BusinessMirror

Modi wants Yale and Oxford to be able to open campuses in India

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India ’s universiti­es have produced chief executive officers at companies from Microsoft Corp. to Google— now Prime Minister Narendra Modi thinks they can be even better with competitio­n from global names like Yale, Oxford and Stanford.

Modi’s government is pushing to overhaul the South Asian nation’s heavily regulated education sector to woo nearly 750,000 students who spend about $ 15 billion each year pursuing degrees overseas, Education Minister Ramesh Pokhriyal “Nishank” said in written responses to questions.

The legislatio­n— which will regulate the operation of foreign universiti­es— is being prepared for approval by the parliament, where the government retains a significan­t majority. It represents a change of heart for the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party, which has long resisted opening up the country’s education sector.

“There has been lot of enthusiasm,” Pokhriyal said, noting that Australia’s government and some universiti­es had shown interest in the proposal. “Very soon, India will have some of the finest, world- class institutio­ns.”

The South Asian nation needs to boost its education sector to become more competitiv­e and close the growing gap between college curricula and market demands. It’s currently ranked 72 among 132 nations in the 2020 Global Talent Competitiv­eness Index that measures the nation’s ability to grow, attract and retain talent.

Still, India’s notoriousl­y tricky bureaucrac­y may be the main stumbling block for foreign universiti­es, along with difficulti­es in acquiring land, academic staff and adequate infrastruc­ture. The minister didn’t specify what incentives India will offer to attract foreign universiti­es, except that institutio­ns, which are required to operate not- for- profit, will be on a playing field with local players.

Some universiti­es have already set up partnershi­ps with Indian institutio­ns, allowing students to par tially study in India and complete their degrees on the main campus abroad. The current move encourages these overseas institutio­ns to set up campuses without local partners.

Fresh challenges

“We’ll seek new opportunit­ies to further pursue such collaborat­ions as India’s new policy is implemente­d,” said Joe Wong, a vice president at the University of Toronto, which has a tieup with Tata Trusts and the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay.

The University of Washington, London School of Economics, Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology and University of Western Australia were among institutio­ns that said they have no plans of setting up campuses in India. Others like Mcgill University and the University of Sydney said they’re looking to expand their partnershi­ps in India through new courses or research programs.

“We have been dreaming about the possibilit­ies of delivering degrees in India,” said Alessandro Giuliani, managing director of SDA Bocconi Asia Center, an Italian business school that operates in Mumbai. He said the institute is waiting to see the government’s final regulation­s in the new policy, which it hopes will avoid any minimum investment requiremen­ts, especially in land.

With more than 51,000 institutio­ns, India’s higher education system is already one of the largest in the world and in terms of enrollment, it is second only to China. Still, it lags behind China in terms of infrastruc­ture, quality teaching and research investment.

Pokhriyal is optimistic that overseas universiti­es will set up their campus in India to tap the nation’s young demographi­cs, with the World Bank projecting 34 percent of its population will be aged between 15 and 34 years by 2021. India had already entered into agreements on educationa­l programs with 55 countries that include exchange of academics and students and cooperatio­n on other initiative­s, he said.

The new plan will double education spending to 6 percent of India’s GDP “at the earliest” according to Pokhriyal. The federal government has proposed spending of over 9 trillion rupees or about $ 123 billion on education in the five years to 2026, of which $ 28 billion will be on higher education.

It’s time for India to open up its tertiary sector, said T. V. Mohandas Pai, chairman of Mani pal Global Education Services, who has done research on the country’s higher education system.

“The main hurdle will be the actual regulation­s,” Pai said. “My concern is that the control- minded bureaucrac­y should not scuttle the execution of the policy by putting in unnecessar­y controls.”

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