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New Delhi, 15 October 2025
Knowledge Economy
AID SPREAD OF
EDUCATION?
By Dhurjati Mukherjee
Eight more British universities are set to
begin operations in India in the near future, following the University of
Southampton’s opening of a Gurgaon campus in July, which is good news. Some
Indian academics have expressed concerns this development may lead to reduced funding
for Indian public universities. They also underlined that these foreign
institutions may charge higher fees and could be permitted to generate profits
and might transfer those profits abroad.
Five campuses in Bengaluru and Mumbai will
operate under the University Grants Commission regulations for foreign
institutions, which make research a mandatory activity of British universities
in India. This emphasis on research is no doubt very crucial as experts and
academicians believe that R&D is rather neglected in the country, both by
the government and the private sector.
This opening of foreign varsities has
generated some controversy as these high-profile institutions will obviously
not cater to the general mass of students. Academics for Action &
Development Teachers’ Association (AADTA) member, Seema Das opposed the UGC
regulations to set up such institutions in the country. According to her, these
educational institutions would be converted into commercial enterprises,
elitist enclaves and distant from Indian socio-economic cultural problems. Many
other organisations have opposed such entry of foreign varsities not just for
the cost factor in studying in these institutions but also their hiring
policies of faculty with high salaries.
Currently, there are 40 million students at
universities in India, but 70 million seats are needed by 2035. At the same
time, it needs to be noted that most Indian students cannot afford education in
private or foreign universities and, as such, the setting of these foreign
institutions will only cater to a small segment of society. What is needed is
setting up more centres of higher education at affordable costs by both the
Central and state governments. What is preventing them from setting up at
least one university in each sub-division of the country with funds, say in the
ratio of 60:40 per cent of the Centre and the states?
That we are trying to emulate Western models
of education can’t be doubted as the country is heading towards the path of the
knowledge economy, which certainly is desired at this juncture. In this system,
advanced learning, sustained by a culture of research, is dynamically
harnessed to yield ever-new products and services for material profit. And this
is the case not just with education in most parts of the world but also with
India. Information technology and pharmaceuticals are two ready examples in our
country. A knowledge economy relies on the conjunction of education and
research with industry and finance.
However, in India, the relation between the
first and the second is not well-entrenched. Hence, India’s higher education
and research lack a participatory dimension. Most of the public universities
are lapsing into irrelevance while the best are struggling to hold their fort
against the top private universities, modelled on the Western style. Experts
repeatedly pointed out that the Indian state and the corporate sector must
jointly undertake what they have always shirked – investing massively in an
intensive education system for youth. Both American and Chinese universities
have ensured the commanding position of their universities and, in close
collaboration with industry, has been carrying out cutting-edge research and
development.
Exerts have for long emphasised the need to
have stronger and more intimate coordination between industry and education,
which is manifest in most Western and other advanced countries of the world.
This, unfortunately, is absent here. As a result, quality products are somewhat
lacking in some sectors in a large country like India. One positive advantage
of allowing foreign varsities here is gearing up research activities and
opening the path for more innovation and technological development. This is not
to say that our IITs are inferior in any way and have the best of expertise and
knowledge skill.
The picture of higher education in the
country is far from satisfactory. Grants have been drastically cut down, and
institutions are asked to borrow from the Higher Education Financing Agency and
hike fees to repay the loan. Admissions across India are increasingly
centralised in one-size-for-all entry tests. Academic autonomy and diversity
vanish in the process. Crucial factors like campus freedom and
academic morale cannot be quantified in any case but both have unquestionably
declined.
Apart from the resource crunch, or should we say
severe resource crunch, of universities, college departments are closing
alarmingly for a nation intent on doubling the enrolment in 10 years. Private
institutions might be absorbing part of the exodus. But the sheer cost of these
institutions shut out the majority with little prospect of compensating
employment thereafter. A major section of the youth is giving up higher
education due to the cost factor. This is the remarkable tragedy of the
dismantling of the State education system. It robs most Indians of all chance
of a meaningful higher education. Some say that the government, while talking
of demographic dividend, is depriving the nation of productive human resources.
While the thrust on moving towards a
knowledge economy is needed at this juncture with expectations that foreign
varsities would give a renewed thrust to R&D welcome, it is also necessary
to build higher education from below so that many deserving students, who come
from poor and marginalised families, can get the right opportunities to rise to
the top. Some system should be evolved whereby meritorious students are picked
up from colleges and given financial support till they finish their
postgraduate and doctoral degrees.
With the modus operandi of higher education
changing in tune with social and economic needs as well as requirements of
industry and transformed syllabus, there is also a need to educate the young
generation to become more aware of socio-political and socio-economic realities
of the present day. In moving towards a transformed world, education has a
vital role to play, and this education should be in tune with present-day
reality. For this, it needs to be reiterated that the spread of education
is vital and must reach the interior parts of the country. This is essential to
achieve the government’s professed objective of ‘Viksit Bharat’ in the coming
years. ----INFA
(Copyright, India
News & Feature Alliance)
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