Context:
The Supreme Court ruled that creamy layer status in OBCs cannot be determined solely based on parental income, addressing discrimination in eligibility criteria.
Key Highlights:
- Case Facts / Judicial Developments
- SC upheld judgments of Madras, Kerala, and Delhi High Courts.
- Dismissed Centre’s appeals challenging these rulings.
- Addressed inconsistencies in 1993 Office Memorandum (OM) and 2004 clarification.
- Policy / Legal Insights
- 1993 OM: Excluded salary and agricultural income in creamy layer determination.
- 2004 letter: Included salary of PSU/private employees → created disparity.
- Court ruled this leads to “hostile discrimination.”
- Stakeholders Involved
- OBC candidates in Civil Services Exams.
- Government (Centre).
- Private sector & PSU employees.
- Significance / Concerns
- Ensures fair access to reservation benefits.
- Prevents unequal treatment between government and private employees.
- Reinforces constitutional equality principles.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Creamy Layer:
- Economically advanced section within OBCs excluded from reservation.
- Constitutional Provisions:
- Article 14: Equality before law.
- Article 15: Prohibition of discrimination.
- Article 16: Equality in public employment.
- Office Memorandum (1993):
- Defined criteria for creamy layer exclusion.
- Key Principle:
- Creamy layer determination involves social status + occupation + income, not just income.
- OBC Classification:
- Based on social and educational backwardness (Article 340).
Relevant Mains Points:
- Strengthening Social Justice:
- Ensures reservation benefits reach genuinely disadvantaged groups.
- Avoids over-simplification of backwardness using income alone.
- Equality Doctrine:
- Reinforces substantive equality over formal equality.
- Prevents arbitrary classification within same social group.
- Administrative Implications:
- Requires revision of creamy layer criteria frameworks.
- Promotes uniform standards across employment sectors.
- Challenges:
- Difficulty in measuring social backwardness objectively.
- Potential increase in litigation over eligibility criteria.
- Way Forward:
- Develop multi-dimensional criteria (income + occupation + social indicators).
- Periodic revision of income limits and classification norms.
- Ensure transparent and uniform guidelines across sectors.
UPSC Relevance:
- Prelims: Creamy layer, Articles 14–16, OBC policies.
- Mains GS Paper 2: Social justice, reservation policy, constitutional equality.
