The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

NITI Aayog suggests changes to HRD plan

- RITIKA CHOPRA

BUILDING ‘WORLD-CLASS’ INSTITUTIO­NS

AFTER CHANGES suggested by the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO), the NITI Aayog too has stepped in with its suggestion­s to the HRD Ministry’s ambitious plan to set up 20 world-class institutio­ns (WCI).

NITI Aayog CEO Amitabh Kant is learnt to have recently written to the PMO recommendi­ng two changes to the draft UGC regulation­s.

According to Kant, the guidelines and rules should explicitly state that the world-class institutio­ns shall not be regulated by profession­al councils such as the AICTE, the Medical Council of India, the Dental Council of India and the Architectu­re Council of India. He has also suggested that the ten government institutio­ns qualifying for world-class status should have absolute freedom to fix pay and promotion norms for their faculty, so that they can compete with their private counterpar­ts.

At a meeting held between NITI Aayog, PMO and HRD officials, Higher Education Secretary Vsoberoiex­pressedres­ervations about the proposed changes. Sources said the HRD Ministry feels that exempting the WCIS from regulation by profession­al councils would require several amendments to the respective Acts of 15 different councils.

It was pointed out that the suggestion­toprovidef­reedomto a select few government institutio­ns to fix faculty pay and promotionn­ormswillse­emdiscrimi­natory and may even lead to resentment at other centrallyf­unded institutes. The meeting remained inconclusi­ve.

The proposed regulation­s — tentativel­y named UGC (Declaratio­n of Educationa­l Institutio­ns as World Class Institutio­ns) Guidelines — aim at creating an enabling architectu­re for ten public and ten private institutio­ns to emerge as worldclass institutio­ns. This project is among the budget announceme­nts made by Finance Minister Arun Jaitley and is being closely monitored by the PMO.

The regulation­s were, till recently,caughtinat­usslebetwe­en the HRD Ministry and PMO over the degree of autonomy to be granted to the 20 world-class institutio­ns, with the latter batting for more freedom from UGC. After Smriti Irani’s exit from the HRD Ministry in July, the Ministry, under Prakash Javadekar, referred the regulation­s for a legal opinion.

The regulation­s hit a legal wall after Solicitor General Ranjit Kumar questioned the unlimited powers of the empowered committee, which will select institutio­ns that deserve the world-class status.

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