| PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2020] National Education Policy 2020 is in conformity with the Sustainable Development Goal-4 (2030). It intends to restructure and reorient the education system in India. Critically examine.Linkage: This PYQ is directly relevant as VBSA operationalises the regulatory vision of NEP 2020, especially restructuring governance and institutional architecture. It helps analyse whether such reforms balance quality enhancement with autonomy, equity, and federal principles, as demanded in the PYQ. |
Mentor’s Comment
The Viksit Bharat Shiksha Adhisthan (VBSA) Bill aims to streamline higher education through a standardised regulatory framework aligned with National Education Policy (NEP) 2020, improving quality and accountability. However, concerns remain about centralisation, institutional autonomy, and federal balance, requiring a calibrated approach that combines uniform standards with flexibility and stakeholder participation.
What is the aim of the VBSA Bill?
- The Viksit Bharat Shiksha Adhishthan Bill, 2025 was introduced in Lok Sabha on December 15, 2025.
- The Bill seeks to establish a regulatory body for higher education. It will replace UGC, AICTE and NCTE with a single ‘Vikas Bharat Shiksha Pratishthan’ (VBSA) for higher education.
- This body will replace the following existing bodies:
- University Grants Commission (UGC)
- All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE)
- National Council for Teacher Education (NCTE).
- The Bill repeals the three Acts providing for constituting these bodies.
- The Bill exempts legal and medical education from its purview. These will continue to be regulated under separate Acts.
What are the key features of the VBSA Bill?
- Apex Regulatory Body: Establishes Viksit Bharat Shiksha Adhishthan (VBSA) as the central authority for higher education governance, replacing fragmented regulatory structures and ensuring system-wide coordination.
- Three-Tier Council Structure: Creates
- Regulatory Council: The common regulator for higher education
- Accreditation Council: Oversees quality assurance and accreditation processes
- Standards Council: Determines academic benchmarks and learning outcomes
- Strategic Policy Role: Assigns Viksit Bharat Shiksha Adhishthan functions such as
- Strategic Direction: Providing strategic direction for higher education and research
- Institutional Transformation: Developing a roadmap for transforming higher educational institutions (HEIs) into large multi-disciplinary education and research institutions
- Quality Enhancement: Suggesting schemes for improving quality of education.
- Separation from Funding Role: Removes grant allocation powers (earlier with UGC), ensuring no direct financial authority over HEIs.
- Composition of Councils: Each Council headed by a President with up to 14 members, including experts, Union nominee, inter-council nominees, and limited State representation on rotation.
- Appointment Mechanism (Councils): President and full-time members appointed by the President of India based on recommendations of a search committee comprising experts and Higher Education Secretary.
- Composition of the Commission: Includes Chairperson (honorary), Presidents of Councils, Higher Education Secretary, five experts, and two academicians from State HEIs.
- Appointment Mechanism (Commission): Chairperson and members appointed by the President of India on recommendations of the central government.
- Tenure and Service Conditions: Fixed tenure of 3 years (extendable), reappointment allowed; age limit of 70 years (except Chairperson); service conditions prescribed by central government.
- Penalties on HEIs: Enables monetary penalties (₹10-70 lakh), along with actions like autonomy revision, grant withholding, degree restrictions, and closure; ₹2 crore penalty for illegal establishment; provides adjudicatory mechanism.
- Appeals Framework: Provides for appeals against decisions of Commission and Councils before the central government.
Does the VBSA Bill undermine federal principles in higher education governance?
- Centralisation of Powers: Transfers authority over standards, accreditation, and regulation to Union-controlled bodies, exceeding coordination role under Entry 66 of the Union List under the Seventh Schedule of the Indian Constitution.
- Entry 66, Union List (Seventh Schedule): Coordination and determination of standards in institutions for higher education or research.
- Erosion of State Role: Limits State governments’ role in decision-making despite education being in the Concurrent List.
- Top-down Governance: Imposes uniform standards without accounting for regional diversity and institutional contexts.
- Absence of Consultation: Bypasses State governments in NEP implementation during COVID period.
How does the Bill affect institutional autonomy and academic governance?
- Reduced Autonomy: Curtails decision-making powers of universities, IITs, IIMs, and Inter-University Centres.
- Bureaucratic Overreach: Assigns excessive control to administrative bodies over academic processes.
- Dilution of UGC Role: Weakens consultative and inspection-based functions mandated under UGC Act.
- Functional Replacement: Transfers core functions like regulation, accreditation, and standard-setting from UGC to separate Councils, reducing UGC’s relevance.
- Loss of Inspection Powers: Replaces UGC’s direct inspection-based oversight with third-party accreditation mechanisms, limiting its ability to assess institutions firsthand.
- Erosion of Advisory Role: Reduces consultative processes traditionally undertaken by UGC with universities, shifting to a more top-down regulatory approach.
- Removal of Funding Leverage: Eliminates grant-giving powers (a key UGC tool for enforcing compliance), weakening its influence over institutional behaviour.
- Fragmentation of Authority: Splits responsibilities across multiple bodies, undermining UGC’s role as a unified regulator and coordinator of higher education.
- Exclusion of Stakeholders: Omits participation of faculty, students, and academic councils in governance processes.
What are the limitations of the proposed regulatory architecture?
- Prescriptive Regulation: Promotes rigid, output-based frameworks (patents, rankings) over academic depth.
- Fragmented Councils: Creates multiple councils (regulation, accreditation, standards) without coordination clarity.
- Outsourced Accreditation: Delegates accreditation to third-party agencies, risking standard dilution.
- Centralised Standard Setting: Ignores sectoral diversity across disciplines and institutions.
Does the funding and research framework address systemic inequities?
- NRF Limitations: National Research Foundation lacks State representation and integrated research support.
- Funding Centralisation: Shifts allocation authority from institutions to Ministry-controlled bodies.
- Neglect of State Institutions: Risks widening gap between Central and State universities.
- Absence of Equity Focus: No targeted provisions for SC/STs, OBCs, or regional disparities.
How does the Bill impact social justice and inclusivity in education?
- Weak Affirmative Action: Lacks enforceable mechanisms for reservation and inclusion.
- Market-oriented Approach: Promotes privatisation and loan-based access to education.
- Cultural Homogenisation: Undermines multi-cultural character through centralised narratives (e.g., “Bhartiya Knowledge”).
- Inter-regional Inequity: Fails to address disparities across regions and institutions.
What alternative governance framework is suggested?
- Shared Responsibility Model: Advocates Centre-State collaboration in decision-making.
- HEGC Formation: Proposes Higher Education Grants Council for transparent fund disbursal.
- Deliberative Councils: Recommends inclusion of States, academics, and stakeholders in governance.
- Decentralised Funding: Ensures equitable resource allocation to lagging institutions.
- Outcome + Process Balance: Combines qualitative academic evaluation with measurable outputs.
Conclusion
The VBSA Bill represents a structural shift toward a more integrated and standardised higher education framework aligned with national goals. However, its effectiveness will depend on balancing regulatory coherence with institutional autonomy, and central oversight with federal participation. A calibrated approach that incorporates stakeholder consultation, academic freedom, and equity considerations will be essential to ensure sustainable and inclusive higher education reform.
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