15 May 2025 Indian Express Editorial
What to Read in Indian Express Editorial( Topic and Syllabus wise)
Editorial 1 : Ripples in the Classroom
Context: How Indian universities can benefit from federal cuts and policy changes in foreign universities
Current State of India’s Higher Education System
- Capacity Constraints
- Demographic Challenge
- 420 million youth aged 15–29 years.
- Only 45 million enrolled in higher education.
- Institutional Shortfall: 40,000 higher educational institutions (HEIs) exist, but need 5x expansion to meet NEP 2020’s 50% enrolment target.
- Demographic Challenge
- Quality and Access Issues
- Public vs. Private Divide
- Public HEIs: Insufficient growth, high vacancies (e.g. Delhi University’s stagnant faculty strength).
- Private HEIs: Dominate (50% of universities) but face trust deficit in quality.
- Outflow of Students: Around 500,000 Indian students go abroad annually due to excess demand for quality education.
- Public vs. Private Divide
Challenges Driving Unemployment and Underemployment
- Root Causes
- Limited Capacity: Inadequate seats in quality institutions.
- Skill Mismatch: Poor-quality education leads to unemployability.
- Affordability: Majority cannot afford high tuition fees of private institutions.
- Structural Issues in Public Institutions
- Faculty Shortages: High vacancies due to slow hiring processes.
- Infrastructure Decay: Crumbling facilities in public universities.
Global Shifts Creating Opportunities for India
- Declining Appeal of Traditional Destinations
- US: Anti-immigrant policies, reduced OPT (Optional Practical Training) opportunities.
- Canada & Australia: Visa cuts and restrictive immigration policies.
- Revenue Pressures on Foreign Universities
- Foreign universities (US, Canada, Australia) face declining enrolments and need new revenue streams.
- India’s Advantage: Large youth population and aspirational demand for quality education.
Strategies to Expand Capacity and Quality
- Attracting Foreign Universities
- Enact legislation to ease entry of foreign universities (as per NEP 2020).
- Address lukewarm uptake by facilitating land acquisition and complementary inputs.
- Collaborative Models: Promote joint degrees and partnerships between Indian and foreign institutions.
- Revitalizing Public Institutions
- Fill faculty vacancies through adaptive hiring processes.
- Upgrade infrastructure in public HEIs.
- Brand Value: Leverage existing reputations (e.g. Delhi University) to scale capacity.
- Strengthening Private Sector Participation
- Trust-Building: Partner with globally reputed universities to enhance credibility.
- Regulatory Facilitation: UGC should streamline approvals for private collaborations.
Economic and Employment Benefits of Education Expansion
- Direct Employment Generation
- For every 10% increase in education investment, employment grows by approx. 4%.
- Jobs range from high-skilled faculty to low-skilled campus service roles.
- Inter-Sectoral Linkages
- Forward Linkages: Skilled graduates boost productivity in industries like IT, healthcare, and finance.
- Backward Linkages: Growth in publishing, construction, and technology sectors.
- Macroeconomic Impact
- Consumption Boost: Higher employability increases aggregate demand.
- Virtuous Cycle: Education-led growth leads to higher investments and economic expansion.
Way Forward and Conclusion
- Urgent Actions Needed
- Policy Dynamism: Fast-track collaborations with foreign universities.
- Public Investment: Prioritize funding for faculty recruitment and infrastructure.
- Quality Assurance: Enforce accreditation frameworks for private institutions.
- Long-Term Vision
- Transform India into a global education hub to retain talent and attract foreign students.
- Align education expansion with skill demands of the 21st-century economy.
- By leveraging global shifts and domestic reforms, India can address its education crisis while driving economic growth and employment.
Editorial 2 : A Good Low
Context: Sustained moderation in inflation.
Introduction: Both wholesale (WPI) and retail (CPI) inflation rates moderated. Wholesale Price Index grew by just 0.9% in April 2025, which is a 14-month low. Retail inflation measured by the Consumer Price Index came in at 3.2% in April, the lowest level in six years.
Wholesale Price Index (WPI) Trends
- Consistently low or negative over the past 24 months (e.g. periods of deflation).
- It is less concerning compared to CPI for policymakers.
- WPI has not been a major stress point for India’s economy in recent years.
Consumer Price Index (CPI) Trends
- RBI’s Comfort Zone: 2–6% target range.
- Historical Volatility
- Since 2019: Multiple spikes above 6–7% due to supply shocks like unseasonal weather (e.g. excessive rains), COVID-19 pandemic disruptions and Russia-Ukraine war impacts.
- FY25 Inflation: Averaged 4.6%, the lowest since FY19 and closer to RBI’s 4% target.
Factors Driving Inflation Moderation
- Crude Oil Price Trends: Expected moderation in global crude prices reduces input costs across sectors (e.g. transport, manufacturing).
- Monsoon Forecast: Above normal monsoon predicted for 2024, likely boosting agricultural output and stabilizing food prices.
- Base Effect: High inflation in previous years creates a favourable statistical base for lower YoY comparisons.
Future Outlook
- FY26 Projections: Analysts estimate CPI inflation at 3.5%, down sharply from more than 6% levels in FY21–FY23.
- Key Risks
- Geopolitical tensions affecting oil prices.
- Erratic monsoon impacting food inflation.
Policy Implications
- Fiscal Measures – Excise Duty Hike: Government raised duties on petrol/diesel by Rs. 2 per litre in April 2024 to mobilize Rs. 300 billion in revenue amid lower crude prices.
- Monetary Policy – RBI Rate Cuts
- 50 basis points reduction expected over June and August 2024 policy reviews.
- Reflects confidence in inflation staying within target, enabling growth-focused measures.
- Broader Economic Impact
- Consumer Relief: Lower inflation boosts disposable income and demand.
- Growth Momentum: Policy space opens for investments in infrastructure and job creation.
Conclusion: The sustained moderation in inflation, particularly CPI, marks a turning point for India’s economy after years of volatility. While external risks (oil prices, monsoon) persist, the current trajectory supports fiscal consolidation and accommodative monetary policy to drive growth
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