By Steve Hardgrave, Wholetime Director and Executive Vice Chairman, Varthana
India’s higher education sector is at an inflection point. With nearly 495 State Public Universities and over 46,000 affiliated institutions, the ecosystem is rapidly expanding to build a knowledge-driven economy. Enrollment is rising, and representation from underserved communities is improving: clear signs that access to quality education is widening.
By 2024, India was spending between 4.1% and 4.6% of its GDP on education, matching UNESCO’s global benchmark. This data point reflects a shift in priorities. More resources were earmarked for classrooms, research labs, and scholarships, while digital tools and improved infrastructure reached students across the country. The investment signaled a commitment to making education not only more accessible, but also more future-ready for millions of young Indians.
Beyond Income: Defining True Returns
The value of education goes beyond degrees and jobs. Its real worth lies in shaping the minds of individuals, societies, and nations. It cultivates critical thinking, adaptability, and employability – skills that may be intangible but are essential for growth and resilience in today’s dynamic world.
At the societal level, education strengthens communities, reduces inequality, and enhances civic participation. Economically, it drives productivity and entrepreneurship; a 2025 study found that every ₹1 crore invested in education generates ₹24 crore in GDP growth. Most importantly, education has a generational impact, altering the trajectory of entire families and communities.
India has seen countless first-generation college graduates from farming communities or daily-wage families who have leveraged education to secure stable jobs, lifting their families out of poverty and inspiring others in their villages to pursue education.
Similarly, the rise of startups from small towns across India reflects a deeper recognition of the power of education and knowledge. Young founders from Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities are solving real-world problems, building companies across sectors such as edtech, fintech, and agritech. Their ventures not only create jobs locally but also prove that innovation is not confined to metropolitan hubs. These examples illustrate how education empowers individuals to spark community-wide change through enterprise and opportunity.
India’s Challenges
Despite rapid expansion, India’s education system faces hurdles. Rural students continue to lag behind urban peers in foundational literacy and numeracy – only half of Grade 5 students can read a Grade 2 text, according to ASER. Disparities across states in learning outcomes, teacher availability, and infrastructure remain stark.
Affordability compounds the problem: low-income families often spend up to 20% of their monthly income on education, sometimes at the expense of food and healthcare. These realities highlight the urgent need for targeted interventions that make quality education accessible and sustainable.
Financing Solutions and Multiplier Effects
Financial support is critical to expanding access to education. Scholarships, income-linked loans, and direct benefit transfers (DBT) ease the burden on low- and middle-income families. DBTs ensure funds reach students directly, reducing leakages and helping cut dropout rates.
Equally important are loans for infrastructure and skill development, ensuring institutions have the resources to thrive. As of 2024, India’s education loan portfolio is valued at nearly ₹1.2 lakh crore, with banks and NBFCs offering schemes tailored to undergraduate, postgraduate, and vocational training. Subsidised interest rates and moratorium periods help families manage repayment while students complete their studies.
The government’s National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 also emphasises these instruments, alongside investments in infrastructure for disadvantaged regions, technology-enabled learning, and teacher capacity building. This directly impacts learning outcomes, especially in rural and underserved areas.
Together, these measures aim to create a more inclusive and future-ready education system.
Education as Smart Investment
For a nation with the world’s largest youth population, education is one of the most resilient and rewarding investments. Every rupee spent today lays the foundation for tomorrow’s breakthroughs in science, technology, and entrepreneurship.
Ultimately, the real returns on education empower individuals to become creators of opportunity, strengthen communities to thrive in a changing world, and position India to lead globally in ideas and talent. By investing boldly now, the country ensures that its youth will not only inherit the future but actively shape it – building a society rooted in equity, innovation, and shared prosperity.