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Home Opinion Ideas

Academic Glut: The Research Gap

Prof R.K. Uppal by Prof R.K. Uppal
May 7, 2026
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Prof R.K. Uppal

India today stands at a peculiar crossroads in higher education. On paper, the country is witnessing a steady rise in doctoral enrolments, an expanding network of universities, and a policy framework that repeatedly emphasizes research, innovation, and global competitiveness. Yet beneath this impressive façade lies an uncomfortable truth: the growth in PhDs is not translating into a proportional growth in meaningful research. The result is a widening academic imbalance—more degrees, but less discovery.
Over the past decade, structural reforms guided by bodies such as the University Grants Commission and anchored in the vision of the National Education Policy 2020 have aimed to democratize doctoral education. The removal of the M.Phil., the introduction of direct PhD pathways, and the relaxation of mandatory publication requirements were intended to reduce barriers and make research more accessible. In principle, this is a progressive shift. But in practice, access has expanded far more rapidly than academic rigor and institutional capacity.
This imbalance is not merely statistical; it is structural. Universities are admitting more PhD candidates than their supervisory ecosystems can effectively support. Faculty members are overburdened, often guiding far more scholars than they can mentor meaningfully. The result is predictable: diluted supervision, mechanical feedback, and a growing culture of academic minimalism. When guidance becomes perfunctory, research inevitably becomes shallow.
Equally troubling is the changing motivation behind pursuing a PhD. For many candidates, the doctorate is no longer the culmination of intellectual curiosity but a credential for career advancement—particularly in academia, where it is often a mandatory requirement for teaching positions. This shift has transformed the PhD from a pursuit of knowledge into a transactional milestone. Scholars aim to complete, not to question; to submit, not to challenge. In such an environment, originality becomes optional, and compliance becomes the safest strategy.
The consequences are visible in the nature of research output. A significant portion of doctoral work remains descriptive, repetitive, or marginally incremental. Instead of addressing pressing societal or technological challenges, many theses revolve around narrow topics with limited relevance. The gap between academic research and real-world application continues to widen. India produces thousands of PhDs each year, yet its contribution to high-impact global research remains disproportionately low relative to its scale.
Part of the problem lies in the ecosystem of incentives. Academic institutions often measure success through quantifiable metrics—number of PhDs awarded, number of research papers published, number of conferences attended. Quality, impact, and originality are harder to measure and therefore easier to ignore. This has given rise to a culture of academic inflation, where the value of a PhD is gradually eroding. When everyone holds a doctorate, the distinction it once carried begins to fade.
The removal of mandatory publication requirements before thesis submission illustrates this dilemma. While the reform aimed to reduce the pressure of predatory publishing and improve research integrity, it also removed a critical checkpoint for scholarly quality. Without robust alternative evaluation mechanisms, the risk is clear: degrees may be awarded without sufficient evidence of meaningful contribution. The intent was to improve quality; the outcome, in many cases, has been to weaken accountability.
Another dimension of this imbalance is the weak integration between academia and industry. In countries with strong research ecosystems, doctoral work is often closely aligned with industrial needs, technological innovation, and policy development. In India, however, the disconnect remains stark. Many PhD graduates find themselves ill-prepared for roles outside academia, while industries continue to report a shortage of research-ready talent. This paradox—of surplus doctorates and scarce expertise—underscores the inefficiency of the current system.

“India’s goal of becoming a global knowledge leader is hindered by a focus on the quantity of PhDs over the quality of research. Expanding doctoral enrollment without ensuring genuine knowledge creation risks undermining national innovation and intellectual credibility. To succeed, India must shift its priority from simply generating degrees to fostering meaningful, high-quality research.”

Funding constraints further compound the problem. India’s expenditure on research and development remains modest relative to global leaders. Limited funding restricts access to advanced laboratories, data resources, and collaborative opportunities. In such conditions, expecting world-class research output is unrealistic. Expanding PhD enrolments without proportionate investment in research infrastructure is akin to building more vehicles without improving the roads—they may move, but they cannot go far.
The issue of academic integrity also looms large. Instances of plagiarism, data manipulation, and superficial research practices are not isolated concerns but symptoms of systemic pressure. When the emphasis is on completion rather than contribution, ethical compromises become more likely. Regulatory frameworks exist, but enforcement is uneven, and institutional accountability is often weak.
Yet, it would be simplistic to argue that the solution lies in restricting access to PhD programs. The problem is not that too many individuals aspire to research; it is that the system is not equipped to nurture them effectively. The challenge, therefore, is not of quantity alone but of alignment—between policy and practice, between enrolment and mentorship, between degrees and discovery.
Rebalancing the system requires a multi-layered approach. First, admissions must be aligned with supervisory capacity and institutional strength. Universities should prioritize quality over expansion, ensuring that each scholar receives meaningful guidance. Second, evaluation mechanisms must shift from procedural completion to demonstrable contribution. A PhD should signify not just endurance but intellectual advancement.
Third, stronger linkages between academia and industry are essential. Collaborative research, industry-funded projects, and applied doctoral programs can bridge the gap between theory and practice. Fourth, investment in research infrastructure must increase significantly. Without adequate funding, even the most capable scholars cannot produce impactful work.
Finally, there is a need to restore the intellectual ethos of the PhD itself. A doctorate should not be a default career step but a deliberate choice driven by curiosity, discipline, and a willingness to engage with uncertainty. Institutions must create environments that encourage questioning, risk-taking, and originality rather than mere compliance.
India’s aspiration to become a global knowledge leader cannot be realized through numerical expansion alone. The current trajectory—of producing more PhDs without strengthening the foundations of research—risks undermining the very purpose of doctoral education. The imbalance between quantity and quality is not just an academic concern; it is a national challenge with implications for innovation, competitiveness, and intellectual credibility.The question, therefore, is not whether India should produce more PhDs, but whether it can ensure that each PhD represents genuine knowledge creation. Until that balance is restored, the country will continue to generate degrees in abundance while remaining short of the one thing that truly matters: meaningful research.
(The author is Principal, Guru Gobind Singh College of Management and Technology, Gidderbaha , Punjab. The views, opinions and conclusions expressed in this article are those of the author and aren’t necessarily in accord with the views of “Kashmir Horizon”)

[email protected]

Prof R.K. Uppal

Prof R.K. Uppal

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