THERE is a crisis brewing in Pakistan’s universities. Over the last
two decades, the Higher Education Commission (HEC) was able to gradually
effect positive changes in the academic culture. These were not the
result of any decrees handed down by HEC’s bureaucracy, but produced by
slow osmosis of academic cultures from around the world that young,
incoming faculty members were a part of during their doctoral studies. Traditionally, this faculty was sourced from countries the academia
of whom was clearly more developed than ours. Considering that it takes
four to six years and costs at least $100,000 to fund a single PhD, the
gains we achieved over these years were hard fought. I will not offer
figures of how many more papers are being published from Pakistani
universities as proof of that, because that measure is controversial by
itself — as many others have lamented. What I would rather like to consider is the growing number of
Pakistani students who, unable to fund their education abroad, are
capitalising on the improved reputation built by their predecessors to
secure funding from sources outside Pakistan. This new faculty also
brought with it expertise in navigating the scholarship search and
application process, programme search, admissions’ application and visa
application processes that today’s students aspiring to study abroad are
benefiting from. Increased spending on higher education by countries that missed the
industrial revolution, but are now trying to catch the bus for the
knowledge economy, is a secular global trend. Across the Arabian Sea,
the countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) have ramped up
spending on higher education and are opening local campuses of foreign
universities and new universities of their own. Their growing
populations mean it is becoming increasingly challenging for their
governments to continue supporting citizens with jobs and/ or other
means of livelihood. In Pakistan, faculty has not seen pay raises in the last five years.
To that end, in 2016 Saudi Arabia, the GCC’s largest member country,
launched its Vision 2030 programme. Amongst its targets was to lower
unemployment from 11.6 per cent to 7pc, increase SME contribution to GDP
from 20pc to 35pc, increase women’s participation in the workforce from
22pc to 30pc, and increase the private sector’s contribution from 40pc
to 65pc of GDP, all by the year 2030. Recent years have also seen
roll-outs of “Saudisation” programmes in various sectors of the economy.
The recent drop in oil prices saw a brief pause in education spending,
but that has picked up again since. The sudden surge in the number of
new universities means a corresponding surge in the number of unfilled
faculty positions. At the same time, in Pakistan, faculty has not seen pay raises in the
last five years. In fact, their benefits are being cut, more
appointments are being made on contractual basis and promotion criteria
are being tightened. A recent survey conducted concerning faculty at the
National University for Sciences and Technology showed that almost all
faculty members are unable to afford housing in the city and have to
commute from afar. Misconceptions also abound. In the words of an
administrator of one of our country’s most prestigious universities,
“these faculty members are not interested in making money. They just
want to be left alone to do their research and publish”. Thus, current conditions in Pakistan and the GCC have set up the
perfect push-pull dynamic: Pakistani faculty, trained at great expense
on the Pakistan government’s dime, on completing their five-year
commitment to work in Pakistan, are exiting in large numbers, and being
absorbed by Saudi Arabia and other GCC countries. One particular
department has hired so many faculty members from NUST that it is
jokingly referred to as a sub-campus of the university. This exodus from Pakistani universities is costing the government its
large investment in university faculty since the inception of the HEC.
Instead of competing for its experienced faculty and paying them their
worth, many universities have elected one of two routes: 1) creating
procedural hurdles for departing faculty, causing further aggrievement,
or 2) replacing departing faculty with newly returning faculty at a
cheaper rate. Most of the newly returning PhDs available to universities for hire
are from China and other countries that the HEC considers “cheaper”
destinations and the difference between the outgoing and incoming crop
of PhDs is so stark that officials at a leading university in hiring
roles have expressed this frustration. There is a scramble to hire
“US-UK PhDs” willing to work on barely livable wages, with no job
security or retirement benefits. The fallout from the government keeping
both its eyes firmly shut on this matter will be felt for years. More
faculty is leaving every day, each setting back the progress our
academic sector has made these last few years. Near-ubiquitous global internet connectivity and cheaper air travel
have enabled highly skilled workers to take advantage of opportunities
around the globe without being too out of touch with families and
friends back home. A Google search for ‘global talent war’ and ‘globally
mobile highly skilled migrants’ yields thousands of articles and
reports on this phenomenon. Countries are competing over wooing the best
global talent, educated and trained at other countries’ taxpayer
expenses. The Pakistani government is blind to this trend and, if the
past is a prologue, will only wake up to it when it is too late. Over the last year, I had the opportunity to talk to several
emigrated faculty members. Almost all of them held PhDs from the US or
EU countries. Their motivations for leaving all boiled down to this:
after paying house/ apartment rent, private school fees for one or two
children, running expenses of a car and groceries, month after month
there is nothing left. There are no retirement benefits, no subsidised
housing societies, and in most cases no medical insurance to speak of.
The prescription for stemming the poaching of our best talent is banal
if it were not so obvious: pay workers a competitive wage, or risk a
backslide and lose the investments we have made in universities and
research that will enable human development for coming decades.
0 Comments