India must overhaul vocational education for broad-based job growth

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Source: The post India must overhaul vocational education for broad-based job growth has been created, based on the article “The skills check” published in “Indian Express ” on 22nd August 2025. India must overhaul vocational education for broad-based job growth.

India must overhaul vocational education for broad-based job growth

UPSC Syllabus Topic: GS Paper 2- Issues Relating to Development and Management of Social Sector/Services relating to Education.

Context: With a volatile external sector, the Prime Minister announced reforms on August 15. Beyond GST recalibration, the article urges overhauling vocational education and training (VET) to raise productivity and employability. A rote-heavy system cannot supply a future-ready workforce.

Scale and outcomes of Indias VET

  1. Low formal training and seat utilisation: Only 4% of India’s workforce is formally trained. The system has 14,000+ ITIs and 25 lakh seats, but enrolment was 12 lakh in 2022—just 48% utilisation.
  2. Modest employment after training: In 2018, only 63% of ITI graduates were employed. VET systems in Germany, Singapore, and Canada achieve 80–90%.
  3. Demand-led growth needs skills: GST may lift demand, but job-rich growth needs skills; the weak VET pipeline restrains productivity and formal jobs.

Structural reasons for weak performance

  1. Late integration in schooling: Germany integrates VET at upper-secondary via a dual system with paid apprenticeships. India adds VET after high school, reducing hands-on time and early orientation.
  2. No academic progression or credit transfer: Singapore provides clear pathways from technical education and polytechnics to university. India lacks formal progression and credit transfer, deterring students who want academic options open.
  3. Quality and perception deficits: Many courses are outdated; over one-third instructor posts are vacant due to limited NSTI capacity. Irregular gradingand absent feedback weaken quality.
  4. Thin employer engagement and PPP gaps: Employer participation is limited; ITIs depend on government funds; MSMEs have capacity limits; Sector Skill Councils lack state presence.

International practices that work

  1. Germanys dual system: Early embedding with paid apprenticeships improves employability and smooths school-to-work transitions.
  2. Singapores quality and lifelong upskilling: Industry-led design, strong instructors, and routine audits ensure relevance. SkillsFuture supports continuous learning.
  3. Shared financing and co-design: Governments fund institutions; employers pay apprenticeships, share costs, and co-design curricula. This aligns training with labour demand.

Reform priorities for India

  1. Integrate VET early and create pathways: Implement NEP 2020 school integration. Fast-track the National Credit Framework with recognised certifications and progression routes.
  2. Raise training quality and capacity: Align courses with local demand via market assessments. Expand NSTIs, hire instructors, and strengthen ITI gradingwith trainee feedback.
  3. Build strong partnerships with industry: Scale the Private Training Partner model. Engage MSMEs and use CSR funding.

Financing and current schemes—whats missing

  1. Invest more and link funding to performance: India spends ~3% on VET vs 10–13% in Germany, Singapore, Canada. Improve viability via lower per-student costs, revenue autonomy, and performance-linked funding.
  2. Scheme design focused on jobs, not skills: ELI Part A gives up to ₹15,000 to first-time EPFO-registered workers. ELI Part B pays employers ₹3,000/month per new hire. Both promote formalisation but lack skilling components.
  3. Internships and upgrades without clear outcomes: The PM Internship Scheme offers one-year placements but no route to permanent jobs. The ITI Upgradation Initiative modernises 1,000 ITIs with industry partners, not necessarily training quality. These measures tinker at the margins; a system overhaul is essential for VET to become a reliable path to jobs and a Viksit Bharat.

Question for practice:

Examine the reasons for low VET uptake and employment in India and the reforms proposed to improve outcomes.

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