Monday, 14 November 2011

State's declining role in Higher Education


The October and September months are dedicated to national and international level conferences, seminars, summits and open houses. For the last three years, I have been attending these higher education ‘get-togethers” organized by various government and private bodies. It is not hard to condone the two topics that have been almost always the highlight in the debate list: Globalization of Higher Education and Internalization of Higher Education. I have come to realize that these two umbrella topics cover whole lot of sub-topics underlining only one aspect: Privatization is the panacea of all our higher education ills.There has not been a single topic which has focused on: Failure of State in providing quality higher education. 

 Why don’t national level debates happen on: State’s role in higher education in the last 30 years? Or ways to generate fund and increase allocation towards Higher Education or, How to expand academic offerings of a college? How many colleges are required in North East or in the back alleys of Bihar? I mean, there is no dearth of issues. Well, topics. But all that the organizing bodies freeze in on is an elitist debate on privatization; inviting several private operators, national and international speakers, and give them national platform to voice their interest, which is: “Open more doors for us, and please open them wide.”

By not focusing on the State’s failure, we are increasingly accepting the declining role of the State and we have stopped questioning its due responsibility with a sense of resignation. And our apathy increasingly legitimizes privatization.

Sooner than later, we all have to pay price for this legitimization. How? America is showing us how.  The free market State has higher education so expensive, that even average American pockets’ bleed paying for the cost. Most households fund the studies through student loans. The 2007 economic jolt has America still on its knees and students are defaulting on the loan repayments. As you read this piece, student outstanding loan sits at a staggering $757 billion. The total outstanding loan is likely to surpass $1 trillion soon. Settle down. There is more. The delinquency rates. It stood 8.8% in 2009. Some estimate that the default exceeds 10 % – ten times more than that for credit cards and car loans.

Here lies the similarity. Indian private education is also becoming off limits to middle- income families. So most end up taking study loans. Now connect the dots. If an average Indian starts defaulting on loan servicing, who loses? The nation- fretting on a heap of national debt.

 Of course, the vicious chain begins; owing to defaults, banks increasingly reject loan applications, and bright students are unable to afford private education,( the quality and variety of State education being questionable) and then the corporates crib on lack of talent and so on… I am not even stepping on the track of: talented poor students being outrightly rejected for loans adding on to the crisis of unemployable youths and miserable employability levels, thereof.  

Why isn’t it incumbent on the State to address the issues? Why does it want increased role of private operators? Why does it make clear case for them? Who is benefiting? And are we accept the diminishing role of the State?

Back to the US.  The US is now currently faced with a big question:  How to recover the loan? Various permutation and combinations are being discussed and demanded. From full –fledged bail out of borrowers to a phase curtailment of government lending, a payment relief as opposed to debt relief, forgiveness after 20 years rather than 25. Full or partial pardon, who will ultimately pay for the forgiveness? The taxpayers. Wish Americans had not let so much of capitalism march into their college corridors in the first place. 

 There is learning from US’s current scenario. Free market is limiting to the interests of average citizens. A bit of Statism (State’s role) not just in bail-outs, but more, is necessitated. 

It is not unrealistic for India to face a mountain of student loan debt in these unpredictable economic times. So who ends up bearing the cost?  Us. The honest taxpayers. I mean, how can one get sold on to the concept of privatization before questioning the reasons for the State’s failure?

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5 Comments:

At 14 November 2011 at 03:15 , Blogger Saurabh Naruka said...

to add to your well written piece (thanks there are still thinkers like you left who can think independently without falling prey to propaganda machinery at work for 'manufacturing consent' as Chomasky calls it) ....the funny thing is that before arguing for more privatization these so called 'experts' forget the basic empircal facts that in India only 9% students who enroll in school are able to complete graduation as against the world average of 45%. Its more goverment intervention which is likely to raise this figure rather than expensive commercial education. They also forget that historically all quality education institutions have been in public sector including our IITs and IIMs on which the private sector too relies for hunting talent till date. India's public sector expenditure as a percentage of GDP on education is abysmally low at around 3%. The need is to expand this investment on education as it is basically for building the future of the country.The diktat of global financial capital who seeks to benifit enoromously by tapping lurative education market of India at the cost of 'education of Bharat'!!! force these 'experts at conferences' to sung the tune which is music to their ears.

 
At 14 November 2011 at 03:23 , Blogger ajeet singh said...

बहुत सही लिखा आपने। निजीकरण के ख्‍याब दिखाने से पहले इस बात की पड़ताल जरूरी है कि सरकारें असफल क्‍यों हो रहीं हैं। शिक्षा के बाजार में चल रहे एक करतब को बहुत दिलचस्‍प अंदाज में बयां किया है आपने। काश ऐसे ख्‍याल कभी सिब्‍बल एंड पार्टी के मन से भी टकराएं।

 
At 14 November 2011 at 03:30 , Blogger Confessions of a Vagabond heart said...

A very pertinent, thought-provoking and insightful read!.....The involvement of State in the education is indeed worth pondering on and with increasing role of private players...it might not be long before higher education becomes a luxury for most...I really wish something is done to avert such a situation.

 
At 14 November 2011 at 03:50 , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Well written article! Gives a perspective on the changing education sector and its aftermaths in the time to come.

 
At 14 November 2011 at 05:22 , Blogger Rajshekhar said...

Super article. Interesting facts, good food for thought.

 

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