Why this matters now
EI is a high-frequency GS-4 theme — its components (often a direct definition question) and its application by administrators to decision-making, conflict resolution, stress and public dealing (frequently embedded in case studies).
Concept
The concept was developed by psychologists Peter Salovey and John Mayer and popularised by Daniel Goleman. EI is the capacity to perceive, understand, use and manage emotions — in oneself and others — to guide thinking and behaviour effectively.
The five components
Goleman’s model has five components:
- Self-awareness — recognising one’s own emotions and their effects;
- Self-regulation — managing and channelling emotions and impulses;
- Motivation — an inner drive to achieve, beyond external reward;
- Empathy — understanding others’ emotions and perspectives;
- Social skills — managing relationships, communication and influence.
EI vs IQ
IQ measures cognitive/analytical ability; EI measures emotional and social competence. Research suggests EI is often a stronger predictor of leadership and life success, especially in people-centred roles. The two are complementary — an effective administrator needs both intellect and emotional maturity.
Application in administration
EI helps administrators to: make balanced decisions under emotional pressure; resolve conflicts and build teams; deal empathetically with citizens, especially the vulnerable; manage stress and burnout; resist corruption by self-regulation; and provide inspirational, ethical leadership. It is central to compassionate yet objective governance.
UPSC angle
Know the five Goleman components and the EI-vs-IQ distinction. Most marks come from applying EI to administrative situations (decision-making, conflict, citizen-dealing, stress, integrity) — practise this in case studies.
Frequently asked questions
What is emotional intelligence?
The ability to perceive, understand, manage and use emotions — in oneself and others — to guide thinking and behaviour effectively.
What are the components of emotional intelligence?
Goleman’s five: self-awareness, self-regulation, motivation, empathy and social skills.
Who developed the concept of emotional intelligence?
Psychologists Peter Salovey and John Mayer; it was popularised by Daniel Goleman.
How is emotional intelligence useful for administrators?
It aids balanced decision-making, conflict resolution, empathetic citizen-dealing, stress management, integrity and ethical leadership.