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PM-SHRI Schools Scheme and Kerala’s Policy Reversal

Why in News ?

  • Kerala’s LDF government (CPI-M led) has decided to implement the PM-SHRI Schools Scheme, reversing its two-year opposition.
  • This has political and governance implications, highlighting tensions between Centre–State relations, NEP 2020 adoption, and federal financial incentives.

Relevance

  • GS-2 (Governance): Centre–State relations, cooperative federalism, education policy reforms.
  • GS-2 (Social Justice): School quality improvement, equitable access, NEP 2020 implementation.

Background of PM-SHRI Scheme

  • Launched: September 2022
  • Full Form: Pradhan Mantri Schools for Rising India
  • Aim: Develop 14,500 model schools as NEP 2020 exemplars across India.
  • Coverage: Includes Central, State, and local government schools (like KVs, NVs, and state-run schools).
  • Funding Pattern:
    • 60:40 (Centre:State) for general states.
    • 90:10 for NE & Himalayan states; 100% for UTs.
  • Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Education, Department of School Education and Literacy.

Core Objectives

  • Demonstrate NEP 2020s vision of holistic and multidisciplinary education.
  • Integrate vocational training, art, ICT, and multilingual pedagogy.
  • Establish School Quality Assessment Framework (SQAF) to evaluate and improve learning outcomes.
  • Foster environment-friendly, inclusive, and digitally equipped learning environments.

Reasons for Policy Reversal

  • Financial Pressure:
    • Kerala faced reduced Samagra Shiksha allocations since non-participation in PM-SHRI led to funding exclusion.
    • In FY 2024–25, no funds were received under Samagra Shiksha; partial release in FY 2023–24 (~₹115 crore).
  • Pragmatic Adjustment:
    • Implementing PM-SHRI ensures access to central funds (~₹150 crore annually).
    • Aligns with federal fiscal reality rather than ideological rigidity.
  • Administrative Efficiency:
    • Integration with existing state education infrastructure under Samagra Shiksha makes implementation smoother.

National Context — Other States

  • Agreed: Delhi (AAP), Punjab, West Bengal, and now Kerala.
  • Holding Out: Tamil Nadu and earlier West Bengal cited NEP-related concerns.
  • Trend: Gradual convergence of opposition-ruled states towards implementation for fiscal and developmental reasons.

Policy Implications

  • Centre–State Federalism:
    • Reflects a shift towards cooperative pragmatism”—states aligning with centrally funded schemes despite ideological reservations.
  • Education Governance:
    • Shows how financial design (conditional funding) influences policy compliance.
  • Implementation Model:
    • Use of SQAF for performance-linked disbursal introduces outcome-based governance in school education.
  • Political Optics:
    • “PM” branding raises questions about decentralized recognition in joint schemes.

Criticisms and Challenges

  • Federal Concerns: Central “branding” seen as undermining state ownership.
  • NEP Alignment Issues: Kerala yet to fully endorse NEP 2020 — may create curricular friction.
  • Equity Challenge: Risk that better-performing schools benefit disproportionately.
  • Administrative Load: Monitoring transformation via SQAF requires strong data infrastructure and human resources.

October 2025
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