The "Unemployment Tax"? Behind the ₹48.88 Crore JKSSB & JKPSC Fee Disclosure
For the thousands of aspirants in Jammu and Kashmir, the road to a government job is paved with hard work, long nights, and—as a recent government disclosure reveals—significant financial costs.
On February 9, 2026, the J&K Government informed the Legislative Assembly that the two main recruitment bodies, JKSSB and JKPSC, collected over ₹48.88 crore in application fees from job seekers over the last two financial years.
The Financial Breakdown
The numbers shared in response to a query by MLA Waheed-ur-Rehman Para show a sharp rise in collections during the 2024–25 period.
Recruitment Body FY 2023–24 FY 2024–25 Total (2 Years)
JKSSB ₹7.09 Crore ₹23.88 Crore ₹30.98 Crore
JKPSC ₹7.39 Crore ₹10.50 Crore ₹17.90 Crore
Combined ₹14.48 Crore ₹34.38 Crore ₹48.88 Crore
Why This Matters to Aspirants
While the government views these figures as a reflection of high participation, the disclosure has raised several critical points of contention:
The "Free Forms" Promise: Many have pointed out that these fees contradict previous political promises that job application forms would be made free for the youth.
A "Tax" on the Unemployed: With J&K’s unemployment rate standing at 6.7%—nearly double the national average—aspirants argue that charging hundreds of rupees per form is a heavy burden for those without a steady income.
Windfall for Few Posts: Earlier RTI disclosures highlight the extremity of the situation; for example, the board collected over ₹6.43 crore for just 75 Naib-Tehsildar posts, a process that was later deferred.
Recruitment Delays: The concern isn't just the money, but the value. Many processes since the new reservation policy in March 2024 remain in the examination or document verification stages, leaving candidates "in limbo" after paying their fees.
Looking Ahead
The demand from the opposition and student groups is clear: if jobs cannot be provided immediately, at the very least, application fees should be waived or refunded for cancelled/delayed processes.
As an aspirant, it’s important to stay informed about where your hard-earned (or borrowed) money is going and to keep pushing for a more transparent, student-friendly recruitment system.