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'Give free land for 999 years to set up private varsities'

Committee report on corporate sector participation in higher education headed by Chief Mentor of Infosys N R Narayana Murthy presented its report to the Planning Commission

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For boosting private sector investment in higher education, the government should allocate land free of charge for 999 years to set up an educational institution, a group set up by the Planning Commission has suggested.

The Committee report on corporate sector participation in higher education headed by Chief Mentor of Infosys N R Narayana Murthy presented its report to the Planning Commission Deputy Chairman here.

The committee said the land provided by the government to the private sector for setting up a new institution should have a world class air connectivity and well-developed social infrastructure.

"The existing higher education system in India lags in comparison to global standards and is inadequate to meet the demand," Murthy said after presenting the Committee's report to Ahluwalia here.

"For setting up new institutions, land should be allocated by both central and state governments, free of charge for 999 years", the committee said in its recommendations.

It said such land should be usable for setting up academic facilities, incubation centres and technology parks.

This should also be allowed for residential facilities for faculty, staff students and administration and other social infrastructure like school, college, recreation and health facilities for the institution, car and bus parking, restaurants, shops etc, the committee said.

According to the estimates of the Committee, India does not have adequate eligible students and needs an additional capacity of 26 million seats over the next decade.

It has pitched for more liberal legal frame work for setting up of educational institutions in the country to attract private sector investment.

The group recommended that the higher education institutes should have freedom to accredit with the any global accreditation agency.

It recommended visas for all academic and research visitors (faculty, student, staff, administrator, researchers) and that they should be exempt from current visa regulations of minimum salary norms ($25,000 per annum).

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