
In News
- Recently, Bihar Cabinet approved a proposal to carry out a caste-based ‘count’ in the State.
Relevance and need for the caste count
- A step towards equality:
- A caste census would help us point out those castes that are not represented in the institutions of this country so that steps towards equality can be established.
- It would also justify the extension of reservations to various communities.
- The aim is that every section of society can progress properly.
- The Last Caste data with the government:
- last caste census was in 1931 and the government still uses this as a basis to estimate demography and different caste groups.
- There have been significant changes in the demography of this country.
- Data unavailability:
- The Rohini Commission too, faced difficulties due to the unavailability of data on various communities classified under OBCs.
- The Commission was set up to examine the issue of sub-categorisation of OBCs.
- The Rohini Commission too, faced difficulties due to the unavailability of data on various communities classified under OBCs.
- Effective service delivery:
- A fresh estimate of the population is necessary to ensure more effective delivery of targeted welfare.
- State actions on caste data collection:
- Karnataka, Odisha and Telangana had carried out similar counts in the name of “socio-economic surveys”.
- Popular demand:
- Along with Bihar, other states like Jharkhand and Odisha are also reiterating their support for the caste census.
Criticisms
- A colonial practice:
- Every Census until 1931 had data on caste. So it was a colonial practice of divide and rule which drove them toward collecting such data.
- Every Census in independent India from 1951 to 2011 has published data on Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, but not on other castes.
- May increase caste divisions:
- the 21st century India should be discussing ‘let’s do away with caste’ rather than further divide India on those lines.
- Caste census may “rekindle divisive feelings among people.
- Demand for reservations:
- Reservations that were implemented for 10 years have continued for 75 years and a caste-based census may lead to a demand for more.
- No constitutional Mandate:
- Unlike in the case of the SCs and the STs, there is no constitutional mandate for the Registrar-General and Census Commissioner of India, to provide the census figures of the OBCs and the BCCs.
- Difficulties in such count:
- Union government contended that such an exercise was not feasible given that there are too many castes and sub-castes in each state and Union territory making it difficult to classify them.
- People use their clan/gotra, sub-caste and caste names interchangeably.
- The government has cited numerous administrative, operational and logistical reasons.
- Census data enumerators are part-timers with 6-7 days of training and are “not an investigator or verifier”
- There is a fear that such counting could endanger the census exercise itself.
- Union government contended that such an exercise was not feasible given that there are too many castes and sub-castes in each state and Union territory making it difficult to classify them.
- Political agenda:
- At a deeper level there are politics involved in the matter.
- Bihar’s politics has been dominated by the Other Backward Castes (OBCs), the numerically powerful social group.
- Socio-economic caste census (SECC)
- Union government cited that the socio-economic caste census (SECC) conducted by the government in 2011 contained too many discrepancies and the data was caste data was withheld.
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History of Caste Census
Why has it not been carried out since 1931?
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Way Ahead
- The need for a caste census can also be seen in the vast income disparity in the country.
- A 2020 Oxfam report states that
- the top 10% of India’s population owns 74.3 % of the total wealth;
- the middle 40% owns 22.9%;
- and the bottom 50% owns a shocking 2.8 %.
- Such an unequal distribution of wealth demands a greater understanding of Indian society.
- Meaningful policies that address affirmative action as a method of reducing the rich-poor gap are essential and, in order to properly understand the distribution of wealth in the country.
- The need of the hour is to devise ways and means to concentrate upon the castes and classes who are still deprived, under-privileged and improvised.
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Socio-economic caste census (SECC)
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Source: TH
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