End the State Monopoly on Higher Education
Last month, when I wrote that public-sector monopoly in India had been abolished in virtually all sectors except railways, I made one major error of omission: higher education. Economic Times, March 28, 2001 Last month, when I wrote that public-sector monopoly in India had been abolished in virtually all sectors except railways, I made one major error of omission: higher education. Under the University Grants Commission (UGC) Act, 1956, an institution can award degrees only if it is established under an act of Parliament or a State Legislature, or specially empowered to award degrees through legislation, or deemed to be a university by the Commission. Accordingly, the institutions of higher learning fall into four categories: (i) universities established by an Act of Parliament or State Legislature; (ii) degree-awarding institutions of national importance, such as the Indian Institutes of Technology (IIT), which are established under Acts of Parliament; (iii) institutions “deemed” to be universities, which are given university status under a provision in the UGC Act; and (iv) diploma-awarding institutions such as the Indian Institutes of Management that are neither established by…
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