The accord requires that member nations set up suitable accreditation standards which would ensure a minimum quality of attainment for their engineering graduates.
India, which has been a provisional member of Washington Accord since 2007, was working for several years to become a permanent member.
The breakthrough came at a meeting of the International Engineering Alliance in Wellington, New Zealand, this morning where the members voted to induct India as a permanent member of the select group.
"Degrees which have been so accredited... Will substantially enhance (Indian graduates') employment opportunities around the world," she said in a statement.
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Congratulations also poured in from her predecessor and former HRD Minister MM Pallam Raju who said that membership of the Washington Accord would be a good facilitator as it would give greater flexibility to Indian students and provide recognition to their degrees.
"Congratulations to the Ministry, after a seven-year effort by the Ministry, India has gained permanent membership of the Washington Accord!," he tweeted.
The Accord was signed in 1989 as an international agreement among bodies responsible for accrediting engineering degree programmes. Some 17 countries are signatories to it.