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The purpose of reservation - II
By Gail Omvedt
THE WAVE of rioting at the time of the Mandal Commission showed
that the goal of reservation had not simply been unfulfilled, but
totally distorted. It revealed, among other things, the degree to
which educated upper caste youth had gotten into the habit of
considering the Government administration not as ``public
service'' but as a source of employment - with lucrative salaries
and pensions, not to mention ample scope for bribe-taking.
Bribery - a major theme of Phule's polemical 19th century
writings - has not apparently changed very much. There are
undoubtedly many honest officials, but they are fighting a system
that gives them very little scope, one which binds together
politicians and bureaucrats in a nexus of corruption.
International surveys of corruption in Government show India at
the bottom of the list; losses in ``transmission and
distribution'' of the State electricity boards; the necessity of
giving ``weight'' in order to get projects approved or papers
moved through desks in administrative offices, all remain
flagrant. In this context, the idea that reservation somehow has
an adverse effect on ``merit'' and ``efficiency'' looks somewhat
laughable. Since the mass education which all the anti-caste
radicals so fervently sought has also remained a distant dream,
this has rendered the masses of toiling people more dependent on
the literate officials and activists.
How much do the upper castes dominate in Government service? The
Mandal Commission report itself made interesting revelations.
According to its statistics, the ``forward castes'' estimated at
25.5 per cent of the population made up 78.34 per cent of
employees of Central Ministries and Departments; the Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes together were 16.83 per cent and the
Backward Castes were 4.83 per cent. In Class I, these figures
were 90.23 per cent for the ``forward castes,'' 7.18 per cent for
the ``Scheduled'' communities and 2.59 per cent for ``other
backwards''. Clearly, reservation had provided some scope for
Dalits and Adivasis, but the ``other backward'' communities, 52
per cent of the total Indian population, were hopelessly behind.
Of course, this was twenty years ago. Has the situation changed?
There is almost no way of knowing. In contrast to advanced
countries, where disciplines such as sociology focus on issues of
ethnicity and class, or the degree of inter-marriage among
various social groups, there have been no surveys of Government
employment, no effort to link caste and economic status at the
top levels of the social order. American sociologists such as C.
Wright Mills and William Domhoff devoted efforts to study the
``power elite'' and the ``ruling class'', in contrast, this has
been a subject about which Indian sociology has kept an
embarrassed silence. With continued resistance to taking up the
issues of caste in the census operations, there is simply no
information available. Thus all the debates today about whether
caste remains an important category of behaviour are taking place
in an informational vacuum. It would perhaps not be so fantastic,
then, to assume that the situation revealed by the Mandal
Commission continues. The lack of information and the resistance
to procuring information are itself revealing.
Most of all, the insertion of an economic exclusion clause was
the primary way in which elite resistance to the major goals of
reservation sought to deprive it of its efficacy. For many years,
opponents of reservation had argued that caste was irrelevant,
that while admittedly the ``ex-untouchables'' and ``tribals''
might require some compensation, the large sections classified as
``backward classes'', that is the ex-Shudras, in fact contained
wealthy and affluent sections. Rich farmers, rich cowherders,
rich barbers, and rich washermen - all of these, it was argued,
were the biggest enemies of Dalits. The opposition to reservation
clothed itself in marxist dress, saying that reservation should
be based if anything on ``economic backwardness'' - that is to
say, on ``class' as an economic category. This had even been the
major theme of the Left for many years, with West Bengal being
one of the laggards in any kind of State-level compensatory
discrimination policy. The phrase ``socially and educationally
backward classes'' referring to the ex-Shudra sections, seemed to
provide an opening - although throughout the British period terms
like ``Depressed Classes'' and ``Backward Classes'' had
invariably been used to refer to jatis.Backed up by this
seemingly disinterested support of a mechanical marxism, the
Indian elite grabbed on to the notion that the ``affluent OBCs''
should be excluded from the benefits of reservations.
What is wrong, it may be asked, with this? First, there is no
country in the world outside of India that has accepted the
notion that Government employment is a logical or legitimate way
of dealing with the problems of poverty! The whole concept is
somewhat fantastic; removing poverty requires broad-level
economic policies, including those for growth and those directed
at mass education and mass access to resources including land and
forest wealth. Taking a few of the poor out of poverty by
providing Government employment for them is a mockery. The
principle of ``compensatory discrimination'' is meant to be
applicable to ``ethnic'' (or non-class) social groups or
communities which have been, for various historical reasons,
systematically excluded from wealth and positions of power in
society. This does not apply to the processes of simple class
stratification.
But, in giving its assent to the Government order for
implementation of the Mandal Commission report, the Supreme Court
in 1992 not only limited overall reservation to 50 per cent
(thereby in effect reserving 50 per cent for the ``forward
castes''), but also inserted an economic exclusion clause under
the name of ``creamy layer''. The term itself was a clever
innovation, implying that by ``skimming off the cream'' a rather
healthier glass of milk could be made available. The term
``creamy layer'' was used both to refer to the slightly better
off economically among the backward castes (luckily this could
not be applied to the Dalits and Adivasis) and to better off
jatis among them.
The costs to the nation of inserting the ``creamy layer''
exclusion clause have been considerable. Financial and
administrative costs have mounted with the continual national and
State-level Government commissions designed to set up criteria
for determining a ``creamy layer'', with continual court cases
focussing on this issue. The Supreme Court has even forced States
such as Kerala, whose own experts had determined that there was
no ``creamy layer'' in the State, to find one, regardless - or be
liable for ``contempt of court''. All of this has provided
considerable employment for social science ``experts'' but it has
added little to the information available about caste and
occupation in India. It has certainly stalled implementation of
the Mandal Commission recommendations.
If the ``creamy layer'' clause were actually enforced rigorously
at determined levels, it would have the effect of excluding today
even children of Class III Government employees or moderately
well-off farmers. But it is not of course rigorously enforced; it
has simply added to the burden of bribery upon those hoping for
employment for their children and has provided another source of
under-the-table income for the local-level officials who provide
the certificates.
Thus the reservation system was instituted not so much on the
basis of the Constitution as on that of the decades-old elite
resistance to restructuring public employment. It serves several
purposes. It allows the elite to maintain the facade of a
generous patron of Dalits and Adivasis while continuing to
deprive them of mass-level education and access to resource. It
provides a process to absorb some of their brightest members into
a system still based more on extortion and corruption than true
public service. Finally, it continues to block a true
representation of the majority of the nation's population, a
representation which the founders and leaders of the anti-caste
movement had always seen as part of a full-scale political and
social-economic transformation.
(Concluded)
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