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Minority Issues – SC, ST, Dalits, OBC, Reservations, etc.

OBC creamy layer: Why SC ruled against hostile

Why in the News?

In Union of India and Others v. Rohith Nathan and Another, Etc. (with connected matters), the Supreme Court of India ruled on March 11, 2026, that salary income cannot be the sole criterion for determining the OBC “creamy layer” status, striking down a 2004 government clarification that discriminated against Public Sector Undertaking (PSU) and private-sector employees. The court held that treating them differently from government employees constitutes hostile discrimination, violating equality principles.

What is the concept of creamy layer in Other Backward Classes (OBCs)?

  1. The “creamy layer” refers to the relatively advanced and economically better-off members within the Other Backward Classes (OBCs) who are excluded from reservation benefits
  2. The principle was introduced by the Supreme Court of India in the landmark judgment of Indra Sawhney v. Union of India (Mandal case).
    1. The Court held that reservation is intended to benefit socially and educationally backward sections, and therefore the more privileged individuals within OBCs should not continue to claim these benefits, as this would prevent genuinely disadvantaged members from accessing opportunities.

Who Falls Under the “Creamy Layer”? (Ineligible for Quota)

The determination is primarily based on the status of your parents’ employment, not just their income. 

  1. Constitutional Posts: Children of the President, Vice-President, Judges of the SC/HC, UPSC members, etc.
  2. Government Employees (Status-Based):
    1. Group A / Class I Officers: Children of direct recruits.
    2. Group B / Class II Officers: Children if both parents are direct recruits, or if one parent is promoted to Group A before age 40.
  3. PSU & Private Sector Employees: Per the March 2026 SC verdict, candidates must be judged by the equivalence of their parents’ posts to government ranks. High salary alone cannot exclude them if their post is equivalent to Group C or D.
  4. Armed Forces: Children of officers of the rank of Colonel and above (and equivalent in Navy/Air Force).
  5. Professional/Trade Category: Families with significant wealth or large landholdings (e.g., irrigated land over a certain limit). 

The Income/Wealth Test (₹8 Lakh Limit) 

This test applies only to those not covered by the status-based categories above (e.g., business owners, private employees). 

  1. The Limit: The current threshold is ₹8 lakh per annum.
  2. What is Excluded: For the purpose of this calculation, salary income and agricultural income are strictly excluded.
  3. Determination: The limit applies to “income from other sources” (like business, professional fees, or rent) for three consecutive years. 

Where the Rule Does NOT Apply

  1. Scheduled Castes (SCs) & Scheduled Tribes (STs): The Union Cabinet (August 2024) has categorically stated that the creamy layer principle does not apply to SCs and STs, sticking to the original constitutional provisions.
  2. Candidates’ Own Income: Only the parents’ status/income is considered. The candidate’s own salary or their spouse’s income is never included.

What was the 2004 Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT) clarification?

  1. The Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT) issued a clarification on 14 October 2004 that altered the operational interpretation of the 1993 Office Memorandum on OBC creamy layer criteria
  2. Under the 1993 OM, the creamy layer status of government employees was determined primarily by the level of post held (e.g., Group A or Group B services) rather than by salary income, and therefore salary and agricultural income were generally not considered for the income test in such cases.
  3. However, the 2004 clarification directed that for employees of Public Sector Undertakings (PSUs), banks and private sector organisations, salary income must be included while calculating the income threshold for determining creamy layer status
  4. This resulted in different standards being applied to similarly placed OBC families, leading to allegations of hostile discrimination, which was later addressed by the Supreme Court.

How did the Supreme Court interpret the concept of creamy layer within OBC reservations?

  1. Constitutional principle of equality: Ensures reservation policies operate within the framework of Articles 14, 15, and 16, preventing discriminatory classification within the same social group.
  2. Purpose of creamy layer exclusion: Ensures reservation benefits reach socially and educationally backward sections, not advanced members within OBCs.
  3. Judicial clarification: Declares that unequal treatment of similarly placed OBC candidates is constitutionally impermissible.
  4. Uniform classification principle: Prevents artificial distinctions between employees in government, PSU, and private sectors.

What is the historical and legal origin of the creamy layer doctrine in India?

  1. Mandal judgment foundation: Establishes creamy layer exclusion in the landmark case of Indra Sawhney v. Union of India.
  2. Objective of exclusion: Prevents the advanced sections within OBCs from monopolizing reservation benefits.
  3. Administrative framework: Operationalized through a 1993 Office Memorandum issued by the Government of India.
  4. Sectoral classification: Includes categories such as constitutional post holders, Group A/B officers, professionals, property owners, and wealthy individuals

Why did the 2004 DoPT clarification create controversy in creamy layer determination?

  1. Income classification anomaly: Included salary income of PSU and private-sector employees in determining creamy layer status.
  2. Exclusion inconsistency: Excluded salary income of government employees, creating unequal treatment.
  3. Three-year income test: Classified children of employees as creamy layer if parental income exceeded ₹2.5 lakh annually for three consecutive years (earlier threshold).
  4. Administrative distortion: Generated discriminatory outcomes among similarly placed OBC families.

Why did the Supreme Court term the classification as ‘hostile discrimination’?

The Supreme Court of India termed the classification “hostile discrimination” in reference to the classification created by the Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT) through its 14 October 2004 clarification regarding the determination of the OBC creamy layer.

  1. Violation of equality doctrine: The Court invoked Article 14’s prohibition on arbitrary classification.
  2. Artificial distinctions: Found no rational basis for differentiating between PSU/private employees and government employees.
  3. Constitutional impermissibility: Declared unequal treatment within the same social class legally untenable.
  4. Judicial reasoning: Affirmed that reservation policies must remain consistent with constitutional guarantees of equality and social justice.

Conclusion

The clarification of the creamy layer principle by the Supreme Court of India reinforces the constitutional commitment to substantive equality and equitable distribution of affirmative action benefits. By striking down discriminatory classifications in creamy layer determination, the Court has reaffirmed that reservation policies must remain consistent, rational, and aligned with the objective of empowering genuinely disadvantaged sections within OBCs. Going forward, periodic review of creamy layer criteria, transparent guidelines, and evidence-based policy design will be essential to ensure that affirmative action continues to function as an instrument of social justice rather than intra-group inequality.

PYQ Relevance

[UPSC 2018] Whether the National Commission for Scheduled Castes (NCSC) can enforce the implementation of constitutional reservation for the Scheduled Castes in religious minority institutions? Examine.

Linkage: The question relates to constitutional safeguards and institutional enforcement of reservation policies, similar to the creamy layer debate which concerns equitable implementation of affirmative action and protection of backward classes under Articles 15(4) and 16(4).


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