Published on: June 4, 2025
CIVIL SERVICES REFORMS
CIVIL SERVICES REFORMS
CONTEXT
- The civil services exam format originates from the Macaulay Report (1854) which introduced merit-based recruitment.
- Post-Independence, the Kothari Committee (1975) proposed the three-tier structure:
- Preliminary Exam
- Main Exam
- Interview (Personality Test)
- This structure aimed to balance academic competence with administrative aptitude.
CONCEPT: WHY REFORM IS NECESSARY
- Originally, the Prelims used an optional + GS paper (2:1 weight), and details were undisclosed, ensuring smooth, uncontested conduct.
- The Right to Information Act (2005) increased demands for transparency, leading to scrutiny of UPSC’s evaluation methods.
- Based on S.K. Khanna Committee (2010), the Prelims format changed in 2011 — replacing the optional with CSAT (Paper II).
- However, CSAT’s emphasis on English and reasoning disadvantaged non-English/Humanities students, triggering protests.
- The government later made CSAT qualifying in nature — marks not added to merit — but disparities remain.
CURRENT: ISSUES & REFORMS NEEDED
Preliminary Exam:
- Acts as a “jealous gatekeeper” — screens out over 95% of aspirants arbitrarily.
- Paper-I is highly unpredictable, leading to excessive stress and coaching dependency.
- Paper-II, though qualifying, still favors Science/Engineering backgrounds over Humanities.
Main Examination:
- Current GS format includes 20 short questions — emphasizes factual recall over analysis.
- Lack of analytical or long-form questions undermines assessment of administrative insight.
- Many aspirants choose scoring optionals over domain relevance — defeating the spirit of specialisation.
Suggested Reforms:
- Replace optional paper with two governance and policy papers — more relevant to public service.
- Make Prelims more transparent, less unpredictable; reduce over-dependence on rote knowledge.
- Introduce a balanced mix of factual + analytical questions in Mains to assess real aptitude.
- Ensure equity across disciplines in qualifying papers; simplify structure without diluting quality.
MAINS QUESTION
- Critically examine the current structure of the civil services examination in India. What reforms would you suggest to make it more effective in assessing administrative aptitude and academic competence?
- Discuss the impact of the Right to Information Act (2005) on the transparency and evaluation methods of the UPSC. How has this led to changes in the examination format?