Jammu and Kashmir’s ₹15,139 crore allocation to education in the 2026–27 budget signals intent, even urgency. But intent alone cannot repair a system weighed down by decades of neglect. As the Union Territory steps into a new academic session, the real test is not how much is being spent, but whether it is being spent where it matters most: inside classrooms.
The numbers are, at first glance, reassuring. A higher-than-average pupil-teacher ratio, a 9 percent budget increase, and ambitious schemes like PM-SHRI schools and Vidya Samiksha Kendras suggest a system on the move. Yet, beneath this optimism lies a troubling disconnect between policy and reality. Over 1,300 schools still function with a single teacher. Thousands of lecturer posts remain vacant. In such a scenario, “smart classrooms” risk becoming little more than empty shells.
The deeper crisis is one of learning. The latest ASER findings are stark: a majority of Grade 5 students in government schools struggle with basic reading and arithmetic. This is not merely an academic deficit; it is a generational setback. When classrooms are forced into a “rush-to-finish” culture due to lost academic days and administrative disruptions, comprehension becomes collateral damage.
Equally telling is the steady drift toward private schools. Despite the government running far more institutions and employing more teachers, nearly matching enrollment in private schools reflects a collapse of public trust. Families, many with limited means, are choosing to pay for what they believe the state is failing to provide: quality education.
Infrastructure gaps further compound the problem. Thousands of schools lack basic facilities like girls’ toilets and electricity. In such conditions, digital initiatives and green school models, while commendable, appear premature. Development cannot be layered from the top down when the foundation itself is fragile.

Encouragingly, there are signs of reform. The, rationalization efforts, and curriculum flexibility are steps in the right direction. But these must translate into swift, visible changes on the ground. Filling vacancies, deploying subject-specific teachers, and ensuring basic infrastructure are not long-term goals, they are immediate necessities.
The challenge before the government is clear. Budgets can create possibilities, but only execution can create impact. If 2026 is to mark a genuine turning point, the focus must shift from announcements to outcomes. Otherwise, this record allocation risks being remembered not as a milestone, but as a missed opportunity.
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