This MCQ module is based on: State of Education in India — Expenditure & Achievements
State of Education in India — Expenditure & Achievements
This assessment will be based on: State of Education in India — Expenditure & Achievements
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4.5 State of Human Capital Formation in India
India's human capital formation? is the outcome of investments in education, health, on-the-job training, migration and information. Of these, education and health are the two most important. India is a federal country: the Constitution divides functions across the union government, state governments and local bodies (Municipal Corporations, Municipalities and Village Panchayats). Expenditures on both education and health are therefore carried out simultaneously by all three tiers. Health is taken up in Chapter 8 of the textbook; this chapter focuses on the education sector.
4.5.1 Why Government Intervention is Essential
Education and health services create both private and social benefits. That is why both private and public institutions exist in these markets. But there are good reasons for government intervention:
4.5.2 Who Looks After Education and Health
In India, the union and state ministries of education, departments of education, and apex bodies like the NCERT?, UGC? and AICTE? facilitate institutions in the education sector. Likewise, the union and state ministries of health and apex bodies like the National Medical Commission and Indian Council for Medical Research (ICMR) facilitate institutions in the health sector. Both, the union and state governments, have been stepping up expenditure on education over the years, in order to attain cent per cent literacy and to raise the average educational attainment of Indians.
4.6 Education Sector in India
4.6.1 Growth in Government Expenditure on Education
Government expenditure on education is expressed in two ways: (i) as a percentage of total government expenditure and (ii) as a percentage of Gross Domestic Product (GDP). The first measure shows the importance the government attaches to education in its scheme of priorities. The second measure shows how much of national income is being committed to building the education sector.
4.6.2 Distribution Across Levels — Elementary vs. Tertiary
Elementary education takes the major share of total education expenditure; the share of higher / tertiary education (colleges, polytechnics, universities) is the least. Yet the per-student expenditure in tertiary education is higher than that in elementary, because building advanced labs, libraries and faculty is expensive. NCERT cautions that this does not mean money should be transferred from tertiary to elementary; teachers for school education themselves come from higher education, so spending on all levels must be increased.
4.6.3 Inter-State Variation in Per-Capita Spending
In 2020-21, per-capita public expenditure on elementary education differed sharply across states — from as high as Rs 96,968 in Sikkim to as low as Rs 10,710 in Bihar. This variation leads to wide differences in educational opportunities and attainments across states.
| Tier | State | Per-Capita Spend (Rs) |
|---|---|---|
| Highest | Sikkim | 96,968 |
| Lowest | Bihar | 10,710 |
| Implication | A child in Sikkim has ~9× more public resource backing per head than a child in Bihar — driving differences in school quality, learning outcomes and life chances. | |
4.6.4 Tapas Majumdar Committee & the Kothari Recommendation
One can judge the inadequacy of education spend by comparing it with the desired levels recommended by various commissions:
Education Commission (Kothari) — 1964–66
- Recommended that at least 6 per cent of GDP be spent on education.
- Aim: a noticeable rate of growth in educational achievements.
- Status: India still spends a little over 4 per cent — clearly inadequate against the 6% goal.
- The 6% target has been accepted as a "must" for the coming years.
Tapas Majumdar Committee — 1999
- Appointed by the Government of India in 1999.
- Estimated an expenditure of around Rs 1.37 lakh crore over 10 years (1998-99 to 2006-07).
- Goal: bring all Indian children in the 6–14 years age group under school education.
- Direct precursor to the legal right enacted in 2009.
4.6.5 Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act, 2009
4.6.6 Education Cess and Loan Schemes
To fund these commitments, the Government of India started levying a 2 per cent education cess on all union taxes. Revenues from this cess are earmarked for spending on elementary education. In addition, the government sanctions a large outlay for the promotion of higher education and runs new loan schemes for students to pursue higher education.
4.7 Educational Achievements in India
NCERT measures educational achievements through three indicators — adult literacy rate, primary completion rate and youth literacy rate.
| Indicator | 1990 | 2000 | 2011 | 2017–18 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adult Literacy — Male (15+) | 61.9 | 68.4 | 79 | 82 |
| Adult Literacy — Female (15+) | 37.9 | 45.4 | 59 | 66 |
| Primary Completion — Male | 78 | 85 | 92 | 93 |
| Primary Completion — Female | 61 | 69 | 94 | 96 |
| Youth Literacy — Male (15–24) | 76.6 | 79.7 | 90 | 93 |
| Youth Literacy — Female (15–24) | 54.2 | 64.8 | 82 | 90 |
4.7.1 Education for All — Still a Distant Dream
Though both adult and youth literacy rates have risen, the absolute number of illiterates in India is "as much as India's population was at the time of independence". The Constitution, when adopted in 1950, said in the Directive Principles of State Policy? that the government should provide free and compulsory education for all children up to the age of 14 years within 10 years of the Constitution coming into effect. Had we achieved this, India would have had cent per cent literacy by now.
4.7.2 Gender Equity — Better than Before
The differences in literacy rates between males and females are narrowing — a positive sign for gender equity. Still, the need to promote education for women in India is "imminent" because:
4.7.3 Higher Education — A Few Takers
The Indian education pyramid is steep — fewer and fewer people reach the higher-education level. Worse, unemployment is highest among the most educated youth.
| Group | Unemployment Rate |
|---|---|
| Rural male graduates and above | 19 per cent |
| Urban male graduates and above | 16 per cent |
| Rural female graduates (most affected) | ~30 per cent |
| Primary-level educated youth (rural & urban) | only 3–6 per cent |
The situation has improved moderately, as indicated by the Periodic Labour Force Survey 2023-24. Even so, the puzzle remains: when compared to the less-educated, a large proportion of educated persons are unemployed. Why? NCERT urges the government to increase allocation for higher education and improve the standard of higher-education institutions so that students are imparted employable skills.
4.8 Growth of the Education Sector — A Visual Picture
The literacy trend from 1951 (16.67%) to 2018-22 (78%) shows that India has expanded the education base sharply, but is still about 22 percentage points short of full literacy. Progress was slow till 1981 and accelerated after the 1990s — driven by Operation Blackboard, Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan, the 86th Constitutional Amendment (2002), and the RTE Act of 2009.
NCERT asks: identify the objectives and functions of NCERT, UGC, AICTE and ICMR.
- NCERT (1961): National Council of Educational Research and Training. Develops curricula, textbooks, teacher training; advises union and state governments on school education; conducts NAS surveys.
- UGC (1956): University Grants Commission. Coordinates and maintains standards in higher education; provides grants to universities and colleges; recognises degrees.
- AICTE (1987): All India Council of Technical Education. Plans and coordinates the development of technical (engineering/management/pharmacy) education; approves courses and intake capacities.
- ICMR: Indian Council of Medical Research. Apex body for biomedical research; sets ethical standards for clinical trials and funds research institutions across India.
NCERT asks: prepare case studies of dropouts at different levels — primary, Class VIII, Class X. Find out the causes. Also discuss: "School dropouts are giving way to child labour. How is this a loss to human capital?"
- Primary dropouts: poverty, distance to school, lack of toilets (esp. for girls), language of instruction, illness.
- Class VIII dropouts: economic compulsion to work, early marriage of girls, weak learning foundation from earlier classes, peer migration to towns for daily-wage work.
- Class X dropouts: board exam pressure, perceived irrelevance of curriculum, lack of vocational pathways.
- Loss to human capital: child labour locks the child into low-skill, low-paid work; depreciates the cognitive gains of schooling; cuts off pathways to higher education and higher earning power; perpetuates inter-generational poverty.
- Policy: RTE 2009, mid-day meals, scholarships and conditional cash transfers (e.g., Kanya Vidya Dhan) directly attack the dropout problem.
NCERT asks: there are some instances of villagers using e-mail and e-governance is projected as the way of the future. The value of IT depends on the existing level of economic development. Do you think IT-based services in rural areas will lead to human development? Discuss.
- Yes — supporting view: IT removes information asymmetry — farmers learn mandi prices, women access government welfare directly, students access free online courses (NPTEL, SWAYAM, Diksha).
- Caution: IT requires literacy, electricity, internet bandwidth and a device. Without these, services exclude the very poor instead of including them.
- India experience: JAM trinity (Jan Dhan + Aadhaar + Mobile) shows IT can deliver subsidies directly. CSCs and DBT have widened reach but the digital divide remains.
- Conclusion: IT in rural areas contributes to human development only when paired with basic schooling, electricity, and last-mile training — IT is an enabler, not a substitute for fundamentals.
📝 Competency-Based Questions — Education Sector in India
Options: (A) Both A & R true, R correctly explains A · (B) Both true, R does not explain A · (C) A true, R false · (D) A false, R true.