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Bharat Cadre

The IAS isn’t a preserve of the elite any longer. Candidates from the hinterland, often with disadvantaged backgrounds, are laying claim to its hallowed ranks.

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Bharat Cadre
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Upamanyu Chatterjee, a 1983-batch IAS officer of Maharashtra cadre, is perhaps the quintessential civil servant of the 1980s and 90s—the kind that flourished well into the 21st century. He went to ‘The College’, as Delhi University’s St Stephen’s college is referred to by its alumni, several of whom found their way into the civil services, giving it a tint of elitism.

Chatterjee captured the zeitgeist in his novel English, August through the protagonist Agastya Sen, who after clearing the IAS finds himself posted in Madna, a small town described as “a dot in the hinterland” —a place he can’t relate to and finds hard to decipher.

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An increasing number of civil servants, including IAS off­icers, are now emerging from these “dots in the hinterland”. One such ‘dot’ is Shedgaon village in Jalna district of Maharashtra’s Marathwada region. In 2015, a 21-year-old from Shedgaon, Sheikh Ansar Ahmad, became the youngest to crack the civil services examination conducted by the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC). Son of an agricultural labourer mother and an autorickshaw driver father, Ahmad is currently posted as the sub-divisional officer of another “dot”—Dinhata in West Bengal’s Cooch Behar district. He is often seen walking around, fully at ease as he int­eracts with people, explaining to them the importance of wearing masks in fluent Bangla. “Learning Bangla was not difficult as it felt like a mixture of Marathi and Hindi to me. I insist that people talk to me in the language and I listen int­ently,” he tells Outlook over the phone from Dinhata.

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Ahmad doesn’t carry his thrice-marginalised status with a sense of victimhood. “As a Muslim belonging to an economically backward family from a poor district of Maharashtra, I have seen all kinds of problems and hardships. But I never wavered from my decision to join the civil services,” he says.

It was in Class 10 that he made up his mind to become an “officer” after his favourite teacher made it to the local newspapers on clearing the state civil services examination. Ahmad says he loved going to school, as it was the only way to escape the all-pervasive negativity around him. His father, a Class 1 dropout, nearly withdrew Ahmad from school after Class 4 as he thought it was enough. A teacher dissuaded him, saying Ahmad was an intelligent kid with a bright future. His family supported him thereon, even selling off their small house in the village to send Ahmad to Pune’s Fergusson College, another hub for future IAS officers. Studying eight to nine hours a day, Ahmad made it to the IAS in his first attempt.

This year, Pradeep Kumar (see interview), son of a farmer from Tevadi village in Haryana’s Sonipat district, made it to the top of the list among nearly eight lakh candidates. Pratibha Verma, daughter of a schoolteacher couple from Sultanpur in Uttar Pradesh, secured the third rank. Yashaswini B., ranked 71, hails from Banur village near Chikmagalur in Karnataka and studied in a Kannada medium school till Class 7.

“The market takes care of those who live along the GT Road,” says Sanjeev Chopra, director of the Lal Bahadur Shastri National Academy of Administration (LBSNAA) in Mussoorie, who refers to aspirants from the hinterland as those living away from the GT Road. “The government remains the largest employer in the country. The fact that aspirants from the interiors are making it to the civil services is a very positive trend. They are not coming from Doon School and Welham. The trend of diversity will ensure a more inclusive, vibrant and open bureaucracy.”

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It is not just exclusive and elite schools that are falling off the civil services map. Even the representation of higher edu­cation institutions like Allahabad University, JNU and Calcutta University has gone down considerably. Former Delhi chief secretary Shailaja Chandra welcomes the trend of increasing number of aspirants from village government schools and district colleges breaching the civil services barrier. “It is a great moment in the country’s history and ought to be celebrated,” she says. The public service is fin­ally becoming public in the real sense as people from diverse backgrounds and places take the lead.

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“With the steady and desirable trend of more candidates from rural areas, small towns and dispersed institutions qualifying for the IAS, the earlier charge of social elitism may no longer be valid,” says former UPSC chairman Deepak Gupta. An alumnus of St Stephen’s and a 1973-batch IAS officer, Gupta believes the IAS still retains an elite status within the civil services. “There must be something in the IAS if more than 10 lakh candidates apply every year for the civil services exam, and many of them, even after qualifying for other services, try repeatedly for making it to the IAS,” he adds.

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Yashaswini had cleared the UPSC last year too in her first attempt, but with rank 293, she did not get her service of choice. So she took the exam again and bettered her rank to 71, making her eligible for the IAS. For this year’s topper Pradeep Kumar, it was the fourth attempt. Failing the first two attempts, he had made it to the Indian Revenue Service (IRS) with 260th rank in his third. The lure of IAS made him take the exam again in 2019, propelling him to the top.

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Babu out of water

Rahul Bose in a scene from the film English, August.

The IAS is still the most significant part in the bureaucratic architecture of governance. Gupta says it remains the premier service that provides the widest variety of experience possible in any job, notwithstanding the consequent generalist tag. “Several factors make the IAS almost irresistible: leadership positions and challenges at the very start of the career and continuing throughout; possibilities to rise to the highest positions in states and the Centre; maximum opportunity to do public service and contribute to public good, and also to make a real difference during the many years in the field, and later in the making of policy and imp­lementation of national programmes,” he adds.

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According to Gupta, many candidates are not even satisfied with the Indian Police Service (IPS), once considered as powerful as the IAS, especially because of the overt display of power through the uniform. “Now we find so many IPS probationers on leave, trying to prepare for the IAS,” he says.

There also continues to be a heavy tilt towards some states that produce more civil servants than others. Though the latest break-up of figures for 2019-20 is not available, the earlier trend shows that the largest number of IAS officers come from Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Maharashtra and Bihar. In 2017-18, 17 candidates from Delhi made it to the IAS—surpassing larger states like Bihar (12 candidates), Tamil Nadu (8) and Karnataka (6).

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“Some northern states still have a feudal culture. In a village or small town, power still means the collector, whom everyone salutes, so clearing the IAS is like becoming the kingpin of the ‘biradari’,” says Shailaja Chandra. Pointing out that a rural agricultural background doesn’t necessarily mean being poor, Gupta adds: “Many come from rural landed families. For them, it is about the status, power and prestige.”

While diversity among those making it to the civil services is a welcome trend, it takes more to make the system truly inclusive. “There remains an innate prejudice against candidates who aren’t English speakers,” says a retired bureaucrat, who served on UPSC’s interview panel for five years. He cites an example of a woman candidate from a border village in Jaisalmer, Rajasthan. “She was the daughter of two beggars and studied in the local government school. Seeing her aptitude, a teacher recommended her for admission to a Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalaya. She was brilliant in her interview. She put all of us to shame with her knowledge and poise. It’s just that she was not fluent in English, with Hindi being her preferred language of communication. While I was in favour of her making it to the IAS and awarded her high marks, the chairman of the panel, an IFS (Indian Foreign Service) officer, did not find her ‘officer material’. I argued in her favour as I believed she would make an outstanding officer, but the chairman asked me not to worry, saying she would probably make it to the IRS.”

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The panel member claims he does not know the final outcome of her interview, which accounts for 275 marks out of the total 2,025. He says the entire experience of the interview can be intimidating for anyone, more so for a person coming from a small village. “Just walking into the imposing Dholpur House (the UPSC building) with formidable liveried guards manning the premises can leave anyone overawed,” he says.

The RSS has been urging the government to do away with the Civil Services Aptitude Test (CSAT), and to replace the interview with a psychological test. The organisation believes the CSAT puts to disadvantage those who take their exam in Hindi. The aptitude test was introduced in 2011 to test a candidate’s comprehension, communication and decision-making skills.

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Devendra Singh, national convener (competitive exams) for the RSS-affiliated Shiksha Sanskriti Utthan Nyas, says the UPSC exams must provide equal opportunity to people of all backgrounds without any discrimination. “Ninety per cent of those who qualify the CSAT are from English medium background and it is discriminatory in nature,” he adds.

However, the ministry of personnel claims that a candidate needs to secure only 33 per cent marks in the CSAT and it is only a qualifying exam for the next level, which is the int­erview. As per the latest 2019 figures, of the 326 civil servants who attended the Foundation Course at LBSNAA, just eight had taken their exam in Hindi, with 315 opting for English. In 2018 too, of the 370 trainees at LBSNAA, eight had taken Hindi, with 357 taking the exam in English.

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The UPSC results announced earlier this month also show the continuing under-representation of Muslims in the civil services. Only 42—about five per cent—of the 829 candidates who made it are Muslims, while the community comprises about 15 per cent of India’s population. Only one made it to the top 100—Safna Nazarudeen from Kerala, with 45th rank.

The ministry of personnel official claims it is difficult to ens­ure equal representation of all marginalised sections. “Seats are already reserved for SCs, STs, OBCs, economically backward sections and physically handicapped. There are relaxations in terms of age and number of attempts for them. We try to make the services as inclusive as possible, but seats cannot be reserved on grounds of religion,” he adds.

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Public policy expert Rajendra Pratap Gupta, who has been rooting for reforms in the bureaucracy, strikes a note of caution on the culture of entitlement in the civil services.

“Whether you come from St Stephen’s or a remote village in Munger, it doesn’t matter much after a few years,” he says. “One unwittingly becomes a part of the system when a junior, even twice the age, addresses the officer as sir or madam. The culture is deeply embedded in authority, hierarchy and entitlement. I am not very optimistic if the trend of people coming from the hinterland into the civil service will change the insensitive system called bureaucracy.”  While the Modi administration is trying to bring changes through steps like “lateral entry” of domain experts, he says it cannot be limited to that. “Till we have the option of ‘lateral exit’ for non-performance, nothing changes,” he adds.

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