A spike in the number ofย Indian students going abroad for PhDs isย leaving domestic universities short onย recruits, according toย researchers.
Debate about the countryโs doctoral diaspora was sparked last month byย Upendra Nongthomba, aย professor ofย genetics atย the prestigious Indian Institute of Science, in a LinkedIn post expressing disbelief that his lab had received applications from only four aspiring students this year โ five times fewer than inย recent years.
โLast year my group hosted 12 summer project traineesโฆIย would have been happy hosting any one of these bright students to do a PhD in my laboratory. But all of them wanted a foreign PhD,โ he wrote.
Migration figures indicate that Professor Nongthombaโs lab is unlikely to be the only one seeing a decline, with the Ministry of External Affairs estimating that the number of students going abroad โ albeit also including undergraduates as well as postgraduates โ is set toย rise to 1.5ย million this year, up from 1.3ย million last year.
And Yatharth Gulati, co-founder of the consultancy Rostrum Education, which provides tutoring and college counselling services to Indian students applying internationally, told Times Higher Education that there had been a โnotable increaseโ in the number of Indian PhDs headed overseas, with the number of doctoral candidates contacting Rostrum this year having risen by 70ย per cent over 2022.
Mr Gulati said many were won over by better employment prospects abroad and access to โstate-of-the-art infrastructureโ. Funding during the PhD was also a big factor.
โAlthough there may be funding opportunities for research in India, overseas students often have access to a greater number of scholarships,โ he said.
Noble Kurian, an assistant professor at Chandigarh University, cited similar reasons.
โUncertainty about [a] PhD and its fellowships are very evident in our country. In India, funding and fellowships are not regular, so the students are usually starved during their tenure,โ he said.
Like many scholars, he shared the perception that Indian universities hiring early career researchers prefer candidates with overseas experience and foreign degrees.
Recently, the All India Research Scholars Association, an umbrella body representing Indian PhD students, urged the government to raise PhD stipends by 60ย per cent, with an automatic upgrade for inflation every four years.
โDelayed revisions have imposed financial burdens due to rising living costs and inflation, hindering researchersโ commitment to impactful research,โ the association wrote.
Its call has been backed by some politicians, including MPย Shashi Tharoor, who warned that โbureaucratic callousnessโ has discouraged many students from continuing a career in research. Writing on social media, Dr Tharoor said a reappraisal of the stipend was overdue.
โOur stressed-out PhD scholars deserve a long-overdue increase in their stipends,โ he wrote. โHow can they meet their daily needs and undertake research amid rising inflation?โ
Ramgopal Rao, formerly the director of the Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, said a 60ย per cent rise might be โdifficultโ to achieve, but he believed that New Delhi was seriously considering increasing stipends.
โIโm sure the government is already contemplating a 30ย to 40ย per cent increase,โ he said, noting that there were โmultiple proposalsโ on the table.
For instance, New Delhi could adjust for inflation automatically every year. Another option could be for the government to adjust PhD stipends so they are in line with salaries for entry-level jobs for bachelorโs degree holders.
โAn entry-level job in the government sector [pays] much higherโฆso the PhD tends to remain a last option,โ he noted.