had passed a judgment that the governments, while taking back the lands assigned to the poor after a period, should ensure the disbursal of all compensation applicable to other patta lands, including compensation for structures if any created on the land. His judgment also paved way for the constitution of Special Investigation Team to retrieve the black money stashed in foreign banks. When Ambani brothers fought over winning the rights for oil and gas exploration in Krishna Godhavari Basin, Justice Sudershan Reddy's judgment stopped their attempt by giving the rights to Oil and Natural Gas Commission, a public sector undertaking. His ruling in 2010 on this issue led to Mukesh Ambani paying a hefty fine a couple of years ago. On the question of supporting Mr. Radhakrishnan, a Tamilian, the Speaker wondered if the BJP leaders from Tamil Nadu, including Union Minister L. Murugan and party's State president Nainar Nagenthiran had done anything good for the State and the Tamils. 'Will Mr. Radhakrishnan, if elected, take any effective step to permanently end the frequent attacks on the Tamil fishermen by the SriLankan navy? What did Mr. Murugan and Mr. Nainar Nagenthiran do to get Tamil Nadu's share of ₹2,151 crore under the Samagra Siksha Abhiyan from the Union Government?,' Mr. Appavu asked. On the Bill introduced in the Parliament on Wednesday by Home Minister Amit Shah empowering the Governors to sack Chief Ministers and the Ministers if they were held on serious charges and kept in custody for 30 days, the Speaker replied that it was nothing but ploy by the BJP government at the Centre to crush political opponents troubling the Union Government.


News18
33 minutes ago
- News18
Evening Digest: Filing ITR? Use 80G Donations To Save More Tax & Top Picks
Last Updated: 80G donations offer tax relief, Russia-China challenge Trump's moves, Kannada numeral watch turns heads and zero-down-payment EV deal. From Bollywood's most private love story to weight-loss drug warnings, shifting global power games, and zero-down-payment EV deals, here's your quick roundup of the day's top stories. Filing ITR 2025 under the old regime? Donations to registered bodies can shrink your tax bill. From eligible charities to claim rules, here's how your generosity can also be financially rewarding. 👉 Learn More 🌏 Power Shifts Ahead: Russia, China Challenge Trump's Moves While the US flexes military and economic muscle, Russia and China are forging deep defence and trade ties. For India, balancing relations with all three is becoming a complex strategic puzzle. 👉 Read Story Karnataka's Gandaberunda emblem and Kannada numerals, this limited-edition wristwatch blends heritage with modern design. 👉 See More Ozempic and similar injections promise quick weight loss, but rare cases of sudden, irreversible vision loss have emerged. Experts warn India of the potential eye risk. 👉 Details Here Owning an EV in India just got easier. A new HDFC-VinFast deal lets customers — and even dealers — drive away with a VinFast electric car without paying anything upfront 👉 Find Out The director refused to cut the scene from Bajrangi Bhaijaan despite CBFC pushback. 👉 Know Why view comments First Published: Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.