Deccan Chronicle

10 crore Indian youth have bad skills, says Pai

-

Hyderabad, June 18: India no longer enjoys the advantage of demographi­c dividend as it’s saddled with crores of youngsters with low skills unsuited to the economy, claimed a human resources and education expert.

The chairman of Manipal global education, T.V. Mohandas Pai claimed that the country already has 10 crore people in the 21-35 age-group with bad skills, unsuited for the economy. “There is no democraphi­c dividend,” he told PTI.

“Because of the failure of the UPA era (2004-2014), we will add another ten crore by 2025...total 20 crore in the 21-45 age group with low skills, low education.”

An IT industry veteran who had served as Head of HR and CFO at Infosys, Mr Pai lamented “lack of educationa­l reforms” during the 10-year UPA regime.

It takes time for educationa­l reforms to impact, he said. “Reform now will take ten years to impact by which (time) this (the current) generation will be lost. The key is: How to ensure they do not (lose out).”

Mr Pai was sharing his thoughts on a recent report by the research wing of the country's largest lender SBI.

This report said India has only one decade to change its status into a developed country and will need to focus on education, failing which the much-hailed ‘demographi­c dividend’ will turn into a disadvanta­ge.

If India is not able to get its act together, it will will never be able to go into the developed group of nations, it said.

The report said, “India has perhaps now only a limited window of a decade to get into the developed country tag, or stay perpetuall­y in emerging group of economies.”

Assocham secretary general D.S. Rawat said India must invest a lot in education, health and child nutrition so that the human resource is qualitativ­ely superior. Both the Centre and the States, Rawat said, need to “jack up” their budget on health and education. — PTI

 ??  ?? Mr Pai said there is a need to improve quality of education, stopping controllin­g education, and opening up of the sector with transparen­t norms and enforcing quality standards in higher education.
Mr Pai said there is a need to improve quality of education, stopping controllin­g education, and opening up of the sector with transparen­t norms and enforcing quality standards in higher education.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India