What is the issue?
There is a lack of jurisprudential clarity on the fees charged by private schools.
What is the challenge?
- Regulating school fees is one of the most significant legal and political challenge policymakers in India face.
- The issue of fee regulation finds itself at the intersection of two important ideas.
- One, the constitutionally protected freedoms enjoyed by private schools.
- Two, the need for making quality education affordable and accessible to all.
What are the concerns?
- Cost - Every academic year, parents witness the burden of unjust hikes in tuition fees for schools.
- Adding to their burden is the additional costs such as fees for transport, extra-curricular activities and sports.
- The managements of such schools claim that these hikes are reasonable and justified.
- The costs of maintaining a fully functional private school with quality teaching and world-class infrastructure are quite steep.
- In 2010, the Comptroller and Auditor General slammed 25 well-known private schools in Delhi for arbitrary fee hikes.
- According to the report, money was being collected from parents under false heads.
- Also, teachers were being underpaid, and accounts were misrepresented.
- Autonomy and welfare - Balancing the autonomy of private schools and their public welfare function is another contentious issue.
- The Supreme Court held that regulatory measures imposed on unaided private educational institutions must, in general, ensure -
- maintenance of proper academic standards
- school atmosphere and infrastructure
- prevention of mal-administration by the school management
- A Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court held that these institutions have the autonomy to generate “surplus”.
- Private schools are thus entitled to a reasonable surplus for development of education and expansion of the institution.
- But the autonomy of such institutions has to be balanced with the measures taken to prevent commercialisation of education.
- However, there is not much clarity on what the terms “surplus”, “reasonable surplus” or “commercialisation of education” entail.
What are the States' models for fee regulation?
- Many state governments have either enacted fee regulation laws or are in the process of framing them.
- These are to prevent private schools from charging unreasonably high fees and to prevent misuse of funds.
- E.g. Tamil Nadu follows the fee fixation model.
- Under this, a government committee is empowered to verify and approve fee structures proposed by private schools.
- Karnataka has a formula that caps fees for schools by way of framing rules under its school education legislation.
- Maharashtra has a weakly enforced legislation to regulate fees and has multiple government bodies to approve school fees.
- Maharashtra government recently decided to cap proposed fee hikes at 15%, which was widely criticised by schools.
- A recent order of the Gujarat High Court upheld the validity of the Gujarat Self Financed Schools (Regulation of Fees) Act, 2017.
- This is now being reconsidered by the Supreme Court which has directed the government to not take any coercive steps against schools in the interim period.
What are the drawbacks?
- Clarity - The new wave of fee regulation laws in States has the potential to address the problems.
- However, there is still a lack of jurisprudential clarity on what private schools can or cannot do.
- How much “surplus” they can make, or what “commercialisation” actually means are poorly defined.
- Deeper Problems - Existing legislative efforts seem to have made an incomplete assessment.
- Evidently, the deeper problems are with financial management and accounting practices by private schools.
- As of now, the states' models are affected by the challenges of weak implementation.
What is the way forward?
- The solution to make these laws more effective is to address the financial mismanagement and misreporting.
- In Modern School v. Union of India (2004), the Supreme Court recommended accounting standards for private schools.
- Further, measures such as the following could be considered -
- regular government supervised audits
- generating capacity in State-level Departments of Education
- regular inspections
- stricter sanctions for fraudulent reporting
Source: The Hindu