In The Media (400)

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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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Fertiliser Subsidy

We spend more than 0.7 per cent of India’s GDP on fertiliser subsidies. This is almost twice the entire amount we spend on higher education. Economic Times, February 28, 2001 WE SPEND more than 0.7 per cent of India’s GDP on fertiliser subsidies. This is almost twice the entire amount we spend on higher education. In absolute terms, the subsidy amounted to a whopping Rs 13,200 crore in 1999-2000. There is little economic justification for placing this huge burden on the Indian taxpayer. Not surprisingly, even the Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council advocates an end to the subsidy in a report available on his website. The bulk of the fertiliser subsidy rewards the gross inefficiency of our urea manufacturers. According to the second report of the Expenditure Reforms Commission, issued on September 20, 2000, production costs of urea vary from Rs 4,800 per tonne for the most efficient plant to Rs 15,175 per tonne for the least efficient one. In today’s highly competitive environment in which paper-thin margins in costs are sufficient to drive firms out of business in most…

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A Vision for 2010

Guest column for a special issue of India Today, February 19, 2001. Where are we likely to be in 2010? Our growth rate during the next 10 years is likely to average 6 to 7 per cent. This is the same rate I had predicted in 1994 for the decade of the 1990s. With growth rate in 1993-94 at a measly 3.8 percent, the prediction was viewed as hugely optimistic at the time; today, with the economy already growing at 6 per cent, it is likely to be viewed as pessimistic. Read full article Let me begin with an excerpt from the special issue of INDIA TODAY dated February 4, 2010: "At the turn of the millennium, the country had an annual per-capita income of $450. A quarter of the country's population lived below the poverty line. Infant mortality rate was 70 per 1,000 live births. Two out of every five individuals aged 15 or more were illiterate. Annual per capita electric power consumption was 450 kw/h. For every 1,000 people, there were 22 phone lines, two cell-phone subscribers and less…

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A Current Account of Activity

Read full article Review in the Times Higher Educations Supplement of The World Bank: Structure and Policies edited by Christopher L. Gilbert and David Vines. No multilateral institution suffers more from an identity crisis today than the World Bank. Globalization has brought private capital to the doorsteps of most developing countries, seriously undermining the Bank’s central function—development lending.

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Unshackling the Old Economy

The major new stimulus to growth must come from further freeing up of the Old Economy, which lags behind the unfettered New Economy. Economic Times, January 31 2001 Speaking to the U.S. Congress during his recent visit to the United States, Prime Minister Vajpayee noted, “In the last ten years, we have grown at 6.5 per cent per year: that puts India among the ten fastest growing economies of the world.” He boldly went on to add, “We are determined to sustain the momentum of our economy: our aim is to double our per capita income in ten years -- and that means we must grow at 9 per cent a year.” Vajpayee is to be applauded for setting ambitious goals for the nation he leads. After all, no general ever won a war without being ambitious. The bad news, however, is that the Prime Minister’s resolve is about to be tested. Finance Minister Yashwant Sinha must soon present the second budget of the present government. If he fails to announce bold new initiatives, the Prime Minister better shelve his…

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