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Rediff.com  » Business » Don't play Arjun Singh's game

Don't play Arjun Singh's game

By Ajay Shah
June 07, 2006 12:58 IST
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Many decades ago, wrist watches made by HMT were a prized possession in India. HMT was practically the monopoly watch-maker. HMT watches were fairly good, and they were scarce, so getting an HMT watch was a big deal.

The government wouldn't make top-quality watches, or enough fairly good watches, but it wouldn't let you start a company to make watches. On the one hand, we had people in the government system trying to lay their hands on the scarce HMT watches. On the other hand, the rich exited the system by purchasing top-quality watches when travelling abroad.

There was no SC/ST or OBC quota for HMT watches. Apart from that, it was a lot like higher education today, where the government produces a minuscule quantity of seats at the Indian Institutes of Technology.

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There is considerable media hype about how amazing some IITs are. I studied at IIT Bombay, and I am very happy to bask in the glory of the institute, but unfortunately this image is simply not accurate.

The IITs face a serious crisis on recruitment, given the fact that good researchers now have a global market, and command wages that the public sector won't match.

While the fact remains that the first-year curriculum at the IIT is more challenging than at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, this accrues entirely to the extreme challenge of the entrance exam. If MIT professors faced the kids who get through theJoint Entrance Examination, they would switch to the IIT curriculum.

As with HMT watches, the IIT degree is fairly good and very scarce. It is Indian socialism in action again. The government won't produce top-quality education, or an adequate quantity of fairly good education, but it won't let you start a university.

On the one hand, we have classic rent-seeking behaviour where a Murli Manohar Joshi or an Arjun Singh tries to derive personal benefits from controlling PSU universities.

On the other hand, there is the elite flight. The extent to which the elite have abandoned Indian college education is remarkable. Judges, IAS officers, or CPI (M) ideologues: all espouse socialism when it comes to the man on the street, but when it comes to their own children, only capitalist colleges will do.

With water or electricity, the rich have abandoned public goods in favour of private solutions like bottled water or generators. So they now have no interest in getting involved in solving public policy problems.

In the case of higher education, the elite actually have a direct incentive to support socialist policies, because it increases the scarcity of education, and thus the lifetime income of their own children, who have escaped the Indian education system.

The problem of HMT watches did not get solved by tinkering with how HMT produced watches. It got solved by massive entry into the watch business, through the abolition of industrial licensing.

New producers started making watches - with no connection to the pace at which PSU reforms took place. Today, all of us are able to buy top-quality watches. There is no need for quotas for SC/STs or OBCs, because watches are plentiful. There is no caste system where people who travel abroad have superior watches.

Manmohan Singh needs to do for higher education what he did for industry. What is required is a massive scale of entry into higher education, by removing entry barriers. India cannot hold its breath waiting for reforms at the IITs.

A remarkable feature of universities abroad is their superior management. The University of Stanford and the MIT know how to run campuses, which take in 5,000 undergraduate students per year - a single campus would have more seats than all the IITs put together. Such entry would flood the market with top-quality education, and give us a situation like wrist watches today.

If 100 new universities come up, each taking in 5,000 students, then this means that 500,000 students get in every year - as opposed to the 3,000 who get into the IITs. There will then be no interest in discussing quotas, and there will be no caste system, where kids who can afford foreign education are a class apart.

Conservatives argue that private colleges are of poor quality. This is because today, with the licence-permit raj in education, it is only politicians who run universities. If this were overturned - as China has done - Harvard and Oxford could be in India running campuses.

Conservatives argue that Harvard and Oxford are fine, but ordinary businessmen are not. For example, in China, Microsoft has started a university, which involves conflicts of interest. I believe it is not easy to get a student to sign up for a mediocre degree; that competition without entry barriers will do the trick with education, as has been the case with watches.

A perfectly acceptable compromise is to look at the Science Citation Index for the top 500 universities of the world, based on citations of research in science, engineering and mathematics. Incidentally, only three to four IITs make it to this list.

These 500 universities should get an invitation to set up a university in India, while being promised they would never have to meet the HRD ministry. In order to avoid the Changi Airport problem, where the foreign partner merely supplies a name, the invitation should be conditional on 100 per cent FDI. MIT India is interesting only if it's all MIT.

Conservatives argue that poor people can't afford the fees charged by MIT-India, and that the real purpose of socialist education policy is to get votes from SC/STs and OBC voters.

But nowhere does this proposal suggest that the existing government universities be closed down. The IITs can continue to offer their 3,000 seats at a near-zero cost. Access to education for poor people would not go down owing to MIT-India.

We need to separate public funding and public production. If the State wants a certain group of voters to have watches, it is more efficient for the State to buy watches from a private and competitive industry through an explicit on-budget programme, and gift these to the voters of interest.

This avoids inducing horrible distortions in the watch industry. In a similar fashion, if the State believes that it is important for SC/ST children to go to MIT-India, it should fund their expenditures for attending coaching classes and attending university, while completely staying out of the functioning of MIT-India.
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