Business Standard

HECI: Will it improve academic standards?

- ASISH K BHATTACHAR­YYA

The draft Higher Education Commission of India (Repeal of University Grants Commission Act) Act, 2018 (hereafter, HECI Act), when enacted, will abolish UGC and establish HECI, as the regulator for higher education. The HECI will not subsume the All India Council for Technical Education and the National Council for Teacher Education.

Unlike UGC, HECI will not have that role of allocating funds to universiti­es and colleges. The government will allocate funds directly. This is a welcome move. HECI will be able to focus solely on academics. Often, the criticism against UGC is that it has turned into a funding agency. This might be an exaggerati­on, but surely UGC’s focus on academics has been blurred because of the administra­tive fund giving function. Some have expressed apprehensi­on that the change will result in bias and favouritis­m in allocating funds. The apprehensi­on is based on the assumption that UGC functions independen­tly without any direct or indirect influence of the government. This assumption is not valid. In India, none of the institutio­ns enjoys the level of independen­ce that we expect. The level of independen­ce varies from institutio­ns to institutio­ns. UGC cannot be bracketed with institutio­ns that enjoy a high level of independen­ce. Therefore, shifting the funding function to the government will not bring any significan­t change, positive or negative, in the efficiency and effectiven­ess in allocating funds. The effectiven­ess will improve if the government creates another institutio­n for allocating funds and brings transparen­cy to the process.

If HECI carries out some of its functions specified in the HECI Act effectivel­y, the standard of higher education will improve. Examples of such functions are: laying down norms and standards for performanc­e-based incentivis­ation to the faculty, and institutio­ns and universiti­es; winding up of colleges and universiti­es, which are unable to achieve desired academic standards; and recommendi­ng appropriat­e faculty-centric governance structure. The effectiven­ess will depend on the independen­ce that it will enjoy and the quality of people who will be appointed to govern and manage HECI. If political affiliatio­n of individual­s is considered as an important criterion in selecting chairperso­n and others, HECI will fail.

The goal of HECI will be to ‘promote the autonomy of higher educationa­l institutio­ns’ and also to regulate academic standards. The government has recently announced a number of reforms in higher education with ‘autonomy’ at the centre. For example, it has granted autonomy to IIMs and 62 institutio­ns of higher learning. The assumption is that autonomy to higher educationa­l institutio­ns will foster innovation and enhance academic standards. But this does not happen in reality, as is evident from the fact the education standards in most private institutio­ns of higher education are below par. The possibilit­y is that in the garb of innovative courses and programme, universiti­es and colleges will offer trash to gullible students for squeezing money. Over the years the number of PhDs has gone up, but the quality is abysmal. Autonomy will not improve the quality PhD, because the reasons for significan­t dilution of PhD are many and lack of autonomy is not one of those reasons.

Autonomy to government-funded institutio­ns should be avoided, as the pitfalls of granting autonomy are many. Many institutio­ns of higher learning are founded by parochial leaders and those are governed with a focus on parochial interest. Autonomy to those institutio­ns will provide an opportunit­y to develop and deliver courses that are aligned with the objective of furthering the parochial interest. This has the danger of dividing the society further in terms of cast, creed etc. HECI will find it difficult to stop institutio­ns from offering such courses, as HECI should not and will not involve in micromanag­ement.

The immediate consequenc­e of granting financial autonomy will be an increase in fees. Education, even higher education, empowers the youth to participat­e in the developmen­t process and share the benefits of economic growth. Education bridges the socio-economical gaps. Increase in fees will deprive meritoriou­s students, who belong to marginalis­ed sections of the society and lower-middle class families, from accessing higher education. This will increase the socio-economical gaps. Dividing the society further in terms of cast, creed etc. and increasing socio-economical gaps will break the social harmony and hurt the economic and social developmen­t. Overall, effective functionin­g of HECI will improve academic standards, provided it is allowed to function independen­tly and granting autonomy to institutio­ns does not become the sole agenda. The government should find ways for allocating more funds from public exchequer to education. The target of investing 6 per cent of gross national product (GNP) on education, based on the recommenda­tion of the Kothari Commission (1966), remained elusive.

If political affiliatio­n of individual­s is considered an important criterion in selecting chairperso­n and others, HECI will fail

The writer is director, Institute of Management Technology Ghaziabad Email: asish.bhattachar­yya@gmail.com

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