Lateral Entry Policy Still Active

Syllabus :GS 2/Governance 

In News

  • Union Minister Jitendra Singh clarified that the government has not given up on the idea of lateral entry into government departments.

Lateral entry 

  • It refers to the hiring of specialists, including professionals from the private sector, to take up senior roles in the government.
  • It aims to bring in fresh talent and strengthen middle management by appointing specialists with domain expertise for specific roles.

View of NITI Ayyog and various commissions 

  • The policy of lateral entry originated from recommendations by the NITI Aayog in its 2017 report, which highlighted the need for specialists in policymaking due to the economy’s growing complexity.
    • It proposed inducting experts to enhance competition and bring fresh talent into governance. 
    • The idea was to replace frequent officer rotations with longer, specialised postings. 
  • Similar recommendations were made earlier by the second Administrative Reforms Commission in 2005 under the UPA government. 

Previous appointments

  • Former PM Manmohan Singh and experts like Verghese Kurien, Homi Bhabha, and A.P.J. Abdul Kalam were lateral entrants who made significant contributions in various fields. 
  • Post-independence, lateral entries helped overcome the shortage of civil servants, and the system gradually evolved with regular UPSC recruitment.
  • Around 60 posts had already been filled through the lateral entry mode. “Today 40 to 45 [lateral entry recruits] are still working.
Do you know?
– In August 2024, the UPSC withdrew its notification for recruiting 45 officers through lateral entry—10 joint secretaries and 35 directors or deputy secretaries—after facing political backlash. 
– Opposition parties criticized the move for bypassing reservations for OBCs, SCs, and STs.

Advantages 

  • Lateral entrants can  bring domain-specific knowledge and professional experience, essential in today’s complex policymaking environment.
  • Private sector professionals may introduce new ideas, data-driven strategies, and outcome-based approaches to governance.
  • The government faces a shortage of All India Services officers, especially at the Central level.
    • Lateral entry helps fill these gaps.
      • According to a 2023-24 parliamentary panel report on the DoPT, only 442 IAS officers were working with the Union government, against the required strength of 1,469.

Disadvantages 

  • Lateral entry has faced criticism for not applying caste-based reservations, potentially sidelining marginalized groups.
    • Critics argue that such appointments bypass the DoPT’s roster system, which applies reservation to each department individually, not across ministries. 
  • Entrants may lack knowledge of governmental procedures and hierarchies, leading to inefficiencies.
  • Cooperation related challenges with existing civil servants.

Way Ahead 

  • The lateral entry holds promise for modernizing India’s administrative machinery but  it must be implemented with transparency, fairness, and clear integration mechanisms to ensure long-term success.

Source :IE

 

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