From Telangana, an index that confirms — and challenges — what we know about caste
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Context
The Government of Telangana commissioned an expert committee to develop the Composite Backwardness Index (CBI) based on a recent caste survey of 35 million people. The CBI measures the relative backwardness of 242 caste groups using 42 parameters, moving beyond population size to advocate for a 'share proportional to backwardness' in social justice policies. The report provides empirical evidence challenging assumptions about caste homogeneity and the idea that poverty alone determines backwardness.
UPSC Perspectives
Social
The Composite Backwardness Index (CBI) provides a critical, data-driven update to our understanding of caste dynamics, significantly expanding on the 11 parameters used by the . The report empirically confirms that structural inequality is deeply entrenched; Scheduled Castes (SCs) and Scheduled Tribes (STs) are three times more backward, and Backward Classes (BCs) are 2.7 times more backward than 'General' castes. Crucially, the CBI shatters the myth of caste homogeneity by revealing stark intra-group disparities. For instance, within the SC category, the Malas perform near the state average, while the Madigas rank at the bottom. This data underscores the concept of sub-categorization within reserved categories, a contentious issue recently addressed by a landmark Supreme Court ruling allowing states to create sub-quotas within SC/ST reservations to ensure equitable distribution of benefits to the most marginalized among them. The finding that access to private, English-medium education is a stronger determinant of backwardness than land ownership highlights the evolving nature of social mobility and the need for policies addressing modern forms of exclusion.
Governance
The introduction of the CBI advocates for a paradigm shift from broad-brush reservation policies towards targeted evidence-based policymaking. The current social justice framework often treats entire caste groups (e.g., all BCs or all SCs) as monolithic blocks for welfare distribution. The Telangana report reveals that this approach leads to misallocation; for example, 30% of welfare benefits flow to individuals who may not need them, and General Castes disproportionately benefit from farm schemes compared to the more deprived SCs. The author proposes a model of 'share proportional to backwardness', suggesting that state resources should be directed precisely where the data indicates the highest level of deprivation. This aligns with the constitutional mandate of , which directs the State to promote the educational and economic interests of the weaker sections, and protect them from social injustice. However, implementing such a granular, dynamic system requires robust administrative capacity and regular data updates, posing a significant governance challenge.
Polity
The findings challenge the contemporary narrative that economic criteria should be the primary basis for affirmative action, a debate central to the introduction of the quota via the . The report explicitly counters the argument that 'poverty is the only caste.' It demonstrates that even when comparing equally poor households (under Rs 1 lakh annual income), children from General Castes access private education at eight times the rate of SC/ST children. This reinforces the core rationale of the constitutional reservation system, anchored in and , which focuses on social and educational backwardness stemming from historical discrimination, rather than just immediate economic distress. The data suggests that social capital and caste networks provide enduring advantages that poverty alone does not negate, arguing against a purely economic approach to social justice.