Sukumar Sah
India’s demographic dividend is often invoked as destiny – a young workforce poised to power growth for decades. But dividends are not automatic; they are earned. The uncomfortable reality is that India’s education system remains misaligned with the needs of its economy, producing degrees at scale but skills in short supply. If this gap persists, the country risks turning its greatest advantage into a structural drag.
The paradox is stark. Universities are expanding, enrolments are rising, and policy frameworks such as the National Education Policy promise flexibility and interdisciplinarity. Yet employers across sectors – from manufacturing to services – continue to report a shortage of job-ready talent. Graduates, meanwhile, face unemployment or drift into low-productivity work unrelated to their training.
The design problem
This is not merely a jobs problem; it is a design problem. India’s education system has been largely supply-driven and degree-oriented. Schooling emphasises rote learning over problem-solving, while higher education often relies on outdated curricula, limited industry exposure, and uneven faculty quality. The result is a pipeline that values certification over capability.
India’s growth ambitions will be determined by the quality of its human capital. The demographic dividend is a window, not a guarantee. Aligning education with economic need is urgent and unavoidable
The mismatch is especially visible in vocational skills. Even as millions pursue white-collar degrees, industries struggle to find trained technicians, machine operators, and service professionals. Vocational education remains socially undervalued and fragmented – treated as a fallback rather than a parallel pathway.
The economic costs are significant. Firms spend time and resources retraining hires, productivity suffers, and sectors such as manufacturing, logistics, healthcare, and tourism expand more slowly than they could. Geography compounds the problem: education capacity is concentrated in cities, while job creation is increasingly dispersed.
Fixing this requires a shift from input metrics – enrolments and campuses—to outcomes such as employability, productivity, and wages. Curricula must be dynamic and co-designed with industry. Apprenticeships need to be mainstreamed so that learning and earning are simultaneous. Vocational tracks must be integrated into the mainstream.
Solution in diversity
India’s diversity means solutions will be built as much by states as by the Centre. Gujarat offers an instructive example of alignment between education and economic structure.
Its economy is deeply industrial, with clusters spanning petrochemicals, textiles, engineering, pharmaceuticals, ports and logistics, and financial services anchored in GIFT City. This creates demand for a wide spectrum of skills – from shop-floor technicians to specialised professionals.
The state has paired this demand with institution-building. Flagship campuses such as IIM Ahmedabad, IIT Gandhinagar, and the National Institute of Design coexist with a growing network of universities and technical institutes. More important is the attempt to connect classrooms to clusters – aligning curricula, internships, and apprenticeships with local industry needs.
Where it works, the benefits are visible. Students gain practical exposure earlier, firms find a more job-ready pool, and local economies deepen as skill ecosystems take root around industrial clusters. Yet limits remain: quality is uneven beyond elite institutions, vocational education retains a second-tier status, and scaling specialised models across sectors is still a work in progress.
Portable principles
Even so, Gujarat points to what alignment could look like. Build around clusters. Normalise apprenticeships. Specialise rather than chase generic degrees. These principles are portable across states, each with its own economic base.
Technology can accelerate this shift, but it cannot substitute for hands-on learning and industry immersion. Ultimately, a cultural change is required – away from degrees as proxies for success toward skills as the true currency.












