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Naxalism-education linkage

EducationWorld May 07 | EducationWorld

Thank you for your insightful cover story ‘Budget 2007-08: Illusory bonanza for Indian education’ (EW April). You have done a signal public service by exposing the hollow claim of finance minister P.C. Chidambaram that he has made huge outlays for agriculture and education in the Central budget presented recently to Parliament. After reading your cover story it is quite evident that the claim of the minister that he has raised the Centre’s education budget by 34.2 percent is mere rhetoric. As you rightly point out, this 34.2 percent higher outlay doesn’t equal even 1 percent of GDP. Just as any head of household would allocate more than 1 percent of total income to the education of children, it was incumbent upon the finance minister to make a substantially larger provision for education. I quite agree that by cutting unmerited middle class subsidies and selling off loss-making public sector enterprises, large capital sums can be released for investment in education infrastructure. But quite obviously the will to educate the poor — as opposed to the middle classes who get highly subsidised education in the IITs, IIMs and universities — is completely lacking in the political class as a whole. The middle classes seem to be unaware that the neglected poor are demanding, and are equally entitled to a fair share of the rising GDP and buoyant tax revenues of the Central government. The growing popularity of the Naxalite movement across India is an indication of the resentment of the poor for being denied meaningful education. Abhay Kumar Ranchi More than money Reading the cover story ‘Illusory bonanza for Indian education’ (EW April) by Dilip Thakore gives the impression that the only problem ailing India’s school and higher education systems is lack of money. The story argues that doubling, and in some cases quadrupling allocations for education schemes will redeem the country’s pathetic public school education system. However more money doesn’t necessarily mean improvement in education infrastructure and quality. Particularly in India, where corruption is a way of life and education schemes remain on paper. India’s abysmal gover- nment school education system requires more than money. It requires a mindset change, tighter control on implemen-tation of schemes, and participation by local communities to ensure the money allocated is actually used for improving the quality of education. Santosh Sinha Delhi Wrong priorities The special report â€˜Wasted potential of India’s gifted children’ (EW April) by Summiya Yasmeen was informative and well analysed. Nurturing the extraordinary talents of our 13 million gifted children could play a major role in determining India’s place in the global order of the 21st century. But the country’s obsolete education system isn’t remotely aware of ways and means to transform gifted children into innovators and leaders. The initiatives taken by a handful of pioneer private schools are too little, too late. We fancifully compare ourselves with developed western countries in terms of nuclear capability and number of millionaires (61,000). But we trail way behind in the race to develop our most precious asset — our 450 million

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