On the day the (NEP) was finally approved by India鈥檚 Cabinet, most Indians had bigger things on their minds. It was 29聽July 2020, and the number of coronavirus cases globally had reached nearly 17聽million, with almost 1.5聽million of those in India. The country鈥檚 campuses were closed, and the virus was surging through the slums of Mumbai, while battered the state of Bihar, forcing many to abandon their homes.
Yet the NEP鈥檚 potential to initiate a monumental shift in the purpose, operation and clientele of Indian universities had already been recognised by those who had read the draft policy, which had been published for consultation the previous year, before Covid鈥檚 ravages and shortly after Narendra Modi was re-elected for his second five-year term as prime minister.
The policy was the first major reform of education policy in the world鈥檚 most populous country since 1986 and was suitably comprehensive, promising to transform the entire system by 2030. A new impetus was certainly long overdue in Indian higher education, which is widely seen as underperforming internationally, with not a single university among the top聽200 of 探花视频鈥檚 World University Rankings and a long tail of low-quality institutions.
The remedies offered by the NEP were forward-thinking: massively increasing enrolment, establishing an Academic Bank of Credits (ABC) so all citizens could have a digital wallet of credentials, positioning India as a global study destination and allowing international institutions to operate within India, broadening the country鈥檚 traditionally technically focused curricula, and expanding open and distance learning.
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鈥淚t鈥檚 a complete rejig of the system,鈥 says Aarti Srivastava, head of the higher and professional education department at the National Institute of Educational Planning and Administration (NIEPA).
About six weeks after the plan鈥檚 enactment 鈥 when gyms began to reopen and weddings were again permitted, while universities remained firmly shut 鈥 Modi declared in a video call to a nation desperate for causes for optimism that the NEP would 鈥済ive new direction to 21st-century India鈥 and 鈥渟ow the seeds for starting a new era鈥.
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Implementation of the policy has been politically fraught, however. And with high levels of graduate unemployment driving increasing disillusion with higher education, hesitancy among top global institutions to accept the invitation to operate in India, and growing exasperation at political interference in universities, transforming the system looked a tall order even before Modi鈥檚 unexpectedly poor showing in this month鈥檚 general election, which wiped out his Bharatiya Janata Party鈥檚 overall majority. Now, observers are questioning whether Modi鈥檚 seeds for the new era might ever fully germinate.
The NEP 2020 had been in the works for several years, with policymakers, educators and the general public all participating in a lengthy consultation process. With time running out to capitalise economically on India鈥檚 massive youth population bulge, policymakers prioritised ensuring access to education. Accordingly, the NEP sets out a target of having 鈥渁t least one large multidisciplinary [higher education institution] in or near鈥 each of India鈥檚 766 districts, with an aim of almost doubling the gross enrolment ratio (GER) in higher education, including vocational education, from the 26.3聽per cent it was in 2018 to 50聽per cent by聽2035.

By 2021-22, the GER had crept up to , and the target will be聽鈥渆asily met鈥, believes Furqan Qamar, professor at Jamia Millia Islamia鈥檚 Centre for Management Studies and former secretary general of the Association of Indian Universities. The greater issue, he argues, is what will happen to students once they graduate, with high youth employment being among the reasons suggested for the BJP鈥檚 failure to win another overall electoral majority.
鈥淭he biggest challenge that the government is faced with is unemployment and underemployment among the graduates,鈥 agrees Saumen Chattopadhyay, associate professor of education at Delhi鈥檚 Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU). 鈥淚ncreasing numbers of youths are entered in the labour force, but, commensurately, job opportunities are not being created,鈥 he says.
In 2022, the International Labour Organization found that India鈥檚 graduates were nine times more likely to be unemployed than Indians with no schooling at all, only 3.4聽per cent of whom are without work. And underemployment is a pervasive issue, with university-educated rickshaw drivers and farm workers commonplace.
Of course, graduate unemployment is a problem in many countries. In 2023, the Chinese government made headlines when it appeared to address plummeting youth employment rates by declining to publish the data altogether. However, the problem in India is exacerbated by the vast size of its youth population (249聽million Indians are aged between 20 and 29, compared with 168聽million Chinese, the latest indicates).
鈥淭he number of [Indian] youths who are looking for a job is significantly higher than all the countries of the world. And the problem is all the more severe because the quality of higher education鈥nd secondary school education [in聽India] is not that good,鈥 Chattopadhyay says. 鈥淲hen [students are] entering the job market, industry people typically say, 鈥榊ou鈥檙e not employable.鈥欌
Modi鈥檚 government is attempting to tackle this skills deficit via the Academic Bank of Credits, which aims to encourage lifelong learning and retraining and emphasises a shift towards vocational education. 鈥淭he government is trying to empower the students by giving them the freedom to choose courses so that they can be job-ready,鈥 says Chattopadhyay.
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This pivot, however, is not popular with everyone. Some academics suspect it is part of a聽wider plan to downgrade the status of universities 鈥 particularly public universities, which the BJP sees as a check on the advance of its Hindu-nationalist (Hindutva) ideology.
鈥淕iven the larger political agenda of the RSS [an umbrella body encompassing the BJP that promotes Hindutva], they do not see their politics in alignment with the public universities, because a lot of these public universities follow the affirmative action programme whereby students from lower echelons of society make it to higher education,鈥 says Ajay Gudavarthy, an associate professor of political studies at JNU. 鈥淎nd RSS鈥 own understanding is that people who come from these backgrounds through higher education institutions don鈥檛 align with their politics. So it鈥檚 also their [the RSS鈥橾 agenda to privatise and close down and run down public universities as much as possible.鈥
In 2021-22, when the most recent was carried out, private universities accounted for 41聽per cent of India鈥檚 1,168 universities, educating 26.7聽per cent of students. Private universities have been proliferating under the BJP government, with , according to the Ministry of Education. While many observers welcome this shift, arguing that there simply is not enough money or capacity to cater for student demand without this expansion, some critics decry what they see as the purposeful erosion of public education.

The sense that the BJP 鈥 in common with other right-wing populist parties around the world 鈥 sees universities as cultural opponents is supported by the political interference and curbs on academic freedom that have been experienced under the Modi administration.
Professors critical of the government report being , having their overseas citizenship status cancelled and being threatened and intimidated online.
BJP-supporting students have also played a part in bearing down on free speech, targeting anyone deemed to be critical of the government. As early as 2016, two years into Modi鈥檚 prime ministership, the student wing of the BJP at the Central University of Haryana at Mahendragarh tried to against fellow students and teachers involved in the staging of an award-winning play that they regarded as portraying the Indian army in an unflattering light, for instance.
鈥淭here is a huge vigilantism that has been set up,鈥 says a representative of the India Academic Freedom Network, who prefers not to be named. 鈥淵oung people, even students in colleges鈥eel entitled, if they support the right-wing government, [to] just snoop on anyone [and] stop any lecture鈥 if聽they disagree with the lecturer. 鈥淎ny good speaker, who鈥檚 known to鈥peak freely and question government policies or support ideas of democracy [will have their] lecture cancelled.鈥
In some cases, simmering tensions on campus have escalated into all-out violence. In 2020, a mob of people in masks entered the campus of JNU 鈥 known for its progressive political stance 鈥 and attacked students. Some accused the BJP鈥檚 student wing of instigating the violence and said the police had been slow to act, while others blamed left-wing activists. It followed an incident the previous year in which police forcefully entered Delhi鈥檚 Jamia Millia Islamia and aggressively suppressed student protests. Subsequently, academics reported an uneasy atmosphere on campuses, with many choosing to refrain from publicly criticising the government for fear of repercussions.
Nor is it only public universities that have come under the BJP鈥檚 spotlight. Delhi鈥檚 Ashoka University, one of several wealthy new private universities that have been established in recent years by philanthropists and industrialists, has apparently felt the need to take action on several occasions to avoid getting on the wrong side of the party. In 2021, a public intellectual and prominent critic of the BJP, Pratap Bhanu Mehta, resigned as professor of political science, citing that his 鈥渁ssociation with the university may be considered a political liability鈥. And last year, an economist, Sabyasachi Das, after publishing a paper that suggested that the BJP may have manipulated the results of the 2019 general election; the university had earlier distanced itself from the paper despite not having carried out an academic review of the research.
Modi鈥檚 government has also been widely accused of installing university leaders who are sympathetic or even aligned to the BJP. These claims were repeated by the opposition leader, Rahul Gandhi, in this year鈥檚 election race, prompting numerous vice-chancellors to respond with an outraged open letter asserting that their appointments were based on merit.
But scepticism persists. 鈥淭here is no doubt that merit has been compromised in India,鈥 says Deepti Acharya, an assistant professor of political science at the Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda. 鈥淭he preference is not being given to those who are really capable.鈥
The BJP has wielded influence through states' centrally appointed governors, using them 鈥渁s a tool to interfere in the day-to-day affairs of the university, especially in the appointment of vice-chancellors and nomination of members to university bodies like the senate and syndicate [executive council]鈥, says Eldho Mathews, programme officer for the internationalisation of higher education at the Kerala State Higher Education Council. But governments in opposition-run states, including Kerala, have fought back, attempting to pass bills that reduce the power of governors over universities. The result has been something of a political tug of war between the central and state governments for control of higher education in these regions.
There is nothing new about political interference on Indian campuses. If Modi had lost the election, Acharya argues, the new government would have exerted similar strategies for control over Indian universities 鈥渂ecause it鈥檚 a game of revenge. Universities are inseparable from politics,鈥 she says. 鈥淧olitical parties are very deeply interested in Indian campuses and what is happening over there. India has not realised so far, even after 75 years of independence, that education is not part of politics.鈥
Nevertheless, the India Academic Freedom Network representative says political intimidation 鈥渟harply came into focus鈥 during Modi鈥檚 second term, when the BJP ruled with an increased overall majority in the Indian parliament and its hegemony was regarded as virtually unassailable.
The shattering of that veneer by this month鈥檚 election result and the unexpectedly strong showing by the Congress-led opposition alliance has prompted widespread hopes, by contrast, that the worst of the BJP鈥檚 attempts to impose its authority on universities may be over for now.
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鈥淚ndia has got good opposition. That is a safe point for Indian universities because the freedom of speech can be maintained only when there is a strong opposition,鈥 says Acharya 鈥 although she is unsure how long the opposition alliance will endure.
But nor are the BJP鈥檚 coalition partners necessarily unshakeable, and, for them, as small regional parties, 鈥渉igher education reforms at the national level are not a policy priority鈥, Mathews says. Hence, 鈥渢o聽avoid controversies in its relationship with the partners, the BJP will not try to advance its political agenda through the higher education sector鈥, he predicts. 鈥淭he interference of governors in state universities may not continue as the BJP will be cautious.鈥
India鈥檚 minor political earthquake may also have implications for the NEP, which is not without its Hindutva elements. Initially, says Saikat Majumdar, professor of English and creative writing at Ashoka (speaking in a personal capacity), 鈥渋t was heartening to see the [NEP] committee鈥檚 commitment to [liberal arts] education, which felt like a welcome turn away from the traditional colonial-bureaucratic focus on the single-subject, examination-driven system. But other worrying factors soon made their appearance 鈥 among them, the presentation of the country鈥檚 culture and past in solely Hindu-Brahminical terms, to the exclusion of all other traditions that make this rich and diverse nation, and the strategic shaping of educational curricula according to this need.鈥
Justifying the proposed shift to multidisciplinary education at universities, the NEP references traditional teaching styles at 鈥渁ncient鈥 Indian universities. It declares: 鈥淚ndia urgently needs to bring back this great Indian tradition to create well-rounded and innovative individuals, and which is already transforming other countries educationally and economically.鈥
That passage illustrates the tensions inherent in the BJP鈥檚 aspiration to push for a renewed focus on Hindu-based knowledge (which critics describe as the 鈥渟affronisation鈥 of education) while simultaneously striving for greater international status by introducing policies that mirror Western education systems, including increased privatisation and internationalisation.
鈥淪ociety is highly confused about this system. [The West] is also confused about this system,鈥 says Acharya. 鈥淲hat is happening, nobody knows. On聽one [hand], you are talking about Hindu philosophy; on another, you are adopting approaches which are completely westernised.鈥
Accordingly, the NEP鈥檚 ambitions to attract more international students to India, to encourage partnerships with 鈥渉igh-quality鈥 foreign institutions, and to allow top-ranked foreign universities to operate in India have so far had mixed success. For instance, while many partnerships have been established 鈥 one example being the joint master鈥檚 in data science and AI offered by the University of Birmingham and the Indian Institute of Technology Madras 鈥 Western partners often report a lack of follow-through from the Indian side. This stems in part from Indian inexperience in international partnerships, but it鈥檚 also down to funding, explains Chattopadhyay. 鈥淭he challenge is that we don鈥檛 have funds to send our faculty and students to study and do research [abroad],鈥 he says. 鈥淭herefore, there are many agreements which have [been] reached but they do not materialise meaningfully.鈥
And while some Western universities initially expressed an interest in establishing branch campuses in India, the response has been muted since the associated regulations were published late last year. Those regulations offer two options. Overseas universities can set up a campus anywhere in India, but that requires them to negotiate a complex regulatory environment and, potentially, submit to a high tax burden. Alternatively, they can set up in GIFT City, a regulation-light zone under construction in Gujarat, Modi鈥檚 home state. However, that is relatively far from key hubs and student bases.
Two Australian universities 鈥 Deakin and Wollongong 鈥 have established teaching spaces in GIFT City, and it has been hinted that more may be coming. Beyond this, however, 鈥渢he best [universities] have not shown any keenness to come to India despite the regulatory framework鈥, says Jamia Millia Islamia鈥檚 Qamar.
Analysts believe Modi needs to do more if he truly wants to transform India into a hub for international universities. Qamar argues that, in general, top institutions have been enticed to set up branches abroad only if they are offered help to obtain land for a campus and significant subsidies; Qatar, for instance, spends more than 拢280聽million each year hosting branch campuses of six US universities at its 20-year-old Education City campus 鈥 one of which, Texas A&M University, announced earlier this year that it聽would nevertheless be closing because of 鈥渋nstability鈥 in the region.
There is 鈥渁 big question mark鈥 about whether Modi would offer such inducements when domestic institutions are so underfunded, Qamar says. 鈥淭here would be some kind of resentment that you are not funding your own institution, and [Indian universities] would see it as a conspiracy to undermine [them].鈥
If branch campuses are not established in significant numbers, vast numbers of Indians will continue to pursue their higher education abroad. Currently, more than 1聽million are estimated to do so, amounting to a huge economic drain for their home nation.
鈥淚ndia is a net importer of higher education,鈥 says Qamar. 鈥淭hat is a situation that any government would want to correct.鈥 But while India is trying to attract foreign students to its own institutions, the number entering does not come close to balancing the outbound figures.
鈥淭he only way to actually address that is to create your own strength,鈥 says NIEPA鈥檚 Srivastava. 鈥淲e should build an institution which can be on par with Oxford, so quality will be the magnet to attract people.鈥 Although the Indian government has established an excellence initiative, known as 鈥渋nstitutes of eminence鈥, the funding 鈥渋s聽not sufficient鈥 to elevate selected institutions to the status of world-class universities, she argues. Indeed, the programme has struggled even to recruit enough suitable institutions, with only 12 out of a targeted 20 (10 each from the public and private sectors) so far enrolled.
Modi 鈥渘eeds to spend heavily on the university system and on research鈥, says Srivastava. 鈥淗e needs to understand that the road to development is through higher education.鈥 So far during the Modi era, she says, funding has failed to keep pace with expanding university populations, and there have been cuts to the (UGC), which distributes funds to central and state universities, and the elite Indian Institutes of Technology and Indian Institutes of Management networks.
鈥淢any labs are running dry and many programmes cannot do much because the funding has been over a period of time receding,鈥 Srivastava says.
Total education spending in 2022 amounted to just 2聽per cent of India鈥檚 gross domestic product 鈥 significantly lower than the 6聽per cent target set out in the NEP. That elusive figure has been repeatedly floated by policymakers since the 1960s, says Qamar, 鈥渟o it was not a surprise that it was repeated in the National Education Policy鈥. However, 鈥渢hree budgets down the line [since the NEP was published], we don鈥檛 see any movement in enhancing allocations for education鈥.
Nor is the funding situation expected to change during Modi鈥檚 third term. The BJP鈥檚 manifesto was vague about higher education, promising merely to 鈥渦pgrade鈥 institutions through 鈥渇ocused鈥 funding, as opposed to offering an increase. Most academics expected Modi to largely maintain the status quo, keeping funding stable (albeit at a lower level than universities would like) while pressing on with implementing the NEP.
But that was far from plain sailing even before Modi was revealed to be politically mortal after all, with several opposition-controlled states pushing back against NEP implementation. For instance, Congress-governed Karnataka announced last year that it was and implementing instead a Karnataka Education Policy from the coming academic year. , too, has rejected the NEP outright, seeing the schools part of it as a ploy to impose the Hindi language on the region 鈥 although the region鈥檚 announcement of a common curriculum for higher education institutions last year caused before the ministry backed down.
Other opposition-led governments, such as those in and , also oppose the NEP but have adopted its requirement for all undergraduate degrees to be four years in duration.
鈥淲hy they are doing it?鈥 asks the JNU鈥檚 Chattopadhyay. 鈥淏ecause the students have been given this Academic Bank of Credits enrolment number. If聽I聽do聽not implement the Academic Bank of Credits in my university, in my state, hypothetically speaking, my students, will suffer. If their degrees are declared to be invalid or [students] can鈥檛 exercise mobility, who suffers? Students suffer,鈥 he says, referring to fears that students whose degrees are聽not nationally recognised might be unable to pursue postgraduate study elsewhere in India, for instance.
鈥淵ou can鈥檛 argue, 鈥楲et the students suffer: my politics comes first,鈥欌 Chattopadhyay says. 鈥淪tudents have to be given the top [priority], no matter what.鈥 So sooner or later, all states will 鈥渉ave to fall into line鈥.
Prior to the election, observers wondered whether a re-empowered Modi might seek to amend India鈥檚 constitution to bring education under full central control, limiting the power of state governments to push back. However, with the BJP now hemmed in by the unaccustomed compromises of coalition government, some predict that NEP implementation might recede as a priority given the coalition partners鈥 relative lack of interest in it. Indeed, according to NIEPA鈥檚 Srivastava, 鈥渆ducation was not really very central鈥 even to Modi鈥檚 agenda, although her speculation that Modi might even cede control of the Ministry of Education did not come to pass: while the two main coalition partners took over , the BJP鈥檚 Dharmendra Pradhan .
She still hopes that the coalition government might increase funding for universities. 鈥淭here are certain themes that are forced upon Indian academia which might be curtailed, with a good rationale of putting the same money to a better use,鈥 she suggests.
But for many Indian academics, such as Jamia Millia Islamia鈥檚 Qamar, a diminution of political interference in universities remains the limit of their ambition for a third Modi term.
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鈥淢y hope would be that the government speaks less about universities,鈥 he says. 鈥淛ust leave them alone.鈥
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