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HomeIndiaPar panel asks govt to examine expanding 360-degree empanelment process beyond IAS...

Par panel asks govt to examine expanding 360-degree empanelment process beyond IAS officers

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New Delhi, Mar 16 (PTI) A Parliamentary Committee on Monday asked the Centre to examine the feasibility of institutionalising a structured 360-degree review mechanism for the empanelment of officers of all central services for Joint Secretary and other higher posts.

Such an approach would promote parity in evaluation standards across services, strengthen merit-based selection at senior levels, and enhance confidence in the objectivity and robustness of the empanelment process, it said.

The empanelment of IAS officers for appointment at the level of Joint Secretary in the government of India is undertaken through a structured process conducted by the Department of Personnel & Training.

The process involves evaluation of officers based on their service records, annual performance appraisal reports (APARs), vigilance status and overall career profile.

In its report, the Committee said that over the past several years, the empanelment process for IAS officers has incorporated a 360-degree assessment mechanism, under which multi-source feedback is obtained from senior officers, peers and other stakeholders who have worked with the officer concerned.

This process is intended to supplement formal performance records with qualitative inputs regarding leadership qualities, domain expertise, integrity, decision-making capacity and overall suitability for senior policy-making roles in the government of India, said the 160th report of the Department-related Parliamentary Standing Committee on Personnel, Public Grievances, Law and Justice on Demands for Grants (2026-27) pertaining to the Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT).

“The Committee, therefore, recommends that the department (DoPT) examine the feasibility of institutionalising a structured 360-degree review mechanism, for empanelment of Joint Secretary and other higher posts drawn from services other than the IAS,” it said.

The panel said that it is of the view that the principles underlying the assessment mechanism, namely holistic evaluation, multi-source feedback and qualitative assessment of leadership attributes, are relevant not only for IAS officers but also for officers from other services considered for empanelment as Joint Secretaries and other higher posts in the government of India.

The Committee also flagged a shortage of IAS officers at the national level and suggested steps to fill such vacancies.

At the national level, nearly one-fifth of the sanctioned IAS posts remain vacant, which is a matter of serious concern, it said.

Of the sanctioned strength of 6,877, there are 5,577 tentative number of officers in position, meaning 1,300 positions are vacant.

An examination of the cadre-wise distribution of vacancies reveals that the shortage is uneven and disproportionately severe in certain states. While the national average shortage is 18.90 per cent, several cadres are functioning well above this level, the panel said.

Nagaland is facing the most acute shortage at 43.62 per cent, followed by Kerala (32.03 per cent) and Manipur (30.43 per cent). Tripura (27.45 per cent), Odisha (25.40 per cent), AGMUT (Arunachal Pradesh, Goa, Mizoram, and Union Territories)  (25.09 per cent) and Sikkim (25.00 per cent) are also operating with one-fourth or more of their sanctioned strength vacant, the panel said.

“The Committee is particularly concerned that a number of North-Eastern and smaller cadres are experiencing disproportionately high shortages in percentage terms. Given their strategic location, developmental priorities and administrative sensitivities, such persistent vacancies may adversely affect governance delivery, supervision of field administration and effective implementation of central and state schemes in these areas,” the report reads.

Moreover, even larger and administratively significant states are not insulated from this challenge.

West Bengal (19.84 per cent), Rajasthan (19.28 per cent), Haryana (20 per cent) and Jharkhand (20.98 per cent) are functioning with nearly one-fifth of their sanctioned strength vacant, it said.

The AGMUT cadre, servicing multiple Union territories including the National Capital Territory of Delhi, has a deficit exceeding 25 per cent, which raises concerns regarding administrative capacity in centrally-governed regions, the panel said.

The Committee said that no cadre is currently operating at full sanctioned strength, indicating that the issue of shortage is systemic rather than isolated.

The panel is of the view that persistent shortage continues to adversely affect administrative capacity at the Centre and in the states, particularly at the field-level positions where timely decision-making and policy implementation are critical, the report said.

“The Committee, therefore, urges the department (DoPT) to immediately prioritise filling the 25% vacancies in the AGMUT cadre, considering its unique administrative spread across multiple Union Territories and the National Capital Territory. Moreover, the Committee feels that there is a need to formulate a special filling strategy for North-Eastern and smaller cadres such as Nagaland, Manipur, Tripura and Sikkim, where percentage shortages are disproportionately high,” it added. PTI AKV AKV AMJ AMJ

This report is auto-generated from PTI news service. ThePrint holds no responsibility for its content.

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