糖心Vlog

IITs and expanding medical training prioritised in Indian budget

Tax-cutting budget sees modest increases for higher education as India鈥檚 growth expected to slow

Published on
February 3, 2025
Last updated
February 3, 2025
A Pick up Truck converted into a Political campaign Vehicle for Indian elections 2024 under BJP Prime minister Narendra Modi in Mysuru, India.
Source: iStock/Priya darshan

The Indian government plans to increase higher education spending by 5 per cent in the upcoming financial year, with more money granted to the country鈥檚 prestigious Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs).听

About 500 billion rupees (拢4.67 billion) has been allocated to the Department of 糖心Vlog for the upcoming financial year, up from 476 billion rupees in 2024-25. The department鈥檚 budget was聽later revised down last year聽to 465 billion rupees.听

Within this, initiatives that will receive increased funding include financial aid, e-learning and support for central universities.听

In a budget announced on 1 February, India鈥檚 finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman also announced that a new Centre of Artificial Intelligence for Education will be established, with 5 billion rupees allocated to the project. While few further details of the initiative have been shared, the new centre will join the three already announced in 2023, which focus on agriculture, health and sustainable cities.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

Funding for IITs increased almost 10 per cent compared with last year鈥檚 budget, rising to 113 billion rupees from 103 billion rupees.

According to Sitharaman, the number of students educated at IITs has doubled over the past 10 years to 135,000. The minister said additional infrastructure would be created at the five IITs that opened after 2014 to educate an additional 6,500 students.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

In contrast, the money spent on the country鈥檚 World Class Universities programme 鈥 also known as Institutions of Eminence 鈥 has fallen by 74 per cent from 18 billion rupees to 4.75 billion rupees in 2025-26.听

The programme was聽first introduced in 2016聽and aimed to support 20 institutions to become 鈥渨orld-class鈥, in an initiative akin to China鈥檚 Double First Class programme. Although it was set out that 20 universities would be granted the status of Institutions of Eminence,聽only 12 have been so far.听

The government also committed to increasing medical聽places by 10,000 over the next year, with a goal of adding 75,000 over the next five years.听

Medical education in India is notoriously oversubscribed, with many students forced to go abroad for their degrees 鈥 a trend聽prime minister Narendra Modi has previously聽pledged to reverse.听

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

This is the first full-year budget since Modi鈥檚 BJP party lost its parliamentary majority in last year鈥檚 election. In general, it focused on tackling slowing growth and tax breaks for the middle class.听

In a statement, Shri Dharmendra Pradhan, India鈥檚 education minister welcomed the new budget, saying it represents 鈥渁nother big leap towards empowering India's population with more opportunities for world-class education and building capacities of human capital鈥.

helen.packer@timeshighereducation.com

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Please
or
to read this article.

Related articles

Sponsored

Featured jobs

See all jobs
ADVERTISEMENT