Kunal Chattopadhyay, professor of Comparative Literature at Jadavpur University, also expressed how the the government's concerns in education have primarily dealt with policing more than funding. “Since China is a neighbour that has improved its global economic and educational standing, a comparison with China is worthwhile. UNESCO Institute for Statistics puts the gross Gross Tertiary Enrolment Rate (GTER) of China at 48.44 % to India’s 26.93% for the year 2016, while China’s tally in the world’s top-500 universities has gone up from 16 in 2012 to 26 in 2022. In the case of India it was seven in 2012 and eight in 2022." He also goes on to establish how defunding plays a major role here. “An end of the plan period based UGC funding for colleges and universities, the Special Assistance Programmes (DRS, DSA, CAS) at the department level, discontinuation of the Maulana Azad National Fellowships, thereby specifically targeting minority students, as well as a general whittling down of JRFs and turning the NET into an absurdity, the simultaneous ending of pre-matric scholarship for the minority students up to class 8 and the general assault on humanities education and research as well as much serious science teaching and research are just a few instances. A particular mention should be made about the assault on History, with ICHR money going to bolster fake and obscurantist Hindutva myths.”
In a country, where numerous headlines keep popping up on how PhD and M.Tech students have had to take up jobs that are objectively distanced from their mettle, the rising number of suicides owing to lack of employment opportunities in the educational sector, and surging drop-out rates owing to factors like increasing costs and a widening digital gap, the numbers on paper and promised schemes hold no relevance unless the government ensures ground implementation across institutions with properly channelled funds.