After 9-year freeze, MP govt employees to get promotions; new policy to create 2 lakh jobs

IANS June 17, 2025 507 views

The Madhya Pradesh government has finally broken a nine-year promotion deadlock for government employees. A groundbreaking policy will create approximately 2 lakh job vacancies across various departments. The new framework incorporates merit-based promotions with specific reservation quotas for Scheduled Tribes and Scheduled Castes. This move is expected to boost administrative morale and provide long-awaited career progression opportunities for nearly four lakh state employees.

"The policy thoroughly examined all judicial options before finalization." - Kailash Vijayvargiya, Urban Development Minister
Bhopal, June 17: After a nine-year hiatus, the Madhya Pradesh Cabinet on Tuesday approved a long-awaited promotion policy for government employees, which will help generate vacancies.

Key Points

1

MP Cabinet approves comprehensive promotion policy after 9-year legal freeze

2

New framework generates 2 lakh job vacancies across departments

3

Merit and seniority-based promotions with reservation provisions

4

Performance appraisals key to eligibility criteria

According to Urban Development Minister Kailash Vijayvargiya, the new policy is expected to generate at least 2,00,000 vacancies across various departments. Approximately four lakh employees stand to benefit from this decision, which marks a significant administrative shift in the state.

The policy introduces a structured promotion mechanism for state service officers. A merit list will be prepared based on seniority, ensuring timely advancement opportunities and eliminating prolonged delays in career progression. The move is expected to boost morale and improve administrative efficiency.

The policy also incorporates reservation provisions, earmarking 20 per cent of promotional posts for Scheduled Tribes and 16 per cent for Scheduled Castes.

These measures aim to ensure equitable representation while maintaining procedural fairness.

Promotions had been suspended for nearly nine years due to a legal dispute over reservation in promotions, which was under consideration by the Supreme Court. During this period, more than 1,50,000 employees retired, including nearly 1,00,000 who were eligible for promotion. On average, around 3,000 employees retire each month in the state.

The government had filed a Special Leave Petition, which effectively stalled the promotion process during the litigation.

Minister Vijayvargiya stated that the legal department thoroughly examined all judicial options before finalising the policy. The Cabinet will now determine the effective date from which promotions will be granted.

The largest concentration of employees is in the school education and police departments, with nearly 5,00,000 personnel classified under the Class-III category.

The new framework seeks to balance the interests of both reserved and unreserved categories.

For Class-1 officers, promotions will be based on a combination of merit and seniority. For Class-2 and lower-level posts, the merit-cum-seniority principle will apply. Eligibility will also depend on performance appraisals. Employees must have received at least four 'A+' ratings in the past seven years or one 'Outstanding' rating in the last two years.

Those with incomplete records due to their own negligence will be disqualified. The policy will not affect employees who have already been promoted, nor will it apply retroactively to those who have retired, except the government makes any decision.

The new policy will come into force from the date of its official notification.

Reader Comments

R
Rajesh K.
Finally some good news for government employees! 9 years is too long to wait for promotions. This will definitely boost morale and efficiency. Hope other states learn from MP's example 👏
P
Priya M.
While the policy is welcome, I'm concerned about the 1.5 lakh employees who retired without promotions. The government should consider some compensation for them - they served the state faithfully for years.
A
Amit S.
The merit-based criteria with A+ ratings is a good move. Government jobs shouldn't just be about seniority - performance must matter too. But hope the appraisal system is fair and transparent 🤞
S
Sunita R.
My brother works in MP police and has been stuck at same post for 8 years. This news has brought so much relief to our family! Hope implementation happens quickly without more delays.
V
Vikram J.
Creating 2 lakh jobs is excellent, but government must ensure these are quality jobs with proper training. We don't want more 'babu culture' where people just occupy chairs without productivity.
N
Neha P.
The reservation percentages seem balanced, but I hope the selection process remains strictly merit-based where required. Our education and police departments need the best people in leadership roles.
K
Karan D.
Good policy overall, but why no provision for those who retired? My father was eligible but retired last year. Small pension hike for such cases would have shown real gratitude for their service.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Your email won't be published


Disclaimer: Comments here reflect the author's views alone. Insulting or using offensive language against individuals, communities, religion, or the nation is illegal.

Tags: