Telangana census finds SCs STs lag far behind

Telangana census finds SCs STs lag far behind

Telangana census finds SCs STs lag far behind

Report shows most SCs STs BCs remain deeply backward

Telangana’s Caste Census Bombshell: SCs 3x More Backward, Welfare Missing the Mark

Hyderabad, April 15, 2026—In a quiet release that packs a punch, Telangana’s Socio-Economic, Educational, Employment, Political, and Caste (SEEEPC) Survey 2024—aka the caste census—lays bare a stark reality. Scheduled Castes (SCs) and Tribes (STs) lag three times behind general castes in backwardness; Backward Classes (BCs) trail 2.7 times. Shockingly, 30% of welfare goodies go to folks less deprived than average. It’s a door-to-door wake-up call covering 3.55 crore souls across 242 castes—97% of the state.

Chaired by ex-SC judge Justice B. Sudershan Reddy, with firebrand Kancha Ilaiah as vice-chair and Praveen Chakravarty convening, the nine-member expert panel pored over it. Stars like Jean Drèze, Thomas Piketty, and Sukhadeo Thorat lent heft. Their gem? The Composite Backwardness Index (CBI)—a 0-126 score across 42 metrics: education, jobs, income, land, homes, gender gaps, discrimination, credit access. Rural-urban split keeps it real.

Who’s Hurting Most? Dakkal Tops the Pain Chart

SC Dakkal community scores a gut-wrenching 116—the state’s most backward. Kapu shines at 12, least deprived. Groups: SCs 96, STs 95, BCs 86, generals 31. State average? 81. Of 242 castes, 135 (69 BCs, 41 SCs, 25 STs) exceed it, covering 67% of folks. Brutal stat: 99% STs, 97% SCs, 71% BCs from worse-off groups. All 18 general castes? Below average—relative comfort.

Population pie: BCs 56.4% (2 crore+), SCs 17.4% (62 lakh), generals 11.9% (42 lakh), STs 10.4% (37 lakh). A mysterious 3.4% (12 lakh) said “no caste”—CBI 48, urban-heavy (73% in GHMC), often privileged folks dodging labels. 43% even hold caste certificates; 13.5% snagged quotas before.

Daily Struggles: Numbers with Heart

Data hits home. 45.7% working-age SCs toil as daily wagers; generals just 10.9%. Private pros? 30% general caste, 5% STs—despite equal pop shares. Kids: One-third general caste in private schools; SC/ST under 10%. ST homes: 33% sans toilet/tap; generals 5%.

Intra-group gaps sting. BC youth: Goldsmiths/Padmasalis 75% English-educated; Mudiraj/Valmiki/Pitchiguntla under 30%. SCs: Mala Sales own 3x land vs Mahars. STs: Gond dropouts triple Lambadi kids’.

Welfare Wake-Up: Billions Missing the Needy

Here’s the kicker: Analyzing ₹54,521 crore schemes (Rythu Bharosa, Cheyutha pensions, Arogyasri, free buses, housing), 30% benefits flow to less-backward groups. Agri handouts like Rythu Bharosa/free power? ₹30,000 crore yearly—15% to generals, 12% SCs (3x more backward, way bigger).

Bright spot: Free buses for women—20% SC, under 10% general. Smarter targeting works.

A Mirror for Telangana: Path to Justice?

This isn’t abstract stats; it’s Ramu the SC laborer skipping meals, Lakshmi the ST girl eyeing college dreams dashed. Survey screams: Redistribute welfare surgically. Experts urge data-driven quotas, schemes laser-focused on CBI highs.

Congress-led Telangana govt touts it as equity tool amid national caste census din. But implementation? That’s the test. Will it heal divides or fuel fights? For now, it’s a raw portrait of inequality—in a “progressive” state. Time to act, before resentment festers.

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