KATHMANDU, Nov 9: The latest annual report of the Public Service Commission (PSC) has revealed an interesting trend: candidates whose parents are illiterate or have only primary education are performing better in civil service examinations than those from more educated families.
According to the report for fiscal year 2081/82, recently submitted to President Ramchandra Paudel, 41.44 percent of successful candidates’ fathers had only primary education, while 16.20 percent were illiterate. Similarly, 48.69 percent of the mothers had only primary schooling, and 33.33 percent were illiterate. In contrast, only 20.61 percent of fathers and 6.7 percent of mothers of successful candidates had attained higher education.
The data suggests that despite limited educational backgrounds, children of less-educated or illiterate parents are excelling in public service recruitment, showing a gradual social shift in opportunities.
Driving away fear from children
No applicants for 44 positions
The PSC report also noted that out of 1,513 advertised civil service positions, 44 posts received no applications at all. These included 31 positions under internal competition and seven under inclusion categories. The unfilled posts were mainly in technical fields such as amin and mechanics, as well as specialized medical positions in nephrology, neurology, cardiology, urology, kidney transplant surgery, neonatology, and hematology.
Commission officials attributed this to the lack of revision in reservation quotas, which by law should be reviewed every 10 years but have not been updated since 2064 BS.
26,000 entered civil service through reservation
Since the introduction of inclusion-based recruitment in 2064 BS, more than 26,000 candidates have joined the civil service through reservation categories. In fiscal year 2081/82 alone, 849 posts were advertised under six inclusive groups, leading to 1,056 permanent appointments. Among them were 365 women, 273 from indigenous groups, 233 Madhesis, 96 Dalits, 46 persons with disabilities, and 43 from backward regions.
Brahmin, Chhetri dominance in applications
The report also highlights caste-wise participation patterns. Of the 459,834 total applicants, Brahmin (hill) and Chhetri communities accounted for the largest shares, at 23.8 and 18.25 percent respectively. Tharu, Yadav, and Magar communities followed. The least representation came from Punjabi/Sikh, Lohorung, and foreign-origin applicants, with only two applications each.
The PSC’s findings reflect both growing access among marginalized backgrounds and persistent social patterns in Nepal’s competitive public service system.