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Talent Gets a Second Wind: UPSC’s ‘Pratibha Setu’ Turns Missed Medals into Meaningful Missions


Updated: June 20, 2025 06:22

Image Source: Vajiram & Ravi

News Summary: In an innovative move to leverage the potential of India's brightest minds, the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) has launched Pratibha Setu — an online bridge connecting high-scoring, non-shortlisted candidates of UPSC examinations with genuine employers in both government and private sectors. This move overhauls and escalates the past Public Disclosure Scheme (PDS), where a second chance is given to over 10,000 candidates who qualified all the stages of the examinations but did not make it to the final merit list.

Core Features:

Pratibha Setu provides access to biodata of willing but not recommended candidates who cleared all stages of UPSC exams.

Corporate houses, private enterprises, and central government departments can now register on the UPSC portal to take advantage of this pool of talent.

The portal includes candidates appearing for tests such as Civil Services, Indian Forest Service, Engineering Services, CDS, CAPF, and more.

The database includes educational qualifications as well as contact details, facilitating easy recruitment by employers.

How It Works:
Registered organizations are provided login credentials to view candidate profiles.

Private sector companies can self-register through the UPSC portal.

It gives access only to verified employers, maintaining candidate integrity and confidentiality.

Why It Matters:

Offers a second career opportunity for those who narrowly missed the cut.

Enables employers with access to a pool of high-quality, pre-screened talent.

Reduces the disparity between public exam performance and broader job opportunities.

Historical Context:

The Public Disclosure Scheme was introduced in 2018, first being used for the Combined Medical Services Examination 2017.

Pratibha Setu is an overhauled and improved model, now being applied to a wider range of UPSC exams and candidates.

Future Outlook:

The trend is poised to make recruitment more transparent, reduce wastage of talent, and make hiring more inclusive.

It also embodies UPSC's new role in shaping not just public service, but national human capital.

Sources: Deccan Herald, The Economic Times, The New Indian Express, The Print, MSN News.

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