This, he said, lead to insufficient government funds to meet the increasing demand for higher education in the state.
"This results in lack of adequate infrastructure besides acute shortage of manpower in both teaching and non-teaching categories. We spend 0.3 per cent of our GSDP on higher education; whereas Centre allocates 1.5 per cent of its GDP according to MHRD source," Tuki said at the annual conference of higher and technical education here.
He appealed the teaching community to give their best and provide a thrust to the higher education scenario.
Tuki said in the next 10-15 years the state would harness about 60,000 MW in hydro-power sector, which would give science graduates a larger scope for employment.
"So this physical dynamics of the state has to be strengthened properly," he stressed.
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