Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Delay in fellowship­s pushes research scholars in science, tech institutes into debt

- Priyanka Sahoo

MUMBAI: It has been four months since Kishalay Ghosh, 26, from Hooghly in West Bengal, joined as a research scholar at a research institute funded by the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), but is yet to receive his fellowship.

Ghosh joined Tata Memorial Centre Advanced Centre for Treatment, Research and Education in Cancer in Kharghar on November 2, 2020. Since then, he has been forced to borrow money from friends and family to meet expenses in the absence of his eligible fellowship dues.

Ghosh, like many research scholars, is eligible for the junior research fellowship (JRF) programme of the CSIR which pays over ₹38,000 including housing allowance. “I am up to my eyes in debt. There’s hardly any friend left from whom I haven’t borrowed any money. My father is the only other earning member in the family and he is close to retirement,” said Ghosh. Living

in a rented accommodat­ion, his expenses amount to almost ₹12,000 a month.

Ghosh’s plight is shared by many research scholars in Csirfunded institutes who said the disbursal of fellowship amounts was irregular. “The fellowship­s are an incentive for researcher­s. But since they are irregular, most of us live in debt. Even when the funds are disbursed, they are spent on paying back loans,” said a JRF scholar at Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, Pune.

CSIR, the apex body that runs the fellowship­s programme for junior and senior researcher­s in science and technology institutes, said the delay in disburseme­nts was a matter of concern.

“We at CSIR cannot avoid taking the responsibi­lity of delay in fellowship disbursal. Payments are released only after attendance and claim are certified by the host Institute, which often has a delay rate of two to four months. During the pandemic it went up to four to seven months as well,” said A Chakrabort­y, head, Human Resource Developmen­t

GROUP-CSIR, which handles fellowship­s.

In Ghosh’s case, his fellowship is yet to be activated by CSIR. The host institute took 2.5 months to send his papers and CSIR was responsibl­e for a delay of 1.5 months, said Chakrabort­y.

CSIR releases funds directly into the bank accounts of research scholars in its 703 host institutes after receiving approved bills from institutes.

“We are concerned with the delay and would like to urge scholars to cooperate in sending timely bills from their institutes. For example, for February, only 28 of the 703 institutes have submitted their claim bills on the due date which is 5th of every month,” said Chakrabort­y.

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