
Syllabus: GS2/Governance
Context
- The recent cancellation of the National Eligibility-cum-Entrance Test Undergraduate (NEET-UG) 2026 following allegations of a paper leak has exposed serious weaknesses in India’s examination governance system, and restoring credibility to the system has become a national priority.
Major Causes of Paper Leaks in India
- Paper leaks refer to the unauthorised disclosure of examination question papers before the test, compromising fairness, merit, and public trust.
- They have emerged as a major governance and institutional challenge in India’s examination system.
- High-Stakes Examination System: India’s entrance and recruitment exams involve millions of candidates competing for limited seats or jobs.
- Examples: NEET, JEE, CUET, SSC, Railway Recruitment Exams, and State Public Service Commission exams.
- This intense competition creates incentives for organised cheating networks.
- Weak Institutional Capacity: Many examination bodies suffer from poor administrative planning, inadequate staffing, lack of professional expertise, and weak coordination among agencies.
- Large-scale examinations require sophisticated management systems, which are often absent.
- Insider Collusion: Paper leaks frequently involve insiders such as printing press employees, examination officials, invigilators, IT staff, and transport personnel.
- Internal access makes question papers vulnerable before the examination begins.
- Poor Cybersecurity and Technological Gaps: With increasing digitalisation, examination systems face risks like hacking, server breaches, data theft, and malware attacks.
- Question papers stored or transmitted electronically become vulnerable if encryption and cybersecurity measures are weak.
- Organised Cheating Networks: Criminal syndicates operate sophisticated paper leak rackets involving coaching centres, middlemen, cyber experts, and corrupt officials.
- These networks sell leaked papers for huge amounts of money.
- Lack of Secure Examination Infrastructure: Several examination centres lack CCTV surveillance, biometric verification, secure internet systems, and standardised procedures.
- Weak infrastructure increases opportunities for malpractice.
- Inadequate Monitoring and Audits: Many examination agencies do not conduct independent security audits, real-time monitoring, surprise inspections, and end-to-end tracking of question papers.
- This weak oversight enables leaks to go unnoticed until after the examination.
- Delayed Legal Enforcement: Although laws exist, punishment is often delayed due to slow investigations, weak prosecution, and lack of coordination between agencies.
- Low conviction rates reduce deterrence.
- Coaching Culture and Commercialisation: The massive coaching industry creates excessive pressure to succeed, and commercial incentives for unethical practices.
- Some coaching networks allegedly become linked to leak syndicates.
- Over-Centralisation of Examinations: National-level exams involving millions of candidates across India concentrate risk in one system.
- A single breach can affect entire examinations, admissions, and recruitment processes nationwide.
Why Does NEET Matters?
- Extreme Competition and Limited Seats: NEET is the gateway to medical education in India. Around more than 2 million students appear annually, and compete for roughly 120,000 MBBS seats.
- It creates a severe demand-supply mismatch.
Consequences of Seat Scarcity
- Rise of Coaching Culture: Students spend years preparing through expensive coaching institutes. Families often invest life savings in preparation.
- Psychological Pressure: Intense competition increases stress, anxiety, and mental health issues. Student suicides linked to examination pressure remain a serious concern.
- Medical Education Abroad: Thousands of Indian students pursue MBBS degrees in countries such as Russia, Ukraine, China, and the Philippines due to insufficient affordable seats domestically.
Government Measures & Their Significance
- Expansion of Medical Seats: The Union government has announced the addition of 75,000 medical seats over five years.
- It is significant because it can improve doctor-population ratio, reduce excessive competition, lower dependence on foreign medical education, and ease financial pressure on families.
- However, seat expansion alone cannot solve systemic governance failures in examinations.
- National Testing Agency (NTA): It was established in 2017 as an autonomous and specialised testing body under the Ministry of Education.
- Its mandate was to conduct transparent and standardised examinations, use scientific and technology-driven assessment methods, reduce irregularities in entrance examinations, and create a globally benchmarked testing ecosystem.
- It currently conducts major examinations such as NEET-UG, JEE Main, CUET-UG, and UGC-NET.
- Radhakrishnan Committee Recommendations: The Union government constituted a high-level committee headed by former ISRO chairman K. Radhakrishnan following the NEET 2024 controversy.
- The committee reportedly made 101 recommendations, including encrypted digital transmission of question papers, AI-based monitoring systems, standardised examination centres, stronger CCTV surveillance, enhanced cybersecurity, staff training and accountability mechanisms.
- However, only partial implementation has reportedly taken place.
- Public Examinations (Prevention of Unfair Means) Act, 2024: The Act introduced stringent penalties up to 10 years imprisonment, and fine up to ₹1 crore.
- It hasn’t worked because of weak enforcement capacity, organised cheating networks, insider collusion, poor monitoring systems, and delayed investigations.
- It shows that punitive laws alone cannot ensure examination integrity without institutional reform.
Way Forward
- Institutional Restructuring of NTA: The NTA requires comprehensive reform through professional and permanent staffing, independent oversight mechanisms, transparent audit systems, and greater operational decentralisation.
- Technological Safeguards: India needs to strengthen end-to-end encryption of question papers, AI-driven anomaly detection, biometric verification, and real-time cybersecurity monitoring.
- Decentralised Operational Capacity: A hybrid model involving central standard-setting, and state-level logistical execution can improve responsiveness and reduce administrative overload.
- Mental Health and Student Welfare: Examination reforms need to include counselling support, reduced examination pressure, multiple testing opportunities, and transparent grievance redressal systems.
- Expanding Educational Capacity: Long-term reform requires more medical colleges, affordable higher education, and better public investment in health and education infrastructure.
- Reducing scarcity will reduce the disproportionate burden attached to a single examination.
| Daily Mains Practice Question [Q] Discuss the major causes behind paper leaks in India. Examine the institutional gaps responsible for such failures and suggest measures to restore credibility, transparency, and accountability in public examinations. |
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