The False Merit-Reservation Binary : Daily Current Affairs

Relevance: GS-2: Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation; Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections of the population by the Centre and States; Indian Constitution - significant provisions and basic structure.

Key Phrases: Reservation & Merit, Competitive Examination, equality and social justice, professional merit, reverse discrimination, affirmative action, substantive and formal equality, cultural capital.

Why in News?

  • Recently, Supreme Court upheld the constitutional validity of quota for Other Backward Classes candidates in NEET’s All India Quota seats, noting that “reservation is not at odds with merit” in open competitive examinations. The judgement deserves closer attention for a reason other than its impact on post graduate medical admissions.

Highlights:

  • The order of the two-judge Bench, lays to rest a popular misconception of merit while advancing an interpretation that is consistent with our constitutional ideals of equality and social justice.
  • The case before the Court was very limited: an expeditious resolution of the issues around the implementation of OBC and EWS quotas in the NEET-All India Quota (AIQ) admissions to medical colleges.
    • AIQ refers to a judicially created category where 15% of undergraduate seats and 50% of post graduate seats are filled on a domicile-free, all-India basis.
  • The Government had recently decided to extend the existing Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe reservations within this category to provide for OBC reservations as well.
  • Writ petitions had challenged this order on the grounds that the implementation of OBC reservation would affect professional merit and cause reverse discrimination against general category candidates.
    • Another set of writ petitions had challenged the notification of EWS reservation even as the hearings on the 103rd Constitutional Amendment Act were pending.
    • Another set of writ petitions had challenged the tenability of ₹8 lakh as the income limit for EWS reservation.
  • The Court, in view of the public health implications of the delay in medical admissions, upheld the admissions notice, and listed for March the hearing on the validity of the ₹8 lakh limit.

Key Points:

For the longest time, critics of affirmative action have argued that reservations violate merit. Those in favour of reservation too often concede this but argue that affirmative actions serve other goals such as social representation.

The judgment, authored by Justice DY Chandrachud, breaks fresh ground. The Court took this opportunity to directly address the issue of merit versus reservations at some length (12 paragraphs).

  • Judgement begins by recalling and reaffirming the principle of substantive equality, rather than formal equality, that underlies our constitutional promise of equality of opportunity.
    • Relying on the debates in the Constituent Assembly, the Court reminds us that the intent of the framers was to remedy real structural barriers that prevented the realisation of equality of opportunity.
  • The Court builds on landmark cases such as State of Kerala vs N.M. Thomas, K.C. Vasanth Kumar (1985), and Indra Sawhney vs Union of India (1992) to reiterate sharply that the provision of reservations in Article 16(4) of the Constitution is not an exception to but an extension of the principle of equality enunciated in Article 16(1).
  • The Judgement observed, ‘Reservations are crucial to achieving the aspirational goal of genuine equality of opportunity and status amongst all citizens. Reservation is one of the measures that is employed to overcome these barriers. The individual difference may be a result of privilege, fortune, or circumstances but it cannot be used to negate the role of reservation in remedying the structural disadvantage that certain groups suffer’.
  • Second, the judgment contributes to the specification of the mechanisms through which social privileges work.
    • Justice C Reddy in K.C. Vasanth Kumar vs State of Karnataka (1985) had critiqued the purely economic understanding of claims for reservation by emphasising the embedded and rigid nature of the socio-cultural institution of caste.
    • The order notes Marc Galanter’s insight that processes of resource accumulation impact the performance of candidates in examinations.
    • Taking this understanding forward, it draws upon the work of K.V. Shyamprasad to recognise, perhaps for the first time, the role of cultural capital.
    • The order holds: ‘The cultural capital ensures that a child is trained unconsciously by the familial environment to take up higher education or high posts commensurate with their family‘s standing. This works to the disadvantage of individuals who are first-generation learners and come from communities whose traditional occupations do not result in the transmission of necessary skills required to perform well in open examination…’
    • The judgment is also attentive to the exclusionary implications of this process as meritocratic discourse legitimises consolidation of ‘family habitus, community linkages, and inherited skills’.
    • In addition to ‘reaffirming social hierarchies’, this obsession with scores in an examination ‘serves to denigrate the dignity of those who face barriers in their advancement which are not of their own making’.
  • Third, it exposes social prejudices that manifest as concerns about ‘efficiency of administration’ and the anxieties about the dilution of merit.
    • It recognises that there is a need to rectify prejudicial stereotypes about the skills of persons belonging to weaker sections.
    • It relies on the 2019 decision in B.K. Pavitra vs State of Karnataka, which held, ‘The benchmark for the efficiency of administration is not some disembodied, abstract ideal measured by the performance of a qualified open category candidate. Efficiency of administration in the affairs of the Union or of a State must be defined in an inclusive sense, where diverse segments of society find representation as a true aspiration of governance by and for the people.’
  • Finally, the judgment goes to the heart of the matter and questions examinations as a measure of merit.
    • It cites Ashwini Deshpande’s study highlighting a stark separation between what examinations claim to measure, and what they actually do.
    • It elaborates by citing Satish Deshpande’s research that shows that often what examinations measure have an indirect and weak link to the tasks the candidate is supposed to perform.
    • He argues that the prestige of competitive entrance examinations and the unimpeachability of its evaluator standards are a manufactured construct.
    • Satish Deshpande calls these examinations ‘traumatic bloodbaths’ that are administered to jealously guard the social prestige of the professional class.
    • Thus, Deshpande concludes that if the examinations were to be any less ruthless, their main social function of persuading ‘the vast majority of aspirants to consent to their exclusion’ would be stymied.
  • Drawing upon this, the judgment opines that exams can ‘only reflect the current competence of an individual but not the gamut of their potential, capabilities or excellence’.

Foregrounding the importance of individual character, lived experiences, and subsequent training, the judgment emphasises that examinations are exclusionary, though convenient, methods of resource allocation and that our constitutional ideals should inform our cautious appreciation of these processes.

Significance:

This critique of the widespread misconception about merit — the common sense of the upper caste elite — can have far-reaching consequences.

  • Claims of reverse discrimination by candidates from the unreserved category would have to be justified under the paradigm of substantive equality.
    • This implies that a crude disparity in cut-off marks would not be construed in isolation of the structural inequalities perpetuated by a competitive examination.
  • This also invites a stringent judicial review of the constitutionality of EWS reservations since it overlooks the role of cultural capital for general category EWS candidates and fixes the same income limits for ‘creamy layer’ OBC and EWS.
  • In the policy realm, this judgment opens the way for designing examinations that are free of linguistic, class, school boards, and regional bias.
  • Justice A.K. Rajan’s report on NEET, cited in this judgment, could be a potential blueprint for democratising access to higher education.
  • The recognition of social privileges that hide behind merit also buttresses the demand for caste census that can document the dynamics of privilege accumulation.

Conclusion:

  • The judgment has the potential to settle a long, fractious and futile debate in our country: merit versus reservations. This reasoning — coming from the highest court of the land would open the eyes of the public to the reality of inherited caste privileges that masquerade as merit. The judgment should have far-reaching consequences for judicial orders, public policy, and, hopefully, public discourse.

Source: The Hindu

Mains Question:

Q. The recent apex court observation on reservation and merit will help in reshaping the complacent and condescending drawing-room conversations about “reserved category”. Discuss