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UPSC IES/ISS (Economic / Statistical Service) Free Mock Test

Economic / Statistical Services
5 topicsLatest 2025 pattern

UPSC IES/ISS (Economic / Statistical Service) (Economic / Statistical Services) is part of India's Government Exams category, covering 5 topics. Kamiyab provides free UPSC IES/ISS (Economic / Statistical Service) mock tests with no signup or payment — two modes: Quick Practice (10 questions in ~10 minutes for daily topic-wise revision) or Full Mock (up to 100 questions matched to the official exam pattern). Both include instant scoring and per-question explanations. Eligibility: Economics / Statistics. Aligned to the current 2026 official syllabus.

Eligibility
Economics / Statistics
Per official notification
Topics
5
Across all sections
Mode
Online CBT
Browser-based
Cost
₹0
Free forever
Today’s plan
10 minutes, 10 questions. Bas itna hi.
UPSC IES/ISS (Economic / Statistical Service) ke liye General English se shuru karo — quick warm-up topic.
General English
Recommended start
10 Qs · 10 min
Aaj ka mock shuru karo →

UPSC IES/ISS (Economic / Statistical Service) mock test modes — at a glance

Comparison of UPSC IES/ISS (Economic / Statistical Service) mock test modes on Kamiyab
ModeQuestionsTimeBest forCost
Quick Practice10~10 minutesDaily topic-wise warm-up₹0 (Free)
Full MockUp to 100~2 hoursPre-exam revision, full exam pattern₹0 (Free)

Test mode

100 Qs · 60 min
First load takes 10–15 sec while AI generates the paper. Questions are batched in parallel and deduped to keep them varied.

Pick a topic

Start with General English

About UPSC IES/ISS — Indian Economic Service / Indian Statistical Service Examination

The Indian Economic Service (IES) and Indian Statistical Service (ISS) are two specialised Group A central services constituted in 1961 to bring trained economists and statisticians into the policy machinery of the Government of India. IES officers staff the Economic Division of the Ministry of Finance, the Department of Economic Affairs, NITI Aayog, the Office of the Economic Adviser in the Ministry of Commerce, the Economic Advisor's offices across line ministries, and increasingly take up lateral postings at the Reserve Bank of India, Planning Boards and multilateral institutions. ISS officers form the technical backbone of MoSPI, the National Statistical Office (NSO), the erstwhile NSSO and CSO data divisions, the RBI Department of Statistics and Information Management (DSIM), the Labour Bureau, the Census of India organisation and statistical wings of line ministries. Together the two services run India's economic forecasting, fiscal analysis and official statistics infrastructure.

Recruits enter at Junior Time Scale (Group A Pay Level 10/11) and progress through Senior Time Scale, Junior Administrative Grade, Selection Grade, Senior Administrative Grade and eventually Higher Administrative Grade equivalent to Joint Secretary or Additional Secretary level, with the apex post being Chief Economic Adviser (IES) or Chief Statistician of India / Secretary MoSPI (ISS) — both of which are Secretary-to-Government-of-India rank. The cadre is small (combined intake is typically 50-100 across both services per cycle), tightly screened and is one of the few Group A entry points where domain mastery in economics or statistics is the explicit selection criterion rather than general administrative aptitude. Notable IES alumni include several Chief Economic Advisers, Finance Secretaries and members of the Prime Minister's Economic Advisory Council; ISS alumni have led the NSO, the Population Commission and several international statistical bodies.

Selection is a two-stage process — a six-paper written examination totalling 1000 marks conducted over three days (the written exam IS the screening stage; there is no separate Prelims as in CSE), followed by a 200-mark Personality Test (viva voce) at UPSC Dholpur House. The Written Examination is largely subjective/conventional (essay, analytical answers, derivations) with the exception of Statistics Papers I and II in the ISS stream, which are objective. Total maximum marks: 1200 (1000 Written + 200 Viva). A candidate applies for EITHER IES OR ISS in a given cycle, not both — the General English and General Studies papers are common, while the four specialisation papers diverge by stream.

Conducted by: Union Public Service Commission (UPSC), under the Department of Personnel and Training, Government of India

Eligibility

Indian Economic Service (IES) — eligibility

Age:
21 to 30 years on 1 August of the examination year. Standard relaxations: SC/ST +5 years, OBC (non-creamy layer) +3 years, PwBD +10 years, ex-servicemen and serving Defence personnel as per DoPT rules, J&K domicile (specified period) as per gazette notification.
Education:
Post-graduate degree in Economics / Applied Economics / Business Economics / Econometrics from a recognised Indian university or a foreign university recognised by Association of Indian Universities. Candidates appearing in the final year of the Master's may apply provisionally — the degree must be produced at the time of Personality Test/document verification.
Nationality:
Citizen of India, or subject of Nepal/Bhutan, or Tibetan refugee who came to India before 1 January 1962 with the intention of permanently settling, or person of Indian origin migrated from specified countries with the intention of permanently settling — as per the standard UPSC eligibility clause.
Attempts:
No restriction on number of attempts up to the upper age limit (subject to category-wise age relaxation). Attempts are NOT capped the way they are in CSE.

Indian Statistical Service (ISS) — eligibility

Age:
21 to 30 years on 1 August of the examination year. Same category-wise relaxations as IES apply.
Education:
Bachelor's degree with Statistics / Mathematical Statistics / Applied Statistics as ONE of the subjects, OR a Master's degree in Statistics / Mathematical Statistics / Applied Statistics from a recognised university. Note that a Bachelor's in Mathematics without a Statistics paper does NOT qualify — Statistics must appear as a subject on the transcript.
Nationality:
Same as IES — Indian citizen or specified categories per gazette notification.
Attempts:
No restriction on number of attempts up to the upper age limit. Final-year Bachelor's/Master's candidates may apply provisionally.

Exam Pattern

Stage-by-stage breakdown of the recruitment process.

Common Papers — General English and General Studies (both IES and ISS)

Mode
Offline, pen-and-paper, subjective/conventional answer scripts
Sections
Paper I — General English (essay, précis, comprehension, paraphrasing, error correction) · Paper II — General Studies (Polity, Modern India, current affairs, economic and social development, geography, science & tech)
Questions
Mix of essay, précis, short-answer and long-answer questions — exact count varies by paper. General English typically has 1 essay (1000 words) + 1 précis + 1 comprehension + grammar/usage tasks; GS has multiple analytical short and long answers.
Marks
100 marks each — total 200 marks across both common papers
Duration
3 hours per paper
Negative marking
Not applicable (subjective) — but evaluators expect clean, structured prose; verbose or off-topic answers are penalised through marking discretion.

Both papers are conducted on Day 1 of the written exam. These two papers alone do not determine selection but are mandatory qualifying-cum-merit components — poor performance here is rarely compensated by strong specialisation scores.

IES Specialisation — four papers (General Economics I, II, III and Indian Economics)

Mode
Offline, pen-and-paper, fully subjective/conventional
Sections
Paper III — General Economics-I (Microeconomics, welfare, game theory, asymmetric information) · Paper IV — General Economics-II (Macroeconomics, money & banking, public finance) · Paper V — General Economics-III (International economics, growth and development) · Paper VI — Indian Economics (Indian fiscal system, monetary policy, banking, agriculture, industry, services, external sector, social sector)
Questions
Each paper typically has 8 questions in 2 sections of 4 questions each — candidates attempt 5 questions (1 compulsory + 4 from choice), with each question carrying 30-50 marks split into sub-parts.
Marks
200 marks per paper — total 800 marks across the four IES specialisation papers
Duration
3 hours per paper
Negative marking
Not applicable (subjective) — marks are awarded for correctness, depth, diagrammatic explanation and economic reasoning. Numerical answers without supporting derivation lose marks even if the final figure is correct.

Conducted across Days 2 and 3 of the written exam. The combined IES written total = 200 (common) + 800 (specialisation) = 1000 marks. Diagram-heavy papers — practise neat, labelled diagrams (IS-LM, AS-AD, indifference maps, Edgeworth box, Solow growth diagram).

ISS Specialisation — four papers (Statistics I, II, III and IV)

Mode
Offline, pen-and-paper. Papers I and II are OBJECTIVE (MCQ); Papers III and IV are DESCRIPTIVE/conventional.
Sections
Paper III — Statistics-I (Probability + distribution theory) — OBJECTIVE · Paper IV — Statistics-II (Statistical Inference + Linear Models + Sampling) — OBJECTIVE · Paper V — Statistics-III (Sampling Techniques, Econometrics, Applied Statistics) — DESCRIPTIVE · Paper VI — Statistics-IV (Indian Official Statistics, Demography, Survey Sampling Theory, Operations Research basics) — DESCRIPTIVE
Questions
Statistics-I: 80 objective questions in 2 hours. Statistics-II: 80 objective questions in 2 hours. Statistics-III and IV: 5-8 conventional questions each in 3 hours, with internal choice.
Marks
200 marks per paper — total 800 marks across the four ISS specialisation papers
Duration
2 hours for objective Papers I and II; 3 hours each for descriptive Papers III and IV
Negative marking
Statistics-I and II (objective): 1/3 mark negative per wrong answer as per UPSC standard objective marking. Descriptive papers: no negative marking but loose derivations are penalised.

ISS is the only stream within IES/ISS where objective speed matters — Papers I and II together carry 400 marks of pure objective Statistics testing. Combined ISS written total = 200 (common) + 800 (specialisation) = 1000 marks.

Personality Test (Viva Voce)

Mode
In-person panel interview at UPSC Dholpur House, New Delhi
Sections
Panel chaired by a UPSC Member with subject-matter experts (economists for IES candidates, statisticians for ISS candidates) plus a generalist member. Discussion ranges across the candidate's academic background, optional subject depth, current economic/statistical affairs, motivation for the service, and ethical/judgement scenarios.
Questions
Discussion-based — no fixed question count
Marks
200 marks
Duration
30-40 minutes typically per candidate
Negative marking
Not applicable

Final merit = Written (1000) + Viva (200) = 1200. Only candidates who clear a UPSC-determined cut-off in the written exam are called for the Personality Test. Viva is held at Dholpur House in October-November.

Syllabus

Tap any section to see the full list of subtopics.

General English (Paper I — common to IES and ISS)7 topics
  • Essay writing on a contemporary national/international topic (typically 1000 words; one essay from a choice of 3-4 topics)
  • Précis writing — condensing a 600-800 word passage to one-third its length while preserving meaning and tone
  • Comprehension passage with analytical and inferential questions
  • Paraphrasing of a literary or argumentative passage
  • Error correction, sentence restructuring, idiom and phrase usage, vocabulary in context
  • Letter writing / report writing in formal register (occasionally appears)
  • Reading speed and prose discipline — the paper rewards economy of expression, not flamboyance
General Studies (Paper II — common to IES and ISS)7 topics
  • Indian Polity — Constitution of India, Fundamental Rights and Duties, Directive Principles, key amendments (42nd, 44th, 73rd, 74th, 101st, 103rd), Centre-State relations, Constitutional bodies (ECI, CAG, Finance Commission, UPSC, NHRC)
  • Modern Indian History — 1857 revolt, Indian National Congress, Moderates and Extremists, Gandhian phase (Non-Cooperation, Civil Disobedience, Quit India), Partition, post-Independence integration of princely states
  • Current National Affairs — Union Budget, Economic Survey themes, major policy launches (Digital India, Make in India, PLI, PM Gati Shakti), election results, Supreme Court judgments of constitutional significance
  • Current International Affairs — G20, BRICS+, QUAD, India-US/India-EU/India-Russia relations, WTO disputes, IMF/World Bank policy positions, India's stance at COP/UNFCCC
  • Economic and Social Development — poverty (Tendulkar, Rangarajan committee benchmarks), unemployment (PLFS measurement), human development (HDI components, NFHS-5 indicators), gender, education and health policy
  • Science and Technology in current context — ISRO missions (Chandrayaan-3, Gaganyaan, Aditya-L1), India's AI Mission, semiconductor policy, biotechnology, defence indigenisation, cybersecurity
  • Geography of India and the World — physical features, climate zones, rivers and dams, agriculture cropping patterns, mineral and energy resources, demographic distribution, world physical and political geography basics
Indian Economics (IES Paper VI — IES-specific)14 topics
  • Indian fiscal system — Union Budget architecture, fiscal deficit / revenue deficit / primary deficit definitions, FRBM Act 2003 (and 2018 amendment), GST structure (CGST/SGST/IGST, GST Council, compensation cess), 15th and 16th Finance Commission recommendations, tax-to-GDP ratio trends
  • Monetary management — RBI Act, Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) composition and inflation-targeting framework (4% +/- 2%), repo/reverse repo/SDF/MSF corridor, OMOs, CRR, SLR, monetary transmission
  • Banking sector — public vs private vs foreign vs small-finance vs payments banks, NPA recognition (IRAC norms), PCA framework, bank recapitalisation history (Indradhanush, 4R), IBC 2016 architecture, NARCL/IDRCL bad bank
  • Capital markets — SEBI regulatory architecture, primary and secondary markets, derivatives, FPI flows, mutual fund industry, IPO regulations, corporate bond market deepening
  • Planning history and NITI Aayog — Five Year Plans (1st to 12th), Planning Commission to NITI Aayog transition (2015), Aspirational Districts Programme, SDG India Index
  • External sector — Balance of Payments (current vs capital account), forex reserves composition, exchange rate regime (managed float), FEMA 1999, CAD financing, India's FTA strategy (UAE CEPA, Australia ECTA)
  • Agriculture and farm sector — MSP regime, APMC and e-NAM reforms, contract farming, Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana, PM-KISAN, rural credit (KCC), agricultural marketing constraints
  • Industrial policy — IDR Act framework, MSME definition (revised 2020), PLI schemes (14 sectors), industrial corridors (DMIC, CBIC), startup ecosystem, Make in India Phase 2
  • Public sector and disinvestment — strategic vs non-strategic sector classification (New PSE Policy 2021), LIC IPO, Air India divestment, BPCL, monetisation pipeline (NMP)
  • Infrastructure and PPP — Hybrid Annuity Model, Bharatmala, Sagarmala, UDAN, National Infrastructure Pipeline (NIP), InvITs and REITs
  • Social sector schemes — MGNREGA (employment guarantee), NHM/NRHM, AB-PMJAY (insurance coverage), Jal Jeevan Mission, SBM, PMAY-U/G, ICDS, Mid-Day Meal (PM POSHAN)
  • Poverty, inequality and unemployment measurement — Tendulkar vs Rangarajan poverty lines, MPI (UNDP/NITI Aayog), Gini coefficient, PLFS quarterly and annual reports, Periodic Labour Force Survey methodology
  • Demography and Census — Census 2011 baseline (delayed Census 2021), Sample Registration System, NFHS-5 (2019-21) headline indicators (TFR, IMR, sex ratio, anaemia), demographic dividend window
  • Regional disparities and federalism — special category status debate, North-East development, NITI Forum for North-East, devolution under Finance Commission
General Economics — Theory (IES Papers III, IV, V — IES-specific)9 topics
  • Microeconomics — Consumer theory (utility, indifference curves, Slutsky decomposition), production and cost (Cobb-Douglas, CES, returns to scale), market structures (perfect competition, monopoly, monopolistic competition, oligopoly — Cournot/Bertrand/Stackelberg), general equilibrium (Walrasian, Arrow-Debreu), welfare economics (Pareto efficiency, Edgeworth box, Social Welfare Function, Arrow's Impossibility Theorem)
  • Game theory and information economics — Nash equilibrium, dominant strategies, repeated games, adverse selection (Akerlof's lemons), moral hazard, principal-agent, signalling (Spence) and screening
  • Macroeconomics — Classical vs Keynesian framework, IS-LM model, AS-AD synthesis, Phillips curve (short-run vs long-run, expectations-augmented), rational expectations (Lucas critique), Real Business Cycle, New Keynesian sticky-price models
  • Growth theory — Harrod-Domar, Solow-Swan neoclassical growth (steady state, convergence), endogenous growth (Romer's R&D model, Lucas human capital, AK model), growth accounting and TFP
  • Money and Banking — money supply determinants, money multiplier, demand for money (Quantity Theory, Keynesian liquidity preference, Baumol-Tobin, Friedman), central banking theory, monetary transmission channels
  • Public Finance — Musgrave's three-branch framework (allocation, distribution, stabilisation), public goods (Samuelson condition), externalities (Pigouvian taxes, Coase theorem), optimal taxation (Ramsey rule, Mirrlees), fiscal federalism (Oates' decentralisation theorem)
  • International Economics — comparative advantage (Ricardian, Heckscher-Ohlin-Samuelson), Stolper-Samuelson theorem, Rybczynski theorem, factor-price equalisation, Krugman's new trade theory (increasing returns, monopolistic competition), Mundell-Fleming open-economy IS-LM, exchange rate determination (PPP, UIP, asset market approach)
  • Development Economics — Lewis dual-sector model, Rosenstein-Rodan big push, Nurkse balanced growth, Hirschman unbalanced growth, structuralism (Prebisch-Singer), Amartya Sen's capability approach, HDI and MPI construction, dependency theory, microfinance impact evidence
  • Statistics and Econometrics basics for economists — descriptive statistics, sampling, hypothesis testing, classical linear regression (OLS, BLUE under Gauss-Markov), violations (heteroscedasticity — White test, multicollinearity — VIF, autocorrelation — Durbin-Watson), simultaneous equations (2SLS), time series basics (stationarity, ADF unit root, ARIMA)
Statistics (ISS Papers III-VI — ISS-specific)10 topics
  • Probability theory — axiomatic foundations (Kolmogorov), conditional probability, Bayes theorem, random variables (discrete + continuous), expectation, variance, covariance, moment generating functions, characteristic functions, modes of convergence (in probability, in distribution, almost sure), CLT and Weak/Strong Law of Large Numbers
  • Distribution theory — Bernoulli, Binomial, Poisson, Geometric, Negative Binomial, Hypergeometric, Uniform, Normal, Exponential, Gamma, Beta, Chi-square, Student's t, Snedecor's F, log-normal, bivariate and multivariate normal, order statistics, sampling distributions
  • Statistical Inference — point estimation (unbiasedness, consistency, efficiency, sufficiency — Fisher-Neyman factorisation, completeness, Rao-Blackwell, Lehmann-Scheffé), Method of Moments, Maximum Likelihood Estimation (properties, asymptotic normality, Cramer-Rao lower bound), interval estimation (pivotal quantity, confidence intervals)
  • Hypothesis testing — Neyman-Pearson lemma (Most Powerful test), Uniformly Most Powerful tests, Likelihood Ratio Test, parametric tests (z, t, chi-square, F), non-parametric tests (sign test, Wilcoxon, Mann-Whitney, Kruskal-Wallis, Kolmogorov-Smirnov)
  • Linear Models — Simple and multiple linear regression (OLS estimation, Gauss-Markov, BLUE property), model diagnostics, ANOVA (one-way, two-way with and without interaction), ANCOVA, MANOVA basics, fixed vs random vs mixed effects models
  • Sampling Theory — SRSWR vs SRSWOR, stratified random sampling (proportional and Neyman allocation), systematic sampling, cluster sampling (single and multi-stage), two-stage and two-phase sampling, ratio and regression estimators, PPS sampling, non-sampling errors
  • Design of Experiments — basic principles (randomisation, replication, local control), Completely Randomised Design (CRD), Randomised Block Design (RBD), Latin Square Design (LSD), factorial experiments (2^k design), confounding and fractional factorials, response surface methodology basics
  • Time Series Analysis — components (trend, seasonal, cyclical, irregular), classical decomposition, moving averages, exponential smoothing (single, Holt, Holt-Winters), stationarity, autocorrelation function (ACF) and partial autocorrelation function (PACF), Box-Jenkins ARIMA modelling, seasonal ARIMA (SARIMA)
  • Multivariate Analysis — multivariate normal distribution, Wishart distribution, Hotelling's T-squared, Principal Component Analysis (PCA), Factor Analysis (exploratory + confirmatory), Discriminant Analysis (Fisher's LDA), Cluster Analysis (hierarchical, k-means), Canonical Correlation
  • Indian Official Statistics — Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) organisational structure, National Statistical Office (NSO) consolidating CSO + NSSO (since 2019), National Sample Survey rounds (NSS 75 — household consumption, NSS 77 — debt and investment, NSS 78 — multiple indicator survey), Annual Survey of Industries (ASI), Index of Industrial Production (IIP — 2011-12 base), CPI/WPI methodology, GDP rebasing series (current 2011-12 base, new base year exercise underway), Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS) quarterly + annual, HCES (Household Consumption Expenditure Survey) 2022-23 release, Census of India, Economic Census, Sample Registration System (SRS), Civil Registration System (CRS)

Preparation Strategy

Decide IES versus ISS up front — your entire two-year preparation arc depends on this single choice. IES rewards conceptual depth in economics across micro, macro, public finance, international and development; ISS rewards mathematical-statistical rigour plus speed on objective Papers I and II. Switching streams mid-preparation is expensive — most successful candidates commit by their first attempt's notification cycle.

Writing practice is non-negotiable. Five of the six papers in both streams are subjective/conventional, evaluated by examiners who reward neat derivations, labelled diagrams, structured paragraphs and economic intuition over rote reproduction. Aspirants from a coaching-only background often underprepare on this — start a daily 1-hour answer-writing routine from Day 1 of preparation, building up to 3-hour timed mock papers in the final 8 weeks. Get answers reviewed by a senior; self-evaluation undercounts errors of expression.

For Indian Economics (IES), the single most important document is the latest Economic Survey volumes (Vol I, II and the Statistical Appendix) — released by the Department of Economic Affairs around Budget Day. The Survey defines the year's economic narrative, headline data and current policy debates; expect 30-40% of the Indian Economics paper to map directly to its themes. Pair it with the RBI Annual Report (monetary side), the Union Budget Speech + Annual Financial Statement, and the latest India Year Book / India 2026 publication.

General Economics (IES) needs a solid micro + macro + dev econ trifecta — do not skim any of the three. Use Hal Varian's Intermediate Microeconomics as the working text (with Mas-Colell/Whinston/Green for the deeper Paper III questions), Dornbusch + Fischer or Mankiw for macro foundations, Romer's Advanced Macroeconomics for growth and dynamic stochastic models, Stiglitz for public economics and Krugman + Obstfeld for international economics. For development economics, Debraj Ray's text plus Amartya Sen's selected essays cover both the standard models and the capability-approach paradigm.

Statistics ISS preparation has a dual personality. Papers I and II are 80 objective questions in 2 hours each — that is one question every 90 seconds with negative marking, demanding the same speed-and-accuracy regime as an engineering entrance exam. Drill problem sets daily from Goon-Gupta-Dasgupta and SC Gupta + VK Kapoor until distribution-derivation steps are automatic. Papers III and IV are descriptive — here, full derivations of MLE, complete proofs of Neyman-Pearson lemma, full ANOVA tables and properly labelled ARIMA model identification matter. The trap is over-investing in either half; allocate study time roughly 50:50.

Choose the right textbook — older but solid wins over newer but superficial. For Statistics, SC Gupta + VK Kapoor (Fundamentals of Mathematical Statistics) and Goon-Gupta-Dasgupta (Outline of Statistical Theory, two volumes) remain the gold standard for ISS; supplement with Hogg + Craig for inference rigour, Cochran for Sampling Techniques, Montgomery for DOE and Anderson-Tatham-Black for multivariate. For Indian Economics, Datt + Sundharam and Mishra + Puri are dated but still cover the institutional/historical layer better than any recent textbook; pair them with current Economic Survey content for the policy layer.

General English is the most under-prepared paper across both streams — candidates assume their working English will suffice. It will not. Schedule one essay (1000 words) per week from Week 1, get it reviewed for structure (intro + 3-4 body sections with sub-headings + balanced conclusion), précis-write one Economist or Hindu editorial weekly, and drill grammar/error-correction from Wren & Martin or High School English Grammar. Aim to score 55-65 marks here — losing this paper while excelling elsewhere is a common reason IES/ISS aspirants miss the cut-off.

GS preparation is similar to CSE Prelims but with two important differences — current affairs leans much more heavily toward economic and statistical news (Budget, Survey, Finance Commission, RBI MPC minutes, MoSPI data releases) and less toward security/diplomacy/environment. Read The Hindu + Indian Express + Mint daily, supplement with PRS India for Parliamentary updates and PIB for official notifications. Laxmikanth for Polity, Spectrum for Modern History, and Shankar IAS Environment are sufficient for the static layer.

In the final 6-8 weeks, simulate the full 3-day exam at least twice — 6 papers in 3 days is a stamina test most candidates fail to rehearse. Sit a complete IES or ISS paper on consecutive days, in proper exam slots (FN: 9-12, AN: 2-5), and treat your handwriting/diagram quality as part of the simulation. Use Kamiyab's Quick Practice for daily topic-level Stats and GE drills, and Full Mock mode for time-bound objective-paper simulation (especially relevant for ISS Papers I and II).

Recent Changes to Know

  • Examination pattern has been broadly stable for over a decade — 6 papers, 1000 marks written + 200 marks viva — with no major structural reform recently. The most recent UPSC pattern review (post-Baswan Committee) did not recommend changes to IES/ISS.
  • Indian Economics paper has substantially expanded its current-affairs surface area — questions now routinely cite NFHS-5 (2019-21) headline indicators, the latest Economic Survey themes, GST Council meeting outcomes, the National Monetisation Pipeline, and PLI scheme tranches. Pre-2018 model answers based on older Economic Surveys are stale.
  • Statistics syllabus has been quietly modernised to reflect MoSPI's expanded data product portfolio — Periodic Labour Force Survey (quarterly + annual since 2017-18), HCES 2022-23 (the first major consumption survey since 2011-12), the new National Statistical Office (NSO) created in 2019 by merging CSO and NSSO, and India's GDP rebasing exercise (current 2011-12 base year, with a new base year update in process). Expect Statistics-IV and Indian Economics questions both to probe these.
  • Viva-voce expectations have shifted toward deeper engagement with current policy debates — IES candidates are routinely asked about MPC inflation-targeting effectiveness, fiscal-monetary coordination during COVID, GST revenue trends and India's external sector vulnerabilities; ISS candidates face questions on PLFS methodology robustness, GDP back-series, MPI construction and Census 2021 delay implications.
  • UPSC has standardised the online application portal at upsconline.gov.in across all its exams — the OTR (One-Time Registration) and Universal Registration are now mandatory for IES/ISS applications. Application fee is ₹200 (waived for SC/ST/PwBD/women per UPSC notification).

Important Dates

Notification
UPSC IES/ISS Notification is published in March-April of the examination year on upsc.gov.in and in the Employment News. Online application opens the same day at upsconline.gov.in with a 21-day window typically.
Exam
Written Examination is conducted in late June or early July over 3 consecutive days (Fri-Sat-Sun typically). Day 1: General English (FN) + General Studies (AN). Day 2: Specialisation Paper III (FN) + Paper IV (AN). Day 3: Paper V (FN) + Paper VI (AN). Viva-voce/Personality Test at UPSC Dholpur House in October-November.
Results
Written Examination results: typically September-October. Personality Test schedule released along with written results. Final Reserve / Selection List: November-December of the examination year. Total cycle from notification to final list: approximately 8-10 months.

All dates above reflect the typical UPSC IES/ISS cycle pattern. Exact dates shift year-on-year and are published on upsc.gov.in. Always check the current UPSC Annual Calendar and the specific year's notification PDF — vacancies, examination centres and reservation break-up are revised every cycle.

Widely-Used Reference Books

Popular books many aspirants use — pick what fits your level.

  • Hal R. Varian — Intermediate Microeconomics (working text for IES General Economics-I; supplement with Mas-Colell/Whinston/Green for advanced Paper III topics)
  • Rudiger Dornbusch + Stanley Fischer + Richard Startz — Macroeconomics, and N. Gregory Mankiw — Macroeconomics (foundational macro for IES General Economics-II); David Romer — Advanced Macroeconomics for growth theory and dynamic models
  • Joseph E. Stiglitz + Jay K. Rosengard — Economics of the Public Sector (Public Finance for IES General Economics-II); Paul Krugman + Maurice Obstfeld + Marc Melitz — International Economics (IES General Economics-III)
  • Debraj Ray — Development Economics, plus Amartya Sen's Development as Freedom (Lewis, Rosenstein-Rodan, capability approach, HDI foundations for IES General Economics-III)
  • Datt & Sundharam — Indian Economy and Mishra & Puri — Indian Economy (institutional and historical baseline for IES Indian Economics paper); Sanjeev Verma — Indian Economy (Tata McGraw-Hill) as the modern integrated reference
  • Latest Economic Survey (Vol I + II + Statistical Appendix), Union Budget documents, RBI Annual Report and India Year Book / India 2026 — the single most important set of primary sources for the Indian Economics paper
  • S.C. Gupta + V.K. Kapoor — Fundamentals of Mathematical Statistics, Goon + Gupta + Dasgupta — An Outline of Statistical Theory (Vols I + II), and Hogg + Craig — Introduction to Mathematical Statistics (core texts for ISS Statistics-I, II and III)
  • W.G. Cochran — Sampling Techniques (Sampling Theory for ISS), Douglas C. Montgomery — Design and Analysis of Experiments (DOE for ISS Statistics-III), and Anderson + Tatham + Black — Multivariate Data Analysis (PCA, factor, discriminant for ISS Statistics-IV)

UPSC IES/ISS (Economic / Statistical Service) mock test — frequently asked questions

Is the UPSC IES/ISS (Economic / Statistical Service) mock test on Kamiyab really free?

Yes, completely free. No signup, no payment and no hidden charges — every UPSC IES/ISS (Economic / Statistical Service) practice test and full mock on Kamiyab is free to use.

Do I need to create an account to attempt the UPSC IES/ISS (Economic / Statistical Service) mock test?

No. You can start any UPSC IES/ISS (Economic / Statistical Service) quick practice or full mock without signing up. Just pick a topic and begin.

How many questions are there in the UPSC IES/ISS (Economic / Statistical Service) mock test?

Quick Practice gives you a focused 10-question, ~10-minute test on a single topic. Full Mock is a longer paper of up to 100 questions built to match the UPSC IES/ISS (Economic / Statistical Service) exam pattern and timing.

Which subjects and topics are covered for UPSC IES/ISS (Economic / Statistical Service)?

5 topics are covered for UPSC IES/ISS (Economic / Statistical Service), including General English, General Studies, Indian Economics and more. Each topic can be practised on its own as a quick test or combined into a full-length mock.

Are the UPSC IES/ISS (Economic / Statistical Service) questions reliable and up to date with the latest syllabus?

Quick Practice questions are hand-curated and kept aligned with the current official UPSC IES/ISS (Economic / Statistical Service) syllabus, each with a short explanation. When the exam body revises the syllabus, the question bank is updated so you are not practising removed or out-of-syllabus topics.

Do I get the correct answers and explanations for UPSC IES/ISS (Economic / Statistical Service)?

Yes. After you submit the test, every question shows the correct option along with a short explanation, so you can review and fix weak areas immediately.

Will the UPSC IES/ISS (Economic / Statistical Service) mock test work on a low-end phone or slow connection?

Yes. Kamiyab runs in any modern mobile browser with no app install. The timer, scoring and explanations all work on basic Android phones and on slow networks.

How should I use Kamiyab to prepare for UPSC IES/ISS (Economic / Statistical Service)?

Use Quick Practice daily for topic-wise revision, then take a Full Mock to simulate the real UPSC IES/ISS (Economic / Statistical Service) timer and pressure. Read the explanations after every test and re-practise the topics where you score low.

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10 minutes. 10 questions. Bas itna hi.

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