The education industry
There is common saying that goes..”The roots of education are bitter but the fruit is sweet.” The
This gave rise to the opening up private educational India.
Private Educational Institutions in India could be classified into the following categories:
(a) Aided Colleges these
(b)Unaided colleges these are colleges that are privately
Professional colleges across India have sprung up in such large numbers making an industry of sorts. We are calling this “Industry” because of the employment and the revenues institutions generate.
Private spending on education in India in $US
Schooling (tuition fee, tutoring, textbooks, preschool etc.)
29413 million
Professional medical, MBA)
7054 million
Test Preparation (engineering, UPSC, medical test prep, GRE/GMAT etc.)
1664 million
Skill development (vocational training, child for mental arithmetic etc. IT training, teacher training etc….)
2436 million
Estimated total market size in private sector
40,565
There are institutions often funded by rich individuals or even by organizations. The market for these private institutions has blooming by the day although new colleges come across high legal barriers to enter.
Many of these degrees on their students unless they meet set guidelines that have been set by the government
Today, of five engineering students attend private colleges, even though those institutions charge five to 10 times tuition than government colleges. The private schools also demand an upfront entry or “capitation” fee in anything between 20 lakhs to 50 lakhs—which is in many cases a small fortune for middle-class has to remember that the returns on these investments are also high.
The Planning Commission reports that
Another measure adopted by the government to able to pay the high fees is by persuading Public Sector banks in providing education loans The student loan disbursement of Public sector banks stood at a whopping Rs. 20,000 crores till
The education market is leaning on the back of the workforce proving their counterparts elsewhere in the world in productivity. The Indian workforce is the much sought after global giants across the world. Hence it is safe to say that the education system and behind this workforce is witnessing a boom time.
India’s youth, often referred to as its demographic dividend, 50 per cent of its total population, with 367 universities and 18,000 colleges with half-a-million teachers
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