The Pak Banker

WB clears $500m loan to improve india’s edu system

- MUMBAI - AFP

The World Bank on Sunday said its Board of Executive Directors has approved USD 500 million (about Rs 3,700 crore) loan to improve quality and governance of school education in six Indian states. The board approved a loan for Strengthen­ing Teaching-Learning and Results for States Program (STARS) on June 24, 2020, the World Bank said in a statement.

"Some 250 million students (between the age of 6 and 17) in 1.5 million schools, and over 10 million teachers will benefit from the program. The STARS program builds on the long partnershi­p between India and the World Bank (since 1994), for strengthen­ing public school education and to support the country's goal of providing Education for All," it said.

Prior to STARS, the bank had provided a total assistance of more than USD 3 billion towards this goal. At the national level, through the Samagra Shiksha, and in partnershi­p with the states of Himachal Pradesh, Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtr­a, Odisha, and Rajasthan, it said, STARS will also help improve learning assessment systems, strengthen classroom instructio­n and remediatio­n, facilitate school-towork transition, and strengthen governance and decentrali­sed management.

India recognises the need to significan­tly improve its learning outcomes to fuel future growth and meet the demands of the labour market, World Bank Country Director in India Junaid Ahmad said.

"STARS will support India’s response to this challenge by strengthen­ing implementa­tion at the local level, investing in teacher capacity and ensuring that no child of any background is left behind from the right to education," he said.

Investing more in the early years of education will equip children with the skills required to compete for the jobs of the future, he added.

The multilater­al funding agency noted that India has, over the years, made significan­t strides in improving access to education across the country; between 200405 and 2018-19, the number of children going to school increased from 219 million to 248 million.

However, the learning outcomes of students across all age groups continue to remain below par.

The USD 500 million loan from the Internatio­nal Bank for Reconstruc­tion and Developmen­t (IBRD), has a final maturity of 14.5 years, including a grace period of five years.

With the lockdown across the country leading to a severe economic slowdown, banks witnessed their non-food credit outstandin­g contract by Rs 1.1 lakh crore between March 27 and April 24.

The biggest contractio­n was witnessed in the personal loan segment that has been the harbinger of bank's credit growth and consumptio­n led economy for several years now.

The personal loan segment that includes home loan, vehicle loan, credit card, consumer durable loan and education loan among others witnessed a sharp contractio­n in its credit outstandin­g by Rs 62,861 crore or 2.5 per cent from an outstandin­g of Rs 25.53 lakh crore on March 27 to Rs 24.9 lakh crore on April 24, 2020, according to the latest RBI data.

The contractio­n has come after the credit outstandin­g for the personal loan segment expanded by Rs 3.32 lakh crore or 15 per cent in the financial year 2019- 20.

The share of personal loan category in the non- food credit outstandin­g of banks stands at 27.4pc.

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