In order to have 50 per cent students in universities, India needs to double the varsities' strength to 2,500, NITI Aayog CEO BVR Subrahmanyam has said.
Delivering a keynote address at the Indian School of Business (ISB) here on Friday, he said though one university and two colleges were opened every week in the past ten years, only 29 per cent of the age cohort enroll in the varsities.
Subrahmanyam also said that with a huge digital infrastructure, India has become the biggest laboratory in the digital world where one can experiment at a scale.
"Today we have 1,200 universities and slightly more than four crore students, but that's only 29 per cent of the cohort age enroll in the university system. Actually, at least 50 per cent of the students should be in colleges.
"We need to double the colleges and universities in the country. The country needs 2,500 universities. It may look like a lot of universities are not up to the mark or whatever, but the fact is, you need those numbers. Maybe we need to deliver education differently," he said.
The CEO said India has created a huge architecture called digital public infrastructure by going the public route rather than the private.
More From This Section
The official further said Estonia was the first country with a population of two million which went for digital identity. However, India did at the scale of 140 crore people and everybody has a digital identity and 120 crore people have bank accounts.
"India has become the biggest laboratory in the digital world. A laboratory where you can experiment at a scale which is impossible and inconceivable anywhere else, probably except the United States. Maybe we even leapfrog them for a variety of reasons," he said.
India has become a place which is digitally and financially connected with an identity, which has led to innovations one after another, he said, adding that UPI is an innovation and 48 to 50 per cent of all global financial transactions happen in India.
As many as 10 billion transactions a month are happening, which may be lower in terms of value and very high in terms of volume, the NITI CEO said.
He said 'Viksit Bharat' is not necessarily just being a prosperous country, but also an inclusive nation which will have a "rising tide which lifts all the boats." He said the country is expected to become a USD 30 trillion economy by 2047, surpassing the present size of the US and Chinese economies.
Research and innovation are crucial for becoming a modern developed economy, he said.
With the vast base that has been created in the last 10 years, India has probably become a huge hub for fintech innovation, Subrahmanyam said.
Talking about the transformation in the country during the last decade, he said there will be a drinking water supply in every village by the end of next year.
"Every house is connected with electricity supply. There is a road to every village. We have housing which is being built at a rapid pace," he said.
In the last 10 years, 25 crore people have escaped "acute poverty", he said, also highlighting the transformation in highways, railways (including Vande Bharat trains) and others in the country.
He also said India can be a leader in climate change as the technologies to address the issue have not yet been invented fully.
Observing that most countries in the west have developed stable economies which have to be "rewired and re-engineered" for a green future.
He said such re-engineering is not required in a large part of India and climate-friendly mobility and power systems can be developed.
The government's missions, such as those related to AI and semiconductor are aimed at keeping the country ahead in the concerned areas, he said.
India is going to be a powerful nation in terms of its innovative capabilities, he said.
He also said NITI Aayog is preparing visions for the country, preparing economic plans for cities and trying to transform agriculture into new areas like horticulture and aquaculture.
"The second area which NITI works in is how we capture the technological trends to benefit the country" he said.
India should be a global leader in frontier technologies, he added.
Since the technologies don't exist, everybody is starting afresh and India should be setting the benchmarks, the standards, the certification methods for technologies, he said.
"I think NITI would lead that drive," he said.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)