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Gurcharan Das
TEACHING WITH A BROKEN HEART
Aug 22, 2004, Times of India
I met a dear old friend last week.
She had gone abroad as a young girl, and there made a big
success as an educator. Twenty years later she returned, full
of idealism, and invested her life's savings to start a
school.
I later heard that her school had become truly outstanding.
So, when we met I had expected the scent of success; instead,
I saw a woman with a broken heart.
She confessed she had needed 11 permissions to start her
school, and each one required a bribe. Almost 10 per cent of
her savings went to pay bribes when she began, and 5 per cent
of her running budget goes into graft each year.
She shivers each time she faces an official, and something
dies inside her when she has to pay off.
This is why I was saddened by the Supreme Court's decision
requiring Delhi's government to regulate private school fees,
further increasing the bureaucrats' hold over schools.
I am an unabashed admirer of our highest Court, which has
courageously upheld our wonderful Constitution even in our
darkest days.
But honourable justices are also fallible and in this case
they have made a terrible mistake in compromising the autonomy
of schools by reversing the TMA Pai judgement.
Ironically, industry won freedom from Licence Raj in 1991, but
it flourishes in education. The Court is right, however, in
pronouncing that schools that were given cheap land and had
agreed to provide free seats to the poor must live up to that
contract.
There are sharks in education as well, and we need sensible
governance to catch the guilty without harassing the innocent.
But price controls do not work - every country has learned the
lesson the hard way.
It is one of the reasons why socialism failed and communism
collapsed. Only in the case of natural monopolies are price
controls needed. For the rest, competition is the best price
control.
Private schools are not natural monopolies and parents do have
a choice. Our objective should be to increase that choice.
Since demand for good schools greatly exceeds their supply,
fees will rise naturally.
If 100 children want to study and there are only 80 seats in a
school, lowering school fees will not achieve justice. You
will always disappoint 20 students.
But if another good school comes up, everyone will find a
place and fees will not rise. The answer then is to increase
the supply of good schools.
Why don't more good schools come up? It's not easy to start a
school. The bureaucracy puts huge obstacles in the way.
According to the Centre for Civil Society, it takes 14
licenses and permits to open a school in Delhi, and each
approval comes with a price.
This naturally discourages honest, idealistic, and
philanthropic persons, who are often the ones who start
schools. Although my friend did not give up, many do. And this
is a great tragedy, for it is products of these very schools
that have succeeded on the world stage and made us proud.
The quickest way to increase the supply of good schools is to
reform our government schools. They are so rotten that even
the poor are abandoning them. Some think that it is impossible
to reform state schools.
They should look at our excellent Central and Navodaya
schools. So, instead of ruining private schools, our babus
should do their own job and fix their own schools.
Meanwhile, who will wipe away the tears of my dear friend and
of the million Indians that daily fall victim to our callous
and arrogant bureaucracy?
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