1. Critically examine the challenges affecting the functioning of State Public Service Commissions (PSCs) and suggest suitable reforms.
| Syllabus: General Studies – II : Appointment to various Constitutional Posts, Powers, Functions and Responsibilities of various Constitutional Bodies. |
IN NEWS: How can State PSCs be reformed?
Public Service Commissions are constitutional bodies entrusted with the merit-based recruitment of civil servants. While the UPSC has maintained institutional credibility, several State PSCs face a trust deficit owing to systemic and structural deficiencies.
Structural Challenges
- Political interference: Appointment to State PSCs often reflects a ‘spoils system’, lacking transparent merit-based criteria.
- Absence of defined qualifications: Unlike UPSC members, State PSC members often lack minimum age, experience, or professional benchmarks.
- Lack of a dedicated personnel management ministry: Most States do not systematise manpower planning or vacancy declaration.
Procedural & Operational Issues
- Irregular examinations: Due to poor manpower forecasting and financial constraints, recruitments are frequently delayed.
- Inadequate syllabus revision: State PSCs rarely update syllabi or involve experts, leading to outdated patterns.
- Limited academic pool: Paper-setting and evaluation remain restricted to local faculty, affecting quality and moderation.
- Complex reservation mechanics: Incorporation of vertical, horizontal and zonal reservations generates frequent litigation.
- Translation errors: Poor quality translation from English to regional languages leads to misinterpretation and court cases.
- Confidentiality issues: Leakage, mismanagement, and delayed responses erode aspirants’ trust.
Consequences
- Rising litigation before High Courts and tribunals.
- Delayed recruitment cycles and vacancy backlogs.
- Erosion of trust among aspirants and calls for UPSC takeover.
Suggested Reforms
- Creating State Ministries of Personnel for five-year recruitment roadmaps.
- Constitutional amendment fixing minimum age (55) and maximum age (65), and defining qualifications for PSC members.
- Transparent, consultative appointments, with Opposition participation.
- Regular syllabus revision and alignment with UPSC standards.
- Objective testing for State-specific subjects.
- Mix of MCQ + descriptive format in mains to ensure holistic assessment.
- Strengthened translation system (tech + expert reviewers).
- Appointment of senior education administrators as PSC Secretaries.
- UPSC-like balance of transparency, confidentiality, and swift systemic corrections.
State PSCs are indispensable for federal governance, and strengthening them is essential for merit-based, efficient administration. Systematic structural and procedural reforms can help restore credibility and align State PSCs with UPSC standards.
| PYQ REFERENCE (UPSC Mains 2018) Q. “The public service commissions are the watchdogs of the merit system in India. Examine their constitutional status and functions.” |
2. Smooth implementation of the Labour Codes depends on meaningful tripartite consultation.” Examine this statement in the context of India’s evolving labour market and federal structure.
| Syllabus: General Studies – II : Government policies and interventions relating to labour, employment, and industrial relations. |
IN NEWS: Labour and honour – Smooth execution of the Labour Codes is linked to tripartite consultations
The four Labour Codes enacted between 2019–2020 consolidate 29 central labour laws into a simplified framework covering wages, industrial relations, social security, and occupational safety. While they aim to improve ease of doing business and formalisation, their smooth implementation hinges on robust tripartite consultation involving the Centre, States, employers, and workers—an approach historically rooted in the Indian Labour Conference (ILC).
Tripartite Consultation Matters for Implementing the Labour Codes
1. Conflicting stakeholder interests
- Workers demand stronger safeguards; employers seek flexibility; States seek autonomy.
- Tripartite forums help reconcile these differing expectations.
2. Historical legacy of social dialogue
- The ILC (met 46 times between 1940–2015) has served as India’s primary platform for shaping labour policy.
- PM had assured that labour reforms would follow wide consultations—currently not fulfilled.
3. Ensures legitimacy and acceptance
- Codes face criticism for ignoring pro-worker recommendations of the Second National Commission on Labour (2002).
- Without consensus, enforcement may face resistance or litigation.
Need for Tripartite Consultations in an Evolving Labour Market
1. Gig and platform workers
- Codes include them under social security ambit, but implementation requires mapping of platforms, contribution mechanisms, and dispute redressal.
- Workers’ voices missing from drafting stages.
2. AI and automation altering job structures
- Definitions of “work,” “wage,” and “employer–employee relations” are becoming fluid.
- Consultations help update rules in line with new realities.
3. Youth bulge and non-farm growth
- 12 million people enter the workforce annually; Economic Survey recommends creating 78.5 lakh non-farm jobs per year.
- Codes must be implemented in a way that enhances labour absorption, not labour exclusion.
4. Rise of informal and contractual work
- A uniform approach may disadvantage sectors differently.
- Localised State-specific insights are critical.
Federal Challenges Requiring Consultation
1. Labour is a Concurrent List subject
- Both Centre and States must frame rules; variations across States can create inconsistency.
2. Capacity gaps in States
- Many States have draft rules but lack enforcement machinery and inspection systems.
3. Industrial relations vary by region
- Manufacturing-heavy States (TN, Gujarat, Maharashtra) have different employer–worker dynamics than service-dominated States.
4. Implementation without consultation risks policy incoherence
- Different timelines or interpretations may hurt national labour markets and investment climate.
The Labour Codes promise major reforms but their success depends not just on legislative consolidation but on consensus-building through tripartite consultations. In a transforming labour ecosystem—marked by gig work, automation, informality, and a growing young workforce—social dialogue is essential for legitimacy, worker protection, and federal harmony. Convening the 47th Indian Labour Conference and ensuring systematic consultation with all stakeholders is imperative for smooth, equitable, and future-ready implementation of the Labour Codes.
| PYQ REFERENCE (UPSC Mains 2023) Q. Do you agree that the gig workers and platform workers need social security coverage? Justify your answer. |

