Prof R.K. Uppal
Higher education is expanding at an unprecedented pace. New universities are being announced, foreign campuses are being invited, private institutions are multiplying, and student enrolment is steadily rising. On paper, the system appears to be growing stronger and more accessible. However, beneath this expansion lies a serious structural problem — the shortage of qualified faculty. Buildings can be constructed, campuses inaugurated, and programmes launched, but without teachers the academic system cannot function. The real question facing higher education today is not how many universities are opening, but who will teach in them.
The scale of expansion is significant. Governments aim to increase the Gross Enrolment Ratio in higher education, pushing more students into colleges and universities. New disciplines such as artificial intelligence, data science, sustainability, public policy, and interdisciplinary studies are being introduced rapidly. Institutions are also expanding postgraduate and doctoral programmes. Each of these initiatives requires trained faculty members, mentors, supervisors, and researchers. Yet the supply of qualified academics is not growing at the same pace. The imbalance between expansion and recruitment is becoming increasingly visible.
One of the clearest signs of the crisis is the large number of vacant teaching positions. Many universities operate with substantial gaps between sanctioned and filled posts. Departments that should ideally have ten or fifteen faculty members often function with only a handful. In several colleges, guest faculty and contractual teachers handle the bulk of teaching. While these arrangements allow institutions to continue functioning, they weaken academic stability. Temporary teachers often lack long-term engagement with curriculum development, research planning, or student mentorship. The result is a system that runs, but does not evolve.
Another dimension of the crisis is the mismatch between emerging disciplines and available expertise. The expansion of higher education is increasingly focused on new-age fields. Universities are launching programmes in artificial intelligence, fintech, climate studies, behavioral sciences, and digital humanities. However, experts in these areas are limited. Industry often offers better salaries and working conditions, attracting potential academics away from universities. As a result, institutions sometimes assign faculty from unrelated disciplines to teach specialized subjects. This compromises both teaching quality and student preparedness.
The problem is even more severe in rural and newly established universities. Established institutions in metropolitan areas tend to attract most of the available talent. They offer better infrastructure, research funding, collaborations, and visibility. In contrast, rural universities struggle to recruit and retain faculty. Even when positions are filled, turnover is high. Faculty members often treat these institutions as temporary stops until better opportunities arise. This constant churn disrupts academic continuity and affects students disproportionately.
Delayed recruitment processes further aggravate the shortage. In many institutions, hiring is slow and bureaucratic. Advertisements are issued infrequently, selection processes take months or even years, and approvals are delayed. During this time, departments function with minimal staff. Students complete entire degree programmes without ever experiencing a fully staffed department. Such delays create a structural weakness that cannot be addressed through temporary arrangements alone.
“The shortage also affects quality. When faculty numbers are limited, teaching loads increase significantly. Professors who should focus on research and innovation spend most of their time handling multiple courses. Administrative responsibilities further add to their burden. Overworked faculty members struggle to maintain academic rigour, supervise research scholars effectively, or engage in curriculum reform. Students receive lectures, but not the intellectual engagement that defines strong universities. Over time, this leads to declining academic standards.”
The expansion of private universities has intensified competition for faculty. Private institutions often offer flexible contracts, faster recruitment, and sometimes higher salaries. They also provide lighter administrative responsibilities, making them attractive to young academics. Public universities, bound by regulatory procedures and rigid pay structures, often lose candidates. This creates an uneven distribution of faculty across institutions. While some universities manage to recruit aggressively, others continue to struggle with vacancies.
The entry of foreign university campuses may further complicate the situation. These institutions will require highly qualified faculty with strong research backgrounds. They are likely to recruit from the existing pool of academics rather than create a new supply immediately. This internal competition may trigger a faculty hiring race. Institutions with greater financial resources will attract talent, leaving others understaffed. Without careful planning, expansion could widen inequality within the higher education system.
The shortage also impacts research output. Universities depend on faculty for research, innovation, and knowledge creation. When faculty members are overburdened with teaching, research suffers. Doctoral supervision becomes weaker, projects slow down, and publication quality declines. Over time, institutions lose their academic reputation. Expansion without research capacity risks creating teaching-only institutions that do not contribute to knowledge production.
Another long-term concern is the pipeline of future faculty. Doctoral programmes are expected to produce the next generation of teachers. However, many PhD scholars face uncertain career prospects, limited funding, and long recruitment delays. Talented candidates often move to industry or international opportunities instead of pursuing academic careers. This reduces the pool of future faculty and deepens the shortage. Without strengthening doctoral training and academic career pathways, the crisis will persist.
Addressing the faculty shortage requires structural reforms. Recruitment processes must become regular and time-bound. Universities should be allowed greater flexibility in hiring emerging discipline experts. Joint appointments with industry, visiting professorships, and international collaborations can help bridge immediate gaps. Improving research funding, infrastructure, and academic autonomy can also make academic careers more attractive. Most importantly, expansion policies must be linked with faculty availability. Opening institutions without ensuring teachers only postpones the problem.
Higher education expansion is necessary for economic growth, innovation, and social mobility. However, expansion without faculty is unsustainable. Universities are not defined by buildings, rankings, or enrolment numbers; they are defined by teachers. Professors shape curricula, mentor students, build research cultures, and create intellectual communities. Without them, the system becomes hollow. The current moment calls for a shift in priorities. Instead of focusing solely on opening new campuses, policymakers must invest in developing academic talent. Faculty development, doctoral training, competitive hiring, and retention strategies should become central to higher education planning. Otherwise, the expanded system will face an uncomfortable reality — more students, more campuses, and fewer teachers. The future of higher education depends not on how fast it expands, but on who stands in the classroom.
(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”)





