Study in India program to turn the country into an education hub for foreign students

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Study in India program to turn the country into an education hub for foreign students

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  • The Indian government released Union Budget for 2019-20 on 5 July, allocating ₹948 billion to the education sector.
  • In 2018, the country allocated ₹850 billion to the education fund, which was increased by 10% in 2019 at ₹938 billion.
  • According to government think tank Niti Ayog, India should increase its education expenditure to nearly 6% of GDP over the next four years.
  • India reportedly ranks third in terms of education score of BRICS nations.
Stressing on improving the quality of education in India, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced Union Budget on July 5, allocating ₹948 billion to India’s education sector.

Sitharaman announced a ‘Study in India’ programme which will be focussed to bring foreign students to study in India’s higher institutions. This the Minister believes will further promote a greater Indian economy.

The government will also ensure industry relevant skill training for 10 million youth in India. The focus will be on building skills in technologies like — Artificial Intelligence, Big Data, Virtual Reality, 3D printing and Robotics. The move will promote higher remuneration among working professionals.

To make India a ‘hub of higher education,’ the government will infuse ₹400 crores to build world class institutions, which is three times the revised estimates of the previous year. Regulatory bodies will be reformed to focus on better academic progress of India.

In the interim budget, the finance ministry announced a 10% increase in the education budget, dedicating a total of ₹938 billion for schools and higher education programmes. In 2018-19, the former Finance Minister, Arun Jaitley allocated ₹850 billion towards the education fund.
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The economic survey conducted last year has shown that the government had limited fiscal space to increase spending on education.

While the school education budget increased in 2019 with a ₹500 billion fund, the higher education budget allocated for prominent institutions including Indian Institute of Technology (IITs) and Indian Institute of Management (IIM) saw a drop.

In the 2017-18, the government provided funds to the tune of ₹818 billion to the education sector, which accounted for nearly 2.7% of the total GDP of the country.

The chart above shows that there has been an increase in India’s expenditure on education. However, it is low compared to other countries like China and Mauritius — which spend 3.3% and 5% of their total GDP on education.

According to government think tank Niti Ayog, India should increase its education expenditure to nearly 6% of its GDP, over the next four years.
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This is necessary to improve the quality of education. India ranks third in terms of education score of BRICS nations (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa). Amongst South Asian countries, India has the second-lowest score in education quality, coming ahead only of Afghanistan. Sri Lanka also ranked much higher than India.

The low quality score may be attributed to teacher shortages and improper assessment criteria, according to an Indiaspend report from 2018.

See also:
India may have one common exam for all college admissions-- if the draft National Education Policy is passed

An in-depth analysis of India’s past education budgets
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