Most Expected Essay Topics for IBPS PO 2025 Descriptive Section

As we head closer to the IBPS PO Mains 2025 exam, one of the biggest unknowns for aspirants is: Which essay topic will come? Though we can never predict with absolute certainty, by examining patterns, current affairs, and evaluation trends, we can make very educated guesses. In this post, I’ll share:

  1. The changed pattern and what it implies
  2. Themes and areas from which topics are likely
  3. A curated list of most expected essay topics for 2025
  4. How to prepare and strategize your essay writing
  5. Sample outlines / angle ideas for a few topics

Let’s begin.


🔍 Pattern & Trend Update (2025) – Implications for Topic Choices

Before listing topic ideas, you must align your expectations with the current design of the descriptive section.

  • In 2025, the IBPS PO Descriptive Section comprises one essay + one comprehension (no letter writing).
  • Total marks = 25; time = 30 minutes.
  • Thematic scope has widened: earlier the topics were more banking / economy oriented, but now issues from society, technology, environment, current affairs are also common.
  • The evaluation is automated (or computer-assisted). Thus, the system penalizes irrelevance, deviation, word-count violation, grammar more harshly.
  • Because the essay has to be typed, many aspirants struggle not with content but speed, coherence, and structure. So the topics will likely be such that a well prepared aspirant can write fluidly.

Given that, the stress is on relevance, clarity, structure, balance, examples, and timeliness.

Considering all this, here are the broad theme buckets from which topics may be drawn:

ThemeWhy It’s LikelyKeywords / Focus Areas
Economy & BankingIt’s central to a banking exam’s domain; policy changes are always topicalFinancial inclusion, inflation control, central bank tools, fintech, digital banking, NBFCs
Technology & InnovationRapid change, overlap with finance, public discourseAI, machine learning, data privacy, cybersecurity, blockchain, digital payments
Social Issues & GovernancePublic policy and societal challenges are always in exam essaysInequality, gender justice, health, education, rural development
Environment & SustainabilityRising importance globally & nationallyClimate change, green finance, renewable energy, climate migration
Current Affairs / National & Global TrendsTo test candidate awareness & ability to link factsGeopolitics, global trade, demographic trends, pandemics, emerging challenges

From trending IBPS PO 2025 lists, some hot topic ideas are already surfacing. For example: AI in Risk Management, Tackling Youth Unemployment, Air Pollution in Delhi NCR, Growing Digital Payments in Smaller Cities, Cryptocurrency rules etc.
Also, earlier lists include: Leveraging India’s population for growth, Digital Learning vs Traditional Classrooms, Green Initiatives & Climate Action, Privatisation vs public accessibility, Cybersecurity in banking etc.
An older but instructive list includes mental health, digital fraud, women empowerment etc.

With all this in view, here’s your bulletproof list.


📝 Most Expected Essay Topics (2025) — Curated List

Here’s a list of 20+ essay topics that are highly probable for IBPS PO 2025 (or useful to practice), along with a brief idea or angle you can take for each.

TopicPossible Angles / Points to Cover
1. AI in Risk Management: Advantages and DisadvantagesHow banks and NBFCs can use AI to assess credit risk, fraud detection; challenges such as bias, data privacy, accountability
2. Tackling Youth Unemployment in IndiaCauses (skill mismatch, automation, education), government schemes, role of private sector, vocational training
3. Air Pollution in Delhi NCR: Policy SolutionsCauses (traffic, industry, stubble burning), health impact, policy measures, citizen role
4. Growing Digital Payments in Smaller CitiesInfrastructure, digital literacy, trust, regulatory support, security concerns
5. Cryptocurrency Rules: Aligning with World StandardsRegulatory challenges, investor protection, how India can position itself globally
6. Leveraging India’s Demographic DividendYouth population as asset, need for job creation, health, education, skill development
7. Digital Learning vs Traditional ClassroomAdvantages & drawbacks; hybrid models; equity & accessibility
8. Green Initiatives and Climate Action in IndiaRenewable energy, carbon credit, sustainable agriculture, finance for climate adaptation
9. Privatisation of Public Sector Banks: Pros, Cons & Way ForwardEfficiency vs public good; risks; role in financial inclusion
10. Cybersecurity in Banking and FinanceThreats, encryption, regulation, consumer protection, role of RBI / govt
11. Women & Economic Progress: Beyond RhetoricBarriers, affirmative policy, women in leadership, financial inclusion for women
12. Role of MSMEs in India’s Economic RevivalPost-pandemic recovery, credit support, technology adoption, markets
13. Challenges and Solutions for Youth Migration (Rural to Urban)Push & pull factors, infrastructure, smart cities, balanced regional growth
14. Data Privacy vs National SecurityTension between personal rights and state surveillance, laws such as PDP, global precedents
15. Is Universal Health Care Feasible for India?Costs, logistics, financing, public vs private role
16. Sustainable Development: Can India Grow Without Compromising the Environment?Tradeoffs, green policies, regulatory framework
17. Technology Innovations During COVID-19 and Their ImpactTelemedicine, remote work, edTech, logistics, gaps exposed
18. Financial Inclusion: Role of Banks, Technology & PolicyNo. of unbanked, digital tools, interoperability, policy support
19. Education Reforms in Post-Pandemic IndiaCurricular change, teacher training, online models, hybrid learning
20. Climate Change & Agriculture: Food Security in ChallengeImpact on yield, farmer distress, mitigation & adaptation, govt schemes
21. Ethical Challenges in the Age of AI & AutomationBias, accountability, job displacement, legal and moral frameworks

You can pick from these for practice. The more you internalize the angles, the more confident you’ll be if any one of these shows up (or a close variant).


🧠 How to Prepare Strategically (Topics + Practice)

Here’s a roadmap to make the most of these topic ideas:

  1. Catalog themes, not just topics. Don’t just learn “Air Pollution” — internalize the theme of environment & public health, so if the topic is slightly different (e.g. “Urban Smog and Public Policy”), you’re ready.
  2. Maintain a “Topic Bank.” For each theme, list 3–5 possible topics with bullet ideas. Regularly add to it when you read news/editorials.
  3. Write at least 2 full essays weekly (30 min style). Rotate topics across themes.
  4. Peer review / feedback matters. Swap essays with fellow aspirants or mentor to catch blind spots.
  5. Update examples & data. Use very recent (2023–25) stats, schemes, incidents. This signals topical awareness to evaluators.
  6. Practice speed + structure under timed, online conditions (typing).
  7. Simulate surprises. Occasionally pick odd topics from your bank to avoid overfitting to only expected ones.

📌 Sample Mini Outlines for 2 Topics

To help you get started, here are sample outlines with angles, major points and possible example hooks.

Topic: AI in Risk Management: Advantages and Disadvantages

  • Introduction
    • Define AI in finance / risk context
    • Growing adoption of machine learning in credit, fraud detection
  • Body
    • Advantages
      • Faster data analysis, predictive analytics, anomaly detection
      • Real-time monitoring and early warning
      • Reduced manual error, cost efficiency
    • Disadvantages / Challenges
      • Data bias & fairness issues
      • Black-box models, lack of transparency (explainability)
      • Privacy concerns, data security
      • Dependence, job role transformation
    • Mitigation & Best Practices
      • Human oversight, transparent models
      • Regulatory frameworks, audits
      • Data governance, anonymization
      • Training & reskilling workforce
  • Conclusion
    • Balanced view: AI is tool not panacea
    • Emphasize human + machine collaboration
    • Call for careful adoption with safeguards

Topic: Women & Economic Progress: Beyond Rhetoric

  • Introduction
    • Statement of current gender gap in workforce
    • Why inclusion of women is critical for India’s growth
  • Body
    • Barriers faced by women
      • Social norms, safety, childcare burden, lack of access to finance
      • Gender pay gap, glass ceiling
    • Existing interventions
      • Schemes such as Mahila Shakti, Ujjwala, microfinance, SHGs
      • Corporate diversity policies, quotas, support infrastructure
    • Way forward / new approaches
      • Flexible work models, skill training, mentorship
      • Banking & credit access, fintech for women
      • Legal measures, gender budgeting, awareness
  • Conclusion
    • Inclusion = sustainable development
    • Need continued policy, private sector role, social change

✅ Final Tips Before Exam Day

  • Practice at least one full creative/topic essay daily in last 10–12 days.
  • Read editorial or opinion columns daily to absorb new topic ideas.
  • Maintain a small “example jam” list: 10–15 up-to-date case studies, schemes, statistics across themes.
  • On exam day, within the first 1 minute brainstorm your outline (3–4 bullet points) before writing.
  • Stick to the word limit (e.g. ~250–300 words). Overwriting may cost you.
  • Use transition phrases for flow (“Furthermore”, “However”, “On the other hand”, “Therefore”)
  • Balance both sides (pros & cons) where applicable, but lean with clarity.
  • Don’t panic if topic is slightly off — apply your theme bank, relate to what you know.