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Revision: Indian Economic Development >> Human Capital Formation in India Economics Commerce (English Medium) Class 12 CBSE

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Key Points

Key Points: Introduction to Human Capital Formation in India
  • Education and training increase a person’s skills, productivity, and income.
  • Educated individuals contribute more to a nation’s economic growth.
  • Education also provides social status, better choices, innovation, and adaptability to change.
  • Human capital means the productive power of people developed through education, training, and health.
  • Like physical capital, a country must invest in people to build more skilled professionals.
  • Investment in human capital leads to economic development and overall human progress.
Key Points: Sources of Human Capital
  • Education – Increases skills, productivity, and income.
  • Health – A healthy worker is more productive.
  • On-the-job training – Improves efficiency and output.
  • Migration – Higher income opportunities boost earning capacity.
  • Information – Helps make better education and job decisions.

Note: Human capital is intangibleinseparable from its ownerless mobile, and provides both private and social benefits.

Key Points: Human Capital and Economic Growth
  • Educated and healthy people are more productive and earn higher income.
  • Education and health boost innovation and technological progress.
  • Human capital and income growth are mutually reinforcing.
  • India values human resources as the key to development.
  • NEP 2020 aims to build a skilled, knowledge-based economy.
Key Points: Human Capital and Human Development
  • Human capital views education and health as means to raise productivity and income.
  • Human development sees education and health as goals in themselves, essential for well-being and personal freedom.
  • Human capital treats people as a means to an end, while human development treats people as the end itself.
  • Investments in basic education and health are vital, even if they don’t directly boost output.
Key Points: State of Human Capital Formation in India
  • Human capital formation in India depends mainly on education and health.
  • India’s Union, State, and local governments share responsibility for these sectors.
  • Government intervention is needed since education and health provide social benefits and prevent exploitation by private providers.
  • Key bodies: NCERTUGCAICTE for education; NMC and ICMR for health.
  • Due to poverty, many cannot afford these services, so governments must offer free or subsidized education and healthcare, aiming for universal literacy and improved educational attainment.
Key Points: Growth of Education Sector in India
  • Government expenditure on education rose from 7.92% (1952) to 16.54% (2020) of total expenditure, and from 0.64% to 4.47% of GDP, though still below the recommended 6%.
  • Elementary education takes the largest share, but per-student spending is highest in higher/tertiary education.
  • Spending varies widely across states — from ₹96,968 in Sikkim to ₹10,710 in Bihar (2020–21).
  • The Education Commission (1964–66) and Tapas Majumdar Committee (1999) emphasized higher investment; the Right to Education Act (2009) made schooling free and compulsory for ages 6–14.
  • India also levies a 2% education cess to fund elementary education.
  • Educational achievements have improved: adult literacy, primary completion, and youth literacy have risen substantially for both males and females since 1990.
Key Points: Future Prospects
  • Education for All: Literacy has improved, yet many Indians remain illiterate — the goal of free and compulsory education for all (ages 6–14) is still unmet.
  • Gender Equity: The literacy gap between men and women is narrowing, but women’s education still needs promotion for economic and social empowerment.
  • Higher Education: Few pursue higher studies, and educated youth unemployment remains high, especially among rural females. There’s a need to raise funding and quality in higher education to enhance employability.
  • Conclusion: Education and health investment drives growth and equity. India must build on its strong scientific and technical talent with better quality and domestic opportunities.
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