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The Real War With India

If we want to compete, we need to invest more in higher education.

By Javaid R. Laghari

It’s hit an all-time low. Pakistan’s commitment to the higher education sector has been scaled back by 10 percent at the same time that India has raised its higher-education budget by 25 percent. This reduction is in addition to the 40 percent cut imposed last year. This shortsightedness imperils economic growth by stunting prospects of a viable middle class.

India has a population six times the size of Pakistan’s. Its GDP, at $1.8 trillion, is 10 times larger than ours. Its growth rate is 8.5 percent, ours is 2.4 percent. Its value-added exports, at $250 billion, are more than ours by a factor of 15; and its FDI, at $26 billion per year, dwarfs ours by a factor of 22. India is set to surpass Japan to become the world’s third largest economy by 2014. This has all been made possible, in no small measure, because of India’s human capital. Pakistan needs to take a leaf out of their book to realize the possible.

The World Bank identifies several key factors to achieve and sustain economic growth: education, a skilled workforce, information and communication technologies, and innovation. These are the veritable pillars of a knowledge economy. Likewise, the World Economic Forum’s Global Competitiveness Report 2010-2011 lists higher education and training, technology readiness, and innovation as essential for competitiveness.

Catching up to the rest of the world must start now. And there is much ground to cover. For Pakistanis between the ages of 17 and 23, access to higher education is at 5.1 percent—one of the lowest in the world. (India is at 12.2 percent and aiming for 30 percent by 2020.) Pakistan has 132 universities for a population of 180 million and a student population of about 1.1 million. India has 504 universities with an enrollment of over 15 million (its enrolment target is 40 million by 2020). Pakistan has approved funding for two new universities. Over the next five years, India will have established 29 universities and 40 other institutes. Pakistan can today produce about 700 Ph.D.s every year (up from a dismal 200 in 2002) while India can produce 8,900 and China some 50,000.

It’s the middle class that makes the difference. India’s represents 32 percent of the total population and is growing at 1 percent annually. By investing heavily in education and entrepreneurship, they hope half the population will qualify as middle class by 2040. Pakistan’s middle class is about 12 percent of the population, and struggling as more and more people slip below the poverty line each year.

India’s political leadership is putting out all the right signals. India has a Knowledge Commission headed by a world-renowned expert serving as an adviser to the prime minister; a Ministry of Human Resource Development, and a strong and centralized University Grants Commission. New Delhi alone is spending 3.5 percent of GDP on education, with 1.03 percent, or $11.5 billion, on higher education alone. This federal allocation is in addition to the states financially supporting university budgets, in some cases covering up to 80 percent of their costs. Pakistan is spending only about 1.3 percent on education and 0.22 percent on higher education.

Sixty-four years ago, Pakistan and India started out evenly enough in terms of education and skilled-workforce levels. India has overshot us and is now competing with the big boys, swiftly and dedicatedly catching up with the developed world in higher education, science, technology, innovation, and research. Pakistan cannot afford to be left behind. We cannot allow security threats, the financial and ideological allure of Islamist radicalism, and bad governance to defeat us. Shoring up higher education and innovation are the solutions that will yield tangible, long-lasting benefits. Yet we are only capable it seems of dialing down attention to areas that can guarantee our success. Pakistan must push to improve and expand higher education. With so much at stake and so much we can do, this is the wise way forward.

Laghari is chairman of Pakistan’s Higher Education Commission

The Real War With India
 
The important point is that Pakistan is behind in this education sector and should improve upon definitely.
 
I would not like to talk about others , but would really like to say that we are still far behind from many other nations....

we should not talk Big until we achieve a great deal in securing the future of millions of children who thrive to get something from life.

we should increase more in education in coming years... at least we are on good track.. just need to be better and better.
 
Why does this have to be about war? Why does it have to be compared to India's education sector? A country needs to have a strong education sector if it has to develop. Period.
 
I would say India is going the rigth way. The only way to sustained growth is through education, especially higher education. Innovation should take the center stage

Not really. Big difference between getting a degree and actually contributing in that field. There are universities churning out graduates, yet research and innovation levels are abnormally low in ratio.
 
India can produce 8,900 PhDs and China some 50,000

worrying
Not really ..Instead of focusing on more PhD we need to focus on more funding for R&d by these Phd...
The problem isent education but the lack of opportunities inside India that causes people give up there pursuit for Phds..

This is one of the easier problems tht should have been tackled before .
 
Not really. Big difference between getting a degree and actually contributing in that field. There are universities churning out graduates, yet research and innovation levels are abnormally low in ratio.

Yes, but we have made a start. We are investing in higher education. We sure have recogonized the importance of education. That is why our higher education budget has increase by 25%. I am sure as the competition grows, like any industry, there will be shift in the industry towards quality and innovation.

We have to start somewhere and I am glad we made that
 
India can produce 8,900 PhDs and China some 50,000 :eek:

worrying

Especially at PhD level, quality matters than quantity. India churn out some of the best researchers. The worrying part is that India should make sure that these PhD's don't migrate to western countries, and again India should try to increase the number of PhD's
 
percentages will be more nice here considering the hyge population difference, but this is a thing that really needs to be stressed upon, and if somebody fails in matriculation, then he or she should be put in a suitable job opportunity like sewing, knitting centers, welding, shipbreaking, farming and all that. But alas, you cannot expect anything under the stooges currently at the head of the country!
 
in india,the greatest progress is in giving basic education and computer literacy.
 
in india,the greatest progress is in giving basic education and computer literacy.

correct. when i was in 5th standard we ( my class ) started learning computer. computer was one of the subjects which formed syllabus.

after few years children started learning computer from 1st standard.
 
correct. when i was in 5th standard we ( my class ) started learning computer. computer was one of the subjects which formed syllabus.

after few years children started learning computer from 1st standard.

now a days,almost everyone knows to use basic functions of a computer.
gone where the days,we used stand wondering about a black & white computer seen in some jewellery shop.
the kid who has floppy disk will be class' celebrity.
 
Yes, but we have made a start. We are investing in higher education. We sure have recogonized the importance of education. That is why our higher education budget has increase by 25%. I am sure as the competition grows, like any industry, there will be shift in the industry towards quality and innovation.

We have to start somewhere and I am glad we made that

I'm not sure buddy. The trend is if you do IT, civil, electrical etc etc engineering you join an IT company as a engineer or lower level analyst. If you do an MBA or an M.Tech in India you go to an IT company as a senior analyst or a associate/functional consultant. If you do your bachelors in science you go to IT companies to be rejected during interviews and go work in banks or study MBA to join an IT company as a associate/functional consultant.
If you study commerce, you join one of the consulting firms or banks as a consultant or an analyst. If you do arts, you are screwed by everyone :D.
 
We put out several threads that are really about the inability of the economy to create Hope in society -- it would be beating a dead horse, but you can decide for yourself what kind vision of society would see society deprived of higher education (though not necessarily Obscuritanist education)
 

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