Critically analyse the proposition that there is a high correlation between India’s cultural diversities and socio-economic marginalities(GS1 2024 Question)

“India is, the cradle of the human race, birthplace of human speech, mother of history, the grandmother of legend, & great grandmother of tradition.” – Mark Twain. However, this richness often intersects with socio-economic marginalities, disproportionately impacting certain communities.

Cultural Diversity Intersect With Socio-Economic Marginalities Reinforcing Inequality

  1. Caste and Socio-Economic Marginality: Lower castes like SCs and STs face systemic discrimination, limiting access to education, jobs, and land. Eg- 79% of rural SC households rely on manual labour, reflecting their economic disadvantage (SECC 2011).
  2. Sociologist M.N.Srinivas in his concept of ‘dominant caste’ noted economic status of various cultural groups reflects historical privileges and disadvantages. Eg. Dominant castes like Brahmins, Jats, Marathas, Reddy, Yadavs, etc historically benefited from better access to education and employment.
  3. Tribal Identity and Economic Exclusion: suffer from high poverty and displacement due to development projects. 50% of STs live in multidimensional poverty (MPI 2019). Eg- Bhils in Narmada valley displaced due to Sardar sarovar dam.
  4. Religious Diversity and Economic Inequality: The Sachar Committee (2006) reported that Muslims lag behind in most socio-economic indicators.
  5. Linguistic Diversity and Regional Inequality: Eg. ASER report noted only 14% of tribal children in grade 3 have comprehension skills.
  6. Gender and Intersectionality: Women from marginalised cultural groups (SCs, STs, Muslims) experience double marginalisation due to both gender and socio-cultural identity. Only 11% of ST women complete higher education (NFHS-4), highlighting intersectional disadvantages.
  7. Geographic and ethnic factors especially in context of north-eastern states, which are rich cultural diverse region, but experiencing lower socio-economic development. Eg. Ongoing conflict of kuki vs meitei in Manipur.
  8. Policy and Governance Challenges: Affirmative action has helped, but elite capture within groups like OBCs leaves the most vulnerable excluded. Eg- Denotified Tribes (DNTs) and other subgroups often do not fully benefit from welfare schemes.

Challenging the Proposition

  1. Political Representation: 15% of Parliament seats are reserved for SCs, and 7.5% for STs, enhancing political participation.
  2. Religious and Linguistic Minorities Thriving: Eg: Sikhs are one of the wealthiest agricultural communities, and Jains have the highest literacy and income levels in India (Census 2011).
  3. Affirmative Action Success: Reservations in education and employment for SCs, STs, and OBCs. SC/ST enrolment in higher education has risen to 21% due to reservation policies (AISHE 2020-21).
  4. Economic Liberalisation: Economic reforms have benefited certain sections of marginalised groups, particularly OBCs, in accessing jobs in sectors like IT and services.
  5. Development Programs: Government welfare schemes like MGNREGA and PM-KISAN have provided direct support to marginalised communities. Eg- MGNREGA created 309 crore person-days of work in 2022-23.
  6. Cultural enrichment: diversity has promoted different avenues such as art,food,tourism and handicrafts. Eg. Red ant chutney of odisha got GI tag.

Way Forward

  1. Strengthen Implementation of Affirmative Action –  Sub-categorization of SC and ST as mandated by SC in State of Punjab & Ors. vs Davinder Singh & Ors.
  2. Promotion of Local Languages and culture: New Education Policy 2020 has supported the three-language policy.
  3. Cultural Integration and Economic Empowerment: Supporting tribal handicrafts in regions like the Northeast and Odisha can create sustainable livelihoods while preserving cultural heritage. 
  4. Improving Social Justice Systems: Strengthening the implementation of the Forest Rights Act of 2006 and PESA
  5. Fostering Community-Based Development: Eg- Kudumbshree Model of Kerala
  6. Enhancing Political Representation: Early implementation of 106th Constitutional Amendment Act.

A a multi-pronged approach with stakeholder participation is need to realise the Trinity of Social, Political and Economic empowerment of Marginalised communities. As PM Modi stated, “The nation is not just land for us, but an inspirational unit,” emphasizing the importance of unity in addressing these disparities.

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