Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Skill could be next fundamenta­l right

- Sanjib Kr Baruah sanjib.baruah@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The government is planning to make skill training a fundamenta­l right guaranteed by the Constituti­on to boost employabil­ity of India’s workforce. The proposed right to skill will task state government­s with the responsibi­lity of imparting vocational training through special universiti­es that will be overseen by a regulatory body at the Centre.

Skill developmen­t as a right has been enacted in several countries, including Germany, Switzerlan­d and South Korea, and is present closer home in Chhattisga­rh as well.

Explaining the proposal, minister of state for skill developmen­t and entreprene­urship Rajiv Pratap Rudy said, “The proposal is at the discussion stage at this point. It will be the responsibi­lity of the state to see that anyone who wants to be skilled is not left out. The idea is to include it under the fundamenta­l rights.”

“Anyone in the age group of 15-45 can go up to the district magistrate and petition that he or she has to be trained,” Rudy told HT. The minister acknowledg­ed that the proposal faced some problems. “The states have to be on board. There are financial obligation­s as well.” States reportedly want the Centre to provide funding for the project.

According to Rudy, the state government­s would also have to set up and administer skill universiti­es. “We are preparing a bill to set up skill universiti­es in the states. We will hopefully soon have a mandate and a statutory system so states can set up such universiti­es and administer them,” said Rudy. “They will be set up first in select states, which we will handhold for sometime before they are replicated in other states,” he added.

Asked about the Centre’s role, Rudy said: “There will be a regulatory body at the Centre. It will be a multi-tier system that will oversee the university, colleges and institutes and integrate them to make them result-oriented.”

The gover nment is also waiting for a report from a sub- g roup of the National Institutio­n for Transformi­ng India (NITI) Aayog which is expected to suggest a new legal framework for validating skill education in India.

“The Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) is directly monitoring the sub-group headed by Punjab chief minister Parkash Singh Badal who is also the mission chairman for Punjab. He is holding consultati­ons with other chief ministers. The group will focus on the states’ partnershi­p as we have already given the framework. The report will give us inputs from the states besides new ideas,” Rudy told HT.

A NITI Aayog official said there was a consensus among most states on the right to skill but they want the Centre to provide the funding like in the case of Right to Education. “The modalities are being worked out,” the official said.

The right route was first opted for by the UPA government which enacted the Right to Informatio­n, Right to Education and the Right to Food Security acts.

STATES WILL BE TASKED WITH SETTING UP SKILL UNIVERSITI­ES WHICH WILL BE OVERSEEN BY A REGULATORY BODY, SAYS RAJIV PRATAP RUDY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India