Context:
India’s development paradigm is shifting towards “women-led development”, with increasing female participation in education, STEM, and research, strengthening the knowledge economy.
Key Highlights:
- Government Initiative / Policy Support
- Focus on Nari Shakti as a driver of economic growth.
- Union Budget 2026 provisions for safe and affordable hostels for girls in STEM across districts.
- Initiatives like Atal Tinkering Labs and early skilling programmes promote innovation exposure.
- Data, Targets, Schemes
- Gender parity achieved in school education (GER ~1.0–1.1).
- Female enrolment in higher education increased from 1.57 crore to 2.18 crore (since 2014-15).
- Female GER improved from 22.9 to 30.2.
- Women constitute 43% of STEM enrolment (among highest globally).
- Over 53% of UGC-NET JRF fellows are women (2024–25).
- PM Research Fellowship: ~35% women, target of 10,000 fellowships in 5 years.
- Stakeholders Involved
- Government (Education & S&T ministries)
- Higher education institutions (IITs, NITs, universities)
- Women students and researchers
- Industry and innovation ecosystem
- Significance / Applications
- Strengthens India’s position in AI, quantum tech, data science.
- Enhances innovation capacity and human capital.
- Promotes inclusive and sustainable growth.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Gross Enrolment Ratio (GER)
- Ratio of enrolment to population in a given age group.
- STEM
- Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics.
- UGC-NET JRF
- Fellowship for research in higher education.
- PM Research Fellowship (PMRF)
- Supports research in premier institutions.
- Anusandhan National Research Foundation (ANRF)
- Promotes research funding and innovation ecosystem.
- Supernumerary Seats
- Additional seats (e.g., in IITs) to improve women’s participation.
Relevant Mains Points:
- Role of Women in Knowledge Economy
- Enhances innovation, productivity, and diversity of ideas.
- Critical for emerging sectors like AI, digital economy, deep tech.
- Progress Achieved
- High female enrolment in STEM education.
- Improved institutional access and policy support.
- Persisting Challenges
- Gap between education and workforce participation.
- Workplace biases and lack of leadership roles.
- Inadequate support systems (childcare, flexibility).
- Way Forward
- Strengthen research career pathways for women.
- Ensure gender-sensitive institutional policies.
- Promote industry-academia linkages for women researchers.
- Enhance mentorship and leadership opportunities.
UPSC Relevance:
• GS 1 – Society (women empowerment)
• GS 2 – Governance (education policies, inclusion)
• GS 3 – Science & Technology (innovation ecosystem)
• Prelims – GER, STEM initiatives
