Finding work for disabled ex-service men
UPSC Study Note: Finding Work for Disabled Ex-Service Men
1. At a Glance
- Disabled ex-service men are veterans who sustained physical or mental disabilities during military service and face compounded barriers to civilian employment — combining service-related impairment with the civil-military transition gap.
- The topic sits at the intersection of veteran welfare, disability rights, and labour policy — examinable across GS-II (social justice, welfare schemes) and GS-III (employment).
- India has a structured architecture through the Directorate General Resettlement (DGR) and Kendriya Sainik Board (KSB) under the Ministry of Defence, with statutory reservation quotas in public sector jobs. [S1][S2]
- A historical precedent (article trigger): A 1926-era British parliamentary debate on 32,000 unemployed disabled ex-servicemen — reprinted by The Hindu as an archive piece in February 2026 — anchors this topic in long-standing global policy concern. [S5]
2. Why in the News
- The Hindu Archive Reprint (18 February 2026): The Hindu republished a historic dispatch from Rugby, 17 February (c. 1926), reporting British Parliament debates on finding employment for ~32,000 disabled ex-service men still unemployed post-WWI; the reprint contextualises the continuing global relevance of the issue. [S5]
- Ex-Servicemen (Re-employment in Central Civil Services & Posts) Amendment Rules, 2026 — notified by the Government of India, formally including Military Nursing Service (MNS) personnel within the definition of ex-servicemen entitled to re-employment and reservation benefits. [S3]
- Amendment Rules also extended to explicitly cover non-combatant ranks, removing definitional ambiguity that had excluded certain categories of disabled veterans from quota benefits. [S3]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| Post-WWI (c. 1918–26) | Britain debates compulsory percentage quotas on government contractors to absorb disabled veterans; 3,70,000 disabled men placed with 28,000 employers in England by 1926. [S5] |
| 1945–47 | UK Disabled Persons (Employment) Act 1944 — first formal quota system (3% of workforce) for registered disabled persons including veterans. |
| 1972 | India: Ex-servicemen (Re-employment in Central Civil Services and Posts) Rules, 1979 — origin of statutory reservation framework. |
| 1985 | Kendriya Sainik Board (KSB) strengthened as apex welfare body under Ministry of Defence. |
| 2016 | Rights of Persons with Disabilities (RPWD) Act, 2016 — replaced Persons with Disabilities Act, 1995; expanded disability categories from 7 to 21; relevant to disabled veterans' legal entitlements. |
| 2024–25 | DGR resettlement training given to 11,589 retiring/retired officers, JCOs and ORs. Total 67,316 ESM benefitted from DGR employment/self-employment schemes (cumulative). [S1] |
| 2026 | Ex-servicemen Re-employment Amendment Rules 2026 — inclusion of MNS; redefinition of eligible categories. [S3] |
4. Core Static Facts
Definitions: - Ex-Serviceman (ESM): Person who served in any rank (combatant or non-combatant) in Regular Army, Navy, or Air Force; post-2026 amendment — also includes MNS officers. [S3] - Disabled ESM: ESM with service-attributable disability of 50% or more for financial assistance eligibility. [S2]
Implementing Bodies: - Directorate General Resettlement (DGR) — Ministry of Defence; runs resettlement/skill training, employment placement, self-employment schemes. [S1] - Kendriya Sainik Board (KSB) — apex body for ESM welfare; coordinates with state Sainik Boards and district Sainik Welfare Officers. [S2] - Ministry of Defence — nodal ministry; works with Ministry of Labour & Employment for quota enforcement.
Enabling Legal Framework: - Ex-Servicemen (Re-employment in Central Civil Services & Posts) Rules, 1979 (as amended 2026) — under Article 309 of the Constitution. [S3] - Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016 — Section 34 mandates 4% reservation in government establishments for persons with benchmark disabilities. - RPWD Act, 2016 — recognises locomotor disability, hearing impairment, low vision etc. as relevant categories for disabled veterans.
Key Numbers: | Parameter | Figure | Source | |---|---|---| | Reservation in CPSUs/PSBs — Group C Direct Recruitment | 14.5% for ESM (includes 4.5% for disabled ESM + dependants of killed) | [S1][S4] | | Reservation in CPSUs/PSBs — Group D Direct Recruitment | 24.5% for ESM (includes 4.5% for disabled ESM + dependants) | [S1] | | Financial aid to disabled ESM (≥50% disability) | ₹1 lakh one-time | [S2] | | DGR resettlement training (FY 2024–25) | 11,589 personnel | [S1] | | Cumulative DGR employment beneficiaries | 67,316 ESM | [S1] | | Historical UK figure (c. 1926) | 3,70,000 disabled men placed; 28,000 employers engaged | [S5] | | Historical UK backlog (c. 1926) | 32,000 disabled ESM still unemployed | [S5] |
Dedicated Portal: Government operates a dedicated online portal for ESM employment/self-employment scheme registration. [S4]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- Unemployed disabled veterans represent a human capital loss — military skills (discipline, logistics, technical expertise) transferable to civil economy but underutilised without structured bridging.
- DGR-facilitated self-employment schemes (petrol pump allotments, DGSCC security agencies, coal-loading contracts) generate livelihoods without burdening public payroll. [S1]
- 4.5% sub-quota in CPSUs/PSBs specifically for disabled ESM ensures affirmative inclusion without crowding out other ESM categories. [S1]
Social
- Disability acquired in service carries social stigma compounded by economic exclusion — two axes of vulnerability simultaneously.
- Families of disabled ESM, particularly in rural areas (UP, Rajasthan, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand — high defence recruitment states), face income insecurity.
- MNS inclusion (2026) addresses gender gap — MNS is an all-women commissioned service; their prior exclusion from re-employment rules was a gender equity issue. [S3]
- Historical British experience (1926) shows that parliamentary advocacy + contractor quota mechanisms were among the earliest social policy tools for veteran absorption. [S5]
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 309 — Parliament/State Legislatures may regulate recruitment and conditions of service; the 1979 Rules and 2026 Amendment derive power from here. [S3]
- Article 16(1) & 16(4) — equality of opportunity in public employment; ESM/disability quotas are constitutionally valid as a form of protective discrimination.
- RPWD Act, 2016, Section 34 — 4% reservation mandate applicable to disabled veterans employed in government establishments.
- Ombudsman mechanism under RPWD Act provides grievance redress for disabled persons denied employment rights.
Administrative
- Three-tier delivery structure: DGR (central) → State Sainik Boards → District Sainik Welfare Offices (DSWOs) — last mile often weak due to capacity/staffing gaps at district level.
- Challenge of definitional ambiguity — pre-2026 exclusion of MNS shows how narrow statutory language can leave entire service categories without protection; the 2026 amendment corrects this. [S3]
- Verification and registration bottlenecks: Disabled ESM must obtain disability certificates, discharge documents, and register on DGR portal — procedural complexity reduces uptake.
Historical
- Post-WWI Britain (1918–1926) established the template: parliamentary pressure + contractor quota mandates + employer engagement = model later adopted globally. [S5]
- India inherited colonial-era pension/welfare structures for wounded soldiers (Military Pension under Pension Regulations for Army, 1961) but modernised post-1972 with structured resettlement architecture.
- Beveridge Report (1942, UK) and subsequent welfare state expansion provided comprehensive disability support — a global benchmark India's policy borrows from conceptually.
Ethical / Governance
- The state bears a moral debt to those disabled in its service — employment provision is not charity but obligation (social contract theory).
- Transparency concern: DGR scheme beneficiary data is not consistently disaggregated by disability type or degree, making outcome monitoring difficult.
- Risk of tokenism: 4.5% reservation in CPSUs means little if ESM disability certificates are not issued promptly or if reserved posts remain unfilled without penalty.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- 2026 (February): Government notifies Ex-Servicemen (Re-employment in Central Civil Services & Posts) Amendment Rules, 2026 — MNS personnel formally included; non-combatant ranks clarified. [S3]
- 2026 (February): Separate amendment extends re-employment and reservation benefits to MNS specifically, resolving a decade-long ambiguity. [S3]
- 2024–25 (FY): DGR conducted resettlement/skill development training for 11,589 retiring/retired defence personnel. [S1]
- 2024–25: Cumulative DGR employment/self-employment scheme beneficiaries crossed 67,316. [S1]
- February 2026: The Hindu republishes 1926 British parliamentary dispatch on disabled veteran unemployment — editorial signal of continuing relevance of the issue. [S5]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The nodal body for resettlement of ex-servicemen in India is the Directorate General Resettlement (DGR), under the Ministry of Defence. [S1]
- The apex welfare body for ex-servicemen is Kendriya Sainik Board (KSB) — not the Ministry of Labour & Employment. [S2]
- Reservation for disabled ESM and dependants of service personnel killed in action in CPSUs/PSBs Group C posts is 4.5% (within the 14.5% overall ESM quota). [S1]
- The Ex-Servicemen (Re-employment) Amendment Rules 2026 were notified under Article 309 of the Constitution. [S3]
- Military Nursing Service (MNS) personnel were formally included in ex-servicemen re-employment rules by the 2026 amendment — previously excluded by definitional ambiguity. [S3]
- A disabled ESM with 50% or more service-attributable disability receives a one-time financial assistance of ₹1 lakh if not covered by AG's Branch scheme. [S2]
- The Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016 mandates 4% reservation (Section 34) in government establishments — applicable to disabled veterans. (21 disability categories under the Act.)
- DGR's resettlement training covered 11,589 personnel in FY 2024–25; total beneficiaries of employment schemes stand at 67,316. [S1]
- A dedicated online portal for ESM employment and self-employment scheme registration exists under DGR. [S4]
- As per the 1926 British parliamentary record, 3,70,000 disabled ex-service men had been placed in employment through 28,000 employers in England, while 32,000 remained unemployed. [S5]
- The proposal discussed in the 1926 British Parliament was to confine government contracts to employers who maintained a percentage of disabled workers — an early form of contractor quota mechanism. [S5]
- The RPWD Act, 2016 replaced the Persons with Disabilities (Equal Opportunities, Protection of Rights and Full Participation) Act, 1995 and expanded disability categories from 7 to 21.
8. Mains Relevance
GS Papers: - GS-II: Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors; Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections; Social empowerment; Issues relating to development and management of Social Sector. - GS-III: Employment and unemployment; Human Resource Development. - GS-IV (Ethics): Social contract; State's moral obligation to those who served it; Duty of care.
Specific Syllabus Headings: - GS-II: "Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections of the population by the Centre and States and the performance of these schemes" - GS-II: "Issues relating to poverty and hunger; mechanisms, laws, institutions and bodies constituted for the protection and betterment of vulnerable sections"
Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "Disabled ex-servicemen represent a doubly marginalised group — veterans navigating both disability and civilian transition. Critically examine India's institutional framework for their rehabilitation and employment." (GS-II, 250 words) 2. "The Ex-Servicemen (Re-employment) Amendment Rules, 2026, including Military Nursing Service personnel, marks a significant step in gender-inclusive veteran welfare. Discuss." (GS-II, 150 words) 3. "From post-WWI Britain's contractor quota model to India's DGR resettlement framework — trace the evolution of state responsibility for disabled veterans' employment and assess the adequacy of India's current approach." (GS-II, 250 words)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Why Connected |
|---|---|
| Rights of Persons with Disabilities (RPWD) Act, 2016 | Statutory backbone for disability reservations applicable to disabled veterans; 21 disability categories directly relevant. |
| Kendriya Sainik Board (KSB) and Sainik Welfare structure | Institutional delivery mechanism for all ESM welfare, including disability-specific schemes. |
| One Rank One Pension (OROP) | Companion veteran welfare issue; understanding the political economy of defence welfare is necessary context. |
| Agniveer Scheme (Agnipath, 2022) | Short-tenure soldiers (4 years) may exit without pension/disability cover of regular service — raises future disabled-veteran welfare questions. |
| National Policy for Skill Development and Entrepreneurship, 2015 | Provides framework within which DGR resettlement/skill training programmes operate. |
| Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD), UN 2006 | India ratified 2007; Article 27 (work and employment for persons with disabilities) applies to disabled veterans. |
| Disability inclusion in Indian labour law | Factories Act, Contract Labour Act enforcement vis-à-vis RPWD Act's 4% mandate — compliance gap analysis relevant for Mains. |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Wrong ministry: DGR and KSB are under Ministry of Defence, not Ministry of Labour & Employment or Ministry of Social Justice & Empowerment — a frequent mix-up.
- Confusing quota percentages: The 4.5% sub-quota is within the 14.5% (Group C) / 24.5% (Group D) ESM quota — not an addition to it; also covers dependants of killed personnel, not only disabled ESM.
- RPWD Act disability count: The Act has 21 categories (not 7 — those were under the repealed 1995 Act). Disabled veterans may qualify under locomotor disability, visual impairment, hearing impairment, etc.
- MNS inclusion date: MNS was included in ESM re-employment rules only by the 2026 amendment — do not assume they were always covered.
- Historical article context: The 1926 figures (32,000 unemployed; 3,70,000 placed) relate to post-WWI Britain, not India — do not conflate with Indian statistics.
11. Sources
- [S1] "Welfare and Rehabilitation Schemes for Ex-Servicemen" — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2040796 — (Tier 1: pib.gov.in)
- [S2] "Welfare and Rehabilitation Scheme for Ex-Servicemen" — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleaseIframePage.aspx?PRID=1913306 — (Tier 1: pib.gov.in)
- [S3] "Govt notifies Ex-servicemen (Re-employment in Central Civil Services & Posts) Amendment Rules 2026" — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleseDetailm.aspx?PRID=2225786®=3&lang=2 — (Tier 1: pib.gov.in)
- [S4] "Dedicated Portal for Ex-Servicemen" — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2040794®=3&lang=2 — (Tier 1: pib.gov.in)
- [S5] "Finding work for disabled ex-service men" — The Hindu Archive Reprint, 18 February 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-18/th_international/articleGVJFJQCFC-13559024.ece — (Tier 4: thehindu.com)