Meritocracy in civil service recruitment must adapt to evolving societal and governance challenges. Critically evaluate the role of the Union Public Service Commission in shaping the future profile of India’s higher bureaucracy.
Kartavya Desk Staff
Topic: Appointment to various Constitutional posts, powers, functions and responsibilities of various Constitutional Bodies.
Topic: Appointment to various Constitutional posts, powers, functions and responsibilities of various Constitutional Bodies.
Q4. Meritocracy in civil service recruitment must adapt to evolving societal and governance challenges. Critically evaluate the role of the Union Public Service Commission in shaping the future profile of India’s higher bureaucracy. (10 M)
Difficulty Level: Medium
Reference: IE
Why the question UPSC’s centenary and ongoing reforms have renewed debate on the need to preserve constitutional meritocracy while adapting recruitment to meet the complex demands of modern governance. Key demand of the question To explain why meritocracy in civil service recruitment must evolve with changing societal and governance challenges, and critically evaluate the role of the Union Public Service Commission in shaping the future profile of India’s higher bureaucracy, covering both achievements and shortcomings, and suggesting a forward path. Structure of the Answer: Introduction State the significance of UPSC as the constitutional guardian of meritocracy and its evolving relevance in a changing governance ecosystem. Body Why meritocracy must adapt – representative diversity, technology-led governance, cross-sector complexity. UPSC’s role – successes in autonomy, ethics integration, curriculum relevance, transparency. UPSC’s limitations – equity gaps, skill relevance lag, lateral entry integration, static assessment formats. Way forward – competency-based assessment, domain tracks, syllabus review, equity outreach. Conclusion A short, forward-looking statement on balancing constitutional impartiality with recruitment innovation to build a future-ready higher bureaucracy.
Why the question UPSC’s centenary and ongoing reforms have renewed debate on the need to preserve constitutional meritocracy while adapting recruitment to meet the complex demands of modern governance.
Key demand of the question To explain why meritocracy in civil service recruitment must evolve with changing societal and governance challenges, and critically evaluate the role of the Union Public Service Commission in shaping the future profile of India’s higher bureaucracy, covering both achievements and shortcomings, and suggesting a forward path.
Structure of the Answer:
Introduction State the significance of UPSC as the constitutional guardian of meritocracy and its evolving relevance in a changing governance ecosystem.
• Why meritocracy must adapt – representative diversity, technology-led governance, cross-sector complexity.
• UPSC’s role – successes in autonomy, ethics integration, curriculum relevance, transparency.
• UPSC’s limitations – equity gaps, skill relevance lag, lateral entry integration, static assessment formats.
• Way forward – competency-based assessment, domain tracks, syllabus review, equity outreach.
Conclusion A short, forward-looking statement on balancing constitutional impartiality with recruitment innovation to build a future-ready higher bureaucracy.