“Closed-door interactions between private school groups and J&K officials raise fears that profit-driven interests are being prioritized over public welfare, undermining trust in the state’s educational governance.’
The growing proximity between certain private school associations and the top leadership of the Jammu & Kashmir government raises serious and uncomfortable questions. At a time when public faith in the education system is already fragile, such closed-door meetings send a troubling signal: that policy may be tilting in favour of profit-driven interests rather than public welfare. Why should the government entertain repeated representations from groups that have, over the years, been accused of accelerating the commercialisation of education? Education is not a commodity to be negotiated in boardrooms; it is a public good that demands transparency, equity, and accountability. Any perception that influential lobbies are shaping policy corridors risks deepening public distrust. The debate has become even more contentious with the emergence of proposals around the Private University Bill. Instead of being seen as a step toward academic advancement, it is increasingly viewed as a potential gateway for expanding private business empires in the education sector. The intent appears less about nation-building through education and more about market expansion under legal cover. Even more alarming is the idea floated by some stakeholders about establishing private universities through “crowd funding.” This concept, largely untested in the higher education ecosystem anywhere in the world, raises fundamental questions about credibility, governance, and accountability. Who will regulate such institutions? Who will ensure academic standards? And most importantly, who will protect students from becoming part of an experimental financial model? If allowed, such moves are bound to trigger widespread resentment across both Kashmir and Jammu divisions. People are already wary of rising costs in private schooling; extending the same model to universities would only widen the gap between the privileged and the middle class. The fear is not unfounded: private universities, in their current imagination, are likely to cater primarily to the affluent, effectively shutting out meritorious students from middle- and lower-income families.
“Prioritizing private higher education is premature as fundamental systemic issues—such as inconsistent quality, inadequate teacher training, and poor infrastructure—remain unresolved in foundational schooling. While private participation is acceptable, it is for the Government to enforce strict regulation and transparency to prevent education from becoming a profit-driven marketplace. The Government is expected to uphold its primary duty just to ensure that education remains accessible, affordable, and public-centered rather than a commodity for the highest bidder.”
Equally concerning is the lukewarm and unclear response from sections of the government. Silence or ambiguity at this stage only fuels speculation and confusion. The government must take a clear, principled stand—one that reassures citizens that education policy will not be dictated by commercial interests. The track record of private schooling in Jammu & Kashmir further weakens the case for unchecked expansion. With few exceptions—mostly limited to some missionary institutions—many private schools have failed to significantly improve the standard of basic education despite decades of operation. Issues of quality, teacher training, infrastructure, and fee regulation continue to persist. If foundational education remains inconsistent, the leap toward privately funded universities appears premature and misplaced. The larger question, therefore, is not whether private participation should exist in education, but under what conditions and safeguards. Regulation must be strict, intentions must be transparent, and outcomes must serve the larger public interest—not narrow financial gains. Education cannot become a marketplace where opportunity is sold to the highest bidder. The government must remember that its foremost responsibility is to ensure accessible, affordable, and quality education for all. Any policy that risks undermining this principle must be reconsidered—firmly and without hesitation.

