Tuesday 13 June 2023

Kahi Pe Nigahen Kahi Pe Nishana

 Opportunity or Crisis?


"In the midst of every crisis lies great opportunity" is a quote often attributed  to Albert Einstein. In the age of social media where  fake news descends on us by the minute like hurricanes, truth is the casualty. Anybody can fearlessly write anything and attribute it to anyone famous or remotely famous. It is immaterial whether Einstein actually said so or not, but I have been given this alluring piece of advice in countless motivational sermons I have listened to. It is only fair that I in turn give this powerful and motivating piece of advice to my children. I have used it in the many training sessions I took up. I have done it without attribution. Well; it's a great piece of advice to receive in a situation of crisis. I am having a rethink.


Recently, I was driving from Kottayam, my home town, to Cochin. At every prominent junction, over the 60 kilometre route, I saw hoardings and advertisements of agencies inviting prospective candidates to go abroad for studies. Each board screamed "opportunity to study abroad". Ironically few boards were even nailed upside down. Was this shower of opportunities an ominous sign of a crisis? 


Figures


Kerala, ‘God’s own Country’, boasts of almost 100% literacy. A survey on the state of higher education in Kerala was conducted in 2020 under the aegis of the Kerala State Higher Education Council. its findings were made public in June 2021. Table No 2 of the survey report reveals that Kerala has 18 Universities and 1504 colleges. It included 701 Arts and Science Colleges, 167 Engineering Colleges, 102 Medical Colleges that include Allopathy, Ayurveda, Dental, Homeo and Allied Health Science colleges, 5 Agricultural colleges, 4 Fine Arts Colleges and 177 Paramedical Colleges, which include Nursing, Paramedical sciences, Pharmacy, Optometry, Medical Laboratory Technology and Pharmaceutical Science institutes. Nearly 13 lakh students were reported to study in these institutions. 

Many who do not take admission to colleges within Kerala go their way to other Indian states to study. A significant number also goes abroad to study. According to people involved in the ‘study abroad’ business, approximately 30,000 children from Kerala have gone abroad to study recently. In the absence of authentic data in the public domain, the numbers might not be ‘the truth, nothing but the truth.’ The cumulative numbers might anyway be much larger. Reports suggest that students from Kerala can be found in 54 countries, their migration facilitated by student recruitment agencies or educational consultants, most of them without any government accreditation or approval. Even Curacao, a small Dutch Caribbean country, that is a landmass of just 444 square kilometers with a population of 1.5 Lakh people, hosts Malayali students.  War in Ukraine and COVID breakout in Wuhan troubled Kerala because there was a sizable Malayalee population studying there. Why is the Malayalee youth running out? Are Malayalees looking for better things to study?


Pursuit


Is the exodus because of inadequate seats for studies? A prominent online news portal reported in Dec 2022 that more than 23,000 seats for B Tech were lying vacant in various engineering colleges under the Kerala Technological University. It also reported large vacancies, unfilled seats, in the arts and science colleges also. It was also reported that many self-financing colleges were willing to reduce the fees just to fill vacant seats. Certainly, the rush out of Kerala is not because of unavailability of avenues for studies.


Is the outbound flight driven by pursuit of knowledge and skills? If Malayalee youth felt that the courses available in Kerala were not good enough they could easily enrol themselves for better courses outside the state, within India, maybe at slightly higher costs but far lesser than what they spend abroad. Many do that. The best colleges under Delhi University are getting more Malayalees every year. The truth is that most of the students going abroad to study are taking up nondescript courses and subjects. Such subjects and courses are available in Kerala at a fraction of the cost incurred by parents of the child going abroad for studies. Then there is something else. 


Erosion


Some people say that students take admission outside Kerala because the examination system is more lenient and offers convenience for those not academically brilliant. The rising number of students from Kerala securing seats in Delhi University undergraduate programs and that too in prestigious colleges that demand very high and stiff cutoffs weaken this argument. Moreover this argument holds water if everyone is rushing to a particular university, considered to have porous systems of examination and evaluation. It is not the case. The rush is mostly to many different self-financing institutions in Tamil nadu and Karnataka, which accept low scorers from Kerala at higher financial contributions. Though some of these colleges are reputed, most are not. Many children taking up technical courses in these colleges never end up completing or passing the course. They at best waste their parents money and get something worthless in the competitive job market.  


Those in power in Kerala certainly are aware of the poor quality of research and institutional inability and hesitation to upgrade  academic infrastructure. To them it doesn't matter that the majority of educational institutions in Kerala are not accredited by the National Assessment and Accreditation Council (NAAC). Militant student unions have played their part in eroding academics and the education system beyond immediate redemption. What happens to the others doesn't seem to bother them  because their future seems assured and taken care of. String of exposes where student union leaders and party members have been caught  manipulating the system to get certificates have come to light. Erosion of the system from within is complete. 


Those championing the local mother tongue and localised syllabus to be mandated in the education system anyway send their children abroad. They do not want their children to be limited by local education. It is practical wisdom and not double speak. Deliberately turning blind eye to systemic flaws, pretending that nothing is wrong and turning against those pointing out deficiencies, letting loose the weight of the government machinery with all its vicious might is an effective and powerful political weapon. It envelops the society with fear and helps cover up. However, Kerala is not the only state suffering in this regard. But why is the youth running away to study abroad?


Is it a case of “Kahi Pe Nigahen Kahi Pe Nishana?*


Nigahen aur Nishane


A close look at where they go to study may reveal something! Canada, The UK, Australia and New zealand are their most favourite destinations. Some are heading for Europe too. This segment is now understood to be growing fast.  According to people in the know of things,  youth is not headed out in pursuit of academic qualifications but in search of ways to migrate. Incidentally, these countries allow Indian students to stay back as full time workers for two to three years once they qualify from institutions there.  Industrious nature of the people involved normally culminates in them obtaining ‘permanent resident’ status in the host country, a migration of sorts, a shortcut. 


In essence everybody going abroad wants to get out of Kerala and India. Hardly anybody comes back to Kerala for a job with a foreign degree. Those who come back are normally only those who had gone to study medicine, because they have to pass an examination in India to be part of the medical system in India. The others coming back to Kerala after studies are the ones who have failed to secure a ‘permanent resident’ permit.


More out of despair and less out of desire, children going to study abroad find ways and means legal or illegal to hang on somehow. It is because there are inadequate jobs and shrinking avenues for job creation within Kerala. Despite all the claims that the government makes, people habituated to fruits of militant trade unionism continue to bleed industrial establishments. Once known for quality, the state’s education system has suffered a serious blow to its credibility, due to  misdeeds of  political cadres. Those who can afford to therefore find escape routes to get out and never come back if they can manage to. The exodus of qualified nurses from Kerala to all over the world and the ease with which they secure permanent resident status there, strengthens this argument. Many nurses working in the gulf are slowly moving out to Europe, America, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.  It is only a matter of time before the entire family of the nurse migrates to the new country. ‘Study abroad’ is just another way to gain a foothold in a distant land.


Costs


Nothing comes free, not even spirituality. There is a financial and social cost to the phenomenon of children going abroad to study.  Parents work abroad or within India to raise the money required.  According to data available Indian students spent over 30 billion dollars in 2019 for education abroad. This is expected to rise to 80 billion by 2024. Many parents feel that the risk and effort is worth it. Such migration commences with heavy financial cost. Students, actually parents, most of them pledging all their immovable assets, end up taking large sums, reportedly starting from Rs 8 lakh to 45 lakhs per person for meeting the expenses. Statistics released by the State Level Bankers Conference (SLBC) reveal that the total outstanding education loans in banks in Kerala  have gone up from Rs 9841 Crores in Mar 20119 to Rs 11,061 in Mar 2022. Interestingly barring a few stray cases everyone repays. Unpayable debt culminates in human tragedy called suicides.


In Kerala the social cost is visible and exasperatingly aggravating. Many houses built with hard earned money are lying locked because the owners have now become permanent residents abroad. Clusters of such houses in some areas, some housing old, ailing and hopelessly lonely  parents hoping to die sooner than later, have started haunting those with conscience. The current rulers in the state have found an opportunity in this crisis, otherwise a situation that is emerging as a human tragedy. They decided to levy additional tax on locked houses. Someone seems to have infused some sense of sanity and they have retracted their steps.


Kerala Story 


This is not just a phenomenon confined to Kerala. Punjab is already  struggling with the social cost of mass scale migration. Andhra and Telangana are also in hot pursuit. Tamil Nadu will catch up very soon. According to data available, US border patrol authorities are said to have intercepted more than 4,297 Indians crossing the Mexican border in two months in 2022.  There are more than 34,230 Asylum cases pending in the American immigration courts in October- November. According to statements made by the Minister concerned to the parliament, a large number of people are giving up Indian citizenship in favour of other countries, the figures clearly showing an increasing trend. Thus, the student exodus may not be a purely a ‘Kerala Story’. Kerala could be a small part of the great Indian story, a story that many who know may not want to tell,  and the masses who should know, remain  ignorant lost happily in the Euphoria of excavation of the past.


Individuals might succeed in their pursuit of their Nishane with Nigahen elsewhere. But, if rulers have their Nigahen elsewhere the society may miss the Nishane.


* ‘Nigahen’ in Hindi  means vision or sight and ‘Nishane’ in Hindi means aim or  target. The reference is to a famous Hindi song by Shamshad Begum for from the movie CID released in 1956



24 comments:

  1. Very correctly articulated
    Human greed and aspirations are the root causes for the migration. We also need to look inwards to arrest it

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Distinction between Greed and Need! That is important

      Delete
    2. Not entirely greed...it is aspirations for better quality of life,i feel.

      Delete
    3. the line between greed and aspiration is blurry and subjective

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  2. Absolute truth

    ReplyDelete
  3. Very well articulated. Facts brought out convincingly.

    Education especially for students from Kerala is for getting an Entry Pass at t the job market. For that students as well as the parents may go to any extent and any corner of the world. Academic excellence or gathering maximum knowledge is certainly not the aim. Certificate matters more than competences. And that certainly is being practical.
    So much of unemployment and uncertainty in the country is a contributing factor.
    My compliments Sir, for an excellent Article

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you very much. Socio economic reasons drive migration. that's good too. but when such migration breaks a society through unintended consequences, there is need for rethink. Aim of the article is just that; to make people think

      Delete
  4. Children coming to Canada to study got to pay Five times the fees what a domestic student pays. It is huge money and mostly Dad's money - बाप का पैसा.

    The colleges in Canada offer diplomas - many not even worth the paper on which it is printed - and the Universities offer Degrees. These students flock to the colleges as it is difficult even for a Canadian student to get admission to a University.

    The students come in with the intention to stay back, become a permanent resident and then a citizen. For most, there is no chance of returning home.

    The good aspect of it is that they learn to work hard, do chores and become independent and not depend on their parents and maids/ help at home.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you very much.
      you are right. the only plus is that they learn to do any job... not necessarily learn to respect any job ! Ego and learnt behaviour doesn't let them free

      Delete
  5. Very contemporary.
    The sad state of higher education in our state clearly brought out.
    Sadly the political power lacks the will to salvage the current deplorable state.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you. Salvaging it means loss of power. Why should they? it is in the polity's misery that politicians thrive.

      Delete
  6. Rightly put. While the reasons may vary from the green grass on the other side and perceived lack of opportunities which the Kerala government prefers to close their eyes to or negates whole heartedly, the systemic failure is hard to miss. Just 4 colleges in the NIRF ranking in the first 100 speaks volumes about our credibility. Shocking news of criminal activities in the educational sector for acquiring even higher educational qualifications is not isolated and the ruling party which is going to have an upper hand in the next election
    too is confident that those loyal stand to gain. This reminds us of the last days of the W Bengal CPM, but a Mamata is yet to be born here. When left with no choice, bear the brunt, to put it politely.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. sometimes truth, is bitter but needs to be told. Thank you

      Delete
  7. Very well said sir

    We are loosing the most precious capital, human resource. Our loss is some other countries gain

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. True...we are losing precious capital called Human resource!!!

      Delete
  8. Thank you General! Excellent treatise, often wrongly diagnosed-prognosed-treatment plan studied, researched, solutions found by babus.
    Perhaps "ഇവിà´Ÿെ à´’à´¨്à´¨ും നടക്à´•ൂà´²്à´²", "സർക്à´•ാർ à´•ാà´°്à´¯ം à´®ുറപോà´²െ", "à´•ൈà´•്à´•ൂà´²ി à´•ൊà´Ÿുà´¤്à´¤ാà´²േ à´•ാà´°്à´¯ം നടക്à´•ൂ", antagonistic/"class enemy" status by branding entrepreneurs as:"à´¸്വകാà´°്à´¯ à´•ുà´¤്തക [à´®ുതലാà´³ി]", "à´¨ോà´•്à´•ുà´•ൂà´²ി", à´Žà´¨്à´¤ിà´¨ും "സമരം" all are negative socio-cultural-mental underpinnings deeply embedded @ anganwadi/LPS days. Bu UPS days, they decide to study abroad, often guided by glamorous girls & boys in ads, walking across Canada roads (palm top/head top grown children, picked up & dropped back by autos to AC vehicles, living on vitrified tile, AC rooms can only think of fashion, modernity, luxury) they ask: à´¡ാ, à´¨ീ à´Žà´¨്à´¤് പഠിà´•്à´•ും à´œോà´²ി? Mental-intellectual immaturity of indifferent peers cross-guide, cross-influence to "do hassle-free no strike, no à´¨ോà´•്à´•ുà´•ൂà´²ി job & also study ABROAD".
    Diagnosis: Bad governance, lawlessness, anarchy & chaos, excessive unionism, INFERIORITY overtaking Meritocracy, Shortcuts & brilliance not to do doctorate, but-"intelligently manipulate/steal from others" & smartly modified to overcome plagiarism is the new "skill" to term one "SMART"

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you very much.
      All that you wrote are the manifestations of the societal pressures prevalent in the state. its is the same in state like Tamil Nadu, Andhra Telangana etc. to get out of the situation people use unfair means . Now whom to blame? The current majoritarian norm is to blame the past and escape the present to a distressing future.
      Kerala being a small state , it is more visible.

      Delete
  9. Dear Sir,
    You brought out a plain truth which is generally well known.What is amazing is that barring few, the migrating students are mainly mediocre and are financially comfortable in the foreign land.
    Those miss the bus are no way doing better ,back in Kerala.It is endless struggle waiting for them.There was a time, Malayalis working outside the state ,on retirement used to settle down in Kerala.Now rarely someone comes back.
    Many parents of children ,who are working and settling down in other states are migrating to be with their children. Even youngsters working in other states are not interested to come back to Kerala.They are even preferring to get married to non Keralites.
    Now the moot question is ' What is wrong if the children are migrating to foreign countries?'Not one case has been reported
    where a person was illtreated or deported.
    They are happily staying there with a decent earning.They don't mind taking up a menial job if it provides them a decent earning.
    The fact of the matter is that no parents want their children to do red or grey collar jobs within Kerala which is in plenty . When our children are migrating ,equal number of guest labourers are thronging Kerala .Let us go by the true spirit of Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam?

    ReplyDelete
  10. Thank you very much.
    You raised two three cardinal issues. What is wrong in migration? Is it not espousing Vaudaiva Kudumbukam?
    will be the next article!!!

    ReplyDelete
  11. Very professionally and logically analysed and clearly articulated. An eye opener I must say. Thank you. Though people might try to see politics in this I feel it’s absolutely apolitical. The problem can be addressed once the party in power calls themselves as the governing party and not ruling party. How can one rule over people who have elected them to govern the administration. . Pradeep Narayanan

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you very much. This is a problem that is affecting us all.
      The question is - is it a problem at all?
      that is the next article likely to be

      Delete
  12. Excellent Article, Sir. Sheds light on a matter that is very serious but not often taken seriously. Brain Drain in India is a serious issue. People leave India and settle abroad for a variety of reasons, the most prominent being Money Of Course. But the fact of the matter is that the purchasing power parity remains somewhat the same. For Example: An average or an above average student who studies abroad will be earning similar to an Indian studied student but who passed out from a renowned university like IIT or IIM. Though it's true that mostly students graduating from IITs and IIMs also look to settle abroad. So it's kind of a shortcut (though an expensive one, considering the initial investment needed to study abroad) for an average person to be able to earn similar to a more academically endowed person. Another reason can be attributed to the fact that in India, the middle class and even upper middle class pays the most tax but is also hammered the most. We don't get tax benefits and support from the government for the ridiculous amount of taxes that we pay. Moreover, our system is very corrupt, which mostly serves the powerful and wealthy. It's an uphill battle for a middle-class person if God forbid they found themselves in a legal battle. In India, we can see only a handful of states that provide support for industrial development and tech MNCs. The majority of students have no choice but to migrate to other states to get good employment opportunities. We are mostly good at providing services and manufacturing manpower, but we lack technological innovation and research, be it in software or hardware. Our education system is partly to be blamed for this as well. So this problem of Indian Youth Exodus can only be solved if we can tackle all these problems.

    ReplyDelete
  13. A nicely written article, sir. Having sent both my children abroad, I firmly believe it is not greed at all. It is the comfort, quality of life and certainty of living conditions abroad. And also, most of the children do not just blow off their parents’ money. A few may but a majority manage to work and earn and take pride in paying the fees and living expenditures thanks to the dignity of labour and high wages in foreign countries. Hence there is nothing wrong if Indian students are moving out of the country for a better future.

    ReplyDelete
  14. Very well brought out. This problem is a countrywide phenomenon. It started with Kerala and Punjab due to lack of good educational facilities resulting in poor employability but now it is spreading like wildfire across the country. There is not only brain drain but there is money drain also. Governments at the centre and states neither seem to have the vision nor the will to arrange for good education and employment opportunities.

    ReplyDelete

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