Indian financial consultant Waqar Khan has seen his income drop by about one-fifth since the COVID-19 pandemic began. When his younger son’s private school raised fees by 10 percent this year, he had no choice but to move him to the state system.
With three children and living in a small house in the capital, New Delhi, the 45-year-old can no longer afford private school fees for his boy of 10. He moved his older boy into a state school early last year.
“I had no option,” Khan told Reuters, adding that rising education costs had come on top of a nearly 25 percent increase in household expenses in the past two years.
Illustration: Mountain People
While inflation is putting the heaviest burden on the poorest, the relatively well-off are coming under the sort of pressure to make cuts in household budgets not seen in years.
Khan is among millions of parents who have moved children from private to state education since 2020, or from elite schools to cheaper ones. Last year, 4 million children switched from private to state, more than 4 percent of all children in school.
That is a reversal of a trend that has swept India over the past two decades, as more families in an increasingly prosperous society opted for private education to give their children an advantage in the job market.
However, now inflation means that such aspirations are becoming unaffordable for some.
“My family life is shattered. I often feel distressed and helpless at being unable to provide good education for my children despite all the hard work,” Khan said.
His daughter, a 12th-grade student, is still at the school where his 10-year-old had been, as he has not been able to find a place in the state system for her.
For the fast-growing middle class, the appeal of lessons in English and better teaching is huge.
The private sector covers a range of schools and fees, from a few dollars a month to hundreds, and so serves lower and middle-income families as well as the wealthy.
On top of fees, transport companies that take children to school have raised prices by more than 15 percent this month in Delhi and some other places to cover higher wages and fuel, parents’ associations said.
Arjun Singh, 47, who drives a school van and owns three school cabs, said he increased his charges by up to 35 percent last month because of higher costs.
Prices for compressed natural gas for his vehicles had almost doubled, he said.
Broader inflation is biting hard, touching 6.95 percent in March — a 17-month high and above the central bank’s target, and economists say that households are bracing for worse as companies pass on the costs.
Many private schools have raised fees and other charges by more than 15 percent this year, said Aparajita Gautam, president of the Delhi Parents Association, although some had delayed doing so during the worst of the pandemic.
Her association has protested at a number of private schools in the capital, drawing the attention of the media and authorities.
In response, Delhi’s government has simplified the procedure for enrolling in state education and promised to audit school accounts, while trying to encourage schools to cap fee increases at 10 percent, with little success.
“Most private schools are forcing parents to accept steep hikes or face adverse consequences,” Gautam said.
In the city of Kolkata, nearly 70 percent of private schools raised fees by up to 20 percent last month, and some parents have asked authorities to press schools to soften the blow.
Schools defend the higher fees.
Sudha Acharya, head of the National Progressive Schools’ Conference and principal at ITL Public School, understood that many parents were going through tough times, but schools faced rising costs.
“Without increasing school fees again, maintaining quality is a little difficult,” she said.
The Delhi-based Centre Square Foundation, a consultancy, found in a study last year that a majority of 450,000 private schools in India, 70 percent of which charged up to 1,000 rupees (US$13) a month per student, faced financial losses of 20 to 50 percent during the pandemic.
As parents defaulted, some schools cut teachers’ pay and thousands of schools, particularly those catering to lower-income families, closed, school associations and state authorities said.
Enrollment in private schools has skyrocketed to more than 35 percent of students from about 9 percent in 1993, and nearly 50 percent of households spend nearly 20 percent of their earnings on children’s education, government and industry estimates show.
A family with monthly income of 20,000 to 50,000 rupees might pay 2,000 to 10,000 rupees a month on tuition and another 1,500 to 5,000 rupees on transport.
There are about 90 million Indian children in private schools in total.
Federal and state governments spent 6.43 trillion rupees to fund about 1.1 million schools in 2019-2020, or about 3.1 percent of GDP against 6 percent recommended by various government panels.
Economists said rising private education costs were not fully captured in inflation data, as it is weighted at just 4.5 percent in the consumer prices index based on a decade-old model.
Devendra Pant, chief economist at India Ratings, the Indian arm of the Fitch rating agency, said rising education costs were part of a second wave of inflation households were facing after a rise in global crude oil and other commodity prices.
“It would significantly impact households’ monthly budget and could force many to cut spending on other products and services,” Pant said.
Some parents have been caught in a nightmare debt trap that could rob their children of education altogether.
Sanjay Kumar Vaghela, a driver in Ahmedabad who had to borrow money after losing work, said he could not afford to pay the higher fees for his daughter nor clear the 18,000 rupees he still owed her school.
The school asked him to pay the outstanding fees before it issued a transfer certificate, without which no state school was prepared to admit his daughter, he said.
“My daughter may remain without education forever as I have no funds to pay,” he said.
Additional reporting by Sumit Khanna,
Rupak De Chowdhuri and Swati Bhat
President William Lai (賴清德) attended a dinner held by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) when representatives from the group visited Taiwan in October. In a speech at the event, Lai highlighted similarities in the geopolitical challenges faced by Israel and Taiwan, saying that the two countries “stand on the front line against authoritarianism.” Lai noted how Taiwan had “immediately condemned” the Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel by Hamas and had provided humanitarian aid. Lai was heavily criticized from some quarters for standing with AIPAC and Israel. On Nov. 4, the Taipei Times published an opinion article (“Speak out on the
More than a week after Hondurans voted, the country still does not know who will be its next president. The Honduran National Electoral Council has not declared a winner, and the transmission of results has experienced repeated malfunctions that interrupted updates for almost 24 hours at times. The delay has become the second-longest post-electoral silence since the election of former Honduran president Juan Orlando Hernandez of the National Party in 2017, which was tainted by accusations of fraud. Once again, this has raised concerns among observers, civil society groups and the international community. The preliminary results remain close, but both
News about expanding security cooperation between Israel and Taiwan, including the visits of Deputy Minister of National Defense Po Horng-huei (柏鴻輝) in September and Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Francois Wu (吳志中) this month, as well as growing ties in areas such as missile defense and cybersecurity, should not be viewed as isolated events. The emphasis on missile defense, including Taiwan’s newly introduced T-Dome project, is simply the most visible sign of a deeper trend that has been taking shape quietly over the past two to three years. Taipei is seeking to expand security and defense cooperation with Israel, something officials
The Taipei Women’s Rescue Foundation has demanded an apology from China Central Television (CCTV), accusing the Chinese state broadcaster of using “deceptive editing” and distorting the intent of a recent documentary on “comfort women.” According to the foundation, the Ama Museum in Taipei granted CCTV limited permission to film on the condition that the footage be used solely for public education. Yet when the documentary aired, the museum was reportedly presented alongside commentary condemning Taiwan’s alleged “warmongering” and criticizing the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) government’s stance toward Japan. Instead of focusing on women’s rights or historical memory, the program appeared crafted