When Education and Healthcare Become Industries

18 January 2026 · Policy

In India, education was never meant to be only a path to employment — it was meant to shape disciplined, civil, socially aware human beings. Healthcare was the dignity of life, not a profit machine. Dr. Ashutosh Singh's essay addresses the turn where both fields have become ‘industries’.

When should a nation start to worry?

When school fees, coaching, private hospital bills, and drug prices push families into debt — worry should begin. Poor students drop out; mothers return from hospitals without treatment. In Hajipur, Dr. Singh has seen this pain closely.

Where do markets clash with human need?

Private investment has a place in education and health — but when regulation is weak and accountability zero, markets exploit human need. The state's role is not only licensing — it is setting standards, publishing data, and building safety nets for the poor.

What can Hajipur-level action look like?

That is why Dr. Singh's practical plan includes hospital support and education continuity through public funds — ground solutions, not paper policy.

What does a society lose over time?

Having seen how developed societies function, Dr. Singh argues: a society that treats schooling and treatment as mere ‘markets’ loses competitiveness over time — because talent and health both begin with children.